NYSE:CAE CAE Q4 2024 Earnings Report $4.00 -0.17 (-4.08%) As of 04/16/2025 04:00 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast Protara Therapeutics EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.09Consensus EPS $0.25Beat/MissMissed by -$0.16One Year Ago EPS$0.26Protara Therapeutics Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$835.47 millionExpected Revenue$863.18 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$27.71 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AProtara Therapeutics Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2024Date5/27/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, May 28, 2024Conference Call Time8:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsProtara Therapeutics' Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 1, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Friday, May 2, 2025 at 12:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptAnnual Report (40-F)Annual ReportEarnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Protara Therapeutics Q4 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 28, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the CAE 4th Quarter and Full Year Financial Results for Fiscal Year 2024 Conference Call. As a reminder, all participants are in listen only mode and the conference is being recorded. After the presentation, there will be an opportunity for analysts to ask questions followed by a Q and A for members of the media. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Operator00:00:35Andrew Arnovitz. Please go ahead, Mr. Arnovitz. Speaker 100:00:40Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that today's remarks, including management's outlook for fiscal 2025 Answers to questions contain forward looking statements. These forward looking statements represent our expectations as of today, May 28, 2024, and accordingly are subject to change. Such statements are based on assumptions that may not materialize and are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially and listeners are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:13A description of the risks, factors and assumptions that may affect future results is contained in CAE's annual MD and A available on our corporate website and on our filings with Canadian Securities Administrators on SEDAR Plus and the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission on EDGAR. With the divestiture of Sea's Healthcare business, all comparative figures discussed here and in our financial results have been reclassified to reflect discontinued operations. On the call with me this morning are Marc Taran, CEE's President and Chief Executive Officer and Sonia Branco, our Chief Financial Officer. Speaker 100:01:49Nick Leontides, CAE's newly appointed Chief Operating Officer is also on hand for the question period. After remarks from Mark and Sonia, we'll open the call to questions from financial analysts. And at the conclusion of that segment, we'll open the lines to members of the media. With that, let me now turn the call over to Mark. Speaker 200:02:10Thank you, Andrew and good morning to everyone joining us on the call. As you'll have seen from our earnings release, 4th quarter results are unchanged from last week's pre announcement, which was mainly intended to communicate the rebaseline of our defense business and the appointment of Nicky Onquides, a proven CA veteran as our Chief Operating Officer. To provide additional context, last week we also offered an earnings preview in our preliminary fiscal 20 25 outlook. This morning, Sonya and I will provide a bit more color on our performance and our very strong financial position. Last week, we took decisive action to establish a clear path for margin improvement in our Defense business. Speaker 200:02:58I certainly recognize that our defense performance has significantly fallen short of our expectations and understand and share investors' frustrations. The impairments and accelerated risk recognition on the legacy contracts that we announced last week are disappointing, but necessary steps towards putting the overhang of these past issues behind us. These actions were made possible by renegotiating agreements with our customers and our suppliers, adjusting the scope and the timing of these contracts for our mutual benefit. Ultimately, this enables us to address the programmatic risks that have been affecting our business. Alongside the rebaseline of the defense business was the acceleration of risk recognition on legacy contracts and execution of a leadership or reorganization and implementation of targeted operational enhancement at both the segment and corporate levels. Speaker 200:03:59These initiatives are designed to fortify our execution capabilities and foster greater synergies between our defense and our civil businesses. I fully expect these changes to enable greater focus through the simplification of our operating structure with our COO overseeing the 5 P and Ls that encompass CAE's entire business scope. This new structure and recent upskilling of talent in defense will further enhance the execution and oversight of major defense programs and facilitate the exploration and realization of synergies between our civil and defense operations. Also and in the vein of further bolstering CE Suture, our 4th quarter and full year results reflect continued strong growth in our core markets, robust order flow and consistent cash generation. For CA overall, we grew adjusted backlog by approximately 13% year over year with 1.6 $1,000,000,000 in orders in the quarter or 1.38 book to sales ratio. Speaker 200:05:05And for the year, we booked over $4,900,000,000 in orders for a 1.15 times book to sales ratio. As of the end of March, we had a record backlog of 12.2 $1,000,000,000 We also further strengthened our financial position having generated $418,000,000 of free cash flow during the fiscal year and together with proceeds from the sale of Healthcare, we reduced leverage below 3x net debt to adjusted EBITDA excluding legacy contracts. In Civil, we booked orders in the 4th fiscal Q4 fiscal quarter for $832,000,000 including contracts for 7 full flight simulators. This brings the total Civil order intake to a record $3,000,000,000 for the year, including 64 full flight simulator sales, demonstrating the sustained high demand for pilot training solutions and our flight solutions software platform. Civil concluded the year with a record adjusted backlog of $6,400,000,000 Notable contracts in the quarter included a multiyear commercial aviation training agreement with AITA Airways and a first of its kind partnership in Canada where CE instructors will deliver initial training for NAV Canada flight service specialists and air traffic controllers. Speaker 200:06:33In testament to our progress in flight solutions, we announced yesterday the signing of European ultra low cost carrier Wizz Air as a new partner under a multi year supply agreement. We'll be supplying Wizz Air with CA's operational control and crew management software and CA's recovery manager solutions for operational and crew disruptions. Average trading center utilization was strong at 78% for the 4th quarter and 76% for the year, up from 72% the year prior. In products, we delivered 17 civil full flight simulators in the quarter and 47 for the year compared to 46 deliveries in the prior year. As disclosed last week, this is a bit lower than the approximately 50 that we had expected with timing difference due to customer requests to postpone deliveries because their own facilities weren't ready to receive the full flight simulators as originally planned. Speaker 200:07:35Taking the time delays from last year to account, we expect to deliver more than 50 full flight simulators in fiscal 2025. Turning to Defense. At the same time as we've been taking actions to rebaseline the business, we've continued to make headway with our transformation strategy. We reached $1,900,000,000 of adjusted order intake on an annual basis, involving training and simulation solutions or 1.04 times book to sales ratio. This contributed to a $5,700,000,000 of adjusted defense backlog. Speaker 200:08:13In the quarter, we had orders totaling 7 $18,000,000 including a transformative win involving a contract with General Atomics to support the remotely piloted aircraft system or RPAS program for delivering aircrew and maintenance technician training and supporting training devices at CourseWitter to meet Canada's RPAS requirements. This to me is a prime example of a kind of larger and more differentiated program that we're in a position to address and that will ultimately drive the defense transformation that we've been expecting. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Sonia, who will provide a detailed look at our financial performance. And I'll return at the end of the call to comment on our outlook. Sonia? Speaker 300:08:59Thank you, Mark, and good morning, everyone. Looking at our Q4 results, on a consolidated basis, revenue of $1,100,000,000 was down 6% compared to the Q4 last year. Adjusted segment operating income was $125,700,000 or $216,000,000 excluding the impact of the legacy contracts, compared to $193,000,000 last year. Quarterly adjusted EPS was $0.12 per share or $0.37 excluding the legacy contracts, compared to $0.33 in the Q4 last year. We incurred restructuring, integration and acquisition costs of $55,000,000 during the quarter in connection with the previously announced restructuring program related to portfolio shaping actions, including the sale of Healthcare and to the continued integration of AirCentre. Speaker 300:09:48The AirCentre integration is progressing as planned and is expected to wind down by the end of June. The restructuring program is related to portfolio shaping actions that to streamline CA's operating model and portfolio, optimize our cost structure and create efficiency. Total restructuring costs incurred since the start of this restructuring program this quarter amounted to $39,300,000 and we expect to record approximately $10,000,000 of additional restructuring expenses over the next two quarters in light of the organizational and operational changes announced last week to replace buying the defense business, further strengthen our execution capabilities and drive additional synergies between CAE's defense and civil aviation businesses. For the year, consolidated revenue was up 7% at $40,300,000,000 adjusted segment operating income was up 2% to $549,700,000 and annual adjusted net income was $276,800,000 or $0.87 per share, which is stable compared to $0.87 last year. Excluding legacy contracts, adjusted segment operating income was up 19% to $640,000,000 and annual net adjusted net income was $355,300,000 or $1.12 per share, which is up 29% compared to last year. Speaker 300:11:12Net finance expense this quarter amounted to $52,400,000 which is stable from the preceding quarter and up from $50,400,000 in the Q4 last year. I expect our annual finance expense in fiscal 2025 to be similar to fiscal 2024 on lower interest expense on debt, offset by higher lease expense related to recently deployed training centers in our global training network in support of growth. Income tax recovery this quarter was $80,600,000 representing an effective tax rate of 14% compared to an effective tax rate of 24% in the Q4 last year. The adjusted effective tax rate, which is income tax rate used to determine adjusted net income and EPS was 47% this quarter compared to 23% in the Q4 last year. The increase in the adjusted effective tax rate was mainly due to the de recognition of tax assets in Europe, partially offset by the change in mix of income from various jurisdictions. Speaker 300:12:11On the same basis, the adjusted effective income tax rate for the year was 17%. The annual effective income tax rate in fiscal 2025 is expected to be approximately 25%, considering the income expected from the various jurisdictions and the implementation of global minimum tax policy. With the closing of the sale of our healthcare business, net income from discontinued operations was $20,500,000 this quarter compared to $4,800,000 in the Q4 last year. The increase compared to the 4th quarter was mainly attributable to the after tax gain on the disposal of discontinued ops of $16,500,000 in relation to the sale of the healthcare business. Net cash provided by operating activities was $215,200,000 for the quarter compared to $180,600,000 in the Q4 last year. Speaker 300:13:03And for the year, we generated $566,900,000 from operating activities compared to $108,400,000 last year. We had free cash flow in the quarter of 191 $100,000 $418,200,000 for the year for an annual cash conversion of 151%. We continue to target an average 100 percent conversion rate going forward. Uses of cash involved funding capital expenditures for 91 point $7,000,000 in the 4th quarter and $329,800,000 for the year, driven mainly by the expansion of our civil aviation training network in lock step with secured customer demand. These opportunities translate to some of our best returns as our simulators assets ramp up within the 1st few years of their deployment. Speaker 300:13:54Commensurate with our ongoing success to capture market opportunities and training, I expect total CapEx in fiscal 2020 to 2025 to be $50,000,000 to $100,000,000 higher than fiscal 2024. Approximately 3 quarters of this relates to organic growth investment in simulated capacity to be deployed to our global network of primarily civil aviation training centers and backed by multi year customer contracts. Our net debt position at the end of the quarter was $2,900,000,000 for a net debt to adjusted EBITDA of 3.17x. Excluding legacy contract leverage was at 2.89x at the end of the same period. We're prioritizing a balanced approach to capital allocation, including funding accretive growth, continuing to strengthen our financial position commensurate with our investment grade profile and returning capital to shareholders. Speaker 300:14:46Given our progress in strengthening CE's financial position, as we announced last week, we are reestablishing a normal course issuer bid as part of our capital allocation strategy. The NCIB is currently intended to be used opportunistically over time with excess free cash flow. Given our outlook and the cash generative nature of our highly recurring business, CAE's Board of Directors will also continue to evaluate the possibility of reintroducing a shareholder dividend. At the same time, I expect that we'll maintain a very solid financial position, bolstering our balance sheet through ongoing deleveraging consistent with our investment grade profile. Now to briefly recap our segmented performance. Speaker 300:15:28In Civil, 4th quarter revenue was up 6% year over year to $700,800,000 and adjusted segment operating income was up 17% year over year to $191,400,000 for a record margin of 27.3 percent. For the year, civil revenue was up 12% to $2,400,000,000 and adjusted segment operating income was up 13% to CAD548,900,000 for an annual margin of 22.5 percent. In defense, as we disclosed last week, we accelerated the recognition of risks associated with our legacy contracts in the 4th quarter, following revised agreements on scope and timing with customers, suppliers and other stakeholders. These actions resulted in profit adjustments associated with a reassessment of our estimated costs. 4th quarter defense revenue of $425,500,000 was down 21% over Q4 last year. Speaker 300:16:23This includes a $54,300,000 impact from the accelerated risk recognition on legacy contracts and the conclusion of certain service contracts we decided to no longer pursue. Adjusted segment operating loss was $65,700,000 and adjusted segment operating income excluding legacy contracts, was $24,600,000 compared to an adjusted segment operating income of $30,500,000 in the Q4 last year. For the year, defense revenue was stable at $1,800,000,000 and adjusted segment operating income was down 98% to $800,000 Adjusted segment operating income excluding the legacy contracts was up 72% to $91,100,000 With that, I'll ask Martin to discuss the way forward. Speaker 200:17:11Thanks, Sonia. I'm going to separately address the outlook for our 2 segments. But before I offer any numbers, I'd like to mention that our combination of our Civil and Defense businesses have significant strategic advantage. Now let me reiterate that and be very clear that our Defense performance in terms of profitability certainly hasn't met my expectations so far, but our strategy remains solid. Over the past 2 years, we've achieved some 20% growth in adjusted backlog and expanded our pipeline with bid opportunities that align very well with our core strengths in training and simulation, offering attractive risk return profiles. Speaker 200:18:01Our simulators and our training products are very complementary for both civil and defense purposes. The synergies are strong in terms of technology, manufacturing as well as go to market approach. There's hardware and software commonality in the products and increasingly there's operational synergy in how we optimize training across the two businesses. I'm very confident that Nick Limonitis will strengthen our execution capabilities and drive additional focus and synergies between both of our business segments. For Civil, the secular demand picture for Aviation Train Solutions remain very compelling, underpinned by growth in air travel, demand for pilots and the need for them to stay current with always advancing aviation technology and regulation. Speaker 200:18:53Our business is driven primarily by the regulated training required to maintain the pilots and crews who operate the global in service fleet of commercial and business aircraft. And as an additional secular driver, we expect to sustain high level of pilot movements from the growth and replacement of the active pilot population. According to our estimates, over half the commercial and business jet pilots will be active in a decade from now have yet to even begin their training. With that background, I expect low double digit percentage civil annual adjusted segment operating income growth in fiscal 2025 and continued margin strengthening with an annual segment operating income margin of approximately 23%. The expected increase in several margins reflects the ongoing ramp up of newer training centers and recently deployed full flight simulators, partially offset by the SaaS conversion that's currently underway in our Flight Operations Solutions software business. Speaker 200:20:00As in previous years, I expect annual civil performance to be more heavily weighted to the second half. In defense, we're also in a secular growth market as the sector enters an extended upcycle marked by rising budgets across NATO and Allied Nations. Key trends include heightened focus on near peer threats, greater government commitments to defense modernization and readiness amid geopolitical tensions and a growing demand for the training and simulation solutions that we provide. Our expertise in both simulation and defense positions us well to meet those needs. And specific to CAE, we're seeing a consistent demand driver across regions for our trained solutions, a shortage of uniform personnel for defense, which has led militaries to rely on industry partners like CAE for training solutions to ensure readiness. Speaker 200:21:00This aligns perfectly with our core strengths and our defense transformation strategy over the past few years has focused on expanding our leadership position on integrated training and simulation solutions. This strategic focus has allowed us to streamline our project selection to ensure a better risk return balance. Moreover, we've renegotiated favorable terms such as cost plus contracts for development work and tighter pricing bans on service contracts, while leveraging civil life business models in defense. These improved terms will positively impact our risk adjusted returns as newer contracts ramp up. This approach has already resulted in significant backlog growth with larger, more profitable programs and we anticipate even greater growth since fiscal 2025. Speaker 200:21:54Our expectations for fiscal 2025 reflect the rebaselining of the business and the enhanced visibility that this obviously gives us. We're extremely focused on acting on what we can control and we'll prove it through execution in the coming quarters. We expect annual revenue growth in the low to mid single digit percentage range and annual defense and SOI margin to increase to the 6% to 7% range and like Civil to be more heavily weighted to the second half. We have large multi year programs currently in negotiation that should add significantly to our backlog soon. Beyond our selection on transformational defense contracts in Canada, we're well positioned over the next year on several strategic programs across the Indo Pacific regions, Europe and in the United States. Speaker 200:22:53In particular, the demand for Air Crew training program similar to Canada's SPAC in our past across the Five Eyes and NATO partners as well as the allies continues to increase. These programs require the type of technologies and proficiency that are CA strengths. We intend to leverage our position on these generational programs in Canada to enable multi domain training in secure synthetic environments across our global network. With that, I thank you for your attention and we're now ready to answer your questions. Speaker 100:23:31Thank you, Mark. Operator, we'll take our first questions from the financial community. Operator00:23:37Great. So we'll begin the analyst question and answer session. The first question is from Kevin Chiang from CIBC. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:23:56Thanks for taking my question and good morning everyone. We'll actually just start with a civil question. Just the slippage of some of the full flight simulators, it sounds like the client wasn't in a position to take those products. But I'm wondering if you're starting to see any impact on pilot training demand just with some of the aircraft delivery issues at the large OEMs. Is that impacting what you're seeing from the airlines in terms of the demand for training, maybe relative to what you would have been forecasting or expecting, let's say, 6 to 9 months ago? Speaker 400:24:36Just wondering if you're seeing anything material there. Speaker 200:24:40Okay. Let me take it, Kevin. Look, I mean, 1st and foremost, you're right. I mean, the changes that we saw just in the relative to our outlook on delivery simulators and therefore the adjusted operating income growth was purely because of those training centers that weren't ready, our customers' training centers weren't ready. And basically those familiars will deliver this year. Speaker 200:25:04So that's really what happened there. It's not a reflection of any type of demand change in the market. I mean, if I could ask maybe Nick some more color if it's required. But look, I mean, we've been living in the kind of environment of lower than let's say lower than potentially anticipated deliveries of 737 MAX Aircraft as well as less activity because of the engine issue that's affecting mainly Airbus airplanes that as you know have literally hundreds of airplanes grounded around the world. So we've been living in that environment for quite a while. Speaker 200:25:44So really that isn't really changing. So I would say there's pockets and I think there's pockets that you see that airlines are affected by the slowdowns. They're not able to get the airplanes that they want to secure the demand. The demand itself is very strong. And what you see is airplanes pulling airplanes out of mothballs, basically taking airplanes that are coming off lease and maintaining them on lease. Speaker 200:26:09But we're not really seeing a change in the demand environment at this time. We're watching it and the guidance that we put for Stival for next year or for this coming year reflects our cautious outlook in that regard. Speaker 400:26:26That's helpful. And then just my second question. I appreciate all the color you provided in terms of the rebasing of defense. It also feels like a segment that feels like it's been in some sort of perpetual restructuring for quite some time now or at least some sort of strategic repositioning with the acquisition of L3 Harris' military training division. Maybe if I were to ask, when you look out 2 years from now or whatever the timeframe is, what is it what should the fence look like? Speaker 400:27:00Like does revenue need to be bigger in order to get the margins you want? And maybe de risk the backlog in terms of there's always risks around execution. Is it being more focused on the addressable markets you're trying to go after? I'm just trying to get a sense of, if all goes well here in defense, you fast forward 2 years, what exactly does defense look like? Is a bigger business with better margins? Speaker 400:27:25Is it a smaller business with better margins? Just any color there would be helpful. Speaker 200:27:31Look, I think I would start by all of those, Kevin. Look, clearly, as I said, look, the numbers that we're printing now surely don't meet my expectation and neither of us are the investors clearly. But I think what we've done here is re baseline the business. We've been talking about the issues that are affecting us in defense for quite a at least a couple of quarters here, at least in the detail. Last quarter, we gave you precision on that really there were 8 contracts, we call the legacy contract that were really undermining the profitability of our business. Speaker 200:28:08I mean those contracts all have the same kind of MO signed prior to COVID, fixed firm price contracts and they were very much adversely affected by supply chain issues, manpower issues, runaway inflation, of which we're not immune. A lot of our defense clients and sister companies across the defense environment, particularly in well, actually, I would say only in United States across the world actually. I mean, we those affected us. We ring fenced those. And this quarter, what we've done here is basically work extremely hard to renegotiate with our customers in this regard to figure out exactly what the remaining scope on those programs is. Speaker 200:29:01The time it's going to take us to execute those contracts. The cost it's going to take us to execute those contracts. And the difference between that and the cost that we anticipate in the past is $90,000,000 And that's to a certain extent maybe shouldn't be much of a surprise because if you remember in the Q3, what we had said is that those 8 contracts were really going to drag for next by 200 basis points, 300 basis points for the next six quarters while we execute those contracts. What we've done here is through the actions that we've taken, through the agreements we've made for customers, we're able basically to take that risk safe off the table or be predictable because we're taking it now. So that gives us a clear view of the future and the programmatic risk now going forward not only in those 8 programs, but overall and across all the programs in the best is balance. Speaker 200:30:04So that's one major component. The other component is I'll go back to the success of the strategy on the front end. I'll reiterate the fact that our when we look at the book of business, we are winning business. We are winning a larger business in the areas where we have core capabilities, training centers, training products, meaning full flight simulators where this is core to us. We know how to do that. Speaker 200:30:32We know how to do it well. We've signed them at margins that are recreative to the outlook that we have in defense, which is 10% or more in terms of profitability. Those programs are going to materialize in our backlog. I expect about 15% of that of those to materialize in our revenue this year. That's all going to contribute to the answer to your question is stable revenue growth, higher margins on the way to the low teens or north of 10% margins. Speaker 200:31:09I want this and generating stable cash flows, which you should expect out of the defense business because we're basically selling to customers with sovereign guarantees. So that's what I expect out of the defense business. Speaker 400:31:26Base. That's very helpful color. Thank you for taking my questions. Operator00:31:32The next question is from James McGarrigle from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:31:38Hey, good morning and thanks for having me on. Thank you. So just on the defense margin guidance, I'll pick up in the back half. So can you just talk to the visibility that you have into that higher margin in the back half? And is there any seasonality in the defense side going forward? Speaker 500:31:57Or should we expect that back half margin to kind of be the exit rate for margin into the upcoming fiscal year? Speaker 200:32:06Look, I think that if you look at our performance in the past few years, you always see this back half loaded and there is reason for that. There is budget in specific countries. There's programs that are ramping up. This year, I mean, we have high visibility of this year. The majority of the revenue and ergo the profit that we need to execute this year plan and meet the guidance of 6% to 7% that we put out there, We've already won those contracts. Speaker 200:32:36They're in the backlog. It's for a safety team. We obviously have very high visibility on the legacy contracts that we've talked about having to re baseline the programmatic risk there. So what I'd say is basically, we're going to in terms again, in terms of its variability in the year, it's basically just the same way we've seen in the previous years. I think maybe to provide a little bit more color on it, I'd say that when we look at the year, the average margin we talked about could be 6% to 7%. Speaker 200:33:13I would expect that we'll start the year where we ended it in terms of profitability, so call it in the 5 percent range was stronger in the second half. That's what I would say. Speaker 500:33:28Okay. And then as a follow-up on the Civil side, you picked like that a lot of that organic investment you're making this year is going to be in the civil business. You previously flagged really solid returns 20% to 30% in that business, 2 to 3 years ramp up. Does that mean we should be thinking about growth at current levels or even higher kind of over the next 2 or 3 years? Can you talk to the visibility and the conversations you're having with your customers a little longer term on the Civil side? Speaker 200:34:01Well, look, I think that I fully expect that the demand environment in Civil Business is strong for years to come. I think maybe just a little bit provide a little bit more color on Civil. I think if you think about the Civil business, you saw the changes we've made under Nick now as CEO. We're basically giving more visibility on the leaders of that business, the 3 leaders that we have Alex Trevo running business aircraft training, Michel Azard Abouda running commercial aviation training and simulators, Pascal Grenier running the software business. We'll be able to provide you, I think, more a broader view of those specific individual businesses with Civil. Speaker 200:34:51But let me just have a shot at that maybe goes to your answer here. If you break down the revenue in our Civil business, about a third of it comes from selling simulators to World Airlines. About a third of it comes training for the World Airlines, so our training centers for airlines around the world. And a third of it comes from Business Aviation Trading and the final really 10% comes from our software business. Each of these businesses has its own dynamics that drives margin. Speaker 200:35:26There's we talk a lot about utilization, which is a strong metric, but it's not the only metric and it is affected by seasonality, especially when you get into the second half where you have lower utilization in our training centers because the airlines certainly in the Western Hemisphere they're flying so they're not training in a large part. Within our product segment, which is selling simulators, the margins and actually the revenue can be affected quite significantly by who's the customer, the product mix of that simulator, whether the equipment is supplied by buyer in terms of the cost of equipment, for example. There's an impact from joint ventures as well because we do a lot of joint ventures and in those cases, you don't see the revenue, but you'll see the income pick up. And finally, the software, there's that's really affected by the timing of the contracts whether or not they're SaaS contracts which we are prioritizing and that has a lower margin at least while we're going through that SaaS conversion. And so and that's the reason I'm been the trend is going to be higher in Civil in all of those segments. Speaker 200:36:47With the Provisory as I talked about the SaaS conversion, which is probably a 2 to 3 year basically ramp up as we go through the SaaS conversion. Speaker 500:37:00I appreciate the color and I'll turn the line over. Thank you. Operator00:37:03Welcome. The next question is from Benoit Poirier from Desjardins Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:37:11Yes, thanks. Good morning, Mark. Good morning, Sonia. Yes, just to come back on the assumption behind the 6%, 7% EBIT margin target for defense in fiscal year 'twenty five, I think I heard that about 15% of the total revenue is expected to come from those transformative deals that are already in the backlog. So could you maybe provide some color about what was the contribution in Q4? Speaker 600:37:40And what makes you confident or the visibility you have with respect to the ramp up in the 2nd part of the year? Speaker 200:37:52I may not be as clear or maybe when I answer that question, it's not 50%, it's 15%, 15% of the revenue that we're going to get this year comes from those transformational programs Benoit and that's relative to 3% last year. So we had last year, we had like 20% of our backlog in defense was these new transformational programs and that was that translated in 3% of revenue. Again, this year, that will be 15% this year and obviously growing in the years to come as they ramp up. Speaker 600:38:28Okay. And obviously you provide some color about fiscal year 2025. Previously you mentioned that it would take 6 to 8 quarters to achieve the completion of those legacy contracts. How should we be thinking beyond fiscal year 'twenty five? And is the 10% target still achievable? Speaker 200:38:52Well, the 10% margin is absolutely still achievable and that's all the actions we've put in place is going to make that happen. Now we haven't guided to next year that we haven't been precise, but it will happen within the planned period. So within the next few years, but we haven't gotten ahead of ourselves beyond this year. Speaker 600:39:15Okay. And with respect to the appointment of Nick as the CEO, obviously, he's been CEO for over 35 years. Could you talk maybe, Mark, about the strategy here, the action that Nick is going to undertake? And maybe more color about the expected synergies that you would like to extract between civil and defense? Speaker 200:39:40You're going to have to ask me to put Nick on the spot. But before I do, let me talk about how I do think. Nick, as you said, Nick is a veteran of this company. And interestingly, you may or may not know actually Nick started his career in defense. So having led starting as an engineer, but have like I was by the way, but having led some major defense contracts, including the most complicated, the more extensive that we have ever had probably before a fact, which was putting together the first PFI contract in the U. Speaker 200:40:18K. In defense, which was standing up our Benson Training Center where we train all medium helicopters for Royal Air Force. I think you may have visited at one point that training center that we have in the Royal Air Force, which is still one of the most prestigious and technology events in the world. So Nick put that together. So just suffice to say, having known Nick and Nick has worked for me directly ever since I've been at CA in various roles. Speaker 200:40:47Nick understands the business. Nick has a very strong operational mindset and focus on execution as well as strategy. And that's basically the reason I put him in charge of Spence over 10 years ago. And I think he's done a pretty good job as tripling the operating in Civil in that period and building us the franchise that we have in defense. He's going to put those strengths to focus in defense. Speaker 200:41:20Beyond that, I mean specifics, look, I think there's a lot of simplification here that can be had through greater focus. It's very clear to me that one of the reasons, certainly not the only one, but key reasons that we've been successful in Stabil is to focus. I talked about the 3 P and L leaders that are fully accountable and have all the tools to be able to execute in their business. We're providing through the changes we're making here, we're enhancing the focus here to very specific P and L leaders in the United States, the largest business, is that we're largest military market in the world by far very specific focus with Jason Gutfreund as President Interim President there working through the U. S. Speaker 200:42:13Board for Nick and with Marc Adevis Savoy running all our international programs including Canada where we have some very large contracts that I announced today. So number 1 is greater focus. That's very important. And that means beyond that is synergy capture. It's clear to me that there's a lot of synergy left to be had by leveraging our scale and technologies across the entire enterprise. Speaker 200:42:42And that's going to be key to NICS responsibly. But beyond that, Nick, maybe a couple of words from your side. Speaker 700:42:48Yes. I was just going to reinforce, I mean, the simplification and accountability, I think we went a little bit astray trying to do all of that under the guise of the 2 business units. I think the we have go to market business units in Business Aircraft and Commercial and DNS U. S. DNS International and then we'll drive synergies across that. Speaker 700:43:16Of course, there's going to be some restructuring. I'll use the word restructuring, of course, because we have some duplication which were necessary at the time, but I think it's one of those things when you look at it and you say, okay, well, we need to make change. And by the way, that's my right now, I'm just asking questions. And I ask questions about everything. Why is this like this? Speaker 700:43:41Why is this like that? And it's amazing the answers that you get. So I think a lot of times it's we get people working on this. The people know what to do. I'm just going to enable them to do it. Speaker 700:43:56And as I tell other people, we played as a team and we're going Speaker 200:44:00to have to do this together as Speaker 700:44:02a team. And people know where inefficiencies are and they know what they need to stop doing. Speaker 600:44:09That's great color, gentlemen. And maybe a very quick one for Sonya. Just looking at your CapEx that is expected to be up $50,000,000 to $100,000,000 How should we be thinking about the sustainable CapEx? It seems a bit elevated versus the history. So I'm just wondering, I understand the growth opportunity, but just want to try to look beyond fiscal year 'twenty five about the what could be kind of the sustainable level of CapEx? Speaker 600:44:38Thank you. Speaker 300:44:40Yes, Benoit. Thanks for the question. So the CapEx is really the spend is really a direct reflection of the success that we've had with all of the orders we've secured to outsource more training. So, three quarters of this CapEx is simulators to our network. So, whether it's Quanta, it's AGN, we've got plenty in Las Vegas, then plenty of examples through that record order intake that we've got in the year. Speaker 300:45:05So, we don't deploy simulators to our network on a speculative basis. Every single one of them are backstopped by signed long term recurring revenue customer contract. So what we see this year's CapEx is really a reflection of the secured order intake that we have and this is to deliver to growth and our customers. And frankly, we have a proven track record of delivering really accretive returns on this organic CapEx, 20% to 30% range of incremental return on capital on our organic growth. So while we're not necessarily going to guide beyond that year, but it will be a function of the level of orders and market capture that will succeed. Speaker 600:45:51Thank you very much for the time. Operator00:45:55The next question is from Konark Gupta from Scotiabank. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:46:01Thanks for taking my question. Just on the defense, I'm wondering, Mark, how does the rebaselining of legacy contracts affect your market position and your ability to structure future bids appropriately? Speaker 200:46:17I think it reinforces them, because I think what's important here is that to me this is a very successful renegotiation that we've done. The teams have been on this for quite a while. Obviously, we have tighter teams on every one of those programs for obvious reasons, but focus on execution of those contracts. But I what I talked about in the previous quarter when I said that we're going to take every effort to be able to accelerate the recognition of risk on those programs. So really scope out the remaining work here. Speaker 200:46:51I mean and I had talked about the time that look, we're going to have to have tough negotiations here. And it could lead to in some cases basically having to accept penalties for example for because we're late on contracts as just one example. But the reality is we haven't to do that in we haven't had to do that in any one of these cases. So we are going to do what CA always does. We are going to execute on those contracts and the customers every one of them on these eight contracts are very happy with the outlook that we now have on those bonuses. Speaker 200:47:31We will deliver what we committed on those contracts and the timeline and the scope of what we'll do is in line with the expectations the client have with us. So our reputation that CA has of always delivering is intact. And in some cases actually in some of these programs, that's really why I talk it I talk about it as particularly successful. In some cases, we have negotiated additional scope on those contracts. So follow on contracts as a result of negotiations. Speaker 200:48:05So long answer, but this is a, if anything, this enhances our reputation. Speaker 800:48:11Perfect. That's great. Thanks. And if I can follow-up quickly with Nick. Nick, you talked about, obviously, some of the low hanging fruit there from synergy standpoint, from technology, etcetera, duplication, all that. Speaker 800:48:24Any specifics you can share? I know it's early, but anything you can tell about what best practices can you bring to the defense segment to derive or support some of the synergies? Speaker 700:48:37Well, I think I can give you a lot of examples, but I mean, I'm sure not to right now. But I can say that in the L3 acquisition for example and the legacy CAE business, there's a lot of overlap in technologies. Best example I can give you is the CONTROVY-one called RPAS. Both teams have products. So these things have to be rationalized. Speaker 700:49:02They don't have to be done. I mean, we're supporting customers, we're supporting, but we need to build up the synergies and develop a strategy where the whole company has one product in some of these areas. Same with on the civil side, there are opportunities for the defense guys to offer solutions like Gulfstreams and Global's because as you know these aircraft are used for mission for missionized missions, if I can use those words. So right now, it's very much not they don't know what the civil guys do and we don't know what these defense requirements are. But for sure, the customer is interested in having these solutions. Speaker 700:49:56And as we know especially on some of these programs like the Globals and the Gulfstreams, these are very good programs for us. And I mean basically we lift and shift training program, we lift and shift a simulator and instructor training and we have a program, you can have a gushing program anywhere you want. So I think that's the kind of stuff that I think we're going to pursue more of because obviously we will always have these programs that are a little bit more complicated and yes we'll protect for all the obvious stuff. But we need a base of business which is a little bit less volatile. And I think these are a couple of examples of things that I think we can do to make ourselves more successful. Speaker 800:50:43That's really great color. Thanks so much and congrats on the new role, Nick. Thanks. Speaker 200:50:48Thank you. Operator00:50:52The next question is from Cameron Doerksen from National Bank Financial. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:50:58Yes. Thanks. Good morning. Maybe just a couple of balance sheet cash flow questions from me for Sonya. Could you just talk about what your expectation is for debt reduction this fiscal year? Speaker 900:51:10And maybe you can just update on what sort of the target leverage for the company is over the next Speaker 300:51:16few years? Yes. So thanks, Cameron. So as part of our continued balanced capital allocation, we're going to continue to focus on deleveraging. We had always said that the 3 times was really just a waypoint on the way to a lower leverage. Speaker 300:51:31So that's a continued focus. We haven't necessarily set a target. It's going to be a balance, but something in line with our investment grade. So I'd say 2 to 2.5 times is a usual for an investment grade. It gives us flexibility and it gives us flexibility to bring back current returns and support our organic investments in CapEx. Speaker 300:51:54So longer term that's what I'd be targeting. But ultimately over the next year it's really continuing on the deleveraging profile while we continue to invest in accretive organic investments and bringing back some shareholder returns. Speaker 900:52:10Okay. And on the working capital, I mean, you had a pretty big, I guess, cash tailwind in fiscal 2024 that followed a significant investment in fiscal 2023. I'm just wondering if you could maybe talk about what your expectation is for fiscal 2025 as far as the working capital investment and maybe talk about how it sort of changes through the year quarter to quarter? Speaker 300:52:36Sure. I'm really pleased with the progress on the non cash looking path for the year. So it's really the result of continued focus on efficiency of our key metrics, whether it's DSO, inventory management, deposits and unbilled sales. So it resulted in a strong reversal and an overall reduction in non cash working capital on the balance sheet. So the focus is continuing. Speaker 300:53:00For the year, I'd expect the historical trends to continue both on a seasonality H1, H2 that trend continues, although more abated. And for the year, training is still the bulk of our business. And that's generally build after execution. So as it grows, it's slightly non cash working capital investment, but we continue to focus on the metrics, on the efficiency of those metrics. And overall, we target 100% conversion of net income to free cash flow. Speaker 900:53:33Okay. That's helpful. Thanks very much. Speaker 200:53:35Thanks. Operator00:53:38The next question is from Tim James from TD Securities. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:53:45Thanks very much. Just one question here. Sonia, you mentioned that expansion of the training network will be in lock stack with customer demand. And then you mentioned you look to you sign long term contracts for recurring revenue at customers. Is it possible to outline hurdle rates that accompany that approach? Speaker 1000:54:08And what I'm trying to get at is just a sense or a comfort level for an outcome where customers maybe their own demands change from what they contract with CE? And how do you manage that? And how are you insured against changes in their own activity levels that they want to put through a specific full flight simulator in the future? Speaker 300:54:36I'll hand it off to Nick to give a bit of color, but the hurdle rates are high. The capital investment, ultimately, as I said, we never deploy speculative. And so these are all backed by at least 1, if not several customer contracts. And ultimately, the proof is in our results, right. So driving 20% plus margins on the civil network and the ramp up of these incremental return on capital of 20% to 30% within 2 to 3 years. Speaker 300:55:03So you can see not only what we expect but what we deliver on the CapEx. And on the outsourcing profile, Nick? Speaker 700:55:12I was just going to say a lot of our contracts in particular our big clients, people like LATAM, I mean these are secured capacity. So the exchange there is, okay, you secure me X number of simulators of capacity because I need that just to be able to keep all the pilots current in their aircraft or training on another aircraft or whatever. And then in exchange for that, I will pay you a certain amount of money to keep that capacity. Now of course, like COVID is a good example, right? We had COVID, customers came back and said, hey, we need some relief, whatever. Speaker 700:55:50Okay. But contractually, we have the hammer. I hate to use that word, but we have hammer and then the question becomes, okay, if an airline wants to change their capacity. Now you got to remember, these are a lot of ways they're like, I want to use the word mathematical, but you have so many pilots, you need so many hours of training, you're going to have so much churn, you're going to have so much I mean it's not the airlines can be are very good at predicting their demand. So we contract on that basis. Speaker 700:56:25So there your fluctuations tend to be a little bit less pronounced, especially on the commercial side. Speaker 200:56:32Okay. That's helpful, Nick. Thank you. Sonja, if Speaker 1000:56:35I could just return, so you mentioned the 20% to 30% return on capital target within, correct me if I'm wrong, I think you said 2 to 3 years. Can you just remind us on the is that return on capital calculation mimic what you, I think, publish as a consolidated target? Is that how we should think about the kind of the numerator and the denominator in that metric when we're thinking about an individual dollar invested in a full flight simulator? Speaker 300:57:03So that incorporates all of that calculation. So ultimately, we look at it simulator by simulator and this is the aggregate of all the simulators we've deployed and ultimately track the contribution of that simulator over its capital cost. And so that we're measuring the incremental accretive benefit of that growth investment. Speaker 100:57:26Super. Thank you. Operator00:57:30The next question is from Jordan Leone from Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:57:36Hey, good morning. Could you just give some color on what you're seeing for utilization rates going into the summer and then business activity at the Vegas facility? Speaker 200:57:46Did you say the Vegas facility? Yes. Yes. Well, maybe I'll turn it over to Ethan. Go ahead. Speaker 200:57:54Well, the biggest facility Speaker 700:57:57is ramping up this year. We'll have pretty close to a steady state year. We've been working this train center has been open Operator00:58:08now for a couple Speaker 700:58:08of years. In fact, I just did a review with the team and they've got a good plan to bring it up to what we would call steady state. And in more generally, of course, Q2 will always be a little bit quieter, especially in places like Europe because we have some big customers like Easyjet who are basically forbidding anybody to train. They just want everybody flying for the summer season. So we'll see some slowdown there. Speaker 700:58:36In the U. S, maybe less because there's still a lot of hiring going on. So that's not as affected by seasonality. But in Europe, definitely we see a lot of seasonality. Speaker 100:58:52Got it. Thank you. Operator00:59:02Next question is from Noah Poponak from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:59:07Hi, good morning. Good morning. In the use of the term rebaselining, I'm trying to better understand how much you have actually reset schedule scope and if you've had any price reset in these 8 legacy contracts versus the charges just reflect the mark to market of the reality of the current margins on those eight contracts? Speaker 200:59:40Well, it's really back as I was mentioning Noah. In each one of these 8 contracts, there have been substantial and extensive renegotiations on every part of those okay? And that's really to define the remaining work that we have to do on those contracts. The time it's going to take us and the very specific cost it's going to take us. I would tell you on still on top of that as you would expect on every one of those contracts, on top of those assets, please put the usual contingencies that are associated with any remaining, what I would call, normal risk on those programs because you can never fully eliminate risk. Speaker 201:00:25There's always some risk, but we have contingencies against those. And we have on top of that management reserve on top of those individual programs and through our whole defense backlog as a whole. So if anything, when I look at those contracts, I would feel good that we should be in a position that we're in a situation that we haven't been in quite a while here, on those programs where basically we don't have to use any sizable part of those contingencies. We want to outperform all those programs very clearly. That's really what we mean by rebaseline here. Speaker 201:01:04It's put this overhang behind us. We're not going to we still have to execute on those contracts. We're not walk away walking away from anything here. We're still largely going to be executing on those contracts to bring them to a close over the next 6 to 8 quarters. A couple of them probably will go into the next year just because of the time line. Speaker 201:01:24But again, we predicted what the cost is going to be on those programs. So feel very good about the execution and the visibility that I have on those programs. Speaker 101:01:36Okay. Have you actually been given higher prices by your customer on some of them? Or is it sort of the same price and just resetting all of the other inputs? Speaker 201:01:54I was mentioning some of those contracts that we've actually been successful in getting follow on work. What I mean by that is, ECPs or engineering change proposals on a couple of them. And on one in particular in Europe, we actually got a follow on contract, which is definitely a better pricing in terms. Speaker 101:02:14Okay. And how many of the 8 are unprofitable? Speaker 201:02:21There I mean, going forward, all of them are being well, not all of them, I think most of them are executed at 0 margin because we're sitting in there because we've taken the charges on them. There's about there's 3 of them that are operating at a very slight profit going forward. So that's the situation of them. Speaker 101:02:44Okay. Thank you. Speaker 401:02:47Welcome. Speaker 101:02:49Operator, I see we've used the full hour and then some. So I think we'll close the call here. I want to thank participants for joining us this morning and remind you that a transcript will be available shortly of the call on CAE's website. Thank you and have a good day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallProtara Therapeutics Q4 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsAnnual report(40-F)Annual report Protara Therapeutics Earnings HeadlinesZWSOFT Showcased Latest CAD/CAE/CAM Innovations at Hannover Messe 2025April 14 at 7:10 AM | finance.yahoo.comMorgan Stanley Remains a Hold on CAE (CAE)April 12, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comNew “Trump” currency proposed in DCAccording to one of the most connected men in Washington… A surprising new bill was just introduced in Washington. Its purpose: to put Donald Trump’s face on the $100 note. All to celebrate a new “golden age” for America. April 17, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)CAE price target lowered to C$36 from C$37 at Morgan StanleyApril 12, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comCAE (NYSE:CAE) Stock Rating Upgraded by StockNews.comApril 12, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comWelcome to WrexhamApril 9, 2025 | sports.yahoo.comSee More CAE Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Protara Therapeutics? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Protara Therapeutics and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Protara TherapeuticsProtara Therapeutics (NASDAQ:TARA), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company, engages in advancing transformative therapies for the treatment of cancer and rare diseases. 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There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the CAE 4th Quarter and Full Year Financial Results for Fiscal Year 2024 Conference Call. As a reminder, all participants are in listen only mode and the conference is being recorded. After the presentation, there will be an opportunity for analysts to ask questions followed by a Q and A for members of the media. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Operator00:00:35Andrew Arnovitz. Please go ahead, Mr. Arnovitz. Speaker 100:00:40Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that today's remarks, including management's outlook for fiscal 2025 Answers to questions contain forward looking statements. These forward looking statements represent our expectations as of today, May 28, 2024, and accordingly are subject to change. Such statements are based on assumptions that may not materialize and are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially and listeners are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:13A description of the risks, factors and assumptions that may affect future results is contained in CAE's annual MD and A available on our corporate website and on our filings with Canadian Securities Administrators on SEDAR Plus and the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission on EDGAR. With the divestiture of Sea's Healthcare business, all comparative figures discussed here and in our financial results have been reclassified to reflect discontinued operations. On the call with me this morning are Marc Taran, CEE's President and Chief Executive Officer and Sonia Branco, our Chief Financial Officer. Speaker 100:01:49Nick Leontides, CAE's newly appointed Chief Operating Officer is also on hand for the question period. After remarks from Mark and Sonia, we'll open the call to questions from financial analysts. And at the conclusion of that segment, we'll open the lines to members of the media. With that, let me now turn the call over to Mark. Speaker 200:02:10Thank you, Andrew and good morning to everyone joining us on the call. As you'll have seen from our earnings release, 4th quarter results are unchanged from last week's pre announcement, which was mainly intended to communicate the rebaseline of our defense business and the appointment of Nicky Onquides, a proven CA veteran as our Chief Operating Officer. To provide additional context, last week we also offered an earnings preview in our preliminary fiscal 20 25 outlook. This morning, Sonya and I will provide a bit more color on our performance and our very strong financial position. Last week, we took decisive action to establish a clear path for margin improvement in our Defense business. Speaker 200:02:58I certainly recognize that our defense performance has significantly fallen short of our expectations and understand and share investors' frustrations. The impairments and accelerated risk recognition on the legacy contracts that we announced last week are disappointing, but necessary steps towards putting the overhang of these past issues behind us. These actions were made possible by renegotiating agreements with our customers and our suppliers, adjusting the scope and the timing of these contracts for our mutual benefit. Ultimately, this enables us to address the programmatic risks that have been affecting our business. Alongside the rebaseline of the defense business was the acceleration of risk recognition on legacy contracts and execution of a leadership or reorganization and implementation of targeted operational enhancement at both the segment and corporate levels. Speaker 200:03:59These initiatives are designed to fortify our execution capabilities and foster greater synergies between our defense and our civil businesses. I fully expect these changes to enable greater focus through the simplification of our operating structure with our COO overseeing the 5 P and Ls that encompass CAE's entire business scope. This new structure and recent upskilling of talent in defense will further enhance the execution and oversight of major defense programs and facilitate the exploration and realization of synergies between our civil and defense operations. Also and in the vein of further bolstering CE Suture, our 4th quarter and full year results reflect continued strong growth in our core markets, robust order flow and consistent cash generation. For CA overall, we grew adjusted backlog by approximately 13% year over year with 1.6 $1,000,000,000 in orders in the quarter or 1.38 book to sales ratio. Speaker 200:05:05And for the year, we booked over $4,900,000,000 in orders for a 1.15 times book to sales ratio. As of the end of March, we had a record backlog of 12.2 $1,000,000,000 We also further strengthened our financial position having generated $418,000,000 of free cash flow during the fiscal year and together with proceeds from the sale of Healthcare, we reduced leverage below 3x net debt to adjusted EBITDA excluding legacy contracts. In Civil, we booked orders in the 4th fiscal Q4 fiscal quarter for $832,000,000 including contracts for 7 full flight simulators. This brings the total Civil order intake to a record $3,000,000,000 for the year, including 64 full flight simulator sales, demonstrating the sustained high demand for pilot training solutions and our flight solutions software platform. Civil concluded the year with a record adjusted backlog of $6,400,000,000 Notable contracts in the quarter included a multiyear commercial aviation training agreement with AITA Airways and a first of its kind partnership in Canada where CE instructors will deliver initial training for NAV Canada flight service specialists and air traffic controllers. Speaker 200:06:33In testament to our progress in flight solutions, we announced yesterday the signing of European ultra low cost carrier Wizz Air as a new partner under a multi year supply agreement. We'll be supplying Wizz Air with CA's operational control and crew management software and CA's recovery manager solutions for operational and crew disruptions. Average trading center utilization was strong at 78% for the 4th quarter and 76% for the year, up from 72% the year prior. In products, we delivered 17 civil full flight simulators in the quarter and 47 for the year compared to 46 deliveries in the prior year. As disclosed last week, this is a bit lower than the approximately 50 that we had expected with timing difference due to customer requests to postpone deliveries because their own facilities weren't ready to receive the full flight simulators as originally planned. Speaker 200:07:35Taking the time delays from last year to account, we expect to deliver more than 50 full flight simulators in fiscal 2025. Turning to Defense. At the same time as we've been taking actions to rebaseline the business, we've continued to make headway with our transformation strategy. We reached $1,900,000,000 of adjusted order intake on an annual basis, involving training and simulation solutions or 1.04 times book to sales ratio. This contributed to a $5,700,000,000 of adjusted defense backlog. Speaker 200:08:13In the quarter, we had orders totaling 7 $18,000,000 including a transformative win involving a contract with General Atomics to support the remotely piloted aircraft system or RPAS program for delivering aircrew and maintenance technician training and supporting training devices at CourseWitter to meet Canada's RPAS requirements. This to me is a prime example of a kind of larger and more differentiated program that we're in a position to address and that will ultimately drive the defense transformation that we've been expecting. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Sonia, who will provide a detailed look at our financial performance. And I'll return at the end of the call to comment on our outlook. Sonia? Speaker 300:08:59Thank you, Mark, and good morning, everyone. Looking at our Q4 results, on a consolidated basis, revenue of $1,100,000,000 was down 6% compared to the Q4 last year. Adjusted segment operating income was $125,700,000 or $216,000,000 excluding the impact of the legacy contracts, compared to $193,000,000 last year. Quarterly adjusted EPS was $0.12 per share or $0.37 excluding the legacy contracts, compared to $0.33 in the Q4 last year. We incurred restructuring, integration and acquisition costs of $55,000,000 during the quarter in connection with the previously announced restructuring program related to portfolio shaping actions, including the sale of Healthcare and to the continued integration of AirCentre. Speaker 300:09:48The AirCentre integration is progressing as planned and is expected to wind down by the end of June. The restructuring program is related to portfolio shaping actions that to streamline CA's operating model and portfolio, optimize our cost structure and create efficiency. Total restructuring costs incurred since the start of this restructuring program this quarter amounted to $39,300,000 and we expect to record approximately $10,000,000 of additional restructuring expenses over the next two quarters in light of the organizational and operational changes announced last week to replace buying the defense business, further strengthen our execution capabilities and drive additional synergies between CAE's defense and civil aviation businesses. For the year, consolidated revenue was up 7% at $40,300,000,000 adjusted segment operating income was up 2% to $549,700,000 and annual adjusted net income was $276,800,000 or $0.87 per share, which is stable compared to $0.87 last year. Excluding legacy contracts, adjusted segment operating income was up 19% to $640,000,000 and annual net adjusted net income was $355,300,000 or $1.12 per share, which is up 29% compared to last year. Speaker 300:11:12Net finance expense this quarter amounted to $52,400,000 which is stable from the preceding quarter and up from $50,400,000 in the Q4 last year. I expect our annual finance expense in fiscal 2025 to be similar to fiscal 2024 on lower interest expense on debt, offset by higher lease expense related to recently deployed training centers in our global training network in support of growth. Income tax recovery this quarter was $80,600,000 representing an effective tax rate of 14% compared to an effective tax rate of 24% in the Q4 last year. The adjusted effective tax rate, which is income tax rate used to determine adjusted net income and EPS was 47% this quarter compared to 23% in the Q4 last year. The increase in the adjusted effective tax rate was mainly due to the de recognition of tax assets in Europe, partially offset by the change in mix of income from various jurisdictions. Speaker 300:12:11On the same basis, the adjusted effective income tax rate for the year was 17%. The annual effective income tax rate in fiscal 2025 is expected to be approximately 25%, considering the income expected from the various jurisdictions and the implementation of global minimum tax policy. With the closing of the sale of our healthcare business, net income from discontinued operations was $20,500,000 this quarter compared to $4,800,000 in the Q4 last year. The increase compared to the 4th quarter was mainly attributable to the after tax gain on the disposal of discontinued ops of $16,500,000 in relation to the sale of the healthcare business. Net cash provided by operating activities was $215,200,000 for the quarter compared to $180,600,000 in the Q4 last year. Speaker 300:13:03And for the year, we generated $566,900,000 from operating activities compared to $108,400,000 last year. We had free cash flow in the quarter of 191 $100,000 $418,200,000 for the year for an annual cash conversion of 151%. We continue to target an average 100 percent conversion rate going forward. Uses of cash involved funding capital expenditures for 91 point $7,000,000 in the 4th quarter and $329,800,000 for the year, driven mainly by the expansion of our civil aviation training network in lock step with secured customer demand. These opportunities translate to some of our best returns as our simulators assets ramp up within the 1st few years of their deployment. Speaker 300:13:54Commensurate with our ongoing success to capture market opportunities and training, I expect total CapEx in fiscal 2020 to 2025 to be $50,000,000 to $100,000,000 higher than fiscal 2024. Approximately 3 quarters of this relates to organic growth investment in simulated capacity to be deployed to our global network of primarily civil aviation training centers and backed by multi year customer contracts. Our net debt position at the end of the quarter was $2,900,000,000 for a net debt to adjusted EBITDA of 3.17x. Excluding legacy contract leverage was at 2.89x at the end of the same period. We're prioritizing a balanced approach to capital allocation, including funding accretive growth, continuing to strengthen our financial position commensurate with our investment grade profile and returning capital to shareholders. Speaker 300:14:46Given our progress in strengthening CE's financial position, as we announced last week, we are reestablishing a normal course issuer bid as part of our capital allocation strategy. The NCIB is currently intended to be used opportunistically over time with excess free cash flow. Given our outlook and the cash generative nature of our highly recurring business, CAE's Board of Directors will also continue to evaluate the possibility of reintroducing a shareholder dividend. At the same time, I expect that we'll maintain a very solid financial position, bolstering our balance sheet through ongoing deleveraging consistent with our investment grade profile. Now to briefly recap our segmented performance. Speaker 300:15:28In Civil, 4th quarter revenue was up 6% year over year to $700,800,000 and adjusted segment operating income was up 17% year over year to $191,400,000 for a record margin of 27.3 percent. For the year, civil revenue was up 12% to $2,400,000,000 and adjusted segment operating income was up 13% to CAD548,900,000 for an annual margin of 22.5 percent. In defense, as we disclosed last week, we accelerated the recognition of risks associated with our legacy contracts in the 4th quarter, following revised agreements on scope and timing with customers, suppliers and other stakeholders. These actions resulted in profit adjustments associated with a reassessment of our estimated costs. 4th quarter defense revenue of $425,500,000 was down 21% over Q4 last year. Speaker 300:16:23This includes a $54,300,000 impact from the accelerated risk recognition on legacy contracts and the conclusion of certain service contracts we decided to no longer pursue. Adjusted segment operating loss was $65,700,000 and adjusted segment operating income excluding legacy contracts, was $24,600,000 compared to an adjusted segment operating income of $30,500,000 in the Q4 last year. For the year, defense revenue was stable at $1,800,000,000 and adjusted segment operating income was down 98% to $800,000 Adjusted segment operating income excluding the legacy contracts was up 72% to $91,100,000 With that, I'll ask Martin to discuss the way forward. Speaker 200:17:11Thanks, Sonia. I'm going to separately address the outlook for our 2 segments. But before I offer any numbers, I'd like to mention that our combination of our Civil and Defense businesses have significant strategic advantage. Now let me reiterate that and be very clear that our Defense performance in terms of profitability certainly hasn't met my expectations so far, but our strategy remains solid. Over the past 2 years, we've achieved some 20% growth in adjusted backlog and expanded our pipeline with bid opportunities that align very well with our core strengths in training and simulation, offering attractive risk return profiles. Speaker 200:18:01Our simulators and our training products are very complementary for both civil and defense purposes. The synergies are strong in terms of technology, manufacturing as well as go to market approach. There's hardware and software commonality in the products and increasingly there's operational synergy in how we optimize training across the two businesses. I'm very confident that Nick Limonitis will strengthen our execution capabilities and drive additional focus and synergies between both of our business segments. For Civil, the secular demand picture for Aviation Train Solutions remain very compelling, underpinned by growth in air travel, demand for pilots and the need for them to stay current with always advancing aviation technology and regulation. Speaker 200:18:53Our business is driven primarily by the regulated training required to maintain the pilots and crews who operate the global in service fleet of commercial and business aircraft. And as an additional secular driver, we expect to sustain high level of pilot movements from the growth and replacement of the active pilot population. According to our estimates, over half the commercial and business jet pilots will be active in a decade from now have yet to even begin their training. With that background, I expect low double digit percentage civil annual adjusted segment operating income growth in fiscal 2025 and continued margin strengthening with an annual segment operating income margin of approximately 23%. The expected increase in several margins reflects the ongoing ramp up of newer training centers and recently deployed full flight simulators, partially offset by the SaaS conversion that's currently underway in our Flight Operations Solutions software business. Speaker 200:20:00As in previous years, I expect annual civil performance to be more heavily weighted to the second half. In defense, we're also in a secular growth market as the sector enters an extended upcycle marked by rising budgets across NATO and Allied Nations. Key trends include heightened focus on near peer threats, greater government commitments to defense modernization and readiness amid geopolitical tensions and a growing demand for the training and simulation solutions that we provide. Our expertise in both simulation and defense positions us well to meet those needs. And specific to CAE, we're seeing a consistent demand driver across regions for our trained solutions, a shortage of uniform personnel for defense, which has led militaries to rely on industry partners like CAE for training solutions to ensure readiness. Speaker 200:21:00This aligns perfectly with our core strengths and our defense transformation strategy over the past few years has focused on expanding our leadership position on integrated training and simulation solutions. This strategic focus has allowed us to streamline our project selection to ensure a better risk return balance. Moreover, we've renegotiated favorable terms such as cost plus contracts for development work and tighter pricing bans on service contracts, while leveraging civil life business models in defense. These improved terms will positively impact our risk adjusted returns as newer contracts ramp up. This approach has already resulted in significant backlog growth with larger, more profitable programs and we anticipate even greater growth since fiscal 2025. Speaker 200:21:54Our expectations for fiscal 2025 reflect the rebaselining of the business and the enhanced visibility that this obviously gives us. We're extremely focused on acting on what we can control and we'll prove it through execution in the coming quarters. We expect annual revenue growth in the low to mid single digit percentage range and annual defense and SOI margin to increase to the 6% to 7% range and like Civil to be more heavily weighted to the second half. We have large multi year programs currently in negotiation that should add significantly to our backlog soon. Beyond our selection on transformational defense contracts in Canada, we're well positioned over the next year on several strategic programs across the Indo Pacific regions, Europe and in the United States. Speaker 200:22:53In particular, the demand for Air Crew training program similar to Canada's SPAC in our past across the Five Eyes and NATO partners as well as the allies continues to increase. These programs require the type of technologies and proficiency that are CA strengths. We intend to leverage our position on these generational programs in Canada to enable multi domain training in secure synthetic environments across our global network. With that, I thank you for your attention and we're now ready to answer your questions. Speaker 100:23:31Thank you, Mark. Operator, we'll take our first questions from the financial community. Operator00:23:37Great. So we'll begin the analyst question and answer session. The first question is from Kevin Chiang from CIBC. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:23:56Thanks for taking my question and good morning everyone. We'll actually just start with a civil question. Just the slippage of some of the full flight simulators, it sounds like the client wasn't in a position to take those products. But I'm wondering if you're starting to see any impact on pilot training demand just with some of the aircraft delivery issues at the large OEMs. Is that impacting what you're seeing from the airlines in terms of the demand for training, maybe relative to what you would have been forecasting or expecting, let's say, 6 to 9 months ago? Speaker 400:24:36Just wondering if you're seeing anything material there. Speaker 200:24:40Okay. Let me take it, Kevin. Look, I mean, 1st and foremost, you're right. I mean, the changes that we saw just in the relative to our outlook on delivery simulators and therefore the adjusted operating income growth was purely because of those training centers that weren't ready, our customers' training centers weren't ready. And basically those familiars will deliver this year. Speaker 200:25:04So that's really what happened there. It's not a reflection of any type of demand change in the market. I mean, if I could ask maybe Nick some more color if it's required. But look, I mean, we've been living in the kind of environment of lower than let's say lower than potentially anticipated deliveries of 737 MAX Aircraft as well as less activity because of the engine issue that's affecting mainly Airbus airplanes that as you know have literally hundreds of airplanes grounded around the world. So we've been living in that environment for quite a while. Speaker 200:25:44So really that isn't really changing. So I would say there's pockets and I think there's pockets that you see that airlines are affected by the slowdowns. They're not able to get the airplanes that they want to secure the demand. The demand itself is very strong. And what you see is airplanes pulling airplanes out of mothballs, basically taking airplanes that are coming off lease and maintaining them on lease. Speaker 200:26:09But we're not really seeing a change in the demand environment at this time. We're watching it and the guidance that we put for Stival for next year or for this coming year reflects our cautious outlook in that regard. Speaker 400:26:26That's helpful. And then just my second question. I appreciate all the color you provided in terms of the rebasing of defense. It also feels like a segment that feels like it's been in some sort of perpetual restructuring for quite some time now or at least some sort of strategic repositioning with the acquisition of L3 Harris' military training division. Maybe if I were to ask, when you look out 2 years from now or whatever the timeframe is, what is it what should the fence look like? Speaker 400:27:00Like does revenue need to be bigger in order to get the margins you want? And maybe de risk the backlog in terms of there's always risks around execution. Is it being more focused on the addressable markets you're trying to go after? I'm just trying to get a sense of, if all goes well here in defense, you fast forward 2 years, what exactly does defense look like? Is a bigger business with better margins? Speaker 400:27:25Is it a smaller business with better margins? Just any color there would be helpful. Speaker 200:27:31Look, I think I would start by all of those, Kevin. Look, clearly, as I said, look, the numbers that we're printing now surely don't meet my expectation and neither of us are the investors clearly. But I think what we've done here is re baseline the business. We've been talking about the issues that are affecting us in defense for quite a at least a couple of quarters here, at least in the detail. Last quarter, we gave you precision on that really there were 8 contracts, we call the legacy contract that were really undermining the profitability of our business. Speaker 200:28:08I mean those contracts all have the same kind of MO signed prior to COVID, fixed firm price contracts and they were very much adversely affected by supply chain issues, manpower issues, runaway inflation, of which we're not immune. A lot of our defense clients and sister companies across the defense environment, particularly in well, actually, I would say only in United States across the world actually. I mean, we those affected us. We ring fenced those. And this quarter, what we've done here is basically work extremely hard to renegotiate with our customers in this regard to figure out exactly what the remaining scope on those programs is. Speaker 200:29:01The time it's going to take us to execute those contracts. The cost it's going to take us to execute those contracts. And the difference between that and the cost that we anticipate in the past is $90,000,000 And that's to a certain extent maybe shouldn't be much of a surprise because if you remember in the Q3, what we had said is that those 8 contracts were really going to drag for next by 200 basis points, 300 basis points for the next six quarters while we execute those contracts. What we've done here is through the actions that we've taken, through the agreements we've made for customers, we're able basically to take that risk safe off the table or be predictable because we're taking it now. So that gives us a clear view of the future and the programmatic risk now going forward not only in those 8 programs, but overall and across all the programs in the best is balance. Speaker 200:30:04So that's one major component. The other component is I'll go back to the success of the strategy on the front end. I'll reiterate the fact that our when we look at the book of business, we are winning business. We are winning a larger business in the areas where we have core capabilities, training centers, training products, meaning full flight simulators where this is core to us. We know how to do that. Speaker 200:30:32We know how to do it well. We've signed them at margins that are recreative to the outlook that we have in defense, which is 10% or more in terms of profitability. Those programs are going to materialize in our backlog. I expect about 15% of that of those to materialize in our revenue this year. That's all going to contribute to the answer to your question is stable revenue growth, higher margins on the way to the low teens or north of 10% margins. Speaker 200:31:09I want this and generating stable cash flows, which you should expect out of the defense business because we're basically selling to customers with sovereign guarantees. So that's what I expect out of the defense business. Speaker 400:31:26Base. That's very helpful color. Thank you for taking my questions. Operator00:31:32The next question is from James McGarrigle from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:31:38Hey, good morning and thanks for having me on. Thank you. So just on the defense margin guidance, I'll pick up in the back half. So can you just talk to the visibility that you have into that higher margin in the back half? And is there any seasonality in the defense side going forward? Speaker 500:31:57Or should we expect that back half margin to kind of be the exit rate for margin into the upcoming fiscal year? Speaker 200:32:06Look, I think that if you look at our performance in the past few years, you always see this back half loaded and there is reason for that. There is budget in specific countries. There's programs that are ramping up. This year, I mean, we have high visibility of this year. The majority of the revenue and ergo the profit that we need to execute this year plan and meet the guidance of 6% to 7% that we put out there, We've already won those contracts. Speaker 200:32:36They're in the backlog. It's for a safety team. We obviously have very high visibility on the legacy contracts that we've talked about having to re baseline the programmatic risk there. So what I'd say is basically, we're going to in terms again, in terms of its variability in the year, it's basically just the same way we've seen in the previous years. I think maybe to provide a little bit more color on it, I'd say that when we look at the year, the average margin we talked about could be 6% to 7%. Speaker 200:33:13I would expect that we'll start the year where we ended it in terms of profitability, so call it in the 5 percent range was stronger in the second half. That's what I would say. Speaker 500:33:28Okay. And then as a follow-up on the Civil side, you picked like that a lot of that organic investment you're making this year is going to be in the civil business. You previously flagged really solid returns 20% to 30% in that business, 2 to 3 years ramp up. Does that mean we should be thinking about growth at current levels or even higher kind of over the next 2 or 3 years? Can you talk to the visibility and the conversations you're having with your customers a little longer term on the Civil side? Speaker 200:34:01Well, look, I think that I fully expect that the demand environment in Civil Business is strong for years to come. I think maybe just a little bit provide a little bit more color on Civil. I think if you think about the Civil business, you saw the changes we've made under Nick now as CEO. We're basically giving more visibility on the leaders of that business, the 3 leaders that we have Alex Trevo running business aircraft training, Michel Azard Abouda running commercial aviation training and simulators, Pascal Grenier running the software business. We'll be able to provide you, I think, more a broader view of those specific individual businesses with Civil. Speaker 200:34:51But let me just have a shot at that maybe goes to your answer here. If you break down the revenue in our Civil business, about a third of it comes from selling simulators to World Airlines. About a third of it comes training for the World Airlines, so our training centers for airlines around the world. And a third of it comes from Business Aviation Trading and the final really 10% comes from our software business. Each of these businesses has its own dynamics that drives margin. Speaker 200:35:26There's we talk a lot about utilization, which is a strong metric, but it's not the only metric and it is affected by seasonality, especially when you get into the second half where you have lower utilization in our training centers because the airlines certainly in the Western Hemisphere they're flying so they're not training in a large part. Within our product segment, which is selling simulators, the margins and actually the revenue can be affected quite significantly by who's the customer, the product mix of that simulator, whether the equipment is supplied by buyer in terms of the cost of equipment, for example. There's an impact from joint ventures as well because we do a lot of joint ventures and in those cases, you don't see the revenue, but you'll see the income pick up. And finally, the software, there's that's really affected by the timing of the contracts whether or not they're SaaS contracts which we are prioritizing and that has a lower margin at least while we're going through that SaaS conversion. And so and that's the reason I'm been the trend is going to be higher in Civil in all of those segments. Speaker 200:36:47With the Provisory as I talked about the SaaS conversion, which is probably a 2 to 3 year basically ramp up as we go through the SaaS conversion. Speaker 500:37:00I appreciate the color and I'll turn the line over. Thank you. Operator00:37:03Welcome. The next question is from Benoit Poirier from Desjardins Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:37:11Yes, thanks. Good morning, Mark. Good morning, Sonia. Yes, just to come back on the assumption behind the 6%, 7% EBIT margin target for defense in fiscal year 'twenty five, I think I heard that about 15% of the total revenue is expected to come from those transformative deals that are already in the backlog. So could you maybe provide some color about what was the contribution in Q4? Speaker 600:37:40And what makes you confident or the visibility you have with respect to the ramp up in the 2nd part of the year? Speaker 200:37:52I may not be as clear or maybe when I answer that question, it's not 50%, it's 15%, 15% of the revenue that we're going to get this year comes from those transformational programs Benoit and that's relative to 3% last year. So we had last year, we had like 20% of our backlog in defense was these new transformational programs and that was that translated in 3% of revenue. Again, this year, that will be 15% this year and obviously growing in the years to come as they ramp up. Speaker 600:38:28Okay. And obviously you provide some color about fiscal year 2025. Previously you mentioned that it would take 6 to 8 quarters to achieve the completion of those legacy contracts. How should we be thinking beyond fiscal year 'twenty five? And is the 10% target still achievable? Speaker 200:38:52Well, the 10% margin is absolutely still achievable and that's all the actions we've put in place is going to make that happen. Now we haven't guided to next year that we haven't been precise, but it will happen within the planned period. So within the next few years, but we haven't gotten ahead of ourselves beyond this year. Speaker 600:39:15Okay. And with respect to the appointment of Nick as the CEO, obviously, he's been CEO for over 35 years. Could you talk maybe, Mark, about the strategy here, the action that Nick is going to undertake? And maybe more color about the expected synergies that you would like to extract between civil and defense? Speaker 200:39:40You're going to have to ask me to put Nick on the spot. But before I do, let me talk about how I do think. Nick, as you said, Nick is a veteran of this company. And interestingly, you may or may not know actually Nick started his career in defense. So having led starting as an engineer, but have like I was by the way, but having led some major defense contracts, including the most complicated, the more extensive that we have ever had probably before a fact, which was putting together the first PFI contract in the U. Speaker 200:40:18K. In defense, which was standing up our Benson Training Center where we train all medium helicopters for Royal Air Force. I think you may have visited at one point that training center that we have in the Royal Air Force, which is still one of the most prestigious and technology events in the world. So Nick put that together. So just suffice to say, having known Nick and Nick has worked for me directly ever since I've been at CA in various roles. Speaker 200:40:47Nick understands the business. Nick has a very strong operational mindset and focus on execution as well as strategy. And that's basically the reason I put him in charge of Spence over 10 years ago. And I think he's done a pretty good job as tripling the operating in Civil in that period and building us the franchise that we have in defense. He's going to put those strengths to focus in defense. Speaker 200:41:20Beyond that, I mean specifics, look, I think there's a lot of simplification here that can be had through greater focus. It's very clear to me that one of the reasons, certainly not the only one, but key reasons that we've been successful in Stabil is to focus. I talked about the 3 P and L leaders that are fully accountable and have all the tools to be able to execute in their business. We're providing through the changes we're making here, we're enhancing the focus here to very specific P and L leaders in the United States, the largest business, is that we're largest military market in the world by far very specific focus with Jason Gutfreund as President Interim President there working through the U. S. Speaker 200:42:13Board for Nick and with Marc Adevis Savoy running all our international programs including Canada where we have some very large contracts that I announced today. So number 1 is greater focus. That's very important. And that means beyond that is synergy capture. It's clear to me that there's a lot of synergy left to be had by leveraging our scale and technologies across the entire enterprise. Speaker 200:42:42And that's going to be key to NICS responsibly. But beyond that, Nick, maybe a couple of words from your side. Speaker 700:42:48Yes. I was just going to reinforce, I mean, the simplification and accountability, I think we went a little bit astray trying to do all of that under the guise of the 2 business units. I think the we have go to market business units in Business Aircraft and Commercial and DNS U. S. DNS International and then we'll drive synergies across that. Speaker 700:43:16Of course, there's going to be some restructuring. I'll use the word restructuring, of course, because we have some duplication which were necessary at the time, but I think it's one of those things when you look at it and you say, okay, well, we need to make change. And by the way, that's my right now, I'm just asking questions. And I ask questions about everything. Why is this like this? Speaker 700:43:41Why is this like that? And it's amazing the answers that you get. So I think a lot of times it's we get people working on this. The people know what to do. I'm just going to enable them to do it. Speaker 700:43:56And as I tell other people, we played as a team and we're going Speaker 200:44:00to have to do this together as Speaker 700:44:02a team. And people know where inefficiencies are and they know what they need to stop doing. Speaker 600:44:09That's great color, gentlemen. And maybe a very quick one for Sonya. Just looking at your CapEx that is expected to be up $50,000,000 to $100,000,000 How should we be thinking about the sustainable CapEx? It seems a bit elevated versus the history. So I'm just wondering, I understand the growth opportunity, but just want to try to look beyond fiscal year 'twenty five about the what could be kind of the sustainable level of CapEx? Speaker 600:44:38Thank you. Speaker 300:44:40Yes, Benoit. Thanks for the question. So the CapEx is really the spend is really a direct reflection of the success that we've had with all of the orders we've secured to outsource more training. So, three quarters of this CapEx is simulators to our network. So, whether it's Quanta, it's AGN, we've got plenty in Las Vegas, then plenty of examples through that record order intake that we've got in the year. Speaker 300:45:05So, we don't deploy simulators to our network on a speculative basis. Every single one of them are backstopped by signed long term recurring revenue customer contract. So what we see this year's CapEx is really a reflection of the secured order intake that we have and this is to deliver to growth and our customers. And frankly, we have a proven track record of delivering really accretive returns on this organic CapEx, 20% to 30% range of incremental return on capital on our organic growth. So while we're not necessarily going to guide beyond that year, but it will be a function of the level of orders and market capture that will succeed. Speaker 600:45:51Thank you very much for the time. Operator00:45:55The next question is from Konark Gupta from Scotiabank. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:46:01Thanks for taking my question. Just on the defense, I'm wondering, Mark, how does the rebaselining of legacy contracts affect your market position and your ability to structure future bids appropriately? Speaker 200:46:17I think it reinforces them, because I think what's important here is that to me this is a very successful renegotiation that we've done. The teams have been on this for quite a while. Obviously, we have tighter teams on every one of those programs for obvious reasons, but focus on execution of those contracts. But I what I talked about in the previous quarter when I said that we're going to take every effort to be able to accelerate the recognition of risk on those programs. So really scope out the remaining work here. Speaker 200:46:51I mean and I had talked about the time that look, we're going to have to have tough negotiations here. And it could lead to in some cases basically having to accept penalties for example for because we're late on contracts as just one example. But the reality is we haven't to do that in we haven't had to do that in any one of these cases. So we are going to do what CA always does. We are going to execute on those contracts and the customers every one of them on these eight contracts are very happy with the outlook that we now have on those bonuses. Speaker 200:47:31We will deliver what we committed on those contracts and the timeline and the scope of what we'll do is in line with the expectations the client have with us. So our reputation that CA has of always delivering is intact. And in some cases actually in some of these programs, that's really why I talk it I talk about it as particularly successful. In some cases, we have negotiated additional scope on those contracts. So follow on contracts as a result of negotiations. Speaker 200:48:05So long answer, but this is a, if anything, this enhances our reputation. Speaker 800:48:11Perfect. That's great. Thanks. And if I can follow-up quickly with Nick. Nick, you talked about, obviously, some of the low hanging fruit there from synergy standpoint, from technology, etcetera, duplication, all that. Speaker 800:48:24Any specifics you can share? I know it's early, but anything you can tell about what best practices can you bring to the defense segment to derive or support some of the synergies? Speaker 700:48:37Well, I think I can give you a lot of examples, but I mean, I'm sure not to right now. But I can say that in the L3 acquisition for example and the legacy CAE business, there's a lot of overlap in technologies. Best example I can give you is the CONTROVY-one called RPAS. Both teams have products. So these things have to be rationalized. Speaker 700:49:02They don't have to be done. I mean, we're supporting customers, we're supporting, but we need to build up the synergies and develop a strategy where the whole company has one product in some of these areas. Same with on the civil side, there are opportunities for the defense guys to offer solutions like Gulfstreams and Global's because as you know these aircraft are used for mission for missionized missions, if I can use those words. So right now, it's very much not they don't know what the civil guys do and we don't know what these defense requirements are. But for sure, the customer is interested in having these solutions. Speaker 700:49:56And as we know especially on some of these programs like the Globals and the Gulfstreams, these are very good programs for us. And I mean basically we lift and shift training program, we lift and shift a simulator and instructor training and we have a program, you can have a gushing program anywhere you want. So I think that's the kind of stuff that I think we're going to pursue more of because obviously we will always have these programs that are a little bit more complicated and yes we'll protect for all the obvious stuff. But we need a base of business which is a little bit less volatile. And I think these are a couple of examples of things that I think we can do to make ourselves more successful. Speaker 800:50:43That's really great color. Thanks so much and congrats on the new role, Nick. Thanks. Speaker 200:50:48Thank you. Operator00:50:52The next question is from Cameron Doerksen from National Bank Financial. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:50:58Yes. Thanks. Good morning. Maybe just a couple of balance sheet cash flow questions from me for Sonya. Could you just talk about what your expectation is for debt reduction this fiscal year? Speaker 900:51:10And maybe you can just update on what sort of the target leverage for the company is over the next Speaker 300:51:16few years? Yes. So thanks, Cameron. So as part of our continued balanced capital allocation, we're going to continue to focus on deleveraging. We had always said that the 3 times was really just a waypoint on the way to a lower leverage. Speaker 300:51:31So that's a continued focus. We haven't necessarily set a target. It's going to be a balance, but something in line with our investment grade. So I'd say 2 to 2.5 times is a usual for an investment grade. It gives us flexibility and it gives us flexibility to bring back current returns and support our organic investments in CapEx. Speaker 300:51:54So longer term that's what I'd be targeting. But ultimately over the next year it's really continuing on the deleveraging profile while we continue to invest in accretive organic investments and bringing back some shareholder returns. Speaker 900:52:10Okay. And on the working capital, I mean, you had a pretty big, I guess, cash tailwind in fiscal 2024 that followed a significant investment in fiscal 2023. I'm just wondering if you could maybe talk about what your expectation is for fiscal 2025 as far as the working capital investment and maybe talk about how it sort of changes through the year quarter to quarter? Speaker 300:52:36Sure. I'm really pleased with the progress on the non cash looking path for the year. So it's really the result of continued focus on efficiency of our key metrics, whether it's DSO, inventory management, deposits and unbilled sales. So it resulted in a strong reversal and an overall reduction in non cash working capital on the balance sheet. So the focus is continuing. Speaker 300:53:00For the year, I'd expect the historical trends to continue both on a seasonality H1, H2 that trend continues, although more abated. And for the year, training is still the bulk of our business. And that's generally build after execution. So as it grows, it's slightly non cash working capital investment, but we continue to focus on the metrics, on the efficiency of those metrics. And overall, we target 100% conversion of net income to free cash flow. Speaker 900:53:33Okay. That's helpful. Thanks very much. Speaker 200:53:35Thanks. Operator00:53:38The next question is from Tim James from TD Securities. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:53:45Thanks very much. Just one question here. Sonia, you mentioned that expansion of the training network will be in lock stack with customer demand. And then you mentioned you look to you sign long term contracts for recurring revenue at customers. Is it possible to outline hurdle rates that accompany that approach? Speaker 1000:54:08And what I'm trying to get at is just a sense or a comfort level for an outcome where customers maybe their own demands change from what they contract with CE? And how do you manage that? And how are you insured against changes in their own activity levels that they want to put through a specific full flight simulator in the future? Speaker 300:54:36I'll hand it off to Nick to give a bit of color, but the hurdle rates are high. The capital investment, ultimately, as I said, we never deploy speculative. And so these are all backed by at least 1, if not several customer contracts. And ultimately, the proof is in our results, right. So driving 20% plus margins on the civil network and the ramp up of these incremental return on capital of 20% to 30% within 2 to 3 years. Speaker 300:55:03So you can see not only what we expect but what we deliver on the CapEx. And on the outsourcing profile, Nick? Speaker 700:55:12I was just going to say a lot of our contracts in particular our big clients, people like LATAM, I mean these are secured capacity. So the exchange there is, okay, you secure me X number of simulators of capacity because I need that just to be able to keep all the pilots current in their aircraft or training on another aircraft or whatever. And then in exchange for that, I will pay you a certain amount of money to keep that capacity. Now of course, like COVID is a good example, right? We had COVID, customers came back and said, hey, we need some relief, whatever. Speaker 700:55:50Okay. But contractually, we have the hammer. I hate to use that word, but we have hammer and then the question becomes, okay, if an airline wants to change their capacity. Now you got to remember, these are a lot of ways they're like, I want to use the word mathematical, but you have so many pilots, you need so many hours of training, you're going to have so much churn, you're going to have so much I mean it's not the airlines can be are very good at predicting their demand. So we contract on that basis. Speaker 700:56:25So there your fluctuations tend to be a little bit less pronounced, especially on the commercial side. Speaker 200:56:32Okay. That's helpful, Nick. Thank you. Sonja, if Speaker 1000:56:35I could just return, so you mentioned the 20% to 30% return on capital target within, correct me if I'm wrong, I think you said 2 to 3 years. Can you just remind us on the is that return on capital calculation mimic what you, I think, publish as a consolidated target? Is that how we should think about the kind of the numerator and the denominator in that metric when we're thinking about an individual dollar invested in a full flight simulator? Speaker 300:57:03So that incorporates all of that calculation. So ultimately, we look at it simulator by simulator and this is the aggregate of all the simulators we've deployed and ultimately track the contribution of that simulator over its capital cost. And so that we're measuring the incremental accretive benefit of that growth investment. Speaker 100:57:26Super. Thank you. Operator00:57:30The next question is from Jordan Leone from Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:57:36Hey, good morning. Could you just give some color on what you're seeing for utilization rates going into the summer and then business activity at the Vegas facility? Speaker 200:57:46Did you say the Vegas facility? Yes. Yes. Well, maybe I'll turn it over to Ethan. Go ahead. Speaker 200:57:54Well, the biggest facility Speaker 700:57:57is ramping up this year. We'll have pretty close to a steady state year. We've been working this train center has been open Operator00:58:08now for a couple Speaker 700:58:08of years. In fact, I just did a review with the team and they've got a good plan to bring it up to what we would call steady state. And in more generally, of course, Q2 will always be a little bit quieter, especially in places like Europe because we have some big customers like Easyjet who are basically forbidding anybody to train. They just want everybody flying for the summer season. So we'll see some slowdown there. Speaker 700:58:36In the U. S, maybe less because there's still a lot of hiring going on. So that's not as affected by seasonality. But in Europe, definitely we see a lot of seasonality. Speaker 100:58:52Got it. Thank you. Operator00:59:02Next question is from Noah Poponak from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:59:07Hi, good morning. Good morning. In the use of the term rebaselining, I'm trying to better understand how much you have actually reset schedule scope and if you've had any price reset in these 8 legacy contracts versus the charges just reflect the mark to market of the reality of the current margins on those eight contracts? Speaker 200:59:40Well, it's really back as I was mentioning Noah. In each one of these 8 contracts, there have been substantial and extensive renegotiations on every part of those okay? And that's really to define the remaining work that we have to do on those contracts. The time it's going to take us and the very specific cost it's going to take us. I would tell you on still on top of that as you would expect on every one of those contracts, on top of those assets, please put the usual contingencies that are associated with any remaining, what I would call, normal risk on those programs because you can never fully eliminate risk. Speaker 201:00:25There's always some risk, but we have contingencies against those. And we have on top of that management reserve on top of those individual programs and through our whole defense backlog as a whole. So if anything, when I look at those contracts, I would feel good that we should be in a position that we're in a situation that we haven't been in quite a while here, on those programs where basically we don't have to use any sizable part of those contingencies. We want to outperform all those programs very clearly. That's really what we mean by rebaseline here. Speaker 201:01:04It's put this overhang behind us. We're not going to we still have to execute on those contracts. We're not walk away walking away from anything here. We're still largely going to be executing on those contracts to bring them to a close over the next 6 to 8 quarters. A couple of them probably will go into the next year just because of the time line. Speaker 201:01:24But again, we predicted what the cost is going to be on those programs. So feel very good about the execution and the visibility that I have on those programs. Speaker 101:01:36Okay. Have you actually been given higher prices by your customer on some of them? Or is it sort of the same price and just resetting all of the other inputs? Speaker 201:01:54I was mentioning some of those contracts that we've actually been successful in getting follow on work. What I mean by that is, ECPs or engineering change proposals on a couple of them. And on one in particular in Europe, we actually got a follow on contract, which is definitely a better pricing in terms. Speaker 101:02:14Okay. And how many of the 8 are unprofitable? Speaker 201:02:21There I mean, going forward, all of them are being well, not all of them, I think most of them are executed at 0 margin because we're sitting in there because we've taken the charges on them. There's about there's 3 of them that are operating at a very slight profit going forward. So that's the situation of them. Speaker 101:02:44Okay. Thank you. Speaker 401:02:47Welcome. Speaker 101:02:49Operator, I see we've used the full hour and then some. So I think we'll close the call here. I want to thank participants for joining us this morning and remind you that a transcript will be available shortly of the call on CAE's website. Thank you and have a good day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by