BWX Technologies Q4 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

Skip to Participants
Operator

welcome to BWX Technologies' Fourth Quarter and Full Year twenty twenty four Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Following the company's prepared remarks, we will conduct a question and answer session and instructions will be given at that time. I would now like to turn the call over to our host, Chase Jacobson, BWXT's Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Chase Jacobson
Vice President, Investor Relations at BWX

Thank you, Gail. Good evening and welcome to today's call. Joining me are Rex Jeviden, President and CEO and Rob Lemasters, Executive Vice President and CFO. On today's call, we will reference the fourth quarter twenty twenty four earnings presentation that is available on the Investors section of the BWXT website. We will also discuss certain matters that constitute forward looking statements.

Chase Jacobson
Vice President, Investor Relations at BWX

These statements involve risks and uncertainties, including those described in the Safe Harbor provision found in the investor materials in the company's SEC filings. We will frequently discuss non GAAP financial measures, which are reconciled to GAAP measures in the appendix of the earnings presentation that can be found on the Investors section of the BWXT website. I would now like to turn the call over to Rex.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Thank you, Chase, and good evening to all of you. This afternoon, we reported better than expected fourth quarter earnings, capping off another strong year for BWXT. We generated record revenue, adjusted EBITDA, adjusted earnings per share and free cash flow, all meeting or exceeding the full year guidance metrics we set last year. Demand in our end markets is unprecedented. Major players in national security, clean energy and medical end markets view nuclear technologies as novel solutions for their mission needs.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

BWXT is well positioned to benefit from this accelerating demand, which drove our extremely strong fourth quarter and full year bookings. We ended 2024 with a backlog of $4,800,000,000 up 21% year over year from large contract awards in both of our operating segments. In addition to the focus on growth, we are obsessive about improving the business in all its aspects. Internally, we call this the BWXT Battle Plan. It has five elements that intertwine with one another, which are sustain and grow the core, invest strategically, expand into adjacent markets, drive performance and deliver the mission.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

The Battle Plan is our operating system and I use it to communicate our purpose and to drive the focus on execution every day. With that backdrop, let me take a few minutes to highlight how we are executing under this framework and how this is positioning BWXT for continued success in 2025 and beyond. First, we are investing strategically, organically and inorganically across our business lines. These investments create capacity, expand our capabilities with new products and services and importantly, increase customer confidence in choosing BWXT to support their most critical needs. In government operations, we recently completed the expansion of the BWXT Innovation Campus, the home of our advanced nuclear business line.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

This facility located adjacent to our naval reactor manufacturing plant in Lynchburg, Virginia is home to over 300 employees and has state of the art capabilities for the design and manufacturing of microreactors and advanced nuclear fuels for defense and commercial applications. We have spoken extensively about the major investments in our naval nuclear propulsion manufacturing plants. While the largest are behind us, we continue to make these strategic investments in our infrastructure to meet the current and future demands of our Naval Reactors customer. This includes maintaining a steady production rate of Virginia class reactor cores, increasing the cadence of Columbia class submarine production as we enter a serial ordering pattern over the next decade and capacity expansion for AUKUS. Further, in the first week of the New Year, we completed the acquisition of AOT, expanding our Special Materials business line into the depleted uranium assay with exciting new capabilities in R and D prototyping, testing and production for major customers, including the Department of Energy and Department of Defense.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

We are already uncovering interesting opportunities at AOT that would drive growth beyond the acquisition business case. In commercial operations, it is a similar story. The demand signals in commercial nuclear power and medical markets are strong and visible, and we are investing in plant capacity and workforce to address that demand. The ongoing expansion of the Cambridge manufacturing plant just outside of Toronto positions BWXT to pursue more projects for large heavy nuclear equipment. Beyond this investment, we are assessing options for additional capacity in North America as demand from utilities and non traditional high-tech buyers for green baseload power generation precipitates.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

In early January, to complement and enhance our commercial nuclear power business, we announced an agreement to acquire Conetrics Incorporated, which we expect to close in mid-twenty twenty five. Conetrics offers a comprehensive specialty service portfolio to commercial nuclear players globally, covering key stages of the project life cycle that we have coveted from reactor design and site licensing on the front end to testing, analysis and materials management throughout the life of a plant through to decommissioning support at the end of a plant's life. We have received unequivocally positive feedback on the announcement from our customers, whom we will be able to serve more effectively with a larger portfolio of services. Conetrix also has an interesting play in nuclear medicine isotope radiation services and stable isotope enrichment for the production of the most important oncology radiotherapeutic on the market, Lutetium-one hundred and seventy seven. This complements BWXT's capabilities and isotope production systems and processing and provides us exposure to the largest and most advanced pipeline of drugs in nuclear medicine.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Our investments extend beyond operations. Over the last year, we have taken on a full digital transformation initiative, including cloud migration, better collaboration tools, ERP consolidation, elimination of redundant on premise IT systems and vastly improved financial integration tools enabling faster and better decisions business decisions. Overall, our investments to enhance capabilities, drive growth and improve efficiency are paying off. Yet, we remain committed to an active and disciplined capital deployment strategy. How does all this translated to our results and future growth?

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

As I noted, in 2024, we achieved record financial performance. Adjusted EBITDA grew 6%, adjusted earnings per share were up 10% and free cash flow was nearly 20% higher, driven by strong operations and supported by many of the financial initiatives Rob and his team have implemented. In government operations, despite multiple severe weather disruptions and a tough year over year comparison, we delivered revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth in line with our expectations. We continue to hire and drive productivity through lean manufacturing processes and increased use of technology, mitigating the impact of higher labor costs and a business mix shift toward less mature, therefore, lower margin programs. During the year, we delivered multiple critical components to Naval Reactors and drove progress in our microreactor and special materials programs such as Pele, DRACO and U metal processing.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

In the fourth quarter, we booked our next pricing agreement for naval propulsion reactors and components. Through the year, we also secured several long term technical services contracts. In November, we took responsibility for management and operations at the Pantech site. And just today, we assumed full responsibility for environmental restoration at the Hanford tank site after a successful four month transition period. Both contracts boost the bottom line and provide added earnings visibility over a multiyear period.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Further in September, we announced that BWXT was the sole awardee of a contract to study the build out of a national security enrichment plant, a vital strategic capability that The U. S. Does not presently possess. This could blossom into a new and exciting long term opportunity for BWXT, which would enhance the security and energy independence of The United States. These wins with our existing book of business provide the foundation for continued growth in government operations in 2025.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

In commercial operations, we delivered double digit revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth in 2024, driven by strong growth in Commercial Power in the Commercial Power and Medical end markets. Commercial Power revenue grew by more than 10%, driven by steam generator deliveries and services to the Bruce Power Life Extension project, which will persist through the early 2030s. We are entering the final phases of the Darlington Refurbishment, one of the highest performing nuclear projects in the world over the past decade. We are particularly proud of this project as it serves as a proof point against the misapprehension that all nuclear projects experience cost and schedule overruns. The positive precedent set by these projects led OPG to commit to extending the life of its Pickering B reactors, for which BWXT has been selected to provide 48 steam generators.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Finally, earlier in the year, we were awarded the contract to manufacture the reactor pressure vessel for the BWRX300 small modular reactor project at the Darlington site, and we continue to anticipate multiple follow on orders in Canada, USA and Europe. Having booked the RPV and a considerable portion of the Pickering contract in the fourth quarter, commercial operations enters 2025 with a record backlog of $930,000,000 up 19% supporting our expectation for another year of double digit Commercial Power revenue growth. Looking ahead, the opportunity set in Commercial Power is rich to say the least. In Canada, Ontario Power Generation recently announced that it is assessing adding up to 10 gigawatts of new nuclear capacity at Port Hope. Bruce Power is evaluating technologies to add up to five gigawatts of new capacity.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

And in The United States, the Tennessee Valley Authority along with a group of industry partners including BWXT announced that it is seeking DOE support to build SMRs at the Clinch River site. BWXGB Medical continued its strong growth trajectory. Revenue grew 23% in 2024 and EBITDA turned more meaningfully positive. This was driven by CDMO and pet diagnostics business lines and increased sales of therapeutic isotopes for ACTINIUM two twenty five clinical trials. We signed our second TEC 99 commercial agreement with a key distributor during the fourth quarter, further affirming industry appetite for our brand and our product and keeping us on track for contracted volumes in 2026.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Overall, we expect 2025 medical revenue to grow at a similar rate to 2024. In conclusion, we are executing on our strategy and delivering the forecasted growth. Demand for nuclear solutions is strong and we are driving performance through the organization to maintain our competitive edge, improve financial performance, serve our customers and build on the momentum we have generated. With that, I will now turn the call over to Rob.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Thanks, Thanks, Rex, and good evening, everyone. I'll start with some total company financial highlights on Slide four of the earnings presentation. Fourth quarter revenue was $746,000,000 up 3% organically with growth in commercial operations offsetting a modest decline in government operations. Adjusted EBITDA was $130,000,000 compared to $148,000,000 in the same quarter last year as growth in commercial operations was offset by lower government operations and timing of quarterly corporate expense accruals. Corporate EBITDA expense in the quarter was higher, primarily based on the timing of healthcare and other expenses, following several quarters of below average expenditures.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

On an annual basis, corporate EBITDA expense was $16,900,000 slightly lower compared to 2023. In 2025, we expect another slight decline in corporate EBITDA expense. Adjusted earnings per share were $0.92 compared to $1.01 last year due to the operating items previously discussed. This was partially offset by slightly higher pension income and lower interest expense as well as the lower tax rate. Last quarter, I applauded the efforts of our tax team, which has been hard at work finding ways to improve our tax rate.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

After a thorough evaluation and in field analysis of certain expense activities, we determined that many tasks that we engage in are considered qualified research expenditures under IRS definitions. This effort will release meaningful cash tax savings as we amend returns and recover money for past tax years. This will permanently reduce our tax rate by over 100 basis points per year compared to historical levels. As such, we recognized the $6,000,000 benefit to our tax provision in the fourth quarter on both a GAAP and non GAAP basis related to this favorable tax planning change, which accounts for the accruals for fourth quarter as well as what we should have been accruing over the course of the year. This led to an adjusted effective tax rate of 18.9% in the quarter and 21.7% for the full year, a favorable outcome compared to our guidance of approximately 23%.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

In addition to the benefit related to the 2024 tax provision, we also recorded a roughly $7,000,000 benefit to GAAP earnings only for refunds we expect for the 2020 through twenty twenty three tax years. Said differently, we have excluded the positive benefit from prior years from our non GAAP results as we deemed it to be non recurring. As we look to 2025, we expect our tax rate to be approximately 22%, a notable decrease from the 23% to 24% we observed in 2022 and 2023, however slightly higher than twenty twenty four's non GAAP tax rate of 21.7%. This slight increase is due to a geographical earnings mix shift toward Canada, a higher tax jurisdiction compared to The U. S.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Given our expectation for outsized organic growth in Canadian commercial nuclear power and medical operations. Free cash flow in the quarter was $224,000,000 bringing full year free cash flow to $255,000,000 up 20% year over year. During the quarter, our intense focus on working capital management and timing of cash receipts associated with strong bookings allowed us to exceed the high end of our original free cash flow guidance. Our capital expenditures in 2024 were 5.7% of sales or $154,000,000 in line with our expectation. In 2025, we anticipate capital expenditures to remain in the range of 5% to 6% of sales as we continue to see our maintenance CapEx at 4% and anticipate spending 1% to 2% on select growth initiatives.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Major capital projects in 2024 will include the previously announced expansion of our Cambridge commercial nuclear manufacturing plant as well as incremental capital investment into our U. S. Facilities including the support of increasing production of Columbia class submarine reactor cores as Rex mentioned. I would note several similar to several other defense peers, while heightened investment in certain naval programs runs through our CapEx, it is often recovered through operating cash flow or working capital releases. Despite likely higher capital expenditures, we expect another strong year of operating cash flow leading to free cash flow growth in 2025.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

We anticipate $265,000,000 to $285,000,000 of free cash flow as we continue to progress toward our medium term target of 90% free cash flow conversion. Moving to the segment results on Slide seven. In government operations, fourth quarter revenue was down slightly to $295,000,000 Adjusted EBITDA was $117,000,000 leading to adjusted EBITDA margin of 19.6% down from last year mainly due to a tough comparison and shifting mix toward less mature programs. On an annual basis, government operations revenue was up 8% and adjusted EBITDA was up 3% yielding adjusted EBITDA margin of 20.2% consistent with the guidance we provided over the last several quarters of slightly higher than 20%. Our underlying performance in our largest facilities as measured by efficiency and utilization remain solid.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

However, our year over year margin comparisons continue to be impacted by a mix shift toward cost reimbursable microreactor projects and contracts that are earlier in their lifecycle, providing less opportunity to recognize cost savings. We anticipate that this dynamic will remain with us through 2025 and therefore we expect GEO segment margin to be relatively flat compared to 2024. Turning to commercial operations, revenue was $152,000,000 up 23% year over year with double digit growth in commercial power and medical. Adjusted EBITDA in the segment was $23,700,000 up 11% as good execution and improving medical profitability was offset by mix with less outage work in the quarter and growth investment. Turning now to our 2025 guidance on Slide eight and nine of the earnings presentation.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

On an organic basis, our operating assumptions are generally in line with the preliminary outlook we provided last quarter. However, we have also included a contribution from the Kinetrix acquisition, which we are still targeting to close in mid-twenty twenty five. On the top line, we expect revenue of approximately $3,000,000,000 In government operations, we expect mid single digit growth consisting of low single digit organic growth plus a contribution from the acquisition of AOT. Organic growth will be led by our Special Materials business with flatter revenue in microreactors and neighbor propulsion as we enter our second year of the forward carrier Lull. In Commercial Operations, we expect significantly higher revenue with mid teens organic growth plus a contribution from the pending acquisition of Kinetrix.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

As a reminder, we expect Kinetrix to generate revenue of slightly more than $300,000,000 annually in 2025 with approximately half of a year included in our guidance given an expected mid year closing. This continues the mid to high single digit organic growth trend Kinetrix has exhibited the past couple of years as an independent company. Additionally, I will note that our commercial operations guidance includes a foreign currency translation headwind of approximately 5% due to the strength of the U. S. Dollar versus the Canadian dollar.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

For adjusted EBITDA, we are guiding $550,000,000 to $570,000,000 inclusive of solid organic growth plus the incremental contribution from AOT and Kinetrix. As mentioned in government operations, we expect EBITDA to grow at a similar rate to revenue. And in commercial operations, we anticipate EBITDA margin to be in the 14% to 15% range compared to 14.1% in 2024 as the increase of higher margin medical sales will be somewhat offset by the large contribution of acquired commercial power revenue. Moving to non GAAP EPS, we are introducing 2025 guidance of $3.4 to $3.55 As you can see in the detailed guidance bridge on Slide nine of our presentation, we expect higher EBITDA to be largely offset by non operating items, including roughly $0.08 headwind from lower pension and other income and $0.08

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

to $0.1

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

from higher interest expense related to the funding of the AOT and Kinetrix acquisitions. I will also note that beginning in the first quarter of twenty twenty five, our non GAAP EPS will exclude acquisition related amortization for these two acquisitions. Looking at the quarterly cadence of earnings, we expect first quarter EPS to be flat to up modestly year over year. Beyond that, we anticipate the remainder of the full year earnings per share to be evenly distributed across the second, third and fourth quarters. This could be moderately affected by when the Conetrics acquisition closes and the resulting impact on non operating items such as interest expense and pension income and the other net on the P and L.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

To sum it up, we had a solid finish to a record year. BWXT has a strong competitive position in growing markets supported by our unique infrastructure capabilities and a robust workforce. We are focused on execution and have a strategy in place that we believe will allow us to effectively and efficiently capitalize on market opportunities and therefore continue to drive shareholder value. And with that, we look forward to taking your questions.

Operator

Okay. So your first question comes from the line of Scott Ducho with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

Scott Deuschle
Scott Deuschle
Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Deutsche Bank

Hey, good evening. Rob, can you offer an update on where medical profitability was for the full year 2024 and how we should be thinking about the incremental EBITDA margins in medical from here?

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Yes. So I'll remind you that in 2023, we sort of slightly turned positive and then built upon that in 2024. I think as far as we want to go is that we're really seeing the margins in that particular part of the commercial at or slightly above where the overall segment is. So that was accretive to margin. And I think that margin upside we'll see as ultimately the tech business continues to grow and the revenue grows.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

So right now it's a really nice contributor to both EBITDA and revenue.

Scott Deuschle
Scott Deuschle
Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Deutsche Bank

Okay. And just to clarify, it grew about 25% in 2024% and you're expecting the similar amount of growth in 2025% or is that not correct?

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

That's exactly right. We actually in the transcript, we specifically said it was 23% and we saw the same rate looking at 2025.

Scott Deuschle
Scott Deuschle
Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Deutsche Bank

Okay. And then Rex, if GE Hitachi were to get some SMR orders here from U. S. Customers like Tennessee Valley Authority, just curious if would you be able to service that manufacturing work out of your facilities in Canada? Or do you think you'd be required to build out capacity for U.

Scott Deuschle
Scott Deuschle
Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Deutsche Bank

S. Customers in The United States, particularly given some of this tariff risk overhang?

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Yes, I mean, sort of setting the tariff risk aside for a moment, Scott, yes, we would be able to service that out of our Cambridge plant. In fact, that's what that capacity expansion is about. It's about the ability to build all the Pickering Steam generators concurrent with reactor pressure vessels and other things that we have moving through that plant. And so we designed it so that we have an output capacity of about three reactor pressure vessels a year. So I think all things being equal, we would want to fill that plant up before we would move to expand in The U.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

S. So, yes, plenty of capacity for, let's say, a four pack at Clinch River completing the Darlington Reactors and maybe some opportunities in Poland.

Scott Deuschle
Scott Deuschle
Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Deutsche Bank

Okay. And then how are you thinking about that tariff risk, I guess, both on the commercial nuclear side and on the medical side?

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Yes. So I'll start this and maybe flip it over to Rob. It's obviously concerning to us, most particularly in our medical business because we export a good amount of products into The U. S. Of course, that import tariff is paid by the customer, but it might put some might splash in pricing pressure back onto our medical products.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

The commercial power business is really kind of self contained in Canada. Obviously, the labor is there and a lot of the components are manufactured there and sold there. So there's not as much effect there, but it is a concerning thing and we're evaluating it and keeping a close eye on it. With that, I'll flip it over to Rob. Yes.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Yes.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Maybe to put some we've been analyzing that this day by day we're monitoring and there's some headlines even earlier today. So, we're just assuming that this will be a headwind and of course Canada is likely to respond as well. The way we're looking at it, Scott, is that about 75% of our earnings comes from the government side of the business as you know and 25% for commercial. On the 75%, that's really a self sustaining in market business, right? That's how you build a defense business is to be able to source everything domestically to the extent you can or at least know that you can get supplies from a couple of different areas.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

So that puts us in a pretty good position where our supply chain and ultimately where our workforce and sales are all kind of within The U. S. Then looking at the 25%, I think Rex is exactly right that just dividing that into the two different parts of the Power business, which again is the majority of that business's revenue and profits today is also, I guess, one could say self sustaining. Commercial power in Canada was always derived to be sustaining. I actually think it could be interesting to just competitive dynamics where ultimately the utilities themselves want to even more source in Canada.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

So I think that puts us in a pretty good position. Within the power, we've evaluated the supply chain for some of those products and occasionally we get stuff from overseas or from The U. S, but it's a minority and frankly we can replace it. So don't see a lot of pressure there. Rex talked about the medical business.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

We are concerned about the medical business because mostly that's a manufacturer in Canada and sell into The U. S. And sometimes into Europe. And the way we're thinking about it is that if this goes through, we need to contact our customers and really make a strong case that the supply chain really only has a couple of players. We're standing up capacity.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

We need to work with our customers and this is not going to be as some short term thing. So we're going to try to evaluate whether or not there's ways we or our customers can work together. There's also a factor in the medical business, which is this is a pretty high margin business for some of our customers. So, their COGS and relatively small high gross margin. So, that's where you'd want to if you were a supplier into an industry, you'd want to sort of have that kind of dynamic where even if we have to pass along our price onto their COGS, it's not going to hurt their profitability a whole lot.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

So, we'll work with our customers. We're looking to be long term players with them. We hope they're viewing the same way and if we have to pass along price, we will.

Scott Deuschle
Scott Deuschle
Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Deutsche Bank

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you very much for your understanding. Your next question comes from the line of Thomas Meyrich with Jonny Montgomery Scott. Please go ahead.

Thomas Meric
Director - Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott

Good afternoon. Thanks for the time. Rex, you mentioned expanding into adjacencies being a part of the Battle Plan. I'm curious how you think about the possibility of expansion into hexafluoride conversion, whether that's organically or through acquisitions?

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

So we have the capability internal to BWXT to do conversion and deconversion. And so but it would require some additional plant capacity and a new process line. So it's not the sort of thing I think we would think about acquiring. It's something we would sort of stand up organically if we were to do that.

Thomas Meric
Director - Equity Research Analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott

And then second one for me is really on kind of win rate after the Kinetrix acquisition and just how to think about the commercial win rate improvement that the Kinetrix acquisition could bring as and specifically I'm also thinking about the Banner project and potentially options for microreactors at industrial facilities or data centers, things like that. Just kind of the overall package that you now have with the acquisition? And that's it for me. Thanks.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Sure. I would say, maybe I'd put in a little maybe I would respond in a little different way than you frame the question. What the Kinetrix acquisition brings to us is a spectrum of capabilities that round out what BWXT does. We do engineering and component manufacturing and spent fuel waste containers and fuel manufacturing. And Kinetrix has a number of interesting and different complementary capabilities like licensing on the front end, safety based analysis and they've got some tail end things as we said in the script such as supporting for particularly testing support for decommissioning and some things we don't even have like distribution and transmission.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

And so what it really does, it gives us a pretty interesting vertical stack of capabilities. So Kinetrix has on its own a very high win rate. We BWXT, our Canadian commercial power business has a very high win rate on its own. And I don't think that would change. I think what would change is that the combination of those two gives you this vertically integrated offering that you could take to customers and maybe take on something completely bigger and completely different than you had anticipated before.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

And so I think it's a powerful combination that maybe enables us to climb the value chain in ways that I think are going to be powerful in the long run.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Operator?

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Bob Labick with CJS Securities. Please go ahead.

Bob Labick
President at CJS Securities

Great. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking our questions.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Hey, Bob.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Hey, Bob. Hi, Bob. Hi, Bob. Hi, Bob. Hi, Bob.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Hi, Bob. Hi, Bob. Hi, Bob. Hi, Bob. Hi, Bob.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Hi, Bob. Hi, Bob. Hi, Bob.

Bob Labick
President at CJS Securities

I just want to start with a quick one first and I have slightly longer one for my follow-up. But in terms of, Molly, you mentioned another contract win or potential for contracting for Tech ninety nine in the '26 contract season. Can you just give us kind of latest update on your the process with the FDA where and timeline and I guess if the '26 contract season is towards the very end of this year, you have still plenty of time ahead of you, but how is that process playing out?

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Yes, Bob. So yes, we signed a second supply agreement from one of the major radiopharmaceutical chains in The U. S. So good news for us. As I said, it demonstrates appetite for our product and I think for our brand.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

In terms of the tech development, I think I mentioned on the last call that we've been working through a few dozen items, taking and tying those off. We are really sort of down to the short strokes on this one. We've been spending quite some time perfecting our formulary because you need to we get to make trade offs between elution efficiency and Moly breakthrough, for example. So we're perfecting that product, making sure we have it exactly right before we submit our final data package. And I feel quite good about where we are.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

I do anticipate approval this year so that we can be in production contracts in 2026.

Bob Labick
President at CJS Securities

Okay, great. Thank you. And then, obviously, you started off the call. You had a tremendous year last year and you have consistent and steady long term growth outlook and several opportunities over the medium term. So the diversity of the growth is great.

Bob Labick
President at CJS Securities

I was hoping you could help focus us a little bit on the biggest contributors in dollars. You don't have to tell us the dollars, but just rank them. Biggest contributors in dollars over the next five years. And I'll throw out a few few and then just tell me what I'm missing or rank them for us. But the recovery in the aircraft cadence, the increases in the Columbia rates, the Canadian refurbishment growth, moly sales, you mentioned the new builds in Canada, microreactors, SMRs.

Bob Labick
President at CJS Securities

Give us a sense of the rank order of I'm talking five years out, the dollar contributors and how you think about the variability around those medium term drivers?

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Yes. It's Rob. I can kind of think about how we build up our growth. We've gone through a we're going through a strategy planning cycle where we look out over ten years. We, of course, look out over one and then three years in our kind of near term planning cycle.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

But as we look out over the longer term, maybe I'll start with kind of the near term, medium term and then long term. What I really see is building the biggest growth drivers in the near term. All of our base businesses are just going to kind of grow nicely, but what comes on top in the near term I think is an increased expansion of SMRs as well as nuclear medicine. I think both those two are really primed over call it the next one to three years to really kind of be incremental to how people are thinking about just the pretty steady organic growth we have in our core. Over the medium term, I see more around AUKUS specifically.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

I think that will pick up quite nicely. I also see a play for micro reactors either us helping others or us getting into that business. So that's sort of a medium term driver in that bucket might be also a play around fuel for microreactors, TRISO specifically. And then as I think about sort of the longer term, I think some of the biggest franchises are still to be had are around enrichment. I think we're just getting going there and it takes a little bit of time, but I think that will be a significant incremental growth driver around as you said that five year time horizon.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

And the last one I put on the list is greenfield commercial nuclear sort of large scale reactors. So again, start off kind of slow with the things that we're on, the medium term being more about microreactors and AUKUS in the longer term. It just takes a long time to get the engine really going. But once we get it going on enrichment and commercial nuclear large scale reactors, I'm pretty excited. I guess you could also say that therapeutics over that time is kind of feathered in across all of those.

Bob Labick
President at CJS Securities

Super. That's great. Thank you so much.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Sure.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Pete Skibitski with Alembic Global. Please go ahead.

Pete Skibitski
Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Alembic Global Advisors

Hey, good evening guys. Hey, Pete. Maybe just following on Rob's comments on microreactors. Can you guys talk more about I feel like we haven't heard in a while on banner. Maybe you could talk about if there's any dependency on banner from Pele, if that builds on it.

Pete Skibitski
Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Alembic Global Advisors

And you've got I think this LOI with Tata as well. And it seems like we've had a proliferation of micro reacting microreactor kind of planning globally, right? So I was wondering if you could give us kind of a real kind of overview of where you're at there with Banner. Thanks.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Sure. I'll do that. I'll take that one, Pete. So Banner is part of the Ambiance Reactor Development Program contract award from the Department of Energy that we won probably four years ago now. And it's one of those eightytwenty cost shares where we're investing at the 20% level and the government takes the other 80%.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

So it's quite beneficial to us from that perspective. Banner, you can think of as a commercial derivative of Pele, but it's in a little different size class. Pele, we can say is in that one to five megawatt class of power output electrical and you can think of banners more like in the 15 to 20 megawatt electrical power output. There are some real differences here. Pele is designed to fit into a standard Connex box and could be air shift or rail shift, you wouldn't have that same kind of constraint with a thing like banner.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

And so therefore, banners in some ways simpler and probably certainly going to be more cost effective from the standpoint of the scale economics of scale, but also the packaging and would be suitable for things like those applications we've talked about in Wyoming that would support trona mining with Tata. And also it would fit into that class of reactors for which the DIU, the Defense Innovation Unit is soliciting for to power U. S. Military bases. So that's the relationship between the two.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

There's a ton of learning between Pele and Banner and it's essentially the same team. And so we have a semi permeable membrane where employees move back and forth as necessary and we take the lessons learned and apply them to Banner. So it's a good dynamic there and we're hopeful of some positive commercial outcomes.

Pete Skibitski
Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Alembic Global Advisors

And I guess Pele is the first prototype, is that expected to be up and running next year? Is that the timeline? I guess maybe Banner would be on a somewhat similar timeline. Is that what you're thinking?

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Yes. I'd say our customers aren't publishing schedules on that actively right now, but Pele and Banner both undergone some scope increases, particularly around testing. And so they'll continue over the next couple of years and we're not we're certainly not approaching a cliff on either of those.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Okay. Maybe just to provide a little perspective on why microreactors might come next, at least in my opinion. When you look at the commercial nuclear market, you really see a trend where we've gotten going on the refurb side that has given way to greenfield activity, right? That's the next thing that's happening there. You're seeing a lot of activity on the SMR side and maybe the next generation, in my opinion, could be microreactors.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

You just think about getting further out on experimental products, if you will. And then the last sort of analogy I would give you is that the Gen three reactors that are popping up in the SMR world are also starting to lay the groundwork for advanced reactors, which are based on HALU or different fuels. So when you really think about refurbs giving away to greenfield SMRs and micros, you can start seeing that you're starting to get an ecosystem of people doing a lot of things that are paying the bills here and now with solutions that work, but also looking out over the next couple of years and I see microreactors as kind of the next thing.

Pete Skibitski
Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Alembic Global Advisors

Great. Thanks for the overview guys.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Thanks Pete.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Michael Ciarmoli with Truist Securities. Please go ahead.

Michael Ciarmoli
Michael Ciarmoli
Managing Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Truist Securities

Hey, good evening guys. Thanks for taking the question, good results. Hey, Rob, just on the EBITDA bridge into next year, what's the assumption from Conetrics? Should we assume about $20,000,000 And I guess, does that imply that the organic core margins are down 60 basis points or so? I know the corporate was going to be down, but is that the right math we should be thinking about?

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Let me take those in two different buckets. So as you recall, we acquired Connectrix, which which we haven't closed yet, still expecting a midyear closing that's going nicely. We talked about it having a little bit under $300,000,000 of revenue, that's U. S. Dollar and about a little under $40,000,000 of EBITDA.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

We said those would grow nicely in 2025, so slightly over $300,000,000 and slightly over $40,000,000 We as we always have described in all of our guidance, we take different scenarios whether we close the deal in two months from now, three months from now or five months from now. But I think the way you set it up there is actually a reasonable way to think about sort of half a year of call it $40,000,000 of EBITDA depending on how that flows through. Of course, don't forget that when that timing comes in, that's going to come with it interest as well as some pension expense, which rolls down into other income. So we've always said that's only going to be slightly accretive in the first year. So if you think about it, you modulate the EBITDA and you modulate the interest in other income to really be relatively neutral.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Said differently, no matter when it kind of closes, we've sort of included all those scenarios in our on how we thought about EPS given the neutrality ultimately on EPS. And then as the margin goes, I didn't exactly follow you on the 60 basis points because here's how I'm thinking about is that we end the year in 2024 at 14.1%. We guided 14% to 15%. You have the mix up impact of medical. You're you then have some headwind from the fact that your commercial nuclear business, the existing business grows less than 25%, right, because that's medical.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

So that would always have a pull down because that has margins essentially in line with the overall CO segment. And then you get a huge amount of Conetrics or huge meaning a large new dose of similarly commercial power EBITDA margin. So you're still growing margin even in the face of increasing your commercial nuclear power mix tremendously, right, with both Kinetrix as well as just the implied growth that we have in our core business. So I'm pretty proud of that mix up for the overall CO margin. And I'll say lastly, of course, at the company level, we can't outgrow when you're essentially guiding the nearly 50% growth in commercial, which frankly will always probably have a lower margin overall than government.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

You're always going to have a mix down at the company level, right? If you have years like this where you're taking on a huge amount of commercial. So that's just a function of that's just a function of that. We don't need to look we look at geo margins, we look at geo margins, we'd encourage you to do the same.

Michael Ciarmoli
Michael Ciarmoli
Managing Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Truist Securities

Okay, fair. And then just one last one. Rex, what's the latest on DRACO? It looks like that problem or that program's kind of had some maybe challenges on testing. Are you still getting revenue there?

Michael Ciarmoli
Michael Ciarmoli
Managing Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Truist Securities

Any expected headwinds? Or how should we think about that one?

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Yes, it's actually the contrary, Michael. There's a desire to do some more comprehensive ground testing before that mission launches and most of that scope comes into our contract because it's around testing the nuclear engine. So it's there's certainly going to be some schedule implications on for that, but that's new scope that comes into our program and so it's business for us.

Michael Ciarmoli
Michael Ciarmoli
Managing Director - Aerospace & Defense Equity Research at Truist Securities

Okay. Okay. So no issues there. Okay, perfect. Thanks guys.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of David Strauss with Barclays. Please go

Joshua Korn
Joshua Korn
Analyst at Barclays Capital

ahead. Hi, good afternoon. This is Josh Korn on for David. Just wanted to ask about the new Navy contract. Any color you could provide and how that might flow through to margins over the next couple of years?

Joshua Korn
Joshua Korn
Analyst at Barclays Capital

And then in the same vein, if you've gotten helped by any of the shipbuilding funding from the CR? Thanks.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Yes. I'll answer the latter one and then maybe flip it back to Rob on any impact of the pricing agreement on margins. We don't have any we're not getting any direct funding from any of the shipbuilding, submarine industrial based funding that's coming through this time or we haven't seen that. We did we were the beneficiaries of some of that funding a few years ago to help in workforce development and it was quite positive for us, but we don't have any particulars on the latter one.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Yes. And maybe I'll just address the recent price agreement. I don't think you're going to see any kink up, if you will, from the signing of that. As you know, we sign agreements every two to three years and agreements that we signed pre COVID, frankly, we've been working through the economic realities of workforce and inflation and so forth. And so we've been chewing our way through that.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

So we're pleased that we got a new contract, but it will take a few years to even dive into that one, if you will. We always talk about layers of the cake. So six years ago, we signed one. Four years ago, we signed one. Two years ago, we signed from all those layers of the cake are really what we're eating out of now.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Yes, it's true that we'll start eating out of a layer of the cake that I think better probably reflects some of the realities of the economic environment that we've been dealing with the past couple of years, but also raises the bar on us, right? We're actively working with our customer to reflect all the efficiency and utilization goodness that we've been working on the past couple of years. And so we continue to try to set the bar higher on ourselves and work with our customer. We're in a fixed price incentive fee contract there. And during these times, I think we look quite favorable where we're working with our customer to share in that profit and really be judged by a very scrupulous customer that's looking to have us always improve our margins.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

So no kink up. I think that we're really pleased with the contract that we reached and we believe our customers too.

Joshua Korn
Joshua Korn
Analyst at Barclays Capital

Okay, thanks. And then if I could just follow-up, if you could quantify the cash tax benefit from the tax change you mentioned during the prepared remarks? Thanks.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Yes. So two impacts. First, going forward, if you will, the 100 basis points applied to our profit before taxes is really the way to think about what happened through our book and taxes set differently 100 basis points right against our PBT would be about $6,000,000 over the next couple of years. And so that's really going to help both our ETR 100 basis points to 150 basis points is really what we see over time, slowly building to that level over a couple of years from the benefit. You take a reserve in the early years and then you work that down.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

So we see 100 basis points plus and that would be a positive to our P and L income going forward to be at that 22% and the cash. So really on a going forward basis, we'd have that. As we look back, we talked about that we've been reviewing what we did in the 2020 through 2023 timeframe. In order of magnitude, we were getting R and D tax credits of a minimal amount. We'll review that with the IRS and ultimately try to release, if you will, the past couple of years of that $5,000,000 or $6,000,000 So ultimately to release all that money, we're going to have to work through that and that'll be a couple of years in the making.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

But we'll work through the past and then ultimately we get a permanent benefit for ETR and tax savings going forward.

Joshua Korn
Joshua Korn
Analyst at Barclays Capital

Great. Thanks for all the help.

Operator

Your last question comes from the line of Andre Matrud with BTIG. Please go ahead.

Andre Madrid
VP - Equity Research at BTIG

Hey, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to focus specifically on the regulatory environment with all the news recently with the NNSA firings and rehirings. And I know you guys put out a release not long after that. But just trying to talk broadly, is those really something that we're going to have to need to worry about moving forward?

Andre Madrid
VP - Equity Research at BTIG

I mean, I thought with regard to BWX, things would be pretty secure just given the high priority of the work that you guys do?

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Yes, I'll comment to that. I would say certainly we have our eye on it and it's caused for some concern. But I think we're kind of built for this. We're not a staff augmentation company or anything like that. We're not writing white papers over here.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

I think you could argue that everything we do is high value add for the government. So we're making nuclear fuel and making reactor pressure vessels and doing environmental restoration of cold war sites. I think it's meaningful work. And I would add that in the case of naval reactors in this sole source position, we have an open book contract with them. And so they're examining and scrutinizing our costs every day.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

So it's a doge like environment to begin with. So we obviously have our eyes on it, but I think we're in as good a position as you could be under the circumstances.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Yes. Maybe I'll just offer, I mean, I think you touched on something that concerns us here, which is there is a lot of change going on in D. C. And we're concerned about air pocket just in general, right? As everybody gets back to work and understand what their priorities are, we think we're going to fare, as Rex said, quite well versus the competition.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

But it's that sort of not knowing that causes different piece of business that we're going after to potentially get delayed. But we're not worried about that over the long term. As you said, we're sort of built for this. We think all of our programs and all the recent medias of where they're looking to make adjustments would most likely not affect us. To Rex's point, just to put numbers around it, it is in our 10 ks that I think we filed earlier today.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

We're all we are 80% fixed price incentive fee and or firm fixed price already, right, within our government business. We break it out in the 10 K. So you'll see that for 2024. So as Rex talked about, 80% of our business is highly scrutinized by a very informed customer. We're a sole supplier and in many circumstances, we're actually showing that cost to our customer and working with them to try to find ways to save ourselves money and give that back to the government.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

So again, we're really nicely aligned with all the themes that we've been reading about.

Andre Madrid
VP - Equity Research at BTIG

No, that's very helpful. And thank you both for breaking that out. And I guess on a similar note, thinking about the prospect of a full year CR, what could the potential impact be for GovOps specifically? I mean, does the long lead nature of the work and its priority within the DoD kind of help offset any potential impact there? It's kind of in a similar vein to the question I just asked, but put it a different way.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

The thing that you worry about in a year long CR is whether or not you have programs of record. The programs of record to get funded at some percentage of the prior fiscal year is the typical formula and all of our major programs are programs of record. So that would include obviously naval reactors Virginia, Ford, Columbia, PaleyDraco. So from that perspective, it's not too worrisome. You do worry about new programs and new starts.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

That said, since the advent of this administration, the changeover in the White House and the new fiscal year, we have received authority to proceed on our West Valley project, authority to proceed on our Hanford Tanks project. So there's a bit of a business as usual theme going on in the business and so we're comforted by that and hopeful that it won't be disruptive to us overly.

Andre Madrid
VP - Equity Research at BTIG

Excellent. Rex, Rob, thanks so much for your comments. I'll leave it there.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Yes. Thank you.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Thank you. Your

Operator

next question comes from the line of Peter Arment with Baird. Please go ahead.

Peter Arment
Senior Research Analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co

Good afternoon, Rex, Rob, Chase. Hey, I'll be brief. I know it's a long call and a lot of questions have been asked. But just Rob, maybe you could just remind us or Rex on I'm looking at all this really good organic growth on the commercial operations. But we know you're just beginning to really ramp up with Pickering.

Peter Arment
Senior Research Analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co

How does the overlap go with Bruce and kind of the refurbishment work there? Do we have kind of an overlap for a few years? Or how do we think about that?

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Yes. So you're exact so again, a little history story here is that we had Darlington really announced first. We talked about in the call that that will be rolling off here or the lion's share of that work over the next couple of years. That's been very positive for us. We then got into the thick of the Bruce and then now so that all sort of we're in the thick of that one.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

And then ultimately, we'll have the Pickering Reactor refurb. That one is actually juicy for us quite juicy for us on the Pickering side. We now have 48 steam generators moving through our plants. It's product that we know a lot about. You can really get stable conditions there and you can feel good about that work.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

And so I don't see that as I mean, I sort of view it as one slightly rolling off and then getting into two different refurbs that are just as juicy, if not juicier for our book of business. Blair on top of that, what's going on with the first SMR and I think there's going to be a decision here over the next couple of quarters, if not sooner about moving forward in Canada on that. That would be work again that wouldn't be first of a kind, it would be second, third and fourth. So I'm feeling pretty good about the book of business that we're looking at. So I'm not worried about a roll off of the reserves.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

And I might add to that, Peter. I might add, Peter, that the Darlington opportunity was smaller for us than the Bruce opportunity because they didn't replace steam generators over there. We had a feeder contract and we had some other very interesting work, but Bruce has the Bruce refurbishment involved replacing steam generators for four of those reactors. So we had feeders, steam generators, heat exchangers, primary coolant pump motors. The Pickering still looks more like Bruce than it does like Darlington.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

As Rob said, it's a little meatier for us, a little richer opportunity set.

Peter Arment
Senior Research Analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co

So that could could that accelerate a little bit? I mean, not in terms of the overall segment and just in general that mix of business just given the size of the Pickering operation?

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Yes. I think as we look out toward I mean it's a good question because even in our guidance right in Peter for 2025 is an acceleration in the core non Conetrics. I think we you could parse through if you took out the medical business this year and kind of looked at the underlying nuclear power growth in 2024 and then you look at 2025, you're seeing a slight acceleration into the double digits on the power side. I think that will be we're not guiding 2627 at this point. But I think with all those drivers of SMRs and Pickering and yes, Darlington will roll off, I think we have a really good shot at continuing to grow as we said at Investor Day, mid to high single digits organically.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Conatrix also Rex talked about that there should be some opportunities to help our customers and hopefully they select us not only for the work that they plan to give us, but maybe those handoff points will be easier for us to help our customers with. So I wouldn't be surprised if that helps ultimately our sales. So I look forward to seeing the positive impact to that. And I think the premise of your question does seem possible.

Peter Arment
Senior Research Analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co

Appreciate all the color. Nice results guys. Thanks.

Rex Geveden
Rex Geveden
President and CEO at BWX

Thanks Peter.

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Thanks

Robb LeMasters
Robb LeMasters
Senior VP & CFO at BWX

Peter.

Operator

Sorry for that. Thank you everyone. That concludes our

Operator

Q and

Operator

A session for today. I will now turn the call over back to Chase Jacobson. Please go ahead.

Chase Jacobson
Vice President, Investor Relations at BWX

Yes. Thanks everybody for joining us today. We look forward to seeing many of you and speaking with you at upcoming investor events or on the phone. If you have any questions, you can reach us at investorspwxt dot com.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect. Have a nice day, everyone.

Executives
Analysts
Earnings Conference Call
BWX Technologies Q4 2024
00:00 / 00:00

Transcript Sections