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Transcript of Pacer feb13presentation
Investor PresentationFebruary 2013February, 2013
Forward Looking Statements
This presentation contains or may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act including with respect to revenue earnings per share margins cash flows debt levelsLitigation Reform Act, including with respect to revenue, earnings per share, margins, cash flows, debt levels, expenses, capital expenditures, business and financial strategies, management’s plans and objectives for future performance and the time by which objectives will be achieved, and future economic, industry and market conditions or performance. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made, and the company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statement. All remarks made during our financial results conference call will be current at the time of the call and we undertake no obligation to update the replay. If the company updates any forward-looking statement, no inference should be drawn that the company will make additional updates with respect to that statement or any other forward-looking statements.
These forward-looking statements are based on the company's current expectations and beliefs and are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Among the important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements are general economic and business conditions; industry trends, including changes in the costs of services from rail, motor, ocean and air transportation providers; our success in implementing our business, operational and commercial strategies; competitive pressures; shipping volumes; the loss of one or more of our major customers; and weather related issues and service disruptions affecting our rail and motor transportation providers. Additional information about these and other factors that could affect the compan 's b siness is set forth in the compan 's ario s filings ith the Sec rities and E changeaffect the company's business is set forth in the company's various filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including those set forth in the company's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2012. Our actual consolidated results of operations and the execution of our business strategy could differ materially from those expressed in, or implied by, the forward-looking statements contained in this presentation. All forward-looking statements attributable to us or persons acting on our behalf are expressly qualified by the cautionary statements in this presentation and in our SEC filings.
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statements in this presentation and in our SEC filings.
Topics Covered
• Business Overview– Pacer International Company Overview– Intermodal Segment
Logistics Segment– Logistics Segment
• Financial Update – 4Q 2012• Summary 2013 FocusSummary 2013 Focus
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Business Overview
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Pacer International Overview
• Founded in 1997 through the acquisition of several logistics companies and the APL Linertrain business, which was renamed Pacer Stacktrain
• Leader in North American Intermodal transportationLeader in North American Intermodal transportation
• Headquartered near Columbus, OH
• ~ 900 employees in our global operationsp y g p
• Comprehensive transportation and logistics portfolio
• Best-in-class service delivery model
• Publically traded (PACR on NASDAQ)
• Financially sound and well positioned for growth
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Pacer Portfolio
Pacer
Intermodal ($1.2B) Logistics ($0.2B)
• International freightDoor to door intermodal"Retail" International
Freight Forwarding
• Warehousing consolidation
• International freight forwarding and shipping (Ocean World Lines & RF International)
• Transportation primarily for
• Door-to-door intermodal movements provided to beneficial cargo owners (BCOs)
Automotive Warehouse, Port, & Transload Services
• Inland intermodal for • Brokered truck-based freight
• Warehousing, consolidation, deconsolidation, and transloading
• Transportation primarily for Auto OEMs and parts manufacturers
Ocean Carrier Services Highway Brokerage
• Inland intermodal for incoming / outgoing ISO containers for Ocean Carriers
Brokered truck based freight movements
• Drayage and repositioning • Supply chain managementDrayage Logistics Solutions
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• Drayage and repositioning services sold externally and to support other lines of business
Supply chain management solutions
One Pacer VisionIntegrated Transportation Solutions
TRACK & TRACE
WAREHOUSE WAREHOUSE Los Angeles C l bWAREHOUSE, CUSTOMS
WAREHOUSE, CUSTOMS
RAIL DRAYAGE
Los Angeles ColumbusShanghai
OCEAN AIR HIGHWAYRAIL DRAYAGE
INTERMODAL
Portfolio of Transportation Solutions
M lti d i t ti l ( i )
The Promise
• Multi-mode international (ocean, air)
• Multi-mode domestic (intermodal, highway)
• Long Term Sector Attractiveness (Intermodal and International)
+ Overlapping Customer Bases• Value added services (trans-load,
warehouse, customs, visibility)
• End-to-end capability for global supply h i
+ Portfolio Differentiator
= Profitable Growth
A Differentiated Portfolio of Transportation Solutions
chains
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Pacer Intermodal Segment
Intermodal Segment ($1.2B)• "Retail" (Door‐to‐Door)• Automotive• Automotive• Ocean Carrier Services• Drayage
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The Pacer Service Differentiator
• Service is the foundation for Intermodal Service Levels
72%
95% 95% 92% 94%Pacer's success
• Pacer service starts with railroad investments in intermodal
Pacer
71%66% 67%
72%investments in intermodal capacity
• Pacer extends rail service levels Railroads
2Q11 4Q11 2Q12 4Q12to best in class logistics levels– Rails: 70% on time within 1 day
vs. published schedule– Pacer: >90% on time within 2
hours vs. customer want
• Service becomes a tool for
Customer / Industry Accolades2012 Business Partner of the year"- Proctor & Gamble
account retention and growth
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2012 Best Overall Carrier- Sony Foxconn
Intermodal Market Development
• Most mature intermodal market • Grow with the market at acceptable E t / W t
Market View Our Focus
• Modal shift opportunities on West Coast, but growth is dependent on imports and ocean carrier IPI Rates
• Panama Canal expansion not t d t h i ifi t i t
margins• Optimize network fit • Leverage bundled Pacer Intermodal and
Logistics solutions for inbound transload f i ht
East / WestTrans‐con
expected to have a significant impact freight
Mexico• Large modal shift opportunities• Near-sourcing continues
• Leverage 20+ years and leading position in cross-border IntermodalMexico g
– Auto production expanding … expect 8% unit growth in 2013
• Above average market growth
• Conversion of Auto business to direct• Crescent corridor with NS / KCS• Commodity focused selling
East
• Heavy rail Intermodal investments drives rail service improvements
• Significant modal shift opportunities• Intermodal rate advantage of 15%
• Focused initiatives for Eastern Core lanes and modal conversion
Directed network sellingPartner with railroads
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Intermodal rate advantage of 15% on average over truckload
Partner with railroads• Continue expanding non-core lanes as
rail infrastructure and service improves
Intermodal Conversion Opportunity
MovesMoves
12m+3.5m+29%
70m(3 5m)(3.5m)
(5%)
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Source: FRA National Rail Plan, Union Pacific
Intermodal Mexico DevelopmentSoutheast to Mexico Connection
New Mexico to SE CorridorNe Intermodal Net ork• New Intermodal Network between SE / NE and Mexico
• New terminals at:Rossville TN (Memphis)– Rossville, TN (Memphis)
– Birmingham, AL– Greencastle, PA
(Chambersburg)• Creates over 30 new
intermodal lanes• Improves service between
Mexico and the Southeast– 1 day transit reduction– Competitive vs. truck
E d TMXU d P
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– Expands TMXU and Pacer service
Intermodal Margin Improvement
• Initiatives in place for all margin elements
Margin El t
% of C t
Ability to I t K I iti ti
• Heaviest focus on those Pacer can best control
Elements Cost Impact Key Initiatives
Price ‐ Med • Sales Effectiveness• Commercial Terms
Rail >50 Med • Rail ContractsRail 50 Med Rail Contracts• Bid Collaboration
Dray 20 – 30 High • Carrier Mix• Street Efficiency• Accessorial Management• Accessorial Management
Equipment < 10 Med • Equipment Utilization
Network < 10 High • Network Balance
SG&A < 10 High • "Lean" Processes• Processing and Decision Support Systems
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Pacer Logistics Segment
$Logistics Segment ($0.2B)• International Freight Forwarding• Warehouse, Port, & Transload ServicesWarehouse, Port, & Transload Services• Highway Brokerage• Logistics Solutions
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Logistics Segment Value Proposition
• Long Term GrowthAtt ti k t l t
Long Term
Growth
– Attractive markets long term– Profitable on a stand alone basis
C t B
Value
• Customer Base– More touch points for existing
customersE t i t f tPortfolio
DifferentiationCustomer
Base– Entry point for new customers
• Portfolio Differentiation– Full range of global door-to-door
transportation solutions– Connects to Intermodal, Ocean
Carrier and Drayage offerings
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Carrier, and Drayage offerings
Pacer Logistics Transformation
IntermodalLiquidity
• Debt Agreements (2009, 2010, 2012), Cash Flow, Debt Free (2011+)
Logistics
Organization and Incentives
• Business Leadership: Commercial, Finance, Capacity, Logistics• Functional Excellence: Sales, Network, Operations, Capacity, Logistics• Global presence (China WOFE, China offices, SE Asia)
C t S i
Customer Service• Logistics (95‐98%, +/‐ 2 hours) mindset
Carrier Relationships• Ocean Carriers• Air Carriers
Air Carriers
Systems• Highway Brokerage• International Freight Forwarding
SG&A• Rightsizing
P i Effi i• Processing Efficiency
• Volume Leverage
= completed (announced phases) = in process / planned 16
Pacer Freight Forwarding Network
Pacer's Ocean World Lines and RF International have global presence with over 200 employees in more than 20 owned-offices
USA Europe Asia
presence with over 200 employees in more than 20 owned-offices in Europe, Asia and N. America, and an international network of top-tier agents worldwide.
Chicago
Cincinnati
Houston
USA Hamburg
Berlin
London
Europe Asia Hong Kong
Ningbo
Shanghai
Long Beach
Miami
New Orleans
g
Shenzhen
Qingdao
Singapore
New York (HQ)
Norfolk
Phoenix
San Francisco
Xiamen
Pacer Agent Office
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San Francisco
Seattle
activities. Pacer Freight Forwarding China Development
• Pacer History in ChinaHeilongjiang
Jiling
Liaoning
– Agents in place for years– Hong Kong opened (Aug-09)– Shanghai opened (Sep-09)
Class B licenses (2011)
Qinghai
Inner Mongolia
Ningxia ShandongGansu
JiangsuShaanxi Henan
Hebei
Beijing
Shanxi
Tianjin
– Class B licenses (2011) … capability and growth limitations
• Development Plans (2013+)Cl A li (1Q13)
Qingdao
Sichuan
HunanChongqing
JiangxiZhejiang
Jiangsu
Hubei
Fujian
Anhui
Guizhou
– Class A licenses (1Q13)– Quick build of experienced team– Full suite of global door-to-door
transportation solution
Ningbo
Shanghai
Yunnan TaiwanGuangxi
Hainan
Guangdong
p• Ocean and air freight• P.O. management
– Cross sell and tie-in with domestic Intermodal and
Xiamen
Hong KongShenzen
domestic Intermodal and Highway
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Pacer Highway
• Complements Intermodal and Freight Forwarding businesses
Service Offerings Initiatives
• Completes the portfolio of multi-modal transportation solutions
• Truckload• LTL• JIT
• Enhanced IT platform (2012 / 2013) – Mercurygate – a proven industry leader
• Brokerage Sales Model (2012 / 2013)
• Transactional / Flex• Dedicated• Service recovery
g ( )– Historically mixed Intermodal / Highway– New dedicated Brokerage sales (2012)
• High energy, high incentives culture• Prove concept, gain tractionSe ce eco e y
• 6,000+ carrier relationships
p , g– Scale up (2013)
• Carrier Development (2012 / 2013)– Mid-level carriers– Dedicated fleets– Mexico presence
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Financial Overview
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Earnings Per Share
• 4Q12 Diluted EPS of $0.06 (adjusted at $0.08)– Intermodal margins rebound: +70 bps Y/Y and +120 bps sequentiallyg p p q y
• 2012 Diluted EPS of $0.12 (adjusted at $0.14)– Intermodal domestic growth offsets Logistics segment losses
• 2013 Guidance of $0 25 – $0 35 with both segments improving
$0.04
$0.40 $0.40
• 2013 Guidance of $0.25 – $0.35 with both segments improving
$0.15 $0.36
$0.12
$0.02 $0.14 $0.25 ‐
$0.35
($ )
$0.00
$0.20
($0.60)
($0.60)
($0.40)
($0.20)
($0.60)
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
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2009, 2010 adjusted, as reported in 2011 10K * 2011 adjusted GAAP results of $0.40 for:‐ 2011 realignment expense (+$0.3m income / +1 cent EPS)‐ 2011 deferred tax adjustment (+$1.2m income / +3 cents EPS)
* 2012 adjusted GAAP results of $0.12 for:‐ 2012 realignment expense (+$0.8m income / +2 cents EPS)
Balance Sheet
• 4Q12: remain Debt Free with $20m Cash– Operating cash flow +$10m and Capital Expenditures of $2.1mp g $ p p $
• 2012: maintained debt free position– Operating cash flow +$6.1m and Capital Expenditures of $11.4m
• 2013: maintain debt free position $40-45m cash on hand
$$30
$40 Net Debt(Debt) + Cash
• 2013: maintain debt free position, $40-45m cash on hand
($9.2)
$24.0 $20.2
$40.0 ‐$45.0
$0
$10
$20
$
($39.0)
($20.2)($ )
($40)
($30)
($20)
($10)
($50)
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
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Our Focus
• Continue Double-Digit Domestic Intermodal GrowthEastern and Mexico market profitable growth– Eastern and Mexico market profitable growth
– Focus on truck conversion• Transform Logistics Segment for Profitable Growth
– New organization, incentives, product offerings– Contributes on a stand alone basis and complements Intermodal
• Retain a Competitive Cost Structure– Drayage capacity/efficiency: optimized mix (76% in-house now)– Network optimization, equipment utilization, empty miles– SG&A scalingSG&A scaling
• Enhance Pacer’s Core: People, Processes, and Technologies– Intermodal drayage, retail, and decision support systems
Highway brokerage organization model and operating system– Highway brokerage organization model and operating system– International organization model and systems
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Our Vision
To be the customers’ preferred choice, earning customer confidence every day byearning customer confidence every day by reliably delivering best-in-class door-to-door transportation services and logistics p gsolutions.
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Investor Contacts
John HaffertyEVP and Chief Financial Officer(614) 923-1987
Steve MarkoskyVP, Financial Planning & Analysis and Investor Relations(614) 923-1703
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