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Operator: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Neogen Third Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] This call is being recorded on Thursday, April 9, 2026. I would now like to turn the conference over to Scott Gleason, Head of Investor Relations at Neogen. Please go ahead. Scott Gleason: Thank you for joining us this morning for the discussion of our fiscal third quarter 2026 earnings. I'll briefly cover the non-GAAP and forward-looking language before passing the call over to our CEO, Mike Nassif; and our CFO, Bryan Riggsbee. Before the market opened today, we published our third quarter results as well as a presentation with both documents available in the Investor Relations section of our website. On our call this morning, we will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures that we believe are useful in evaluating our performance. Reconciliations of historical non-GAAP financial measures are included in our earnings release and the presentation, Slide 2 of which provides a reminder that our remarks will include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks that could cause actual results to be materially different from those expressed in or implied by such forward-looking statements. These risks include, among others, matters that we have described in our most recent annual report on Form 10-K and in other filings we make with the SEC. We disclaim any obligation to update these forward-looking statements. I'm now pleased to turn the call over to our CEO, Mike Nassif. Mikhael Nassif: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I'm happy to report that we delivered solid core growth in our Food Safety segment again this quarter, including continued growth in the United States. And our growth in the quarter was consistent with current market dynamics. This is an important milestone to achieve our goal of above-market growth. We improved our adjusted EBITDA margins to some of the highest levels in recent company history at 22.8% through cost discipline. This bodes well for our future as we look to accelerate top line growth in fiscal year 2027 and beyond and helps demonstrate the inherent financial leverage in the business. At the same time, we encountered several supplier challenges stemming from third-party manufacturers that unfortunately had a meaningful impact on our Animal Safety business. While many of these issues were outside of our direct control, they don't meet the standards we've established as an organization. So in response, we've implemented a more rigorous supplier qualification and review process to strengthen reliability going forward. Meeting our customer needs remains our highest priority, and we're addressing these challenges head on with urgency and discipline. As we look at our transformation journey, we continue to be focused on 3 major strategic initiatives to stabilize and strengthen our mission as the market leader in food safety. First, commercial prowess. We're strengthening our sales and marketing engine by deploying an enhanced go-to-market strategy. We're introducing a global solutions-based selling model that will fully leverage our market leadership position, implement rigorous metric-driven performance tracking and continue to invest in talent and capabilities of our commercial team. Second, high-impact innovation. We're building the foundation for true organic innovation for the first time at Neogen. This means identifying the products and technologies that can expand our addressable markets, advance our technology leadership and differentiation and unlock new growth opportunities within our core channel. And finally, operational efficiency. We're simplifying and fortifying our enterprise processes to drive stronger efficiency and execution. Our key operational initiatives include advancing and scaling our S&OP process, completing the transition of our manufacturing operations and refining our budgeting and forecasting processes. We're already preparing for fiscal 2027 and pursuing technology enhancements and consolidation opportunities that can further streamline operations. Together, these 3 initiatives paint the picture of how we're upgrading our capabilities and solutions across the organization to be best-in-class. I'll start with our first growth initiative, commercial prowess. First, I think it's important to highlight that Neogen has a strong commercial foundation for us to build upon with the most comprehensive portfolio of high-quality integrated solutions in food safety, unparalleled technical expertise and standard setting guidance and best-in-class global education, training and implementation support. These foundational elements provide a strong launching platform for our next-generation commercial engine. Additionally, as we have previously announced, we've added 2 outstanding leaders to our commercial organization. Tammi Ranalli, our new General Manager of Global Food Safety; and Joe Freels, our new Chief Commercial Officer. Tammi and Joe have been conducting a comprehensive review of our global go-to-market strategy. These leaders know what good looks like and are leading our commercial transformation on a day-to-day basis. As we assess our presence across countries and customer segments, a clear theme has emerged. It's time to optimally realign our resources from either a geographic or revenue exposure standpoint. To address this, we intend to reallocate investment towards the markets, product lines and customer segments that deliver the most significant impact on our ability to grow while allowing us to provide better customer service. In certain regions, partnering through distribution can be a more effective playbook. This allows us to streamline our cost structure and improve the level of service we deliver to customers in those areas. I implemented a similar approach when I led the Siemens Point-of-care Diagnostics business, and it resulted in significantly improved operating performance, a more efficient organization overall and a better ability to meet our customers' needs. From a sales and operations perspective, Neogen has historically operated in a siloed manner with limited process standardization or resource alignment across geographies. Tammi and Joe are developing global standards and a unified solutions-based selling framework for our teams. We believe this approach is the most effective way to differentiate Neogen competitively and to fully leverage 2 of our core strengths, the breadth of our portfolio and our expanding commitment to innovation. We will support these solutions with rigorous metric-based analysis and disciplined performance management. Joe and Tammi continue their weekly meetings to evaluate our critical sales KPIs such as total funnel size, funnel additions and funnel wins. This process rigor has been the biggest contributor to our improved execution in food safety to date and still has significant room for further improvement. Now for our second initiative, high-impact innovation. Our Chief Scientific Officer, Jeremy Yarwood, is leading a comprehensive assessment of our existing portfolio, opportunities for organic innovation and areas where externally developed technologies could be licensed and applied within food safety. The goal of this component of our transformation strategy is clear: to enhance our current offering, enable entry into attractive markets and strengthen Neogen's competitive differentiation through unique technology solutions. At the heart of our innovation strategy, we always consider our customer needs and requirements first. One area where we see a meaningful early opportunity is Petrifilm. We believe the applications for Petrifilm extend well beyond traditional food and beverage testing into additional consumer product categories like pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, nutraceuticals and other consumer product categories. In the future, with full control of our manufacturing process, we'll qualify and validate new custom SKUs within the established Petrifilm framework, something that wasn't possible historically. In prior years, several major customers approached us seeking custom SKUs tailored to their testing needs. But because we didn't have control of production, we couldn't respond. That constraint will soon be removed. To accelerate this development, in the fourth quarter of fiscal year '26, we're investing in a research scale R&D line at our Minnesota research facility. This will allow us to rapidly prototype, test and validate new SKUs without disrupting commercial production. As our new facility in Lansing becomes operational, it will support our current and future volumes utilizing highly automated production lines with a capacity of multiples of our current commercial volume. As a result, in addition to the structural efficiencies gained from bringing manufacturing in-house, the contribution margin on incremental Petrifilm revenue is exceptionally high. Incremental volume growth can be a meaningful impact on our transformation and our ability to achieve our longer-term margin objectives. We'll plan to share more details on our plans around innovation and customer technology solutions as we progress through the calendar year. But at a high level, beyond best-in-class sales and service, differentiated products and technologies remain the most critical drivers to position Neogen as the category leader in food safety. Now let's turn to our third initiative, operational efficiency. Here's an update on our Petrifilm manufacturing transition and our core enterprise capabilities. We're right on schedule for the planned November '26 transition. I'm highly encouraged by the disciplined oversight from our operations and R&D teams and the significant momentum we continue to build. First, we've now completed full validation of 100% of the production equipment utilized in the Petrifilm manufacturing process. Additionally, this quarter, we initiated the validation process for our current 17 SKUs, beginning with the highest volume and most technically challenging products. We are actively conducting both operational performance validation on multiple SKUs to ensure full manufacturing transition by this fall. It's important for us to complete all of the product validations before commercial production and scale up to ensure we have a robust process in place and to prevent commercial production from interfering with the validation process. We continue to believe that the scale of investment required and the considerable technical complexity associated with reproducing this manufacturing process creates an almost insurmountable barrier to entry, replicating the level of precision and quality achieved through our Petrifilm platform would be exceptionally challenging for any competitor, let alone a subscale provider. In addition, we look forward to hosting 2 upcoming investor tours at our Lansing manufacturing facility in partnership with our covering analysts. These tours will give investors a firsthand view into the sophistication of the operation and the progress we are making. From an inventory management and sales operations planning perspective, we continue to make meaningful progress even as reported inventory levels remain flat sequentially. Our objective is to build an enterprise-level end-to-end controlled supply chain. We believe these initiatives will drive lower cost of goods sold through increased automation and procurement optimization, enable faster and more reliable global fulfillment and most importantly, enhance the overall customer experience. As part of this transformation, we are moving toward a centralized planning model supported by AI-enabled logistics and supply chain software tools to improve efficiency and decision-making. In parallel, we are strengthening supplier management with rigorous controls around cost, quality and performance while also simplifying an overly complex warehousing and logistics footprint to reduce both cost and operational complexity. We expect to complete the implementation of this new operating model by the end of the calendar year, and we believe it will have a lasting impact on both our cost structure and our ability to serve customers more effectively. Now I want to address the backorder challenges we experienced in our Animal Safety business. The issues stem primarily from disruptions at our third-party suppliers that related to product documentation, raw material shortages and delays tied to supplier manufacturing site transitions. These are further compounded by supplier shifts driven by global tariff changes. Here's what we're doing about it. We're conducting a rigorous review of our supplier qualifications processes and strengthening the controls necessary to ensure we're consistently positioned to meet customer needs going forward. And finally, as part of our operational efficiency, our fiscal 2027 budgeting and forecasting cycle is well underway. I've asked our leaders to do 2 things: first, to scrutinize spending with a focus on value-creating activities; and second, to take a strategic view of where technological innovation, enhanced enterprise capabilities and strengthened processes can drive meaningful long-term efficiencies. This will ultimately allow us to allocate more resources towards growth and innovation. Today, about 56% of our operating expenses are tied to salaries and benefits. This level reflects underinvestment in process automation and modern technology solutions. Achieving sustainable efficiency gains will require a degree of near-term investment and transformation-related spending. The longer-term returns from these initiatives are likely to exceed what we could achieve through acquisitions or even through internal product innovation alone. We are currently evaluating a number of areas for AI and technology implementation. These include customer service, finance process automation, sales operations and planning, research and development and technical service applications. Consistent with our historical practice, we expect this transformation-related spend to be excluded from our adjusted financials as we view it as a temporary requirement to build the foundation for a more scalable business. However, in any scenario, we believe the total magnitude of spend in these areas is positioned to decline going forward, and we continue to anticipate significant improvements in free cash flow next year. Given the large number of initiatives we have ongoing pertaining to sales and marketing, our innovation strategy and enhancing our operational efficiency, we are excited to host an Investor Day this fall to give investors a better sense of the impact our transformation is having and our long-term financial outlook. Since the day I arrived, I've been convinced that our challenges are solvable, our industry secular growth drivers are strong and our ability to execute will ultimately drive our success. While there is still meaningful work ahead, we all know turnarounds are never linear. The progress underway is substantial. And while our early wins aren't always immediately visible on our financial results, what is clear is this, our unwavering commitment to build a stronger, more innovative and efficient company for all stakeholders. The impact of the changes we're implementing today will become increasingly evident as we enter the next fiscal year and beyond. And now I'll turn the call over to Bryan. R. Riggsbee: Thank you, Mike, and thanks to all of you participating in the call today. I'm pleased to provide an overview of our financial results and outlook for fiscal year 2026. We delivered third quarter revenue of $211.2 million, representing a 0.1% increase on a core basis. As Mike noted, we saw continued strong core growth in our Food Safety segment, while supply chain disruptions within our Animal Safety segment had a significant impact on our results in the quarter. At the segment level, our Food Safety business delivered $156.7 million in revenue for the quarter, representing 4% core growth, consistent with the second quarter and relatively in line with current market growth rates. Performance was led by continued strength in our indicator testing and culture media products, which were up 11% and strong growth in pathogen test kits, which are included in bacteria and general sanitation. From a macro standpoint, as the year started, market commentary from several major food producers was generally positive. Many reported flat volumes, an improvement from the persistent declines observed over the past 3 years and several guided to a return to volume growth in calendar year 2026. Recent public comments from companies like Conagra and General Mills show the operating environment has deteriorated with supply chain and logistics cost pressures mounting as a result of the war with Iran. Fuel and fertilizer costs are rising, which is having a meaningful impact on margins for our customers. Other signs of market disruptions include factory consolidations, increased focus on cost management initiatives and restructuring across the food production landscape. Given these factors, we continue to maintain a measured view on the macro backdrop for our food safety customers. Food safety continues to be a top priority for our customers and a clear area of competitive differentiation. As an example, Nestle recently highlighted that the latest infant formula recall is expected to result in approximately $350 million in lost sales across 2025 and 2026, which does not include the additional financial costs associated with managing the recall itself. At an industry level, recall activity is also increasing. The total number of food recalls rose by roughly 15% from 2024 to 2025, and more significantly, the volume of food recalled by the FDA more than doubled year-over-year. These trends reinforce how essential reliable food safety solutions are for producers and the critical role we play in helping them maintain trust, compliance and brand protection. Quarterly revenue in our Animal Safety segment totaled $54.5 million with core revenue declining 8.7% compared to the prior year period. As mentioned earlier, supplier-related disruptions had a significant impact on the results in our Animal Safety business. If you exclude these impacts in the quarter, core growth in Animal Safety would have been more consistent with where we were in the second quarter of this fiscal year from a year-over-year growth perspective. We are beginning to see some encouraging signs in the Animal Safety end markets. Although U.S. production animal herd sizes remain near record lows, sustained strength in meat demand and pricing has materially improved producer profitability. In addition, USDA projections indicate that herd sizes may be nearing a cyclical bottom with growth expected beyond 2026 as ranchers reinvest to meet elevated global protein demand. These trends support a more constructive outlook for the segment over the medium term. From a regional perspective, U.S. revenue was 48% of total sales in the quarter, and our international revenue was 52%. Importantly, U.S. Food Safety once again grew in the third quarter, consistent with the second quarter. We saw strong growth in both EMEA and Latin America in the quarter, and the supplier issues in Animal Safety disproportionately impacted the domestic business in the quarter, given sales are predominantly based in the U.S. Gross margin in the third quarter was 46.9% and adjusted gross margin was 51.7%. On a year-over-year basis, our gross margins, excluding onetime costs, were essentially flat. This quarter, we did not make as much progress as planned on sample collection margin improvement, and it still generated a negative gross margin. We faced higher scrap rates on certain sample collection products due to a quality issue at a third-party supplier, which has now been addressed. We continue to be optimistic about our ability to drive improvement for sample collection margins through a combination of growth and potential automation investments in the upcoming fiscal year. Adjusted EBITDA was $48.2 million in the quarter, representing a margin of 22.8%, an improvement of almost 110 basis points on a sequential basis from the second quarter despite lower revenue. This change is reflective of a decline in adjusted operating expenses, which were down 9% from second quarter levels, showing strong cost control. Of note, $1 million of the sequential decline was due to nonrecurring credits, which will not repeat in future periods. Third quarter adjusted net income and adjusted earnings per share were $19.4 million and $0.09 per share, respectively. Turning to the balance sheet. We closed the quarter with $800 million of gross debt, 68% of which is fixed rate and a total cash balance of $159.9 million. We remain fully compliant with all debt covenants and believe we are well positioned to further strengthen our balance sheet as free cash flow continues to improve. As previously announced, we entered into an agreement to divest our genomics business unit, which generated approximately $90 million in revenue in fiscal year 2025 and delivered adjusted EBITDA margins in the mid-teens. The announced sale price for the business is $160 million with expected net proceeds of approximately $140 million after transaction costs and taxes. We expect the transaction to close in the second quarter of fiscal 2027. We intend to use net proceeds from the sale to reduce debt, and we anticipate our net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio will decline to below 3x by the end of calendar 2026. Free cash flow in the third quarter was $11.1 million and is now positive for the year. We continue to expect improvements in cash flow trends going forward due to reduced CapEx following the completion of our Petrifilm equipment and construction costs as well as the elimination of duplicative manufacturing costs. Turning to our guidance. We're raising our full year fiscal 2026 revenue guidance to reflect our stronger-than-expected third quarter results. We now anticipate full year revenue to be in the range of $857 million to $860 million. With respect to this guidance, it's important to consider the evolving foreign exchange environment. Following the sharp decline in the U.S. dollar index last year and more recently, the strengthening we have seen in the dollar, we expect the currency tailwinds that have supported noncore growth to diminish meaningfully beginning next quarter. This dynamic will impact both reported growth rates and our full year revenue outlook. As a reminder, approximately 40% of our revenue is generated in non-U.S. dollar currencies. And on a sequential basis, the current level of the dollar index represents a modest headwind to noncore growth. In addition, we anticipate continued impact from certain supply-related challenges in our Animal Safety business that affected results this quarter. As Mike noted, we are also implementing several changes across the sales organization, including leadership transitions following our global talent review. Taken together, we believe it is prudent to take a more conservative view for the fourth quarter. We have also received questions regarding the conflict involving Iran and the potential implications for our business. Revenue exposure to countries within the conflict zone is immaterial, totaling less than $0.5 million annually. As for the potential impact of higher energy and oil prices on plastic components, today, we source approximately $40 million annually in plastic OEM products, and we currently hold 6 to 9 months of inventory for these components. As a result, the duration of elevated oil prices would need to be prolonged to meaningfully impact our cost structure. It is important to note that raw material costs represent only one component of our suppliers' total cost base alongside labor and overhead. And even under a more adverse scenario, we believe any impact would be manageable, and we would have the ability to partially offset increased cost through pricing actions, if necessary. Where we are seeing more tangible pressure is in global logistics and freight, given disruptions around key global transit routes such as the Suez Canal and the impact of higher energy prices on transportation rates. Currently, we are experiencing freight and transportation cost increases in the high single-digit to low double-digit range. At current rates, the aggregate impact equates to approximately $1.5 million per quarter in incremental freight and transportation costs. In light of these headwinds, we are maintaining our adjusted EBITDA guidance of $175 million for fiscal year 2026. I'll now hand the call back to Mike for some final thoughts. Mikhael Nassif: Thanks, Bryan. I'm really proud of our team, and I'd like to take this opportunity to thank our dedicated employees. We're committed to creating outstanding stakeholder and customer value as the clear market leader in Food Safety. Our industry is driven by powerful secular trends, and we offer the broadest and highest quality products. Our primary barrier to unlocking our full potential has been operational execution. And as you've just heard, we're making rapid and meaningful progress. We'll finish this year as a stronger, leaner and more capable organization. This foundation will enable us to enter the next phase of our transformation, accelerating growth and leadership through technology and product innovation. And with that, I'll now turn things over to the operator to begin the Q&A. Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Subbu Nambi with Guggenheim. Subhalaxmi Nambi: A couple of cleanup questions. The Petrifilm and duplicative costs were expected to step up, and they did, but the tariff cost and the sample handling expenses did come as a surprise, which sample handling looks like it's solved for. But could you walk us through what's driving those? And what's your line of sight to further costs for 4Q? R. Riggsbee: Yes. Thanks, Subbu. Yes, I think we talked about a little bit on the call some of the issues that we had in sample collection during the quarter. We made -- some of those have resolved themselves. I would not expect it to step up from where we're at, and I would expect it to improve sequentially as we get to the fourth quarter. Subhalaxmi Nambi: And then just any of these like unexpected third-party supply issues that was tied once you have taken stock of the whole animal safety supplier issue? What gives you the confidence that you'll be able to move through this quickly, just given the history of these costs mainly on margins and concerns for investors? Mikhael Nassif: Yes, Subbu, I'll take that, and thank you for the question. Yes, I mean, again, the challenges with the quarter on Animal Safety were supply side, not a demand issue. Our ordering patterns continue to be pretty encouraging. So our focus is really on addressing the 3 supplier issues. The first has to do with the key instrument supplier transitioning manufacturing locations to reduce tariffs impact. So there's been some start-up challenges that they've had. Second, we're all aware of the global vitamin A shortage. So that's affected several of our products and some constraints. And third, a fairly substantial partner of ours in sodium bicarb is transitioning production and they're running into some issues. So we've strengthened our -- on our side, our supplier management and making sure we're partnering and understanding so that we can do a better job at predicting in our forecast. I think we missed that a little bit in Q3. We were surprised by some of these supplier challenges, which we won't repeat again in Q4. Now in Q4, given the uncertainty and these things being out of our control, we have built that into the guide, and we're really thinking along the lines of being meaningfully measured as we do that. I can't give you a specific number with regards to what we expect as recovery at this point in time. We're certainly working towards that, but we do expect the challenges to continue in Q4 as these suppliers are working through it. Subhalaxmi Nambi: Super helpful. One cleanup question. On the slide deck, you say Petrifilm will be done in November 2027. I feel you meant November fiscal year 2027, right? Mikhael Nassif: Yes, surprised, no. That's I hope -- it's November 2026. We're on track. Maybe what we were trying to say is that in addition to that, we continue our 3M agreement until August of 2027 as an "insurance policy" for any disruption we may have. Operator: Your next question comes from Bob Labick with CJS Securities. Bob Labick: Congratulations on another strong quarter. R. Riggsbee: Thanks Bob. Bob Labick: Okay. Great. Just to make sure you hear me. So obviously, with this solid core growth for the second quarter in a row of 4% in Food Service, after 1 quarter, you weren't there yet, but are you in a position to say you're able to sustain top line core growth in Food Service going forward? And how should we think about the core growth over the next 12 months in terms of potential headwinds and tailwinds and any unusual comps that we should keep in mind? Mikhael Nassif: Well, thank you for that question, Bob. And I'll let -- I'll give you some thoughts and let Bryan jump in. First, let me address your second part. I mean, we're not going to -- we're not prepared to give guidance for next year at this point in time. We'll do that during our Investor Day. But to speak to Food Safety, I think that, as I said on the earnings call, our focus on commercial execution and really driving the discipline and leveraging the breadth of our portfolio has enabled us to deliver another quarter of in line with market growth on Food Safety. Now I expect that to continue. As Tammi and Joe are working through the reorganization and looking at where we can reallocate resources to drive quicker -- faster growth, we're looking at the optimization of our portfolio where we're looking to drive higher-margin products. I think that we can expect there to be more upside as we go through to accelerate that growth. And so I think the overall market on the end market piece, we see the food safety continue to be fairly stable. I'd say it's in the lower single digits at this point in time. We do hear food producers are reporting that they see volumes being flat versus declining historically. I think the tone of our customers is improving. Of course, the current macroeconomic environment and Iran and oil and all those things are creating some cost pressures and unknowns for us. But we continue to be excited about food safety and our position as the only market leader with the broadest portfolio to meet customer needs. So more to come on the Investor Day, but we feel good. But certainly, we're happy but not satisfied, and we're going to continue to push on our market leadership in food safety. And Bryan, I don't know if there's anything else you want to add. R. Riggsbee: Yes. No, I think we've seen nice -- for a few quarters now, nice growth on the Food Safety side. As Mike mentioned earlier, I'm not going to get beyond Q4, but we expect the Animal Safety issues to not fully resolve during the quarter. I think it doesn't impact the core growth number that we report, but the only thing I would just highlight is that the commentary around FX becoming a headwind versus a tailwind that we've seen. So that will impact the reported numbers. Bob Labick: Okay. Great. And then just, I guess, my follow-up, another question. You mentioned in the prepared remarks, certainly driving innovation. And then you also mentioned a research line for Petrifilm, which sounds like a wonderful idea to keep production going. Can you talk about the kind of the CapEx for that? And I think you said you expect free cash flow to grow in fiscal '27. So maybe kind of tie all of those things together for us, please. R. Riggsbee: Yes. I would say the CapEx will be in our FY '26 CapEx number. We do expect CapEx to step down next year as we get past the projects, the larger Petrifilm manufacturing facility ramp up. And given that we're at a positive free cash flow level now for the year, year-to-date, we would expect that to step up next year as profitability continues to improve and as CapEx ramps down. Bob Labick: Okay. Great. So the research line is not a major investment. It's just an opportunity to continue. R. Riggsbee: Yes. It's just incremental. It's not a material change to what we had talked about before. Mikhael Nassif: But it has a significant impact on accelerating Petrifilm innovation. And we believe that, that's extremely important for the future growth of our food safety portfolio. Operator: Your next question comes from Brandon Vazquez, William Blair. Brandon Vazquez: Mike, maybe can I start with you, and I wanted to start a little bit higher level. You've been in the seat about 6 or 7 months now. Just reflect a little bit on what things within the organization have changed that are kind of working? Like what things are allowing you to execute a little bit better than we've seen historically for Neogen? And then spend a minute on like what's left. You're talking a little bit about go-to-market strategy evaluation, things like that. What work is left to be done still? And just spend a little bit of time around that first. Mikhael Nassif: Sure, Brandon. Thanks for the question. I would say that 7 months in, I continue to believe based on everything that I've learned so far that purely our challenges are operational. They're internally related. And from the start and having been in other turnarounds, I discussed sort of the approach on driving the top line to create oxygen to allow us to run a more efficient organization and kick off more cash. And we are implementing that strategy. I spoke a little bit today around commercial prowess, operational efficiency and really focusing on innovation. So as we are strengthening our commercial acumen and becoming more focused on higher-growth markets, managing better in our operating expenses, we need to start now to think about innovation to accelerate growth in ' 28, '29 and '30 and beyond. So I think where we've been able to really push hard, you're seeing the results of that. So I think the second quarter of solid growth in food safety is representative. But I would say we're just getting started. Tammi and Joe are really digging in. They're optimizing the commercial organization. We're looking to flex the portfolio. Again, you guys know this, Neogen has got the broadest portfolio in food safety. We have the ability to provide end-to-end solutions. I'm not sure we always flex that portfolio the way that we should. And so we are very much focused on doing that and changing how we go to market. And all of those things are remaining to be done. And so I would say what I would "a quick wins" I think we've kind of captured those. And now we're in a part of taking those best practices and just back to basics and scaling them. And as you know, scaling takes some time. And I think we're in that phase now. And so no turnaround is linear, but we're going to continue to focus on those areas and scaling them across the organization in the various regions. Brandon Vazquez: Okay. And Bryan, for you, as I look at the implied guidance on adjusted EBITDA, you had talked a lot of moving pieces in Q4, whether it's the OpEx line or maybe some margin headwinds, things like that. I want to ask it a little bit more direct. I know you're not going to give us '27 on this call, but I think a lot of us are going to start building our model off of the Q4 EBITDA line, right? So like just maybe like walk us through, help us think of like what things impacting the Q4 profitability implied in guidance are transient, which ones are going to linger into fiscal '27, so we can understand to what degree this Q4 EBITDA number is like a good jumping point we should use as we build our model going forward into fiscal '27? R. Riggsbee: Yes. Thanks for the question. I think a few things that I would highlight. I think, first of all, when you look at -- we talked about it on the call, the onetime credit that we had in the quarter, that was about $1 million. We talked about the freight and transportation step-up that we're seeing. We characterize that as about $1.5 million. We had a partial -- because of the way the quarter straddles, the months, we -- our merit impact will have some incremental impact from some of our employee costs in the quarter, given the fact that we had 2 months of it in the last quarter, we'll have an incremental month. So that's a bit of a headwind. And then we finally have finished building out the lead team. And so we have a little bit of incremental cost related to that. But I think the sum of those things is probably what reconciles it for you relative to kind of where you were before in terms of Q4, that's at least a few million dollars there. And that's the way that I would probably think about it. Hope that's helpful. Brandon Vazquez: Okay. Yes. And maybe I'll sneak one last one in. Mike, as you talk about kind of go-to-market strategy evaluation, I'm kind of curious what might that entail? Like I guess part of the question that I'm asking is, is it possible in the next quarter or 2 that there's some bigger commercial changes that might be made to the organization that may take a little time to take root? Mikhael Nassif: Yes. No. So I don't see the changes we're making as disruptive as much as they are more additive and sort of accelerating where we see opportunity. So the overall strategy of our go-to-market is pretty simple. It's identifying the markets where we see significant market opportunity, evaluating our presence, adding resources to capture or exceed market growth, looking at markets where maybe the market opportunity is not as substantial, evaluating our cost structure in those markets and saying, is our cost structure aligned with the market opportunity? And then third, looking at markets where the market opportunity is not great and maybe our revenue is not there, but our cost structure is too high. How do we transition that to a partner, reallocate those savings and put it in the markets where we see accelerated growth. So I don't see that disruption as really just realigning and reinforcing the markets where we see accelerated growth. Does that help, Brandon? Brandon Vazquez: Yes. Operator: Your next question comes from Thomas DeBourcy with Nephron Research. Tom DeBourcy: I'll just ask 2 upfront. So first, just on adjusted gross margin. It seems like clear sequential trajectory upwards. And question there is really even with, I guess, integration or some disruption, your ability to sustain, even, I guess, above 50% adjusted gross margins? And then the second question, just on the sale of the genomics business. It looks like it may be actually accretive on an earnings basis given the cost of debt. But just whether that's the case? And is there additional portfolio rationalization in Animal Safety products, whether through divestiture or through just, I guess, end-of-lifeing low-margin products? R. Riggsbee: Yes. Thanks, Thomas. I'll start. I guess to your first question around the adjusted gross margin, yes, we were very pleased with the performance. I think you're thinking about it the right way, too, in terms of sustaining above 50% because we're going to have fluctuation from quarter-to-quarter. So I wouldn't focus so much on that as I would on the fact that sustaining it at that higher level, I think that's the right way to think about it. Because if you look at the current quarter, we probably had some favorable mix in there given the food safety growth, that's a higher-margin business relative to the Animal Safety business, which was down in the quarter. So I think that's the first question. And then I think the short answer on your second question around the genomics sale is, yes, accretive and positive impact from that divestiture. Mikhael Nassif: Yes, Tom, just when you look at the margin structure for the genomics business, we've talked about both the gross margin and operating margins for that business on an operating margin basis, the adjusted operating margins being in the mid-teens. So that's obviously below the corporate average. And then as we look at from a total expense standpoint, there is some allocated corporate overhead that goes away with that as well. And so that's really what drives the accretion. Operator: Your next question comes from David Westenberg with Piper Sandler. David Westenberg: Congrats on another nice beat here. So you raised the guide by a little bit more than the beat, implying maybe that Animal Safety issue might be resolved in the next quarter or so. Is that a great way to read it? And then also with kind of the beat, I know you mentioned kind of the freight costs and some of the other stuff, onetime items. Is there any other reason why you wouldn't get more operating leverage with the -- with revenue going up there in Q4? R. Riggsbee: Yes. I think the implied guide is a slight increase from Q3 to Q4 in terms of the top line revenue. So there will be some leverage that you should get -- you should see there, but it's not a meaningful step-up in terms of the revenue. I think that the guidance really implies continued food safety growth around the levels where we are currently. And we don't expect the full benefit of the Animal Safety resolution in the current quarter is the way we think about it. And then as I noted as well, the fact that we've started to turn from an FX tailwind to a headwind is also a thing that we thought about as we looked at where we're going to land the year. David Westenberg: Got you. Well, you guys -- I mean, on Brandon's question, you talked a lot about kind of some of the margin headwinds in Q4. Can you talk about as we're building 2027 to thinking about the margin expansion opportunities? I mean, I know Petrifilm is now getting in-house or transitioning to you. Is there any other ways of thinking about margin expansion opportunities in '27? R. Riggsbee: Yes. I mean I think that a couple of things. First of all, from a gross margin perspective, I think that we should be getting past the issues that we've had with sample collection. We should see Petrifilm. We've said that should be margin expansive once we've in-sourced that. So those are helpful. And then on the OpEx side, we continue to evaluate the cost structure there. I think one of the things is we saw the impact of the restructuring that we did back in the fall with -- part of that was we were looking at taking out, I think it was around $25 million, but also with some add-backs for areas where we thought we had gaps. And so you started to see some of that sort of flow through as well in terms of the investments that we've made. But I think we -- in terms of the go-to-market strategy that Mike has talked about earlier, that's obviously a more efficient way of operating in a lot of places, given the fact that you may go through distributor versus going direct, that sort of thing. So I think we have opportunity remaining on the OpEx side. Mikhael Nassif: Yes. I would add a couple of other things that are also extremely important and we're focused on, and we've talked a little bit about it. I would say more in a purchase price variance. So we're really digging into that and looking at our supplier base and trying to understand how can we improve that. That will be -- that's a huge focus now as we think about '27. I think another big one is inventory. So we definitely talked about inventory and the challenges we've had. I think the write-offs are obviously very visible, and we're aware of those, and we're working through them. But I think the way that I would see that in '27 is there's certainly been a lot of legacy raw materials that have been a big part of our inventory. And as those make it the finished goods and we start to calibrate our production to reduce inventory in '27, we should start to see the benefits of those. It's hard to see them right now because they're currently in progress. But as we transition into '27, we should start to see a meaningful decline in our finished goods inventory, which will manifest itself in an improved margin. So those are 2 other areas I would add that we're thinking through for next year. Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call over to Scott Gleason for closing remarks. Scott Gleason: Thank you for joining us today, and we look forward to following up with a lot of you after the call here. Have a great day. Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating and ask that you please disconnect your lines.
Operator: Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to PriceSmart, Inc.'s Earnings Release Conference Call for the Second Quarter of Fiscal Year 2026, which ended on February 28, 2026. After remarks from our company's representatives, David Price, Chief Executive Officer; and Gualberto Hernandez, Chief Financial Officer, you will be given an opportunity to ask questions as time permits. As a reminder, this conference call is limited to 1 hour and is being recorded today, Thursday, April 9, 2026. A digital replay will be available shortly following the conclusion of the call through April 16, 2026, by dialing 1(800) 770-2030 for domestic callers or 1 (647) 362-9199 for international callers, entering replay access code 589-8084. For opening remarks, I would like to turn the call over to PriceSmart's Chief Financial Officer, Gualberto Hernandez. Please proceed, sir. Gualberto Hernandez: Thank you, operator, and welcome to PriceSmart Inc.'s Earnings Call for the Second Quarter of Fiscal Year 2026, which ended on February 28, 2026. We will be discussing the information that we provided in our earnings press release and our 10-Q, which were both released yesterday, April 8, 2026. Also in these remarks, we refer to non-GAAP financial measures. You can find a reconciliation of our non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures in our earnings press release and our 10-Q. These documents are available on our Investor Relations website at investors.pricesmart.com, where you can also sign up for e-mail alerts. As a reminder, all statements made on this conference call other than statements of historical fact, are forward-looking statements concerning the company's anticipated plans, revenues and related matters. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements containing the words expect, believe, plan, will, may, should, estimate and some other expressions. All forward-looking statements are based on current expectations and assumptions as of today April 9, 2026. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that would cause actual results to differ materially, including the risks detailed in the company's most recent annual report on Form 10-K, the quarterly report of our 10-Q filed yesterday and other filings with the SEC, which are accessible on the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. These risks may be updated from time to time. The company undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking statements made during this call. Now I will turn the call over to David Price, PriceSmart's Chief Executive Officer. David Price: Thank you, Gualberto, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. We delivered a strong second quarter. Growth was broad-based across our regions and our membership renewal rate reached an all-time high. I want to take a moment to express my sincere gratitude to every one of our employees across our 13 countries in Chile. Their dedication, hard work and passion for doing right by our members is the foundation of our success. . We delivered these results against the backdrop of continued global uncertainty, including currency volatility, evolving trade policy and macroeconomic pressures that are dynamic all multinationals face today. That being the case, our business delivers value to our members in good times and bad, and I am excited about the momentum we are carrying into the second half of this fiscal year. With that, let me walk you through highlights from the quarter. During the second quarter, net merchandise sales and total revenue reached almost $1.5 billion. Net merchandise sales increased by 9.9% or 7.8% in constant currency. Comparable net merchandise sales increased by 7.6% or 5.5% in constant currency. Two of our recent club openings, Cartago and Ketsilton-ongo are not yet included in our comparable sales numbers. During the first half of our fiscal year, net merchandise sales reached over $2.8 billion and total revenue was almost $2.9 billion. Net merchandise sales increased by 10.2% or 8.6% in constant currency. Comparable net merchandise sales increased by 7.8% or 6.2% in constant currency. During the second quarter, our average sales ticket grew by 2.2% and transactions grew 7.5% versus the same prior year period. The average price per item increased 3.3% year-over-year, while average items per basket decreased 1%. First, in Central America, where we had 32 clubs at quarter end, net merchandise sales increased 8.6% or 7.8% in constant currency. Comparable net merchandise sales increased 4.7% or 4% in constant currency. Our Central America segment contributed approximately 280 basis points of positive impact to the growth in total consolidated comparable net merchandise sales for the second quarter. Second, in the Caribbean, where we had 14 clubs at quarter end, net merchandise sales increased 4.3% or 5.3% in constant currency. Comparable net merchandise sales increased 4.2% or 5.1% in constant currency. Our Caribbean region contributed approximately 120 basis points of positive impact to the growth in total consolidated comparable net merchandise sales for the second quarter. Last, in Colombia, where we had 10 clubs opened at the end of our second quarter, net merchandise sales increased 30.5% or 13.8% in constant currency. Comparable net merchandise sales increased 31.3% or 14.7% in constant currency. Colombia contributed approximately 360 basis points of positive impact to the growth in total consolidated comparable net merchandise sales for the quarter. The increase is a result of several factors, including the appreciation of the Colombian peso, increases in member traffic and continued strengthening of our merchandise offering, which I will share more on later in my remarks. In terms of merchandise categories, when comparing our second quarter sales to the same period in the prior year, our foods category grew approximately 9.2% within foods, fresh proteins were a standout. Seafood, poultry and meat each exceeded 15% growth as we continue to elevate quality and value in those departments. Our nonfood category increased approximately 12.4%. Alongside cost efficiencies from our age of consolidation initiatives, we drove growth with strong performance in casual apparel, especially in our actewear categories and in small appliances. One of several notable programs included a mix of shorting items that were especially exciting for our members, and contributed to our focus of creating the treasure hunt experience within our clubs and online. Softlines also had a strong quarter, highlighted by our domestic white sale promotion in January, which more than doubled sales compared to the prior year. Our food service and bakery category increased approximately 12.2% and our health services, including optical, audiology and pharmacy increased approximately 13%. Membership accounts grew 7.9% year-over-year to almost 2.1 million accounts with a strong 12-month renewal rate of 90.2% as of February 28. It is especially exciting to see our membership renewal rate at an all-time high this past quarter, a clear indication that our members see the value we deliver and remain engaged with our offering. The key focus of our membership strategy is growing the Platinum membership base. Platinum is our premium tier designed for our most engaged members. These members receive an annual cash back reward on eligible purchases which drives loyalty, increases, purchasing frequency and rewards their continued business with us. By focusing on platinum growth, we're investing in our highest value member relationships. As of February 28, platinum accounts represented 19.5% of our total membership base. up from 14.5% in the same period last year. We are happy with the results of our targeted promotional campaigns and the strong renewal rate we are seeing reflects that our members believe in the value of that upgrade. We believe that a Platinum membership, combined with our strong co-branded credit card, which comes with an additional cash back on points earned ensures that participating members get the very most out of their membership with Priceline. Membership income as a percentage of revenue increased to 1.6% in the second quarter compared to 1.5% in the prior year period, driven in part by the shift toward Platinum membership. These strong results reflect our team's execution and the strategic initiatives we have underway. Now let me walk you through the progress we're making across real estate expansion, supply chain transformation and technology investments that are enhancing our ability to serve members and position the company for our next phase of growth. We are opening our sixth warehouse club in the Dominican Republic in the La Romana municipality early next month. We are excited to bring PriceSmart to a new trade area, and we are particularly proud of the sustainable design practices incorporated in its build, including solar panels, a heat reclamation water system that eliminates the need for a water heater, recycled steel in the infrastructure, a modern CO2 refrigeration system, high-efficiency plumbing fixtures and an intelligent energy management system. These features reflect our commitment to doing right by both our members and the planet. And importantly, they also reduce operating costs, making our club more efficient. We look forward to serving members in this new trade area as we continue to deepen our presence in the Dominican Republic. In Jamaica, we have 2 clubs under construction, one in Montego Bay and the other on South Camp Road in Kingston, which we expect to open in summer and winter of 2026, respectively. Construction is progressing well for both. Recovery efforts have been strong in the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa, and market indicators suggest a robust 2025, 2026 tourism season. That, combined with international relief efforts supporting the island's recovery, give us confidence in the consumer demand environment as both clubs prepare to open. Additionally, in the second quarter of fiscal year 2026, we purchased land for our tenth warehouse club in Costa Rica and SudadKasata, that's approximately 47 miles northwest from our nearest Club in San Jose. The club will be built on a 6-acre property and is anticipated to open this summer. Lastly, in the third quarter of fiscal year 2026, we leased land for our eighth warehouse in Guatemala in the municipality of approximately 13 miles south from the near club in Guatemala City. The club will be built on a 5-acre property and is anticipated to open in the spring of 2027. Although we are still waiting to obtain all permits, we are confident we will receive them and have begun with the initial earthworks for the club. Should we not receive the remaining permits we can cancel the lease. Once these 5 new clubs are open, we will operate 61 warehouse clubs in total. We believe that there is opportunity to expand our footprint in our existing markets and plan to continue to diligently procure sites, we think will strengthen our existing network of locations and meet our expected returns. Chile remains a top priority, and we are encouraged by the progress we are seeing there. We have signed executory agreements for 2 prospective club sites and are actively pursuing additional locations. In parallel, we are laying the foundation for a successful market entry. We have hired a country General Manager and local team members, established our central office and are building out the procurement and logistical infrastructure needed to operate effectively. We look forward to sharing more specific milestones as they develop. Beyond new growth, we also will begin warehouse club and parking lot expansions and remodels in fiscal year 2026 in Portware, Jamaica and Barbados. Now turning to our supply chain transformation strategy, one of the key drivers in keeping prices low is improving how we move and distribute merchandise to our clubs. Today, we operate major distribution centers in Miami, Costa Rica, Panama and Guatemala. During the second quarter, we began operations at our new distribution center in Trinidad. In addition, we plan to open distribution centers in Colombia and Jamaica during fiscal year 2026 and in the Dominican Republic during fiscal year 2027. Our goals with these distribution centers are to improve product availability, reduced lead times and lower landed costs, among other efficiency gains. Alongside these new distribution centers, we completed implementing third-party distribution centers in China to consolidate merchandise sourced in the country, which we believe will drive greater efficiency and lower costs. We continue to advance our migration to the relax forecasting and replenishment platform and remain on track to complete the full implementation in fiscal year 2026. We completed onboarding our U.S.-sourced inventory procurement process, and now we are focused on our local goods procurement process. While the implementation of a new system brings with it an initial learning curve, we are starting to realize its capabilities and expect to see the benefits of improved forecasting, product availability and operational efficiency long term. During the second quarter, we advanced our multiphase implementation of the ETA Open Global trade management platform designed to enhance automation, compliance and controls across global import and export operations. We believe this platform will strengthen trade compliance, improve data visibility to support scalable international growth once fully implemented. Turning now to other ways we are enhancing membership. On a comparable basis, excluding a reclassification of the produce category, private label penetration increased 50 basis points in the first 6 months of FY 2026, reflecting continued progress towards our long-term goal of growing this part of our business. Using our updated methodology, penetration of private label was 26.6% of total merchandise sales. Private label serves multiple strategic purposes. It allows us to offer high-quality products at lower prices than the national brands. It improves our margins, and it gives us leverage with national brand suppliers by providing a trusted alternative that keeps them competitive. Recent additions like avocado oil, fresh chicken and purified drinking water demonstrate our focus on delivering exceptional value across key everyday categories, and we have been able to pass meaningful savings to our members as reduction in commodity costs allow including price reductions on extra version, all of all of 31.5%, franchise of 8.9% and Montreal 5.8%. Our private label water program is a good example of how private label can deliver simultaneously for members for the business and for the planet. By shifting supply for our 10 Colombia clubs to a local bottler, we reduced prices by approximately 23%, roughly $2 per pack while also lowering our carbon footprint through reduced transportation and packaging made with 50% recycled content. We continue to invest in omnichannel capabilities to meet our members where they are. In the second quarter, digital channel sales reached $94.1 million, our highest dollar volume to date, up 23.4% year-over-year and representing 6.4% of total net merchandise sales. Orders placed directly through our website or app grew 10.9%, with average transaction value up 10.8%. As of February 28, 74.7% of our members have created an online profile and more than one in 4 members had made a purchase through pricesmart.com or our app, an indicator of the digital engagement we are building across our membership base. We see continued opportunity in this space, and we will keep investing to enhance the digital experience we offer our members. During the second quarter, we began migrating our mobile application to fully native iOS and Android architectures, to enhance speed, reliability and accessibility. This foundation will allow faster deployment of new features and help us deliver an outstanding member experience in our digital channels. Turning to technology investments that enhance both member and employee experience and operational efficiency. In the first quarter, we completed implementation of our new point-of-sale system, Valera across all English-speaking Caribbean markets. We have since begun testing in Central America and are making good progress on our rollout plans for Spanish-speaking markets. Early indicators show that Valera is delivering faster checkout times, improved productivity and expanded payment options for our members, tangible improvements to the in-club experience as we roll out the platform across our network. Also in the second quarter, we furthered implementation of Workday's human capital management system to replace legacy HR applications and expect to go live by end of the third quarter. This upgrade is designed to enhance the employee experience with modern user-friendly tools while improving processes and strengthening compliance. We will also provide scalable integrated data layer to support our future growth. Before I turn it over to Gualberto, I want to address a few additional topics. First, regarding U.S. tariffs. Approximately half of the merchandise we sell is sourced locally, reasonably within Latin America. The other half is sourced from the U.S., Europe, China and globally. In addition, on February 20, 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. While the landscape of tariffs continues to evolve, it is important to note that we consolidate many of these international products through our Miami distribution center. They are shipped in bond and are not nationalized in the United States. We also take advantage of free trade agreements where we can. Additionally, we've been leveraging our expanding distribution center network and China consolidation capabilities to shift direct to market where feasible. In short, U.S. import tariffs do not apply to most of our merchandise. And as a result, we are not owed a refund from the U.S. government due to the most recent Supreme Court ruling. We continue to monitor the evolving trade policy environment. But to date, current U.S. tariff policy has not directly impacted our cost structure or business operations. We are also monitoring developments with respect to the ongoing military conflicts with Iran. We anticipate potential impacts to transportation costs or delays in the shipment or delivery of our products. The cost of fuel is a significant component of transportation cost. If our vendors or any raw material suppliers on which our vendors rely suffer prolonged manufacturing or transportation disruptions, our ability to source product to be adversely impacted, which would adversely affect our business. Also, fuel prices in some of our markets have increased significantly, which may reduce consumer demand impacting frequency and purchasing power. However, we are monitoring and we'll do what we can to ensure we continue to provide the value we are known for in our communities. Lastly, I want to provide a brief preview of our March sales and some insight into our Semana Santa results. Note that Semana Santa this year started late March, early April versus mid- to late April last year. So the comparability and growth for March will be skewed higher. However, our comparable net merchandise sales for the 4 weeks ended March 29, 2026, grew 12.3% in U.S. dollars and 9.2% in constant currency. I'm incredibly proud of the exciting assortment we offered in the outstanding preparation and execution by our merchandising, supply chain and operation teams and also all who are involved at the company to make this year's Semana Santa a success. With that, I'll turn it over to Gualberto, who'll walk you through the financial results. Gualberto Hernandez: Thank you, David. Continuing with the income statement. Total gross margin for the quarter as a percentage of net merchandise sales increased 50 basis points to 16.1% versus Q2 last year. The increase is mainly driven by shifts in product mix, primarily within our nonfood segment and cost savings we are starting to realize from our Asia consolidation efforts when compared to the same period in the prior year. Total revenue margins improved 60 basis points to 17.7% of total revenue from 17.1% in the same period last year. This was mainly driven by the increase in our warehouse sales margins and good results in membership renewals and platinum growth, as mentioned before by David. On overhead costs, Total SG&A expenses increased to 12.7% of total revenues for the second quarter of fiscal year 2026 compared to 12.4% for the second quarter of fiscal year 2025. The 30 basis point increase is primarily related to the appreciation of the peso in Colombia and its effect on our warehouse expenses. Our continued investments in technology and executive officer compensation not incurred in previous years. Operating income for the second quarter of fiscal year '26 increased 15.6% from the same period last year to $75.4 million. Operating income for the first 6 months of fiscal year 2026 increased 12% from the same period last year to $138.3 million. Below the operating income line, in the second quarter of fiscal year 2026, we recorded an $8.7 million net loss in total other expense, an increase from a $5.1 million net loss in the same period last year. The primary cost of the increase is due to foreign currency-related losses, predominantly from unrealized noncash losses related to the revaluation of the net U.S. dollar monetary asset position we have in Costa Rica as there was a significant appreciation of the Costa Rica colon in the month of February. This loss was partially offset by lower foreign currency exchange transaction costs during the quarter and for the first 6 months of the fiscal year in Trinidad as we executed fewer sourcing transactions. However, in March and subsequent to quarter end, we have executed and will be sourcing more foreign currency and incur additional transaction costs for the remaining part of the fiscal year. When and how many transactions we executed in any given period is dependent on various factors, including available trading currencies and the cost to convert. Lastly, in light of increased volatility in the exchange rates, we are also actively exploring options to expand our hedging program in select markets. In terms of income tax, our effective tax rate for the second quarter of fiscal year 2026 came in at 26.4%, a slightly favorable result versus 27.2% a year ago. For the 6 months ended February 28, 2026, our effective tax rate was 27.1%, almost in line with a 26.9% effective tax rate of the comparable prior year period. Finally, net income for the second quarter of fiscal year 2026 was $49.1 million or $1.62 per diluted share, an increase of 11.7%, up from $43.8 million or $1.45 per diluted share in the second quarter of fiscal year 2025. Adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter of fiscal year 2026 was $99.7 million, compared to $87 million in the same period last year, a growth of 14.6%. Net income for the first 6 months of fiscal year 2026 was $89.3 million or $2.91 per diluted share, an increase of 9.4%, up from $81.2 million or $2.66 per diluted share in the first 6 months of fiscal year 2025. Adjusted EBITDA for the first 6 months of fiscal year 2026 was $186.6 million compared to $166.1 million in the same period last year, a growth of 12.3%. Moving on to our balance sheet. We ended the quarter with cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash totaling $195.1 million, plus approximately $149.7 million of short-term investments, typically held in certificates of the past. When reviewing our cash balances, it's important to note that as of February 28, 2026, we had $76.9 million of cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments denominated in local currency in Trinidad, which we could not really convert into U.S. dollars. Turning to cash flow. Net cash provided by operating activities reached $133.3 million for the first 6 months of fiscal year 2026, an increase of $6.9 million versus the prior year period. The increase is primarily driven by a $10.6 million increase in net income adjusted for noncash items and a $5.3 million overall net positive changes in other various operating assets and liabilities. This is partially offset by shifts in working capital, mainly due to higher overall inventory balances, which used $9 million of cash in operating activities. Net cash used in investing activities increased by $89.9 million for the first 6 months of fiscal year 2026 compared to the prior year, primarily due to net changes in short-term investments of $59.6 million. a $25.5 million increase in property and equipment expenditures and an $11.9 million increase in purchases of long-term investments. Net cash used in financing activities increased by EUR 21.7 million for the first 6 months of fiscal year 2026 compared to the prior year, primarily due to a $15.9 million increase in net repayments of short-term bank borrowings, a $3.1 million increase in the purchase of treasury stock upon vesting of restricted stock awards to cover employee tax withholding obligations and a $2.3 million increase in cash dividend payments. In February, we declared our annual cash dividend, which in total is $1.40 per share, or an 11.1% increase over last year's dividend. That's 5 consecutive years of increases and double what we declared per share in 2021. This is another signal of the strength of our cash-generating abilities. Our priority remains executing consistently and responsibly for our long-term success. We believe our established processes, diversified footprint and experienced teams provide a solid foundation as we manage the business day to day with that long-term perspective, guiding us forward. We appreciate the continued support of our members, employees and shareholders, and we thank our teams for their ongoing efforts. Thank you for joining our call today. I will now turn the call over to the operator to take your questions. Operator, you may now start taking our callers' questions. Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Jon Bretz from Kansas City Capital. Jon Braatz: A couple of questions. First of all, David, when you think of -- it's been a couple of quarters since you first began talking about Chile and the media or the press in Chile has wrote a number of published number of articles about where your stores might be and some of the people you hire, but -- is it taking a little bit longer to sort of the eyes and cross the Ts and get permits and all this other stuff to begin construction of stores? Is it just a little bit longer than you would have anticipated? David Price: Thanks for the question, Jon. Yes, you're right about the media. It's been really interesting to observe just how active the press media is in the business news media is in Chile versus our other markets. It's been something that surprised us, quite frankly. And it's not necessarily a bad thing, but certainly, the press will write a lot of things, whether or not they're able to validate that they're true. They still will publish, and that's something that's kind of been -- But we haven't seen that things are taking any longer necessarily than any other market. The process actually compared to some of our other markets is better in the sense that it's much more clear, in terms of the quality of the institutions and the steps that you have to go through that good permits. But we're quite conservative in terms of when we announce openings. We typically announce once we have permits in hand and we don't. So we haven't announced. And so that's been our policy and our approach. And so we try to be consistent in how we approach announcing new openings. Jon Braatz: Okay. Two other questions. David, a lot of conversations surrounding remits in your markets. Have you seen any impact because of that? And then secondly, I was distracted a little bit when you were talking about the situation in the Mid East. Beyond the higher cost of energy, what was your comments about maybe supply chain impact if there is? David Price: Sure, sure. Thank you for the question. So in terms of remittances, we haven't seen any visible changes in consumption as a result of changes in remittances. And in fact, the data has been fairly clear that the remittances are still flowing to the markets at rates that are not that different from what has occurred in the past, which is interesting actually because one would think that there maybe would be bigger changes. But I think these are patterns that have been around for many years, and they're probably quite difficult to change. So we haven't seen any changes in terms of consumption patterns among our members as a result of changes On the topic of what's happening in Iran and Strait of Hormuz, from a supply chain standpoint, there's a lot of -- I mean, it's still somewhat early in the For sure, we're seeing there are changes in fuel costs around the globe. And that's something that I think all retailers and all distributors are dealing with. And I think it hits in different ways, and we have the ocean component via the U.S. domestic component. And so as it fuels is a large part of transportation of the cost. And so certainly, that's a piece of something that we're seeing shift. Otherwise, we haven't had major supply chain disruption at this point because a lot of the merchandise that's coming into our markets is not coming by -- well, not coming by way of the Strait. But besides that, there's some POs, a delay here and there, but nothing that's really significant. I mean -- which is good, but that doesn't mean it can't happen. I mean I think there's still yet to be seen all of the impacts of this conflict. And I think even after the conflict resolves, there still may be impacts. And there was an interesting article I read in the New York Times just last night about World Word I and the impact that happened many years after. And I recommend you read it because it got me thinking about that could happen here for sure. And so we're just trying to remain as vigilant as we can but also as flexible as we can to have a resilient supply chain. I think the work that we're doing with consolidation and then beginning to diversify how we procure products, it's all good because as the world becomes more volatile, the more resilient and diverse our supply chain is the better. Gualberto Hernandez: And we have run some simulations. This is Gualberto, Jon. We have run some simulations and are actively looking into this. There will be some smaller impacts in terms of financials, but nothing really material or nothing or... David Price: Not at this point. Gualberto Hernandez: Yes. Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Héctor Maya from Scotiabank. Héctor Maya López: Could you please share more details on the drivers of the higher gross margin, particularly if this is more structural or temporary? And if there will be some investments going forward? I mean I saw you had a better mix and solid membership income, but just wanted to understand a bit more about this. Gualberto Hernandez: Yes. Thank you for the question, Héctor. This is Gualberto. We -- there are a couple of variables that usually, it's not only one single, but we have benefited from a shift in mix by category. Foods went a little bit down in terms of say, participation versus fresh that has been helped with better margins, debase of that is on nonfood hard lines. First, that's an interesting play in harness versus softline improved the margin itself versus prior versus the same quarter in the last year, but still below the margin of Softline. Softline went up versus also a mix change there that ahead. We have started to benefit also from the Asia consolidation efforts, so there are savings in shipping costs have one routes as we are keeping the Miami saving and handling fees. So that all was in favor of the margin improvement this quarter and year-to-date. Héctor Maya López: Also, given that Central America and the Caribbean are highly dependent on remittances and all imports, how are you preparing for a potential macro challenge there? I mean at least on the side of remittances, I understand that we haven't seen material changes in the region just yet, but we have seen of central banks in Central America coming out with projections that point to a deceleration for 2026 in remittances due to declining integration trends to the U.S. and the 1% tax remittances that started this year. So basically, how would you say that you could be preparing for potential risks on this? Gualberto Hernandez: Well, I think we have some type of natural protection to that also because of the profile of our members that are less reliant on remittances. So that gives us some type of natural protection. But we don't this means, I mean, you made a very good point with we don't dismiss the risk and we're watching carefully. But again, there are only projections so far. We're tracking them. as David explained, we haven't really seen anything. As you know, the actual data about has some material lags in terms of how we retest. But I would just repeat what David said. We have not seen anything yet. We believe we have some type of network protection against the heating remittances, and we will continue following this closing. David Price: And maybe -- Héctor, I'll add one other thing, which is our -- we're one of our kind of -- the way we think about our business, one of our missions is to keep driving down costs supply chain and becoming more competitive, so we can offer better and better value to our members. And I think that's a natural -- also a natural way to protect against changes in remittance. I mean we can only do what we can do, right? I mean if there's macro swings happening, we just have to run our business as well as we can. And so as we build a better supply chain that's more efficient and more efficient than our competitors, particularly in those markets, that's going to help us continue to drive up value for the member drive market share, drive sales. And so that, I think, is the best thing we can do. Héctor Maya López: I'm the add on a promise we noticed that one plant cloud in Costa Rica and one in Jamaica have earlier opening dates now. So just wondering what was behind that? And also on Chile, if you could give us an update on not so much in progress because I understand that it is something that you see as going forward as you were expecting. But progress on how much you're learning so far from the potential opportunities in that market? And I mean, aside from the media, the media behavior that you haven't noticed, what other learnings that you're getting from this new market? David Price: Sure. Thank you. On the topic of the accelerated club opening, I always challenge our team to find ways to open earlier because every day that we save of time that we open is the day that we started getting our investment paid off and creating a good return for our shareholders. So they get a lot of pressure for me to figure out ways to go faster. But besides that, we actually received permits a little earlier than we expected. And so that's probably the most significant thing. I mean, because we only do -- we're always trying to learn how to be better at constructing these buildings, but certainly getting permits are help. So... On Chile, we're learning a lot. We're learning a lot. We've had a number of different kind of delegations of buyers that have gone down. I was down there a couple of times last year and I'll be down again a few times this year, I'm sure. And so I mean there's all sorts of things that we could dig into, but it's a very advanced market from the standpoint of both the consumer, but then also on the supply chain side. I mean distribution space is high quality, high quality is in the United States, and processing capabilities for fresh products are very high quality in terms of chicken and produce and otherwise. I think there's a desire for international goods. We see it the other retailers in the market the floor and the other retailers that they're carrying a lot of USBs and U.S. and European products, certainly German products, we see a lot of the market as well, and there's -- the shopping experience occurs in a lot digitally, but not only. I mean it's a very digitalized market, as I mentioned on prior calls, it's the highest penetration of Internet in the region, all of Latin America. So we're learning a whole lot. I mean, infrastructure is a whole lot better than our other markets in terms of mobility, right? There's toll roads that are quite robust to go from Visa Cuda, Sachiubeo or around the city, I mean, there's the coolants partially on the ground. For me, as someone that spends a lot of my professional and personal life in Central America is going to Santiago for the first time was really eye opening. I mean, tremendously eye opening in terms of how sophisticated the market is and the capabilities there. So we're learning a whole lot, and we believe that we have something that would be very desirable and valuable for the consumer in the marketplace. And so we're going to do our best. Operator: And that concludes our question-and-answer session. I will now turn the call back over to David Price for closing remarks. David Price: Thank you for joining the call, everyone, and have a great day. Thank you very much. Operator: This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.
Operator: Greetings, and welcome to Constellation Brands' Fiscal Year 2026 Fourth Quarter Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Blair Veenema, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin. Blair Veenema: Thank you, Donna. Good morning all, and welcome to Constellation Brands' Q4 and Full Year Fiscal '26 Conference Call. I'm joined this morning by Bill Newlands, our CEO; and Garth Hankinson, our CFO. I'm also pleased to welcome our incoming CEO, Nicholas Fink, who is joining us at the start of today's call to share a few remarks. Following Nick, Bill will briefly review the fiscal year, after which we will turn it over to your questions for Bill and Garth. Before we proceed, we trust you had the opportunity to review the news release and CEO, CFO commentary made available in the Investors section of our company's website, www.cbrands.com. On that note, as a reminder, reconciliations between the most directly comparable GAAP measure and any non-GAAP financial measures discussed on this call are included in the news release and website. And we encourage you to also refer to the news release and Constellation's SEC filings for risk factors that may impact forward-looking statements made on this call. Before turning it over to Bill to kick things off, -- please keep in mind that as usual, answers provided today will be referencing comparable results unless otherwise specified. Lastly, in line with prior quarters, I would ask that you limit yourselves to 1 question per person, which will help us to end our call on time. Thanks in advance, and for the final time, over to you, Bill. William Newlands: Thanks, Blair, and good morning, everyone. I'm going to make a few opening comments before we get into Q&A. But first, I'd like to pass it over to Nick Fink our President and CEO elect for a few brief comments. Nick, warm welcome. Nick will assume the role on April 13, and we are pleased to have him with us today to say a few words before we get started. Nick? Nicholas Fink: Thank you, Bill, and good morning, everyone. I'd like to start by recognizing Bill's leadership over the past 7 years as CEO and in total, his 11 years of contributions to Constellation Brands. He strengthened the foundation of the company in meaningful and lasting ways, and I've valued our partnership during my time on the board. I look forward to continuing to work closely with him over the coming months to ensure a seamless transition as he moves into his role as a strategic adviser. I'm honored to step into the CEO role next week at such an important time for our business. Constellation enters this chapter from a position of strength with a leading portfolio in high-end beer, a reshaped wine and spirits business, best-in-cost marketing and sales capabilities and a proven playbook that continues to deliver consistent share gains year after year. While the consumer landscape remains dynamic, I firmly believe that we are well positioned to continue delivering for our consumers, employees, distributors and shareholders over the long term. Having served on the Board for the past 5 years, I've been closely involved in our key strategic and operational priorities. That perspective gives me strong conviction in our strategy and in our ability to execute going forward. We will continue to be insights-driven and consumer obsessed, lean into our strengths in beer, allocate capital with discipline and generate strong cash flow while thoughtfully navigating an evolving consumer landscape. As I formally assumed the role on April 13, I look forward to spending time with our operators, distributors and many of you in the investment community to gain an even deeper understanding as we begin to shape the next phase of our growth journey ahead. I'll close by reiterating my confidence in this business, in our iconic brand portfolio, our route to market and consumer-led marketing, our best-in-class operations and most importantly, our talented people. These strengths underpin our differentiated capabilities as we seek to continue delivering sustainable long-term growth and attractive shareholder returns. With that, I'll turn it back to Bill. . William Newlands: Thanks, Nick. Just a few additional comments from me before we start Q&A. As we stated in our published remarks, we ended the year with some solid momentum in our beer business, despite operating in a challenging environment during our fiscal '26. It was a year that required agility and focus as consumers continue to navigate a tough economic backdrop with more selective shopping behavior, which weighed on overall category performance for much of the year. Our teams stayed tightly aligned on what we can control, drawing points of distribution, supporting our core brands and executing with discipline. That approach allowed us to take share and strengthen our competitive position. Our beer portfolio continued to lead the high-end segment with Modelo Especial maintaining its leadership as the #1 beer brand by dollars in the United States and momentum improved as the year progressed. In Wine and Spirits, our efforts to reshape the portfolio are gaining traction with strong contributions from brands like Kim Crawford and Mecampo. Lastly, from a financial standpoint, the business delivered solid cash generation, giving us the flexibility to reinvest while also returning capital to shareholders. As we look ahead, we're encouraged by the improvement we saw exiting the year, but we remain realistic about the current operating environment, which remains fluid with limited visibility. That said, we feel good about where we're positioned. -- with strong portfolio, clear priorities and a disciplined approach to operating, we believe we're well equipped to continue building momentum and delivering long-term value. Now back over to you, Donna, for the questions. Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question today is coming from Nik Modi of RBC Capital Markets. . Nik Modi: Bill, best of luck going forward. Maybe you could just unpack the beer top line guidance for the upcoming fiscal year, the negative 1 is a positive one. And I ask that in the context of what seemingly is a pretty good start to March or to the year. if you could just give us some context on kind of what you're thinking? Is there anything that we should be thinking about in terms of like why it would decelerate for the full year relative to what we're seeing in March right now? Any context would be helpful. . William Newlands: Sure, Nick. Obviously, the single biggest challenge that exists now is our limited visibility. Things have been very volatile in terms of what the consumer reaction has been and our continuing research suggest that the consumer is still cautious. With that said, as we noted in our overview, -- we exited last year in a very strong position. We saw sequential gains in the quarter, and we saw depletions up in the quarter, which had not been the case over the prior 3 quarters. March is off to a solid start, better than planned with continued increasing momentum. So certainly, we remain optimistic about the year that we have just begun. -- but we need to continue to recognize volatility has been high and visibility has been low. Operator: The next question is coming from Bonnie Herzog of Goldman Sachs. . Bonnie Herzog: All right. And best of luck Bill from me, too. It was great working with you. I have a question on beer operating margins. Your guiding margins of 37% to 38% for this year, which is a step down from your prior guidance of 39% to 40%. So can you help us understand the key drivers of the new margin delivery I guess, especially around fixed cost absorption from the new Veracruz brewery coming online. Also, how should we think about the phasing of margins across 1H versus 2H? And then finally, I guess, I'm curious to know if you believe you could get back to the 40% margin range? And if so, is that a possibility next fiscal year? Or is this going to take longer . Garth Hankinson: Thanks for the question, Bonnie. So you're right. We've got to 37% to 38% margins. I'll tell you what the headwinds are and then what we're doing to offset those headwinds. You rightfully pointed out that -- the primary headwind as it relates to operating -- our gross profit margins are expense-related, costs associated with our new brewery in Veracruz, which is expected to begin production around the middle of our fiscal year. With that, we were going to have some fixed cost absorption headwinds as we go through the year. And then further down the P&L, we have an increase in our SG&A expense related to lower incentive comp in FY '26 and incremental investments in marketing that we will make in this year to drive continued growth within the business, both in the short and in the long term. Offsetting those headwinds will be 1% to 2% price delivery, which, as we've noted in the materials we uploaded overnight, we'll be at the lower end of the range this year. We will continue to deliver against our cost savings agenda, where we've been very successful in our migration from a builder to an operator. And then we -- additionally, as you saw in materials, we'll have relief from aluminum tariffs this year. As it relates to beyond FY '27, we're not prepared to talk around any guidance beyond this year. So we'll cover that as we go through this year and into next. Operator: The next question is coming from Dara Mohsenian of Morgan Stanley. . Dara Mohsenian: Best wishes for me also, Bill, I enjoyed working with you. And Garth, maybe if I can just follow up on the beer margin side, -- can you just break out what you're expecting from a key input cost standpoint in fiscal '27 aluminum freight and some of the other key buckets, just how hedged you are on the input cost side as well as FX side -- and then as you think about beer margins, maybe volatility there, what might be some of the upside drivers versus downside drivers -- and then also just focus on wine and spirits as much, but the margin guidance is clearly a lot lower than maybe the ongoing business should support longer term. So just help us understand the wine and spirits margin guidance for '27, how much of that is depressed by factors specific to '27 versus extends longer term? Garth Hankinson: Yes, Dara, there was a lot there. So I hope I got it off. So from a hedging perspective, we're fairly well hedged as we enter the year in both the [indiscernible] and on currencies. For fuel, we're nearly 100% hedged; on aluminum were approximately 90% hedged; natural gas, about 80% hedged; in corn about 75% hedged. Across all of our currencies, we're right around 80% hedged as we enter the year. So we're in a good spot. In terms of beer margins and what could lead to upside I think volume, as Bill noted, we're cautiously optimistic around the start of the year. And if volumes were to increase from where we are, that would certainly benefit the margin profile. As it relates to wine and spirits margins, there are a number of factors that are going into our -- the guided margin profile, including ongoing category pressures, channel headwinds, the timing of our cost deleveraging and distributor inventory rebalancing. Starting with the category headwinds. We've seen a material downgrade in the outlook from where we were a year ago U.S. high-end wine has shifted from expected low single-digit growth to low single-digit declines. U.S. high-end spirits are decelerating from plus mid-single-digit growth to flat to slightly down. And so while we're significantly outpacing the market, it's sort of on what I would call a little bit of a lower base. Relating to channel headwinds. We've seen some tasting room softness in our Napa-based wineries. And then internationally, we've seen some weakness as it relates to U.S. made or U.S. sourced wines and spirits, particularly in Canada, which is our largest market, where ban on U.S. wine and spirits remains in place. And then as we outlined in our materials, we've agreed to some inventory rebalancing with our key distributors, reflecting the softness we're seeing in the wine and spirits category. And then in terms of the timing of cost leverage because the top line is softer, as you know, in wine, the length of time it takes for things to move from the balance sheet into the P&L just it will take a bit longer than expected. That being said, structurally, we still believe that our target margins are achievable over the medium term as distributor inventories normalize as the category declines moderate and as our cost savings agenda moves from the balance sheet and into the P&L. Operator: The next question is coming from Filippo Falorni of Citi. Filippo Falorni: Just adding my best wishes to Bill and congrats to Nick on the new position. So maybe staying on beer margins, but on the marketing spend side. You mentioned in the prepared remarks that you're thinking about 9.5% of sales on marketing. How should we think about the cadence throughout the year? Obviously, you have a World Cup -- for World Cup coming in the summer, should we think maybe there's a little bit of actual spending in the summer months. And longer term, how do you guys think about the marketing levels is this 9.5% still a good place to think about longer term beyond fiscal '27? . William Newlands: You bet. We're going to very aggressively invest against our brands in the first half of this year for a number of reasons. One is the momentum that we saw coming out of the end of the year and the momentum that we've seen in March. Secondly, the World Cup is an outstanding event that provides an opportunity for many of our loyalist consumers to engage with our brands. And we're going to invest heavily against that. We always invest in the first half of the year. You will see additional investment this year. Part of that will be done against our high-end light beer strategy. You've probably noticed, we are seeing momentum in our oral and premier brands, particularly coming out of our repositioning of our price points for those 2 sub-brands and we're going to invest behind it. We think that remains a tremendous opportunity for our business, and we're going to invest behind that. We're going to continue to invest against Modelo. Modelo, we believe, still has a lot of runway and will be very appropriate in the time frame of the World Cup. And lastly, I got to make a call out to both Pacifico and Victoria, which have both on a tear, you're going to see more investment against Pacifico than we have done historically as we see that momentum is 1 that we can continue to leverage going forward. And last but not least, Victoria. Victoria has done very well and brings in a younger consumer than our overall portfolio mix, which we find is very beneficial for the long run as well. So a lot to be excited about within our brands that doesn't even begin to touch on things like Sunbrew, which obviously is another one. That showed great momentum in its first full year. So a lot of things for us to invest in, as Garth noted a moment ago. We are increasing our investment this year as we feel it's the perfect time to begin to take advantage of some of this momentum that we're seeing. Operator: Our next question is coming from Chris Carey of Wells Fargo Securities. . Christopher Carey: I wanted to follow up I think it was Dara's question just around some of the key drivers of margin and I have another question. But are you expecting a step-up in depreciation this year with the capacity? And are you well hedged on FX, I think you've been talking about layering in some hedges over the past several years. So if you could just confirm those for me, please? And then just from a medium-term perspective, I think we saw that you had given some concrete targets for cases on Pacifico over the medium term. Can you just expand on that? And and how you see the portfolio evolving and some of the key drivers of your business kind of through fiscal '30, is Pacifico going to be the new growth driver as Modelo normalizes. So I appreciate just some confirmation on the margins in the medium term. . Garth Hankinson: Yes, Chris. So I'll take the first part of that. And as it relates to depreciation, we are expecting a step into up in depreciation as Veracruz comes online in the middle or expected to be in the middle of our fiscal year. And then as it relates to currency hedging across all of the currencies that we hedge, we're roughly hedged at about 80%, and that's inclusive of the Mexican peso. And obviously, we don't get too far down the track on what we expect volumetrically for our brands. But I think your statement, do you expect Pacifico to be a continuing growth driver for our business. The answer is yes. I think you can see by the takeaway that's existing in Circana channels, Pacifico continues to explode. And it's done a very similar thing to what you saw initially with Modelo which was the initial strength was on the West Coast, and you're starting to see that strength broadening across the country. You probably have noted, we have a new campaign that focuses on the tremendously exciting yellow color of our cans, which stand out both on the shelf and in the [ cold box. ] The consumer continues to be excited about the product in the bottle or the can -- and we think that Pacifico is going to be a critically important part of our growth profile going forward. Not to diminish by the way, the potential that still exists on Modelo as well. So lots of areas for growth drivers, but certainly, Pacifico is going to be a critically important 1 for us going forward. Operator: Thank you. The next question is coming from Lauren Lieberman of Barclays. . Lauren Lieberman: Great. So Bill, as you just went through talking about the brands, 1 that was absent was Corona Extra. And so just I'd love to hear a little bit about like kind of what's next for that brand. But in particular, also extending to think about Modelo. You shared the general market ZIP codes are continuing to outperform the higher Hispanic population areas. But I want to talk about Corona Extra and Modelo Especial, particularly within gen market and what you've been seeing. And then like I said at the outset, just kind of more broadly on Corona -- any thoughts on kind of what's next to the brand given the trends have remained pretty soft. . William Newlands: Yes. No problem. Obviously, Corona remains 1 of the best loved brands that we have in the entire category. And I think the -- our ability to do things like Corona Sunbrew and the strength of Familiar are really reflective of the strength of Corona Extra. With that said, we're going to continue to invest aggressively against extra. Well, we don't see that necessarily as the growth driver of the business going forward. We believe it's important to maintain that with the kind of strength that exists today for that particular business. Recognizing the overall family is very healthy for the Corona franchise because of some of those sub-brands like Familiar and Sunbrew and Premier. Relative to Modelo, we have seen improvements as most of you know, we assess ZIP code data on a quintile basis. What's the percentage of Hispanic consumers, less than 20%, 20% to 40% and so on as you go up the ladder. We were very pleased to see coming out of the fourth quarter that all of those quintiles showed a sequential improvement in the takeaway. It was probably most notable in the state of California, which is part of the reason you've seen very strong Circana data over the recent past, where we have gained over 1 share point in both dollars and volume over the last 4 weeks, which gets us back to a more traditional share-gaining position. As you probably saw, we came out of the fourth quarter gaining 0.6 share points that has accelerated as we started into the new year. A lot of that has been driven by Modelo as well as you've seen Modelo begin to show continued strength. And we continue to invest not only with our core Hispanic consumer but in the broader marketplace as well. You will expect to see, as you have been, if you've been watching any sports that are focused against sports and that whole platform for Modelo will continue this year, and I think it will speak very well to Modelo's continue ability to grow. Operator: Thank you. Our next question is coming from Rob Ottenstein of Evercore ISI. . Robert Ottenstein: Great. Just would love to understand your process in terms of thinking about capital expenditures, given the uncertain and muted outlook of this year, the declines of last year, the lack of visibility going forward and obviously, you have to invest ahead of actual results and visibility. So -- how have you adjusted your thinking on CapEx? What -- how do you think about what to spend today for growth tomorrow and maybe update us in terms of your medium-term expectations for volume for the business. . William Newlands: So let me start, and then I'll turn it over to Garth for some more specifics about the operational footprint. I think it's important to recognize we've continued to do what we've said for a number of years now around capital allocation which has involved continuing our spend at the levels that we think are important for the long run. It's continuing to do the dividend. And more importantly, we've continued to return dollars to shareholders. Over $900 million last year despite some extra dark periods we had in preparation for the announcement of Nick joining our business. So that kind of financial discipline is 1 that I think you can expect to see continue as we go forward. Nick has been an important part of supporting our development of that strategy over the last 5 years that he's been on the board. And I think, broadly speaking, you're not going to see any real change in our approach to capital allocation. Now specifically, to the operational side of that. Garth, I'll pass that to you. . Garth Hankinson: Yes, Robert. So first of all, we're not ready to give any guidance beyond FY '27 at this point in terms of growth. That being said, -- we do expect that we will return to growth and that the headwinds that we're facing today are more cyclical in nature than they are structural. So that being said, we'll continue to operate very modularly as it relates to bringing production capacity online. I think we've been very effective in this over the last several years. This past year, FY '26 -- we spent significantly less in CapEx than where we had started our expectations in the year. And that's going to continue, right? We'll manage that spend. Some of that spend will get delayed as we bring on capacity later than expected and some of it may get avoided altogether. To your point on the timing of when you make those decisions, I mean, as we've spoken about before, a lot of what goes into a brewery are long lead items. And so you have to make those commitments ahead of time, sometimes years in advance. And so that's the process we go through is looking at what we have for expectations for growth and then back backing that into when we think that capacity needs to come online. But again, very successful in managing the modularity of when capacity comes online and managing the cost associated with it. Operator: The next question is coming from Peter Galbo of Bank of America. Peter Galbo: Garth, maybe just a clarification and then a question for Bill. I think off the back of Dara's question around just wine and spirits margins for the year. Maybe you can just help us a little bit with the phasing I think that you talked about inventory distributor reductions. I don't know if that's mostly a Q1 event, so that weighs on the margin. Just any help there. And then, Bill, just a question on on beer, you mentioned Victoria actually being a nice bright spot for the portfolio. That's obviously a very Hispanic-dominant brand. And so -- just I want to kind of reconcile the comments you have about the Hispanic consumer against 1 of the stronger brands in the portfolio, albeit small, growing at the rate that it is, given kind of the cautious view. . Garth Hankinson: So on the first piece of that, I would say that there's nothing abnormal or unusual around the phasing of line and Spirits margins in FY '27. The inventory destocking with distributors will happen throughout the year and not sort of in 1 event, if you will. . William Newlands: So relative to Victoria, 1 of the things we've seen, and I alluded to it on 1 of the prior questions, is Victoria has been a much younger demographic, 21 to 25. We're bringing in new consumers. And while you're correct, it is heavily driven by Hispanic consumers it's a Hispanic consumer that is recognizing the heritage of Victoria and the authenticity of Victoria and are adopting that as their brand. We've seen many times over the course of time that generations, new generations will find a brand that they would like to make their own. And it certainly appears at this point in time, recognizing it's early days, that a younger Hispanic consumer is focused on Victoria and is coming to that brand in very strong numbers and quantity. So -- we're very encouraged about that. It's always good within a portfolio of brands to have a somewhat different demographic base. And we think Victoria is going to be a sleeper. It's more than doubled over the last few years, and we think it has a lot of potential going forward as well, partially because of that younger demographic profile. Operator: Thank you. Our final question today is coming from Nadine Sarwat of Bernstein. . Nadine Sarwat: Guys, Bill, it's been a pleasure working with you and best of luck in the next chapter. Maybe 2 for me, just 1 clarifying on an answer earlier than my actual question. Earlier on the call, you said that you feel that your target margins for wine and spirits are still achievable over the medium term. But I know you withdrew your fiscal '28 guidance. Could you help us understand therefore what that target you're referring to is, is that north of 20% -- and then my actual question, mix was a 50 basis point drag to the beer top line in this last quarter, you guys called out packaging type. Can you give a little bit more color -- how much of this is you guys introducing new mix dilutive offerings? How much of that behavioral change from the consumer end? And what are you assuming in your full year guidance for this year when it comes to mix? . Garth Hankinson: So as it relates to our wine and spirits target margins, we still believe that structurally, we can get those margins in the low 20s. -- again, given all the headwinds that we're facing, that's going to take us a bit longer than expected, but we still expect to achieve that over the medium term. Operator: Thank you. At this time, I'd like to turn the floor back over to Mr. Newlands for closing comments. . William Newlands: All right. Thank you, Donna. In closing, literally, -- thank you all for joining the call today. As you can see, we are confident we're well positioned to achieve our objectives in fiscal '27 and continue driving long-term shareholder value. We have a strong foundation and a clear strategy, and this is the right moment for a seamless leadership transition. It has truly been an honor and privilege to serve as CEO of Constellation Brands over the last 7 years, Together as an organization, we've accomplished a great deal. We've grown our beer business from roughly 280 million cases to well over 400 million cases. nearly double the size of Modelo Especial and made it the #1 selling beer brand by dollars in America. We reshaped our wine and spirits business to be focused on a portfolio of higher-end brands -- we've established a capital allocation framework that we executed against with consistent discipline and we invested behind our organization to develop best-in-class talent and a company culture and future truly worth reaching for. While the industry landscape remains dynamic, I firmly believe Constellation is best positioned in this space with advantaged brands, best-in-class marketing and sales capabilities, and most importantly, an exceptional team. Having worked closely with Nick on the Board for the past 5 years, I know he understands our business deeply and has the leadership, judgment and strategic perspective to lead this company into its next phase of profitable growth. So to our investors, partners, employees with gratitude, I thank you for your trust and support over the years. It's been a privilege to lead this to lead this remarkable organization. And with that, Donna, back to you. Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's event. You may disconnect your lines or log off the webcast at this time, and enjoy the rest of your day.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to OVHcloud H1 Full Year 2026 Results. Today's speakers will be Octave Klaba, Chairman and CEO of OVHcloud; and Stephanie Besnier, CFO. I now hand over to OVH management to begin today's conference. Thank you. Octave Klaba: Good morning, everybody. I'm Octave Klaba, Chairman and CEO of OVHcloud. Thanks to being with us this morning. Let me start with the key highlights of H1 '26. As we announced, we generated EUR 555 million revenue and EBITDA EUR 227 million. That means that we generated around 5.5% like-for-like growth this H1. Our adjusted EBITDA, it's 40.9% and net revenue recurring rate, it's more than 100%. And we had this other -- unlevered free cash flow of EUR 32.3 million. As the key initiatives, so as you know, I started as the CEO 6 months ago, I make my -- a lot of interviews internally, and we already started some strategic initiatives in OVH to start this 5-year strategic plan that we started with '26 to '30. And inside of that, we announced that we will create -- that we actually started to create a vertical in defense market. The goal is really to go after the customers and the needs that we had a lot of feedback in the last quarter, and for this very critical horizon that some customers they ask us. Another strategic initiative, it's really focusing on the sales side on the Starters and Scalers on the acquisition. We can go deeper insight if you have any question about that. And on the corporate, more focusing on the regular fast closing, midsized deals. And again, I have some highlights if you have the questions about that. And we announced also that we create our AI lab, and it started -- it was initiated with this acquisition of Dragon LLM. And it's really to address the growing market that we feel that we -- our customers, they want us to be part that it's agentic AI. And on the operational highlights. So we had a few things that we wanted to share with you. So we had this EBITDA that is quite highest record from the IPO 5 years ago. So we still continue to improve the EBITDA, and it's going up and the goal is really to not to be satisfied with the level that we have today. And there was another key operational highlight. It's about the front-loaded CapEx to secure the -- our free cash flow in this year and the next year. So I think you will have some questions about that. So we will go deeper with your questions. So next page, please. On the -- so let's go deeper in the different range of products. So first one is private cloud. So we generated EUR 169 million that represents about 60.5% of our group revenue, and the growth is about 2.9% from the like-for-like growth on the Q2. And on the H1, it's 3.4%. As the highlight on the bare metal, so you know we started these initiatives in the first H1, first quarter and the second quarter. As the result, we have this 12% more customers acquisition. If we compare H1 '25 and H1 '26, it works better on the acquisition, but we need still to continue and to increase our aggressivity on the market and to win more customers. So what we put in place works, but it's not enough. I want more. And this is where we want to go into H2, in the Q3 and Q4 after more customers on the startup. On the scalers, we have this continued growth, and it works nicely what we have internally. There's still some improvement. But what we have, I'm happy what we have. And on the corporate, yes, we had some churn on some 2 customers on the corporate that didn't impact on the fundamentals of the -- on the growth. So we still have growth on that, but just we lost 2 corporate customers on that. Yes, we announced that we signed a strategic deal, strategic contract with Alchemy that is a blockchain platform. And we have a lot of successful in this blockchain platform that helps us really understand how to grow faster in the scaler go-to-market. On the hosted private cloud, on the Starters and Scalers, we still see that there was a few optimization of our customers. We are working on this new product. And I think in the next weeks, where you will see some announcement that we'll make with Broadcom. In other corporate, it's -- we really ramp up of this mission-critical deals that it's a really interesting market that we didn't have yesterday that based on the 3-AZ, maybe we'll have a chance to talk about that. Next page, please. On the public cloud, on the public cloud, we generated in the Q2, EUR 60 million, that is EUR 119 million in H1. There was 26% of Q2 growth and 14.5% of the growth in Q2. That means on the H1, it's 15.1% of growth. So we have a solid new customer acquisition. As I said, we changed the things, but still, we can make it better. On the scalers, strong upside of the current customers, and we see the opportunities on the additional products on this 3-AZ approach that we have that customers really like, and we see some migrations from the current data centers to this new model of the 3-AZ. On the corporate, we have more traction on the corporate. Still, those small -- the 2, 3 products that is still missed, and it will be delivered in the next quarters that will help definitely to go after this corporate market -- on the corporate market. So we've also have been working a lot, and we will secure more our public cloud on this end-to-end encryption on the confidential computing on the -- all the securities that it's -- that we can deliver on this public cloud in the product. And this is additional value that some customers, they are asking us. On the entry level of the range of the product, the VPS and the SaaS, we have a good proof that what we've done, it works well because we had more than 100% of additional customers that we had in H1 '26 versus H1 '25. That means that we doubled acquisition of number of customers. We started to see that in the revenue, and we'll see how it will evolve in the next quarters. But this is kind of prove that the strategy of the very aggressive prices, more volume, more customers and then having this machine to upsell and going and helping customers to use all our products, it works. Now we need to scale that and to go after more geographies, more customers and to be more aggressive, and this is what we will see in the next quarters. Next page, please. On the Web Cloud, we generated EUR 50 million, that means on the H1, EUR 100 million growth of the Q2, 70.5% and on that 70.5% of our group revenue. And then our growth is 2.4% on the Q2 and 2.5% on the H1. There was still -- yes, I would just go after the topics, and then I would just add additional comments on that. So on the starters, we just didn't really started repricing and to generate new demand, okay? This is exactly what we are doing right now, and it will be delivered in the next 2 months, 1 or 2 months, it's really ongoing. So we want to be really seen as very competitive on the starters market for the Web Cloud, but we have also the opportunity to go after the more higher market of the customers. They are more pro business that they trust us and they order us more products. So we want to go after this 2 segmentations of the products and also working on the web AI. And you will see the next quarters, next months, this transformation of the web cloud to the web AI that we will operate over the next months and quarters to go after this totally new market where AI helps our customers to build a faster, faster delivering website, help them to operate them to having the marketing, to having the additional products, the additional services. And this is what we are doing right now on the web cloud. So you don't see really the results of that in the numbers today because this is what we started last quarter, and there's still a lot of things to do, but you will see by the end of this fiscal year, I hope the first result of this strategy. Next page, please. If we see on the split by countries, France, we have in Q2, a growth of the 4.5%. That means on the H1, 5%. On the Europe, excluding France, we have 2.9% and then on the H1, 2.5%. I have to say that it was a really complex quarter. There was a lot of -- there was something that is really new, but we have seen that last 2, 3 years. And it seems like on this Q2 period of time, we will see in the next years, this customer optimization because it is end of the calendar year for events and the beginning of the next year. And I think this is what we have seen -- we started to see as the -- for the last year, this year and 2 years ago, that we have this kind of the new pattern of the behavior of the customers in December, January, February, where you see optimization of the cost and to having these discussions probably internally on the budget and the event starting as lower as they can, the new year and event then grow over the year until the December. So it's something that it's not confirmed yet. We're still working on the numbers to really understand. But this is also what we see on this Q2 result that we knew that it will be -- it's a tough period. Now we started to know and started to understand why it's a tough period. Still work to do to really understand the behavior of the customers and to confirm that we will have in the future this Q2 pattern on our revenue. So I don't know yet, but it is what we started to see. And then the rest of the world, we had this Q2, 8.7% and then H1, 9.5% still continue to grow on the bare metal and on this public cloud product. So I will let Stephanie to go in the financial results, and I will have talk with you on the outlook. Stephanie Besnier: Thank you very much, Octave. Hello, everyone. This is Stephanie speaking. Thank you for being with us this morning. So let's begin this financial section with our key financial figures for H1. So we delivered a profitable growth with a record adjusted EBITDA margin since our IPO and solid unlevered free cash flow despite having significantly front-loaded our CapEx ahead of H2. We'll come to that point. So we recorded an organic revenue growth of 5.5% and adjusted EBITDA margin of 40.9%. So we are up 90 basis points compared with H1 '25, thanks to our operational efficiency. And CapEx was 42.9% of our revenue, up 6.9 points compared with last year H1 '25, of which 11% were front-loaded for H2. We have decided to make proactive investments to secure our supply chain and mitigate the impact of skyrocketing component costs, which began to materialize in our Q2. Despite this anticipation of our CapEx, you see that we generated a solid unlevered free cash flow of EUR 32.3 million on this H1. So going to the next slide. Regarding our top line, as Octave said at the beginning, we delivered a like-for-like growth of 5.5% during this H1. So this was driven by, first, a private cloud performance, up 3.4% like-for-like, impacted by a 1.2 point headwind from the churn of the 2 corporate clients that we mentioned during our Q1 results. And we have also a softer hosted private cloud dynamics following Broadcom price increases. Second, public cloud continues to lead our growth trajectory, up 15.1% like-for-like, confirming its position as our primary growth engine. And last, Web Cloud, up 2.4% like-for-like. So now let's take a closer look at our P&L on the next slide. So P&L, as you can see, we achieved another strong step-up in profitability with an adjusted EBITDA of EUR 227 million in H1, and it represents a margin of 40.9%, our highest margin since our IPO. So the strong 90 basis points improvement in our EBITDA margin is coming from a positive mix effect on our direct costs, reduced electricity costs as a percentage of revenue compared to H1 at less than 5% of our revenue. And I can tell you that we are hedged in the current context also for the next 18 months. And we have also a strong operating leverage on our fixed cost base. We delivered an EBIT of EUR 35.4 million, representing a margin of 6.4%. On a like-for-like basis, if we exclude the one-off gain from the disposal of a legacy data center in Paris last year, our EBIT margin remained broadly stable. After including a financial result of minus EUR 28.7 million and a tax expense of EUR 0.7 million, we recorded a net profit of EUR 5.9 million for H1, slightly lower than last year. Now let's look at the increase in profitability, how it translated into cash generation. So our strong profitability enabled us to generate a solid unlevered free cash flow of EUR 32.3 million in H1 '26. So our CapEx, if we exclude M&A, amounted to EUR 238 million -- EUR 238.5 million exactly in H1, and it represents 43% of our revenue. Our growth CapEx accounted for 30% of revenue. And again, 11 points of our CapEx were deliberately front-loaded ahead of H2 to secure component availability and contain hyperinflation. Recurring CapEx represented 13% of revenue. So our level of CapEx is compensated by our profitability and change in operating working capital requirements, which was higher than usual and amounted to EUR 54.7 million in H1, and it includes phasing effect due to late orders in February. So all in all, after leases and financial charges, our levered free cash flow stood at minus EUR 14.2 million. So now let me give you a detailed view of our CapEx on the next slide. So our CapEx, again, excluding M&A, represented approximately 43% of revenue in H1. So let me explain the key moving parts. First, on the hardware CapEx, it represented 33% of revenue, EUR 187 million. So it's a step-up compared with EUR 27 million in H1. And as I already mentioned, this was a deliberate decision in face of a global supply crisis on memory and disk components to first secure our component availability and contain cost hyperinflation. Second, our infrastructure and network CapEx came down to 2% of revenue, EUR 11 million, with some phasing effect from H1 to H2. And product and software CapEx remained stable around EUR 37 million, 7% of our revenue, reflecting our continued investment in expanding the product portfolio. Notably with new public cloud services and mission-critical offerings while we control our costs. Other CapEx remained marginal, around 1% of our revenue. So now given the exceptional supply environment, we have adjusted our full year CapEx guidance, which I will walk you through on the next slide. So as I just mentioned, the global component crisis, particularly on memory and disk has led us to adjust our full year '26 CapEx guidance. So I will take you through the bridge on this slide. You'll remember, our initial guidance was 30% to 32% of CapEx as a percentage of our revenue. The exceptional hyperinflation on memory and disk components add approximately 3 percentage points. However, we decided to front-load some of those CapEx, and by doing so, we realized a saving of approximately EUR 10 million in our H1. So we are already partially offsetting the inflation impact through proactive timing, and we are securing our supply. So this brings our new FY CapEx guidance to 33% to 35% of revenue. This adjustment is cyclical and not structural. It reflects the current component inflation environment. We have already passed through price increases to part of our customers effective April 1, and we continue to monitor the situation closely to calibrate further adjustments as needed. On top of this, we are going to build a dedicated stock of approximately EUR 50 million in memory and disk components. Those are standard components, and there are no obsolescence risk, and it will be strictly earmarked for '25 consumption. This exceptional envelope allows us to secure availability. This is very important, and we lock in pricing ahead of further anticipated cost increases. Here again, by purchases in H2 rather than at the beginning of '27, we estimate additional savings of approximately EUR 15 million, 1-5. So in total, EUR 10 million in H1, EUR 15 million coming up in H2. Our front-loading strategy generates EUR 25 million savings that would have been lost had we waited. To finance this EUR 50 million of lock-in stock for '27, we will use a dedicated exceptional financing facility. So our underlying business generates sufficient cash to cover all our FY '26 investments and delivering a positive levered free cash flow in FY '26 that we confirm today. So including exceptional and dedicated financing for those lock-in stock for FY '27 CapEx. Let me now turn to our balance sheet and financial structure. That will be my last slide. So our financial structure remains robust and well positioned for the future. Our net debt stood at EUR 1.125 billion at the end of February '26, and it's broadly stable compared to August '25. Our leverage ratio has continued to decrease 2.6x our EBITDA, in line with our debt policy. The all-in cost of debt remained unchanged year-on-year at 4.4%, demonstrating the quality of our hedging strategy. Available liquidity stands at EUR 236 million, comprising EUR 36 million in cash and our undrawn EUR 200 million multipurpose credit facility. As you can see on the right-hand side of the slide, we have no major debt repayment before FY 2030, giving us significant financial flexibility. Our funding sources are well diversified. We have our EUR 500 million inaugural bond at a fixed rate of 4.75% maturing in FY '31, rated BB- by S&P and Ba3 by Moody's, our EUR 450 million EU taxonomy aligned green loan maturing in FY 2030. So it's a first for a European cloud player. Our EUR 200 million EIB credit facility; and finally, our undrawn multipurpose facility of EUR 200 million. And this credit facility was also converted into a sustainability-linked loan, further reinforcing our commitment to responsible financing. So in summary, we have a strong, well-hedged balance sheet with no near-term refinancing needs, supporting our path to positive free cash flow. And now I will hand over to Octave to discuss our outlook. Octave Klaba: Thank You, Stephanie. So for the FY '26 activity, our guidelines don't change, doesn't change. We anticipate like-for-like revenue growth of 5% to 7%. Adjusted EBITDA margin more than FY '25. CapEx, adjusted CapEx, if we consider really FY '26 activity is 32%, 35%, that is a little bit more, but levered free cash flow -- free cash flow will be positive for this '26 activity. So now we open the floor for your questions, if you have any. Operator: [Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Ines Mao from BNP Paribas. Ines Mao: I just have 2 questions. The first one is on your CapEx breakdown. So I look at the CapEx breakdown by component. I see that hardware was up as a percentage of revenue, which was voluntarily. But if it was only hardware, why was also recurring CapEx higher in H1 year-over-year? And my second question is, can you comment further on potential pass-through price increases to moderate the impact of this price up cycle on CapEx? Is it still on the menu? Or is -- yes, can you give us more color on this? Stephanie Besnier: Yes. Thank you, Ines. So we have a slight increase of our recurring CapEx to 13% of our revenue. This incorporates also the impact of inflation that started to kick in, particularly in our Q2 numbers. And as for the price increase, we have already started to partially pass through the impact of this inflation. We launched the first initiative around increasing our prices April 1. We are doing it tactically. We don't price all our customer bases. We focus particularly on the new configurations, on new customers and also on products where we have less price elasticity. And obviously, I mean, we remain very careful, like we mentioned, and we will continue to monitor the evolution of the prices to be ready to react and to engage into potentially new price increases if needed. Operator: [Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Derric Marcon from Bernstein. Derric Marcon: So the first one is on price increase. Can you quantify the impact that it will have in 20 -- in fiscal year 2026? And what was factored in the unchanged guidance of plus 5%, plus 7%? And if we look to 2027, what would be the impact of this price increase? That's my first question. The second question is about the telephony and connectivity. Do you see the trough coming in the next quarters? Or where do you see the trough for this business because it's still waiting on the performance of Web Cloud in H1? And my third question is on AI. Could you quantify, please, the impact of AI on public cloud growth? Stephanie Besnier: Thank you, Derric, for your questions. So first, on the price increase, I mean, we've just launched them a few days ago. Like I said, I mean, we've done tactical price increase, and this will have a gradual effect. We have some of our customers that are committing. So bear in mind that this will flow through over several quarters. We will also monitor the impact of this price increase. So far, it's too soon to tell you a clear impact. In any case, on that basis, we have no -- we have decided not to change our guidance, and we confirm the 5% to 7% range for this year. And again, for the same reason, I mean, we monitor the impact in our Q3. We'll have a better view probably at the end of Q3 of this impact, and we will work also on the guidance for '27 in the coming months, and we'll get back to you with indications and guidance for '27 at the end of October during our full year communication. Octave Klaba: On the VoIP and access, thanks for this question. So no, we don't see any change for the moment. We started to work on the web pages on the offers just last quarter, and it's still the work we are working on. I hope that the next quarter, it will be done, and we will start seeing the difference in this decrease of the revenue because it's impacting the perception on our growth on the Web Cloud. So it's sad to have this decrease of the revenue while we're doing well on the domain name of the e-mails, et cetera. So I understand your question. Still it's work -- the work will be delivered. I hope it will be May 1 on the -- or June 1, on the new range of the Web Cloud and the new range of the VoIP. And when we will see also what to do exactly, we have different options for the access, for the connectivity. Stephanie Besnier: And your last question, Derric, was on AI contribution. You remember, I mean, we always mentioned and that was true so far that we remain cautious with regard to AI, considering the level of return of investment that we've seen so far. So the contribution remained quite small because we invested tactically to answer also some requests from our customers. It's around 1 point like in the previous quarter. Now I mean you may have seen the announcement last week, we've decided to launch our lab -- our AI labs. We've made a small acquisition for Dragon LLM. And last point is that we -- in the context of this inflation on the standard components, we do see a clear improvement on the GPU return compared to CPU. And now it looks like we could achieve similar return on GPUs and on some of our CPUs. So basically, what I'm saying is that we are seeing an evolution on the market and on the economics, and we are ready to invest in the coming quarter more significantly in AI. Operator: The next question comes from Qihang Zhang from Lazard. Qihang Zhang: It's regarding your leverage -- levered free cash flow guidance is guided to be positive for financial year 2026. Could you please elaborate on this front? Is the EUR 50 million locked-in stock for '27 included in this guidance? And how should we think about the working capital for this year? Stephanie Besnier: Thank you for your questions. So to be very transparent on the levered free cash flow, like we explained, we are going to acquire components ahead of '27 that will be clearly isolated and stopped for '27 for EUR 50 million that will help us secure our supply chain. And also by doing so, it's prudent management because we will generate what we estimate around EUR 50 million of cost savings. So we are going to invest EUR 50 million more exceptional. And in front of it, we are going to set up an exceptional short-term financing of EUR 50 million. So those 2 elements will be included in our levered free cash flow and neutralized. So basically, I would say, adjusted for '26 basis, our levered free cash flow is going to be positive in '26. We don't guide for any specific numbers. It will be, in any case, above 0. And working capital, I mean, we don't guide also specifically. You see that we have some positive impact for this semester because we had some payments that were out of the period, it will also depend on the timing of the reception of the CapEx. So it's a bit too soon to comment on our working capital for the full year. Operator: Thank you for your questions. I hand the conference back to the OVH management for any closing comments. Octave Klaba: Perfect. Thank you very much for your questions. Just to have the key takeaways, highlights. 5.5% growth like-for-like. Adjusted EBITDA that is a record from IPO and the front-loaded CapEx for FY -- so H2 '26 and a lock in the stock for CapEx FY '27. Last strategic initiatives, we have -- we wanted to highlight 3 of them. Defense market, we go after this. Going after the acquisition of the small customers, digital customers, having more pressure of that and going after this more regular midsized deals and also launching our AI labs with the acquisition of Dragon LLM. In FY '26 guidance, 5% to 7% of growth like-for-like, adjusted EBITDA more than FY 2025, adjusted CapEx 33%, 35% of the revenue and positive levered free cash flow. I want to thank you for all your questions at the time and having a very good day. Stephanie Besnier: Thank you very much. Octave Klaba: Thank you.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to OVHcloud H1 Full Year 2026 Results. Today's speakers will be Octave Klaba, Chairman and CEO of OVHcloud; and Stephanie Besnier, CFO. I now hand over to OVH management to begin today's conference. Thank you. Octave Klaba: Good morning, everybody. I'm Octave Klaba, Chairman and CEO of OVHcloud. Thanks to being with us this morning. Let me start with the key highlights of H1 '26. As we announced, we generated EUR 555 million revenue and EBITDA EUR 227 million. That means that we generated around 5.5% like-for-like growth this H1. Our adjusted EBITDA, it's 40.9% and net revenue recurring rate, it's more than 100%. And we had this other -- unlevered free cash flow of EUR 32.3 million. As the key initiatives, so as you know, I started as the CEO 6 months ago, I make my -- a lot of interviews internally, and we already started some strategic initiatives in OVH to start this 5-year strategic plan that we started with '26 to '30. And inside of that, we announced that we will create -- that we actually started to create a vertical in defense market. The goal is really to go after the customers and the needs that we had a lot of feedback in the last quarter, and for this very critical horizon that some customers they ask us. Another strategic initiative, it's really focusing on the sales side on the Starters and Scalers on the acquisition. We can go deeper insight if you have any question about that. And on the corporate, more focusing on the regular fast closing, midsized deals. And again, I have some highlights if you have the questions about that. And we announced also that we create our AI lab, and it started -- it was initiated with this acquisition of Dragon LLM. And it's really to address the growing market that we feel that we -- our customers, they want us to be part that it's agentic AI. And on the operational highlights. So we had a few things that we wanted to share with you. So we had this EBITDA that is quite highest record from the IPO 5 years ago. So we still continue to improve the EBITDA, and it's going up and the goal is really to not to be satisfied with the level that we have today. And there was another key operational highlight. It's about the front-loaded CapEx to secure the -- our free cash flow in this year and the next year. So I think you will have some questions about that. So we will go deeper with your questions. So next page, please. On the -- so let's go deeper in the different range of products. So first one is private cloud. So we generated EUR 169 million that represents about 60.5% of our group revenue, and the growth is about 2.9% from the like-for-like growth on the Q2. And on the H1, it's 3.4%. As the highlight on the bare metal, so you know we started these initiatives in the first H1, first quarter and the second quarter. As the result, we have this 12% more customers acquisition. If we compare H1 '25 and H1 '26, it works better on the acquisition, but we need still to continue and to increase our aggressivity on the market and to win more customers. So what we put in place works, but it's not enough. I want more. And this is where we want to go into H2, in the Q3 and Q4 after more customers on the startup. On the scalers, we have this continued growth, and it works nicely what we have internally. There's still some improvement. But what we have, I'm happy what we have. And on the corporate, yes, we had some churn on some 2 customers on the corporate that didn't impact on the fundamentals of the -- on the growth. So we still have growth on that, but just we lost 2 corporate customers on that. Yes, we announced that we signed a strategic deal, strategic contract with Alchemy that is a blockchain platform. And we have a lot of successful in this blockchain platform that helps us really understand how to grow faster in the scaler go-to-market. On the hosted private cloud, on the Starters and Scalers, we still see that there was a few optimization of our customers. We are working on this new product. And I think in the next weeks, where you will see some announcement that we'll make with Broadcom. In other corporate, it's -- we really ramp up of this mission-critical deals that it's a really interesting market that we didn't have yesterday that based on the 3-AZ, maybe we'll have a chance to talk about that. Next page, please. On the public cloud, on the public cloud, we generated in the Q2, EUR 60 million, that is EUR 119 million in H1. There was 26% of Q2 growth and 14.5% of the growth in Q2. That means on the H1, it's 15.1% of growth. So we have a solid new customer acquisition. As I said, we changed the things, but still, we can make it better. On the scalers, strong upside of the current customers, and we see the opportunities on the additional products on this 3-AZ approach that we have that customers really like, and we see some migrations from the current data centers to this new model of the 3-AZ. On the corporate, we have more traction on the corporate. Still, those small -- the 2, 3 products that is still missed, and it will be delivered in the next quarters that will help definitely to go after this corporate market -- on the corporate market. So we've also have been working a lot, and we will secure more our public cloud on this end-to-end encryption on the confidential computing on the -- all the securities that it's -- that we can deliver on this public cloud in the product. And this is additional value that some customers, they are asking us. On the entry level of the range of the product, the VPS and the SaaS, we have a good proof that what we've done, it works well because we had more than 100% of additional customers that we had in H1 '26 versus H1 '25. That means that we doubled acquisition of number of customers. We started to see that in the revenue, and we'll see how it will evolve in the next quarters. But this is kind of prove that the strategy of the very aggressive prices, more volume, more customers and then having this machine to upsell and going and helping customers to use all our products, it works. Now we need to scale that and to go after more geographies, more customers and to be more aggressive, and this is what we will see in the next quarters. Next page, please. On the Web Cloud, we generated EUR 50 million, that means on the H1, EUR 100 million growth of the Q2, 70.5% and on that 70.5% of our group revenue. And then our growth is 2.4% on the Q2 and 2.5% on the H1. There was still -- yes, I would just go after the topics, and then I would just add additional comments on that. So on the starters, we just didn't really started repricing and to generate new demand, okay? This is exactly what we are doing right now, and it will be delivered in the next 2 months, 1 or 2 months, it's really ongoing. So we want to be really seen as very competitive on the starters market for the Web Cloud, but we have also the opportunity to go after the more higher market of the customers. They are more pro business that they trust us and they order us more products. So we want to go after this 2 segmentations of the products and also working on the web AI. And you will see the next quarters, next months, this transformation of the web cloud to the web AI that we will operate over the next months and quarters to go after this totally new market where AI helps our customers to build a faster, faster delivering website, help them to operate them to having the marketing, to having the additional products, the additional services. And this is what we are doing right now on the web cloud. So you don't see really the results of that in the numbers today because this is what we started last quarter, and there's still a lot of things to do, but you will see by the end of this fiscal year, I hope the first result of this strategy. Next page, please. If we see on the split by countries, France, we have in Q2, a growth of the 4.5%. That means on the H1, 5%. On the Europe, excluding France, we have 2.9% and then on the H1, 2.5%. I have to say that it was a really complex quarter. There was a lot of -- there was something that is really new, but we have seen that last 2, 3 years. And it seems like on this Q2 period of time, we will see in the next years, this customer optimization because it is end of the calendar year for events and the beginning of the next year. And I think this is what we have seen -- we started to see as the -- for the last year, this year and 2 years ago, that we have this kind of the new pattern of the behavior of the customers in December, January, February, where you see optimization of the cost and to having these discussions probably internally on the budget and the event starting as lower as they can, the new year and event then grow over the year until the December. So it's something that it's not confirmed yet. We're still working on the numbers to really understand. But this is also what we see on this Q2 result that we knew that it will be -- it's a tough period. Now we started to know and started to understand why it's a tough period. Still work to do to really understand the behavior of the customers and to confirm that we will have in the future this Q2 pattern on our revenue. So I don't know yet, but it is what we started to see. And then the rest of the world, we had this Q2, 8.7% and then H1, 9.5% still continue to grow on the bare metal and on this public cloud product. So I will let Stephanie to go in the financial results, and I will have talk with you on the outlook. Stephanie Besnier: Thank you very much, Octave. Hello, everyone. This is Stephanie speaking. Thank you for being with us this morning. So let's begin this financial section with our key financial figures for H1. So we delivered a profitable growth with a record adjusted EBITDA margin since our IPO and solid unlevered free cash flow despite having significantly front-loaded our CapEx ahead of H2. We'll come to that point. So we recorded an organic revenue growth of 5.5% and adjusted EBITDA margin of 40.9%. So we are up 90 basis points compared with H1 '25, thanks to our operational efficiency. And CapEx was 42.9% of our revenue, up 6.9 points compared with last year H1 '25, of which 11% were front-loaded for H2. We have decided to make proactive investments to secure our supply chain and mitigate the impact of skyrocketing component costs, which began to materialize in our Q2. Despite this anticipation of our CapEx, you see that we generated a solid unlevered free cash flow of EUR 32.3 million on this H1. So going to the next slide. Regarding our top line, as Octave said at the beginning, we delivered a like-for-like growth of 5.5% during this H1. So this was driven by, first, a private cloud performance, up 3.4% like-for-like, impacted by a 1.2 point headwind from the churn of the 2 corporate clients that we mentioned during our Q1 results. And we have also a softer hosted private cloud dynamics following Broadcom price increases. Second, public cloud continues to lead our growth trajectory, up 15.1% like-for-like, confirming its position as our primary growth engine. And last, Web Cloud, up 2.4% like-for-like. So now let's take a closer look at our P&L on the next slide. So P&L, as you can see, we achieved another strong step-up in profitability with an adjusted EBITDA of EUR 227 million in H1, and it represents a margin of 40.9%, our highest margin since our IPO. So the strong 90 basis points improvement in our EBITDA margin is coming from a positive mix effect on our direct costs, reduced electricity costs as a percentage of revenue compared to H1 at less than 5% of our revenue. And I can tell you that we are hedged in the current context also for the next 18 months. And we have also a strong operating leverage on our fixed cost base. We delivered an EBIT of EUR 35.4 million, representing a margin of 6.4%. On a like-for-like basis, if we exclude the one-off gain from the disposal of a legacy data center in Paris last year, our EBIT margin remained broadly stable. After including a financial result of minus EUR 28.7 million and a tax expense of EUR 0.7 million, we recorded a net profit of EUR 5.9 million for H1, slightly lower than last year. Now let's look at the increase in profitability, how it translated into cash generation. So our strong profitability enabled us to generate a solid unlevered free cash flow of EUR 32.3 million in H1 '26. So our CapEx, if we exclude M&A, amounted to EUR 238 million -- EUR 238.5 million exactly in H1, and it represents 43% of our revenue. Our growth CapEx accounted for 30% of revenue. And again, 11 points of our CapEx were deliberately front-loaded ahead of H2 to secure component availability and contain hyperinflation. Recurring CapEx represented 13% of revenue. So our level of CapEx is compensated by our profitability and change in operating working capital requirements, which was higher than usual and amounted to EUR 54.7 million in H1, and it includes phasing effect due to late orders in February. So all in all, after leases and financial charges, our levered free cash flow stood at minus EUR 14.2 million. So now let me give you a detailed view of our CapEx on the next slide. So our CapEx, again, excluding M&A, represented approximately 43% of revenue in H1. So let me explain the key moving parts. First, on the hardware CapEx, it represented 33% of revenue, EUR 187 million. So it's a step-up compared with EUR 27 million in H1. And as I already mentioned, this was a deliberate decision in face of a global supply crisis on memory and disk components to first secure our component availability and contain cost hyperinflation. Second, our infrastructure and network CapEx came down to 2% of revenue, EUR 11 million, with some phasing effect from H1 to H2. And product and software CapEx remained stable around EUR 37 million, 7% of our revenue, reflecting our continued investment in expanding the product portfolio. Notably with new public cloud services and mission-critical offerings while we control our costs. Other CapEx remained marginal, around 1% of our revenue. So now given the exceptional supply environment, we have adjusted our full year CapEx guidance, which I will walk you through on the next slide. So as I just mentioned, the global component crisis, particularly on memory and disk has led us to adjust our full year '26 CapEx guidance. So I will take you through the bridge on this slide. You'll remember, our initial guidance was 30% to 32% of CapEx as a percentage of our revenue. The exceptional hyperinflation on memory and disk components add approximately 3 percentage points. However, we decided to front-load some of those CapEx, and by doing so, we realized a saving of approximately EUR 10 million in our H1. So we are already partially offsetting the inflation impact through proactive timing, and we are securing our supply. So this brings our new FY CapEx guidance to 33% to 35% of revenue. This adjustment is cyclical and not structural. It reflects the current component inflation environment. We have already passed through price increases to part of our customers effective April 1, and we continue to monitor the situation closely to calibrate further adjustments as needed. On top of this, we are going to build a dedicated stock of approximately EUR 50 million in memory and disk components. Those are standard components, and there are no obsolescence risk, and it will be strictly earmarked for '25 consumption. This exceptional envelope allows us to secure availability. This is very important, and we lock in pricing ahead of further anticipated cost increases. Here again, by purchases in H2 rather than at the beginning of '27, we estimate additional savings of approximately EUR 15 million, 1-5. So in total, EUR 10 million in H1, EUR 15 million coming up in H2. Our front-loading strategy generates EUR 25 million savings that would have been lost had we waited. To finance this EUR 50 million of lock-in stock for '27, we will use a dedicated exceptional financing facility. So our underlying business generates sufficient cash to cover all our FY '26 investments and delivering a positive levered free cash flow in FY '26 that we confirm today. So including exceptional and dedicated financing for those lock-in stock for FY '27 CapEx. Let me now turn to our balance sheet and financial structure. That will be my last slide. So our financial structure remains robust and well positioned for the future. Our net debt stood at EUR 1.125 billion at the end of February '26, and it's broadly stable compared to August '25. Our leverage ratio has continued to decrease 2.6x our EBITDA, in line with our debt policy. The all-in cost of debt remained unchanged year-on-year at 4.4%, demonstrating the quality of our hedging strategy. Available liquidity stands at EUR 236 million, comprising EUR 36 million in cash and our undrawn EUR 200 million multipurpose credit facility. As you can see on the right-hand side of the slide, we have no major debt repayment before FY 2030, giving us significant financial flexibility. Our funding sources are well diversified. We have our EUR 500 million inaugural bond at a fixed rate of 4.75% maturing in FY '31, rated BB- by S&P and Ba3 by Moody's, our EUR 450 million EU taxonomy aligned green loan maturing in FY 2030. So it's a first for a European cloud player. Our EUR 200 million EIB credit facility; and finally, our undrawn multipurpose facility of EUR 200 million. And this credit facility was also converted into a sustainability-linked loan, further reinforcing our commitment to responsible financing. So in summary, we have a strong, well-hedged balance sheet with no near-term refinancing needs, supporting our path to positive free cash flow. And now I will hand over to Octave to discuss our outlook. Octave Klaba: Thank You, Stephanie. So for the FY '26 activity, our guidelines don't change, doesn't change. We anticipate like-for-like revenue growth of 5% to 7%. Adjusted EBITDA margin more than FY '25. CapEx, adjusted CapEx, if we consider really FY '26 activity is 32%, 35%, that is a little bit more, but levered free cash flow -- free cash flow will be positive for this '26 activity. So now we open the floor for your questions, if you have any. Operator: [Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Ines Mao from BNP Paribas. Ines Mao: I just have 2 questions. The first one is on your CapEx breakdown. So I look at the CapEx breakdown by component. I see that hardware was up as a percentage of revenue, which was voluntarily. But if it was only hardware, why was also recurring CapEx higher in H1 year-over-year? And my second question is, can you comment further on potential pass-through price increases to moderate the impact of this price up cycle on CapEx? Is it still on the menu? Or is -- yes, can you give us more color on this? Stephanie Besnier: Yes. Thank you, Ines. So we have a slight increase of our recurring CapEx to 13% of our revenue. This incorporates also the impact of inflation that started to kick in, particularly in our Q2 numbers. And as for the price increase, we have already started to partially pass through the impact of this inflation. We launched the first initiative around increasing our prices April 1. We are doing it tactically. We don't price all our customer bases. We focus particularly on the new configurations, on new customers and also on products where we have less price elasticity. And obviously, I mean, we remain very careful, like we mentioned, and we will continue to monitor the evolution of the prices to be ready to react and to engage into potentially new price increases if needed. Operator: [Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Derric Marcon from Bernstein. Derric Marcon: So the first one is on price increase. Can you quantify the impact that it will have in 20 -- in fiscal year 2026? And what was factored in the unchanged guidance of plus 5%, plus 7%? And if we look to 2027, what would be the impact of this price increase? That's my first question. The second question is about the telephony and connectivity. Do you see the trough coming in the next quarters? Or where do you see the trough for this business because it's still waiting on the performance of Web Cloud in H1? And my third question is on AI. Could you quantify, please, the impact of AI on public cloud growth? Stephanie Besnier: Thank you, Derric, for your questions. So first, on the price increase, I mean, we've just launched them a few days ago. Like I said, I mean, we've done tactical price increase, and this will have a gradual effect. We have some of our customers that are committing. So bear in mind that this will flow through over several quarters. We will also monitor the impact of this price increase. So far, it's too soon to tell you a clear impact. In any case, on that basis, we have no -- we have decided not to change our guidance, and we confirm the 5% to 7% range for this year. And again, for the same reason, I mean, we monitor the impact in our Q3. We'll have a better view probably at the end of Q3 of this impact, and we will work also on the guidance for '27 in the coming months, and we'll get back to you with indications and guidance for '27 at the end of October during our full year communication. Octave Klaba: On the VoIP and access, thanks for this question. So no, we don't see any change for the moment. We started to work on the web pages on the offers just last quarter, and it's still the work we are working on. I hope that the next quarter, it will be done, and we will start seeing the difference in this decrease of the revenue because it's impacting the perception on our growth on the Web Cloud. So it's sad to have this decrease of the revenue while we're doing well on the domain name of the e-mails, et cetera. So I understand your question. Still it's work -- the work will be delivered. I hope it will be May 1 on the -- or June 1, on the new range of the Web Cloud and the new range of the VoIP. And when we will see also what to do exactly, we have different options for the access, for the connectivity. Stephanie Besnier: And your last question, Derric, was on AI contribution. You remember, I mean, we always mentioned and that was true so far that we remain cautious with regard to AI, considering the level of return of investment that we've seen so far. So the contribution remained quite small because we invested tactically to answer also some requests from our customers. It's around 1 point like in the previous quarter. Now I mean you may have seen the announcement last week, we've decided to launch our lab -- our AI labs. We've made a small acquisition for Dragon LLM. And last point is that we -- in the context of this inflation on the standard components, we do see a clear improvement on the GPU return compared to CPU. And now it looks like we could achieve similar return on GPUs and on some of our CPUs. So basically, what I'm saying is that we are seeing an evolution on the market and on the economics, and we are ready to invest in the coming quarter more significantly in AI. Operator: The next question comes from Qihang Zhang from Lazard. Qihang Zhang: It's regarding your leverage -- levered free cash flow guidance is guided to be positive for financial year 2026. Could you please elaborate on this front? Is the EUR 50 million locked-in stock for '27 included in this guidance? And how should we think about the working capital for this year? Stephanie Besnier: Thank you for your questions. So to be very transparent on the levered free cash flow, like we explained, we are going to acquire components ahead of '27 that will be clearly isolated and stopped for '27 for EUR 50 million that will help us secure our supply chain. And also by doing so, it's prudent management because we will generate what we estimate around EUR 50 million of cost savings. So we are going to invest EUR 50 million more exceptional. And in front of it, we are going to set up an exceptional short-term financing of EUR 50 million. So those 2 elements will be included in our levered free cash flow and neutralized. So basically, I would say, adjusted for '26 basis, our levered free cash flow is going to be positive in '26. We don't guide for any specific numbers. It will be, in any case, above 0. And working capital, I mean, we don't guide also specifically. You see that we have some positive impact for this semester because we had some payments that were out of the period, it will also depend on the timing of the reception of the CapEx. So it's a bit too soon to comment on our working capital for the full year. Operator: Thank you for your questions. I hand the conference back to the OVH management for any closing comments. Octave Klaba: Perfect. Thank you very much for your questions. Just to have the key takeaways, highlights. 5.5% growth like-for-like. Adjusted EBITDA that is a record from IPO and the front-loaded CapEx for FY -- so H2 '26 and a lock in the stock for CapEx FY '27. Last strategic initiatives, we have -- we wanted to highlight 3 of them. Defense market, we go after this. Going after the acquisition of the small customers, digital customers, having more pressure of that and going after this more regular midsized deals and also launching our AI labs with the acquisition of Dragon LLM. In FY '26 guidance, 5% to 7% of growth like-for-like, adjusted EBITDA more than FY 2025, adjusted CapEx 33%, 35% of the revenue and positive levered free cash flow. I want to thank you for all your questions at the time and having a very good day. Stephanie Besnier: Thank you very much. Octave Klaba: Thank you.
Operator: Good morning, and welcome to the BlackBerry Fourth Quarter and Full Fiscal Year 2026 Results Conference Call. My name is Betsy, and I will be your conference moderator for today's call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded for replay purposes. I would now like to turn today's call over to Suzanne Spera, Senior Director of Investor Relations, BlackBerry. Please go ahead. Unknown Executive: Thank you, Betsy. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to BlackBerry's Fourth Quarter and Full Fiscal Year 2026 Earnings Conference Call. Joining me on today's call is Blackberry's Chief Executive Officer, John Giamatteo; and Chief Financial Officer, Tim Foote. After I read our cautionary note regarding forward-looking statements, John will provide a business update, and Tim will review the financial results. We will then open the call for a brief Q&A session. This call is available to the general public via call-in numbers and via webcast in the Investor Information section at blackberry.com. As part of today's webcast, presentation slides will be played. The slides are also available on the Investor Information section at blackberry.com as well the replay of today's call. Some of the statements we'll be making today constitute forward-looking statements and are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of applicable U.S. and Canadian securities laws. We'll indicate forward-looking statements by using words such as expect, will, should, model, indeed, believe and similar expressions. Forward-looking statements are based on estimates and presumptions made by the company in light of his experience and its -- of historical trends current conditions and expected future developments as well as other factors that the company believes are relevant. Many factors could cause the company's actual results or performance to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. These factors include the risk factors that are discussed in the company's annual filings and MD&A. You should not place undue reliance on the company's forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statements are made only as of today, and the company has no intention and undertakes no obligation to update or revise any of them, except as required by law. As is customary during the call, John and Tim will reference non-GAAP numbers in their summary of our quarterly results. For a reconciliation between our GAAP and non-GAAP numbers, please see the earnings press release published earlier today, which is available on the EDGAR, SEDAR+ and blackberry.com websites. And with that, let me now turn the call over to John. John Giamatteo: Thanks, Suzanne, and thanks to everyone for joining today's call. BlackBerry finished the fiscal year with another strong quarter, delivering double-digit top line growth and marking the eighth consecutive quarter of improving GAAP profitability, capping 2 full years of significant progress in the fundamentals of the business. When this new management team was appointed, we promised a turnaround to transform BlackBerry into a profitable growth company, and I'm pleased to report that we've done exactly that. These are not just data points or even a trend, but a consistent track record of delivery. The turnaround is complete, and the BlackBerry story is now a growth story. . QNX delivered another rule of 40 quarter, rounding out a rule of 40 year. We achieved the second consecutive record for revenue in the quarter, exceeding the top end of the guidance range at $78.7 million, representing 20% year-over-year growth. The nature of the business means -- building on a solid and underappreciated Q3, we believe QNX is as strong as ever. Revenue was driven by a record quarter for royalties and development revenue had its best quarter of the year. We are delighted to report that QNX royalty backlog continues to grow, increasing to approximately $950 million. We added significantly more into the backlog than we recognized in the P&L this year. The backlog provides QNX with a line of sight to ongoing multiyear durable revenue growth that few companies enjoy. Consistently adding backlog year after year, significantly above the rate it is recognized in the P&L is a key indicator of future revenue growth potential. This is not a business that is slowing down, but rather one that is compounding, powered by our continued leadership in automotive and growing momentum across physical AI, robotics, industrial, medical and emerging markets. The royalty engine is just getting started, and we're more excited than ever about the future of QNX. It is important to reiterate that QNX's growth should not be judged from quarter-to-quarter. The nature of the business means that design wins aren't evenly spread and therefore, neither are development tool purchases. Further, the majority of revenue we secure from a design win will come once it moves into production, which is often 2 to 3 years in the future. As a result, some quarters like Q1 tend to be seasonally softer, while others such as Q4 are typically much stronger. We saw this last year. Q1 grew at a single-digit rate year-over-year in fiscal 2026. But QNX still delivered 14% growth for the full fiscal year. We expect a similar cadence this year. Despite that unevenness from quarter-to-quarter based on our strong backlog, pipeline and operating leverage, we expect QNX to remain a Rule of 40 business for fiscal year 2027. Therefore, it is important to focus more on the strength of our full year growth, the continued expansion of our backlog and our growing design win pipeline all of which points to QNX remaining a solidly double-digit growth business. Our QNX strategy is underpinned by our automotive leadership. This past quarter, we demonstrated that with a wide range of design wins in multiple domains. Our largest win of the quarter was with a Tier 1 supplier for the Chinese market where QNX will be deployed on Chinese chip maker, Xeris SoCs in a range of smart sensors for use by a number of leading OEMs. China remains a large, valuable and growing market for us, demonstrated by this win, which comes on the back of several other significant wins in recent quarters. We continue to demonstrate our leadership in the digital cockpit domain, including a major win with one of the world's top 5 automakers based in North America. We were able to successfully upsell the customer to a broader range of our product portfolio for a platform that we expect to go into production this year. We also secured a significant ADAS safety system design win in Europe with another top 5 OEM that is deploying a Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset. In addition to the progress in our core auto strategy, we have 2 key growth accelerators that offer significant upside potential. The first is the move up the automotive software stack beyond the core operating system into the middleware layer with our alloy core platform. This platform combines QNX's safety-certified operating system and virtualization with our partner vectors, Safe middleware to provide a pre-integrated safety-certified lightweight and scalable foundation for a number of key domains throughout the car. Alloy core reduces software integration overhead for OEMs, accelerates their development and frees them up to focus engineering resources on differentiating customer experiences in the app layer. We continue to work very closely and effectively with Vector and remain on track for general release of the product this calendar year. While as expected, we haven't secured any design wins for Alloy core yet conversations with several leading OEMs, including Mercedes-Benz are progressing well. The platform represents an opportunity for significant ASP expansion compared to the revenue from selling the core operating system. Alloy core could be many multiples of that. The second growth vector where we're seeing significant traction is the general embedded space. Currently, approximately 20% of QNX revenue comes from non-auto verticals and the addressable market opportunity is massive, potentially larger than for automotive. The technology we developed for auto is intentionally highly adaptable for use in adjacent verticals, and we're investing in go-to-market to drive adoption. Sales cycles in these verticals are often relatively long, but the pipeline we've been building is starting to convert in fiscal year 2026 delivered wins in several of our target verticals. This past quarter, we secured a significant win for our general embedded development platform or GEDP to be deployed in industrial automation controls for a major North American OEM. This was one of a number of wins in industrial automation, which is a key target vertical. We also secured a number of wins in medical instrumentation, including with Johnson & Johnson, where QNX OS for safety will power a new AI-driven heart pump. Robotics represents one of our most exciting long-term opportunities as we stand to capture growth in physical AI. We are building pipeline momentum and expect this vertical to become a meaningful part of gem growth over time. QNX has already proven itself as the platform of choice for physical AI, given its large footprint in all levels of autonomous driving. The car is the most complex consumer device and is essentially a robot all wheels. We believe our strong partnerships will support this growth. Recently, ARM announced its new ARM AGI CPU for use in physical AI. And during the launch event, CEO, Rene Haas identified QNX as one of its foundational software ecosystem partners in support of their aspirations in this space. We also have strong relationships with other leading silicon providers, including NVIDIA and Qualcomm, who are also pushing into physical AI and we believe these partnerships help position us well for future growth. Now moving over to Secure Communications. Just over a year ago, the Secure Communications division was barely discussed. In fact, at the time it was viewed as a drag on our overall story, a business in transition as we focus from a broader cyber portfolio to our core strengths in mission-critical secure communications and digital sovereignty. Today, the situation has changed considerably. This past quarter, secure communications delivered a near rule of 40 quarter, results that would have seemed unthinkable a year ago. We believe it now represents under-recognized value within our portfolio. Revenue was strong at $72.5 million exceeding the top end of our guidance by 12% and delivering 8% year-over-year growth. Digital sovereignty, the desire for governments to retain critical data and communications on sovereign solutions hosted and operated in country is no longer a buzzword. Instead, it is a budget line item for governments worldwide and we are winning in this space with a demand environment that has seldom been stronger. Together with rapidly growing defense budgets among NATO allies and beyond, the Secure Communications division is benefiting from meaningful tailwinds. Secusmart, our military grade encrypted voice and data platform delivered a strong quarter with revenue growing meaningfully year-over-year. This performance was primarily driven by sales to the German government, where Secusmart is a key and trusted supplier meeting the very demanding certification requirements of the German cybersecurity Authority, BSI. Our investment in the platform to support iOS devices in addition to Android, has driven a significant market opportunity for us with the German government, and we see a strong line -- pipeline of opportunities as we head into fiscal year 2027. Outside of Germany, we were thrilled to announce a multiyear extension and expansion to our contract with Shared Services Canada. SSC is the Canadian government agency responsible for delivering and operating IT infrastructure and digital services for most federal agencies. As part of the deal, the Canadian government has significantly expanded its number of Secusmart licenses. This will help drive a strong start to fiscal year '17 and with meaningful revenue from this deal expected in the new fiscal year. Other wins in the quarter included NATO and the Malaysian anticorruption establishment. UEM continues to stabilize. Although full year revenue declined year-over-year, the renewal rate continued to improve and the value of multiyear deals increased by 47% year-over-year. In Q4, we secured a number of new logo wins particularly by capitalizing on the BSI certification in Germany and where UEM is sold in conjunction with Secusmart. This quarter's wins we're global and included the IRS, the German Bundesbank, the Council of the European Union, the Netherlands Reagewaterstak as well as Switzerland's Bank Julius Baer. AtHoc, our Critical Event Management solution had a solid quarter and full year, recording double-digit year-over-year revenue growth for Q4 and high single-digit growth for the full fiscal year. This past quarter, we secured expansions and renewals with a number of customers, including the U.S. Air Force the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Department of Treasury as well as a new logo win with Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. Key metrics for the Secure Communications business indicate an inflection point. Annual recurring revenue, or ARR, for secure comms increased by $2 million or 1% sequentially to $218 million, which is $10 million or 5% growth year-over-year. Dollar-based net retention rate or DBNRR also improved by 2 percentage points sequentially to 94%, 1 percentage point higher than in Q4 of the prior year. Another reason we're confident in the durability of BlackBerry's growth is the competitive moat we enjoy across our QNX and secure communications businesses. This moat is multilayered and importantly, addresses the concerns investors have today about AI and software models. Let me give you 3 reasons why we believe our moat is durable. The first is that our QNX pricing model is different from traditional seat-based SaaS models. The majority of QNX's revenue is consumption-based, primarily driven by royalties tied to the number of high-performance systems powered by QNX in cars, robots and other intelligent edge devices rather than seat-based licenses. Second, our software is embedded in the most demanding, highly regulated safety critical use cases imaginable where users' lives depend on the software working exactly as it should. AI is probabilistic by nature, meaning outputs can vary but the QNX platform is deterministic, delivering the same result every time without exception. That distinction matters enormously when our software controls the vehicle safety features such as adaptive cruise control or autonomous drive. We have built deep trust with customers through decades of flawless execution backed by certifications, such as the rigorous ISO 26262 standard for functional safety. The stakes are high and the cost of failure could be catastrophic and the benefit of replacing a proven certified platform for a marginal price saving in our view, is not a trade-off that any responsible OEM will make. As a relatively small portion of the bill of materials we see the risk and reward equation heavily skewed to our favor. The third is cost of delivery. QNX's scale across the automotive and other verticals drives a cost of delivery advantage that individual OEMs attempting to build and maintain their own solution, even with AI tools cannot match. On the secure comp side, our products are deployed in mission-critical, highly regulated, highly sensitive environments. The license to operate in those environments comes in the form of hard-earned certifications, which assess people and processes as long as long-standing customer relationships that take years to build. Far from being complacent, we see AI as a net tailwind for our business rather than a threat. QNX is positioned to be a critical enabler for physical AI where there is 0 margin for error and learnings from our leadership position in demanding automotive environments serve as a perfect blueprint. Further, in the hands of our R&D experts, powerful new AI tools increase productivity, accelerate development cycles, strengthen our competitive advantages and enhance the operating leverage already embedded in our model. Touching briefly on licensing. Licensing revenue came in at $4.8 million, slightly below guidance due to quarterly variation in returns from pre-existing arrangements that are not indicative of any change in the underlying business. And with that, let me now turn the call over to Tim, who will provide further details on our financials. Tim Foote: Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. Earlier, John described how both QNX and Secure Communications delivered stronger-than-expected revenue. This past quarter, we saw the impact of this year-over-year revenue growth in both divisions and for BlackBerry overall. QNX gross margins expanded by 1 percentage point to 84%, record revenues of $78.7 million. Further, this drove an 11% year-over-year growth in adjusted EBITDA for QNX to $21.4 million, representing 27% of revenue for the quarter. For the full year, QNX delivered $71 million of adjusted EBITDA or $0.26 of revenue, which together with the 14% revenue growth mean that QNX was a rule of 40 business, both for the quarter and the full fiscal year. The strong top line for secure comms also drove operating leverage, with gross margins expanding by 8 percentage points year-over-year in Q4 driven in part by stronger Secusmart software license revenue. This translated into a 27% adjusted EBITDA margin for secure comms growing to $19.5 million for Q4 and $56.1 million for the full year, well ahead of guidance from this time last year. Our licensing business contributed $6.3 million of adjusted EBITDA in the quarter and $21 million for the full year. This relatively passive income stream remains a solid source of both profitability and cash flow for BlackBerry. Adjusted operating costs, excluding amortization for our corporate functions, came in at $11.1 million in Q4 and $41 million for the full fiscal year. Tight cost control reduced corporate overhead by 5% year-over-year in fiscal year 2026. Pulling this all together, BlackBerry had a very strong fiscal quarter and solid fiscal year. Total company revenue grew 10% year-over-year in Q4 and 3% year-over-year for fiscal year 2026. For the quarter, year-over-year, gross margins expanded by approximately 5 percentage points to 78.2% and adjusted EBITDA margins by 8 percentage points to 23%. For Q4, BlackBerry generated $36.1 million of adjusted EBITDA driving full year performance, exceeding the top end of our guidance range at $107.1 million. Adjusted earnings per share for Q4 also beat the top end of the guidance range at $0.06. In Q4, we converted this strong profitability into cash flow. During the quarter, we generated $45.6 million of operating cash flow and a further $38 million in deferred proceeds from the sale of Cylance to Arctic Wolf. This conversion of profitability into cash continues to strengthen our balance sheet. We exit fiscal year 2026 with $432.4 million of cash and investments or $232 million of net cash. This provides the company with substantial optionality for capital deployment. This past quarter, we continued to execute on our share buyback program, repurchasing 6.7 million shares for $25 million. This brings the total since the program launched in May of last year to 15.5 million shares or $60 million. The share buyback program serves 2 purposes, offsetting dilution from equity-based compensation and signaling how we value the company relative to current price levels. Further, given our capital generation, we are actively considering tuck-in M&A as a way to further accelerate growth in QNX. While QNX has a strong organic path to durable long-term growth. We also see opportunities to increase both the speed and scale of that growth through strategic buy-side M&A. The bar is high, however, and any M&A need to be compelling both strategically and financially. Moving now to guidance for Q1 and the full fiscal year. As John mentioned, the turnaround is now complete. BlackBerry is now positioned as a sustained growth story. QNX entered fiscal year 2027, with solid momentum. For Q1, we expect revenue to be in the range of $60 million to $64 million, reflecting the seasonal cadence that we've seen from QNX in recent years. As John mentioned, growth from quarter-to-quarter is unlikely to be linear due in part to the impact of upfront revenue from development licenses. Therefore, some quarters will have stronger year-over-year growth than others, but we believe the trajectory is clear and consistent. For the full fiscal year, we expect to continue to drive solid top line growth with revenue in the range of $290 million to $307 million. The top end of the range represents approximately 15% growth and acceleration over fiscal year 2026, and this is our target. However, given the current uncertainty in the macro environment, we believe it's only prudent to price and some risk to the lower end of the range. On the cost front, we continue to invest organically in our QNX business to capture the opportunities we see in front of us. We expect a sustained top line growth to translate into adjusted EBITDA for QNX in the range of $69 million to $81 million for the full year. We expect secure comms to return to full year growth for the first time in 6 years. This is an important inflection point. The combination of digital sovereignty tailwinds and the benefits from key investments such as Secusmart iOS support, FedRAMP high authorization for AtHoc and UEM BSI certification is helping stabilize UEM and drive growth for AtHoc and Secusmart. We expect Q1 revenue in the range of $66 million to $70 million. For the full fiscal year, we expect to deliver top line growth in the range of 4% to 8% or $270 million to $280 million. We expect adjusted EBITDA for the fiscal year 2027 to be in the range of $57 million to $65 million. For our licensing division, the revenue stream is relatively solid, and we expect licensing to remain a consistent source of profitability and cash flow. As a result, we continue to expect revenue to be approximately $6 million each quarter and adjusted EBITDA of approximately $5 million per quarter. Bringing everything together at the total company level, we expect BlackBerry to deliver an acceleration in top line growth in the range of 6% to 11% for fiscal year 2027, or $584 million to $611 million. We expect adjusted EBITDA of between $110 million and $130 million and non-GAAP EPS to increase significantly to be between $0.15 and $0.19. This EPS guidance does not reflect the impact of any potential future share repurchases. Finally, in terms of cash, consistent with historical patterns, Q1 is expected to be a seasonal low for cash flow, driven by the billings and payments timing. However, for the first time in 3 years. We expect BlackBerry to maintain positive operating cash flow generation in Q1 in a range of breakeven to $10 million. Further, improved cash conversion is expected to drive full year operating cash flow of approximately $100 million, nearly doubling year-over-year. And with that, let me now turn the call back to John. John Giamatteo: Thanks for the summary, Tim. And before we move to Q&A, let me briefly summarize the key takeaways from this past year. BlackBerry's turnaround is complete and we are now firmly focused on growth and value creation. Over the past fiscal year, we delivered consistently improving fundamentals highlighted by a record revenue quarter for QNX. Today, QNX is a Rule of 40 business with growing backlog and strong sustained momentum. Secure Communications has returned to growth, supported by a demand environment for digital sovereignty that is both real and accelerating. Across the company, we are growing, generating meaningful cash and deploying it with discipline. We have a proven track record of execution, a clear strategy, and we are well positioned for the road ahead. So with that, let's now move to Q&A. So Betsy, if you can please open up the lines. Operator: [Operator Instructions] The first question today comes from Kingsley Crane with Canaccord Genuity. Unknown Analyst: Really impressive results. this term physical AI is in vogue now, and you've been building capabilities in the gym space for years. I'm just curious if customers understand that automotive really can be a blueprint here and thinking about the distinction between deterministic action and probabilistic action, that seems important not just in auto, but also in other areas like general Robotics. Just curious on that. John Giamatteo: Yes. Yes. That's really good perspective is. And that's something that we think has really resonating in the prospects and the pipeline that we're building in the robotics space and particularly in the GM space. The credibility that we have in the automotive space with autonomous and all the safety certified capabilities that we provide there really translates so well into an environment like physical AI and I think for that reason, we get a lot of looks at new opportunities that maybe others don't and maybe we wouldn't have had in the past. But we think the combination of leveraging that subject matter expertise, the building out of our go-to-market function and some of the partnerships that we have there, we're really starting to see some solid pipeline will -- it will take some time to convert it and to turn it into backlog and royalties and the rest of it, but we are very encouraged by the momentum that we see in that space. . Unknown Analyst: Thanks, John. Really helpful. And for Tim, look, the ASPs on the GEM wins are meaningfully higher than automotive. Could you just remind us of the delta between those? And would these opportunities in physical AI meaningfully expand that further? Tim Foote: Yes. Great question, Kingsley, and great to speak with you. Yes. So one of the things, obviously, is the volume equation. When you look at auto, you have some very significant volumes in terms of production runs. And you don't typically see that in GEM. But quite often in this space, particularly things like robotics and physical AI. Right now, it's speed to market, that's the most important thing as opposed to sort of driving gross margins for the OEMs themselves. So what we're seeing is less price sensitivity on that side of the house. What we see is, ultimately, the growth story is to have more instances of QNX running with more layers of software as well. And physical AI as John mentioned, being a really compelling safety critical use case is a really high-performance edge compute type environment that we really would excel in. So yes, we believe that as GEM starts to grow as a portion of the overall pie because it is growing pretty fast right now, that could be pretty accretive to our gross margins going forward. Operator: The next question comes from Todd Coupland with CIBC. Thomas Ingham: I wanted to ask about Alloy Core. You talked about general availability later in the year, how meaningful this could be? How meaningful could this be to your backlog, maybe put that into the context of the $950 million you just reported. . John Giamatteo: Yes. Todd, we -- I will tell you -- Tim and I talk about this all the time. We think this is one of the most underappreciated part of the business in terms of our -- the upside potential that we have to this current year because we're finding more and more OEMs are looking for us to do more and more of this kind of partnership with the likes of Vector. So we're -- the pipeline for that is growing significantly and we do think it can have a meaningful impact to the overall backlog. We're confident on rolling it out in time. And we're also confident in converting a number of opportunities that are pretty -- progressing really, really well. So it's hard to put a specific number on it and probably be inappropriate for me to do that. But I do think it can have a significant impact to that $950 million backlog and set us up even better for future growth in a place where we already have a lot of credibility. Thomas Ingham: And then in terms of robotics, exclude an automation, industrial automation, are you bucketing that in physical AI? Or is that a separate category? And then specifically on that, what does the pipeline look like? And how meaningful could that be to your backlog and growth in the coming year? . John Giamatteo: Yes. Robotics, physical AI, we would -- when we think about the general embedded space, we think of really 3 categories that we've had great momentum on industrial automation, medical instrumentation. It's a really nice win this quarter with Johnson & Johnson. And then robotics and physical AI, we kind of bring that together. Today, it represents an overall 20% of our backlog-ish of our revenue. And we think the robotics component of it is probably going to be one of the faster-growing segments of those 3 verticals that we're focusing on. So we'll continue to provide updates on wins as we make further progress in this space. But between alloy core and the gym in those 3 verticals, we think the growth trajectory is very optimistic about the growth trajectory of those businesses. Operator: [Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Paul Treiber with RBC Capital Markets. Paul Treiber: You see the QNX backlog growth, it did improve to 10% this year, up from 6% last year. Could you walk through some of the drivers of that improved growth, whether it's obviously, new deals, but then also if there was any increases in any existing deals? And then what are some of the key categories that are seeing stronger growth or contributing to that growth? John Giamatteo: Great. I'll start, Tim, you chip in. I think part of the growth in the backlog, Paul, is that like we built out the portfolio of QNX in a pretty comprehensive way. A few years ago was QNX SDP 7. Today, it's SDP 8, our next-generation capability Today, it's QNX cabin, which gives our OEM customers the ability to more cost effectively deploy their products. QNX Sound is another component of it. Alloy core is another component. So what was, I think, a more limited focus in the product is a much broader set of capability and some of the wins this quarter with a major OEM in North America, where we've kind of gone deeper and richer with some of these other capabilities. So having a broader portfolio within the auto space, has, I think, been really, really helpful. And then obviously, we've already talked a little bit about the GEM momentum in those 3 verticals. So the combination of all of that is I think what helped us resulted in a really strong backlog number for the year. Paul Treiber: And then secondly, just on investments that you're making, looking at guidance, it implies 20% EBITDA margins at the midpoint basically flat despite revenue growth. So obviously, you're making investments. Could you walk through what are some of those larger investments? And then also if you still expect leverage of corporate overhead and other cost efficiencies? Tim Foote: Yes. Really good question. So ultimately, we've got very strong balance sheet, Paul. So what we're looking to do is obviously deploy that capital intelligently to drive growth. We see now, as John mentioned, we turn to a growth story. We see value creation going forward, coming primarily now from top line growth and the operating leverage that, that drives. So when we look at the QNX business, we see significant growth opportunities in many different ways. So obviously, backing the Alloy core opportunity driving forward with the full portfolio in the STPA launch, making sure we've got the right go-to-market for GEM. So we're backing all of those things. So looking at the QNX guide for the year, we're actually sort of holding EBITDA relatively flat, and that's a deliberate choice. We're making those investments in R&D and in sales and marketing to really drive that top line growth. Now going forward, we see opportunities then for further leverage to come in the future. But for this year, we're really focused on that. The other part you mentioned was the corporate overhead. I think we've done some tremendous heavy lifting over the last couple of years and taken out a significant amount of cost. Now we continue to take a very close look at every single dollar that we deploy across the business, but particularly in the corporate overhead. So when longer-term contracts are coming up for renewal, we're taking a hard look at those and seeing, do we really need it? Can we downsize it? Are there alternatives? So what I'd say you'd expect to see this year is actually a decrease, a further decrease in corporate overhead from, I think it's $41 million, maybe take $4 million or $5 million off of that going into the new year. But I don't think cutting cost is really now the main focus there. We've turned the page on that, Paul, and we're really looking to drive top line growth. Operator: The next question comes from Steven Li with Raymond James. Steven Li: A quick one. How did share count jump to 643? I'm drawing a blank here, Tim. Tim Foote: 643. No, I don't think that's right. . Steven Li: It's not -- I mean, the diluted share count was 643 for the Q4. Tim Foote: Now the share count should have come down. We're just scrambling to see what the numbers are. So -- we've gone from 590 basic down to 598 and that's really a function of the of the buyback to leave -- particularly... Steven Li: On the diluted share count? Tim Foote: We need to take a look at that, Steve, and then come back to you. . Operator: I would like to turn the call back over to John Giamatteo, CEO of BlackBerry for any closing remarks. John Giamatteo: Terrific. Thank you, Betsy. Thanks, everybody, for being part of the call today. Before I wrap up, I just want to make a quick note that our QNX team is going to be in Boston on May 27 and 28 for the Robotics Summit and Expo, one of the industry's largest events. John Wall will be opening the conference as part of keynote there, and I'll also be on a panel with leaders from Amazon Robotics Universal Robots and Locus Robotics. The team will also be showcasing the latest of our QNX innovations and how we provide the trusted foundation that robotics and physical AI systems rely on to operate safely and predictably in the real world. So if you're in the air, please stop by. We'd love to see you there. And with that, thanks for joining today's call, and we'll see you all next time. . Operator: This concludes today's call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.
Operator: Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Pure Cycle Corporation's Second Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. As in prior quarters, we'll start the call with a presentation from our CEO, Mark Harding, and then we'll provide time for questions and answers afterwards. [Operator Instructions] So we'll start the earnings call with a presentation [indiscernible] questions and answers. Without further ado, I'd like to introduce Mark Harding, our CEO. Mark Harding: Thank you. Good morning, everyone. My wingman today are Marc Spezialy, our CFO; and our Controller, Serena Fingan. So if you have any questions, we'll have a solid team to weigh in on all of the details here. For those of you that are looking at this, we do have a deck for this. It's on our website. I think it's on our landing page, you can click on that and then we'll be able to advance through the presentation and give you the details on it. So with that, I'll start. And start with our forward-looking statements, statements that are not historical facts contained or incorporated it reference in this presentation are forward-looking statements as that is the meaning of the Securities and Exchange Act. Most of you are familiar with that. [indiscernible] want to continue to emphasize the team that we get to work with an outstanding team of professionals that really bring their game every day. And so it helps drive value for the corporation. So continued shout out to our management team. Also, our Board of Directors, I do want to welcome our newest Board of member, Dan Rohler and look forward to working with him. He is actively engaged and really working with the directors and the team. So we look forward to working with him. Let's take a look at kind of the investment snapshot here. We continue to deliver shareholder returns and returns on our assets through consistent and profitable results continuing our street with a 27th continuous profitable quarter here. We're growing our revenues, our recurring revenues and durable revenues through all 3 business segments. We continue to grow our asset base by delivering lots to our national homebuilder customers as close to a just-in-time basis and really doing that to really match market demands and we do see a lot of cyclical nature in the housing market. Water is a little bit more tempered in that, but we continue to really focus on our assets and monetizing our assets and build shareholder value really through our strong balance sheet and strong liquidity position. Let's dive right into the results, really had a great order and this year has been a more tempered year to be able to even out our revenues and our cash flows on this, and that's really been a function of a very, very mild winter for my fellow skiers the morning the loss of ski season, but we're celebrating the opportunity for us to really do a lot of the work that we can't do seasonally in the winter by a lot of the concrete work and the asphalt work. So what you see is kind of a more even paced development, where we're able to -- through our cost of completion on our project, be able to even out these cash flows on it. So quarter-over-quarter revenue this first 6 months, about $5.1 million in revenue, about $2.8 million in gross profit. And really, those are driven by those percent completions on delivering our lots to our customers. We're about as much as 6 months ahead of schedule on some of the lot deliveries on that. And so a lot of our builders are equally thrilled with that because they were able to get out in the field and put up some model homes for this spring season. Taking a look at net income and earnings per share. Again, those are going to match really exceeding our guidance typically on the quarter-over-quarter just because of the advancements on our projects on that. So net income, a little over $1 million earnings per share, about $0.05 per share. And really, this is up by about 36%, really driven by all segments, mostly land but water as well as single-family rentals. We're adding a few more of our rental segments in there, and we'll have a little bit more color on that later, but also seeing a bit of an uptick in our water through industrial water sales to oil and gas operators this year, taking a look at just the comparison to our guidance, our full year guidance. So we're right at that 50% our guidance through halfway through the year. So that's a bit unusual for us just because the winter quarters usually our weakest year or weakest quarter of the year just because of the seasonality of weather out here. And so we're about $14.3 million in total revenue of our close to $30 million forecast or guidance and then profit at about $9 million to our about $19 million guidance on that. So really terrific results year-over-year. Moving to net income and earnings per share also we see those pacing more evenly through the year. Margin results are showing a bit more moderated because we have advancements and investments into the delivery of lots slightly ahead of our contract delivery. So those will normalize through the rest of the year and really kind of help us temper those [indiscernible]. So specifically, with the quarter end results, what I'd like to do is kind of drill down to each of these segments and talk a little bit about what it is that each of these are driving for us. One of the things I recently heard was an acronym called a [ halo ], which is used to describe some companies that -- in the context of this, it's a heavy asset, low obsolescence, and I found that pretty descriptive over our company and you can't get a more low obsolescence asset than water utilities. And so we'll drill down on the water utilities and talk specifically about what we're seeing in that growth and margin opportunities. We really deliver water to customers kind of in 3 various segments. We have our domestic deliveries, which is your portable water that we deliver to residential and commercial users. We have our industrial segment, which delivers water to our oil and gas operators. And then we have continued customer growth, which is our connection fees, and those are onetime fees that are paid by our homebuilder customers and then that just adds to the customer growth of the overall segments. Taking a look at revenues on a quarter year-to-date basis, we continue to see some customer growth corresponding revenues driven by the connection fees, which is really adding new customers to the system. Our oil and gas revenues are up this year, and I think we'll see a very strong performance in industrial water sales and then just monthly water and wastewater sales continue to grow, and that's really a function of continued growth in the rates as well as the number of customers for that. Detailing out the industrial segment. Our oil and gas sales are up significantly over last year's primarily because last year was largely a permitting year for our operators, mostly our largest operator who was working to secure as many as 200 permits in and around our service area and really, that's translated into increased drilling and increased fracking this year, which is really turning out quite well for them, given the rise in oil prices, so they couldn't have timed that better for bringing a lot of that new supply online. The outlook looks very good for this year. I think we'll exceed our guidance that we had taken a look at this year. And I think it's going to continue into the future, right? We see rigs that we have a dedicated rig to our service area, which is drilling some of those 200 well permits, and that will probably take them somewhere around the 3 years to drill all those wells. Our revenue per well continues to strengthen. We do have a multiyear contract with our operators to deliver these water supplies. So it allows us to do some strength in planning and then also making sure that our infrastructure is capable of not only meeting our industrial, but the domestic demands on that. One of the things that we like to highlight in our Water segment is the capacity that we have and the fact that we continue to grow and developing this capacity, but yet we're still only using a small fraction of our portfolio while we generate significant revenues from this segment and really at very attractive margins when we're really looking at that variable demand for oil and gas, they do have a preferential pricing on that where we do get a premium on that to make that water supplies available to them as they need that in the volumes that they need. Let me move into highlighting our land development segment. This is a nice area of our high school at Sky Ranch that's being constructed. So we're very excited about that. It will really deliver not just -- it's a full K-12 campus. So we've got the primary school, which is a Ka as well as our high school there. And really, a lot of the relocation and customer feedback on buying in the community is a function of the school campus that we have here. We're delighted to continue to work with our charter school operator National Heritage Academy or Terrific Partners in bringing educational excellence at Sky Ranch. Talking a little bit about how we're delivering a lot. So this fiscal year, really focusing on punching out Phase II, which was about 228 lots and we're about 95% complete with that and then also Phase IId, which we're almost 80% complete on that. And really, that's the big advancements for this quarter. over the winter months, we were able to get a lot of that infrastructure in the ground. Very proud of our portfolio of homebuilder customers, all of the major homebuilders including the Lennar, D.R. Horton, KB Taylor Morrison, Challenger, Pulte, [indiscernible] all bring entry-level homes to the Denver market. Phase II started out with about 780 homes, but through some product alignments and diversification, that's really grown to about a little over 1,000 lots in that area. So we do see a significant uptick in our density out of Sky Ranch, and that's terrific for us. Not only does that allow us to deliver more lots but allows us to increase the assessed value, which really has an impact on generating additional capacity, bonding capacity within the district to repay our reimbursables on that, which you see us continue to grow. Let's drill down a little bit on that land development by phase, period-over-period, the revenues really did crush it. We really are generating significant Q2 revenues, more of a function of that mild winter and an opportunity for us to kind of turn up the volume and get that payment down and finished those lots so that the homebuilders can get those building permits and really start getting their model homes up for the selling season. We do see an uptick in traffic out of Sky Ranch. All our builders are seeing an uptick on that and a little bit more of a conversion to that. There's lots of reasons that housing has variable demands, whether that's interest rate sensitivities, and we see a little bit of volatility in the interest rate segment. I think that still is the #1 incentive that our homebuilders are offering is a mortgage buydown. I think they're hitting that sweet spot of trying to buy down those mortgages right below that 5% range. So that 4.99%. So when you see a lot of that adjustment from the Federal Reserve on interest rates, that may not have as big an impact on this particular segmentation of it just because that's the primary incentive that our homebuilders are offering or first-time buyers in converting those into sales. The pace of our land development will normalize through the rest of the year. We really do have a little bit to complete in that Phase II and then are really moving into grading the next phase, which is going to be [ 2E]. That's about another -- we've got another good slide on kind of the visual aspect of completing out each of these. And so as you see, you can see that in the lower left cell there where -- we've got a number of homes that are up and constructed for that Phase IIC and then Phase IID, while it's a little bit out of the picture on this, we do have model home lots being developed in there. So we have really 2 active phases that are complete where they're developing lots. So we've got about maybe 430 lots available for homebuilders to really tap the market on a variety of products. We've got all phases of the products, whether they are standard for task 45-foot front load, 45-foot rear-load, 35-foot rear-load, duplexes, townhomes. We really have a very strong portfolio diversity of product type out there is really creating opportunities for almost every type of home buyer in that. Moving on to kind of the development time line here. This gives you kind of an overview of our phasing. And as most of you know, most of our contracts are geared towards a system of developing a portion of the infrastructure in phases and then having -- once that's complete, having our homebuilder customers reimburse us and support the next phase of the development activity. And so we get payments at the Platt stage, which is when we finish the recorded flat and there's a real property interest that they acquire. And then a second payment, which is at the completion of wet utilities, once we're done with the water sewer and storm facilities on the phase and then finally, that third payment at finished lot pays. And so that's where you saw some of those lots being pulled forward on being able to finish a number of those lots on Q2. As I started to allude to, we are starting Phase II. So our grading contractors mobilizing on site will be hitting that this month. And really, those are about 160 lots that we're looking for delivery and continuing pacing that so that each of our builders can have a year's worth of inventory. Those will be 2027 lots. So we expect those to deliver sometime in the summer of 2027. That Phase IIE here is to give you kind of an orientation of where that's at it's directly across the street from our school. And this is really more of an infill site. We have most of the infrastructure done on that. A lot of the road network is done. Most of the main lines on the water and the sewer system are already in place. That kind of gives you a -- that's our water -- our peak hour water storage tank and comp station. They're in the picture as well, but that's a very streamlined process for us to be able to bring this online. It's about another $14 million in lot revenues, correspondingly $4.3 million in tap fees and about $240 million in recurring revenue from the number of comers that we have on that. This was kind of a celebratory opportunity for us, together with National Heritage Academy, really on a groundbreaking for that and really partnering with our local school district, the [ bentoschool district ] as well as the National Heritage Academy to bring this K-12 campus to our development. I wanted to show a continuing -- one of the most underappreciated assets I think we have in our portfolio is our service area. And as many of you have heard me talk through the years, the Denver Metro area continues to grow out on the Eastern planes, we really live on an ocean. We can't grow West as a metropolitan area. So really moving to the east side of it. This really kind of gives you an illustration of the level of activity that's occurring around our service area on the Lowry Ranch. As you all know, the State of Colorado owns the Lowry property, it is owned in the school trust, and they develop their assets to generate revenue for the public education system here in the state of Colorado. And there's a couple of parcels that really just highlighted here, one on the south side of the property, and that kind of gives you -- that bottom picture is an orientation looking north and then it's a very active development on that. That's about a half section 320 acres. And then also properties that you've seen the -- what's occurring on the west side with all the development from the city of Aurora that's on the west side, but then also projects starting on the north side of the property as well. And so there's substantial opportunities all around the property, and it's well positioned for whenever the state looks to find opportunities for the Lowry range, we are the exclusive water and wastewater provider for this particular property. And having been able to develop Sky Ranch, I think we can demonstrate that we would love to partner with them on opportunities for land development should that occur, but we really do want to kind of give you perspective of kind of the growth of the metropolitan area and how that grows in relationship to where some of our assets are, whether that's Sky Ranch or whether that's our service area at [indiscernible]. Moving into our third segment, single-family rental. There's a bit of an update in what I probably call a realignment for a couple of reasons in the single-family rental segment, as many of you know. The current administration has had some strong comments about corporate ownership of homes I probably would push back a little bit on that on kind of the justification for that. But they were sort of concerned about corporate ownership and what that is doing to housing affordability. And so we took a strong look at how we were positioning the growth trajectory of this particular segment and really decided to slow our growth of this segment and take a look at these assets in a couple of ways. We wanted to really get a strong look at what the return on the investment is for these segment assets. And as they settle in, as we've got them constructed as we've got them leased out. We really want to understand, well, what are these -- what is the return for this particular asset? And is that going to meet an acceptable level of threshold here for the company and making sure that, that delivers the returns that the shareholders are looking for in that. And so what we've done is push back a number of those lots that we were having, our homebuilder customers build for us. And as an illustration here, this kind of shows you the lots that were identified in blue are the ones that are either constructed or under construction. And so that will settle up to be about 60 units. The lots that we have that are kind of highlighted in this light yellow, light green color, those are the lots that we kind of reevaluated and we're able to resell back to each of the homebuilders that are building their product classes in there. And so what we've done is kind of pared that back from a growth strategy up to about 90 units and really scale that back to about 60 units. And so that will allow us to have a little stronger performance on the revenue from the Land Development segment because we're getting about $100,000 to $110,000 a lot on that. So we'll see that come back to the company and then really take a look at really what the performance is on this segment, be able to get our returns on that and really report that to you. And make a decision as to how this segment continues in the future. So that's been really the key realignment here is to take a more measured growth approach to our single-family rentals on that. We've got 19 homes completed to date and they are all completely rented. We are seeing extremely strong demand for rentals in this unit. So I'm very optimistic about the continued performance of it. Each of the homes as we bring them on market are already rented. I think we've got homes rented for home deliveries that we're seeing up through August right now. So we do continue to see that as a strong performer in the segment. And then this will instruct us on how the appreciation of the homes are going as we continue to add value to the community, not only from the schools, but then all the commercial development and open space and trails and the recreational opportunities that we deliver. We are seeing continued strong growth of these home values, and that's an opportunity for us to really measure that within the overall segment. One of the most attractive features of the single-family rentals is our recurring revenues and the asset appreciation. So period-over-period, revenues are up 20%, mostly as a result of additional units. We continue to see growth in the monthly rentals on this. And what we really like to do is make sure that we get all these units fully leased and have a 100% occupancy on that. [indiscernible] the growth trajectory. This is kind of how each of the phases of performance. And this is a bit of an update from our previous position on that where we were growing up to about 90 homes. And I think we really took a look at that and payer back almost all of the units in Phase II [indiscernible] on of the units in Phase IIC, really just as a reactionary element to some of the pressures that this segment was receiving on ownership, corporate ownership and then also opportunities to demonstrate to you all what the return of this segment is going to look like. Talk a little bit about shareholder value, our assets and kind of what we have in use and really a little bit about where we're headed. As most of you know, we are extremely hawkish about our equity, with our last issuance being more than 15 years ago. And so we really do fund our operations through our balance sheet. If you take a look at really all of the components of this, we maintained a strong balance sheet. I believe our assets are significantly more valuable than the recorded value. And that's mostly because they're legacy assets. They've been acquired many, many years ago, more than more several decades ago. And taking a look at each of these individual segments, if you take a look at our Water segment, we have about $74 million or, call it, $75 million in total assets, and that's about 44% of the total assets of the company. But then when you take a look at kind of what's developed and what that contribution is, that's only about 4% developed. So you see how that kind of the pedal that we have left in the water segment and really the opportunity that we have to continue to grow that segment in our business. Land segments, we acquired Sky Ranch in 2010. It's about a $5 million acquisition of the land. We did get some water beneath that as well. And then taking a look at kind of the developed land for sale, how we do the percent completion on that, that represents about 6% of our total assets, and it's about 20% developed. So while we continue to generate strong returns year-over-year on that, we still have a good amount of land that we have developed more homes and then the commercial value on that. So really terrific opportunities to continue to grow the land development segment. And as many of you know, we continue to look for other opportunities in the land development segment. Taking a look at our single-family home segment. That's a relatively small segment, about a total of 5% of the total assets and had a little detailed discussion about that on kind of how we're going to really mark that performance of that segment. But really, the biggest opportunity for us here is our total liquidity here. And taking a look at the cash and receivables, it's about a 44% asset. And largely held in that note receivable from the municipality where we continue to develop the infrastructure, those public improvements are reimbursable to us. And we take a look at building the assessed value through adding additional homes there. Our next opportunity for monetizing some of that assets likely to be in 2027, where we're taking a look at financing and refinancing. We'll have a financing on the interchange. As many of you know, we talked about kind of how we're going to construct a new interchange on the interstate there, but also being able to refinance some of the Phase 2 bonds and really capitalize on the opportunity we financed our first bonds on Phase 2 at about 780 units and growing that to the [ 1,030 units ] gives us an opportunity to have a significant reimbursement for refinancing those bonds now that they'll be mature and more assessed value than we originally planned in the first financing. So that will be a great opportunity for us moving forward. The low obsolescence the recurring revenue really come from water and wastewater revenues and rents from our single-family home rental segments. And so you do have strong sticky revenue on those sides and really a lot of the growth revenue from selling lots to national homebuilders as well as the connection charges to add our customer growth into our Water Utility segment. talk a little bit about shareholder value. We consistently grow our balance sheet and income statement quarter-over-quarter year after year. and really generate kind of leading -- industry-leading margins from all segments, whether that's going to be the water segment the land development segment and the single family rental segments. And so we're very targeted to continue to monetizing our assets, taking a look at where we're at in our guidance. So we're taking a look at our guidance for 2026 at about $2.7 million in recurring revenue and asset growth, bringing that a little over $160 million. So those still look strong. Profitability trends. We continue to build shareholder value on really each of these segments and really on pace for delivering our fiscal year-end results. We will share some guidance on 2027 at our Q3 as we get a little bit clearer picture of kind of how the Phase IIE is going to come along and tap fees and the oil and gas deliveries for fiscal '27 become a little clearer for us. Taking a look at kind of that total gross revenue, our guidance is going to be in that $26 million to $30 million range. We're still supporting that earnings per share in that same range $0.43 to $0.52. And upside in some of that acceleration of that is really going to be probably the timing of the delivery of lots as well as, I think, oil and gas, and so we'll have a lot -- a much stronger year in selling industrial water sales just because of the permitting that was done last year and really, I think the strength and the price of oil will really reinforce the fact that our operators are going to really try and capitalize on that, keep those rigs in active service on our service area in and around our service areas. So we don't have just the 1 operator, we do have several operators that are looking at programs and multi-well pad sites this year. So we believe we'll have a strong performance on that industrial segment. We continue to reinvest and repurchase shares. I believe our stock is undervalued, significantly undervalued. We are we're encouraged by some of the recent strength in the stock and really do believe that the assets do have continued support and really focused on continuing to deliver that shareholder value. And some of the ways of doing that are really going to be kind of the development of our commercial opportunities, getting this interchange completed, we're really at the final stages of that permitting process, and getting that into [ CDOT and Rabo County ] who are regulatory agencies here, but it does allow us to accelerate not only the commercial opportunities, but also continuing on the residential side. So that's another thing to keep a look out in the next fiscal year. And then also I did want to kind of give you a revised video. We're trying to kind of keep this video as part of our format to kind of share with you the progress that we make. So it's about a minute long, but I'll give you kind of an opportunity to see -- gives you a perspective. That should be an all white picture there in the background, and it's just not. So that gives you an illustration of kind of the dry year that we've had and [indiscernible] also gives you kind of a picture. You can see the landscaping is fairly dry throughout the community. It's pretty typical, but I think that we're going to have a challenged year for some of our water supplies and other providers. I think we're strong in our position in our portfolio, but other providers are going to see very seasonal water deliveries. Just kind of drills in on that Phase IIC number, we probably got more than 1/3 of these homes permitted and started and then it also gives you kind of where we're taking a look at IID, where you've got homebuilders really starting construction activity on that project as well. And really, this is the unusual aspect. We would not expect to have all these roads paved and these lots available for that. But we were able to capitalize on that this year with the mild winter. And so that's a great opportunity for us and our homebuilders. And then moving into kind of Phase IIb, we're nearly complete here. We probably only got maybe half a dozen home lots that are yet to be constructed in that phase, and then this kind of rolls up into a good view of the high school and construction progress on that. We've enjoyed that opportunity as well. They are ahead of schedule with the mild winter that we've had as well. So that will open up in August for our toolkit for the next '26, '27 school year. So that's exciting for us. And then ultimately, kind of a shot at where we're going to be with that interchange in our commercial properties up there in that area. So we are actively marketing our commercial properties. We've got both retail and industrial brokers engaged and are seeing some exciting opportunities. We're out there pitching a lot of the retail and some industrial opportunities for distribution centers, a number of different types of uses, whether that's going to be a heavy water user or just access to that Interstate is a terrific asset for us. So with that, I guess I'll -- those are our prepared remarks. So what I'd like to do is open it up for Q&A. I think the easiest way to do the Q&A is if you want to on Mike and just shout out a question and then we'll coordinate seeing how that technology works for everyone. So with that, I'll turn it over to you all. Elliot Knight: Mark, I've got several questions for you. Most important on your last call, you made it clear that completion of the new interchange is very important. You sound encouraged, could you give us a real -- a detailed update? Mark Harding: Yes, drilling down in then. So the interchange, we have -- we've been working on that. It's -- government always has an acronym for it, and then Colorado, it's called the 1601 permit process. And so you do that in conjunction with the [indiscernible] Department of Transportation, and it's a comprehensive effort, right? You go through every component of your interchange design, what the load capacities are going to be, what the traffic movements are going to be what the distance setbacks are for signals to the interchange and environmental aspects of it. And so we're now at about a 30% design of that interchange. So we really have a solid idea of how that's -- the cost estimates are going to be and then really how do you fund that. So it's a private permit, the Sky Ranch will be a permit for that. And then we work together with Arapaho County because they'll be the administration of that. It's in the jurisdiction of Arapaho County. We should be submitting that 1601 seat. We submitted every component of that as we go along for their review and their concurrence. So what we hope to do is have that ready sometime this June and then really be in a position of going to final design on that. That will probably take through the end of the year and then take a look at funding that bonding of that. We've got specific mills that have been set aside within the community to be able to bond that. So we have that as a component of the 1601 and then start construction in 2027 with a completion in 2028. So that would be the time line. Elliot Knight: Okay. That slipped a little bit from completion in 2028 because on the last call, I think you were thinking in late 2027? Mark Harding: Yes. that probably has slipped just a little bit, but we continue to be able to deliver each individual phase. So I think we'll still -- we won't really miss any of our cadence on lot deliveries on that. I think what we've tried to do is work on currently with some of our commercial opportunities [indiscernible] lead time as well, and we want to make sure that we can bring those online as we're constructing the interchange. Elliot Knight: Okay. On your last call, you mentioned data center -- no mention of it today. Could you please update us anything you can tell us there? Mark Harding: Yes. We -- it's not that we are not continuing to pitch that. But Colorado is probably not as attractive as a state on some of these larger hyperscale or data center type opportunities, and it's really twofold. One, a lot of these -- the ones that we were very active [indiscernible] really are looking for tax incentives and so the state had the bill before the legislature, they have 2 competing bills. They have 1 bill that is seeking incentives and 1 bill that's seeking to disincentivize and Colorado just has a dysfunctional relationship with itself on being able to set a consistent policy. But they are heavy water users, which is something that we certainly have an opportunity to support, but they're also heavy power users and Colorado probably is a little more challenged than other areas on bringing on additional power, particularly gas turbine-based power in the area. So those are the risk elements that some of the data centers that we have been marketing to are sharing with us. We still like the opportunity. There still are data centers that are being built in this area. And so we'll compete with that and see where it lands. But it's not just the data centers. We have water and bottling opportunities. Those are going to be heavy water customers, that we're pitching to and then just overall distribution centers and things like that for our commercial industrial opportunities. Elliot Knight: Okay. Last question. I was delighted to see that you've added another 1,600-plus acre feet of water. You acquired little bits and pieces of water, I think in the last few years. The company continues to say it has 30,000 acre feet of water. It must have more than that. Doesn't it -- how much does it have? Mark Harding: We do. We do. You're set to heat tabs on that. We probably increased that portfolio about 10%. And so we're maybe closer to 300 or 3,000 acre feet of water. And correspondingly, we do have the ability to probably provide service to more than 60,000 connections, and those are very important metrics. Those are longer tail on it. But when you take a look at how we scope that opportunity, we talk about $40,000 a connection charge of $60,000, which is about $2.5 billion, and that number is probably [indiscernible] consider. It's probably closer to $3 billion worth. But those are longer lead that kind of carries us out and continues to add to the real depth of that segment of the business and as we get closer to that 25,000 connections within the company, we can really detail out really how much more of that we have to serve. And I think couple of areas for that, the Denver area growing out in and around Sky Ranch in and around [indiscernible] which is our service area, are really the key opportunities for us to continue to add to that portfolio -- that customer on that portfolio. I see Jeff's got to stand up. Unknown Analyst: Quick question. The -- as I recall, you were going to wait for the commercial development until the [indiscernible] was actually finished. Did I understand that you're currently actively marketing the commercial opportunities? Mark Harding: We are. Yes. Unknown Analyst: Is that an acceleration of what you had wanted to do? Mark Harding: Well, I think we had that time line. And as Elliot kind of highlighted, we were looking at getting that 1601 permit kind of this summer, and I think we'll look to get that towards the end of the year. but we already set that up in motion, right? We want to be in front of these users. It's not something that you can just directly turn on and say, okay, get out there and start building your building or your retail use or whatever it is. We really want to make sure that it is a highly attractive site, and we want to be regionally specific. We want all of those folks that are looking at sites and interchanges to be appreciating what it is that we're putting into this opportunity and put it into their scope and planning. And we do have some capacity to get started on it. It's not 100% conditioned on the interchange being developed. We have an existing interchange, it does have service capacities, and we do have opportunities where we can add maybe it would be a nontraffic sensitive type user to the site, someone like a distribution center that would have the appreciation. Okay, we can use the existing interchange to get our building permitted and started. And then as that gets completed, really would have that truck traffic. So that's what we were trying to do is parallel that process and make sure that this doesn't have that long lead time and really deliver just in time. Unknown Analyst: Mark, just quick. Do you have any expectation on the timing of the next receivables? Mark Harding: Great question. we'll take a look at what that capacity is from the 2022 bonds. And so those typically have a 5-year call provision, and so that's where they start to burn off in 2027. And taking a look at really the differential that we had in our first filing and our second filing, we think they're somewhere around $10 million to $12 million worth of additional reimbursables from refinancing just what we've already financed there. And then as we move into Phase II, we'll take a look at because that will be that 2027 time frame as well as we complete that interchange and really start processing permits into Phase III, that could be as much as $20 million. So -- and I think we got about $10 million of refinancing of one bonds and then probably another in of fresh financing moving into Phase III. Unknown Analyst: Awesome. And then can you talk about the builders' appetite for lots right now, delivered the current phase ahead of schedule, we know new home demand spend kind of sluggish given interest rates. So I guess I'm just wondering, is there any risk of an air pocket between this phase and then starting the next phase if it takes a while for the builders to deliver the lots that you delivered ahead of schedule? Like how does that impact the timing of starting the next phase? Mark Harding: That's a great question. And so really, what we saw as a result of kind of this pull back in the market. And I'd say consumer confidence is the #1 factor on decisions to buy houses. Interest rates always impact that, but that's -- that's not, I think, in our segment, where homebuilders are able to buy down mortgages and at an entry-level point, that's a little less costly for them. When you're buying down a mortgage at maybe a point at $450,000 home there's a lot less than if you're buying down that point at $800,000 home. And so that sensitivity for us isn't so much in interest rate but more consumer confidence. And so what we were able to do is pull in new homebuilders to the portfolio. We had 4 homebuilders -- 4 national homebuilders that were part of the portfolio as we started Phase II. We now have a -- and those 3 new ones that are in the mix on this thing are really -- there is a filing 2D. And so they have 1 year inventory, and we're looking at 2027 in deliveries and sell. They may not be in IIC but they're in IID. And then the other 4 were in IIC and IID. And so they're a little bit long on that annual inventory, but the other ones are a little short on that annual inventory. And so that gives us the opportunity to roll Phase IIE on because they're the ones that want those '27 deliveries working on the '26 deliveries that they already have. And so that's an opportunity for us to bring in more builders. And we really like having that yearly deliveries for them and a number of builders in there. So they're bringing diversity of products. So it's not cannibalizing the market. It's really having an opportunity where we have a very robust portfolio builders. Operator: [Operator Instructions]. Mark Harding: [Operator Instructions]. Operator: There was a question in the chat related to a slight decline in some reoccurring revenue from 2025 to 2026. We -- I looked into that and it looks -- we have some commercial customers non-oil and gas that are off site of Sky Ranch that are governmental buildings that could fluctuate from year to year. And that looks like what it's what's causing that slight decline. Obviously, we're not seeing a decline on the average house per residential house in Sky Ranch nor are we forecasting any kind of decline there even with water restrictions that are coming forward. So it happens to be just a slight anomaly between some off-site customers that are showing that slight decline. Mark Harding: Well if there aren't any other [indiscernible]. Unknown Analyst: A couple of quick questions for you. One, on the land acquisition. Any updates from any of the potential spots you're looking at and -- or from Lowery, I know you discussed Lowry, but nothing else except for just the fact that everything is built out already, and we need to -- that's the next logical spot. And then secondly, when it comes to stock buyback, I know you guys have been buying back stock, but really just to maybe offset the -- not to reduce share count. Any thoughts to stepping that up at a quicker pace with the stock still sitting here? Mark Harding: A couple of good questions. We are taking a look at new acquisitions really, there are a number of land areas in and around Sky rands and other areas. And -- and there's a soft way of taking a look at that. Where we go out and we buy a land and hold that in inventory and -- is that the best use for our shareholder capital because some of those projects would be very long stemmed in being able to do that. And there's some we're trying to get -- I think our priority opportunities where we can either get those in a partnership, get those in away -- acquisitions in a way where that doesn't become a big drain on tying up shareholder capital for many, many years on that. And so there's still opportunities in there. Most of those guys really aren't that excited about that type of structure. And so what we want to do is time those out if we've got an opportunity that we can buy a cheap land, but that land doesn't look to turn over for 7 to 10 years. That may not be our highest priority. There are opportunities where that has gone up. And we sort of said, well, we like that land interest, and we might not be the buyer today, but we might be the buyer in 5 years and it doesn't matter where we may have to pay a little bit more in 5 years, but it's also 5 years closer to when that would be looking for development. So we're really being disciplined about that type of opportunity. Did highlight, Lowry, and those are -- we continue to see great opportunities there. That is controlled by the state, and we'll work with them and whatever their time line is on something like that. So we'll be reactionary to that. On the share buyback, we took a look at what our trading windows are and we wanted to open up some flexibility on that to be able to be more aggressive on particular areas. There's certainly a lot of restrictions on the windows that we can repurchase those shares and -- we want to be a little bit more flexible for that. And so we did modify our window of trading activity. And then really, Craig, I think our continued focus is capital stack to be in a position to reinvest in the company. And this -- our balance sheet and liquidity and our flexibility here has been really demonstrated by being able to do that this winter and having the capital to be able to do that. And so you did see a real change in the liquidity where we were dropping that liquidity down substantially because we did deliver in advance of those. And as that comes back and that liquidity continues to reimburse. There are opportunities for us to increase our share buyback, and that's something that we continue to evaluate, and we will take advantage of as appropriate. [indiscernible]. Operator: [Operator Instructions]. Unknown Analyst: Yes. This is Greg Bennett. Could you go through the economics of the -- you're deemphasizing the rental program, but what are the -- what is the return unlevered rate of return in the rental program. I mean you're -- am I correct the loan that you have against these properties is a floating rate loan. And yes, I'm just curious, you've never mentioned what the places rent for or what the capital you have tied up in you go through the economics of that? Mark Harding: Yes. Yes. I mean, so I'll give you kind of a high-level version of that. So typically, what we see is we're carrying forward some of that equity in the lot and the water. And so when we go out and we contract with our homebuilders to build those homes, they're coming in around $350,000 is really the cost that, that vertical construction is on that home. The home typically appraises somewhere in that $530,000 range. So we have about $180,000 margin in there. And a lot of that's just kind of the equity value of that. We do have a credit instrument for that. It's a fixed rate credit instrument, not a variable rate one. So we do have a facility that we're using that credit facility and not our cash to be able to do that. It's about a 6.5% credit facility. So our first few were done in a very low credit facility, right around that 4.5% rate. So it was much better at that rate. The rentals on these cover the debt service on that and provide us a margin. So typically, these homes are renting around $3,000. I'll just use that as a kind of a round number. some are a little lower, some are a little higher, depending on the number of bedrooms and the square feet of that. And so when you take a look at all of those, we don't have a lot of holding costs on those. And so our rate of return on that somewhere in the 8% to 10% range, but we want to dial that in. We want to see, okay, is that -- how is that performing? What is the capital creation of those homes. If those homes are appreciating at 4% or 5%, together with the rental incomes we want to see what those segments are performing out and making sure that, that meets our investment threshold. So that's really the pause of continued growth of that segment is to get a good handle on how that segment is performing and report that out and make a determination of management and the board level as to is that adequate? And do we want to keep moving forward with it. Unknown Analyst: Okay. Second question on -- you mentioned in your comments in the oil and gas segment, the impression I got is that you contracted out for the drilling companies. Are these all -- is that firm take-or-pay or let's just say oil prices go down to $60 a barrel or $50 a barrel, are these -- is the contract a take-or-pay? Or can they say, no, we're not going to take the water, we've decided to slow down our drilling operation? Mark Harding: Yes, great question. The oil and gas companies really will pay a premium for you to be at their back end call. And so when we when we price our spot oil and gas or industrial deliveries, that's about 3x, 3x what we price it out at our residential customers. But the downside of that is that sometimes they help back on that call. And so no, we don't have a very fixed amount of take or pays and we're one of the very few providers that can dial up and dial down on their systems, and that makes us very attractive to them. And so the premium that I think we charge them for that flexibility is really good for them and good for us. And as you saw last year, we had relatively weak oil and gas deliveries compared to 2023 time frame or 2024 time frame. And so it is a variable demand. It is hard for us to forecast because they do -- it takes a significant amount of lead time for them to get their permits in line, get their rigs committed. And so what we will see is we will see some pretty robust demand through 2026, and we will see a pretty healthy opportunity in 2027, given what they've already what they drilled to date. And so I think we're pretty we're pretty confident about the next 2 years on that. But forecasting out beyond that, as you highlight, is a real function of how oil and gas is doing in the overall commodity index. Unknown Analyst: Okay. And final question, and I'm in a car, but I didn't see your slide, but in the very beginning of your presentation, you gave an area view, I guess, of Aurora or some of the properties, I guess, that are south of Sky Ranch that were undergoing -- my impression was there were undergoing development of home sites. Is that correct? Mark Harding: That is correct. Unknown Analyst: Yes. So the stuff that's been permitted south of the Sky Ranch that actively being developed. What's the time -- I mean, how many units is that? What's the absorption? Is that thousands of units? Is that like a 5-year plan for -- these are other companies or it's Aurora. But what's the time frame to get all those years? Mark Harding: Yes. And so just that -- you're correct. And there's a lot of land in and around this area, right? The I-74 is probably be highest development corridor in the metro area. And it had reasons for that being the case. One, it has transportation. Secondly, it has available land. And so there are on a number of projects, which are thousands of residential units, and they're all around our area. And the Denver area is adding around 15,000 to 17,000 units a year. And I would say this submarket is probably 1/3 to 40% of that domain, whether it's in Aurora, whether it's in IncorporApple County, it really is the strongest development segment in that area, and it will continue to be that way. It will add 6, 000 or 7,000 units a year in this corridor for the next 50 years, right? There's no other area to develop. So we worry less about how we compete necessarily a Sky range to the next development. I think we have a lot of advantages that bring us into a higher performing master plan community than other areas. But at the end of the day, it's all going to absorb. And so this happens to be we're targeted in the right segments of the Denver Metro area. We're offering the right product. We're offering the right model for delivery of lots to our homebuilder customers. So we worry less about is that project can absorb in conjunction with our project absorbing and are we going to see any competition in that area. I would say that's not the biggest metric for us. What we really want to do is be the right developer being that we are doing a horizontal work. We're doing it exactly the way our customer wants it with annual lot deliveries. We're adding to the builder portfolio so that we have all of the builders in our projects and whether we have 1 project at Sky Ranch. But we have multiple projects where there are other Sky Ranch 2, Lowry, any of the other projects, we want to make sure that -- we continue to pay those deliveries and maintain what will be a very long tail of land development. Unknown Analyst: Yes. I guess my question was more when do other parties have to come to you for water -- if you don't own the [indiscernible]? Mark Harding: Yes. I misunderstood that. So they're in the city of Aurora, which as you can see, most of the land directly south of Sky Ranch is in the city of Aurora. They will not come to us, right? They will get their water from the city of Aurora. Those land areas that are not incorporated into the city and the corporate or Apple County, low rate, they will get their water from us. And so I would say it's maybe an even split of opportunities that are going to be competing with us that are going to get their water from Aurora and opportunities that we are competing for to be the developer or just the water utility provider because they're in unincorporated [indiscernible]. whether we develop it or another developer develop, is it. Unknown Analyst: Mark, I think I figured out my [indiscernible] here. Congratulations to you and the team on another solid quarter here. So following up on the question with regard to water. You've got capacity. Obviously, you've got great variability with industrial water sales. What -- can you just refresh us what the opportunity, what your obligations are to WISE and what the opportunity there is, especially if I think you alluded to earlier in your comments that this might be a challenging year when it comes to water supplies and other areas. Do you have the ability to sell through the WISE program or draw from the WISE program. Mark Harding: We do have the ability to draw from the WISE program. So that's an addition, as Elliot identified earlier, that's one of the acquisitions of water supply that's added to the portfolio. We get about, I think, our full subscription in there is about 900-acre feet of water. That system is fully built. We have capacity within that system. So we have, in addition to the 900-acre feet, we have 3 MGD of pipeline capacity in there. And the -- WISE is a kind of a partnership among 12 different water providers in the Denver metro area. And what we've done over the last several years is -- there are opportunities where we want more water, like if we have very heavy oil and gas demands in the winter and other of the WISE participants do not have real high water demand because their summer irrigation season hasn't quite kicked in. There are opportunities for us to get more water out of WISE. And then sometimes when the heavy irrigation season is going on and we have light oil and gas or industrial water deliveries, our domestic deliveries are relatively modest. They're probably 5% of the total capacity that we deliver in any given year, we have opportunities to sell water to the otherwise participating. So we go both ways. WISE, where we're able to trade for more water or trade or less water in that opportunity within WISE. Is there opportunities for that to expand? Yes. We're looking at partnerships and regional partnerships for storage. As many of you who have been following the company for a long time now, we have some very valuable storage reservoirs. And so those are opportunities for us to develop and store other water supplies as our partners look to develop those water supplies had a higher treatment capacity where we can deliver more than our subscription that [indiscernible] into that. So that will grow over time for opportunities for us to expand and it would be a spot water type market, but opportunities for -- as oil and gas over the next 10 years starts to mature out. And if they recycle in and refrac those wells, that will continue to build in the next cycle of the development of this [indiscernible] formation. And then also opportunities for us to be spot and peak water deliveries to other WISE participants. So we look at all those opportunities and that interconnect of that system is a very important aspect of that. Well, terrific questions, and I want to thank you all for your continued engagement. We continue to really pace the development of our assets and really are looking forward to built out at Sky Ranch. We're looking forward to continuing to expand in the land development and really monetizing our service area and more water opportunities and really building this in. So we couldn't be more excited about our runway and really the market penetration that we seen as a utility provider in the [indiscernible] as well as the land developer in the Denver area. And so I think that's going to continue to generate really handsome returns for us and returns to the shareholders. So -- if you didn't get on the call, if you're listening to this on a rebroadcast and a question arises, certainly don't hesitate to give us a call. We will have our Annual Investor Day this coming in July. So -- do we have a date set on that? I think it's [indiscernible] third week of July. So be on the lookout for that. I think it's typical on a Wednesday. I know I did get 1 shareholder that was looking for combining that with a Friday activity, but we'll send some information out as it gets a little bit closer to that. But again, thank you all for your continued investor confidence, and we look forward to the next steps. Thank you.