NYSE:MAXR Maxar Technologies Q3 2021 Earnings Report Maxar Technologies EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.19Consensus EPS $0.15Beat/MissBeat by +$0.04One Year Ago EPS-$0.02Maxar Technologies Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$437.00 millionExpected Revenue$453.00 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$16.00 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AMaxar Technologies Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2021Date11/3/2021TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, November 2, 2021Conference Call Time8:00PM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckQuarterly Report (10-Q)Company ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Maxar Technologies Q3 2021 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 2, 2021 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Maxar Technologies Q3 2021 Conference Call and Webcast. At this time, all participants are in listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Mr. Operator00:00:32Jason Gursky, Vice President, Investor Relations and Corporate Treasurer. Speaker 100:00:39Good afternoon, and thanks, operator. Welcome to Maxar's 3rd quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. I'm joined today by the company's Chief Executive Officer, Dan Jablonsky and its Chief Financial Officer, Biggs Porter. Both will make some opening remarks, after which we're going to open up the line for your questions. We're shooting to wrap up the call in about an hour. Speaker 100:00:58Before we get started, I'd like to refer listeners to the accompanying slides for today's presentation, which can be found on the company's website at maxar.com. Once there, please turn to Slide 2, where I'd like to remind you that part of today's discussion, including responses to various questions, may contain forward looking statements, which represent the company's estimates, future plans, objectives and expected performance at today's date. These statements are based on current assumptions that the company believes are reasonable, but are subject to a wide range of uncertainties and risks that could lead actual results to differ materially From the forward looking information, you refer to the advisory regarding forward looking statements contained in our quarterly earnings releases, earnings call slide decks and the company's most recent MD and A section found in our Form 10 Q on the company's website at maxar.com. And with that, I'm going to turn the discussion over to Dan. Dan, go ahead. Speaker 200:01:51Thanks, Jason, and good afternoon, everyone. Before I get started, I'd like to welcome Tom Wayne, our Chief Strategy Officer and Colleen Campbell, Chief Marketing Officer to the Maxar team. Both are seasoned executives and have deep experience in the aero defense industry. Tom is a space industry veteran having held both banking and operating roles over his 20 plus year career. He also has a long history with Maxar, having advised DigitalGlobe, one of our predecessor companies as far back as 2012. Speaker 200:02:22Tom will lead corporate strategy, corporate development and strategic investments As we look to drive long term growth for our shareholders, Colleen most recently led marketing and communications at Allianz, A leading AI and cyber platform, previously led digital strategy at Northrop and earlier in her career We have leadership roles at Global Park and Ogilvy, since now we're leading our global marketing, media relations and communications teams. We're very excited about the ecosystem in which we operate and the demand environment in front of us. This lends itself to a multitude of opportunities We want to be best positioned to take advantage of them. I'd like to remind investors that our 3 d capabilities, which are a big driver of our current product growth, came by way of the Vrycon JV that we set up way back in 2015. I'd also like to remind everyone that we remain committed to generating cash and to reducing debt and leverage in the years ahead. Speaker 200:03:20At this point, we're on the path to our long term leverage targets, which should provide the company even more flexibility to execute on our strategic growth plans. Okay. Now for the quarter and our progress. I'm going to cover the key highlights from the quarter and provide an update on our 2021 priorities, including where we are with the Legion program, our next generation constellation. I'll also spend time describing our commercial business in the Earth Intelligence segment to provide some context on the breadth of our offerings and marquee customers, as well as the financial contribution this vertical makes to the company. Speaker 200:03:56Please turn to slide 3 of the accompanying presentation. We generated 5% year over year revenue growth in the quarter, excluding the effect of EV deferred and 11% year to date. Of note, Earth Intelligence grew 7% year over year in the quarter and is now up 8% year to date despite the fact that we are currently Growth here was driven largely by product sales to commercial and government customers. Importantly, we saw 380 basis points of adjusted EBITDA margin expansion year over year, excluding EV deferred, driven by improvement in both segments. Bookings were solid this quarter and we generated a book to bill of 2.2x. Speaker 200:04:43Key wins included 2 GEO awards from SiriusXM, while in Earth Intelligence, we received our 11th renewal of the EnhancedView program And we're awarded numerous U. S. And international government contracts, including another renewal of the global EGD program. Year to date, Total company book to bill is 1.1 times, reflecting solid demand for both multi year contracts as well as strong book to ship activity in the Earth Intelligence segment this year. Importantly, we generated robust free cash flow and are now positive for the year through the end of Q3. Speaker 200:05:20Bank defined leverage finished below 4 turns. Biggs will go into these metrics in more detail during his remarks, But I can say we're excited by the progress we've made over the past couple of years on both, and we look forward to continued momentum in the years ahead. Finally, as Bags will discuss in more detail, we have increased our outlook for adjusted EBITDA and cash flow. Please turn to Slide 4 for an update on our 2021 priorities. We remain focused on winning in Earth Intelligence, which means driving bookings growth, including for capacity on WorldView Legion, growing 3 d capabilities And extending EnhancedView through the upcoming EOCL or electro optical commercial layer program with the NRO. Speaker 200:06:06In addition to the awards I mentioned a moment ago, we won an award to continue development and operations of a classified big data analytics program for the U. S. Government. We renewed a contract with a large technology company and we announced the 2 new customers signed multimillion dollar contracts earlier this year to our rapid access program, including the first customer in Latin America. Importantly, We also signed a contract with a close U. Speaker 200:06:33S. Ally to upgrade the country's ground infrastructure so that it is ready for the Legion constellation. This marks the 5th country to commit to a ground upgrade. As a reminder, one of these 5 countries has already committed to on the constellation and we expect the others to do the same once the satellites are operational. This is a good sign that the demand environment remains robust. Speaker 200:06:58From an execution perspective, it was another good quarter, with the team generating both revenue And margin growth, excluding EV deferred, which as I mentioned earlier, is a great outcome given the capacity constraints we face ahead of the Legion launch. In early October, we attended the Annual GEOINT Symposium, an event that brings together leaders from across government and the industrial base. There we continue to hear that government demand for geospatial data and analytics is as robust as ever. Our customers at the NRO, NGA And military services seek to leverage the capabilities of the industrial base to better understand what's going on in every corner of the planet. And importantly, they're increasingly looking for answers to tough questions in technology solutions, not just data. Speaker 200:07:45As I've discussed on prior earnings calls over the past couple of years, Maxar is positioned well for this demand environment. We've been making investments in our constellation to provide the highest quality data available in the commercial market. We've invested in platforms Such as SecureWatch and Global EGT, which provide online access to our geospatial data and analytical tool sets to 100 of thousands of users across the U. S. Government and allied nations and to commercial enterprise customers. Speaker 200:08:14And we've been investing in AI and machine learning capabilities that help turn data into insight and that drive improved sensor to shooter timelines. We're excited about what the future holds for It's clear that the geopolitical environment is driving investment on their end, particularly in the areas of focus for Maxar. And we've been making investments for years to address this demand with well proven technologies. I'm confident this positions us well To continue to be a trusted partner on our nation's most critical national security missions in the years ahead. Turning now to space infrastructure, where we are committed to consistent execution against some of the world's most complex space programs and to establishing a foundation for future growth. Speaker 200:09:00In addition to the SiriusXM awards I mentioned earlier, we booked a contract modification with NASA for work on the power propulsion element And study contracts for national security work as we continue to look to shape new programs and further diversify the business. Book to bill this quarter was a robust 2.5 times and now sits at a touch over 1 times for the year. The pipeline remains robust across both commercial and government end markets, but the precise timing of awards is always difficult to access. We're pleased with our bookings performance so far this year and look forward to updating investors as new awards are made. From an investment standpoint, as I mentioned last quarter, we continue to work on new satellite and constellation designs, including modular spacecraft and proliferated constellations, as we look to serve commercial, civil and classified programs with highly engineered and affordable solutions. Speaker 200:09:54We also remain focused on our payloads and are proactively working on comprehensive packages that will solve our customers' demanding mission needs. Reflected in the financial results, we had a solid quarter as adjusted EBITDA margins continued their year over year improvement, reflecting better performance and healthier program mix. And finally, on financial flexibility, we're continuing to drive strong financial results in the business And see our way to significant cash generation in the quarters and years ahead, both of which should drive debt and leverage levels lower. Moving to WorldView Legion, please turn to Slide 5. First, the punch line. Speaker 200:10:33We remain on track for a first launch In the March to June window of 2022 and we continue to expect the remainder of the constellation will launch 3 to 6 months after the first. Importantly, the First Flight unit is largely through its integration phases and is prepping for thermal vac. I know investors are interested in the remaining work before the let's go into service. So I thought I'd provide some insight on the outstanding phases of the program. As you've heard me mention in the past, The program has already made its way through various design and integration reviews and we've taken delivery of components and various subsystems from both internal and external suppliers, Which we've been integrating. Speaker 200:11:13A key gating item this year was some hardware coming in from Honeywell and Raytheon. And as we reported out on last quarter's call, The Honeywell equipment to support the first launch has been delivered. With Raytheon, we've received and have integrated the first instrument and expect the second in the coming weeks. That's a short delay for the second one, but we do not expect this to cause any pressure on the overall program schedule. At this point, we expect the remaining hardware for the other satellites to flow during the fall and winter. Speaker 200:11:42Once all in, we complete the integration of the hardware and conduct Initial performance testing, then comes environmental testing, starting with thermal vac, then acoustics and then vibration, all designed to simulate The launch characteristics and eventual environment the satellites will operate in, in space once on orbit. After all the testing is complete, Including software validation, we'll begin launch campaign activities, including the shipment of the satellites to the launch facility down at the Cape. And lastly, of course, on orbit testing and the beginning of revenue generation. On the right hand of this slide, We've included some photos that should give readers a better sense of the program. The top left picture is an artist's depiction of a Legion satellite on orbit And on the one on the top right is the optical instrument before being integrated into the satellite bus. Speaker 200:12:33The larger picture at the bottom is what the first unit looked like on factory floor recently. There you see things like thermal blankets around the bus and the instrument integrated into the satellite. Of note, there are 2 employees standing off to the right. This should give you a pretty good sense of the scale of the satellite itself. We We continue to believe we're on the right path for a launch in the March June window next year with the critical remaining steps being what I just described. Speaker 200:12:59Going forward, we will continue to provide updates on our progress on quarterly earnings calls and we look forward to having you join us either virtually or in person at the launch site next year. Please turn to Slide 6. I'd like to take a moment to remind listeners that the Legion constellation represents When initially launched, Legion will significantly augment our current constellation. On the replacement side, Legion, which will fly in both polar and mid inclination orbits, will eventually replace GeoEye 1 and WorldViews 12, which fly Additionally, Leachman will provide 30 centimeter class resolution versus the 40 to 50 centimeter capabilities of the satellites that it will be replacing. Both are important nuances. Speaker 200:13:48The mid inclination orbit will allow us to collect more imagery in the areas with the most demand, Since 95% of the world's population lives between plus or minus 50 degrees latitude and higher resolution data has historically garnered better price levels given its value to customer missions. In our view, the combination of additional capacity in the in demand areas of the world A significant enhancement in the quality mix of the data should drive solid revenue growth in the Earth Intelligence segment once Legion is on orbit. Importantly, Legion and the existing constellation assets are broad area collectors that allow for monitoring type missions and that when combined with our existing constellation will provide revisit rates of up to 15 times per day. This type of high resolution, highly accurate collection capacity It's wide area, artificial intelligence and machine learning modeling, sensor to shooter applications and is a key enabler of our ability to Derive highly accurate and lifelike 3 d models, which we believe positions Maxar well to continue to be an industry leader as customers transition from 2 d Before I hand the call over to Bix for a more detailed discussion of the numbers, I'd like to spend a few minutes Double clicking on the Earth Intelligence segment's activity in the commercial vertical. Speaker 200:15:15In 2020, we generated $143,000,000 in revenue From a who's who of the largest enterprise users of geospatial data, products and analytics. We've been a trusted partner for the world's largest Technology and telecommunications companies for well over a decade and we're consistently onboarding new and innovative customers every year, including in the automotive and autonomous areas. These customers value our high quality data and the products, services and analytics that are derived from it, and we look forward to growing with them in the future. Importantly, year to date performance is a pretty good indicator of how things are going on that front, With revenue up 23% through the Q3 of 2021 versus the same period a year ago. What I'd like to do now is walk you through the 4 primary product areas on offer to commercial customers and then move to focus on one of them. Speaker 200:16:09I'm going to move quickly through these slides to provide a general overview, but encourage listeners to read through them in detail offline to fully appreciate the power and significance of our offerings to a broad set of enterprise customers. Please turn to Slide 9. In general, our products span satellite access, Geospatial Foundation, Precision Mapping and On Demand Intelligence. I'm going to highlight Geospatial Foundation, a product area where we provide the highest quality satellite imagery, Consumer Mapping, Risk Management and Monitoring, Telecommunications and Metaverses, Simulation and Gaming. Slides 1213 showcase how we use our 15 centimeter HD product in the autonomous driving area. Speaker 200:17:02While Slides 14 through 17 demonstrate how our vivid base maps and analyst ready data allow users to unlock location intelligence for both consumer and first responder mapping applications. And finally, slides 18 through 23 highlight how our capabilities with 3 d technology are helping customers in the technology and telecom, Simulation and Gaming in Autonomous Verticals. I wanted to highlight the commercial vertical today because I know that it often gets Given the critical national security missions for the U. S. Government and our closest allies that we help to support. Speaker 200:17:34But at $143,000,000 last year and growing, The commercial vertical is incredibly important to us and as such to our investors. It's an area that helps for innovation across our products and services And it's an area that we are going to be increasingly focused on in the future as we see any number of applications across the commercial sub verticals I mentioned earlier Benefiting from the investments we're making in the Legion constellation, investments in 3 d and our investments in AI and ML, all of which are topics that I've covered in-depth on previous earnings calls. And with that, I'm going to turn the call over to Biggs for a deeper dive on quarterly performance and how 2022 and 2023 are shaping up. Mig? Thanks, Dan. Speaker 200:18:17Please turn to Slide 24, where we present year over year comparisons Speaker 300:18:23Our net income for Q3 was $14,000,000 driven primarily by strong performance in both Earth Intelligence and Space Infrastructure. Revenue was roughly flat year over year for the quarter and is up 4% year to date on a reported basis. Excluding the effects of the enhanced fee contract deferred revenue Total company revenues increased 5% year over year driven by recent wins in Space Infrastructure and Product Growth Earth Intelligence. On year to date basis, total company revenues increased 11%, excluding the effects of the EV deferred revenue burn off and adjusted EBITDA margins increased by 300 basis points. Please turn to Slide 25, where I'll discuss Earth Intelligence results without the effect of EV deferred. Speaker 300:19:10Revenue increased 7% year over year in the 3rd quarter, driven primarily by increases from international defense and intelligence commercial customers, offset slightly by a reduction of revenue from U. S. Government customers. Adjusted EBITDA margins expanded 3.30 basis points, driven by the expansion of contracts with existing commercial and international defense and intelligence customers contributing to positive margin growth. On a full year basis, revenue was up 8% year over year, driven by increases from international defense and intelligence commercial customers And adjusted EBITDA margins expanded 100 basis points. Speaker 300:19:51Please turn to Slide 26. Space Infrastructure revenue was essentially flat year over year, while margins expanded 120 basis points, driven by the profitability of recent awards, as well as fewer negative EAC impacts, including those related to COVID-nineteen taken last year. This was offset partially by an increase in indirect costs and selling, general and administrative costs. Year to date revenue is up 9%, primarily driven by an increase in revenues from commercial programs as well as lower EIC growth. Adjusted EBITDA margins expanded to 8 60 basis points, driven by the profitability of recent program awards, Offset by reductions in revenue from the SiriusXM7 charges taken during the year and modest increases in indirect and SG and A costs. Speaker 300:20:44Before moving on to a discussion of cash flows, I do want to comment more generally on the supply chain issues and COVID vaccination requirements that have impacted various industries. We continue to monitor our supply chain closely and do not expect to see any material impacts at this time. Also, we're pleased to report we already have approximately 92% of our workforce that are submitted proof of their vaccination status. We'll continue to work through the various protocols. Please turn to Slide 27. Speaker 300:21:18The company generated $136,000,000 in operating cash flow from continuing operations in the Q3 and invested $51,000,000 in CapEx. Operating cash flow for the quarter was positively impacted by the timing of cash receipts and other favorable working capital changes as expected, which we outlined in the Q2 call. Please turn to Slide 28. We have roughly $508,000,000 liquidity at the end of And our bank defined leverage ratio ended the quarter at approximately 3.8x. Net debt decreased $84,000,000 from last quarter due to our cash generation in Q3. Speaker 300:21:57Now please turn to Slide 29. Overall, we're narrowing and improving our guidance ranges for adjusted EBITDA and cash flows. Revenue guidance has decreased slightly driven by an increase in inter We've tightened the revenue guidance for Earth Intelligence by $20,000,000 to a range of $1,060,000,000 to 1 point The midpoint remains unchanged from what we issued previously. We spoke earlier this year about our goal of driving up to $100,000,000 of new product growth At Earth Intelligence this year including on and highlighted the 23% year to date growth we have seen with our commercial customers and we continue to drive growth And our customer base as well government customer base as well. At the midpoint of our guidance, we expect further 4th quarter revenue to be roughly in line with the average quarterly run rate of Speaker 400:22:49the 1st 3 quarters of Speaker 300:22:50the year at 5,000,000 I lowered the top end of our guidance range by $10,000,000 and expect the full year to fall between $740,000,000 $760,000,000 representing lowtomidsingle digit. Q4 results to roughly mirror the Q2 driven by the timing of revenue recognition, particularly on recent commercial awards. As Dan spoke to earlier, Space Infrastructure had a book to bill of 2.5x in the 3rd quarter. It's important to note that last year's Q4 benefited from a steep ramp in revenue associated with commercial GEO Comsat that were awarded earlier in 2020 and from a greater contribution from U. S. Speaker 300:23:32Government work, including on the PPE and psych programs. Guidance for intersegment eliminations has increased modestly to an expected total of $65,000,000 for the full year, driven by our increased spend on the WorldView Legion program. As a result of the changes at Space Infrastructure and the change in our segment eliminations, Consolidated revenue guidance is now expected to fall into a range of $1,730,000,000 to 1,780,000,000 Excluding the effects of EV deferred, the midpoint of our guidance implies approximately 7% growth for the year. Turning to adjusted EBITDA. At Earth Intelligence, we have raised the midpoint by 15,000,000 We now expect to be in a range of $465,000,000 to $475,000,000 for the year. Speaker 300:24:32As we highlighted earlier this year, Earnings at Earth Intelligence can vary with the timing of awards and the nature of those awards can impact the margin profile quarter to quarter. Growth in our services portfolio continues to be constrained by the pace at which government is making awards, with a significant number of proposals remaining outstanding. This is lower margin business however, so we are clearly benefiting from the growth in the higher margin product revenues. We aren't making any changes to the full year adjusted EBITDA range for Space Infrastructure and expect margins to expand into 4th quarter to levels similar Margins will fluctuate some quarter to quarter due to the nature of percent complete accounting and as volume and mix As such, it's important to look at trends over a longer period and on a year over year basis where we continue to see steady progress. As a reminder, margins in Space Infrastructure have fluctuated this year given the impacts of the XXM-seven charge and the start of new programs, but we are clearly up on a year to date basis. Speaker 300:25:46Expectations for intersegment adjusted EBITDA eliminations have increased to $25,000,000 for the full year, driven by the WorldView Legion program. At a consolidated level, our guidance for adjusted EBITDA has increased $5,000,000 implying roughly 300 basis points of margin expansion for the year excluding the effects of EV deferred. Moving on to operating cash flow. We've increased both the low and the top end of the range on our operating cash flow $20,000,000 to a range of $260,000,000 to $290,000,000 As expected, the working capital changes we walked through during the Q2 call Flip to our favor in the Q3. We are free cash flow positive on a year to date basis and we continue to expect to remain free cash flow positive for the full year. Speaker 300:26:34The ranges for CapEx are now $220,000,000 to $240,000,000 a decrease of roughly $18,000,000 from the midpoint as of the second quarter. Turning now to a few comments about 2022. I said on our last earnings call that we clearly We make back into the business to drive growth in 'twenty two and beyond. We should guide in each year on our Q4 call, so we'll provide more clarity then. That said, if you simply take the midpoint of our guidance for the Q4 and annualize that, you get to a Higher adjusted EBITDA number than the midpoint of our guidance for the full year 2021. Speaker 300:27:24And of course, We'd expect some growth as we move through next year. On cash flow, growth will depend on where we end up this year and finalizing our investment decisions for next year. On 2023, we're still evaluating the effect of the Legion delay and the opportunities to offset whatever effect that has. We previously said we expected $80,000,000 in growth from Allegion in 2023 as part of the $165,000,000 improvement from 2020 to 2023 in Earth Intelligence. Let's use that $165,000,000 number to create some perspective. Speaker 300:28:01This year, we are projecting approximately $40,000,000 of growth in Earth Intelligence adjusted EBITDA over 2020. That is net of expenses incurred to support future growth, reductions in certain government spend that is expected to come back and an environment of delay in our services awards. If we do nothing more to continue that $40,000,000 a year of net growth for the next 2 years, we will cover 120,000,000 of $165,000,000 of growth from 2020. That would leave us with $40,000,000 but just EBITDA to be achieved from Legion or other sources, Not the $80,000,000 we pointed to almost 2 years ago prior to our more developed product efforts. It is still too early for me to say that our Our Q3 targets are unchanged due to the Legion delay, but I think this should help you understand that there are other considerations and you can't look Long term guidance on a line item basis. Speaker 300:28:54Continuing that thought, on Space Infrastructure, we said we were targeting $95,000,000 in adjusted EBITDA growth from 2020 to 2023. If you exclude the SiriusXM charge this year, we are already on track We have a solid backlog as demonstrated by the total year to date book And of course, we remain focused on executing on WorldView Legion Construction and the EOCL program with ENRO. All of this should have positive impact on the trajectory of cash flow, which we intend to reduce indebtedness and drive down leverage over time. We're excited about the trends we see in front of us and we believe we're well positioned to drive total company growth in the years ahead. Operator, let's now begin the Q and A. Operator00:30:04Your first question is from Matt Sharpe from Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Speaker 500:30:10Dan, Vigges, Jason, good afternoon and nice quarter. Speaker 200:30:13Hey, Matt. Hey, Matt. Thanks. Speaker 500:30:16Dan, appreciate the details on the path forward for WorldView Legion. That's very helpful. Maybe just stepping back here and looking at the remaining key phases, I was hoping you could tell us Which have maybe been more difficult and which have been less difficult based on past Performance or the company's experience. Said another way, where do you see variability in the schedule ahead here and what milestones maybe do Do you think you'll have kicked off come the Q4? Speaker 200:30:53Thanks, Matt. I think the probably the best way to answer that Is to reflect on what we've gotten done so far and then kind of think just through the steps ahead of us. But The legacy of the Maxar team going all the way back through the SSL days is a very experienced satellite Program Management and Satellite Manufacturing and Testing team. So as we've completed The things that threw us just a little bit this year were the Raytheon and the Honeywell supply chain issues. We've got the Honeywell parts, we've got the 1st Raytheon instrument integrated, second one on its way shortly here. Speaker 200:31:39So as we move into the testing phases now, I think the next big milestones we'll be looking at are making our way through thermal vac, final integration and All the flight software and the full complete on orbit simulation simulated testing of the satellite in the various environments and then Down to the launch range for final prep and launch. So I'm not sure that there's one I'm concentrating on any more than the others. We're very Speaker 600:32:05focused on the schedule. Speaker 200:32:05We're very focused on the We're very focused on the March to June timeframe and looking forward to getting that and getting these up and getting them tested and providing service for customers. Speaker 500:32:15Got it. That's helpful. And then I think Biggs might have mentioned, 92% of the workforce vaccinated. Enough to sort of backfill any employees that might choose not to be vaccinated by the December 8th deadline? Speaker 200:32:40Yes, we're in pretty good shape. 92% is a very good number and we're continuing to get some other people filtering in. There are a handful of people that we're going to work through the protocol and the exemptions that are listed under the executive order, but we're really encouraged with How the teams move forward on this and don't expect any type of material impact either to the main business or to the Legion program Throughout the rest of the year as we comply with the executive order. We'll continue to watch developments as they occur. I know some other large contractors We're looking at timelines for the final vaccinations and stuff and working through those, but we've been sort of full steam ahead with it and a high degree of compliance. Speaker 500:33:21Fantastic. And then maybe one more, if I may. The SDA program, Transport Layer Tranche 1 moving to an OTA, does that change anything for Maxar there? And then maybe just thinking about the program over the longer term, what's the opportunity, the potential there in terms of satellites or dollar figures. Speaker 200:33:48Yes, I think probably the maybe just as I headline, Maxar is really, really committed to its diversification efforts And we're getting some strong traction across different agencies and we can remain committed to supporting the SDA and all of our government customers With the innovative solutions, we really think we've got to compete. We did challenge the SBA transport layer initial RFP because we thought it was unduly burdensome to industry and favored large companies. And I think we were right with that quick reversal. They've now since moved to an OTA Methodology, we're continuing to assess and review that. But we think we've got some great commercial capabilities for SDA and the national architecture as they build out TransOne layers and other aspects of what Space Force and SDA and the Department of the Air Force are all looking at. Speaker 200:34:37So I don't want to give any particular dollar numbers because we're in the middle of a lot of competitions right now, but we think they're significant and will contribute to The resiliency of the space business going forward. Operator00:34:55Your next question is from Tyler Bolanos from JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 700:35:00Hey, good afternoon, guys. Just a quick question on Legion and then 1 on space. Just starting on Legion, is Any update you guys could provide on the other 4 instruments from Raytheon that you guys expected? I think previously you expected it to come this fall. Just wondering if that's still the right time, maybe by year end. Speaker 700:35:23And then on Space Infrastructure, if you could just touch on the backlog growth and maybe what opportunities there are for 2022 and where we could see that segment go? Speaker 200:35:32Yes, sure. I'll hit the Raytheon one first and then I'll talk about Space infrastructure and backlog and some of our pipeline opportunities there. On the instrument, we did find a minor issue During the first instrument integration, not really unexpected during the first build, but it did that learning did require some slight modifications. Those are already in process for the other instruments and so had a slight delay on flight modules 2 through 6. As that gets corrected, we'll be back on the center lines we expect to be with The schedule as we stated, the March to June timeframe for the first launch and then 3 to 6 months for the remaining satellites getting up. Speaker 200:36:16I just I'll stress one point. I think it's important to note that we at Maxxagger consider that change to be extremely low risk. So it wasn't something that knocked the program off its It was just something we had to work through and then we had to work through with Raytheon and they've been very helpful and cooperative in the process. So good news there. Let's see, your other question was about the space infrastructure and where we're seeing some of the pipeline and what's going forward. Speaker 200:36:40So I guess Probably, the good news is we continue to diversify. We had some really strong awards last year In the geo market, geocom market commercially with the C band awards, SiriusXM9 and 10 have certainly been great awards for us this year and That overweights the commercial sector a little bit more than we thought initially, but they're great wins and we'll take that kind of good business with customers wherever it comes from. On the Defense Intel side, we said it'd be a 3 to 5 year story during our Investor Day back in March of 20 And we've been booking study contracts, which are a precursor to production work. You've got solid capabilities in spacecraft, propulsion, It's commercial heritage and a very strong quality track record. We'll continue to assess our partnering strategy there where we can be either a prime or a sub for some of the larger other We've also been bolstering our mission architecture and business capture teams. Speaker 200:37:37On the pipeline, we see geo market being mostly flattish With a solid replacement pipeline, both for bent pipe and digital solutions. Leo market opportunities are a bit nascent, but we're engaged in a number of engineering studies there. And with the civil agencies timelines and budgets are gating items, but we're really encouraged by the administration support for the space programs moving forward. Operator00:38:10And your next question is from Peter Arment from Baird. Your line is open. Speaker 600:38:17You actually have Eric Rudin on the line for Peter today. I appreciate the color on the 2023 targets and the EBITDA growth in Earth Intelligence kind of Ex lesion there. But just a follow-up on that. Given the delays to the remaining Raytheon instruments, And it seems like the first two the first batch here is more de risked than the second. Can that first batch do that 40,000,000 EBITDA growth by 2023 once the first launch takes place? Speaker 200:38:49So I'd say the first thing I think I'd stress is that we're not expecting the issues that we Uncovered the minor issues we had during the integration to knock the overall program schedule off. So we do still continue to expect to march forward with the rest I'd just like to make sure we clarify that if I wasn't sort of rock solid on it earlier. In terms of the growth Yes. You know, we're continuing to grow on the current constellation. We do expect the lesions, the first two and then the additional 4 lesions To provide strong incremental growth to us as soon as they're commissioned and start providing revenue service. Speaker 200:39:30In terms of capacity, any two regions Have more capacity than the WorldView-four Legion the WorldView-four satellite we lost in early 20 2019. 2019, sorry, yes, 1st part of 2019. But and at that time, that satellite had Over $80,000,000 of revenue on it and very high EBITDA. So just to kind of give you a perspective there, 2 Allegiance could generate a lot of revenue and a lot of EBITDA for the business. Speaker 100:40:01Yes. I think it's important to note, if you reflect back on Dan's prepared remarks regarding the Allegion schedule, That the first two go up in the March June timeframe and the second or the remaining satellites will go up 3 to 6 months Later. So the issue that he talked about here on Raytheon, to his point, has not knocked that schedule off at this So reflect back on the prepared remarks for that one. Speaker 600:40:30Okay. Thank you. Appreciate that. And then maybe just a quick one on the CapEx. Is the $30,000,000 impact to CapEx for next year from the Legion delays still the right number? Speaker 600:40:40It looks like you took down the guide $20,000,000 this year. Is that savings or is that just timing being pushed out to 'twenty two? Speaker 300:40:47No, it's a great question. I think as to The pure effect of the Legion cost growth we had through the delay, the $30,000,000 is still a good number. The $20,000,000 I think it's a little early to say whether that Domino's directly into next year or not. That's one of the things that we'll just have to consider as we set our guidance for next year when we come back in the Q4 call. Speaker 600:41:13Okay. Appreciate the color. I'll hop back in queue. Operator00:41:18Your next question is from Tim James from TD Securities. Your line is Speaker 800:41:24Thanks and good afternoon everyone. Quick question actually for Biggs First. And forgive me if you covered this in your commentary, but I don't think I heard it. The change in the D and A guidance for the year, the increase was about $25,000,000 for the year. Could you talk about what was the cause of that? Speaker 100:41:44Yes, I'll take this one. It's the modest Uptick in the depreciation and amortization guidance for the year, that's fully rolling in all of The amortization from the Vrykon acquisition and the CapEx that we've brought on so far this year. Speaker 800:42:05Okay. Thanks, Jason. And then my second question, Dan, just want to go back to you made reference And it's not a surprise your capacity constraints on the imagery side. Just interested where what does that mean? Like where does that demand go? Speaker 800:42:26Do customers look to competitors to fill their needs? Or do they just hold off on acquiring Imagery, like how does your customer base adjust or how should we interpret that when you see your capacity Which presumably I assume means that you could be selling more imagery if you had it available? Speaker 200:42:44Yes. As we've been discussing for some time now, we are sold out in certain regions of the world. But even with that, we've continued to grow. And I think that's kind of We wanted to highlight that in the commercial side that we're up 23% year to date and continuing to see strong applications for our data and products. On the Straight issue of capacity, our current constellation does provide The world's best data and satellite access for our customers. Speaker 200:43:15We have had, as I mentioned On the call, 5 nations now enhanced their ground capacity like ahead of Allegion launches and we've had 1 capacity pre capacity sale of Allegion Capacity, we are aware of one customer that did delay a competition because they want Legion to be in the mix when that comes out, an international customer. So, I mean, what we're seeing is a lot of the smaller competitors don't really meet the mission needs For what the Intel agencies and defense applications are or for what some of the high-tech applications are with our large technology customers as well. So We think there's unmet demand in the marketplace, and we're really looking forward to Allegion getting on orbit to be able to meet that demand. Speaker 800:44:03Okay. Thank you. Can I just sneak one quick one in here, Dan? Great slide that talks about the 5 emergent commercial industries for geospatial data and analysis. Could you comment, is 1 or 2 of those, would you say, a bigger opportunity than the others? Speaker 800:44:18Or do you think they all represent pretty Equally sized opportunities for REMAXAR over the next kind of 3 to 5 years? Speaker 200:44:30I think they all represent really compelling opportunities for us. That's why we put them in the slide that way. But we're Just kind of like this year, 23% year to date is coming from a range of applications and customers. Right now, the tech companies seem to be Growing their revenue and profit profile with us faster than the others, but we see really strong indications that autonomy and We are going to be a large driver in the future. Our risk management applications, we see as being a very strong area of growth for us. Speaker 200:45:03And then back to autonomous, not automotive, but we're actually we're picking up customers that do things like using our data to be able to fly drones around And that kind of application. What we're watching really kind of close to as well is not just the traditional mapping applications you might see Google and like tech companies like that, but gaming, simulation, metaverse applications, which We're far in advance on that with the work we're doing on the One World Terrain system for the U. S. Army to be able to create a simulated training environment based on that 3 d type So we're pretty excited about some of those technologies transitioning back and forth across the Intel, Defense and commercial establishments as we continue to see expansion in those markets. Operator00:45:58Your next question is from Ron Epstein from Bank of America. Your line is open. Speaker 900:46:03Hi, good evening. It's actually Elizabeth on for Ron tonight. We've been seeing a lot of, call it, relatively new entrants to the earth observation market, whether it's Planet or BlackSky or Spire, I was just wondering how you think of them in the competitive landscape given that some of them also do imagery, but then for example, Spire has a little bit of a different angle on the earth observation market. Speaker 200:46:30Yes. I mean, we continue to be very aware of The environment around us, including the new companies and what's going on. We're also, I think, Most focused on meeting our customers' current and emerging needs, and I think it's pretty clear from the Q3 results, we've continued to demonstrate Strong growth here at Maxar. We do continue, as I mentioned earlier, to have the most sophisticated and capable constellation on orbit now And Legion will only be adding to that for electro optical solutions. And across that we've been investing in AI, ML and 3 d capabilities. Speaker 200:47:08That commercial business, off a base of $143,000,000 in 20.20, growing 23% year to date, which is bigger than I guess all those facts combined if you start to roll up numbers. And We think we're positioned well moving forward with the investments we've made, with the investments we'll continue to make and as we drive towards What we think the customer solutions look like. So we're not standing still. We're aware of what's going on and we're continuing Speaker 300:47:35to drive forward. It's probably worth pointing out too that Planet and BlackSky really aren't new. They've been in the market for many years. Speaker 200:47:44Yes, I think that's a fair point, Biggs. I mean, some of these companies have been around for a decade or so and again, a lot more pressing out the SPAC market, but We're watching it. We're intrigued by some of the TAMs out there. We think if we're trying to Take the view that we see of them based on what we see current customer and future customer needs looking like, but if those TAMs turn out to be Fraction of what some of the people say they are, we expect to take a very large percentage of that market share as well. Speaker 900:48:17Thank you. Thanks. Operator00:48:22Your next question is from Thanos Moskopoulos from BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:48:28Hi, good afternoon. Dan, maybe expanding on the competition question. I guess one More recent development is Airbus having launched some of their satellites. So for the first time, there's another 30 centimeter resolution competitor with commercial imagery. Now I guess from your commentary, it sounds like you're obviously seeing strong demand regardless. Speaker 1000:48:51Just curious if that's changing the dynamic at all. And I guess is one of the answers that there's just a lot of other parameters that matter to the customer beyond just the resolution? Speaker 200:49:00Yes. Thanks, Thanos. And I mean, as You've been following us for quite a while. Airbus has long been a competitor for both the International Defense and Intelligence and Commercial Industry. So that's not new. Speaker 200:49:12They've been launching the Neo satellites and all indications are they provide very capable data And service for the customers. We'll continue to compete with them across the world in those But that's nothing new really for the legacy DigitalGlobe or where we are with Maxar today. So we're Just kind of we're confident in the way we're seeing that unfold across the world. Speaker 1000:49:42And just on margins, so looking at the Space and Infrastructure margins, they were up year over year, but they did relative to Q2 and Your colleagues went to rebound in Q4. Anything to call out there or is that just a function of the cadence of the various programs? Speaker 300:49:58Yes, it's just driven by product sales mix, 1 quarter to another. The increase in revenues we have on product are going to create a little bit more lumpiness from one period to the next as you look quarter to quarter. Speaker 100:50:14Yes, that's a good that's on the Earth Intelligence side. And then on Space Infrastructure. Oh, sorry, he was Yes, space infrastructure. Speaker 300:50:23Space infrastructure, it's a little bit different story. There's some mix in there. But if you look at the Q2, we had a number of smaller positive upticks on Programs on EACs, which boosts both revenue and margins. And then in the Q3, there were a few small adjustments going the other way on EACs, not singularly material. And then there was one pass through cost, which really represented a contingency that was outstanding that We may still not have to incur when it's all said and done, but we booked a few $1,000,000 On a pass through cost in the Q3. Speaker 300:51:11And so you put all that together and it creates a little bit of volatility from 2nd quarter to 3rd quarter, but still really good margins compared to the past and overall on a good trend through the year. Good Q4. It would be projected to be relatively normal without noise upwards or downwards in terms of what we project to look Speaker 1000:51:39And then finally, in terms of when the first part of Legion launches, Is that going to have any impact on gross margins at all either direction or should that be relatively neutral as an event Just on a short term basis? Well, Speaker 300:51:57it first has to be it become operational. It's not just a matter of mystically upon launch. And so it will go through in orbit testing and commissioning. And so then it will ramp up. So it will be a very gradual Production, I shouldn't say, I was trying to make it as fast as we can, but it will be a gradual increase Of revenue, it will be high margin though when it comes Speaker 200:52:24on. Yes, we won't have to spend a lot more on The current infrastructure supports the operations of the Legion constellation substantially And the way we're set up for production, the products and the types of services we provide at the satellites will scale Very nicely into the existing cost base. Operator00:52:49Yes. And the thing that Speaker 100:52:50I would add, Thanos, is that the $1,100,000,000 roughly in Earth Intelligence Revenue, dollars 300,000,000 of it is in that services business. It runs at 10% to 12% EBITDA margins. And as we bring Legion capacity online, The other $800,000,000 will be growing a bit faster than the services business. So that by kind of definition is should be margin accretive for us. Speaker 1000:53:12Great. Thanks guys. Operator00:53:15Your next question is from Peter Osterland from Trello Securities. Your line is open. Speaker 1100:53:22Hey, good evening. This is Pete on for Mike Ciarmoli tonight. Thanks for taking our question. Last quarter you called out some internal mission assurance and engineering resources that you were adding to address some of the delays you've experienced The Woundview Legion launch, so I just wanted to ask how that has progressed. Are there any efficiency improvements that you've been able to realize as a result? Speaker 1100:53:44And are there Are there areas within the company where those resources have also been useful? Speaker 200:53:51Yes, I'd say Probably nothing that we didn't expect or that we didn't bake into how we were thinking about the business going forward and the program in general. I do think it's an advantage for us. As 1 MAX or as a larger company, We've got lots of good resources across the organization that we can flex from the space side to the Earth Intel side or for the Earth Intel side to the space side, Depending on where we need particular types of engineering or Software, other types of support on programs or mission assurance reviews or those kind of things. So I think it's good to see the teams operating cohesively And driving forward for customer mission success. Speaker 1100:54:39Thanks very much. Operator00:54:43Your last question is from Chris Quilty from Quilty Analytics. Your line is open. Speaker 400:54:50Hi, guys. Question for you on the commercial pipeline and I guess the commercial Growth that you've seen, if you could maybe quantify the recent growth spurt, is that driven more by Adding new customers or adding new products or is it existing customers Buying additional products or more volume of legacy products, some kind of flavor of where that growth is coming from? Speaker 200:55:23Yes. Hey, Chris. Yes, so it's a combination We're seeing really good traction with some of the existing customers on new products. So the 3 d capabilities would be something I'd highlight there, but also 15 centimeter HD and our worldwide solution base maps, the Vivid and those kind of things for The tech customers that are looking for highly accurate but visually appealing information sets. And they're really intrigued by how 3 d helps Not just lock data sources down, but also conduct things like autonomous navigation and otherwise. Speaker 200:56:02There are a healthy dose of new customers coming in With that 3 d technology as well that we're seeing solutions being provided for. So that's really exciting to see. And then I'd say the product growth generally across has been something I'm really glad we've been investing in. The 3 d capabilities, the AI and ML capabilities we're bringing to bear, helping solve people's problems, not just providing Data or software access to them. Speaker 400:56:32Got you. And with the Legion program coming online, you have some Pretty good visibility from your government customer and certainly international defense and Intel, they're putting hardware in place. How do you gauge the incremental demand that you may see from the commercial side? Are there any indicators you can point to or discussions you're having When you look at the $80,000,000 of revenue ramp in whatever period, should half of that be coming from commercial The majority or something less? Speaker 200:57:08Boy, kind of tough to parse out which will grow faster. It's fun when you put that challenge in front of the sales teams to see who's going to drive their numbers harder. The And there's always been a promise in this business, but of a very large commercial market. I think at 143% and growing 23% year to date, we're seeing some on that with the better refined products we've got as well as cloud compute environments and how AI and ML can help snap some of that together for solutions. So we're excited about that. Speaker 200:57:41The VriCon, it's not just a 3 d solution that we're bringing to bear, but there are 3 d point clouds that help disparate sources of information Be layered in and made sense of for analyst ready data and AI and ML ready data. So that's really exciting as well. On the government side, we're I'm not sure which one is going to run faster, quite honestly, but we're really excited to see The trend lines on the commercial side and there's a future scenario where that could be a very Material. It's already material, I guess, but a very comprehensive and large part of our business, much like the government businesses now. Speaker 400:58:20Got you. A clarification on Slide 6 where you've got the 5,000,000 square meters of square kilometers, excuse me, of capacity, That clearly includes 6 Legion satellites, but what other satellites does it assume in that number? Speaker 200:58:36That assumes the current constellation right now, I think minus GY1 at some point. So we'd assume the WorldView constellation plus the legions. And then Yes, we've got the I guess we've got the capacity to If the market signals are there to add to the Legion constellation, if and when it's appropriate to do so. Speaker 400:58:58And you typically update in the 10 ks Where you currently assume the lifecycle on those legacy satellites, which is it currently now being driven by fuel on the satellites or Technical aspects of the systems performance and power and whatnot? Speaker 200:59:15Yes, none of them are fuel limited, Which I think is good. We do update that table annually and as you've noted several times in the past, we've extended those Like yes, it's basically just an engineering simulation on for the depreciation and amortization schedules. I guess what I'd note that I haven't made remarks about before is that we did just renew our insurance for all 4 satellites. We've got the same coverage levels as we had last year and there were really no material changes to the premiums. So that probably gives some expectation that we Speaker 300:59:50every year the satellites are on orbit, we continue to expect Speaker 200:59:50them to last a Every year the satellites are on orbit, we continue to expect them to last longer in space. Speaker 400:59:56That's good given what's been happening to insurance rates. Okay. Final question, and maybe when we're going to get an unsatisfactory answer, but some recent news story rumors around Potential funding issues with the EOCL, unclear whether they're talking about the traditional optical or some of the new phenomenologies. I know we're not going to get a detailed answer because it's all still in process, but do you feel as well today as you did a quarter ago About the outlook for EOCL and funding levels in your position? Speaker 201:00:32Yes, actually Pretty confident in what we're seeing for funding levels for EOCL. The RFP was issued this morning By the NRO and responses are due December 3. Consistent with their expectations in the Q1 of 2022, we do expect Awards. And I think we're this follows an extensive review by the U. S. Speaker 201:01:01Government over the past 2 years, both For industry studies as well as setting out requirements for the DoD and the intelligence community. And As Pete Moon said in his remarks to the press this morning, they continue to see expanded use of commercial to meet the nation's needs. So we're I spent a lot of time on Capitol Hill. I think there's a lot of strong support for the EOCL program, what it provides and the fact that it's a good deal for the U. S. Speaker 201:01:29Taxpayers. Speaker 1001:01:31Awesome. Thank you. Speaker 201:01:32Thanks, Chris. Speaker 101:01:34Yes, operator, I think we've got time for one more. Operator01:01:38Your last question is from Austin Moeller from Canaccord Genuity. Your line is open. Speaker 1201:01:44Good evening, Dan. I don't know if this You've been asked already, but I just was wondering about the recent news report that Intelsat was planning to buy 10 GEO satellites sometime Early next year and what percentage of that you think might be won by Maxar? And then also on the Non geostationary satellite fleet that they've been planning to announce for next year, if that's something that you plan to have the I Speaker 201:02:18guess, we've got a long history with Intelsat And continue to engage closely with them to try and meet their mission solutions. We're aware of the article, really No comment on that particular aspect of it other than to note that we do have technical solutions that allow us to compete for Bids with Intelsat, we had strong performance on the C band awards. Some of the ones that are Reference in the article are software defined satellites and we'll continue to work very hard to keep that long term customer happy and keep winning business from them. Speaker 1201:03:02Okay, great. Thank you. Speaker 201:03:04Thank you. Okay. Operator01:03:07And I'm showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back to Mr. Jason Jerske for any additional or closing comments. Speaker 101:03:15Great. Thank you, operator. Thanks to all for dialing in and for your interest in Maxar. We look forward to reconnecting with you all early next year on our Q4 earnings call.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways Financial Growth: Maxar generated 5% year-over-year revenue growth in Q3 (11% YTD) and expanded adjusted EBITDA margins by 380 basis points, achieving a Q3 book-to-bill of 2.2x. Cash Flow & Leverage: The company delivered robust free cash flow, turned positive YTD through Q3, reduced net debt by $84 M, and ended the quarter with bank-defined leverage below 4x, leading to raised full-year EBITDA and cash flow guidance. WorldView Legion Progress: Maxar remains on track for its first WorldView Legion launch in the March–June 2022 window, with environmental testing and remaining hardware integration underway and subsequent satellites set to launch 3–6 months later. Earth Intelligence Commercial Growth: The commercial segment generated $143 M in 2020 revenue and is up 23% YTD through Q3 2021, driven by high-resolution imagery, AI/ML analytics and 3D mapping solutions for enterprise customers. Space Infrastructure Wins: In Q3 the company secured two new SiriusXM GEO awards, a NASA power propulsion element contract modification and other government bookings, sustaining a 2.5x book-to-bill ratio and a healthy program pipeline. A.I. generated. May contain errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallMaxar Technologies Q3 202100:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckQuarterly report(10-Q) Maxar Technologies Earnings HeadlinesMaxar restores access to commercial satellite imagery for UkraineMarch 12, 2025 | msn.comMaxar restores Ukraine’s access to satellite imagesMarch 12, 2025 | msn.comBuffett’s favorite chart just hit 209% – here’s what that means for goldA Historic Gold Announcement Is About to Rock Wall Street For months, sharp-eyed analysts have watched the quiet buildup behind the scenes. Now, in just days, the floodgates are set to open. The greatest investor of all time is about to validate what Garrett Goggin has been saying for months: Gold is entering a once-in-a-generation mania. Front-running Buffett has never been more urgent — and four tiny miners could be your ticket to 100X gains.May 21, 2025 | Golden Portfolio (Ad)Maxar confirms closing Ukraine's access to its satellite imageryMarch 7, 2025 | msn.comUS block on Maxar satellite images effectively blinds Ukraine's drone pilotsMarch 7, 2025 | msn.comMaxar disables Ukraine's access to satellite images, media reportsMarch 7, 2025 | msn.comSee More Maxar Technologies Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Maxar Technologies? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Maxar Technologies and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Maxar TechnologiesMaxar Technologies (NYSE:MAXR) provides earth intelligence and space infrastructure solutions in the United States, Asia, South America, Europe, the Middle East, Australia, Canada, and internationally. It operates through two segments, Earth Intelligence and Space Infrastructure. The Earth Intelligence segment offers earth imagery and other geospatial data sourced from its advanced satellite constellation and third-party providers to public sector and enterprise customers, as well as a provides advanced geospatial information, applications, and analytic services for national security and commercial solutions. Its solutions include satellite access, geospatial foundation, precision mapping, on-demand intelligence, and geospatial services. It serves U.S. and international government agencies, and enterprise customer verticals. The Space Infrastructure segment provides space-based infrastructure, robotics, sub-systems, and information solutions, including communication and imaging satellites and payloads; platforms for space exploration and hosting instruments for earth science; space subsystems for power, propulsion, and communication; satellite ground systems and support services; space-based remote sensory solutions; space robotics; and defense systems. This segment serves government agencies and satellite operators. Maxar Technologies Inc. was founded in 1957 and is headquartered in Westminster, Colorado.View Maxar Technologies 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 Alibaba's Earnings Just Changed Everything for the StockCisco Stock Eyes New Highs in 2025 on AI, Earnings, UpgradesSymbotic Gets Big Earnings Lift: Is the Stock Investable Again?D-Wave Pushes Back on Short Seller Case With Strong EarningsAppLovin Surges on Earnings: What's Next for This Tech Standout?Can Shopify Stock Make a Comeback After an Earnings Sell-Off?Rocket Lab: Earnings Miss But Neutron Momentum Holds Upcoming Earnings Lowe's Companies (5/21/2025)Medtronic (5/21/2025)Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (5/21/2025)Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (5/21/2025)Snowflake (5/21/2025)TJX Companies (5/21/2025)Autodesk (5/22/2025)Analog Devices (5/22/2025)Copart (5/22/2025)Intuit (5/22/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Maxar Technologies Q3 2021 Conference Call and Webcast. At this time, all participants are in listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Mr. Operator00:00:32Jason Gursky, Vice President, Investor Relations and Corporate Treasurer. Speaker 100:00:39Good afternoon, and thanks, operator. Welcome to Maxar's 3rd quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. I'm joined today by the company's Chief Executive Officer, Dan Jablonsky and its Chief Financial Officer, Biggs Porter. Both will make some opening remarks, after which we're going to open up the line for your questions. We're shooting to wrap up the call in about an hour. Speaker 100:00:58Before we get started, I'd like to refer listeners to the accompanying slides for today's presentation, which can be found on the company's website at maxar.com. Once there, please turn to Slide 2, where I'd like to remind you that part of today's discussion, including responses to various questions, may contain forward looking statements, which represent the company's estimates, future plans, objectives and expected performance at today's date. These statements are based on current assumptions that the company believes are reasonable, but are subject to a wide range of uncertainties and risks that could lead actual results to differ materially From the forward looking information, you refer to the advisory regarding forward looking statements contained in our quarterly earnings releases, earnings call slide decks and the company's most recent MD and A section found in our Form 10 Q on the company's website at maxar.com. And with that, I'm going to turn the discussion over to Dan. Dan, go ahead. Speaker 200:01:51Thanks, Jason, and good afternoon, everyone. Before I get started, I'd like to welcome Tom Wayne, our Chief Strategy Officer and Colleen Campbell, Chief Marketing Officer to the Maxar team. Both are seasoned executives and have deep experience in the aero defense industry. Tom is a space industry veteran having held both banking and operating roles over his 20 plus year career. He also has a long history with Maxar, having advised DigitalGlobe, one of our predecessor companies as far back as 2012. Speaker 200:02:22Tom will lead corporate strategy, corporate development and strategic investments As we look to drive long term growth for our shareholders, Colleen most recently led marketing and communications at Allianz, A leading AI and cyber platform, previously led digital strategy at Northrop and earlier in her career We have leadership roles at Global Park and Ogilvy, since now we're leading our global marketing, media relations and communications teams. We're very excited about the ecosystem in which we operate and the demand environment in front of us. This lends itself to a multitude of opportunities We want to be best positioned to take advantage of them. I'd like to remind investors that our 3 d capabilities, which are a big driver of our current product growth, came by way of the Vrycon JV that we set up way back in 2015. I'd also like to remind everyone that we remain committed to generating cash and to reducing debt and leverage in the years ahead. Speaker 200:03:20At this point, we're on the path to our long term leverage targets, which should provide the company even more flexibility to execute on our strategic growth plans. Okay. Now for the quarter and our progress. I'm going to cover the key highlights from the quarter and provide an update on our 2021 priorities, including where we are with the Legion program, our next generation constellation. I'll also spend time describing our commercial business in the Earth Intelligence segment to provide some context on the breadth of our offerings and marquee customers, as well as the financial contribution this vertical makes to the company. Speaker 200:03:56Please turn to slide 3 of the accompanying presentation. We generated 5% year over year revenue growth in the quarter, excluding the effect of EV deferred and 11% year to date. Of note, Earth Intelligence grew 7% year over year in the quarter and is now up 8% year to date despite the fact that we are currently Growth here was driven largely by product sales to commercial and government customers. Importantly, we saw 380 basis points of adjusted EBITDA margin expansion year over year, excluding EV deferred, driven by improvement in both segments. Bookings were solid this quarter and we generated a book to bill of 2.2x. Speaker 200:04:43Key wins included 2 GEO awards from SiriusXM, while in Earth Intelligence, we received our 11th renewal of the EnhancedView program And we're awarded numerous U. S. And international government contracts, including another renewal of the global EGD program. Year to date, Total company book to bill is 1.1 times, reflecting solid demand for both multi year contracts as well as strong book to ship activity in the Earth Intelligence segment this year. Importantly, we generated robust free cash flow and are now positive for the year through the end of Q3. Speaker 200:05:20Bank defined leverage finished below 4 turns. Biggs will go into these metrics in more detail during his remarks, But I can say we're excited by the progress we've made over the past couple of years on both, and we look forward to continued momentum in the years ahead. Finally, as Bags will discuss in more detail, we have increased our outlook for adjusted EBITDA and cash flow. Please turn to Slide 4 for an update on our 2021 priorities. We remain focused on winning in Earth Intelligence, which means driving bookings growth, including for capacity on WorldView Legion, growing 3 d capabilities And extending EnhancedView through the upcoming EOCL or electro optical commercial layer program with the NRO. Speaker 200:06:06In addition to the awards I mentioned a moment ago, we won an award to continue development and operations of a classified big data analytics program for the U. S. Government. We renewed a contract with a large technology company and we announced the 2 new customers signed multimillion dollar contracts earlier this year to our rapid access program, including the first customer in Latin America. Importantly, We also signed a contract with a close U. Speaker 200:06:33S. Ally to upgrade the country's ground infrastructure so that it is ready for the Legion constellation. This marks the 5th country to commit to a ground upgrade. As a reminder, one of these 5 countries has already committed to on the constellation and we expect the others to do the same once the satellites are operational. This is a good sign that the demand environment remains robust. Speaker 200:06:58From an execution perspective, it was another good quarter, with the team generating both revenue And margin growth, excluding EV deferred, which as I mentioned earlier, is a great outcome given the capacity constraints we face ahead of the Legion launch. In early October, we attended the Annual GEOINT Symposium, an event that brings together leaders from across government and the industrial base. There we continue to hear that government demand for geospatial data and analytics is as robust as ever. Our customers at the NRO, NGA And military services seek to leverage the capabilities of the industrial base to better understand what's going on in every corner of the planet. And importantly, they're increasingly looking for answers to tough questions in technology solutions, not just data. Speaker 200:07:45As I've discussed on prior earnings calls over the past couple of years, Maxar is positioned well for this demand environment. We've been making investments in our constellation to provide the highest quality data available in the commercial market. We've invested in platforms Such as SecureWatch and Global EGT, which provide online access to our geospatial data and analytical tool sets to 100 of thousands of users across the U. S. Government and allied nations and to commercial enterprise customers. Speaker 200:08:14And we've been investing in AI and machine learning capabilities that help turn data into insight and that drive improved sensor to shooter timelines. We're excited about what the future holds for It's clear that the geopolitical environment is driving investment on their end, particularly in the areas of focus for Maxar. And we've been making investments for years to address this demand with well proven technologies. I'm confident this positions us well To continue to be a trusted partner on our nation's most critical national security missions in the years ahead. Turning now to space infrastructure, where we are committed to consistent execution against some of the world's most complex space programs and to establishing a foundation for future growth. Speaker 200:09:00In addition to the SiriusXM awards I mentioned earlier, we booked a contract modification with NASA for work on the power propulsion element And study contracts for national security work as we continue to look to shape new programs and further diversify the business. Book to bill this quarter was a robust 2.5 times and now sits at a touch over 1 times for the year. The pipeline remains robust across both commercial and government end markets, but the precise timing of awards is always difficult to access. We're pleased with our bookings performance so far this year and look forward to updating investors as new awards are made. From an investment standpoint, as I mentioned last quarter, we continue to work on new satellite and constellation designs, including modular spacecraft and proliferated constellations, as we look to serve commercial, civil and classified programs with highly engineered and affordable solutions. Speaker 200:09:54We also remain focused on our payloads and are proactively working on comprehensive packages that will solve our customers' demanding mission needs. Reflected in the financial results, we had a solid quarter as adjusted EBITDA margins continued their year over year improvement, reflecting better performance and healthier program mix. And finally, on financial flexibility, we're continuing to drive strong financial results in the business And see our way to significant cash generation in the quarters and years ahead, both of which should drive debt and leverage levels lower. Moving to WorldView Legion, please turn to Slide 5. First, the punch line. Speaker 200:10:33We remain on track for a first launch In the March to June window of 2022 and we continue to expect the remainder of the constellation will launch 3 to 6 months after the first. Importantly, the First Flight unit is largely through its integration phases and is prepping for thermal vac. I know investors are interested in the remaining work before the let's go into service. So I thought I'd provide some insight on the outstanding phases of the program. As you've heard me mention in the past, The program has already made its way through various design and integration reviews and we've taken delivery of components and various subsystems from both internal and external suppliers, Which we've been integrating. Speaker 200:11:13A key gating item this year was some hardware coming in from Honeywell and Raytheon. And as we reported out on last quarter's call, The Honeywell equipment to support the first launch has been delivered. With Raytheon, we've received and have integrated the first instrument and expect the second in the coming weeks. That's a short delay for the second one, but we do not expect this to cause any pressure on the overall program schedule. At this point, we expect the remaining hardware for the other satellites to flow during the fall and winter. Speaker 200:11:42Once all in, we complete the integration of the hardware and conduct Initial performance testing, then comes environmental testing, starting with thermal vac, then acoustics and then vibration, all designed to simulate The launch characteristics and eventual environment the satellites will operate in, in space once on orbit. After all the testing is complete, Including software validation, we'll begin launch campaign activities, including the shipment of the satellites to the launch facility down at the Cape. And lastly, of course, on orbit testing and the beginning of revenue generation. On the right hand of this slide, We've included some photos that should give readers a better sense of the program. The top left picture is an artist's depiction of a Legion satellite on orbit And on the one on the top right is the optical instrument before being integrated into the satellite bus. Speaker 200:12:33The larger picture at the bottom is what the first unit looked like on factory floor recently. There you see things like thermal blankets around the bus and the instrument integrated into the satellite. Of note, there are 2 employees standing off to the right. This should give you a pretty good sense of the scale of the satellite itself. We We continue to believe we're on the right path for a launch in the March June window next year with the critical remaining steps being what I just described. Speaker 200:12:59Going forward, we will continue to provide updates on our progress on quarterly earnings calls and we look forward to having you join us either virtually or in person at the launch site next year. Please turn to Slide 6. I'd like to take a moment to remind listeners that the Legion constellation represents When initially launched, Legion will significantly augment our current constellation. On the replacement side, Legion, which will fly in both polar and mid inclination orbits, will eventually replace GeoEye 1 and WorldViews 12, which fly Additionally, Leachman will provide 30 centimeter class resolution versus the 40 to 50 centimeter capabilities of the satellites that it will be replacing. Both are important nuances. Speaker 200:13:48The mid inclination orbit will allow us to collect more imagery in the areas with the most demand, Since 95% of the world's population lives between plus or minus 50 degrees latitude and higher resolution data has historically garnered better price levels given its value to customer missions. In our view, the combination of additional capacity in the in demand areas of the world A significant enhancement in the quality mix of the data should drive solid revenue growth in the Earth Intelligence segment once Legion is on orbit. Importantly, Legion and the existing constellation assets are broad area collectors that allow for monitoring type missions and that when combined with our existing constellation will provide revisit rates of up to 15 times per day. This type of high resolution, highly accurate collection capacity It's wide area, artificial intelligence and machine learning modeling, sensor to shooter applications and is a key enabler of our ability to Derive highly accurate and lifelike 3 d models, which we believe positions Maxar well to continue to be an industry leader as customers transition from 2 d Before I hand the call over to Bix for a more detailed discussion of the numbers, I'd like to spend a few minutes Double clicking on the Earth Intelligence segment's activity in the commercial vertical. Speaker 200:15:15In 2020, we generated $143,000,000 in revenue From a who's who of the largest enterprise users of geospatial data, products and analytics. We've been a trusted partner for the world's largest Technology and telecommunications companies for well over a decade and we're consistently onboarding new and innovative customers every year, including in the automotive and autonomous areas. These customers value our high quality data and the products, services and analytics that are derived from it, and we look forward to growing with them in the future. Importantly, year to date performance is a pretty good indicator of how things are going on that front, With revenue up 23% through the Q3 of 2021 versus the same period a year ago. What I'd like to do now is walk you through the 4 primary product areas on offer to commercial customers and then move to focus on one of them. Speaker 200:16:09I'm going to move quickly through these slides to provide a general overview, but encourage listeners to read through them in detail offline to fully appreciate the power and significance of our offerings to a broad set of enterprise customers. Please turn to Slide 9. In general, our products span satellite access, Geospatial Foundation, Precision Mapping and On Demand Intelligence. I'm going to highlight Geospatial Foundation, a product area where we provide the highest quality satellite imagery, Consumer Mapping, Risk Management and Monitoring, Telecommunications and Metaverses, Simulation and Gaming. Slides 1213 showcase how we use our 15 centimeter HD product in the autonomous driving area. Speaker 200:17:02While Slides 14 through 17 demonstrate how our vivid base maps and analyst ready data allow users to unlock location intelligence for both consumer and first responder mapping applications. And finally, slides 18 through 23 highlight how our capabilities with 3 d technology are helping customers in the technology and telecom, Simulation and Gaming in Autonomous Verticals. I wanted to highlight the commercial vertical today because I know that it often gets Given the critical national security missions for the U. S. Government and our closest allies that we help to support. Speaker 200:17:34But at $143,000,000 last year and growing, The commercial vertical is incredibly important to us and as such to our investors. It's an area that helps for innovation across our products and services And it's an area that we are going to be increasingly focused on in the future as we see any number of applications across the commercial sub verticals I mentioned earlier Benefiting from the investments we're making in the Legion constellation, investments in 3 d and our investments in AI and ML, all of which are topics that I've covered in-depth on previous earnings calls. And with that, I'm going to turn the call over to Biggs for a deeper dive on quarterly performance and how 2022 and 2023 are shaping up. Mig? Thanks, Dan. Speaker 200:18:17Please turn to Slide 24, where we present year over year comparisons Speaker 300:18:23Our net income for Q3 was $14,000,000 driven primarily by strong performance in both Earth Intelligence and Space Infrastructure. Revenue was roughly flat year over year for the quarter and is up 4% year to date on a reported basis. Excluding the effects of the enhanced fee contract deferred revenue Total company revenues increased 5% year over year driven by recent wins in Space Infrastructure and Product Growth Earth Intelligence. On year to date basis, total company revenues increased 11%, excluding the effects of the EV deferred revenue burn off and adjusted EBITDA margins increased by 300 basis points. Please turn to Slide 25, where I'll discuss Earth Intelligence results without the effect of EV deferred. Speaker 300:19:10Revenue increased 7% year over year in the 3rd quarter, driven primarily by increases from international defense and intelligence commercial customers, offset slightly by a reduction of revenue from U. S. Government customers. Adjusted EBITDA margins expanded 3.30 basis points, driven by the expansion of contracts with existing commercial and international defense and intelligence customers contributing to positive margin growth. On a full year basis, revenue was up 8% year over year, driven by increases from international defense and intelligence commercial customers And adjusted EBITDA margins expanded 100 basis points. Speaker 300:19:51Please turn to Slide 26. Space Infrastructure revenue was essentially flat year over year, while margins expanded 120 basis points, driven by the profitability of recent awards, as well as fewer negative EAC impacts, including those related to COVID-nineteen taken last year. This was offset partially by an increase in indirect costs and selling, general and administrative costs. Year to date revenue is up 9%, primarily driven by an increase in revenues from commercial programs as well as lower EIC growth. Adjusted EBITDA margins expanded to 8 60 basis points, driven by the profitability of recent program awards, Offset by reductions in revenue from the SiriusXM7 charges taken during the year and modest increases in indirect and SG and A costs. Speaker 300:20:44Before moving on to a discussion of cash flows, I do want to comment more generally on the supply chain issues and COVID vaccination requirements that have impacted various industries. We continue to monitor our supply chain closely and do not expect to see any material impacts at this time. Also, we're pleased to report we already have approximately 92% of our workforce that are submitted proof of their vaccination status. We'll continue to work through the various protocols. Please turn to Slide 27. Speaker 300:21:18The company generated $136,000,000 in operating cash flow from continuing operations in the Q3 and invested $51,000,000 in CapEx. Operating cash flow for the quarter was positively impacted by the timing of cash receipts and other favorable working capital changes as expected, which we outlined in the Q2 call. Please turn to Slide 28. We have roughly $508,000,000 liquidity at the end of And our bank defined leverage ratio ended the quarter at approximately 3.8x. Net debt decreased $84,000,000 from last quarter due to our cash generation in Q3. Speaker 300:21:57Now please turn to Slide 29. Overall, we're narrowing and improving our guidance ranges for adjusted EBITDA and cash flows. Revenue guidance has decreased slightly driven by an increase in inter We've tightened the revenue guidance for Earth Intelligence by $20,000,000 to a range of $1,060,000,000 to 1 point The midpoint remains unchanged from what we issued previously. We spoke earlier this year about our goal of driving up to $100,000,000 of new product growth At Earth Intelligence this year including on and highlighted the 23% year to date growth we have seen with our commercial customers and we continue to drive growth And our customer base as well government customer base as well. At the midpoint of our guidance, we expect further 4th quarter revenue to be roughly in line with the average quarterly run rate of Speaker 400:22:49the 1st 3 quarters of Speaker 300:22:50the year at 5,000,000 I lowered the top end of our guidance range by $10,000,000 and expect the full year to fall between $740,000,000 $760,000,000 representing lowtomidsingle digit. Q4 results to roughly mirror the Q2 driven by the timing of revenue recognition, particularly on recent commercial awards. As Dan spoke to earlier, Space Infrastructure had a book to bill of 2.5x in the 3rd quarter. It's important to note that last year's Q4 benefited from a steep ramp in revenue associated with commercial GEO Comsat that were awarded earlier in 2020 and from a greater contribution from U. S. Speaker 300:23:32Government work, including on the PPE and psych programs. Guidance for intersegment eliminations has increased modestly to an expected total of $65,000,000 for the full year, driven by our increased spend on the WorldView Legion program. As a result of the changes at Space Infrastructure and the change in our segment eliminations, Consolidated revenue guidance is now expected to fall into a range of $1,730,000,000 to 1,780,000,000 Excluding the effects of EV deferred, the midpoint of our guidance implies approximately 7% growth for the year. Turning to adjusted EBITDA. At Earth Intelligence, we have raised the midpoint by 15,000,000 We now expect to be in a range of $465,000,000 to $475,000,000 for the year. Speaker 300:24:32As we highlighted earlier this year, Earnings at Earth Intelligence can vary with the timing of awards and the nature of those awards can impact the margin profile quarter to quarter. Growth in our services portfolio continues to be constrained by the pace at which government is making awards, with a significant number of proposals remaining outstanding. This is lower margin business however, so we are clearly benefiting from the growth in the higher margin product revenues. We aren't making any changes to the full year adjusted EBITDA range for Space Infrastructure and expect margins to expand into 4th quarter to levels similar Margins will fluctuate some quarter to quarter due to the nature of percent complete accounting and as volume and mix As such, it's important to look at trends over a longer period and on a year over year basis where we continue to see steady progress. As a reminder, margins in Space Infrastructure have fluctuated this year given the impacts of the XXM-seven charge and the start of new programs, but we are clearly up on a year to date basis. Speaker 300:25:46Expectations for intersegment adjusted EBITDA eliminations have increased to $25,000,000 for the full year, driven by the WorldView Legion program. At a consolidated level, our guidance for adjusted EBITDA has increased $5,000,000 implying roughly 300 basis points of margin expansion for the year excluding the effects of EV deferred. Moving on to operating cash flow. We've increased both the low and the top end of the range on our operating cash flow $20,000,000 to a range of $260,000,000 to $290,000,000 As expected, the working capital changes we walked through during the Q2 call Flip to our favor in the Q3. We are free cash flow positive on a year to date basis and we continue to expect to remain free cash flow positive for the full year. Speaker 300:26:34The ranges for CapEx are now $220,000,000 to $240,000,000 a decrease of roughly $18,000,000 from the midpoint as of the second quarter. Turning now to a few comments about 2022. I said on our last earnings call that we clearly We make back into the business to drive growth in 'twenty two and beyond. We should guide in each year on our Q4 call, so we'll provide more clarity then. That said, if you simply take the midpoint of our guidance for the Q4 and annualize that, you get to a Higher adjusted EBITDA number than the midpoint of our guidance for the full year 2021. Speaker 300:27:24And of course, We'd expect some growth as we move through next year. On cash flow, growth will depend on where we end up this year and finalizing our investment decisions for next year. On 2023, we're still evaluating the effect of the Legion delay and the opportunities to offset whatever effect that has. We previously said we expected $80,000,000 in growth from Allegion in 2023 as part of the $165,000,000 improvement from 2020 to 2023 in Earth Intelligence. Let's use that $165,000,000 number to create some perspective. Speaker 300:28:01This year, we are projecting approximately $40,000,000 of growth in Earth Intelligence adjusted EBITDA over 2020. That is net of expenses incurred to support future growth, reductions in certain government spend that is expected to come back and an environment of delay in our services awards. If we do nothing more to continue that $40,000,000 a year of net growth for the next 2 years, we will cover 120,000,000 of $165,000,000 of growth from 2020. That would leave us with $40,000,000 but just EBITDA to be achieved from Legion or other sources, Not the $80,000,000 we pointed to almost 2 years ago prior to our more developed product efforts. It is still too early for me to say that our Our Q3 targets are unchanged due to the Legion delay, but I think this should help you understand that there are other considerations and you can't look Long term guidance on a line item basis. Speaker 300:28:54Continuing that thought, on Space Infrastructure, we said we were targeting $95,000,000 in adjusted EBITDA growth from 2020 to 2023. If you exclude the SiriusXM charge this year, we are already on track We have a solid backlog as demonstrated by the total year to date book And of course, we remain focused on executing on WorldView Legion Construction and the EOCL program with ENRO. All of this should have positive impact on the trajectory of cash flow, which we intend to reduce indebtedness and drive down leverage over time. We're excited about the trends we see in front of us and we believe we're well positioned to drive total company growth in the years ahead. Operator, let's now begin the Q and A. Operator00:30:04Your first question is from Matt Sharpe from Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Speaker 500:30:10Dan, Vigges, Jason, good afternoon and nice quarter. Speaker 200:30:13Hey, Matt. Hey, Matt. Thanks. Speaker 500:30:16Dan, appreciate the details on the path forward for WorldView Legion. That's very helpful. Maybe just stepping back here and looking at the remaining key phases, I was hoping you could tell us Which have maybe been more difficult and which have been less difficult based on past Performance or the company's experience. Said another way, where do you see variability in the schedule ahead here and what milestones maybe do Do you think you'll have kicked off come the Q4? Speaker 200:30:53Thanks, Matt. I think the probably the best way to answer that Is to reflect on what we've gotten done so far and then kind of think just through the steps ahead of us. But The legacy of the Maxar team going all the way back through the SSL days is a very experienced satellite Program Management and Satellite Manufacturing and Testing team. So as we've completed The things that threw us just a little bit this year were the Raytheon and the Honeywell supply chain issues. We've got the Honeywell parts, we've got the 1st Raytheon instrument integrated, second one on its way shortly here. Speaker 200:31:39So as we move into the testing phases now, I think the next big milestones we'll be looking at are making our way through thermal vac, final integration and All the flight software and the full complete on orbit simulation simulated testing of the satellite in the various environments and then Down to the launch range for final prep and launch. So I'm not sure that there's one I'm concentrating on any more than the others. We're very Speaker 600:32:05focused on the schedule. Speaker 200:32:05We're very focused on the We're very focused on the March to June timeframe and looking forward to getting that and getting these up and getting them tested and providing service for customers. Speaker 500:32:15Got it. That's helpful. And then I think Biggs might have mentioned, 92% of the workforce vaccinated. Enough to sort of backfill any employees that might choose not to be vaccinated by the December 8th deadline? Speaker 200:32:40Yes, we're in pretty good shape. 92% is a very good number and we're continuing to get some other people filtering in. There are a handful of people that we're going to work through the protocol and the exemptions that are listed under the executive order, but we're really encouraged with How the teams move forward on this and don't expect any type of material impact either to the main business or to the Legion program Throughout the rest of the year as we comply with the executive order. We'll continue to watch developments as they occur. I know some other large contractors We're looking at timelines for the final vaccinations and stuff and working through those, but we've been sort of full steam ahead with it and a high degree of compliance. Speaker 500:33:21Fantastic. And then maybe one more, if I may. The SDA program, Transport Layer Tranche 1 moving to an OTA, does that change anything for Maxar there? And then maybe just thinking about the program over the longer term, what's the opportunity, the potential there in terms of satellites or dollar figures. Speaker 200:33:48Yes, I think probably the maybe just as I headline, Maxar is really, really committed to its diversification efforts And we're getting some strong traction across different agencies and we can remain committed to supporting the SDA and all of our government customers With the innovative solutions, we really think we've got to compete. We did challenge the SBA transport layer initial RFP because we thought it was unduly burdensome to industry and favored large companies. And I think we were right with that quick reversal. They've now since moved to an OTA Methodology, we're continuing to assess and review that. But we think we've got some great commercial capabilities for SDA and the national architecture as they build out TransOne layers and other aspects of what Space Force and SDA and the Department of the Air Force are all looking at. Speaker 200:34:37So I don't want to give any particular dollar numbers because we're in the middle of a lot of competitions right now, but we think they're significant and will contribute to The resiliency of the space business going forward. Operator00:34:55Your next question is from Tyler Bolanos from JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 700:35:00Hey, good afternoon, guys. Just a quick question on Legion and then 1 on space. Just starting on Legion, is Any update you guys could provide on the other 4 instruments from Raytheon that you guys expected? I think previously you expected it to come this fall. Just wondering if that's still the right time, maybe by year end. Speaker 700:35:23And then on Space Infrastructure, if you could just touch on the backlog growth and maybe what opportunities there are for 2022 and where we could see that segment go? Speaker 200:35:32Yes, sure. I'll hit the Raytheon one first and then I'll talk about Space infrastructure and backlog and some of our pipeline opportunities there. On the instrument, we did find a minor issue During the first instrument integration, not really unexpected during the first build, but it did that learning did require some slight modifications. Those are already in process for the other instruments and so had a slight delay on flight modules 2 through 6. As that gets corrected, we'll be back on the center lines we expect to be with The schedule as we stated, the March to June timeframe for the first launch and then 3 to 6 months for the remaining satellites getting up. Speaker 200:36:16I just I'll stress one point. I think it's important to note that we at Maxxagger consider that change to be extremely low risk. So it wasn't something that knocked the program off its It was just something we had to work through and then we had to work through with Raytheon and they've been very helpful and cooperative in the process. So good news there. Let's see, your other question was about the space infrastructure and where we're seeing some of the pipeline and what's going forward. Speaker 200:36:40So I guess Probably, the good news is we continue to diversify. We had some really strong awards last year In the geo market, geocom market commercially with the C band awards, SiriusXM9 and 10 have certainly been great awards for us this year and That overweights the commercial sector a little bit more than we thought initially, but they're great wins and we'll take that kind of good business with customers wherever it comes from. On the Defense Intel side, we said it'd be a 3 to 5 year story during our Investor Day back in March of 20 And we've been booking study contracts, which are a precursor to production work. You've got solid capabilities in spacecraft, propulsion, It's commercial heritage and a very strong quality track record. We'll continue to assess our partnering strategy there where we can be either a prime or a sub for some of the larger other We've also been bolstering our mission architecture and business capture teams. Speaker 200:37:37On the pipeline, we see geo market being mostly flattish With a solid replacement pipeline, both for bent pipe and digital solutions. Leo market opportunities are a bit nascent, but we're engaged in a number of engineering studies there. And with the civil agencies timelines and budgets are gating items, but we're really encouraged by the administration support for the space programs moving forward. Operator00:38:10And your next question is from Peter Arment from Baird. Your line is open. Speaker 600:38:17You actually have Eric Rudin on the line for Peter today. I appreciate the color on the 2023 targets and the EBITDA growth in Earth Intelligence kind of Ex lesion there. But just a follow-up on that. Given the delays to the remaining Raytheon instruments, And it seems like the first two the first batch here is more de risked than the second. Can that first batch do that 40,000,000 EBITDA growth by 2023 once the first launch takes place? Speaker 200:38:49So I'd say the first thing I think I'd stress is that we're not expecting the issues that we Uncovered the minor issues we had during the integration to knock the overall program schedule off. So we do still continue to expect to march forward with the rest I'd just like to make sure we clarify that if I wasn't sort of rock solid on it earlier. In terms of the growth Yes. You know, we're continuing to grow on the current constellation. We do expect the lesions, the first two and then the additional 4 lesions To provide strong incremental growth to us as soon as they're commissioned and start providing revenue service. Speaker 200:39:30In terms of capacity, any two regions Have more capacity than the WorldView-four Legion the WorldView-four satellite we lost in early 20 2019. 2019, sorry, yes, 1st part of 2019. But and at that time, that satellite had Over $80,000,000 of revenue on it and very high EBITDA. So just to kind of give you a perspective there, 2 Allegiance could generate a lot of revenue and a lot of EBITDA for the business. Speaker 100:40:01Yes. I think it's important to note, if you reflect back on Dan's prepared remarks regarding the Allegion schedule, That the first two go up in the March June timeframe and the second or the remaining satellites will go up 3 to 6 months Later. So the issue that he talked about here on Raytheon, to his point, has not knocked that schedule off at this So reflect back on the prepared remarks for that one. Speaker 600:40:30Okay. Thank you. Appreciate that. And then maybe just a quick one on the CapEx. Is the $30,000,000 impact to CapEx for next year from the Legion delays still the right number? Speaker 600:40:40It looks like you took down the guide $20,000,000 this year. Is that savings or is that just timing being pushed out to 'twenty two? Speaker 300:40:47No, it's a great question. I think as to The pure effect of the Legion cost growth we had through the delay, the $30,000,000 is still a good number. The $20,000,000 I think it's a little early to say whether that Domino's directly into next year or not. That's one of the things that we'll just have to consider as we set our guidance for next year when we come back in the Q4 call. Speaker 600:41:13Okay. Appreciate the color. I'll hop back in queue. Operator00:41:18Your next question is from Tim James from TD Securities. Your line is Speaker 800:41:24Thanks and good afternoon everyone. Quick question actually for Biggs First. And forgive me if you covered this in your commentary, but I don't think I heard it. The change in the D and A guidance for the year, the increase was about $25,000,000 for the year. Could you talk about what was the cause of that? Speaker 100:41:44Yes, I'll take this one. It's the modest Uptick in the depreciation and amortization guidance for the year, that's fully rolling in all of The amortization from the Vrykon acquisition and the CapEx that we've brought on so far this year. Speaker 800:42:05Okay. Thanks, Jason. And then my second question, Dan, just want to go back to you made reference And it's not a surprise your capacity constraints on the imagery side. Just interested where what does that mean? Like where does that demand go? Speaker 800:42:26Do customers look to competitors to fill their needs? Or do they just hold off on acquiring Imagery, like how does your customer base adjust or how should we interpret that when you see your capacity Which presumably I assume means that you could be selling more imagery if you had it available? Speaker 200:42:44Yes. As we've been discussing for some time now, we are sold out in certain regions of the world. But even with that, we've continued to grow. And I think that's kind of We wanted to highlight that in the commercial side that we're up 23% year to date and continuing to see strong applications for our data and products. On the Straight issue of capacity, our current constellation does provide The world's best data and satellite access for our customers. Speaker 200:43:15We have had, as I mentioned On the call, 5 nations now enhanced their ground capacity like ahead of Allegion launches and we've had 1 capacity pre capacity sale of Allegion Capacity, we are aware of one customer that did delay a competition because they want Legion to be in the mix when that comes out, an international customer. So, I mean, what we're seeing is a lot of the smaller competitors don't really meet the mission needs For what the Intel agencies and defense applications are or for what some of the high-tech applications are with our large technology customers as well. So We think there's unmet demand in the marketplace, and we're really looking forward to Allegion getting on orbit to be able to meet that demand. Speaker 800:44:03Okay. Thank you. Can I just sneak one quick one in here, Dan? Great slide that talks about the 5 emergent commercial industries for geospatial data and analysis. Could you comment, is 1 or 2 of those, would you say, a bigger opportunity than the others? Speaker 800:44:18Or do you think they all represent pretty Equally sized opportunities for REMAXAR over the next kind of 3 to 5 years? Speaker 200:44:30I think they all represent really compelling opportunities for us. That's why we put them in the slide that way. But we're Just kind of like this year, 23% year to date is coming from a range of applications and customers. Right now, the tech companies seem to be Growing their revenue and profit profile with us faster than the others, but we see really strong indications that autonomy and We are going to be a large driver in the future. Our risk management applications, we see as being a very strong area of growth for us. Speaker 200:45:03And then back to autonomous, not automotive, but we're actually we're picking up customers that do things like using our data to be able to fly drones around And that kind of application. What we're watching really kind of close to as well is not just the traditional mapping applications you might see Google and like tech companies like that, but gaming, simulation, metaverse applications, which We're far in advance on that with the work we're doing on the One World Terrain system for the U. S. Army to be able to create a simulated training environment based on that 3 d type So we're pretty excited about some of those technologies transitioning back and forth across the Intel, Defense and commercial establishments as we continue to see expansion in those markets. Operator00:45:58Your next question is from Ron Epstein from Bank of America. Your line is open. Speaker 900:46:03Hi, good evening. It's actually Elizabeth on for Ron tonight. We've been seeing a lot of, call it, relatively new entrants to the earth observation market, whether it's Planet or BlackSky or Spire, I was just wondering how you think of them in the competitive landscape given that some of them also do imagery, but then for example, Spire has a little bit of a different angle on the earth observation market. Speaker 200:46:30Yes. I mean, we continue to be very aware of The environment around us, including the new companies and what's going on. We're also, I think, Most focused on meeting our customers' current and emerging needs, and I think it's pretty clear from the Q3 results, we've continued to demonstrate Strong growth here at Maxar. We do continue, as I mentioned earlier, to have the most sophisticated and capable constellation on orbit now And Legion will only be adding to that for electro optical solutions. And across that we've been investing in AI, ML and 3 d capabilities. Speaker 200:47:08That commercial business, off a base of $143,000,000 in 20.20, growing 23% year to date, which is bigger than I guess all those facts combined if you start to roll up numbers. And We think we're positioned well moving forward with the investments we've made, with the investments we'll continue to make and as we drive towards What we think the customer solutions look like. So we're not standing still. We're aware of what's going on and we're continuing Speaker 300:47:35to drive forward. It's probably worth pointing out too that Planet and BlackSky really aren't new. They've been in the market for many years. Speaker 200:47:44Yes, I think that's a fair point, Biggs. I mean, some of these companies have been around for a decade or so and again, a lot more pressing out the SPAC market, but We're watching it. We're intrigued by some of the TAMs out there. We think if we're trying to Take the view that we see of them based on what we see current customer and future customer needs looking like, but if those TAMs turn out to be Fraction of what some of the people say they are, we expect to take a very large percentage of that market share as well. Speaker 900:48:17Thank you. Thanks. Operator00:48:22Your next question is from Thanos Moskopoulos from BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:48:28Hi, good afternoon. Dan, maybe expanding on the competition question. I guess one More recent development is Airbus having launched some of their satellites. So for the first time, there's another 30 centimeter resolution competitor with commercial imagery. Now I guess from your commentary, it sounds like you're obviously seeing strong demand regardless. Speaker 1000:48:51Just curious if that's changing the dynamic at all. And I guess is one of the answers that there's just a lot of other parameters that matter to the customer beyond just the resolution? Speaker 200:49:00Yes. Thanks, Thanos. And I mean, as You've been following us for quite a while. Airbus has long been a competitor for both the International Defense and Intelligence and Commercial Industry. So that's not new. Speaker 200:49:12They've been launching the Neo satellites and all indications are they provide very capable data And service for the customers. We'll continue to compete with them across the world in those But that's nothing new really for the legacy DigitalGlobe or where we are with Maxar today. So we're Just kind of we're confident in the way we're seeing that unfold across the world. Speaker 1000:49:42And just on margins, so looking at the Space and Infrastructure margins, they were up year over year, but they did relative to Q2 and Your colleagues went to rebound in Q4. Anything to call out there or is that just a function of the cadence of the various programs? Speaker 300:49:58Yes, it's just driven by product sales mix, 1 quarter to another. The increase in revenues we have on product are going to create a little bit more lumpiness from one period to the next as you look quarter to quarter. Speaker 100:50:14Yes, that's a good that's on the Earth Intelligence side. And then on Space Infrastructure. Oh, sorry, he was Yes, space infrastructure. Speaker 300:50:23Space infrastructure, it's a little bit different story. There's some mix in there. But if you look at the Q2, we had a number of smaller positive upticks on Programs on EACs, which boosts both revenue and margins. And then in the Q3, there were a few small adjustments going the other way on EACs, not singularly material. And then there was one pass through cost, which really represented a contingency that was outstanding that We may still not have to incur when it's all said and done, but we booked a few $1,000,000 On a pass through cost in the Q3. Speaker 300:51:11And so you put all that together and it creates a little bit of volatility from 2nd quarter to 3rd quarter, but still really good margins compared to the past and overall on a good trend through the year. Good Q4. It would be projected to be relatively normal without noise upwards or downwards in terms of what we project to look Speaker 1000:51:39And then finally, in terms of when the first part of Legion launches, Is that going to have any impact on gross margins at all either direction or should that be relatively neutral as an event Just on a short term basis? Well, Speaker 300:51:57it first has to be it become operational. It's not just a matter of mystically upon launch. And so it will go through in orbit testing and commissioning. And so then it will ramp up. So it will be a very gradual Production, I shouldn't say, I was trying to make it as fast as we can, but it will be a gradual increase Of revenue, it will be high margin though when it comes Speaker 200:52:24on. Yes, we won't have to spend a lot more on The current infrastructure supports the operations of the Legion constellation substantially And the way we're set up for production, the products and the types of services we provide at the satellites will scale Very nicely into the existing cost base. Operator00:52:49Yes. And the thing that Speaker 100:52:50I would add, Thanos, is that the $1,100,000,000 roughly in Earth Intelligence Revenue, dollars 300,000,000 of it is in that services business. It runs at 10% to 12% EBITDA margins. And as we bring Legion capacity online, The other $800,000,000 will be growing a bit faster than the services business. So that by kind of definition is should be margin accretive for us. Speaker 1000:53:12Great. Thanks guys. Operator00:53:15Your next question is from Peter Osterland from Trello Securities. Your line is open. Speaker 1100:53:22Hey, good evening. This is Pete on for Mike Ciarmoli tonight. Thanks for taking our question. Last quarter you called out some internal mission assurance and engineering resources that you were adding to address some of the delays you've experienced The Woundview Legion launch, so I just wanted to ask how that has progressed. Are there any efficiency improvements that you've been able to realize as a result? Speaker 1100:53:44And are there Are there areas within the company where those resources have also been useful? Speaker 200:53:51Yes, I'd say Probably nothing that we didn't expect or that we didn't bake into how we were thinking about the business going forward and the program in general. I do think it's an advantage for us. As 1 MAX or as a larger company, We've got lots of good resources across the organization that we can flex from the space side to the Earth Intel side or for the Earth Intel side to the space side, Depending on where we need particular types of engineering or Software, other types of support on programs or mission assurance reviews or those kind of things. So I think it's good to see the teams operating cohesively And driving forward for customer mission success. Speaker 1100:54:39Thanks very much. Operator00:54:43Your last question is from Chris Quilty from Quilty Analytics. Your line is open. Speaker 400:54:50Hi, guys. Question for you on the commercial pipeline and I guess the commercial Growth that you've seen, if you could maybe quantify the recent growth spurt, is that driven more by Adding new customers or adding new products or is it existing customers Buying additional products or more volume of legacy products, some kind of flavor of where that growth is coming from? Speaker 200:55:23Yes. Hey, Chris. Yes, so it's a combination We're seeing really good traction with some of the existing customers on new products. So the 3 d capabilities would be something I'd highlight there, but also 15 centimeter HD and our worldwide solution base maps, the Vivid and those kind of things for The tech customers that are looking for highly accurate but visually appealing information sets. And they're really intrigued by how 3 d helps Not just lock data sources down, but also conduct things like autonomous navigation and otherwise. Speaker 200:56:02There are a healthy dose of new customers coming in With that 3 d technology as well that we're seeing solutions being provided for. So that's really exciting to see. And then I'd say the product growth generally across has been something I'm really glad we've been investing in. The 3 d capabilities, the AI and ML capabilities we're bringing to bear, helping solve people's problems, not just providing Data or software access to them. Speaker 400:56:32Got you. And with the Legion program coming online, you have some Pretty good visibility from your government customer and certainly international defense and Intel, they're putting hardware in place. How do you gauge the incremental demand that you may see from the commercial side? Are there any indicators you can point to or discussions you're having When you look at the $80,000,000 of revenue ramp in whatever period, should half of that be coming from commercial The majority or something less? Speaker 200:57:08Boy, kind of tough to parse out which will grow faster. It's fun when you put that challenge in front of the sales teams to see who's going to drive their numbers harder. The And there's always been a promise in this business, but of a very large commercial market. I think at 143% and growing 23% year to date, we're seeing some on that with the better refined products we've got as well as cloud compute environments and how AI and ML can help snap some of that together for solutions. So we're excited about that. Speaker 200:57:41The VriCon, it's not just a 3 d solution that we're bringing to bear, but there are 3 d point clouds that help disparate sources of information Be layered in and made sense of for analyst ready data and AI and ML ready data. So that's really exciting as well. On the government side, we're I'm not sure which one is going to run faster, quite honestly, but we're really excited to see The trend lines on the commercial side and there's a future scenario where that could be a very Material. It's already material, I guess, but a very comprehensive and large part of our business, much like the government businesses now. Speaker 400:58:20Got you. A clarification on Slide 6 where you've got the 5,000,000 square meters of square kilometers, excuse me, of capacity, That clearly includes 6 Legion satellites, but what other satellites does it assume in that number? Speaker 200:58:36That assumes the current constellation right now, I think minus GY1 at some point. So we'd assume the WorldView constellation plus the legions. And then Yes, we've got the I guess we've got the capacity to If the market signals are there to add to the Legion constellation, if and when it's appropriate to do so. Speaker 400:58:58And you typically update in the 10 ks Where you currently assume the lifecycle on those legacy satellites, which is it currently now being driven by fuel on the satellites or Technical aspects of the systems performance and power and whatnot? Speaker 200:59:15Yes, none of them are fuel limited, Which I think is good. We do update that table annually and as you've noted several times in the past, we've extended those Like yes, it's basically just an engineering simulation on for the depreciation and amortization schedules. I guess what I'd note that I haven't made remarks about before is that we did just renew our insurance for all 4 satellites. We've got the same coverage levels as we had last year and there were really no material changes to the premiums. So that probably gives some expectation that we Speaker 300:59:50every year the satellites are on orbit, we continue to expect Speaker 200:59:50them to last a Every year the satellites are on orbit, we continue to expect them to last longer in space. Speaker 400:59:56That's good given what's been happening to insurance rates. Okay. Final question, and maybe when we're going to get an unsatisfactory answer, but some recent news story rumors around Potential funding issues with the EOCL, unclear whether they're talking about the traditional optical or some of the new phenomenologies. I know we're not going to get a detailed answer because it's all still in process, but do you feel as well today as you did a quarter ago About the outlook for EOCL and funding levels in your position? Speaker 201:00:32Yes, actually Pretty confident in what we're seeing for funding levels for EOCL. The RFP was issued this morning By the NRO and responses are due December 3. Consistent with their expectations in the Q1 of 2022, we do expect Awards. And I think we're this follows an extensive review by the U. S. Speaker 201:01:01Government over the past 2 years, both For industry studies as well as setting out requirements for the DoD and the intelligence community. And As Pete Moon said in his remarks to the press this morning, they continue to see expanded use of commercial to meet the nation's needs. So we're I spent a lot of time on Capitol Hill. I think there's a lot of strong support for the EOCL program, what it provides and the fact that it's a good deal for the U. S. Speaker 201:01:29Taxpayers. Speaker 1001:01:31Awesome. Thank you. Speaker 201:01:32Thanks, Chris. Speaker 101:01:34Yes, operator, I think we've got time for one more. Operator01:01:38Your last question is from Austin Moeller from Canaccord Genuity. Your line is open. Speaker 1201:01:44Good evening, Dan. I don't know if this You've been asked already, but I just was wondering about the recent news report that Intelsat was planning to buy 10 GEO satellites sometime Early next year and what percentage of that you think might be won by Maxar? And then also on the Non geostationary satellite fleet that they've been planning to announce for next year, if that's something that you plan to have the I Speaker 201:02:18guess, we've got a long history with Intelsat And continue to engage closely with them to try and meet their mission solutions. We're aware of the article, really No comment on that particular aspect of it other than to note that we do have technical solutions that allow us to compete for Bids with Intelsat, we had strong performance on the C band awards. Some of the ones that are Reference in the article are software defined satellites and we'll continue to work very hard to keep that long term customer happy and keep winning business from them. Speaker 1201:03:02Okay, great. Thank you. Speaker 201:03:04Thank you. Okay. Operator01:03:07And I'm showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back to Mr. Jason Jerske for any additional or closing comments. Speaker 101:03:15Great. Thank you, operator. Thanks to all for dialing in and for your interest in Maxar. We look forward to reconnecting with you all early next year on our Q4 earnings call.Read morePowered by