GlycoMimetics Q3 2024 Earnings Report $0.18 +0.01 (+4.25%) As of 04:00 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast GlycoMimetics EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.84Consensus EPS $1.13Beat/MissBeat by +$0.71One Year Ago EPS$0.98GlycoMimetics Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$615.46 millionExpected Revenue$596.41 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$19.05 millionYoY Revenue Growth+9.80%GlycoMimetics Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date10/31/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, October 31, 2024Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsGlycoMimetics' Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 8, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Friday, May 2, 2025 at 4:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryGLYC ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by GlycoMimetics Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 31, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to Itron's Third Quarter 20 24 Earnings Release Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Operator00:00:21Please note that today's conference is being recorded. I will now hand the conference over to your speaker host, Paul Vincent, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:33Good morning, and welcome to Itron's Q3 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Tom Dietrich, Itron's President and Chief Executive Officer and Joan Hooper, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, will review Itron's 3rd quarter results and provide a general business update and outlook. Earlier today, the company issued a press release announcing its results. This release also includes details related to the conference call and webcast replay information. Accompanying today's call is a presentation that is available through the webcast and on our corporate website under the Investor Relations tab. Speaker 100:01:10Following prepared remarks, the call will open for questions using the process the operator described. Before Tom begins, a reminder that our earnings release and financial presentation include non GAAP financial information that we believe enhances the overall understanding of our current and future performance. Reconciliations of differences between GAAP and non GAAP financial measures are available in our earnings release and on our Investor Relations website. We will be making statements during this call that are forward looking. These statements are based on current expectations and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Speaker 100:01:46Actual results could differ materially from these expectations because of factors that were presented in today's earnings release and comments made during this conference call as well as those presented in the Risk Factors section of our Form 10 ks and other reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. All company comments, estimates or forward looking statements are made in a good faith attempt to provide appropriate insight to our current and future operating and financial environment. Materials discussed today, October 31, 2024, may materially change, and we do not undertake any duty to update any of our forward looking statements. Now please turn to Page 4 of our presentation as our CEO, Tom Dietrich, begins his remarks. Speaker 200:02:30Thank you, Paul. Good morning to everyone and thank you for joining our call. Itron's 3rd quarter results were ahead of our expectations and reflect another quarter of solid execution delivered by our team. The continued market demand fueled by growth in energy and water needs supports our substantial pipeline of opportunities for the future. Financial highlights for the Q3 are shown on Slide 5 and include revenue of $615,000,000 adjusted EBITDA of $89,000,000 non GAAP earnings per share of $1.84 free cash flow of $59,000,000 Turning to Slide 6, our backlog at the end of 3rd quarter was $4,000,000,000 and bookings during the quarter were $487,000,000 Noteworthy bookings in the 3rd quarter include Arkansas Valley Electric Cooperative selected Itron's Gen X technology platform through our distribution partner NRTC. Speaker 200:03:32Arkansas Valley was one of the first Department of Energy Smart Grid Program awardees to complete negotiations with the DOE receiving a grant for their grid intelligence and distribution automation project. Additionally, CenterPoint Energy is working with Itron to offer the additional safety features of IntellisGas endpoints to commercial and industrial users. The enhanced safety capabilities include an integrated shutoff valve and pressure sensing with Edge Intelligence. This expansion further demonstrates CenterPoint's commitment to the safety of their users. Finally, we have expanded our support of Duke Energy to include our latest grid edge and distributed intelligence capabilities for DIRM's control. Speaker 200:04:19In our prior quarterly call, we commented that regulatory and funding processes can extend the time from project award to booking recognition due to our disciplined approach to register an award as backlog. This can increase the quarter to quarter variability in bookings for any given period and calendar 2024 is no exception. We are pleased with the pace of the various regulatory and funding processes within the 1st month of this quarter, Q4 2024. As a result, we maintain conviction for a book to bill ratio of 1:1 or greater for the full year. Now Joan will provide details of our Q3 results and our Q4 outlook. Speaker 300:05:03Thank you, Tom. Please turn to Slide 7 for a summary of consolidated GAAP results. 3rd quarter revenue of $615,000,000 increased 10% year over year and was stronger than expected. The higher revenue was driven by solid operational performance as well as shipments of customer orders initially anticipated in the Q4 and early 2025. Gross margin of 34.1 percent was 70 basis points higher than last year due to operational efficiencies. Speaker 300:05:37GAAP net income of $78,000,000 or $1.70 per diluted share compares to $40,000,000 or $0.87 per diluted share in the prior year. The improvement was driven by higher levels of operating and interest income and less tax expense. Both our GAAP and non GAAP net income and earnings per share benefited from a favorable resolution of a foreign tax audit. This resulted in an increase in net income of approximately $14,000,000 or $0.30 per share. Regarding non GAAP metrics on Slide 8. Speaker 300:06:12Non GAAP operating income of $79,000,000 increased 34% year over year. Adjusted EBITDA of $89,000,000 was a record and increased 29% year over year. Non GAAP net income for the quarter was $84,000,000 or $1.84 per diluted share versus $0.98 a year ago. Free cash flow was $59,000,000 in Q3 versus $28,000,000 a year ago. The improvement reflects strong year over year earnings growth. Speaker 300:06:43Year over year revenue growth by business segment is on Slide 9. Device Solutions revenue increased 10% on a constant currency basis, primarily driven by growth in smart water sales and electric demand. Network Solutions revenue grew 8% year over year, driven by increased volume associated with new projects and ongoing deployments. Outcomes revenue increased 16% on a constant currency basis, primarily due to higher recurring revenue services and software. Moving to the non GAAP year over year EPS bridge on Slide 10. Speaker 300:07:17Our Q3 non GAAP earnings per share of $1.84 per diluted share was an all time quarterly record and increased $0.86 year over year. Pretax operating performance contributed $0.61 per share year over year improvement, driven by the fall through of higher revenue and gross profit, partially offset by higher operating expenses. 3rd quarter tax expense was reduced by $14,000,000 due to a favorable resolution of a foreign tax audit, resulting in higher net income and a $0.30 earnings per share increase. Turning to slides 11 through 13, I'll review Q3 segment results compared with the prior year. Device Solutions revenue was $123,000,000 gross margin was 27.2% and operating margin was a record 21.6%. Speaker 300:08:07Gross margin was up 290 basis points year over year and operating margin was up 560 basis points, reflecting volume and operational efficiencies and effective cost management. Network Solutions revenue was $417,000,000 with gross margin of 35.9% and operating margin of 27.7%. This quarter was another record level of revenue for this segment. Gross margin increased 80 basis points year over year and operating margin was up 110 basis points driven by volume and operational efficiencies. Outcomes revenue was $76,000,000 with gross margin of 35 percent and operating margin of 14.7%. Speaker 300:08:50Gross margin decreased 3 60 basis points year over year and operating margin was down 110 basis points due to a lower margin revenue mix and increased services cost. Turning to Slide 14, I'll review liquidity and debt at the end of the Q3. Total debt was $1,265,000,000 and net debt was 282,000,000 As of September 30, net leverage was 0.9 times and cash and equivalents were $983,000,000 Now please turn to Slide 15 for our 4th quarter outlook. We anticipate 4th quarter revenue to be between $600,000,000 to $610,000,000 The midpoint of this range represents growth of $28,000,000 or 5% year over year. For non GAAP earnings per share, we expect a range of $1 to $1.10 per diluted share, which assumes an effective tax rate of approximately 25%. Speaker 300:09:47At the midpoint, this implies a decrease of $0.18 versus Q4 of last year. But Q4 of 2023 had an effective tax rate of just 8%. When normalizing Q4 of last year to a 25% effective tax rate, this Q4 2024 outlook is an increase of $0.06 or 6% year over year. Now please turn to Slide 16 for an update to our annual 2024 outlook incorporating this Q4 update. We now anticipate 2024 full year revenue to be within a range of 2.4 $28,000,000,000 to $2,438,000,000 At the midpoint, this represents an increase of 12% versus 2023 and 1% from our prior 2024 annual guidance. Speaker 300:10:36Continued customer demand, strong operational execution and the timing of customer shipments is driving our higher 2024 revenue expectations. Earnings will also be positively impacted by the fall through of higher revenue. Our non GAAP earnings per share full year outlook range is $5.28 to $5.38 per diluted share. At the midpoint, the updated non GAAP EPS estimate is up 59% versus 2023 17% versus prior guidance. Although we are not ready to provide formal 2025 financial guidance at this time, the combination of 2024 performance being consistently ahead of expectations, a normalizing operating environment and very back end loaded 2024 bookings make it reasonable to assume a lower revenue growth profile for 2025. Speaker 300:11:31We remain committed to the 2027 financial targets Speaker 200:11:41Operational momentum and efficiency gains continued to accrue during the Q3. And while we expect growth rates to normalize in the coming quarters, the larger trends are clear. Customer demand is growing. Our broad portfolio of innovative products and services gives us confidence that our strategic direction is well placed and the 2027 financial targets remain appropriate. Before opening the line for Q and A, there are a few non financial highlights of note. Speaker 200:12:11We recently held Itron's annual Inspire customer event where the power of data and grid edge intelligence was on full display. It is clear from the depth of interaction with utility executives, ecosystem partners and other influential industry leaders that we have the necessary motivation and thought leadership across our industry to resolve the most complex and pressing energy and water resource challenges facing us today. Significantly, the nature of the discussions has shifted from what to do to how to get it done. This is encouraging and will serve to accelerate the pace of the industry. During the conference, we announced our GridEdge Essentials offering. Speaker 200:12:54GridEdge Essentials solution dramatically simplifies the process for our utility customers to adopt new advanced technologies, accelerating the time to value. Also in conjunction with Inspire, we released our resourcefulness report, which explored artificial intelligence and machine learning trends within the utility industry. The key findings of the research include that 82% of utility executives report active AI projects. AI and ML are already helping utilities optimize asset utilization, advancing sustainability progress and enhancing consumer engagement. And perhaps unsurprisingly reflective of broader considerations related to AI adoption, 43% of utilities cited the lack of expertise as a current barrier to greater AI adoption. Speaker 200:13:48AI and ML are focus areas for the utility industry, which places even greater value on thoughtful approaches to data capture, analytics and agile infrastructure. The report is available for download at itron.com, and I encourage everyone to review the findings. Thank you for joining our call today. Operator, please open the line for some questions. Operator00:14:12Thank you. Our first question coming from the line of Ben Kallo with Baird. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:14:32Hey, guys. Congratulations on the quarter. Joe, I just want to clarify when you talked about growth next year, There will be growth next year, which is not the same level of growth? Speaker 300:14:47Yes. Well, we're obviously not in a position to give 25 guidance yet, but I wanted to make sure people remembered a couple of things. One is, we had $125,000,000 of catch up revenue in 2024. So be careful that you grow on a normalized 2024. And the fact that the bookings are so back end loaded is another factor. Speaker 300:15:05So really no different than what I've said on previous calls. If you look at the compounded growth from the current 24 estimates to get to the 27 targets, it's only 2.5% to 5% growth, because 24 was so much higher than we expected. So just be careful with the growth rates. We never expected a linear from 23 to 27. Speaker 400:15:29Thank you for that. Then the next question is just kind of behind the bookings that you expected in this quarter. Could you just talk about the stay in the market and deals out there to continue kind of the strength that you guys have had going on for the last couple of quarters or years? Thank you. Speaker 200:15:52Thanks, Ben. Tom here. The market remains extremely constructive. The needs of utilities to deal with things like climate disruption or increasing demand or doing a better job managing water or gas safety, all of those trends are alive and well, and I think we're well positioned to be able to take advantage of that. We are definitely seeing progress on the regulatory and funding front. Speaker 200:16:25Last quarter, I referenced something like $1,000,000,000 of pending awards that were in process. We definitely have seen progress, I would say, well over 50%, probably closer to 75% of that regulatory process is now behind us. And that's really what is underlying the one to one for the full year on a book to bill basis that I referenced in the prepared remarks. So feeling good about the overall market. On a global level, the commentary I just gave was largely around the Americas, but Europe has at least through Q3 continued to perform a little bit ahead of the expectations and you saw that in our Q3 results. Speaker 500:17:10Thank you, guys. Operator00:17:13Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Jeff Osborne with TD Cowen. Your line is now open. Speaker 600:17:22Thank you. Maybe just to follow-up on that last point, Tom. If I heard you right, you mentioned bookings were strong in October and then you said 50% to 75% of the $1,000,000,000 came in after the quarter. Is that the way you're trying to couch that Speaker 200:17:36for Q4? Well, not quite, not quite. You're close. But of the $1,000,000,000 that I referenced last time, we've seen progress on the regulatory front. It doesn't mean it's quite to the point that we registered as a booking yet. Speaker 200:17:51But certainly, we expect to achieve the 1 to 1 for the year on a book to bill ratio. So feeling good about the progress. And I wanted to give that color just to give people a little bit of context as to what we see behind the curtain and why we remain pretty excited about the market opportunity ahead. Speaker 600:18:11Got it. And just to be clear, is the regulatory front you're referring to both federal and state if it requires both, just given that there was some federal awards from the group program? Speaker 200:18:21Yes. Yes, it's a combination of the 2. And again, those bookings are primarily the Americas, but there's some international things that have government funding activities associated with it. Speaker 600:18:41Retrospect would you frame the strength in water all year? And do you expect that to continue next year for the devices segment? And then what's the M and A pipeline in light of the recent debt offering that you've done? And how has that evolved in the past few months? Speaker 200:18:56So let me start with water. Water has certainly been performing above our expectations thus far in the year. The terms have been really good. We set expectations for maybe $100,000,000 to $100,000,000 plus on the devices, $100,000,000 to $100,000,000 plus on the devices run rate and you can look at the last three quarters, we're kind of running a bit above that. I don't know that I would expect it to continue at that level as we get into the Q4 and for next year. Speaker 200:19:27What we see is lead times are starting to normalize again after some extended period of constraints in supply channels on a supply chains rather on a global basis. And as lead times start to reduce across the industry, that means that the amount of inventory that our customers are holding tends to pull back a little bit. So I do think the turns rate probably slows down over the coming quarters. But that doesn't mean the market is any way going backwards. It's more just the accordion effect that you get in the supply chain itself. Speaker 200:20:04On the M and A front, I would say that very similar commentary to what we have mentioned in the past. We're pleased with the position of our balance sheet that puts us in a good place to move when those opportunities present themselves. We're very active in the market looking for those opportunities. What we are really seeking is something that will accelerate our outcomes growth rate. It's growing a bit faster than some of the other segments in the company, but we're really looking for ways to accelerate that even more and that's where a lot of that acquisition attention is placed on our side. Speaker 200:20:47We want something that will add to our grid edge intelligence platform and something that really would be scalable across many, many customers. That's what we are looking for. And as those opportunities present themselves, we'll obviously be sharing it with the market. Speaker 600:21:04Perfect. That's all I had. Thank you. Speaker 200:21:06Thanks, Jeff. Operator00:21:08Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Noah Kaye with Oppenheimer. Your line is now open. Speaker 700:21:17All right. Thanks very much for taking the questions. Tom, you mentioned the launch of GreatEdge Essentials, really a bundled solution for managing a range of outcomes for these utilities. And we understand that that is not actually kind of commercially available broadly until December. But can you just talk at an early stage about the adoption of whether it's this solution or just more usage of the DI network that is now kind of growing pretty rapidly? Speaker 700:21:57And what does that mean for how the mix within outcomes in terms of revenue composition should evolve over, let's say, the next 12 to 18 months? Are we going to see more recurring revenue, higher margin? And just what is your visibility to that inflection? Speaker 200:22:16So 3 different concepts that I think are important to pull out of the question that you asked. 1st and foremost, greatEdge Intelligence as an offering. That is a very full featured platform that allows you as a utility to have a lot of agility in your infrastructure. When you buy something, you put it in the ground, you can use it as you need and perform a lot of different grid efficiency or consumer engagement kinds of applications through things like distributed intelligence. At this point, we've got more than 12,000,000 grid edge or DI capable endpoints that are in the field, millions more in backlog, millions of applications that are out there running for things like safety or things like distributed energy resource management out of the edge. Speaker 200:23:11That said, a lot of that fielded equipment and much of what's in backlog is for larger utilities, think large IOUs, where they have a pretty robust capability inside to be able to take advantage of that. As we broaden that grid edge intelligence capability and take it towards more midsized or muni co op kinds of customers, The ability to say DI in a box is what BridEdge Essentials is really all about. It packages up the endpoints, the network, the head end software, the analytics, the DI capability and really makes it easy for utility that doesn't have perhaps a massive IT department to be able to integrate into that overall offering. So it broadens out the opportunity for us as we think about serving more customers with this important capability. So that's what GridEdge Essentials is really all about. Speaker 200:24:10Relative to market adoption, again, we're super excited about what we see our customers doing. The pace of innovation is there. The idea of the spark in someone's eye about what they might be able to do to being able to prototype and put some applications out in the field is something measured in months rather than in quarters or years, which is the typical innovation cycle if you look in the years past for utilities. So pace of innovation grows and this becomes something that is a very robust part of our business in the years ahead. So I hope that sort of unpacks and pulls together the 3 threads that you mentioned in your question. Speaker 700:24:54It does, Tom, but in the follow-up was really around the implications for mix, right, and the growth of recurring revenues within the outcomes segment. How should we think about that trend over the next Speaker 200:25:07Indeed, sorry, I missed that one. Outcomes, certainly, last quarter and what you saw in even in Q2 was revenue that was a bit more tilted towards services and one time services. We definitely think that outcomes will bounce back and those targets we laid out for 2027 to put the gross margin into the 40s kind of range is what we would expect to see. I still think it will be a little bit lumpy quarter to quarter depending on the mix until the business gets a little bit more scale to it and a little bit more heft. But certainly, we see it swinging back more towards some of that SaaS and licensing types of revenue in the quarters ahead. Speaker 700:25:59Great. Just one quick follow-up for Joan. Taxes, again, a good guide this quarter. Not sure if that relates to more release evaluation allowances, but can you help us frame out what should sort of be the normalized tax rate for the business going forward? Speaker 300:26:17Yes, I would say probably about 25% would be a normalized rate. So yes, this quarter the $14,000,000 or the $0.30 per share I alluded to was the favorable basically a settlement in the foreign tax audit that pertain to many, many years ago 2014 to 2017. So yes, we had some reserves on our books and once we settled the audit, we were able to release those. So that was really an anomaly. But if you ignore discretes, which are hard to predict, I would say about 25%. Speaker 700:26:50Great. Thanks very much. Operator00:26:53Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Joseph Olshau with Guggenheim Partners. Your line is now open. Speaker 500:27:02Thank you. Good morning. Following on Noah's question a little bit, I'm wondering if you can try and give us a sense as to how this quarter's bookings and this sort of bolus of an additional $1,000,000,000 coming in at the end of the year. What the mix for that round of bookings looks like relative to the revenue that you're realizing now? Speaker 200:27:25The bookings themselves will be very heavily skewed towards networks and outcomes. To be honest, that's similar to our backlog position as it is today. So that $4,000,000,000 of existing backlog is 90% plus networks and outcomes, and I would suspect that 4th quarter bookings looks a lot like that in terms of the mix. The outcomes portion of that portfolio is growing a little bit faster than networks in terms of Q3 revenue as an example, but that's also true in the bookings themselves. So bookings rate for outcomes is quite a bit higher today than it was a year or 2 ago within the mix itself. Speaker 200:28:12What's underneath that? It's all the grid edge intelligence platform and the associated software and services that go along with that. So it all flows from the types of offering discussion that I outlined earlier. Speaker 500:28:28Now with that in mind, is it possible as we actually get to 2026 and 2027 that there's Speaker 400:28:36some Speaker 500:28:36kind of shorter term book and ship business in devices? Obviously, you can tell what I'm trying to figure out here in terms of what the revenue mix looks like or should we think of that backlog as being representative more of the actual what the actual revenue mix might look like in 2026? Speaker 200:28:55Yes. I think that our devices business probably that $100,000,000 to a bit above that on a run rate basis is the right zip code to be in, whereas the networks and the outcome side probably continues to grow more like the rates that we've talked about in our prepared remarks. So I think that that would be a good way to think about the business itself. Devices Speaker 300:29:33And And I would say if you look at the segment level targets that we provided for 2027 in Investor Day, those are still appropriate. Speaker 500:29:44Okay. And then just quickly as a follow-up, given you've spoken, Joan, very clearly about the fact that stuff hitting bookings now is not going to show up in 2025 revenue. What would you say is the window for bookings showing up in 2026 revenue? Can we think about perhaps anything that shows up by the first half of twenty twenty five, maybe making into the twenty twenty six revenue? I'm just trying to understand a little bit how to roll this booking strength forward into 2026 to 2027? Speaker 300:30:16Yes. I mean, obviously, each deal is a little bit different, but I think what we've been assuming is sort of a 9 to 12 month lag from the time you close a booking to when revenue starts to flow. Speaker 500:30:28Okay. Thank you. Operator00:30:31Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Pavel Molchanov with Raymond James. Your line is now open. Speaker 800:30:39Yes, thanks for taking the question. If we look at outcomes, year over year growth past 2 quarters is double digits, which is meaningfully higher than probably the last kind of 2 straight years. Are these one offs or is there some kind of structural change in that segment that explains the double digit growth all of a sudden? Speaker 200:31:11Well, I think there's a number of factors inside of there. Remember that a lot of the outcomes revenue tends to be tilted towards recurring revenue. So it takes a little bit of time to show up and every time we do a booking, it adds a small slice on top of that. So as we've mentioned on previous calls, when networks got started to catch up on some of that constrained revenue due to component shortages in years going by, the outcomes revenue was going to follow. It's usually a bit of time for customers to get the network up and running and then some of that outcomes revenue starts to flow in on top of it. Speaker 200:31:55And it's just following that normal trend that we've seen. So it's maybe that 12 month lag between networks growing, which yielded the outcomes growth. That's what you see showing through in terms of outcomes. But it is largely tilted towards recurring revenue and we are excited about the quarters ahead in terms of where we can continue to grow that business, which is why in our 27 targets, we've outlined it as one of the faster growing segments. Speaker 800:32:29Right. Follow-up on outcomes as well. In the context of the kind of AI euphoria, a lot of headlines recently about virtual power plants. Can you talk about the role that Itron is playing in virtual power plant development, which I guess would be within outcomes? Speaker 200:32:54Correct. There are a lot of assets that are out at the edge of the grid, whether it is a battery that's in your garage or whether it is a rooftop solar or adding load control capabilities to existing assets, maybe something as simple as a pool pump. So the outcomes really has a lot of the software capability housed within it to be able to control those assets for the good of the grid and the optimization of what is going on. So a DI app to be able to pull charge out of the battery to be able to supply to the house and pull out some of the load of that house off the grid is a perfect example of a VPP, virtual power plant kind of application that's going on in the outcomes segment. Several quarters ago, we announced something called GridEdge Optimizer, which is really all about being able to utilize those edge assets to be able to balance supply and demand out at the edge. Speaker 200:34:03And those are very ripe and growing opportunities for us as more and more local hotspots and constraints are showing up in our customers' grids, whether it is because of EV growth or whether it is just more data centers in the area, you got to figure out a way to balance supply and demand where you don't quite have everything that you need and you can't afford to upsize everything. You got to make the assets you have in the field a bit more agile, which is exactly where outcomes comes to the scene and can help our customers. Got it. Thanks very much. Thank you. Operator00:34:44Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Austin Miller with Canaccord Genuity. Your line is now open. Speaker 900:34:52Hi, good morning. Congrats on the quarter. Just my first question here, given the water demand needed for data centers, do you expect the increase in demand for electricity meters on the grid to mirror water meters due to the data center demand for Coolant? Speaker 200:35:11I think that electricity probably outpaces water growth on a global level. Water will continue to grow as an entire segment for us in the years ahead, but I think electricity outpaces that as there is a lot more that needs to be done on the electrical infrastructure side. So I think our growth aspirations are in both segments, but probably a bit more tilted towards electricity over water. Speaker 900:35:45Okay. And just a follow-up, how much of the non inflation index inventory still remains? And did we get a significant reduction in that this quarter just in the reflection on the gross margin? Speaker 200:36:04Yes. Our backlog today is a bit over 75% that is either repriced or indexed for the new environment we are operating in. That less than 25% -ish that is still left to flow through as of the end of Q3. Most of that remaining, call it, 25% is it will flow through within the next 12 months. So we're almost through that period. Speaker 200:36:35As new backlog starts to come in and certainly we noted that we expect Q4 to be a bit more of a heavy bookings quarter that will add to the right side of that equation for the quarters ahead, but call it 70five-twenty 5 today. Speaker 900:36:52Excellent. Thank you for the details. Operator00:36:56Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Scott Graham with Seaport Research Partners. Your line is now open. Speaker 1000:37:09Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Joan, I kind of wanted to go back to your math on the assumed or implied, I should say, CAGR for revenue between $24,000,000 $27,000,000 $2,500,000 $5,000,000 I get I come up with that same number, of course. What I'm wondering is, I thought I heard you say 25 down. Did you mean growth down or revenue down? Speaker 300:37:44I didn't say either, I don't believe. So what I was relating to is first comment would be 2027 targets are still appropriate and that was a revenue range of $2,600,000,000 to $2,800,000,000 and we had the EBITDA range of 15% to 17%. So at the time we did Investor Day, we anchored the charts of 23 actuals. So to get to the 23 from the 23 actuals to the 27 targets, it was a revenue CAGR of 5% to 7%. However, 2024 is a lot stronger than 23%. Speaker 300:38:18So if you take the updated annual guidance at the midpoint, you get the call it 2.5% to 5% is what's required going forward to get to the 27 targets. And again, all we've said is, we don't expect that to be a straight line. So at this point, it's too it's premature to talk about 25%. I would expect some growth. But again, I would caution people, you got to do the growth off a normalized $24,000,000 You got to take $125,000,000 out of our full year estimate, which was catch up one time in nature that won't recur. Speaker 1000:38:50Got it. Yes. Thank you for that clarification. Very much appreciated. The other question I wanted to ask was kind of more for both you and Tom. Speaker 1000:38:59So when you provided your targets earlier this year, I believe this moving $1,000,000,000 pipeline was only kind of thought of as, let's say, a couple maybe several $100,000,000 and that has graduated greatly to this $1,000,000,000 number. So it would suggest that your guidance did not contemplate that. Could you comment on that? Speaker 300:39:28Yes, I'd be I don't think that's the case. So what we're talking about with the $1,000,000,000 is a delay in getting it through the funnel to call it a booking. It's not saying it's $1,000,000,000 higher than what we would have expected. So I don't think we see any change in terms of the market demand that would get us to the 27 targets that we laid out. The $1,000,000,000 is a timing issue in terms Speaker 200:39:51of regulatory approvals. Yes. We started the year saying book to bill of 1 to 1 or greater, that's still our belief today. But we know that, okay, with the first three quarters of this year were whatever, 0.8, 0.9 something like that, well below 1 to 1, which means that there is a bit of a catch up on the bookings side in Q4, which is what Joan referenced. So it's more timing within the year on the bookings themselves rather than some fundamental shift or change in the marketplace. Speaker 1000:40:23Understood. Thank you for that clarification. If I could just sneak this one more in. Joan, the non GAAP incremental operating margin has been fairly steady in like the last 6 quarters in this sort of 32%, 35% last quarter, 41% range, just in this sort of 5% to 10% range. Are you comfortable with that on a go forward basis, call it in the low 30s type thing? Speaker 300:40:57Yes. Again, not in the position to talk 25% guidance. What I would anchor you to is the 27% targets that we gave, which again weren't operating income, but you can figure that out. EBITDA percentage of revenue of 15% to 17%. So from quarter to quarter, you're going to get some variability. Speaker 300:41:15As an example, OpEx for us will tend to go up in Q4. We just did our customer event. We have a lot of marketing spend and a lot of travel outside services. So it will vary quarter to quarter, but I think the targets we laid out for 27 are still appropriate. Speaker 1000:41:30Understood. Thank you. Operator00:41:36Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Chip Moore with ROTH Capital Partners. Your line is now open. Speaker 1100:41:51Good morning. Hey, thanks for taking the question. I guess I just wanted to do a clarification. I think you referenced Joan some pull forward with some of that coming from 2025, which would be an incremental headwind. I think we understand the growth dynamics there, but maybe just expand on that. Speaker 300:42:12Yes. I mean, if you look at the revenue range we provided for Q3, at the midpoint, it was about $595,000,000 So we ended up $20,000,000 higher than that. We did not try to lowball our guidance when we gave you that number. So obviously, we work with customers in terms of when they want the shipments and some shipments that we would have expected to be Q4 or early 2025 actually occurred in Q3. So that's all we were trying to point out. Speaker 200:42:38Yes. The dynamic there is as projects start to move, generally, they can accelerate a little bit once the installation crews really hit their stride and things go a little faster. And that's kind of what you saw in Q3. It was nothing particularly overt. It was just the market moving in the right direction for us. Speaker 1100:43:02Perfect. Yes. And not particularly material. And maybe just my follow-up on the outlook for Q4, I think that implies maybe that margins stepped down a bit. Anything on product mix or I think you just referenced some of the year end OpEx maybe, Joan, but anything there to keep in mind and then margin trajectory, I guess, next year with some of the growth dynamics with what you're seeing in backlog? Speaker 1100:43:26Thanks. Speaker 300:43:27Yes. So if I start on the top line, I would say, again, the midpoint of our range is slightly down from Q3, call it $10,000,000 or so. Most of that is really strong Q3 performance for devices. So as Tom mentioned, we typically think about devices as maybe a little over $100,000,000 a quarter. They were $123,000,000 in Q3, so really quite high. Speaker 300:43:48On an EPS standpoint, you've got obviously to factor in the tax benefit that was booked in Q3. That's not going to recur in Q4. That's got to be $0.30 or so, just right there and then higher OpEx. From a gross margin perspective, maybe flat to slightly down. We don't typically guide to gross margin, but nothing in particular there. Speaker 300:44:08It is the last quarter that we're in the process of closing our 2 factories. So you typically get a little bit of lack of productivity as you're ramping from one factory to another and we factor that in as well. Speaker 1100:44:27Perfect. Very helpful. Appreciate it. Operator00:44:32Thank you. And I'm showing no further questions in the Q and A queue at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Mr. Tom Dietrich for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:44:41Thank you, Libby. We are pleased with our progress and certainly the performance of the team. You're starting to see the proof points and the strategy play out and we are excited about the future and where the market is heading. So look forward to updating everyone next quarter. Thank you for joining today. Operator00:45:02Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallGlycoMimetics Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) GlycoMimetics Earnings HeadlinesGlycoMimetics (NASDAQ:GLYC) Earns Sell Rating from Analysts at StockNews.comApril 8 at 1:35 AM | americanbankingnews.comCrescent Biopharma Appoints Joshua Brumm as Chief Executive Officer and Expands Leadership Team to Advance Pipeline of Potentially Best-in-Class Oncology TherapeuticsApril 3, 2025 | globenewswire.comElon Musk Confirms: Tesla’s Optimus is Replacing Workers… and Heading to MarsMusk confirmed that SpaceX's Starship will carry Optimus to Mars in 2026 as part of an autonomous mission to help build human colonies on the Red Planet. And here on Earth? Optimus is about to change everything.April 8, 2025 | InvestorPlace (Ad)GlycoMimetics (NASDAQ:GLYC) Now Covered by StockNews.comMarch 31, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comCantor Fitzgerald Initiates Coverage of GlycoMimetics (GLYC) with Overweight RecommendationMarch 22, 2025 | msn.comCantor Fitzgerald Initiates Coverage of GlycoMimetics (GLYC) with Overweight RecommendationMarch 22, 2025 | msn.comSee More GlycoMimetics Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like GlycoMimetics? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on GlycoMimetics and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About GlycoMimeticsGlycoMimetics (NASDAQ:GLYC), a biotechnology company, focuses on the discovery and development of therapies for cancers and inflammatory diseases in the United States. It develops uproleselan, an E-selectin antagonist, which is used in combination with chemotherapy to treat acute myeloid leukemia (AML), as well as completed phase 3 trial to treat relapsed/refractory AML. The company also develops various other programs, including GMI-1687, an antagonist of E-selectin to treat vaso-occlusive crisis; and GMI-2093, a galectin-3 carbohydrate-binding protein. In addition, its portfolio comprises GMI-1359, which targets e-selectin and a chemokine receptor for the treatment of osteosarcoma. The company has a cooperative research and development agreement with the National Cancer Institute; and a collaboration and license agreement with Apollomics (Hong Kong) Limited for the development and commercialization of uproleselan and GMI-1687. 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There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to Itron's Third Quarter 20 24 Earnings Release Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Operator00:00:21Please note that today's conference is being recorded. I will now hand the conference over to your speaker host, Paul Vincent, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:33Good morning, and welcome to Itron's Q3 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Tom Dietrich, Itron's President and Chief Executive Officer and Joan Hooper, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, will review Itron's 3rd quarter results and provide a general business update and outlook. Earlier today, the company issued a press release announcing its results. This release also includes details related to the conference call and webcast replay information. Accompanying today's call is a presentation that is available through the webcast and on our corporate website under the Investor Relations tab. Speaker 100:01:10Following prepared remarks, the call will open for questions using the process the operator described. Before Tom begins, a reminder that our earnings release and financial presentation include non GAAP financial information that we believe enhances the overall understanding of our current and future performance. Reconciliations of differences between GAAP and non GAAP financial measures are available in our earnings release and on our Investor Relations website. We will be making statements during this call that are forward looking. These statements are based on current expectations and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Speaker 100:01:46Actual results could differ materially from these expectations because of factors that were presented in today's earnings release and comments made during this conference call as well as those presented in the Risk Factors section of our Form 10 ks and other reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. All company comments, estimates or forward looking statements are made in a good faith attempt to provide appropriate insight to our current and future operating and financial environment. Materials discussed today, October 31, 2024, may materially change, and we do not undertake any duty to update any of our forward looking statements. Now please turn to Page 4 of our presentation as our CEO, Tom Dietrich, begins his remarks. Speaker 200:02:30Thank you, Paul. Good morning to everyone and thank you for joining our call. Itron's 3rd quarter results were ahead of our expectations and reflect another quarter of solid execution delivered by our team. The continued market demand fueled by growth in energy and water needs supports our substantial pipeline of opportunities for the future. Financial highlights for the Q3 are shown on Slide 5 and include revenue of $615,000,000 adjusted EBITDA of $89,000,000 non GAAP earnings per share of $1.84 free cash flow of $59,000,000 Turning to Slide 6, our backlog at the end of 3rd quarter was $4,000,000,000 and bookings during the quarter were $487,000,000 Noteworthy bookings in the 3rd quarter include Arkansas Valley Electric Cooperative selected Itron's Gen X technology platform through our distribution partner NRTC. Speaker 200:03:32Arkansas Valley was one of the first Department of Energy Smart Grid Program awardees to complete negotiations with the DOE receiving a grant for their grid intelligence and distribution automation project. Additionally, CenterPoint Energy is working with Itron to offer the additional safety features of IntellisGas endpoints to commercial and industrial users. The enhanced safety capabilities include an integrated shutoff valve and pressure sensing with Edge Intelligence. This expansion further demonstrates CenterPoint's commitment to the safety of their users. Finally, we have expanded our support of Duke Energy to include our latest grid edge and distributed intelligence capabilities for DIRM's control. Speaker 200:04:19In our prior quarterly call, we commented that regulatory and funding processes can extend the time from project award to booking recognition due to our disciplined approach to register an award as backlog. This can increase the quarter to quarter variability in bookings for any given period and calendar 2024 is no exception. We are pleased with the pace of the various regulatory and funding processes within the 1st month of this quarter, Q4 2024. As a result, we maintain conviction for a book to bill ratio of 1:1 or greater for the full year. Now Joan will provide details of our Q3 results and our Q4 outlook. Speaker 300:05:03Thank you, Tom. Please turn to Slide 7 for a summary of consolidated GAAP results. 3rd quarter revenue of $615,000,000 increased 10% year over year and was stronger than expected. The higher revenue was driven by solid operational performance as well as shipments of customer orders initially anticipated in the Q4 and early 2025. Gross margin of 34.1 percent was 70 basis points higher than last year due to operational efficiencies. Speaker 300:05:37GAAP net income of $78,000,000 or $1.70 per diluted share compares to $40,000,000 or $0.87 per diluted share in the prior year. The improvement was driven by higher levels of operating and interest income and less tax expense. Both our GAAP and non GAAP net income and earnings per share benefited from a favorable resolution of a foreign tax audit. This resulted in an increase in net income of approximately $14,000,000 or $0.30 per share. Regarding non GAAP metrics on Slide 8. Speaker 300:06:12Non GAAP operating income of $79,000,000 increased 34% year over year. Adjusted EBITDA of $89,000,000 was a record and increased 29% year over year. Non GAAP net income for the quarter was $84,000,000 or $1.84 per diluted share versus $0.98 a year ago. Free cash flow was $59,000,000 in Q3 versus $28,000,000 a year ago. The improvement reflects strong year over year earnings growth. Speaker 300:06:43Year over year revenue growth by business segment is on Slide 9. Device Solutions revenue increased 10% on a constant currency basis, primarily driven by growth in smart water sales and electric demand. Network Solutions revenue grew 8% year over year, driven by increased volume associated with new projects and ongoing deployments. Outcomes revenue increased 16% on a constant currency basis, primarily due to higher recurring revenue services and software. Moving to the non GAAP year over year EPS bridge on Slide 10. Speaker 300:07:17Our Q3 non GAAP earnings per share of $1.84 per diluted share was an all time quarterly record and increased $0.86 year over year. Pretax operating performance contributed $0.61 per share year over year improvement, driven by the fall through of higher revenue and gross profit, partially offset by higher operating expenses. 3rd quarter tax expense was reduced by $14,000,000 due to a favorable resolution of a foreign tax audit, resulting in higher net income and a $0.30 earnings per share increase. Turning to slides 11 through 13, I'll review Q3 segment results compared with the prior year. Device Solutions revenue was $123,000,000 gross margin was 27.2% and operating margin was a record 21.6%. Speaker 300:08:07Gross margin was up 290 basis points year over year and operating margin was up 560 basis points, reflecting volume and operational efficiencies and effective cost management. Network Solutions revenue was $417,000,000 with gross margin of 35.9% and operating margin of 27.7%. This quarter was another record level of revenue for this segment. Gross margin increased 80 basis points year over year and operating margin was up 110 basis points driven by volume and operational efficiencies. Outcomes revenue was $76,000,000 with gross margin of 35 percent and operating margin of 14.7%. Speaker 300:08:50Gross margin decreased 3 60 basis points year over year and operating margin was down 110 basis points due to a lower margin revenue mix and increased services cost. Turning to Slide 14, I'll review liquidity and debt at the end of the Q3. Total debt was $1,265,000,000 and net debt was 282,000,000 As of September 30, net leverage was 0.9 times and cash and equivalents were $983,000,000 Now please turn to Slide 15 for our 4th quarter outlook. We anticipate 4th quarter revenue to be between $600,000,000 to $610,000,000 The midpoint of this range represents growth of $28,000,000 or 5% year over year. For non GAAP earnings per share, we expect a range of $1 to $1.10 per diluted share, which assumes an effective tax rate of approximately 25%. Speaker 300:09:47At the midpoint, this implies a decrease of $0.18 versus Q4 of last year. But Q4 of 2023 had an effective tax rate of just 8%. When normalizing Q4 of last year to a 25% effective tax rate, this Q4 2024 outlook is an increase of $0.06 or 6% year over year. Now please turn to Slide 16 for an update to our annual 2024 outlook incorporating this Q4 update. We now anticipate 2024 full year revenue to be within a range of 2.4 $28,000,000,000 to $2,438,000,000 At the midpoint, this represents an increase of 12% versus 2023 and 1% from our prior 2024 annual guidance. Speaker 300:10:36Continued customer demand, strong operational execution and the timing of customer shipments is driving our higher 2024 revenue expectations. Earnings will also be positively impacted by the fall through of higher revenue. Our non GAAP earnings per share full year outlook range is $5.28 to $5.38 per diluted share. At the midpoint, the updated non GAAP EPS estimate is up 59% versus 2023 17% versus prior guidance. Although we are not ready to provide formal 2025 financial guidance at this time, the combination of 2024 performance being consistently ahead of expectations, a normalizing operating environment and very back end loaded 2024 bookings make it reasonable to assume a lower revenue growth profile for 2025. Speaker 300:11:31We remain committed to the 2027 financial targets Speaker 200:11:41Operational momentum and efficiency gains continued to accrue during the Q3. And while we expect growth rates to normalize in the coming quarters, the larger trends are clear. Customer demand is growing. Our broad portfolio of innovative products and services gives us confidence that our strategic direction is well placed and the 2027 financial targets remain appropriate. Before opening the line for Q and A, there are a few non financial highlights of note. Speaker 200:12:11We recently held Itron's annual Inspire customer event where the power of data and grid edge intelligence was on full display. It is clear from the depth of interaction with utility executives, ecosystem partners and other influential industry leaders that we have the necessary motivation and thought leadership across our industry to resolve the most complex and pressing energy and water resource challenges facing us today. Significantly, the nature of the discussions has shifted from what to do to how to get it done. This is encouraging and will serve to accelerate the pace of the industry. During the conference, we announced our GridEdge Essentials offering. Speaker 200:12:54GridEdge Essentials solution dramatically simplifies the process for our utility customers to adopt new advanced technologies, accelerating the time to value. Also in conjunction with Inspire, we released our resourcefulness report, which explored artificial intelligence and machine learning trends within the utility industry. The key findings of the research include that 82% of utility executives report active AI projects. AI and ML are already helping utilities optimize asset utilization, advancing sustainability progress and enhancing consumer engagement. And perhaps unsurprisingly reflective of broader considerations related to AI adoption, 43% of utilities cited the lack of expertise as a current barrier to greater AI adoption. Speaker 200:13:48AI and ML are focus areas for the utility industry, which places even greater value on thoughtful approaches to data capture, analytics and agile infrastructure. The report is available for download at itron.com, and I encourage everyone to review the findings. Thank you for joining our call today. Operator, please open the line for some questions. Operator00:14:12Thank you. Our first question coming from the line of Ben Kallo with Baird. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:14:32Hey, guys. Congratulations on the quarter. Joe, I just want to clarify when you talked about growth next year, There will be growth next year, which is not the same level of growth? Speaker 300:14:47Yes. Well, we're obviously not in a position to give 25 guidance yet, but I wanted to make sure people remembered a couple of things. One is, we had $125,000,000 of catch up revenue in 2024. So be careful that you grow on a normalized 2024. And the fact that the bookings are so back end loaded is another factor. Speaker 300:15:05So really no different than what I've said on previous calls. If you look at the compounded growth from the current 24 estimates to get to the 27 targets, it's only 2.5% to 5% growth, because 24 was so much higher than we expected. So just be careful with the growth rates. We never expected a linear from 23 to 27. Speaker 400:15:29Thank you for that. Then the next question is just kind of behind the bookings that you expected in this quarter. Could you just talk about the stay in the market and deals out there to continue kind of the strength that you guys have had going on for the last couple of quarters or years? Thank you. Speaker 200:15:52Thanks, Ben. Tom here. The market remains extremely constructive. The needs of utilities to deal with things like climate disruption or increasing demand or doing a better job managing water or gas safety, all of those trends are alive and well, and I think we're well positioned to be able to take advantage of that. We are definitely seeing progress on the regulatory and funding front. Speaker 200:16:25Last quarter, I referenced something like $1,000,000,000 of pending awards that were in process. We definitely have seen progress, I would say, well over 50%, probably closer to 75% of that regulatory process is now behind us. And that's really what is underlying the one to one for the full year on a book to bill basis that I referenced in the prepared remarks. So feeling good about the overall market. On a global level, the commentary I just gave was largely around the Americas, but Europe has at least through Q3 continued to perform a little bit ahead of the expectations and you saw that in our Q3 results. Speaker 500:17:10Thank you, guys. Operator00:17:13Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Jeff Osborne with TD Cowen. Your line is now open. Speaker 600:17:22Thank you. Maybe just to follow-up on that last point, Tom. If I heard you right, you mentioned bookings were strong in October and then you said 50% to 75% of the $1,000,000,000 came in after the quarter. Is that the way you're trying to couch that Speaker 200:17:36for Q4? Well, not quite, not quite. You're close. But of the $1,000,000,000 that I referenced last time, we've seen progress on the regulatory front. It doesn't mean it's quite to the point that we registered as a booking yet. Speaker 200:17:51But certainly, we expect to achieve the 1 to 1 for the year on a book to bill ratio. So feeling good about the progress. And I wanted to give that color just to give people a little bit of context as to what we see behind the curtain and why we remain pretty excited about the market opportunity ahead. Speaker 600:18:11Got it. And just to be clear, is the regulatory front you're referring to both federal and state if it requires both, just given that there was some federal awards from the group program? Speaker 200:18:21Yes. Yes, it's a combination of the 2. And again, those bookings are primarily the Americas, but there's some international things that have government funding activities associated with it. Speaker 600:18:41Retrospect would you frame the strength in water all year? And do you expect that to continue next year for the devices segment? And then what's the M and A pipeline in light of the recent debt offering that you've done? And how has that evolved in the past few months? Speaker 200:18:56So let me start with water. Water has certainly been performing above our expectations thus far in the year. The terms have been really good. We set expectations for maybe $100,000,000 to $100,000,000 plus on the devices, $100,000,000 to $100,000,000 plus on the devices run rate and you can look at the last three quarters, we're kind of running a bit above that. I don't know that I would expect it to continue at that level as we get into the Q4 and for next year. Speaker 200:19:27What we see is lead times are starting to normalize again after some extended period of constraints in supply channels on a supply chains rather on a global basis. And as lead times start to reduce across the industry, that means that the amount of inventory that our customers are holding tends to pull back a little bit. So I do think the turns rate probably slows down over the coming quarters. But that doesn't mean the market is any way going backwards. It's more just the accordion effect that you get in the supply chain itself. Speaker 200:20:04On the M and A front, I would say that very similar commentary to what we have mentioned in the past. We're pleased with the position of our balance sheet that puts us in a good place to move when those opportunities present themselves. We're very active in the market looking for those opportunities. What we are really seeking is something that will accelerate our outcomes growth rate. It's growing a bit faster than some of the other segments in the company, but we're really looking for ways to accelerate that even more and that's where a lot of that acquisition attention is placed on our side. Speaker 200:20:47We want something that will add to our grid edge intelligence platform and something that really would be scalable across many, many customers. That's what we are looking for. And as those opportunities present themselves, we'll obviously be sharing it with the market. Speaker 600:21:04Perfect. That's all I had. Thank you. Speaker 200:21:06Thanks, Jeff. Operator00:21:08Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Noah Kaye with Oppenheimer. Your line is now open. Speaker 700:21:17All right. Thanks very much for taking the questions. Tom, you mentioned the launch of GreatEdge Essentials, really a bundled solution for managing a range of outcomes for these utilities. And we understand that that is not actually kind of commercially available broadly until December. But can you just talk at an early stage about the adoption of whether it's this solution or just more usage of the DI network that is now kind of growing pretty rapidly? Speaker 700:21:57And what does that mean for how the mix within outcomes in terms of revenue composition should evolve over, let's say, the next 12 to 18 months? Are we going to see more recurring revenue, higher margin? And just what is your visibility to that inflection? Speaker 200:22:16So 3 different concepts that I think are important to pull out of the question that you asked. 1st and foremost, greatEdge Intelligence as an offering. That is a very full featured platform that allows you as a utility to have a lot of agility in your infrastructure. When you buy something, you put it in the ground, you can use it as you need and perform a lot of different grid efficiency or consumer engagement kinds of applications through things like distributed intelligence. At this point, we've got more than 12,000,000 grid edge or DI capable endpoints that are in the field, millions more in backlog, millions of applications that are out there running for things like safety or things like distributed energy resource management out of the edge. Speaker 200:23:11That said, a lot of that fielded equipment and much of what's in backlog is for larger utilities, think large IOUs, where they have a pretty robust capability inside to be able to take advantage of that. As we broaden that grid edge intelligence capability and take it towards more midsized or muni co op kinds of customers, The ability to say DI in a box is what BridEdge Essentials is really all about. It packages up the endpoints, the network, the head end software, the analytics, the DI capability and really makes it easy for utility that doesn't have perhaps a massive IT department to be able to integrate into that overall offering. So it broadens out the opportunity for us as we think about serving more customers with this important capability. So that's what GridEdge Essentials is really all about. Speaker 200:24:10Relative to market adoption, again, we're super excited about what we see our customers doing. The pace of innovation is there. The idea of the spark in someone's eye about what they might be able to do to being able to prototype and put some applications out in the field is something measured in months rather than in quarters or years, which is the typical innovation cycle if you look in the years past for utilities. So pace of innovation grows and this becomes something that is a very robust part of our business in the years ahead. So I hope that sort of unpacks and pulls together the 3 threads that you mentioned in your question. Speaker 700:24:54It does, Tom, but in the follow-up was really around the implications for mix, right, and the growth of recurring revenues within the outcomes segment. How should we think about that trend over the next Speaker 200:25:07Indeed, sorry, I missed that one. Outcomes, certainly, last quarter and what you saw in even in Q2 was revenue that was a bit more tilted towards services and one time services. We definitely think that outcomes will bounce back and those targets we laid out for 2027 to put the gross margin into the 40s kind of range is what we would expect to see. I still think it will be a little bit lumpy quarter to quarter depending on the mix until the business gets a little bit more scale to it and a little bit more heft. But certainly, we see it swinging back more towards some of that SaaS and licensing types of revenue in the quarters ahead. Speaker 700:25:59Great. Just one quick follow-up for Joan. Taxes, again, a good guide this quarter. Not sure if that relates to more release evaluation allowances, but can you help us frame out what should sort of be the normalized tax rate for the business going forward? Speaker 300:26:17Yes, I would say probably about 25% would be a normalized rate. So yes, this quarter the $14,000,000 or the $0.30 per share I alluded to was the favorable basically a settlement in the foreign tax audit that pertain to many, many years ago 2014 to 2017. So yes, we had some reserves on our books and once we settled the audit, we were able to release those. So that was really an anomaly. But if you ignore discretes, which are hard to predict, I would say about 25%. Speaker 700:26:50Great. Thanks very much. Operator00:26:53Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Joseph Olshau with Guggenheim Partners. Your line is now open. Speaker 500:27:02Thank you. Good morning. Following on Noah's question a little bit, I'm wondering if you can try and give us a sense as to how this quarter's bookings and this sort of bolus of an additional $1,000,000,000 coming in at the end of the year. What the mix for that round of bookings looks like relative to the revenue that you're realizing now? Speaker 200:27:25The bookings themselves will be very heavily skewed towards networks and outcomes. To be honest, that's similar to our backlog position as it is today. So that $4,000,000,000 of existing backlog is 90% plus networks and outcomes, and I would suspect that 4th quarter bookings looks a lot like that in terms of the mix. The outcomes portion of that portfolio is growing a little bit faster than networks in terms of Q3 revenue as an example, but that's also true in the bookings themselves. So bookings rate for outcomes is quite a bit higher today than it was a year or 2 ago within the mix itself. Speaker 200:28:12What's underneath that? It's all the grid edge intelligence platform and the associated software and services that go along with that. So it all flows from the types of offering discussion that I outlined earlier. Speaker 500:28:28Now with that in mind, is it possible as we actually get to 2026 and 2027 that there's Speaker 400:28:36some Speaker 500:28:36kind of shorter term book and ship business in devices? Obviously, you can tell what I'm trying to figure out here in terms of what the revenue mix looks like or should we think of that backlog as being representative more of the actual what the actual revenue mix might look like in 2026? Speaker 200:28:55Yes. I think that our devices business probably that $100,000,000 to a bit above that on a run rate basis is the right zip code to be in, whereas the networks and the outcome side probably continues to grow more like the rates that we've talked about in our prepared remarks. So I think that that would be a good way to think about the business itself. Devices Speaker 300:29:33And And I would say if you look at the segment level targets that we provided for 2027 in Investor Day, those are still appropriate. Speaker 500:29:44Okay. And then just quickly as a follow-up, given you've spoken, Joan, very clearly about the fact that stuff hitting bookings now is not going to show up in 2025 revenue. What would you say is the window for bookings showing up in 2026 revenue? Can we think about perhaps anything that shows up by the first half of twenty twenty five, maybe making into the twenty twenty six revenue? I'm just trying to understand a little bit how to roll this booking strength forward into 2026 to 2027? Speaker 300:30:16Yes. I mean, obviously, each deal is a little bit different, but I think what we've been assuming is sort of a 9 to 12 month lag from the time you close a booking to when revenue starts to flow. Speaker 500:30:28Okay. Thank you. Operator00:30:31Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Pavel Molchanov with Raymond James. Your line is now open. Speaker 800:30:39Yes, thanks for taking the question. If we look at outcomes, year over year growth past 2 quarters is double digits, which is meaningfully higher than probably the last kind of 2 straight years. Are these one offs or is there some kind of structural change in that segment that explains the double digit growth all of a sudden? Speaker 200:31:11Well, I think there's a number of factors inside of there. Remember that a lot of the outcomes revenue tends to be tilted towards recurring revenue. So it takes a little bit of time to show up and every time we do a booking, it adds a small slice on top of that. So as we've mentioned on previous calls, when networks got started to catch up on some of that constrained revenue due to component shortages in years going by, the outcomes revenue was going to follow. It's usually a bit of time for customers to get the network up and running and then some of that outcomes revenue starts to flow in on top of it. Speaker 200:31:55And it's just following that normal trend that we've seen. So it's maybe that 12 month lag between networks growing, which yielded the outcomes growth. That's what you see showing through in terms of outcomes. But it is largely tilted towards recurring revenue and we are excited about the quarters ahead in terms of where we can continue to grow that business, which is why in our 27 targets, we've outlined it as one of the faster growing segments. Speaker 800:32:29Right. Follow-up on outcomes as well. In the context of the kind of AI euphoria, a lot of headlines recently about virtual power plants. Can you talk about the role that Itron is playing in virtual power plant development, which I guess would be within outcomes? Speaker 200:32:54Correct. There are a lot of assets that are out at the edge of the grid, whether it is a battery that's in your garage or whether it is a rooftop solar or adding load control capabilities to existing assets, maybe something as simple as a pool pump. So the outcomes really has a lot of the software capability housed within it to be able to control those assets for the good of the grid and the optimization of what is going on. So a DI app to be able to pull charge out of the battery to be able to supply to the house and pull out some of the load of that house off the grid is a perfect example of a VPP, virtual power plant kind of application that's going on in the outcomes segment. Several quarters ago, we announced something called GridEdge Optimizer, which is really all about being able to utilize those edge assets to be able to balance supply and demand out at the edge. Speaker 200:34:03And those are very ripe and growing opportunities for us as more and more local hotspots and constraints are showing up in our customers' grids, whether it is because of EV growth or whether it is just more data centers in the area, you got to figure out a way to balance supply and demand where you don't quite have everything that you need and you can't afford to upsize everything. You got to make the assets you have in the field a bit more agile, which is exactly where outcomes comes to the scene and can help our customers. Got it. Thanks very much. Thank you. Operator00:34:44Thank you. And our next question coming from the line of Austin Miller with Canaccord Genuity. Your line is now open. Speaker 900:34:52Hi, good morning. Congrats on the quarter. Just my first question here, given the water demand needed for data centers, do you expect the increase in demand for electricity meters on the grid to mirror water meters due to the data center demand for Coolant? Speaker 200:35:11I think that electricity probably outpaces water growth on a global level. Water will continue to grow as an entire segment for us in the years ahead, but I think electricity outpaces that as there is a lot more that needs to be done on the electrical infrastructure side. So I think our growth aspirations are in both segments, but probably a bit more tilted towards electricity over water. Speaker 900:35:45Okay. And just a follow-up, how much of the non inflation index inventory still remains? And did we get a significant reduction in that this quarter just in the reflection on the gross margin? Speaker 200:36:04Yes. Our backlog today is a bit over 75% that is either repriced or indexed for the new environment we are operating in. That less than 25% -ish that is still left to flow through as of the end of Q3. Most of that remaining, call it, 25% is it will flow through within the next 12 months. So we're almost through that period. Speaker 200:36:35As new backlog starts to come in and certainly we noted that we expect Q4 to be a bit more of a heavy bookings quarter that will add to the right side of that equation for the quarters ahead, but call it 70five-twenty 5 today. Speaker 900:36:52Excellent. Thank you for the details. Operator00:36:56Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Scott Graham with Seaport Research Partners. Your line is now open. Speaker 1000:37:09Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Joan, I kind of wanted to go back to your math on the assumed or implied, I should say, CAGR for revenue between $24,000,000 $27,000,000 $2,500,000 $5,000,000 I get I come up with that same number, of course. What I'm wondering is, I thought I heard you say 25 down. Did you mean growth down or revenue down? Speaker 300:37:44I didn't say either, I don't believe. So what I was relating to is first comment would be 2027 targets are still appropriate and that was a revenue range of $2,600,000,000 to $2,800,000,000 and we had the EBITDA range of 15% to 17%. So at the time we did Investor Day, we anchored the charts of 23 actuals. So to get to the 23 from the 23 actuals to the 27 targets, it was a revenue CAGR of 5% to 7%. However, 2024 is a lot stronger than 23%. Speaker 300:38:18So if you take the updated annual guidance at the midpoint, you get the call it 2.5% to 5% is what's required going forward to get to the 27 targets. And again, all we've said is, we don't expect that to be a straight line. So at this point, it's too it's premature to talk about 25%. I would expect some growth. But again, I would caution people, you got to do the growth off a normalized $24,000,000 You got to take $125,000,000 out of our full year estimate, which was catch up one time in nature that won't recur. Speaker 1000:38:50Got it. Yes. Thank you for that clarification. Very much appreciated. The other question I wanted to ask was kind of more for both you and Tom. Speaker 1000:38:59So when you provided your targets earlier this year, I believe this moving $1,000,000,000 pipeline was only kind of thought of as, let's say, a couple maybe several $100,000,000 and that has graduated greatly to this $1,000,000,000 number. So it would suggest that your guidance did not contemplate that. Could you comment on that? Speaker 300:39:28Yes, I'd be I don't think that's the case. So what we're talking about with the $1,000,000,000 is a delay in getting it through the funnel to call it a booking. It's not saying it's $1,000,000,000 higher than what we would have expected. So I don't think we see any change in terms of the market demand that would get us to the 27 targets that we laid out. The $1,000,000,000 is a timing issue in terms Speaker 200:39:51of regulatory approvals. Yes. We started the year saying book to bill of 1 to 1 or greater, that's still our belief today. But we know that, okay, with the first three quarters of this year were whatever, 0.8, 0.9 something like that, well below 1 to 1, which means that there is a bit of a catch up on the bookings side in Q4, which is what Joan referenced. So it's more timing within the year on the bookings themselves rather than some fundamental shift or change in the marketplace. Speaker 1000:40:23Understood. Thank you for that clarification. If I could just sneak this one more in. Joan, the non GAAP incremental operating margin has been fairly steady in like the last 6 quarters in this sort of 32%, 35% last quarter, 41% range, just in this sort of 5% to 10% range. Are you comfortable with that on a go forward basis, call it in the low 30s type thing? Speaker 300:40:57Yes. Again, not in the position to talk 25% guidance. What I would anchor you to is the 27% targets that we gave, which again weren't operating income, but you can figure that out. EBITDA percentage of revenue of 15% to 17%. So from quarter to quarter, you're going to get some variability. Speaker 300:41:15As an example, OpEx for us will tend to go up in Q4. We just did our customer event. We have a lot of marketing spend and a lot of travel outside services. So it will vary quarter to quarter, but I think the targets we laid out for 27 are still appropriate. Speaker 1000:41:30Understood. Thank you. Operator00:41:36Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Chip Moore with ROTH Capital Partners. Your line is now open. Speaker 1100:41:51Good morning. Hey, thanks for taking the question. I guess I just wanted to do a clarification. I think you referenced Joan some pull forward with some of that coming from 2025, which would be an incremental headwind. I think we understand the growth dynamics there, but maybe just expand on that. Speaker 300:42:12Yes. I mean, if you look at the revenue range we provided for Q3, at the midpoint, it was about $595,000,000 So we ended up $20,000,000 higher than that. We did not try to lowball our guidance when we gave you that number. So obviously, we work with customers in terms of when they want the shipments and some shipments that we would have expected to be Q4 or early 2025 actually occurred in Q3. So that's all we were trying to point out. Speaker 200:42:38Yes. The dynamic there is as projects start to move, generally, they can accelerate a little bit once the installation crews really hit their stride and things go a little faster. And that's kind of what you saw in Q3. It was nothing particularly overt. It was just the market moving in the right direction for us. Speaker 1100:43:02Perfect. Yes. And not particularly material. And maybe just my follow-up on the outlook for Q4, I think that implies maybe that margins stepped down a bit. Anything on product mix or I think you just referenced some of the year end OpEx maybe, Joan, but anything there to keep in mind and then margin trajectory, I guess, next year with some of the growth dynamics with what you're seeing in backlog? Speaker 1100:43:26Thanks. Speaker 300:43:27Yes. So if I start on the top line, I would say, again, the midpoint of our range is slightly down from Q3, call it $10,000,000 or so. Most of that is really strong Q3 performance for devices. So as Tom mentioned, we typically think about devices as maybe a little over $100,000,000 a quarter. They were $123,000,000 in Q3, so really quite high. Speaker 300:43:48On an EPS standpoint, you've got obviously to factor in the tax benefit that was booked in Q3. That's not going to recur in Q4. That's got to be $0.30 or so, just right there and then higher OpEx. From a gross margin perspective, maybe flat to slightly down. We don't typically guide to gross margin, but nothing in particular there. Speaker 300:44:08It is the last quarter that we're in the process of closing our 2 factories. So you typically get a little bit of lack of productivity as you're ramping from one factory to another and we factor that in as well. Speaker 1100:44:27Perfect. Very helpful. Appreciate it. Operator00:44:32Thank you. And I'm showing no further questions in the Q and A queue at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Mr. Tom Dietrich for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:44:41Thank you, Libby. We are pleased with our progress and certainly the performance of the team. You're starting to see the proof points and the strategy play out and we are excited about the future and where the market is heading. So look forward to updating everyone next quarter. Thank you for joining today. Operator00:45:02Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by