Finning International Inc. (FTT) Earnings Call Transcript & Summary
August 9, 2023
Earnings Call Speaker Segments
Operator
operatorWelcome to the Finning International Inc. Second Quarter 2023 Investor Call and Webcast. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the conference over to Greg Palaschuk, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
Greg Palaschuk
executiveGood morning, everyone, and welcome to Finning's second quarter earnings call. Joining me today is Kevin Parkes, our President and CEO. Following our remarks today, we'll open the line to questions. This call is being webcast on finning.com. We have also provided a set of slides that we'll reference during our prepared remarks. The slides are posted on the Investor Relations section of the website. An audio file of this call and accompanying presentation will be archived on our website as well. Before I turn it over to Kevin, I want to remind everyone that some of the statements provided during this call are forward-looking. Please refer to Slides 10 and 11 for important disclosures about forward-looking information as well as currency and specified financial measures, including non-GAAP financial measures. Please note the forward-looking information is subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors as discussed in our annual information form under key business risks and in our MD&A under Risk Factors and Management and forward-looking information disclaimer. Please treat this information with caution as our actual results could differ materially from current expectations. Kevin, over to you.
Kevin Parkes
executivePlease turn to Slide 2. We are very pleased with how our teams continue to execute and deliver strong performance. In quarter 2, we achieved significant revenue growth in all lines of business, led by a 30% increase in product support revenue and strong deliveries from our record equipment backlog. Importantly, we continue to drive strong operating leverage, grow earnings and expand our ROIC. We are pleased to see our quarterly earnings per share reach $1 and our adjusted return on invested capital above 20% for the first time. This is a result of our hard work by our employees and the plan we put in place two years ago to drive product support, lower costs and reinvest compound our earnings. We are carefully managing our costs and given our strong support growth, which is SG&A intensive and inflationary environment, we view 17% SG&A over the last 12 months as a very good outcome, and we believe we have opportunities to continue to find ways to make our cost base more flexible. We are simplifying our strategic priorities: product support, which is the most resilient part of our business and a key driver of earnings remains top of our list, and we're also focused on growing other aspects of our business in a sustainable way. Two areas where we see attractive opportunities are the growing demand for electric power generation in all of our regions and an increasing our participation in the rental and used equipment market to capture a larger share of the retail market and the subsequent aftermarket opportunities. The other key element of our strategy is building greater resiliency into our operating model and more velocity into our invested capital performance to ensure we deliver reliable performance in all market conditions. We're also challenging ourselves to build stronger engagement and greater empowerment of our people, particularly at the front line as this is where the customer experience happens and the strategy is executed. We look forward to providing more details on our strategic priorities at our upcoming Investor Day. Now please turn to Slide 3. Market activity in our regions remains robust, and our outlook is positive. Our order intake is healthy, and our equipment backlog for delivering 2024 continues to grow and now stands at 0.9 billion. We're also seeing broad-based strength in product support with significant levels of demand for service work, including growth in machine rebuilds. We remain diligent in our execution, controlling what we can and continue to optimize our labor and facility productivity, building capabilities and capacity to capture strong demand and grow our share of aftermarket in a thoughtful way. Our absorption ratio, which is a measure we use to measure the profitability of our product support business in the context of our total cost structure has shown significant and sustained positive trends over the past few years. Compared to 2018, our absorption is up 18 percentage points, reflecting improvements we've made in our cost structure and efficiencies in our operations. Given our continued growth, particularly in sectors with longer lead times for equipment and parts, we are very pleased with free cash flow generation in the quarter and remain committed to optimizing working capital through the balance of the year, whilst ensuring we can support our customers. We are optimistic about continued momentum and focused on driving strong performance going forward. We are building our equipment backlog for 2024 and expanding our installed base of equipment. We have recently received significant orders from our mining customers, which will be added to our backlog in quarter 3. We continue to execute on our product support strategy. Our service work in progress balance is up 20% compared to June 2022. We are also pleased with the business performance of our rental and used departments and target them as key growth areas for the future. Our operations continue to hire technicians and expand our product support capabilities and capacity. We added 145 technicians in the first half of the year, growing our technical workforce by 18% since 2021. We currently employ about 5,300 technicians globally. We're also making targeted investments in our facilities to better serve our customers. In Canada, we have just moved into our new RRR facility in Kamloops, with more days and more workshop warehouse space. We expect to be able to hire as many as 100 technicians to work in the new facility. We also plan to expand our capabilities in Antofagasta, Chile over the next couple of years to support the strong outlook for increased copper production and growing mining equipment population. We are excited about the long-term growth opportunities in South America and look forward to demonstrating our strong capabilities in the region when we host our Investor Day and tour in Antofagasta in September. I will now hand it back to Greg to provide a greater level of detail on our second quarter results.
Greg Palaschuk
executiveI'll talk about our second quarter performance in more detail, including our regional results. I'm turning to Slide 4. We're pleased with another strong quarter. Net revenue of $2.6 billion was up 28% from Q2 2022, with strong revenue growth in Canada and South America. Continued disciplined execution of our product support growth strategy once again was a key enabler of strong operating leverage and return on invested capital. Our teams in South America and Canada delivered adjusted ROIC above 26% and 20%, respectively. EPS was up 24% from Q2 2022 at $1 per share. Strong revenue growth and operating margins were partially offset by higher LTIP and higher financing costs year-over-year. We generated $31 million of free cash flow in the second quarter compared to a use of $142 million in Q2 of last year. Our net debt to adjusted EBITDA was 1.8x at the end of June. We were pleased with the strong interest in our $350 million bond offering in May. We secured an attractive rate of 4.45% on a 5-year basis, and the deal was 5x oversubscribed to broad distribution. On Slide 5, you can see changes in our net revenue by line of business and the composition of our backlog by market sector. Revenues were higher in all lines of business from Q2 2022. Product support was up 30%, strong across all regions. Execution of our rebuild strategy has been a key driver. The total number of rebuilds up 25% compared to Q2 of last year. A 29% increase in new equipment sales was led by mining deliveries in Canada and power system sales in all regions. Our equipment backlog of $2.4 billion remains very healthy. We are pleased with our strong mining deliveries in the quarter that expand our equipment population for the long term. Quoting activity and order intake remains strong, and we have already secured additional large mining orders in July. About 60% of our equipment backlog is expected to be delivered in the second half of '23 with the remaining scheduled for 2024. Mining and Power Systems continue to grow in proportion, representing roughly 40% and 25% of the backlog as of June 30th, respectively. Turning to Slide 6, which shows our EBIT performance. Gross profit was up 24% on strong product support and new equipment volumes. As a percentage of net revenue, gross profit was down 70 basis points, primarily due to a high proportion of mining deliveries in the revenue mix. EBIT was up 28% as a percentage of net revenue. Consolidated EBIT margin was 9.4%, which was comparable to Q2 of last year. Moving to our Canadian results and outlook, which was summarized on Slide 7. Net revenue increased 36% from Q2 2022, driven by strong new equipment and product support volumes across all market sectors. New equipment sales were up 84%, led by mining deliveries to oil sand customers. Product support revenue increased 24%, led by mining, including rebuild activity. We're seeing a notable growth in Power Systems business in Canada with Power Systems revenue up 70% from Q2 2022 and backlog up nearly 4x. Operating leverage was strong with SG&A as a percentage of net revenue down significantly from Q2 2022. EBIT as a percentage of net revenue was 9.9% comparable to Q2 of 2022, again due to the higher proportion of mining and the new equipment mix. Canada's adjusted ROIC exceeded 20%, up 280 basis points from Q2 2022, driven primarily by profitability improvements. Our outlook for Western Canada is positive, supported by healthy order activity, record equipment backlog and continued strong demand for product support across all sectors, including component remanufacturing and increased rebill activity. Canada's equipment backlog was up further 4% from March, reflecting strong order intake, including the addition of the remaining Artemis Gold order. Now turning to South America on Slide 8. In functional currency, net revenue increased 28% from Q2 2022, driven primarily by mining product support. Total product support in South America was up 34%. New equipment sales were up 18%, mostly due to higher sales to large contractors supporting mining operations in Chile. EBIT was up 53% as a percentage of net revenue was 12.1%, up 200 basis points from Q2 of last year, attributable to strong growth in product support and improved operating leverage. South America generated ROIC of 26.4%, up 410 basis points from Q2 2022 and the highest level achieved to date. The outlook for Chile mining remains strong, supported by growing demand for copper and improved political clarity. We're encouraged by the recent government approval of large-scale brownfield expansions and increasing customer confidence to invest in new projects and expansions. Mining quota activity is robust. We expect to add significant orders to our equipment backlog in the third quarter of this year. We also continue to see strong demand from large contractors supporting mining operations in Chile, while infrastructure construction activity in Chile is expected to remain stable. In Argentina, with the election process beginning in August and likely concluding in November, there is an increased risk of near-term volatility, particularly in the construction market. We continue to actively manage import regulations, high inflation and challenging fiscal regulatory and currency environment in Argentina. Please turn to Slide 9 for our results in the U.K. and Ireland. In functional currency, net revenue decreased 11% from Q2 of 2022 due to lower new equipment sales in construction. In Q2 of last year, HS2 deliveries drove record equipment sales and EBIT in the UK and Ireland. Product support revenue was up 14%, driven by strong customer activity and equipment utilization across all sectors. Used equipment sales more than doubled compared to Q2 of 2020. EBIT as a percentage of net revenue was a solid 5.5%, reflecting our focus on growing the product support business. Construction markets in the U.K. and Ireland remained stable. Demand for equipment has been resilient. The construction order intake was up 60% from Q1 of 2023, and we expect continued healthy product support activity. With HS2 deliveries complete, we continue to expect lower new equipment sales in the U.K. compared to the record levels of 2022. In Power Systems, we have a solid backlog of projects for delivery in 2023 and 2024. We expect demand in power system markets, including data centers to remain strong. In summary, we're pleased with Q2 results and the momentum in our business. Customer activity levels are high. Our equipment inventory is healthy with a substantial majority committed customer orders with improved political clarity in Chile, they are mobilizing for growth. Canada has a broad-based strength and the U.K. business is resilient. Product support activity continues to be very robust and remain focused on disciplined execution of our product support growth strategy in a thoughtful way. As supply constraints moderate, we're working to reduce our safety stock and normalize our inventory levels while supporting strong business volumes. Before I turn it over to Q&A questions, I'd like to remind everyone that we are excited to be hosting our Investor Day on September 26th in Antofagasta, Chile. A video webcast of our Investor Day will also be available on our website. The investor tour of Mining Operations will include our component rebuild center, Integrated Knowledge Center, workshop, where we are currently delivering 1798 truck per week and our parts distribution center. In addition, we'll be visiting Codelco's Ministro Hales mine that recently announced the submission of a permit to request an expansion and extension. We'll start the afternoon of September 25th and conclude on September 27th. We have a very strong list of attendees that do have the ability to add a few more investors. If you are interested in joining in person, we encourage you to register as soon as possible. Operator, I'll now turn the call back to you for questions.
Operator
operatorWe will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Cherilyn Radbourne with TD Cowen.
Cherilyn Radbourne
analystMy sense based on your MD&A and your comments is really that Canada is the area of most strength and that South America is coming up behind that as some of the political issues start to be alleviated. Maybe you can just elaborate a little bit more on the coding pipeline and what you're seeing from customers in terms of brownfield and then greenfield development in that territory?
Kevin Parkes
executiveThe way we're describing it internally right now is that Canada is very strong and robust across all segments and across all geographies as well. You'd be correct to describe it that way. The way we describe South America right now is mobilizing. As you rightly mentioned, on the back of the political uncertainty and the mining royalty discussions. What we're seeing now is greater commitment to the region, more certainty in terms of brownfield mining and some more discussions around greenfield. It would be true to say that the greenfield mines, apart from QB2, which will be fully operational by the end of the year, which is a significant add to production. Most of the activity and the conversations we're having right now around brownfield expansion, productivity improvements within existing lines. I always point to the fact that the reason when we've had with the biggest copper mine in South America is a significant actions in South America. Yes, hence why we're excited to be taking or inviting investors and analysts to our Investor Day in September. Greg was there just a couple of weeks ago. I was there six weeks ago. You can't help but see the mobilization in action when you spend a couple of days in the region. The other thing I would point to Cherilyn is that brownfield is good for Finning. It means machines are working harder. It means machines are aging. In many cases, all grades are still declining. We're seeing some of the benefits in that in terms of our business performance and our numbers.
Cherilyn Radbourne
analystThen my second question relates to deliveries during the quarter, which were very heavy from a mining perspective in Canada. I'm curious how many of those deliveries were incremental to the installed base and how that compares to what you see in the current backlog?
Greg Palaschuk
executiveYes. I'd say that we're pleased with the deliveries. They would all be described as incremental. If you look at the amount of tonnes being moved in the oil sands, that continues to go up. Those would all be incremental adds. Yes, with the backlog at the level it is, we're always pleased with above $2 billion. We continue to refresh it above $2 billion. There's lots of additional mining orders, both trucks and ancillary equipment for Canada and South America in the mix.
Operator
operatorThe next question comes from Yuri Lynk with Canaccord Genuity.
Yuri Lynk
analystOn product support, extremely impressive growth in the quarter, and you're coming up on some pretty difficult comps. Just wondering how your forward indicators for product support look in terms of service WIP and backlog of rebuilds versus, say, about six months ago?
Kevin Parkes
executiveAs I mentioned in my remarks, we are adding capacity, we talked about the addition of the Kamloops facility and some incremental capacity that we're building into Antofagasta. Technicians are up 18% since 2021, and we've added around 150 technicians this year and continue to add them in a thoughtful way. You mentioned there service work in progress, which is up 20%. That's another good indicator of continued momentum and strength in the product support business, and rebuilds are up double digit as well year-over-year, I think, 25%. We continue to see stickiness in terms of the pivot to rebuilds, particularly in the smaller moving down the range into the construction type of equipment. If we think about branches and buys and technician ads and then the subsequent building in productivity, which then leads to service work in progress. We're very optimistic about the product support business in the second half of the year.
Yuri Lynk
analystJust historically, your clients would generally make a decision between rebuilding a piece, an older piece of equipment or buying a new piece of equipment, just from the numbers, it looks like you're getting both right now, you're getting a lot of rebuilds, and you're getting a lot of new equipment. What's the market dynamic behind what you're seeing today?
Kevin Parkes
executiveWell, I think as CAT said on their call, Yuri, there is still some constrained supply chain that we're working through and we're using our resources in which rental and rebuilds and used equipment are tools we use to manage through and support our customers. For sure, through those kind of supply constrained environments, customers move towards rebuild because it was the best option there. I'd also like to highlight that during that process and our product support strategy execution, we also repositioned the rebuild. As I mentioned, we're rebuilding much smaller equipment than we ever did in the past. We actually have a rebuild factory now for D6s, which would be one of the products that still has quite a long lead time, which is a staple a D6 tractor. I think we've reimagined rebuilds. I think customers who've had a taste of rebuilds like the solution but net-net, customers are looking to build capacity. They're needing to use both levers and including rental news as well to be able to meet the demand in the end markets in the current kind of supply situation.
Operator
operatorThe next question comes from Jacob Bout with CIBC.
Jacob Bout
analystCurious on the feedback you're getting from clients on how they're dealing with pricing. Are you seeing any pushback at this point?
Kevin Parkes
executiveI mean we have to be competitive. I think our order intake and backlog build suggests that we are in the new equipment space. Equally, we're seeing growth in rental and used and product support. I always point to activity levels as a good indicator of our competitive proposition in the marketplace. We're very focused on using all the data we have to analyze what's acceptable in the marketplace. We're equally articulating very clearly where costs have gone up and they need to be absorbed into the broader market. I would suggest that nobody likes to see price increases in the environment that we just worked through, which is normalizing a little right now has been an extraordinary environment. I would say the general market industry, Caterpillar, the dealers, customers have absorbed it very well into their operations.
Jacob Bout
analystAs supply chain availability normalize, it sounds like there will be less rebuilds and we're going to see more pressure on pricing. I mean, how should we think about that? When do you think things are fully going to normalize as far as availability?
Kevin Parkes
executiveI think there are some areas that are, I would describe as normalized right now, particularly in the smaller equipment and excavators in the larger engines and larger mining equipment, they all still have longer and extended lead times than we typically would be used to. As the CEO of the company, I wouldn't describe it as the supply chain improvement as a negative, either from a less rebuild or a pricing perspective. I see supply chain improving as a huge positive for the organization because we're still working in a relatively constrained environment. Supply chain improvement will allow us to do more business and to continue on the growth trajectory that we're on right now. I'm not naive enough to think that there won't be some normalization in a greater competitive environment as well, the supply chains normalize. You are very focused on making sure that our supply chain normalizes as quickly as everybody else's and our current business levels and market share would suggest that we're well placed there. Ultimately, I would not see this as a negative. I mentioned previously, rebuilds, we've reimagined and reposition rebuilds, and we're finding them to be way more sticky than just an alternative to a constrained piece of new equipment. Net-net, we see supply chain improvement as a positive for this, for our organization.
Greg Palaschuk
executiveOur ability to improve velocity and working capital, I think, improves in that environment as well, a big focus area.
Operator
operatorThe next question comes from Michael Doumet with Scotiabank.
Michael Doumet
analystThe question I had was on product support productivity. Kevin, I think you talked about in the last 18 months, having increased the technician staff by nearly 20%. You've also built several new facilities. Are you seeing any productivity or cost absorption headwind as a result? I'm just trying to get a sense for whether that's a margin opportunity.
Kevin Parkes
executiveNo. As I mentioned in my remarks, Michael, we have a measure called absorption, which measures our cost base through the lens of our product support activity, and that continues to increase. Productivity levels are high. We're adding technicians optimizing how we do the work. I mean I can't overemphasize the way that we do the work and move machines around to, we move the work to the people now to make sure they're optimized and the bays are optimized and the labor is optimized. Also the work is being done with the highest capability and also freeing up our field response staff and technicians to respond to breakdowns and field scenarios much faster. No, I think we're seeing continued expansion and grown increases in our absorption ratio. As we become more efficient, and we've got more to do there, for sure. I think you're on the right line in terms of that being an opportunity for us.
Michael Doumet
analystThen maybe just turning to the SG&A. A very good performance overall. SG is going to, obviously, to me, a pretty tricky number to nail down quarter-on-quarter from a modeling standpoint. Obviously, as you spend for growth. Then there's been the restructuring, the variability in LTIP. Maybe, Greg, what are some of the trends we should consider going forward? I wonder if the Q2 SG&A number is a fair number to consider as a high water mark for '23.
Greg Palaschuk
executiveYes. Certainly, the share price performance as well as ROIC, which is also linked to LTIP. Obviously, that was quite a large number in the quarter. I wouldn't expect that every single quarter. That would have put it on the higher side. Also, some of the union activities and agreements would also be in there. Certainly, we're pleased to be at 16.2% per quarter, 17.3% for an LTM and we will continue to drive the 17% and see where we can take it next as we continue to go through. Productivity and SG&A management continues to be the big value driver and important. Certainly, high within the quarter for the reasons I mentioned, and we can definitely continue to focus area.
Operator
operatorThe next question comes from Sherif El-Sabbahy with Bank of America.
Sherif El-Sabbahy
analystI just wanted to ask a bit on seasonality and operating margin. Historically, you typically see your margin ramp from Q1 to Q3 on a sequential basis and then tail off into Q4. Given this year has the impact of very high new deliveries, well product support revenues are also growing. Are you able to give us a sense of what the second half will look like?
Greg Palaschuk
executiveYes, we're edging our way back towards a little more normal seasonality, which would be Q1 is winter in Canada and some slower times in South America in the summer season. That tends to be a little slower, Q2 spring selling season and ramp up it tends to be more activity. Then Q3 is kind of peak rental activity and a really strong quarter. Then Q4 seasonally trends down from an activity level, but sometimes you have some interesting year-end activities with customers with remaining CapEx and whatnot. It can move a little bit. Yes, typical would be Q2 strong, Q3 peak rental and a little higher margins. That would be a typical seasonality, which we're edging more towards. That said, we do have a lot of new equipment that we're delivering, as you saw in Q2, being up 84% in Canada is a big number. We're trying to get that equipment out in customers' hands as quickly as we can. Those are great units to add into the population to start accumulating ours.
Operator
operatorNext question comes from Devin Dodge with BMO Capital Markets.
Devin Dodge
analystDemand for Power Systems continues to be really strong for Finning. We've heard this from others as well. I also heard that lead times for some of the equipment is really stretched out. Just wondering if you could talk about the sustainability of those demand drivers for power systems and if there's optimism that CAT can add capacity to keep up with that demand.
Kevin Parkes
executiveYes, you're correct. I mean we're really happy with the demand in our Power Systems business, and it's across the board. I mean U.K. was always a big part of the business, and they were first out of the block here. The business levels that we're seeing in the other two regions are really encouraging right now. Power Systems account for about 25% of our backlog right now, which has never been that high in the past, and it continues to build. Some of that build is because of the extended lead times for sure. The order intake and the activity levels are very strong. I was talking to the leader of our Canadian Power Systems business just last week. With the outlook for our Canadian power systems is going to be a record all-time year. We see that sustaining. We'll talk about that in greater detail at our Investor Day. Just to give you a few soundbites I mean we look at our Power Systems business in three broad segments or subsegments. The first is the growth in data and data centers and the demand for the processing of data. We have a very good proposition and a track record of market share in terms of supporting power for data centers. That continues to grow and the demand for data when it is only going one way. The second area that we focus on is power resilience. As the world shifts to more renewables, obviously, it also requires more resilience as the renewables are not as reliable as traditional forms of power generation. We feel in a really good space there, and we have some relatively long-term contracts, providing power resilience and support in the grid. A good example of that would be in the UCON. Then the final area is prime power. As transition costs keep going up as energy costs keep increasing. More and more larger facilities are looking at how do they become more power independent and take control of their power requirements, and that's what we call prime power. Lots of opportunities to provide larger facilities with a full comprehensive power generation solution. Not only that, they also have the ability to then use power management software to sell back into the grid and offset some of their investments. Those are the three broad segments. We see all three segments have runway. It's kind of hard to identify the total addressable market because it's so new. The outlook is extremely positive.
Devin Dodge
analystWe've seen spending be really active in its buyback program in Q2, and this seemed like it continued into July. Just wondering is the stock moving higher over the last few months, do you expect capital allocation to become a bit more balanced between stock repurchases and some of your other priorities on a go-forward basis?
Greg Palaschuk
executiveYes. It's something where capital allocation. We'll touch a bit more on the framework at Investor Day, but spoiler alert, it's very similar. We want to grow the dividend on a steady basis. We want to invest organically in the business, which we've done a lot of. Obviously, that started to turn to free cash, and we're pretty optimistic on that outlook going forward given the accumulation of profits we've had over the last couple of years. We've got capital to allocate and deploy and we continue to see share buybacks as a very good way to do that, 7x EBITDA and 12x earnings is attractive. At the end of the day, when we look externally, we can't find businesses as attractive as ours with the dynamics that we've talked about today between Canada, Chile and the U.K. That's that attractive. We continue to see this attractive and we continue to be consistent on that and we think of that as 1% per quarter minimum and then look at the amount of cash that we generate and make choices from there.
Operator
operatorThe next question comes from Steve Hansen with Raymond James.
Steven Hansen
analystLabor cost inflation has been a headline issue across the entire continent of late. There's been some pretty hefty demands being dressed for. Can you just perhaps give us an update as to where you stand from a labor standpoint and any recent negotiations or increases that you might have faced or that you're planning on?
Kevin Parkes
executiveI want to go ahead and say that our labor negotiation teams and our operations teams have done a spectacular job over the last period of time negotiating with our labor agreements in all three regions. I'm pleased to say that we've successfully completed all union negotiations that are ready to be renewed at this moment in time. In fact, we've got ahead of some of the agreements in South America. Then just this week, we signed off on the U.K. and Ireland agreement. Extremely challenging environment with the spike of inflation, as you mentioned, Steve. I think the team took a balanced and fair approach. That's evidenced by the fact that we've managed to reach agreement with all of our unions and still managed to absorb those, what I call, fair and balance, but high labor agreements and into our current operating performance and our financial performance. Absolutely fantastic job by the team.
Steven Hansen
analystYou described some very strong progress earlier on the product support strategy, recent capacity expansions and even filling the labor gap with technician hiring. Can you just give us a sense for how long of a runway you think that gives you before you need to reinvest again or contemplate further expansions in that strategy? I guess just as you look at the broader installed base backlog, et cetera, how long does it give you with the recent investments?
Kevin Parkes
executiveThat's some of the work that we're doing right now. CAT has been public, Steve, about their intention to double services by 2026. That means we've got 2.5 years left of that runway and that includes a double-digit product support growth for dealers within that broader strategy. Right now and through our Investor Day in September, we hope to be able to articulate a clear plan of continued product support growth through that period. Hence, why we're adding the capacity in a thoughtful way. We're also very mindful that we want to make sure that we retain our staff and we provide job security and certainty. We're not chasing every opportunity and every dialogue. We're having very robust conversations with customers and trying to use this opportunity to really integrate and build stronger partnerships with our customers, particularly from a labor perspective. The answer to your question is that we see continued growth rate in product support for the next 2 to 3 years, and we'll thoughtfully add capacity to meet those demands.
Greg Palaschuk
executiveI'd maybe just add that the way we're adding capacity is different than the past. When we open up a new camp with extra capacity, it's taking capacity from four other branches and scaling up very efficiently. As we build a warehouse in Edmonton, it's four warehouses into one and with automation within the warehouse. The way we're adding capacity, I think, is more efficient than ever. It is not just add 20% everywhere. As we highlighted in Investor Day as well, we're adding capacity in the Antofagasta region because you can see clear growth there. We'll kind of walk through that.
Kevin Parkes
executiveThe way I think about it is that we still have some potential ahead of us right now. Some of that is market share, some of it is constrained opportunity. We still have opportunity to build the population, and you're seeing that through the mine influx, but we have opportunities to build population and rental and used are good examples of that. Then the growth in power that I just articulated on the previous question there, that provides another level of installed base that is critical to our continued product support growth.
Operator
operatorThe next question comes from Sabahat Khan with RBC Capital Markets.
Sabahat Khan
analystYou provided some color on Chile and some of the mining activity and talked about some orders. I was wondering if you can maybe dig into the type of orders that you're referring to? Earlier, you had mentioned some of the activity in Chile was a bit slow as the political situation settled out. It sounds like there are some orders coming through. If you can just talk about the nature of those orders are the larger global miners starting to move on some of their plans. Just want to get an understanding of the activity levels and where it's coming from.
Kevin Parkes
executiveAs we think about Chile, we talked about a large framework opportunity this time last year or slightly September time last year, and that continues to be executed, and we look forward to demonstrating how we're executing that in Antofagasta in September. We've got the continued execution of support for QB2, which is the biggest greenfield opportunity that's going to come into production at the end of the year. Aside from that, there's strong activity levels in mining contractors, this mobilization enablement description reduce for Chile right now. For sure, there's been a delayed or a pause whilst the political uncertainty managed through and the the mining royalty was negotiated and agreed. Since then, two things are going to happening. I think activity around greenfield is increasing in terms of discussions. There's a big discussion, it's moving from a economic discussion into a permit in an ESG discussion now, and I'm quite very confident that will move through. You're seeing that through some of the M&A activity and the big miners that are making investments into the commitments into the region. The other thing is just in the meantime, the expansion and the productivity improvements within the brownfield sites, where productivity, they're looking for every opportunity to increase productivity within the scope of mines that they have today, and we are helping them with that with new trucks, with rebuilt trucks with data and site expertise through our IKC operation, which, again, we'll demonstrate in September. I would describe it as like we said, mobilizing and enabling with strong and solid activity in brownfield and encouraging sentiment in terms of greenfield activity.
Sabahat Khan
analystAnd then just one on the new BC facility that Greg mentioned earlier. I guess how should we think about the ramp-up? Is there -- like you mentioned, taking some work away from some of the other facilities, should we think about any sort of SG&A drag as that facility gets to full capacity? Just want to think about how we should model for that addition, if it's material at all.
Greg Palaschuk
executiveYes, I wouldn't think it would be material enough to model, but it's just a good example of the efficiency of which we add capacity. I mean all of the costs, we would have been -- we've been building the branch for two years. We're just at cut over now, so maybe there's some minor duplicate costs. At the end of the day, by the end of the year, it'll be fully up and running and fully transitioned over and more efficient, adding incremental work. It's just an example of how you use the hub-and-spoke model and provide great leverage points at places where you have deep labor pools and can attract labor. It's more of an example than something that necessarily model, but again, just a point around efficiency as we scale.
Operator
operator[Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Max Sytchev with National Bank Financial.
Maxim Sytchev
analystI had a follow-up question in terms of the product support. When we look at historically, we had a much lower sort of pace of growth in PS over the years and then we're sort of seeing this in production. Obviously, there is a lot of changes that have been done internally over the last couple of years. I'm just wondering if there's any risk to pulling towards some of the demand that we had a lot of disruption over the last couple of years, just because, again, when you move to the prior cycle, new sales are up 16% and product support is up 70%. I understand the whole installed base dynamic and I don't think anybody wants the imagination where that can go. I'm just wondering if you can maybe provide some sort of high-level comments in terms of how you see the product support dynamic and some of the reasons for the growth.
Kevin Parkes
executiveAs I've mentioned previously, along with Caterpillar, we have a very clear strategy to do all services to $28 billion by 2026. Of course, that's done through the dealers, and we're a big part of that. We're a big part of Caterpillar business. Finning needs to deliver on those on their fair share of that growth. I'm pleased to say that we've done that for a number of years now coming out of the back of the pandemic. We continue to do that, and we're really, really pleased with the product support levels that we saw in Q2. We're very focused on sustaining the growth trajectory in product support. For sure, that growth trajectory will moderate over time as the market has the available market shrinks and obviously, we've had the tailwinds of some pricing inflation as well. We're very focused on growing our product support business. Peak is not a word that we use. Product support peak is not a word we use if any right now. We're very committed to continued growth, and we'll articulate that in the Investor Day. That's why we're adding capacity. That's why we've got this record backlog that we continue to, we're really happy that our backlog has been over $2 billion for more than a year now. We continue to have strong equipment deliveries. As Greg mentioned, which of that is incremental, which is fantastic. We continue to add to the backlog. It's a little lumpy because of the nature of the mining opportunity and the extended lead times in some of the products. It all plays to the fact that we're growing the installed base, we're winning market share. We're adding capabilities and capacity. We're not really looking back at the prepricycles because the business is so much different than it was in the past. The installed base is very different, too.
Operator
operatorThis concludes the question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Greg Palaschuk for any closing remarks.
Greg Palaschuk
executiveThat concludes our call for today. Thanks for your participation, and have a safe day.
Operator
operatorThis concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your lines. Thank you for participating, and have a pleasant day.
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