Sonic Automotive, Inc. (SAH) on Q2 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Good morning and welcome to the Sonic Automotive Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. This conference call is being recorded today, Thursday, July 29, 2021. Presentation materials, which management will be reviewing on the conference call, can be accessed at the company's website at IR.SonicAutomotive.com. At this time, I would like to refer to the safe harbor statement under the Private Securities and Litigation Reform Act of 1995. During this conference call, management may discuss financial projections, information or expectations about the company's products or market or otherwise make statements about the future. David Bruton Smith: Thank you and good morning, everyone, and welcome to Sonic Automotive's second quarter 2021 earnings call. As she said, I'm David Smith, the company's CEO. Joining me on the call today is our President, Mr. Jeff Dyke; our CFO, Mr. Heath Byrd; our Executive Vice President of Operations, Mr. Tim Keen; our Chief Digital Retail Officer, Mr. Steve Wittman; and our Vice President of Investor Relations, Mr. Danny Wieland. We're excited to publicly announce today record-breaking operating and financial performance for our company during the second quarter of 2021. This performance would not have been possible without the tremendous effort and execution by our valued Sonic and EchoPark teammates. Congratulations and thank you all. We'd also like to thank our customers, manufacturers and vendor partners for helping us achieve another record quarter. During the second quarter of 2021, Sonic continued to deliver exceptional performance in our Franchised Dealerships segment. We also posted a fourth consecutive quarter of record revenue and retail unit sales volume for our EchoPark business. On a consolidated basis, we reported all-time record quarterly revenues of $3.4 billion, up 59% year-over-year. When compared to the second quarter of 2019, to exclude the effects of the onset of the pandemic, total revenues were up 28%. We generated all-time record quarterly income from continuing operations before taxes of $151 million, up 303% on year-over-year basis and up 310% when compared to the second quarter of 2019. We also reported all-time record quarterly earnings from continuing operations of $114 million or $2.63 per diluted share, compared to second quarter 2020 earnings from continuing operations of $31 million or $0.71 per diluted share, and adjusted earnings from continuing operations of $28 million or $0.64 per diluted share. Operator: Our first question comes from the line of Rick Nelson with Stephens. Please go ahead. Richard Nelson: Hey, thanks. Good morning. It's a great quarter. I'd like to follow up on this strategic alternative. I'm curious what is prompting that review at this time. Heath Byrd: Rick, this is Heath. We're not going to comment any further than the statement that both was in the press release as well as in the opening statements from David. And once the evaluation is complete, there may be additional comments. But at this point, I just wanted to make everyone aware that, that process was underway. Richard Nelson: Okay, got you. Thanks for that. So, on GPU, so on the franchise side, we saw a pretty meaningful expansion. And at the EchoPark side, we saw declines in that GPU. Can you help reconcile those differences? Jeff Dyke: Yeah, Rick, so why don't we start, and this is kind of a long-winded answer, but why don't we start, and let me refer you to Slide 22 of the investor presentation that we released this morning. And I think that will really help us kind of answer this question. I'll give you a a second to get there. So as you can see on the slide, when you look at weeks 1 through 9, we had really normal market conditions and normal EchoPark margins. But beginning in week 10, wholesale prices rose above average market retail prices. And in my career, which is 25 years doing this, the market has never seen a wholesale price inversion of this length or magnitude at all. In early April, we then decided to make a strategic decision to drive volume and market share, but also mitigate losses by adjusting our pricing strategy up. As we move into the third quarter, market conditions are now beginning to return to normal, and we've returned to our normal pricing strategy that we were running in the first quarter. But however, we do have a 40-plus current day supply of inventory. That's driven by new store openings. Traditionally, we run 30-day supply, 20 on the front-line and 10 in the pipeline. And so, we expect margin pressure to continue through August. But as we approach the end of the third quarter, we expect EchoPark margins to begin to normalize. Fourth quarter margins are going to look a lot like the first quarter. And as a result of the actions that we've taken, we do remain on track to sell the 100,000 to 105,000 cars that we told The Street that we would sell at the beginning of the year. When you look on the franchise side, trade-ins make up a big percentage of our volume, about 60%. And so, we're obviously trading for cars a lot cheaper than we're buying cars at the wholesale line. About 88% of our cars come from the auctions at the EchoPark level where very few, a much smaller percentage of our cars come at the franchised dealerships. And that speaks for the industry as well. Everybody's got higher margins. But the exposure for EchoPark is, is that we buy a lot of wholesale cars at auctions and so - and we keep a short day supply. So we're going to run into margin events when you have an event like this. The good news is, is these events have happened onetime in my 25 years and probably have happened one time in anybody that's on this call as well. So it's not a concern for us as we move forward. We believe things will return back to normal, and getting closer to normal as we go into the month of September, certainly into the fourth quarter and as we move on into 2022. Richard Nelson: Got it, got it. So, thanks for that, Jeff. So curious also if you're expecting losses in Q3 and Q4, or do we shift to profitability, kind of, your sort of forecast here would be helpful? Jeff Dyke: Yeah, here's how you would look at it. I think that the losses that you see and saw in the second quarter, they are going to kind of be relative in the month of July. We'll get a little better, but probably still show a loss in August. September should then turn positive. And in the fourth quarter, we'll be back at the run rates that you saw in the first quarter. So that overhang that we have, and we wouldn't obviously have an overhang if we weren't opening so many stores, but we're buying a lot of inventory right now. And we're just not going to adjust our strategy because of an event that happens once in a lifetime. It's not something we're going to do. It slows the entire business down. We're going to continue to grow our share as David said in his opening comment. We have a 5 year old store. Our most mature store in our most mature market has got 18% share in the Denver market. And we're averaging really 14% share in anything over 5 years. So we're not going to slow that down for a onetime event. And we think we've made the right decision there. So a little bumpy road for July, August. Things get a lot better when September gets here and then back to normal in the fourth quarter. Richard Nelson: Thanks for that. Also, I noticed you have an acquisition announcement today. We haven't seen one of those in a while. If you could speak to that and your appetite to acquire on the franchise side? Jeff Dyke: Yeah, I mean, look, we're bullish on the franchise side of the business and the EchoPark side of the business. There are a lot of deals out there right now. And so, we're strategically buying deals that fit our footprint or markets that we're going into. New markets like we announced at Grand Junction, although we're in the state of Colorado. But there are a lot of opportunities out there right now. And as David said in his opening statement, you're going to see more purchases from us on the franchise side as we move through the rest of this calendar year. Richard Nelson: Great. Thanks and good luck everybody going forward. Jeff Dyke: Thank you so much. Heath Byrd: Thank you. Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Rajat Gupta with JPMorgan. Rajat Gupta: Hi, great. Thanks for taking the question. I know you don't want to give too much color on the strategic review, but in the event that there is a separation of the EchoPark business that might happen as one of the possibilities, is there any way you can frame for us or quantify the dyssynergies that would be there in that event? Any brief color on that would be helpful and I have a follow-up. Jeff Dyke: No, we appreciate the question. But we really can't comment further. Rajat Gupta: Okay. Anything qualitative to keep in mind in terms of shared resources or auctions or anything like that? Heath Byrd: Rajat, this is Heath. Again, we're not going to comment on any of the details. I can just assure you that just like every decision that we make in this company, our focus is on increasing shareholder value and releasing as much value in this company as we can. And so, that's a driver of every decision we make. But other than that, we just won't get into details of that analysis. Rajat Gupta: No worries. I had to try. Just on the 2 million units at maturity, what kind of EBITDA margin profile can the business run at? The 2025 targets imply like somewhere in the low-single-digits, but you're still ramping up stores at that point. So any color on what kind of EBITDA margins or profitability of the business can be at maturity? Danny Wieland: Yeah, you're going to continue to see expansion of that, in particular, based on what we projected in 2025. That's based on an immature store-set. So as we run those out toward maturity and you get a more mature store base, you'll see continued expansion beyond what that is there. We have not quantified what that opportunity or upside is. But I think the basis for EchoPark is that we were able to scale and leverage those expenses dramatically better and more efficiently than we are on the franchise side. And so, we should see meaningful upside to EBITDA margin as you get north of 575,000 units and continue to mature the store base. Jeff Dyke: Yeah, and to Danny's point, we've always talked about how the expenses at EchoPark are more fixed. And so, obviously, that's going to drive a higher EBITDA margin as we scale. Rajat Gupta: Got it. And any color on like what the matured stores, what kind of EBITDA margin they're at, obviously, taking into account the onetime hit this quarter on GPU? But any reference to that? Jeff Dyke: So, I think the best way to look at it is SG&A is going to be in the mid-50%s to 60% range, somewhere in that ballpark for mature store. Rajat Gupta: Got it. So you - okay. Danny Wieland: If you go back to what our 2 most mature markets, Denver and Dallas, did in 2019 pre-COVID, each of those markets did $12 million in pre-tax. And so, if you think about them running at, I think, that year is 1,300, 1,400 units a month on average. So if you look at it from that perspective, EBITDA is going to be somewhere north of that $12 million into that revenue base. Jeff Dyke: And during that timeframe, the share in those markets was lower. Denver is running last month, for the month of June we ran 18% market share there. So it's a much more mature market now, and we don't know where that share can go. We're calling out 10%, which is driving the $2 million, but our stores are at 5 years at 14%, so there's certainly upside to that number and I think that's a critical thing to think about as we move forward. Rajat Gupta: Got it. Got it. Just one last one. On the SG&A side, you gave us some color on the franchised business in the context of like what GPUs could look like. Just looking at the second quarter number, the 58% for franchised unit gross. It looks like the leverage or the drop through to the bottom line from the gross profit increase just seems to be much higher for you versus what we've seen at some of the peers, almost like 75% to 80% drop through of that gross profit benefit. Is there something different? Or are there any changes that you have made over the last year, when you were laying off - when you laid off some staff that, it has there been any change in terms of the fixed sources variable comp model or anything of that sort that would lead to this kind of a drop through? Just curious if you could share any thoughts there that would be helpful. Thanks. Heath Byrd: Yes. This is Heath. A couple of things - I missed a little bit of it, but I just want to - and David hit on it very well in the opening comments. First of all, on a high level, I think, we had actually had guidance in February of around 73% for 2021, for the year, we're running at 66%, 67%. And we - for this year, we actually expect that to be our SG&A percent of gross at that level, not the higher 73%. If you look forward, David articulated this and tried to normalize what we expect to see in 2022, where you - we still believe that GPU is going to be elevated on new, you normalize the use. We are looking at a 62% and that includes EchoPark and the franchise business. And so as the EchoPark matures, we can actually improve that even better than the 62% range, but a couple of things that are driving the throughput. We've got - if you look at our productivity on our sales associates, for example, we used to sell 12 units per month for associate before these cuts that we put in place and these efficiencies, now we're running 18, 19. And so that's a fundamental change that you can see even at these new levels we're maintaining. And so that's a big part of it that changes - structural changes that have been made in organization. The other one is centralization of advertising, a huge component to our SG&A that is a structural change that's allowing that throughput to happen. We're spending a lot less on advertising, and it's even more effective. And so those are 2 of the biggest that are the structural changes are driving that throughput. Jeff Dyke: It's not just a gross driven event. It's a gross and expense driven event, and we made a big deal out of that during COVID, saying, we really did take a lot of expense out of this business. I think, we quoted $84 million annually that's come out. It's running higher than that. And it's permanent, as David said in his opening statement. And so, when you're looking at your models and forecasting for next year, you really got to take that into consideration in terms of how you look at the business. And then the great news there is, and I don't know if you mentioned this or not, Heath, but our California market is really underperforming in a big way compared to the rest of the markets. The market has just not come back as fast due to COVID. So if you look at our new car volume in California, it underperformed the rest of our stores by 1,000 basis points, used car volume down by 1,400 basis points, 600 basis points. Total revenue was down by 1,300 basis points and gross profit down by 1,000 basis points. As California opens back up, it's just going to be fantastic for us. We've got a big chunk of our stores and our business out there. And so that's going to further enhance the gross portfolio, but it's also going to continue to lever the SG&A percentage down. So it really is coming from both sides. And the great news is, as we can have the new car margins return - I don't think they're going to return to pre-COVID levels. Again, I think the manufacturers are doing a smart job by keeping inventories tight and they'll continue to do that even as we move forward. So if you do model a $2,500 PVR, which is still well ahead of where we were at pre-COVID, you get to have the gross growth and you get the big expense reductions that are permanent, again, in place, and that's just going to keep the SG&A coming down. Then you add on top of that the performance of EchoPark getting back out of this crazy inversion time that we went through into picture just works really, really good for us. David Bruton Smith: And that's why - this is David. And that's why I noted that assuming no additional unit sales volume in that or further parts and service growth. We're being conservative in these projections. Heath Byrd: Yeah, I think that's - look, it's some of the models I've seen some of the analysis on line and sell side. From our perspective, I think what is being missed is that the power of that SG&A reduction staying in place. I also think that some people are assuming that we go back to pre-COVID GPUs, which from our perspective, as Jeff mentioned, we think that we will be elevated continuing. And at least from our company specifically, the models are not giving EchoPark any credit. And as we've mentioned many times, 2022 is the tipping point of EchoPark. That's when we are going to be opening less stores than we have opened. And so I think when we look at some models that really don't jive with ours, those are the things I think they're missing. Rajat Gupta: Got it. Hello? Jeff Dyke: Yeah, we can hear you. Go ahead. Rajat Gupta: Yeah, I think, I missed like the last few seconds when you'd cut off, but I can read the transcripts. So thanks for the color. Jeff Dyke: You bet. Rajat Gupta: And you just the store openings versus... Heath Byrd: Yeah, I was just saying that as we look at some of the models from some of our buy- and sell-side analysts and when it doesn't really jive with from our perspective, the things that I think are missing are the understanding of the permanent reductions that will continue regardless of any increase in volume, number 1. Number 2, the assumption that new GPU goes back that the manufacturers go back to the 60-day supply; 65-day supply and the new GPU goes back to 2019. From our conversations, as Jeff mentioned, that's not going to happen. Those will be elevated, continuing. The impact of California, at least specifically for us, and what is going to happen to the second half of 2021 and into 2022. And again, EchoPark. EchoPark is that 2022 is our inflection point or tipping point where we are opening less stores than we have matured. And as we stated before, we believe that is when the profitability even though we have it today, it starts going exponentially, because you've got so many mature stores in place. Rajat Gupta: Got it. Great. Thanks for all the color and good luck. Jeff Dyke: You bet. Thank you. Operator: Your next question comes from the line of John Murphy with Bank of America. John Murphy: Good morning, guys. You've answered a lot of my questions, but I'll ask just 1 or 2 more. You mentioned 2 million units is sort of the target for EchoPark at maturity. And, Jeff, you were saying there are some markets that that's based on 10% more market share on your target vehicles. But there are some markets you're 14%, 15%. I mean, could this be the kind of thing where this is not $2 million, it's $3 million. And then if you decide to expand in the iceberg or maybe slightly older vehicles, or expanding the offering that you might be something significantly larger than that? How are you paying this $2 million other than just 10%? What's the opportunity beyond maybe that? Jeff Dyke: Yeah, I mean, if we take the 5-year average, right - the 5-year old store average right now is 14%. So the number is bigger than $2 million. And, yeah, it could be $3 million, $4 million. At the end of the day, we're always looking to take the inventory process that we have at EchoPark into pricing model and to expand that. I would think of it differently. I don't think we expand into 5, 6, 7, 8 year old cars because it brings a lot of complexity to the model that really doesn't fit our model, adds cost and things of that nature that just doesn't fit the model. But what you might think about is instead of the traditional EchoPark - less this crazy time, traditional EchoPark average retail price being $20,000 to $21,000, you might look at something was, okay, can they expand that to a $35,000 to $40,000 car? And so - because that's not an average retail selling price we come anywhere near. And look we're always looking at how can we take this great model that we have, the efficiency that we have with the model, which is really exceptional and one of a kind, I think, in our industry and expand that to grow EchoPark to further levels? So - yeah, the $2 million is a good, safe number for us, because we know we're going to be above 10% in terms of market share. And we understand what our defined market is. It's a smaller swim lane. It's not the tradition of 40 million to 43 million cars being sold every year. It's a smaller lane, but we can own a much larger percentage of that lane than what some of our competitors are talking about of the overall marketing. So, I think, you're thinking right and it's absolutely the way that we're thinking. Heath Byrd: And also, also when you think about because of our pricing strategies, part of that $2 million, which could be a lot higher numbers. We're pulling that 5- and 6-year old buyer into the 1- to 4-year old, because we are priced so low that now they can afford a 1 to 4 rather than a 5 to 6. That adds to our TAM. We're also pulling from new car buyers, because I've got a 1- to 4-year old car with a conditional report of 4.5. It's just as good - I mean, it's just as good as a new car. And so I'm pulling from that $13 million as well. So we feel like we're going to have some migration from those other populations into the 1 to 4, because of the way we price. Jeff Dyke: And we do today that's not part of our volume today, and we expect that to continue to expand with our pricing model as we move forward. We see that happening, and that's part of the big share like I quoted for Denver that we've got an 18% market share there in the 1 to 4 category, but it includes some 5- and 6-year old vehicle buyers, because the price is so low and it includes some new car buyers, because we're 40% priced below the new car traditional number. So all-in, a great opportunity for us and again, I think, you're thinking right. John Murphy: And then just a second question. I'm not sure you can - you're going to be willing to answer this, but I mean, you said 88% of EchoPark units are sourced from auction. Will that be the case over time? And are there other 12% flowing from your franchised stores? I mean, I'm just trying to understand that inventory, I mean, you're sourcing 2 million units, you start getting into, obviously, just simply big numbers, big chunks of the market. So I mean does the sourcing strategy, it stay over time at EchoPark? Jeff Dyke: It's really not a strategy. At the end of the day, we buy as many cars off the street as we want, but just think about it. It's not a lot of customers trading in a 1- or 2-year old car. And they're still upside down, have negative equity whatever. It's just not as big a swimming pool as you might see for our franchise stores or some of our competitors where we're selling 0- to 10-year old cars, and the average car on the road is 8, 9 years old, and we trade for those cars all the time, that drives the margin that you see on the franchise side. So yeah, I think, can expand. If you look when we first started that number was 6%, 7%, 8%, we've got it up to 12%. We've got - I think, we have some opportunities there, but I don't think it's going to be as big a percentage overall of our sellable inventory as you might see at some of our competitor set or even our own franchise stores. And we really don't - we don't take cars from the franchise stores and move to EchoPark, we do the other way. Cars that don't fit the EchoPark model, we send to our franchise stores and they benefit greatly from that. But it's certainly every day a topic of conversation for us, is how do we increase the 12%, because the margins are significantly better on a street purchase than they are buying a car at the auction. And one other point, we're not - I mean, I hear people all the time talking about not being able to buy inventory. We don't have - we've never had a problem buying inventory. We haven't had a problem. When everybody says inventory is tight right now, we don't have a problem buying inventory. You got to pay for it, and that's going to adjust the margins. But it's - what we're not going to let that do is slow us down. The business is strong enough now that we're going to continue to power through. And when you have events like we had over the summer here, it just is not - it's not a big enough event to worry us. We're going to continue to power through, drive our market share, because we come out the other side of this, we're going to be a lot stronger for it. So we don't have any problems getting inventory. I want to make sure that I get that point across. David Bruton Smith: Yeah. This is David. And simply to think about it and related to that is, as we grow our brand, our EchoPark brand and the markets, you can see there our market share increases, but so do the number of quality trade-ins that we get that actually fit the EchoPark model that we then go and resell. So we definitely see that those numbers growing. John Murphy: Okay. And then just lastly, I mean, there's a core part of the business which is still a very, very good business outside EchoPark. I mean, do you have any designs about where that lands? I mean, you've given us an idea of 2 million units, but like obviously, there's some upside there on EchoPark. I mean, where do you think that the core business - the core franchise business goes over time? How do you think about where that could top out or where you go when you're making acquisitions? David Bruton Smith: Well, there's a number of ways to answer that, and I know, Jeff will have some comments on that. But the franchise business is still extremely fragmented in this country. And so there's still tremendous opportunity for growth in that area, which we alluded to that in our opening comments. Jeff Dyke: Also, John, we've just never been in a position to grow, right? We just haven't had the liquidity. We've been shoring up our business. This team has been together since the end of 2018. And so we positioned the company now from a liquidity perspective, we can kind of do what we need to do to grow in the franchise business and continue to grow EchoPark. And so now you're going to see us dive in there. We said that in the opening, we've got more franchises coming. We want to grow the business. It's a great business like you said, it's highly profitable. We really have our house in order when it comes to our liquidity, and Heath can comment on that here in just a second, but also from an operational perspective. The turnover from our general manager turnover is 5% or less, the company has really strengthened its performance. Our playbook processes are really - have matured. And so it's time to grow the business, and we're in a position to do that now. David Bruton Smith: And there's been some deals that just want to emphasize too that, but we absolutely look at the ROI of all of our investments. And so there have been some deals that we've passed on that just did not represent a great investment versus the investment in EchoPark. But we think as we move forward, we're seeing more and more opportunities to get - for great acquisitions that are accretive and will add a lot of value for our shareholders. Heath Byrd: And if you look at it from a balance sheet perspective, our leverage ratio is extremely low. Our credit profile is improving from the agencies on a daily basis. So we've got readily available access to the capital markets for additional needs if necessary. John Murphy: I mean would it be, just a follow-up, I mean, you look at AutoNation, it's about 2% of the market. You got Lithia making acquisitions pretty aggressively, talking about getting about 5% of the market. I mean, would you ever, I mean, I certainly can't put you on the spot right now, because I'm sure, well, you may have some ideas about this. So I certainly ask, of where you could be as a percentage of the new market, right? Because sitting here saying, yeah, it can be 10% of the addressable market I'm going after in EchoPark, I mean could you say 2%, 3%, 4%, 5% in the new vehicle market? Is that something you'd be willing to put out at some point? Is it a target or is this going to be just more opportunistic and you're going to roll up as you see fit over time? Jeff Dyke: Well, I mean, look, we just go back in the pool, right? And so, that's a number I'm sure that we'll come with, because there's just a ton of buying opportunities out there right now and you see our competitors buying, and you'll see us do the same, in particular, between now and the end of the year. And so, yeah, I think at some point in time, we can define that. But we're really kind of starting to hit our stride from an M&A perspective. And so, give us a few quarters, and we'll begin talking a little bit more about that as we kind of define how many of these stores we're going to buy and where we're headed with this. John Murphy: Okay, great. Thank you very much, guys. Jeff Dyke: You bet, thank you. Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Mark Jordan with Jefferies. Mark Jordan: Good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. I guess, following up on the M&A question. Can you kind of talk about what multiples you're seeing now and how they compare to historical trends? Jeff Dyke: They're different all over. It really depends on the brand and the markets that you're in, but, I mean, if you're going to go out and buy a Porsche store, you're going to pay north of a 10 multiple. But if you're buying some of domestic or imports, it's 5, 5.5, 6, somewhere in that ballpark we're seeing. And it really does depend on the market, the city. There's just so many different issues with narrowing it down on a kind of a nationwide basis, because those numbers are different all over the place. And I think you would hear that from our competitive set as well. Mark Jordan: Okay. Great. And, I guess, following up on the EchoPark GPU question from earlier. It looks like in the quarter, you took some pricing up, yeah, I think above market to kind of offset some of those wholesale headwinds. So when we get back to more of a normal sourcing environment, is this maybe kind of an opportunity to rethink the pricing model or maybe just be a little bit above where you have been historically for EchoPark? Jeff Dyke: It's an interesting conversation, because what it showed in this timeframe is the strength of the brand, because we got as high as 108%, 109%, 110% of the market during the timeframe, trying to balance the loss and maintain our numbers in terms of share. So down the road, as the brand strengthens, and the guest gets to experience more than just price, that they get to experience just the great experience that you get coming into the store. And then, we introduce in the fourth quarter, our digital retailing platform and our new websites are just going to be fantastic. There is definitely going to be opportunity for margin expansion. We have not defined that yet, but you will continue to see us stay very aggressive versus the market. That's our bread and butter. Could we go from 2,500 to 3,000 below market down to 2,000 below market and still get the same kind of market share that we're seeing today? We will definitely play with those numbers as the brand expands across the country and becomes a nationwide known brand. And I might have Steve Wittman just comment quickly on our digital retailing platform. Steve Wittman: Yes, sure. So we've taken a 2-pronged approach to e-commerce here at Sonic Automotive. In parallel, we are improving EchoPark.com and building our proprietary digital retailing tool. Our proprietary digital retailing tool is on track to launch in Q4 of this year. We have a big team of over 50 people of designers, developers and product owners who are working on that right now. And that's really set to deliver a true end-to-end experience for the consumer, without having a lot of human intervention like a lot of our other tools out there have. In parallel, we're improving EchoPark.com. So the EchoPark.com, visits are up 156% versus a year ago, leads are up 111% versus a year ago, and our cars sold from our websites are up 74% versus a year ago. So we're improving EchoPark.com. every single day. And we've actually, for the first time in May and then June and July, we actually generated more leads from EchoPark.com than we did from our third parties, just shows the strength of the website and also shows the strength of our brand. Mark Jordan: Great. Thanks, Steve. Operator: We have no further questions at this time. I'll turn the conference back over to management for any closing remarks. David Bruton Smith: Thank you, everyone, for joining us and have a great rest of your week. Jeff Dyke: Thank you. Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that will conclude today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.
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