NYSE:CALX Calix Q2 2024 Earnings Report $34.43 +0.48 (+1.40%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$34.46 +0.03 (+0.08%) As of 04:08 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Calix EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.09Consensus EPS $0.06Beat/MissBeat by +$0.03One Year Ago EPS$0.15Calix Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$198.14 millionExpected Revenue$200.77 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$2.63 millionYoY Revenue Growth-24.10%Calix Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date7/22/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, July 23, 2024Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsCalix's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Monday, April 21, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, April 22, 2025 at 8:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Calix Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 23, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings, everyone. Welcome to the Calix Second Quarter 20 24 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the brief prepared remarks. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:21It's now my pleasure to introduce your host, Jim Fanucchi, Vice President of Investor Relations. Sir, please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:29Thank you, Rob, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our Q2 2024 earnings call. Speaker 200:00:35Today on Speaker 100:00:35the call, we have President and CEO, Michael Beeney and Chief Financial Officer, Corey Synthalar. As a reminder, yesterday after the market closed, Calix issued a news release, which was furnished on a Form 8 ks along with our stockholder letter and was also posted in the Investor Relations section of the Calix website. Today's conference call will be available for webcast replay in the Investor Relations section of our website. Before I turn the call over to Michael for his opening remarks, I want to remind everyone on this call, we will refer to forward looking statements, including all statements the company will make about its future financial and operating performance, growth strategy, market outlook and actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by these forward looking statements. Factors that could cause actual results and trends to differ materially are set forth in the Q2 2024 letter to stockholders and in the annual and quarterly reports filed with the SEC. Speaker 100:01:32Galix assumes no obligation to update any forward looking statements, which speak only as of their respective dates. Also on this conference call, we will discuss both GAAP and non GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP measures is included in the Q2 of 2024 letter to stockholders, unless otherwise noted. All financial information referenced in this call will be non GAAP. With that, it is my pleasure to turn the call over to Michael. Speaker 300:01:59Michael, please go ahead. Speaker 200:02:00Thank you, Jim. Our results in the Q2 demonstrated the strength and execution of our strategy. Our platform, cloud and managed services continue to enable our broadband customers to dominate their markets as they simplify their operations and go to market, innovate across the consumer, business and municipal segments of the markets they serve and grow the value for their members or investors and in turn to Calix. Once again, our unique broadband business model delivered record gross margin. Robust expansion of our platform cloud and managed services led to a sequential 9% increase in RPOs as BSPs continue to turn to Calyxt in the face of growing competition to win new subscribers through the ever expanding capabilities of the Calyxt platform, cloud and managed services. Speaker 200:02:55As we have discussed, the market is crossing the chasm and this is best evidenced by our landing footprint with 24 new BSP customers who started their business transformation with Calix in Q2, up from 10 in Q1. Our appliance business is settling into a new normal where we see smaller orders and many, many more of them. This gives us the confidence to forecast a return to sequential quarterly revenue growth in Q3. And our momentum continues into Q3 as the team recently closed our largest platform cloud and managed services deal setting a new record. Speaker 300:03:35With that, I'd like to turn Speaker 200:03:36it over to Corey to review our financial results for the Q1. Corey? Thank you, Michael. Speaker 300:03:43The Q2 represented another quarter of deliberate and disciplined execution. We delivered revenue of $198,000,000 Speaker 200:03:51which was within the guidance range we provided in April. As we continue Speaker 300:03:56to navigate the crosswinds that are still prevalent in our industry, The continued growth in our platform cloud and managed services drove record non GAAP gross margin of 55.1%. In the Q2, we saw strong platform adoption with 17 customers beginning their platform journey with us, 19 new cloud deployments and 22 additional customers deploying a managed service for the first time. Remaining performance obligation or RPOs grew to $267,000,000 at the end of the quarter. This is an increase of $22,000,000 or 9% sequentially and up $54,000,000 or 25% year over year. Furthermore, our current RPOs were $103,000,000 up 4% sequentially and up 28% year over year. Speaker 300:04:56As we've discussed before, the increases in RPO reflect new customer additions and the continued adoption of our platform offering as our existing customers add new subscribers and expand their use of our platform cloud and managed services. As a result, we expect RPO will continue to grow. In the Q2 of 2024, non GAAP operating expenses were $104,000,000 down $4,000,000 from the prior quarter. The decrease is mostly attributable to lower outside services and professional fees. As we have said before, our plan is to keep 2024 operating expenses expense investments relatively consistent with 2023 as we believe this level of investment represents a great opportunity for us to grow our footprint ahead of the expected U. Speaker 300:05:49S. Government broadband investment. Our debt free balance sheet and balance sheet metrics remain strong. Speaker 200:05:57At the end of the quarter, cash Speaker 300:05:59and investments were just over $261,000,000 representing a sequential increase of roughly $22,000,000 This was our 5th consecutive quarter of double digit free cash flow. DSO was 38, Inventories were 2.8 down from 3.1 last quarter as our component inventories increased. Excluding component inventory, our inventory turns would have been 3.7 and inventory deposits decreased by $6,000,000 bringing our total inventory deposit down to $70,000,000 Furthermore, we expect continued profitability combined with working capital reduction will result in consistent double digit quarterly operating free operating and free cash flow. Now let's discuss revenue guidance for the Q3. Based on the current ordering trends Speaker 200:06:59and new customer acquisitions, we believe Speaker 300:07:03the Q2 marks the bottom for 2024 Speaker 200:07:07and we will grow from here. Speaker 300:07:09For the Q3 of 2024, our revenue outlook is to be between 198 $8,000,000 $204,000,000 Speaker 200:07:19In terms of feed, we've seen Speaker 300:07:21a lot of progress since our last call. As we sat here a quarter ago, only one state, Louisiana, had completed all ten steps of the program. Today, there are 20 states and territories approved through all ten steps and they represent $12,000,000,000 of the $42,000,000,000 program. While the approvals have accelerated, we believe that we will begin seeing orders in 2025 early 2025. In summary, Q2 represents a low point for revenue in 2024 and we will return to sequential quarterly revenue growth in Q3. Speaker 300:08:01We continue to add new BSD customers every quarter, which over time will support our growth objectives. In addition, our platform cloud and managed services grows each quarter, driving our RPO and gross margin expansion. We have the most pristine balance sheet in the industry, which gives us the financial capacity to invest in our operation and expand our footprint as our industry process the chasm. Michael, back to you. Speaker 200:08:28Thanks, Corey. Throughout Q2, I continued to meet with broadband customers and their investors with the discussion remaining the same. How to win? The industry is under significant stress as legacy network operators face the disruption of increased competition and the expanding risk of commoditization as broadband speed disappears as a differentiator. This shift from speed to an experience mindset is critical to our crossing the chasm from early adopters to winning the early majority and it is accelerating. Speaker 200:09:02With 10 65 BSPs now deploying our platform, which grows every quarter, we continue to engage with prospects of all sizes to educate them on the power of the platform while supporting our existing customers as they expand their business model across consumer, business and the communities they serve. It is the winning business model that is achieving incredible revenue, margin, cash flow and customer satisfaction results every single day. In closing, our confidence in returning to sequential quarterly revenue growth is driven by an expanding funnel of opportunities as our unique platform cloud and managed services model enables our customers to succeed. We have the financial strength and balance sheet that allows us to execute without distraction, while maintaining a disciplined and steady hand on our operating expense investments that support our VSP customers as they win their markets and together we succeed for the long term. Term. Speaker 200:10:07Jim, let's open Speaker 300:10:08the call for questions. Thanks, Michael. Rob, at this time, you Speaker 100:10:12can please open up the lines for questions. Operator00:10:15Thank you, Jim. We'll now be conducting a question and answer Thank you. And our first question, it comes from the line of Samik Chatterjee with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your questions. Mr. Operator00:10:54Chatterjee, your line is open for questions. Perhaps you're on Speaker 100:11:03mute. Probably, the next one will pull Sonic back into the rotation. Operator00:11:07Yes. Thank you. The next question is from the line of Ryan Kuntz with Needham and Company. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 400:11:13Great. Thanks for coming on. On the pressure on the large and medium customer cohort and decline there, do you have an updated view of the drivers behind the tight capital environment between interest rates and B preparation? How would you kind of characterize the top three drivers there among your largest customer base? Speaker 300:11:39Well, I actually don't think it's a large customer phenomenon. Speaker 200:11:42I actually think it's across the entire base. And this goes back to what we've articulated in Q4 and Q1. It remains the same. So the first one is that they're going through a decision making process with regards to B. You've seen the complexity of that scenario. Speaker 200:11:59Now it's making progress and Cory can talk to that extensively. But as they go through that again, their planning teams are now focused on how do they do those submissions and then in second half a lot of that will finally come to clarity and that's companies of all sizes, small, medium and large, right? That's the first one. The second one is that, again, small, medium and large. The second thing they're considering is that if they are an entity that has private equity backing or investors, the pervasively high interest rates and the increase in competition, which again we forecasted for many years has caused them to say, okay, should we slow down a little bit or contemplate our business model as we're not getting the loads that we need. Speaker 200:12:52And so let's really pivot hard into our existing investments and win new subscribers, which really comes down to the crossing the chasm part is that we really needed them. If I go back a year ago, a year ago I was at U. S. Telecom, which was a big CEO event. And a year ago I was and the year before I was the one who is a bit of a naysayer in that room constantly saying the same thing that we said at our Connections event, which is speed is going to commoditize. Speaker 200:13:24It's not a differentiator. Building fiber is not enough. You actually know that you need to build a comprehensive business model to own the community. And as little as a year ago, especially with the medium and large customers, they were dismissive. They're like, no, I'm doing well enough. Speaker 200:13:40I keep going at it. Where our smaller customers were aggressively pivoting into that experience community center brand message. I was there again this summer and frankly they were all saying the same thing. There is a ton of investors there and they're all like, you know what, we've been building for the last 3 years. We're not getting the subscriber loads on our networks that we thought we would. Speaker 200:14:02The competition is a lot higher than I expected and I really need to be contemplating my business model. And frankly, to us, this is the exact thing that we have been building our company for 13 years to build that opportunity and it makes us crossing the chasm that crossing the chasm leads easier because now they're under a ton of pressure, which is what I talked about in my opening remarks. Corey, anything that summarizes it. Speaker 400:14:38And Corey, the mention of the largest platform deal ever, was that included in your stated RPO for 2Q or is that a 3Q event? Speaker 300:14:47That is a new event, Brian, that will be reflected in our Q3 RPO number. Speaker 200:14:51Well, to be clear, in Q2, we booked the largest platform and cloud deal in the company's history in Q2 and then run up to this call, we actually closed a larger deal. So 7 new records for our cloud managed services, but that's a Q3 deal. Speaker 400:15:13Awesome. That's great. And Corey, can you give us any color on the product mix in the quarter across network versus CPE in general? Like how has that trended in 2Q versus say last 12 months? Speaker 300:15:31Yes. In terms of our gross margin, what you're seeing is exactly kind of amplified for what Michael has just talked about. We're seeing operators spending less time building out new networks and working towards adding new subscribers to their networks, turning on revenue and cash flows for them. And so we've seen a shift in our product mix towards premises, away from appliance revenue from the network compliance side. Speaker 400:16:07Got it. So even though the hardware there has got lower gross margin, the higher software mix you're selling more of the mix up Speaker 300:16:13of that? That is spot on. Speaker 500:16:18All right. Speaker 400:16:18I'll get back in queue. Thanks for the questions. Operator00:16:23Thank you. Our next questions are from the line of Samik Chatterjee from JPMorgan. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 600:16:29Hi, thanks for letting me jump back on here. I know, Michael, you mentioned you mentioned about bead early on in the prepared remarks. Just wondering, we've seen some other suppliers start to talk about receiving bead related orders already even though they ship out in 2025. Can you just address sort of where you are in terms of the timing? And I think the primary question from investors is how material can be related revenues be for your model in 2025? Speaker 600:17:00Anything you can share on that front in terms of how to think about whether it should be revenues from sort of all 50 plus states or should it be really a fraction of the geographies just considering how the pace of approvals are? And I have a quick follow-up. Speaker 300:17:18Sure. Happy to talk about that. And we while there's others out there that are talking about orders and revenue starting this year, We've been consistent regarding our thoughts around B. We expect to start receiving orders in the Q1 of 2025. Orders, not necessarily revenue. Speaker 300:17:40We do not know what that ramp will be after we start receiving orders. We do know that 20 states have their volume 2 proposals approved and that represents $12,000,000,000 of the $42,000,000,000 So you might recall on our last call, I suggested that as long as there was at least 10 to 15 states approved that we would get enough to actually start seeing an impact, a meaningful impact in 2025. And so we're sitting here today with 20. So that's the good news that there's certainly enough money now available for that program to have an impact on 2025. But there's other steps that will follow such as NTIA's approval of each state's broadband map subsequent to the challenge process. Speaker 300:18:27So there's certainly more challenges to overcome as that program continues to roll out. That said, we will do well with BE as we have with every government program, large and small for the last 20 years. Speaker 600:18:48Yes, got it. The just the other question that I'm getting this morning from investors is we've seen the lower mix of revenue from your large customers. Is there anything beyond sort of the cyclical headwinds in terms of market share with some of your large customers, just given the revenue decline you've seen with them on a year over year basis? Speaker 300:19:12Yes. So in the quarter, it was actually better than we thought it would be. So it's better than feared. So that was a positive and encouraging sign for us. The hold back in our large and medium segment is a lot of reduction in CapEx spending as they're reevaluating their priorities. Speaker 300:19:34But you might recall that we had talked about, we thought that large and medium segments would have again inside of Q2. And obviously, it did not, it did better than we thought. So there are signs of them kind of coming out of those decision making process and getting back on with their ordering programs. So we are encouraged by that. And so I think that's a positive development. Speaker 300:20:00Yes. Speaker 200:20:00And if anything, the medium and large are actually starting to finally listen around the conversation, which I talked about around the trust around monetization and actually how they have to change the business strategy. So Speaker 300:20:14in Q2, we closed the Tier 2 Speaker 200:20:17that we've never done. They used to be a big customer of ours, but has not actually done anything with our cloud and we closed with them on a go to market strategy around smart business. So how to actually attack their very sizable small business base and win with a radically different experience. And so if anything, I would say that this is now our share opportunity to grow and you saw that as represented by the 24 new logos that we added this quarter. Those are not new companies starting up. Speaker 200:20:48Those are wins for companies who want to change their business model and evolve and transform with Calix. Speaker 600:20:58Thank you. Thanks for taking my questions. Operator00:21:02Our next question is from the line of George Notter with Jefferies. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 700:21:09Hi, guys. Thanks very much. I wanted to ask about as we think about the impacts in the business, I think you guys have mentioned a number of things, certainly in the shareholder letter, certainly in recent quarters. But I'm wondering if you could kind of talk about what the biggest impacts are on the hardware side of the business right now. We've talked about delays in decision making associated with BEED and government funding. Speaker 700:21:36You've talked about customers adjusting lead times because of adjusting order levels because your lead times are shorter. We talked about higher interest rates. We talked about a shift towards adding subs versus core infrastructure. I guess I'm just wondering if there's kind of a map to what these different factors Speaker 300:22:06Well Speaker 200:22:09Well, actually George, you summarized them very clearly. If you want us to stack rank them, I would say that it depends on the company and therefore inside each company, they're going to be different. So let's cover off what you've said succinctly and accurately covered, which is what we've been saying for multiple quarters since we started to see this in late 2023. So the one with the decision making on beef, as we've always stated that government funding is going to take much longer than anticipated and in the end will be a much larger funding outpouring over time. So while it's a $42,000,000,000 program on lead, it's actually added 25% and significantly larger. Speaker 200:22:59We you succinctly stated that lead times has been adjusting how they think about inventory because we actually dropped our lead times down. They're now at what is our new normal on the appliance side, which is why we're also comfortable with stating very clearly that we're going to return to the sequential revenue growth because of the fact that our lead times are now where they are. The good thing in that is that I constantly get questions from customers that as they clear that first point on decision making, well, we have enough inventory to serve them. That question continues to get asked to me. I've probably answered it 10 times this quarter alone. Speaker 200:23:45And my response is the same though that we've given Speaker 100:23:48to investors also, which is that Speaker 200:23:49when we entered the pandemic and faced a surge in demand, it was a significant issue because we had 3,200 SKUs. We're now counter around 200 SKUs. We have an incredible supply chain. We're optimized to meet any demand spikes. And so that's great. Speaker 200:24:05So we're in great shape there as that changes. And then the interest rates, you succinctly covered off interest rates. If I'm a private equity investor, they were investing with abandon through the pandemic. If you had a as I like to joke, if you had a pulse, you could raise $20,000,000 and could spell broadband and people were throwing money willy nilly. And now what they're starting to do is take a step back and say, wait a second, we've been at this now for 2 or 3 years and the business model showed that I would be getting this amount of ramp and I'm not achieving that ramp. Speaker 200:24:47And in fact, what I'm seeing is when I go into certain markets, I have more competition than I anticipated. But more importantly, the fundamental thesis at the beginning of the pandemic, which is build fiber and they will come and you will win is actually fundamentally flawed again, which we've been stating. So that and the fact that interest rates are higher are having some of them say, wait a second, I need you to go pivot all your attention back to it's great that you're a good construction company and that's what a lot of broadband companies are, great construction companies, great network operators, but how are you going to market and sell and win that community and get do what Tom Bigby has done and get market share that's at 60% and an NBS of 92% and shutting off incredible ARPU, massive cash flow and huge margins or like Allo is doing. How are you going to go do that? And so that not only interest rates that becomes a reason why they have the conversation, but it also is leading to these management teams coming under significant stress because their investors are saying where's the frigging money, right? Speaker 200:25:58And that's great for us. I go back to U. S. Telecom. When I was there a year ago, people were kind of, yes, yes, whatever, Michael, whatever, what Michael. Speaker 200:26:08But when I was there this go around, there were many of them saying, hey, I'm working with Calix on this, I'm working with Calix on that because I need to change my business model if I'm going to win. And that's what we've always stated and it just becomes the impetus to actually have the conversation and realize that the pain is right there. So the interest rates, I would say, are just an impetus to having the conversation that your business model needs to change, right? You need to cross that chasm with us. And then and that which then led to the very succinct thing. Speaker 200:26:42So I think your third point and then your subs versus infrastructure, those in essence are the same thing. Because if you're winning a shedload of subs like Allo is or Tom Bigby is or many of our other customers are, who cares about interest rates because your margins are so strong, your take rates are so high, your return on invested capital is so massive, you don't care. If it was a 20% interest rate, you'd still be investing because your market share is yielding a huge return on investment. And so it's difficult for us to stack rank it. Others can say, George, all you're spot on and it just depends on the customer. Speaker 200:27:25And so, when I go back to well, the quarter's adds, 24 network operators decided to become broadband service providers this quarter, 24. And these are not new companies. These are ones that are deciding that, you know what, I'm going to partner with Calix to actually change my business model. And so that is that's the market, that's the industry. Speaker 700:27:52Got it. And then just one quick one. On lead times, was there more reduction in lead times this quarter versus last quarter or we have we been at a stasis on lead times all year? And what are lead times? Yes. Speaker 200:28:07We've been Operator00:28:20Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Scott Searle with ROTH Capital Partners. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 800:28:28Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Nice to see the bottom put in for the Q2 and looking for sequential growth as we go into the back half of the year. Maybe quickly to just hit on a couple of share questions, Mike. It sounds like you're gaining share within the Tier 2s. Speaker 800:28:44I was wondering if you could address that. And then more specifically, as we look to bead, I know you guys have been working in a consulting with many of these bead requests, I'm wondering if you have some early thoughts in terms of what you think share is going to look like between Tier 1, 2s and 3s as beat funding starts to roll the market in 2025. Clearly, you guys would be better positioned with the Tier 3s and Tier 2s. But I'm kind of wondering what your thought process is there in terms of the share gains that they might have within those categories? Speaker 200:29:20So lots of complex questions in there. So the first one is with regards to share, the way we think about market share is actually the customers that we're aligned with whether or not they're taking share. And one of the best examples of that this quarter would be that we had a small customer who grew to a medium customer. Why? Because they're thinking they're actually adding subs, they're growing their business and they're winning in the markets that they serve. Speaker 200:29:47So when we think about market share, we think of it that way. And then on adding subs, one of the things that we talked about the Tier 2 that actually went to our small business solution. The way this goes back to the underlying business strategy that we've always articulated, which is we're uniquely positioned in that we have this very diverse platform that allows us to find a beachhead into a customer and then demonstrate to them what success looks like. So with that one, they were are coming under pressure with regards to I need to improve ARPU, I need to slow churn, I need to grow revenue and that's why they chose our small business solution. And once the small business solution goes into that customer who now the entire platform is in. Speaker 200:30:44So we've hooked into the back office, we've hooked into their business processes and it's easy for them to continue to expand as they see success. So the key thing about gaining share for us is that once we garner that beachhead like we have in that Tier 2 with small business, we then flood our customer success team into it to help that customer transform their go to market strategy, win a whole bunch of new small business customers and then hopefully expand with us over time. With regard to bead consulting, the way that our bead process is radically different than most others. You saw that in Q1 when we announced the relationship with ready.net, who has incredible cloud and software tools to help broadband service providers actually understand me. And so we're hand in glove. Speaker 200:31:38So while others are, as Corey said touting, hey, I got some orders in, I got some orders in. We're actually sitting down beside with that beside them, putting in their beat submissions, helping them articulate it. We've got a team, a big team of people who do it plus our ready partnership to ensure that we are side by side and planning with them not only in how to win and how they pitch the local state office, but then also what the implications are on timeline. And that's through the second half, we'll get clearer and clearer. With regards to who's going to win Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, the reality is that one of the things you've heard a lot of grossing about is that if this program was actually centralized in Washington, D. Speaker 200:32:26C. And everything was through a single office centrally, then the bigger companies would definitely have a significant advantage because they'd be able to do what they do well and they put a massive lobbying arm into DC and they could influence outcomes. By having this as a state by state, territory by territory program, The ones who are advantaged are the ones who are local. And you hear that in the when I'm out in the speaking to the different groups, you hear a lot of that is that as these are state run projects, they really want companies who care about the local state, whether that's a for profit or a cooperative to actually be that voice in that office and win the money because they know that they're not in it just to kind of scarf up a bunch of money and pad a P and L like other programs have in the past. They're actually they care about the community, they're in the community, they're in the state and they're there for the long term. Speaker 200:33:30And so while that has definitely been one of the reasons where you've seen a slowdown in the BEAT process, at the same time, I think that very democratic process and that's been diffused out to the different states is really powerful. And frankly, I think an advantage is both the companies that care about the state. Speaker 300:33:55So Mike bottom line there Scott, just to amplify one thing on Michael. BEAT is just a single program. Yes, it's a big one, but there are lots of government programs out there, a lot of state money. Our customers do very well and Calix does very well as a result and have so for the last 20 years of taking advantage of these government programs. We're going to do just fine with the speed one as well. Speaker 300:34:24Got you. So not to put words in Speaker 800:34:25your mouth, but it sounds like your customers disproportionately to their current broadband share should participate pretty well in BEAT and other programs going forward. Is that correct? Speaker 300:34:39That's true, Ryan. And in BEAT in particular, you got to think again, these are hard locations, right? These are the most rural parts of the country. And so these are the ones that are done last. And so it's going to be somebody with a community minded perspective, willing to make those investments to go after those hard to get locations. Speaker 300:35:00So we think that will disproportionately lead to the smaller players to go after those locations. Speaker 800:35:07Great. And lastly, if I could on a follow-up, I think last quarter you talked about, right, certainly 'twenty four is a transition year, but it seemed like there was enough green shoots that 'twenty five you'd be shaping up to get back into the targeted 10% to 15% growth range. I'm wondering if you could update your thoughts on that front and also kind of full bead into the conversation. Corey, you said, look, if we get 10 to 15 states or territories, you'd be feeling pretty good about the bead contribution into 2025. Now we're at 20 states, you've got another 36 states that have completed 9 out of 10 steps. Speaker 800:35:43So by the time we have this call, in the October timeframe, you could have double that number. So I'm kind of wondering how bead kind of layers into that thought process for growth in 2025? Thanks. Speaker 300:35:59Thanks, Scott. What we're seeing here on the appliance side is that we're establishing a new normal, where our smaller orders seeing smaller order sizes, but many, many more of them. There's a healthy trend with us planning new footprint as evidenced by the 24 new customers. When you combine that with the robust demand of our platform cloud and managed services as noted by the 9% sequential growth and the signing of our largest cloud deal lever this quarter in Q3. I think we're I think what you're seeing is we've put the bottom in and we're going to return to that sequential revenue growth. Speaker 300:36:45What you're poking at is what does that quarterly growth rate look like from here on out. I think we're going to take a very pragmatic view about it, given the fact that we've had a the last few quarters on the appliance side. And so we will be cautious going forward. I think as we look out at the next several quarters, we had talked about a quarterly growth rate of 1% to 5%. We'll be at that lower end of that range here for the next several quarters. Speaker 300:37:19And as we progress through 2025, as we start seeing contributions from the customer acquisitions, as we see the large and medium customers continue to return back, as we start seeing some of the beat shipments, not just orders, but shipments, we will move to, let's call it, the middle of that range by the end of the 2025. And so there'll be a general progression there as those revenue streams layer into this bottom that we're creating right now. Speaker 200:37:51Yes. And a good example of that would be we won a really incredible customer in Q2 last year. They were at the upper end of small, will definitely cross over into medium and they're an innovator with a huge amount of money behind them. But it took them some time to actually migrate their way over to Calix. They had to get rid of some of their existing inventory, those different elements. Speaker 200:38:19And Q2 is the first time we started to see actually Q2 this year, a year later doing all that work with them is where we finally started to see the orders won. So the key thing in all of this is that we can have a short term view of chase this, but we're actually as we stated on and on every single time, our whole goal is to use this disruptive time whenever when things are popping up or falling apart or the disruption happening to cross that chasm, win a whole bunch of new customers and then basically set in place by winning those beachheads as I mentioned with that Tier 2. So that becomes the beginning of an expansion of the footprint in an entirely new customer. And so this footprint attack that we're on will not has not yielded in this quarter or next quarter, although we have hit the bottom and we're going to now go sequentially, but we're laying those early green shoots in net new accounts to win for the long term. And that's what our entire leadership team, our entire field team is what they're focused on is we're thinking about 20252026 like the work that we're doing right now will pay off in a huge way again as evidenced by the amount of logos that we went over this quarter. Speaker 200:39:39Great. Thank you. Operator00:39:43Our next question is from the line of Tim Savage with Northland Capital Markets. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 500:39:50Hey, good morning. I wanted to stay with Bede for a second here. As this opportunity maybe comes into greater view or greater focus with the approvals that we've seen, And I understand the kind of mechanics from a customer standpoint. I wonder if you have any updated thinking on what B could mean to the company just from an overall revenue opportunity standpoint, right? We've got a $40,000,000,000 program where there's I guess the grantees are supposed to bring some money to Speaker 300:40:32the table as well. Speaker 500:40:33Maybe that's even a little bigger. I think you guys have talked about kind of a high single digit percentage exposure from kind of access infrastructure and network standpoint. But what do you when we get rolling up to something significant with bead, what do you think that could mean to Calyxt from a revenue perspective on an annual basis? Speaker 300:41:06So Tim, that's a great question. And I think it will be a significant number. You've delayed out the math, right? So it's a $42,000,000,000 program. There's a 25% match. Speaker 300:41:17So you're looking at over $50,000,000,000 of capital being put to work. It will be over a 5, 6, 7, 8 year timeframe. And we're going to start seeing the beginning of that in 2025. So I think it will take some time to get rolling in full steam. Our expected amount Calix can serve is about 8% of that number. Speaker 300:41:45So you take 8% of 50%. So it's a very large amount of money that will come over the next 5, 6, 7, 8 years. And so you can kind of put your own kind of ramp on it when it gets to that full steam. And I think we'll just do very well if it's past experience on these government programs is any indication and the bias towards smaller service providers serving those rural areas is any indication. Calix will get its more than its fair share of those proceeds. Speaker 200:42:22Great, thanks. Speaker 500:42:23I'm sorry, if I could follow-up, try to combine a couple of things here, but really starting with the new large cloud order that you mentioned, if you had any color on that with regard to kind of type or size of service provider, new or current customer. And I guess I asked that in a broader context of the uptick in RPOs. And a, it sounds like given your earlier comment, you said maybe expect that to continue with this new order contributing. But if we look at the drivers of RPOs, it seems to me it's probably 3 big, I won't say one off, but big orders like that, new customers, which you mentioned and also the shift in current customers towards additional platforms. Of those three factors, I guess, how did you see that play out in Q2 with the increase in RPOs and what would you expect in Q3? Speaker 300:43:29Yes. So as it relates to the RPO of those factors you outlined, it's consistent with what we've been saying. The number one factor for the increase in RPO is going to be the subscriber additions that our customers are adding. Right. So they're out there taking share, growing their footprint. Speaker 300:43:49The second one is they expand their use cases and the amount of of our products that we offer. So they're expanding the actual platform cloud advantage services. And the last contributor is new customer acquisition. It takes them a while to build up to it. And so this large contract was an existing customer. Speaker 300:44:10There was a renewal in Q2 and in Q3 existing customers and you get to further down the stream and when they come back in, they've grown their footprint over the last 3 years to a much larger size. And so when they renew that contract for the next 3 years on that larger base, it just tends to grow. So this is what you're seeing as these contracts come up. So that's the biggest genesis of it is not only did they take more of our platforms, but it's the size of base that they're applying that contract over. So let Speaker 200:44:47me expand out on that. So I want to use these two deals as explicit examples of the land and expand strategy, right. So the biggest deal we've ever done in Q that we had a record deal in Q2. And as Corey said, that was a net new deal where the customer committed over time. Why did they do that? Speaker 200:45:12They've been working with us for a long while. They've been adding subscribers. They see the value of the platform and then they made a pretty significant commitment to us over the long term. But their previous cloud contracts were tiny, right? The one that we closed last week was the same idea where it was essentially like a pay as you go working together, laying out the business model, identifying what the opportunity is. Speaker 200:45:41And then as that customer enjoyed significant success, we re upped it into a massive contract. And so that's what you have to think about on the way that we do these. Sometimes we say, hey, we added a new customer and like that small business customer, the commitment wasn't significant, but the commitment was significant mentally because they went after our they landed our platform into their business and now we're going to help them transform how they win small businesses. And what will happen is that will then lead to at some point in the once we demonstrate that they add a ton of subs, they'll go, hey, we want a better price. Therefore, we understand our volumes and let's actually do a proper contract and boom, you have another record contract. Speaker 200:46:32And so this business requires patience. This business requires consistency. This business requires us sitting beside our customers, their CEOs and their leadership teams, helping them win. And we're the only ones doing it frankly. No one else is. Speaker 200:46:52Everyone else is popping into the office and saying, here's the PO by my box, I'll see you in a little while. We're going to win because our customers are going to win. Speaker 500:47:07I appreciate all that color. And last one for me. And you mentioned that the large and medium segments were less weak than you anticipated, I think probably close to down 20% versus 50%. Conversely, that implies some weakness among the smaller carriers that maybe you didn't expect. And I know there's the shifting of the carrier classification there likely has some impact. Speaker 500:47:37But I wonder if you can give us a little more color on that dynamic amongst the smaller carriers and what you saw there? And that's it for me. Thanks. Speaker 300:47:47Yes, you bet. The lower appliance revenue from our smaller customer segment is really from the normalizing orders due to our shortened lead times and creating that base for what we're seeing as the new normal. Speaker 200:48:06Okay. Thanks. Operator00:48:09Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Christian Schwab with Craig Hallum Capital. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 900:48:17Hey, great. Just I think we all understand by this point the platform sales process of your company and the competitive advantage you have there. But in reality, when we go back to bead, right, on our math, you have a little bit over 2,100 different service providers, in the Tier 2, Tier 3, Tier 4 category. And so when that feed money is released, obviously, you'll have an expanded opportunity for customer dialogue on a platform. But just as far as speeds and feeds equipment, right, you should over time as that money is rolled out and deployed regardless of whether they buy your platform software, you should see a material increase in equipment orders, shouldn't you? Speaker 300:49:19Yes, that is true, Christian. But more importantly, understand that that hardware is the ability for us then to follow that up with the premises and our platform cloud and managed services. So we look at Bead as kind of an acceleration to be able to pull forward our platform cloud and managed services model. So while there will be an increase in hardware or appliance revenue, the real, real positive is the fact that it pulls forward our business model. Yes, understood. Speaker 300:49:59I just wanted to make sure I was thinking about it correct. That's it. Thank you. Operator00:50:06Thank you. We've reached the end of the question and answer session. And I'll turn the call over to Jim Fanucchi for closing remarks. Speaker 100:50:13Thank you, Rob. Calix will participate in several investor events during the Q3 and information about these events, including the dates and times and publicly available webcast will be posted on the Events and Presentations page of our Investor Relations website. Once again, thank you to everyone on this call and webcast for your interest and talents and for joining us. This concludes our conference call. Have a good day. Operator00:50:37Thank you. Thank you for everyone's participation today. You may now disconnect your lines at this time.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCalix Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Calix Earnings HeadlinesCalix Water Treatment Products Exempt from U.S. TariffsApril 8, 2025 | tipranks.comInvestors might be losing patience for Calix's (NYSE:CALX) increasing losses, as stock sheds 10% over the past weekApril 7, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comHere’s How to Claim Your Stake in Elon’s Private Company, xAIEven though xAI is a private company, tech legend and angel investor Jeff Brown found a way for everyday folks like you… To partner with Elon on what he believes will be the biggest AI project of the century… Starting with as little as $500.April 15, 2025 | Brownstone Research (Ad)When Emergencies Strike Local Broadband Providers Deliver a Communications Lifeline for Their Communities With Calix SmartTownApril 4, 2025 | tmcnet.comCalix Inc (CALX) Enhances Community Connectivity with SmartTown and Broadband PlatformApril 3, 2025 | gurufocus.comCalix Inc (CALX) Partners with GoFibre to Transform Broadband Services in the UKApril 1, 2025 | gurufocus.comSee More Calix Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Calix? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Calix and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About CalixCalix (NYSE:CALX), together with its subsidiaries, engages in the provision of cloud and software platforms, and systems and services in the United States, rest of Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the Asia Pacific. Its cloud and software platforms, and systems and services enable broadband service providers (BSPs) to provide a range of services. The company provides Calix Cloud platform, a role-based analytics platform comprising Calix Engagement Cloud, Calix Service Cloud, and Calix Operations Cloud, which are configurable to display role-based insights and enable BSPs to anticipate and target new revenue-generating services and applications through mobile application, such as CommandIQ for residents and CommandWorx for businesses; Calix Intelligent Access EDGE, an access network solution for automated and intelligent networks; and Calix Revenue EDGE, a premises solution for subscriber managed services. It also offers SmartLife managed services, including SmartHome managed services and applications to enhance, operate and secure the connected experience of subscribers in their home; SmartTown managed services that reimagine community Wi-Fi as a ubiquitous, secure, and managed experience across a BSP's footprint; and SmartBiz managed services that address the business networking and productivity needs of business owners with an all-in-one managed service. In addition, the company provides Wi-Fi systems under GigaSpire and GigaPro brands to be ready for deployment as a complete subscriber experience solution for BSP's residential and business subscribers. It offers its products through its direct sales force and resellers. The company was incorporated in 1999 and is headquartered in San Jose, California.View Calix ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Why Analysts Boosted United Airlines Stock Ahead of EarningsLamb Weston Stock Rises, Earnings Provide Calm Amidst ChaosIntuitive Machines Gains After Earnings Beat, NASA Missions AheadCintas Delivers Earnings Beat, Signals More Growth AheadNike Stock Dips on Earnings: Analysts Weigh in on What’s NextAfter Massive Post Earnings Fall, Does Hope Remain for MongoDB?Semtech Rallies on Earnings Beat—Is There More Upside? 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There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings, everyone. Welcome to the Calix Second Quarter 20 24 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the brief prepared remarks. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:21It's now my pleasure to introduce your host, Jim Fanucchi, Vice President of Investor Relations. Sir, please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:29Thank you, Rob, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our Q2 2024 earnings call. Speaker 200:00:35Today on Speaker 100:00:35the call, we have President and CEO, Michael Beeney and Chief Financial Officer, Corey Synthalar. As a reminder, yesterday after the market closed, Calix issued a news release, which was furnished on a Form 8 ks along with our stockholder letter and was also posted in the Investor Relations section of the Calix website. Today's conference call will be available for webcast replay in the Investor Relations section of our website. Before I turn the call over to Michael for his opening remarks, I want to remind everyone on this call, we will refer to forward looking statements, including all statements the company will make about its future financial and operating performance, growth strategy, market outlook and actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by these forward looking statements. Factors that could cause actual results and trends to differ materially are set forth in the Q2 2024 letter to stockholders and in the annual and quarterly reports filed with the SEC. Speaker 100:01:32Galix assumes no obligation to update any forward looking statements, which speak only as of their respective dates. Also on this conference call, we will discuss both GAAP and non GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP measures is included in the Q2 of 2024 letter to stockholders, unless otherwise noted. All financial information referenced in this call will be non GAAP. With that, it is my pleasure to turn the call over to Michael. Speaker 300:01:59Michael, please go ahead. Speaker 200:02:00Thank you, Jim. Our results in the Q2 demonstrated the strength and execution of our strategy. Our platform, cloud and managed services continue to enable our broadband customers to dominate their markets as they simplify their operations and go to market, innovate across the consumer, business and municipal segments of the markets they serve and grow the value for their members or investors and in turn to Calix. Once again, our unique broadband business model delivered record gross margin. Robust expansion of our platform cloud and managed services led to a sequential 9% increase in RPOs as BSPs continue to turn to Calyxt in the face of growing competition to win new subscribers through the ever expanding capabilities of the Calyxt platform, cloud and managed services. Speaker 200:02:55As we have discussed, the market is crossing the chasm and this is best evidenced by our landing footprint with 24 new BSP customers who started their business transformation with Calix in Q2, up from 10 in Q1. Our appliance business is settling into a new normal where we see smaller orders and many, many more of them. This gives us the confidence to forecast a return to sequential quarterly revenue growth in Q3. And our momentum continues into Q3 as the team recently closed our largest platform cloud and managed services deal setting a new record. Speaker 300:03:35With that, I'd like to turn Speaker 200:03:36it over to Corey to review our financial results for the Q1. Corey? Thank you, Michael. Speaker 300:03:43The Q2 represented another quarter of deliberate and disciplined execution. We delivered revenue of $198,000,000 Speaker 200:03:51which was within the guidance range we provided in April. As we continue Speaker 300:03:56to navigate the crosswinds that are still prevalent in our industry, The continued growth in our platform cloud and managed services drove record non GAAP gross margin of 55.1%. In the Q2, we saw strong platform adoption with 17 customers beginning their platform journey with us, 19 new cloud deployments and 22 additional customers deploying a managed service for the first time. Remaining performance obligation or RPOs grew to $267,000,000 at the end of the quarter. This is an increase of $22,000,000 or 9% sequentially and up $54,000,000 or 25% year over year. Furthermore, our current RPOs were $103,000,000 up 4% sequentially and up 28% year over year. Speaker 300:04:56As we've discussed before, the increases in RPO reflect new customer additions and the continued adoption of our platform offering as our existing customers add new subscribers and expand their use of our platform cloud and managed services. As a result, we expect RPO will continue to grow. In the Q2 of 2024, non GAAP operating expenses were $104,000,000 down $4,000,000 from the prior quarter. The decrease is mostly attributable to lower outside services and professional fees. As we have said before, our plan is to keep 2024 operating expenses expense investments relatively consistent with 2023 as we believe this level of investment represents a great opportunity for us to grow our footprint ahead of the expected U. Speaker 300:05:49S. Government broadband investment. Our debt free balance sheet and balance sheet metrics remain strong. Speaker 200:05:57At the end of the quarter, cash Speaker 300:05:59and investments were just over $261,000,000 representing a sequential increase of roughly $22,000,000 This was our 5th consecutive quarter of double digit free cash flow. DSO was 38, Inventories were 2.8 down from 3.1 last quarter as our component inventories increased. Excluding component inventory, our inventory turns would have been 3.7 and inventory deposits decreased by $6,000,000 bringing our total inventory deposit down to $70,000,000 Furthermore, we expect continued profitability combined with working capital reduction will result in consistent double digit quarterly operating free operating and free cash flow. Now let's discuss revenue guidance for the Q3. Based on the current ordering trends Speaker 200:06:59and new customer acquisitions, we believe Speaker 300:07:03the Q2 marks the bottom for 2024 Speaker 200:07:07and we will grow from here. Speaker 300:07:09For the Q3 of 2024, our revenue outlook is to be between 198 $8,000,000 $204,000,000 Speaker 200:07:19In terms of feed, we've seen Speaker 300:07:21a lot of progress since our last call. As we sat here a quarter ago, only one state, Louisiana, had completed all ten steps of the program. Today, there are 20 states and territories approved through all ten steps and they represent $12,000,000,000 of the $42,000,000,000 program. While the approvals have accelerated, we believe that we will begin seeing orders in 2025 early 2025. In summary, Q2 represents a low point for revenue in 2024 and we will return to sequential quarterly revenue growth in Q3. Speaker 300:08:01We continue to add new BSD customers every quarter, which over time will support our growth objectives. In addition, our platform cloud and managed services grows each quarter, driving our RPO and gross margin expansion. We have the most pristine balance sheet in the industry, which gives us the financial capacity to invest in our operation and expand our footprint as our industry process the chasm. Michael, back to you. Speaker 200:08:28Thanks, Corey. Throughout Q2, I continued to meet with broadband customers and their investors with the discussion remaining the same. How to win? The industry is under significant stress as legacy network operators face the disruption of increased competition and the expanding risk of commoditization as broadband speed disappears as a differentiator. This shift from speed to an experience mindset is critical to our crossing the chasm from early adopters to winning the early majority and it is accelerating. Speaker 200:09:02With 10 65 BSPs now deploying our platform, which grows every quarter, we continue to engage with prospects of all sizes to educate them on the power of the platform while supporting our existing customers as they expand their business model across consumer, business and the communities they serve. It is the winning business model that is achieving incredible revenue, margin, cash flow and customer satisfaction results every single day. In closing, our confidence in returning to sequential quarterly revenue growth is driven by an expanding funnel of opportunities as our unique platform cloud and managed services model enables our customers to succeed. We have the financial strength and balance sheet that allows us to execute without distraction, while maintaining a disciplined and steady hand on our operating expense investments that support our VSP customers as they win their markets and together we succeed for the long term. Term. Speaker 200:10:07Jim, let's open Speaker 300:10:08the call for questions. Thanks, Michael. Rob, at this time, you Speaker 100:10:12can please open up the lines for questions. Operator00:10:15Thank you, Jim. We'll now be conducting a question and answer Thank you. And our first question, it comes from the line of Samik Chatterjee with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your questions. Mr. Operator00:10:54Chatterjee, your line is open for questions. Perhaps you're on Speaker 100:11:03mute. Probably, the next one will pull Sonic back into the rotation. Operator00:11:07Yes. Thank you. The next question is from the line of Ryan Kuntz with Needham and Company. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 400:11:13Great. Thanks for coming on. On the pressure on the large and medium customer cohort and decline there, do you have an updated view of the drivers behind the tight capital environment between interest rates and B preparation? How would you kind of characterize the top three drivers there among your largest customer base? Speaker 300:11:39Well, I actually don't think it's a large customer phenomenon. Speaker 200:11:42I actually think it's across the entire base. And this goes back to what we've articulated in Q4 and Q1. It remains the same. So the first one is that they're going through a decision making process with regards to B. You've seen the complexity of that scenario. Speaker 200:11:59Now it's making progress and Cory can talk to that extensively. But as they go through that again, their planning teams are now focused on how do they do those submissions and then in second half a lot of that will finally come to clarity and that's companies of all sizes, small, medium and large, right? That's the first one. The second one is that, again, small, medium and large. The second thing they're considering is that if they are an entity that has private equity backing or investors, the pervasively high interest rates and the increase in competition, which again we forecasted for many years has caused them to say, okay, should we slow down a little bit or contemplate our business model as we're not getting the loads that we need. Speaker 200:12:52And so let's really pivot hard into our existing investments and win new subscribers, which really comes down to the crossing the chasm part is that we really needed them. If I go back a year ago, a year ago I was at U. S. Telecom, which was a big CEO event. And a year ago I was and the year before I was the one who is a bit of a naysayer in that room constantly saying the same thing that we said at our Connections event, which is speed is going to commoditize. Speaker 200:13:24It's not a differentiator. Building fiber is not enough. You actually know that you need to build a comprehensive business model to own the community. And as little as a year ago, especially with the medium and large customers, they were dismissive. They're like, no, I'm doing well enough. Speaker 200:13:40I keep going at it. Where our smaller customers were aggressively pivoting into that experience community center brand message. I was there again this summer and frankly they were all saying the same thing. There is a ton of investors there and they're all like, you know what, we've been building for the last 3 years. We're not getting the subscriber loads on our networks that we thought we would. Speaker 200:14:02The competition is a lot higher than I expected and I really need to be contemplating my business model. And frankly, to us, this is the exact thing that we have been building our company for 13 years to build that opportunity and it makes us crossing the chasm that crossing the chasm leads easier because now they're under a ton of pressure, which is what I talked about in my opening remarks. Corey, anything that summarizes it. Speaker 400:14:38And Corey, the mention of the largest platform deal ever, was that included in your stated RPO for 2Q or is that a 3Q event? Speaker 300:14:47That is a new event, Brian, that will be reflected in our Q3 RPO number. Speaker 200:14:51Well, to be clear, in Q2, we booked the largest platform and cloud deal in the company's history in Q2 and then run up to this call, we actually closed a larger deal. So 7 new records for our cloud managed services, but that's a Q3 deal. Speaker 400:15:13Awesome. That's great. And Corey, can you give us any color on the product mix in the quarter across network versus CPE in general? Like how has that trended in 2Q versus say last 12 months? Speaker 300:15:31Yes. In terms of our gross margin, what you're seeing is exactly kind of amplified for what Michael has just talked about. We're seeing operators spending less time building out new networks and working towards adding new subscribers to their networks, turning on revenue and cash flows for them. And so we've seen a shift in our product mix towards premises, away from appliance revenue from the network compliance side. Speaker 400:16:07Got it. So even though the hardware there has got lower gross margin, the higher software mix you're selling more of the mix up Speaker 300:16:13of that? That is spot on. Speaker 500:16:18All right. Speaker 400:16:18I'll get back in queue. Thanks for the questions. Operator00:16:23Thank you. Our next questions are from the line of Samik Chatterjee from JPMorgan. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 600:16:29Hi, thanks for letting me jump back on here. I know, Michael, you mentioned you mentioned about bead early on in the prepared remarks. Just wondering, we've seen some other suppliers start to talk about receiving bead related orders already even though they ship out in 2025. Can you just address sort of where you are in terms of the timing? And I think the primary question from investors is how material can be related revenues be for your model in 2025? Speaker 600:17:00Anything you can share on that front in terms of how to think about whether it should be revenues from sort of all 50 plus states or should it be really a fraction of the geographies just considering how the pace of approvals are? And I have a quick follow-up. Speaker 300:17:18Sure. Happy to talk about that. And we while there's others out there that are talking about orders and revenue starting this year, We've been consistent regarding our thoughts around B. We expect to start receiving orders in the Q1 of 2025. Orders, not necessarily revenue. Speaker 300:17:40We do not know what that ramp will be after we start receiving orders. We do know that 20 states have their volume 2 proposals approved and that represents $12,000,000,000 of the $42,000,000,000 So you might recall on our last call, I suggested that as long as there was at least 10 to 15 states approved that we would get enough to actually start seeing an impact, a meaningful impact in 2025. And so we're sitting here today with 20. So that's the good news that there's certainly enough money now available for that program to have an impact on 2025. But there's other steps that will follow such as NTIA's approval of each state's broadband map subsequent to the challenge process. Speaker 300:18:27So there's certainly more challenges to overcome as that program continues to roll out. That said, we will do well with BE as we have with every government program, large and small for the last 20 years. Speaker 600:18:48Yes, got it. The just the other question that I'm getting this morning from investors is we've seen the lower mix of revenue from your large customers. Is there anything beyond sort of the cyclical headwinds in terms of market share with some of your large customers, just given the revenue decline you've seen with them on a year over year basis? Speaker 300:19:12Yes. So in the quarter, it was actually better than we thought it would be. So it's better than feared. So that was a positive and encouraging sign for us. The hold back in our large and medium segment is a lot of reduction in CapEx spending as they're reevaluating their priorities. Speaker 300:19:34But you might recall that we had talked about, we thought that large and medium segments would have again inside of Q2. And obviously, it did not, it did better than we thought. So there are signs of them kind of coming out of those decision making process and getting back on with their ordering programs. So we are encouraged by that. And so I think that's a positive development. Speaker 300:20:00Yes. Speaker 200:20:00And if anything, the medium and large are actually starting to finally listen around the conversation, which I talked about around the trust around monetization and actually how they have to change the business strategy. So Speaker 300:20:14in Q2, we closed the Tier 2 Speaker 200:20:17that we've never done. They used to be a big customer of ours, but has not actually done anything with our cloud and we closed with them on a go to market strategy around smart business. So how to actually attack their very sizable small business base and win with a radically different experience. And so if anything, I would say that this is now our share opportunity to grow and you saw that as represented by the 24 new logos that we added this quarter. Those are not new companies starting up. Speaker 200:20:48Those are wins for companies who want to change their business model and evolve and transform with Calix. Speaker 600:20:58Thank you. Thanks for taking my questions. Operator00:21:02Our next question is from the line of George Notter with Jefferies. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 700:21:09Hi, guys. Thanks very much. I wanted to ask about as we think about the impacts in the business, I think you guys have mentioned a number of things, certainly in the shareholder letter, certainly in recent quarters. But I'm wondering if you could kind of talk about what the biggest impacts are on the hardware side of the business right now. We've talked about delays in decision making associated with BEED and government funding. Speaker 700:21:36You've talked about customers adjusting lead times because of adjusting order levels because your lead times are shorter. We talked about higher interest rates. We talked about a shift towards adding subs versus core infrastructure. I guess I'm just wondering if there's kind of a map to what these different factors Speaker 300:22:06Well Speaker 200:22:09Well, actually George, you summarized them very clearly. If you want us to stack rank them, I would say that it depends on the company and therefore inside each company, they're going to be different. So let's cover off what you've said succinctly and accurately covered, which is what we've been saying for multiple quarters since we started to see this in late 2023. So the one with the decision making on beef, as we've always stated that government funding is going to take much longer than anticipated and in the end will be a much larger funding outpouring over time. So while it's a $42,000,000,000 program on lead, it's actually added 25% and significantly larger. Speaker 200:22:59We you succinctly stated that lead times has been adjusting how they think about inventory because we actually dropped our lead times down. They're now at what is our new normal on the appliance side, which is why we're also comfortable with stating very clearly that we're going to return to the sequential revenue growth because of the fact that our lead times are now where they are. The good thing in that is that I constantly get questions from customers that as they clear that first point on decision making, well, we have enough inventory to serve them. That question continues to get asked to me. I've probably answered it 10 times this quarter alone. Speaker 200:23:45And my response is the same though that we've given Speaker 100:23:48to investors also, which is that Speaker 200:23:49when we entered the pandemic and faced a surge in demand, it was a significant issue because we had 3,200 SKUs. We're now counter around 200 SKUs. We have an incredible supply chain. We're optimized to meet any demand spikes. And so that's great. Speaker 200:24:05So we're in great shape there as that changes. And then the interest rates, you succinctly covered off interest rates. If I'm a private equity investor, they were investing with abandon through the pandemic. If you had a as I like to joke, if you had a pulse, you could raise $20,000,000 and could spell broadband and people were throwing money willy nilly. And now what they're starting to do is take a step back and say, wait a second, we've been at this now for 2 or 3 years and the business model showed that I would be getting this amount of ramp and I'm not achieving that ramp. Speaker 200:24:47And in fact, what I'm seeing is when I go into certain markets, I have more competition than I anticipated. But more importantly, the fundamental thesis at the beginning of the pandemic, which is build fiber and they will come and you will win is actually fundamentally flawed again, which we've been stating. So that and the fact that interest rates are higher are having some of them say, wait a second, I need you to go pivot all your attention back to it's great that you're a good construction company and that's what a lot of broadband companies are, great construction companies, great network operators, but how are you going to market and sell and win that community and get do what Tom Bigby has done and get market share that's at 60% and an NBS of 92% and shutting off incredible ARPU, massive cash flow and huge margins or like Allo is doing. How are you going to go do that? And so that not only interest rates that becomes a reason why they have the conversation, but it also is leading to these management teams coming under significant stress because their investors are saying where's the frigging money, right? Speaker 200:25:58And that's great for us. I go back to U. S. Telecom. When I was there a year ago, people were kind of, yes, yes, whatever, Michael, whatever, what Michael. Speaker 200:26:08But when I was there this go around, there were many of them saying, hey, I'm working with Calix on this, I'm working with Calix on that because I need to change my business model if I'm going to win. And that's what we've always stated and it just becomes the impetus to actually have the conversation and realize that the pain is right there. So the interest rates, I would say, are just an impetus to having the conversation that your business model needs to change, right? You need to cross that chasm with us. And then and that which then led to the very succinct thing. Speaker 200:26:42So I think your third point and then your subs versus infrastructure, those in essence are the same thing. Because if you're winning a shedload of subs like Allo is or Tom Bigby is or many of our other customers are, who cares about interest rates because your margins are so strong, your take rates are so high, your return on invested capital is so massive, you don't care. If it was a 20% interest rate, you'd still be investing because your market share is yielding a huge return on investment. And so it's difficult for us to stack rank it. Others can say, George, all you're spot on and it just depends on the customer. Speaker 200:27:25And so, when I go back to well, the quarter's adds, 24 network operators decided to become broadband service providers this quarter, 24. And these are not new companies. These are ones that are deciding that, you know what, I'm going to partner with Calix to actually change my business model. And so that is that's the market, that's the industry. Speaker 700:27:52Got it. And then just one quick one. On lead times, was there more reduction in lead times this quarter versus last quarter or we have we been at a stasis on lead times all year? And what are lead times? Yes. Speaker 200:28:07We've been Operator00:28:20Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Scott Searle with ROTH Capital Partners. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 800:28:28Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Nice to see the bottom put in for the Q2 and looking for sequential growth as we go into the back half of the year. Maybe quickly to just hit on a couple of share questions, Mike. It sounds like you're gaining share within the Tier 2s. Speaker 800:28:44I was wondering if you could address that. And then more specifically, as we look to bead, I know you guys have been working in a consulting with many of these bead requests, I'm wondering if you have some early thoughts in terms of what you think share is going to look like between Tier 1, 2s and 3s as beat funding starts to roll the market in 2025. Clearly, you guys would be better positioned with the Tier 3s and Tier 2s. But I'm kind of wondering what your thought process is there in terms of the share gains that they might have within those categories? Speaker 200:29:20So lots of complex questions in there. So the first one is with regards to share, the way we think about market share is actually the customers that we're aligned with whether or not they're taking share. And one of the best examples of that this quarter would be that we had a small customer who grew to a medium customer. Why? Because they're thinking they're actually adding subs, they're growing their business and they're winning in the markets that they serve. Speaker 200:29:47So when we think about market share, we think of it that way. And then on adding subs, one of the things that we talked about the Tier 2 that actually went to our small business solution. The way this goes back to the underlying business strategy that we've always articulated, which is we're uniquely positioned in that we have this very diverse platform that allows us to find a beachhead into a customer and then demonstrate to them what success looks like. So with that one, they were are coming under pressure with regards to I need to improve ARPU, I need to slow churn, I need to grow revenue and that's why they chose our small business solution. And once the small business solution goes into that customer who now the entire platform is in. Speaker 200:30:44So we've hooked into the back office, we've hooked into their business processes and it's easy for them to continue to expand as they see success. So the key thing about gaining share for us is that once we garner that beachhead like we have in that Tier 2 with small business, we then flood our customer success team into it to help that customer transform their go to market strategy, win a whole bunch of new small business customers and then hopefully expand with us over time. With regard to bead consulting, the way that our bead process is radically different than most others. You saw that in Q1 when we announced the relationship with ready.net, who has incredible cloud and software tools to help broadband service providers actually understand me. And so we're hand in glove. Speaker 200:31:38So while others are, as Corey said touting, hey, I got some orders in, I got some orders in. We're actually sitting down beside with that beside them, putting in their beat submissions, helping them articulate it. We've got a team, a big team of people who do it plus our ready partnership to ensure that we are side by side and planning with them not only in how to win and how they pitch the local state office, but then also what the implications are on timeline. And that's through the second half, we'll get clearer and clearer. With regards to who's going to win Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, the reality is that one of the things you've heard a lot of grossing about is that if this program was actually centralized in Washington, D. Speaker 200:32:26C. And everything was through a single office centrally, then the bigger companies would definitely have a significant advantage because they'd be able to do what they do well and they put a massive lobbying arm into DC and they could influence outcomes. By having this as a state by state, territory by territory program, The ones who are advantaged are the ones who are local. And you hear that in the when I'm out in the speaking to the different groups, you hear a lot of that is that as these are state run projects, they really want companies who care about the local state, whether that's a for profit or a cooperative to actually be that voice in that office and win the money because they know that they're not in it just to kind of scarf up a bunch of money and pad a P and L like other programs have in the past. They're actually they care about the community, they're in the community, they're in the state and they're there for the long term. Speaker 200:33:30And so while that has definitely been one of the reasons where you've seen a slowdown in the BEAT process, at the same time, I think that very democratic process and that's been diffused out to the different states is really powerful. And frankly, I think an advantage is both the companies that care about the state. Speaker 300:33:55So Mike bottom line there Scott, just to amplify one thing on Michael. BEAT is just a single program. Yes, it's a big one, but there are lots of government programs out there, a lot of state money. Our customers do very well and Calix does very well as a result and have so for the last 20 years of taking advantage of these government programs. We're going to do just fine with the speed one as well. Speaker 300:34:24Got you. So not to put words in Speaker 800:34:25your mouth, but it sounds like your customers disproportionately to their current broadband share should participate pretty well in BEAT and other programs going forward. Is that correct? Speaker 300:34:39That's true, Ryan. And in BEAT in particular, you got to think again, these are hard locations, right? These are the most rural parts of the country. And so these are the ones that are done last. And so it's going to be somebody with a community minded perspective, willing to make those investments to go after those hard to get locations. Speaker 300:35:00So we think that will disproportionately lead to the smaller players to go after those locations. Speaker 800:35:07Great. And lastly, if I could on a follow-up, I think last quarter you talked about, right, certainly 'twenty four is a transition year, but it seemed like there was enough green shoots that 'twenty five you'd be shaping up to get back into the targeted 10% to 15% growth range. I'm wondering if you could update your thoughts on that front and also kind of full bead into the conversation. Corey, you said, look, if we get 10 to 15 states or territories, you'd be feeling pretty good about the bead contribution into 2025. Now we're at 20 states, you've got another 36 states that have completed 9 out of 10 steps. Speaker 800:35:43So by the time we have this call, in the October timeframe, you could have double that number. So I'm kind of wondering how bead kind of layers into that thought process for growth in 2025? Thanks. Speaker 300:35:59Thanks, Scott. What we're seeing here on the appliance side is that we're establishing a new normal, where our smaller orders seeing smaller order sizes, but many, many more of them. There's a healthy trend with us planning new footprint as evidenced by the 24 new customers. When you combine that with the robust demand of our platform cloud and managed services as noted by the 9% sequential growth and the signing of our largest cloud deal lever this quarter in Q3. I think we're I think what you're seeing is we've put the bottom in and we're going to return to that sequential revenue growth. Speaker 300:36:45What you're poking at is what does that quarterly growth rate look like from here on out. I think we're going to take a very pragmatic view about it, given the fact that we've had a the last few quarters on the appliance side. And so we will be cautious going forward. I think as we look out at the next several quarters, we had talked about a quarterly growth rate of 1% to 5%. We'll be at that lower end of that range here for the next several quarters. Speaker 300:37:19And as we progress through 2025, as we start seeing contributions from the customer acquisitions, as we see the large and medium customers continue to return back, as we start seeing some of the beat shipments, not just orders, but shipments, we will move to, let's call it, the middle of that range by the end of the 2025. And so there'll be a general progression there as those revenue streams layer into this bottom that we're creating right now. Speaker 200:37:51Yes. And a good example of that would be we won a really incredible customer in Q2 last year. They were at the upper end of small, will definitely cross over into medium and they're an innovator with a huge amount of money behind them. But it took them some time to actually migrate their way over to Calix. They had to get rid of some of their existing inventory, those different elements. Speaker 200:38:19And Q2 is the first time we started to see actually Q2 this year, a year later doing all that work with them is where we finally started to see the orders won. So the key thing in all of this is that we can have a short term view of chase this, but we're actually as we stated on and on every single time, our whole goal is to use this disruptive time whenever when things are popping up or falling apart or the disruption happening to cross that chasm, win a whole bunch of new customers and then basically set in place by winning those beachheads as I mentioned with that Tier 2. So that becomes the beginning of an expansion of the footprint in an entirely new customer. And so this footprint attack that we're on will not has not yielded in this quarter or next quarter, although we have hit the bottom and we're going to now go sequentially, but we're laying those early green shoots in net new accounts to win for the long term. And that's what our entire leadership team, our entire field team is what they're focused on is we're thinking about 20252026 like the work that we're doing right now will pay off in a huge way again as evidenced by the amount of logos that we went over this quarter. Speaker 200:39:39Great. Thank you. Operator00:39:43Our next question is from the line of Tim Savage with Northland Capital Markets. Please proceed with your questions. Speaker 500:39:50Hey, good morning. I wanted to stay with Bede for a second here. As this opportunity maybe comes into greater view or greater focus with the approvals that we've seen, And I understand the kind of mechanics from a customer standpoint. I wonder if you have any updated thinking on what B could mean to the company just from an overall revenue opportunity standpoint, right? We've got a $40,000,000,000 program where there's I guess the grantees are supposed to bring some money to Speaker 300:40:32the table as well. Speaker 500:40:33Maybe that's even a little bigger. I think you guys have talked about kind of a high single digit percentage exposure from kind of access infrastructure and network standpoint. But what do you when we get rolling up to something significant with bead, what do you think that could mean to Calyxt from a revenue perspective on an annual basis? Speaker 300:41:06So Tim, that's a great question. And I think it will be a significant number. You've delayed out the math, right? So it's a $42,000,000,000 program. There's a 25% match. Speaker 300:41:17So you're looking at over $50,000,000,000 of capital being put to work. It will be over a 5, 6, 7, 8 year timeframe. And we're going to start seeing the beginning of that in 2025. So I think it will take some time to get rolling in full steam. Our expected amount Calix can serve is about 8% of that number. Speaker 300:41:45So you take 8% of 50%. So it's a very large amount of money that will come over the next 5, 6, 7, 8 years. And so you can kind of put your own kind of ramp on it when it gets to that full steam. And I think we'll just do very well if it's past experience on these government programs is any indication and the bias towards smaller service providers serving those rural areas is any indication. Calix will get its more than its fair share of those proceeds. Speaker 200:42:22Great, thanks. Speaker 500:42:23I'm sorry, if I could follow-up, try to combine a couple of things here, but really starting with the new large cloud order that you mentioned, if you had any color on that with regard to kind of type or size of service provider, new or current customer. And I guess I asked that in a broader context of the uptick in RPOs. And a, it sounds like given your earlier comment, you said maybe expect that to continue with this new order contributing. But if we look at the drivers of RPOs, it seems to me it's probably 3 big, I won't say one off, but big orders like that, new customers, which you mentioned and also the shift in current customers towards additional platforms. Of those three factors, I guess, how did you see that play out in Q2 with the increase in RPOs and what would you expect in Q3? Speaker 300:43:29Yes. So as it relates to the RPO of those factors you outlined, it's consistent with what we've been saying. The number one factor for the increase in RPO is going to be the subscriber additions that our customers are adding. Right. So they're out there taking share, growing their footprint. Speaker 300:43:49The second one is they expand their use cases and the amount of of our products that we offer. So they're expanding the actual platform cloud advantage services. And the last contributor is new customer acquisition. It takes them a while to build up to it. And so this large contract was an existing customer. Speaker 300:44:10There was a renewal in Q2 and in Q3 existing customers and you get to further down the stream and when they come back in, they've grown their footprint over the last 3 years to a much larger size. And so when they renew that contract for the next 3 years on that larger base, it just tends to grow. So this is what you're seeing as these contracts come up. So that's the biggest genesis of it is not only did they take more of our platforms, but it's the size of base that they're applying that contract over. So let Speaker 200:44:47me expand out on that. So I want to use these two deals as explicit examples of the land and expand strategy, right. So the biggest deal we've ever done in Q that we had a record deal in Q2. And as Corey said, that was a net new deal where the customer committed over time. Why did they do that? Speaker 200:45:12They've been working with us for a long while. They've been adding subscribers. They see the value of the platform and then they made a pretty significant commitment to us over the long term. But their previous cloud contracts were tiny, right? The one that we closed last week was the same idea where it was essentially like a pay as you go working together, laying out the business model, identifying what the opportunity is. Speaker 200:45:41And then as that customer enjoyed significant success, we re upped it into a massive contract. And so that's what you have to think about on the way that we do these. Sometimes we say, hey, we added a new customer and like that small business customer, the commitment wasn't significant, but the commitment was significant mentally because they went after our they landed our platform into their business and now we're going to help them transform how they win small businesses. And what will happen is that will then lead to at some point in the once we demonstrate that they add a ton of subs, they'll go, hey, we want a better price. Therefore, we understand our volumes and let's actually do a proper contract and boom, you have another record contract. Speaker 200:46:32And so this business requires patience. This business requires consistency. This business requires us sitting beside our customers, their CEOs and their leadership teams, helping them win. And we're the only ones doing it frankly. No one else is. Speaker 200:46:52Everyone else is popping into the office and saying, here's the PO by my box, I'll see you in a little while. We're going to win because our customers are going to win. Speaker 500:47:07I appreciate all that color. And last one for me. And you mentioned that the large and medium segments were less weak than you anticipated, I think probably close to down 20% versus 50%. Conversely, that implies some weakness among the smaller carriers that maybe you didn't expect. And I know there's the shifting of the carrier classification there likely has some impact. Speaker 500:47:37But I wonder if you can give us a little more color on that dynamic amongst the smaller carriers and what you saw there? And that's it for me. Thanks. Speaker 300:47:47Yes, you bet. The lower appliance revenue from our smaller customer segment is really from the normalizing orders due to our shortened lead times and creating that base for what we're seeing as the new normal. Speaker 200:48:06Okay. Thanks. Operator00:48:09Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Christian Schwab with Craig Hallum Capital. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 900:48:17Hey, great. Just I think we all understand by this point the platform sales process of your company and the competitive advantage you have there. But in reality, when we go back to bead, right, on our math, you have a little bit over 2,100 different service providers, in the Tier 2, Tier 3, Tier 4 category. And so when that feed money is released, obviously, you'll have an expanded opportunity for customer dialogue on a platform. But just as far as speeds and feeds equipment, right, you should over time as that money is rolled out and deployed regardless of whether they buy your platform software, you should see a material increase in equipment orders, shouldn't you? Speaker 300:49:19Yes, that is true, Christian. But more importantly, understand that that hardware is the ability for us then to follow that up with the premises and our platform cloud and managed services. So we look at Bead as kind of an acceleration to be able to pull forward our platform cloud and managed services model. So while there will be an increase in hardware or appliance revenue, the real, real positive is the fact that it pulls forward our business model. Yes, understood. Speaker 300:49:59I just wanted to make sure I was thinking about it correct. That's it. Thank you. Operator00:50:06Thank you. We've reached the end of the question and answer session. And I'll turn the call over to Jim Fanucchi for closing remarks. Speaker 100:50:13Thank you, Rob. Calix will participate in several investor events during the Q3 and information about these events, including the dates and times and publicly available webcast will be posted on the Events and Presentations page of our Investor Relations website. Once again, thank you to everyone on this call and webcast for your interest and talents and for joining us. This concludes our conference call. Have a good day. Operator00:50:37Thank you. Thank you for everyone's participation today. 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