NASDAQ:MRCY Mercury Systems Q4 2023 Earnings Report $46.90 -1.15 (-2.39%) Closing price 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$49.04 +2.14 (+4.55%) As of 05:07 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Mercury Systems EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.03Consensus EPS $0.34Beat/MissMissed by -$0.31One Year Ago EPSN/AMercury Systems Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$253.24 millionExpected Revenue$277.27 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$24.03 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AMercury Systems Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2023Date8/15/2023TimeN/AConference Call DateTuesday, August 15, 2023Conference Call Time5:00PM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Mercury Systems Q4 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 15, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Day, everyone, and welcome to the Mercury Systems 4th Quarter Fiscal 2023 Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded. At this time, for opening remarks and introduction, I'd like to turn the call over to the company's Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Dave Farnsworth. Please go ahead, Mr. Farnsworth. Speaker 100:00:23Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us. With me today is our President and Chief Executive Officer, Bill Ballhaus. If you've not received a copy of the earnings Press release we issued earlier this afternoon, you can find it on our website atmrcy.com. The slide presentation that Bill and I will be referring to is posted on the Investor Relations section of the website under Events and Presentations. Turning to Slide 2 in the presentation. Speaker 100:00:52I'd like to remind you that today's presentation includes forward looking statements, including information regarding Mercury's financial outlook, future plans, objectives, business prospects and anticipated financial performance. These forward looking statements are subject to future risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results or performance to differ materially. All forward looking statements should be considered in conjunction with the cautionary statements on Slide 2 in the earnings press release and the risk factors included in Mercury's SEC filings. I'd also like to mention that in addition to reporting financial results In accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles or GAAP, during our call, we will also discuss several non GAAP financial measures, Specifically, adjusted income, adjusted earnings per share, adjusted EBITDA, free cash flow, organic revenue and acquired revenue. A reconciliation of these non GAAP metrics is included as an appendix to today's slide presentation and in the earnings press release. Speaker 100:02:02I'll now turn the call over to Mercury's President and CEO, Bill Blauhaus. Please turn to Slide 3. Thanks, Dave. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. In this call, I'll cover 3 topics. Speaker 100:02:161st, introductory comments on recent changes, actions taken at the company and my initial impressions second, our priorities and focus going forward And third, expectations for our performance, both for FY 'twenty four and longer term. I'll then turn it over to Dave to discuss our results and look forward to wrapping up with Q and A. Before diving in, I wanted to take a moment to recognize the efforts of Speaker 200:02:42the Mercury team, Their demonstrated resilience over time and their dedication and commitment to serving our clients and their important missions. As we've discussed throughout the company, with our recent announcements, we are on a very clear path to unlock the intrinsic value of Mercury for our customers, Shareholders and employees through enhanced operational focus. As a team, we realize that what we need to do is within our control, And we all recognize that's a great place to be. Please turn to Slide 4. Let me start by summarizing some of the recent changes at the company. Speaker 200:03:20At the end of Q4, the Board concluded its review of strategic alternatives and implemented several important changes to put Mercury on a path Over the past 2 months, the Board has made positive governance changes, appointing Roger Krone and Jerry DeMuro to the Board, Both well respected industry veterans with CEO experience and appointing Scott Ostfeld to the Board who brings an important shareholder perspective. I have known these 3 individuals for a number of years and I'm delighted to have them on the Board. In addition, The Board affected a smooth leadership transition with the valuable addition of Dave Farnsworth, a seasoned Defense Technology leader as Chief Financial Officer. And with today's announcement, I am humbled and excited that the Board has placed its faith in me to lead Mercury through its next phase of value creation. We have significant work ahead of us, and I'm confident based on what I've seen over the last year as a Board member and more recently as interim CEO that we can and will make tangible progress toward predictable, profitable organic growth with improved cash conversion in fiscal 2024 and beyond. Speaker 200:04:35I also want to take a moment to thank Bill O'Brien for his 15 years of service To Mercury and for his significant leadership in navigating through this recent transition period as Chairman of the Board. Before I go too far, I'll give you a little background on myself. I began my career as an aerospace engineer designing and building high powered communication satellites For government and commercial applications around the world supporting demanding missions and delivering very complex satellite systems. One of my key takeaways from that experience was that as a young engineer, I didn't need to worry about things outside of my control. I realized that if I just came to work every day, focused on solving the customers' hard technical problems better than anybody else, Being a good teammate, doing the right thing and delivering programs on cost and schedule, everything else would take care of itself. Speaker 200:05:31Customers would be happy, shareholders would be happy, and as employees, we would have a lot of fun outperforming our competitors. That was about the 1st decade of my career and over the last 20 years, I've led a number of aerospace, defense and technology businesses. Like Mercury, many of these businesses had great fundamentals, but needed renewed focus to restore and drive strong shareholder returns. In each of these situations, I've worked with high performing teams to drive a culture of relentless focus on enhanced execution that led to significant value creation and returns for shareholders. This experience, Combined with my knowledge of this leadership team and Mercury's superb positioning in the market gives me the utmost confidence that we will be successful in realizing the inherent growth, profitability, cash flow and ultimately value of this national asset. Speaker 200:06:32Since taking on the interim CEO role on June 26, I spent significant time with the team digging into the details of the business Informing an assessment of Mercury and its value creation potential. Specifically, I have visited our major centers of operation and personally led reviews of our challenge programs and expanded those reviews to include 100% of our current development programs, their estimated cost to complete and any roadblocks or risks to completion. I've engaged with the growth organization to review the health of our new business pipeline and our approach to accelerate organic growth. The leadership team and I have rapidly assessed our cost structure, Taking initial actions to right size our organization and improve margins in fiscal 2024 and beyond. And as a leadership team, we have reviewed our major unbilled receivables balances by program and our inventory in detail to establish burn down plans and drive Please turn to Slide 5. Speaker 200:07:40Based on the last year plus That I served on the Board and my work recently with the team, here are my initial impressions and takeaways. First impression, Mercury's strategy is sound. We are a national asset in the defense and industrial base. At a macro level, we are positioned in an attractive growth market, Defense Electronics, and more importantly, we are situated in the right parts of that market Poised for significant electronic modernization. And finally, with enhanced customer focus and execution excellence, Mercury will continue to benefit from increased outsourcing by our defense prime customers. Speaker 200:08:31All these factors give me confidence in our ability to 2nd impression, over the past several years, the company grew inorganically into strategically attractive areas, but didn't fully integrate some of the businesses and mature processes and management systems to align with Mercury's evolving business portfolio. In my experience, this is not uncommon in businesses that grow rapidly via acquisitions. At Mercury though, The immaturity and lack of full integration of key functional areas have led to the serious challenges the company experienced Forecasting business performance over the past several quarters. That said, maturing in these areas is doable within our control and underway. My third and most important takeaway is that while our recent results are disappointing, the majority of our business is performing well, Delivering predictable and profitable growth. Speaker 200:09:31However, this solid performance has been masked by approximately 20 programs that are experiencing unique and outsized costs, primarily temporary cost growth related to initial development challenges. In fiscal 'twenty three, these few programs impacted our financial performance by approximately $56,000,000 Said differently, our reported margin in 2023 does not at all reflect a structural shift in our margin profile. It is the composite of a very predictable and profitable core business obscured by an atypically large mix of development programs and cost challenges on a subset of programs that are resolvable and temporary in nature. And looking beyond our recent results, I'm encouraged by 3 factors. First, the majority of our business is performing very well. Speaker 200:10:272nd, the temporary execution challenges that are masking this performance are occurring on a small subset of programs, most of which are development in nature and are all solvable. And third, the current larger than normal mix of development programs reflects the potential for increased highly predictable and profitable business as the programs transition into production. With those introductory comments, I'd like to now transition to our priorities and focus going forward. So please turn to Slide 6. Our enhanced focus on execution includes 4 priority areas: 1st, delivering predictable results Through improved execution on challenge programs. Speaker 200:11:132nd, building a thriving organic growth engine that leverages our unique strategic positioning 3rd, expanding margins through a rationalized cost structure and improved program gross margins and 4th, driving improved free cash flow conversion and near term cash release. These priorities are central to unlocking the intrinsic value in the business. Let me provide some additional color on how we're approaching each of them. First, on delivering predictable results. In assessing our program portfolio, Our core business consisting of franchise production programs as well as a large portfolio of performing development programs is healthy and delivers solid gross margins, which gives me a lot of confidence in our long term business model. Speaker 200:12:04Currently, there are two factors that have pressured and added variability to our recent results. First, as discussed in Q3, We have been successful winning a number of development programs that has led to a shift in our program mix from 20% development programs in FY 2021 to 40% development programs in FY 'twenty three. We know this mix shift is temporary in nature And a positive leading indicator of future growth as our development programs are a precursor to higher margin, long term production contracts. But given that our development programs typically run at approximately 1,000 basis points lower gross margin than our production programs, We have experienced near term margin pressure tied to this mix shift. 2nd, as I mentioned earlier, because our management Inherent in many of these development programs, a small number of programs have become challenged, leading to unanticipated and temporary impacts Our overall performance. Speaker 200:13:16In FY 'twenty three, execution challenges on approximately 20 programs, A majority of which are development in nature drove approximately $56,000,000 of impact or approximately 580 basis points of margin contraction. We are squarely focused on mitigating the effects from the challenged programs, completing them and transitioning them into production. We have strengthened our program reviews on development programs with increased frequency and internal rigor and tightened program management 2 of these programs moved into production in Q4, 5 more Have or are expected to transition in H1 with the majority completing throughout FY 2024. While I can't promise we are done seeing the impacts from the challenge programs on our results, I can say that these execution challenges are resolvable, Temporary in nature and the full force of the organization is focused on overcoming them. As we make progress through the year And as we return toward a more typical program mix, I believe the profitability of the core business will begin to become visible as we progress And finally, even at the increased levels of investment associated with the challenged programs, I'm confident that we'll see a high return on those programs as they transition from one time development to ongoing long term Profitable production runs. Speaker 200:14:51Our second focus area, delivering consistent industry leading organic growth, Requires the 2 growth engine that is bidding and winning new contracts at an appropriate level given our scale after years of inorganic growth. Our book to bill has averaged slightly above 1.0 over the past 8 quarters, which isn't adequate to meet our growth aspirations. Going forward, we are focused on driving a higher book to bill, which will help meet our long term growth objectives and above market growth rates reflecting our attractive market positioning. Sizing up our growth engine will take some time, But the good news is that we aren't opportunity constrained given our market positioning. I've had the opportunity to successfully work through similar growth Scaling exercises several times in my career to accelerate organic growth. Speaker 200:15:45There is a consistent progression associated We're targeting pipeline and levels of bid activity as leading indicators to revenue growth. We are beginning that work today, Led by our growth organization and while it will take time to translate into revenue, I am confident that a healthy growth engine combined with Mercury's strong positioning, will lead to industry leading organic growth. Our 3rd area of focus is margin expansion through targeted improvements to both our operating expense and gross margin. As mentioned earlier, we have taken initial actions to simplify our organizational structure, facilitate clearer accountability and aligning to our priorities, including embedding impact processes and execution into the business, Streamlining our organizational structure and removing areas of redundancy between corporate and divisional organizations and reducing SG and A headcount and rebalancing discretionary and third party spend. This first set of actions will generate approximately $24,000,000 in annual run rate cost savings, including approximately $20,000,000 to $22,000,000 of net benefit to FY 'twenty four. Speaker 200:17:01These savings are reflected in our FY 'twenty four outlook, which Dave will discuss shortly. In the near term, we are evaluating additional efforts to drive further efficiencies in SG and A, R and D Investment and manufacturing footprint among others. Our 4th focus area is driving improved free cash flow conversion and cash release. Over the past 2 fiscal years, Mercury has delivered $333,000,000 of adjusted EBITDA, but generated negative $107,000,000 in free cash flow, which is clearly unacceptable. Since FY 'twenty, Working capital has grown from approximately 35% of revenue to approximately 65% of revenue in FY2023. Speaker 200:17:47This growth has primarily been driven by increases in unbilled receivables and inventory and is a direct result of the temporary execution Our focus in this area is as follows: 1st, resolve execution challenges and ship and bill against legacy program unbilled balances second, continue to improve asset efficiency In our new overtime revenue programs through cash neutral or positive terms and tighter alignment of manufacturing cycles with customer deliveries And 3rd, better align the receipt of inventory with our manufacturing execution cycles and pursue advanced Funding for material where possible. We believe these actions will help return the company to historic levels of net working capital, representing a future cash release opportunity of approximately $300,000,000 or more over time. With that description of our focus going forward, I'd now like to discuss our expectations for both our long term business model and guidance for FY 'twenty four. Please turn to Slide 7. Looking at our model and focusing on margins considering recent history. Speaker 200:19:04With 2023 as a reference point, as we improve our program execution and resolve our challenge programs, We will remove approximately 580 basis points of headwind in our margins, which is partially offset on a go forward basis by approximately $22,000,000 or 2.30 basis points related to annual incentive plan bonus that was not paid in FY2023 Due to underperformance, based on recent actions to improve our cost structure, we see another 250 basis points of benefit. We also expect to return to a more normal mix of production versus development programs over time, which will have margin uplift given the 1,000 basis points lower average gross margins on development programs. Assuming we return to our historical eightytwenty mix of production versus development programs, we could experience an additional 200 basis points of margin expansion demonstrating a clear path to 22% adjusted EBITDA margins over time. Beyond that, we have several additional levers to drive margin. We will continue to focus on program execution, Not only on our development programs, but on our already profitable production programs to drive gross margin improvement. Speaker 200:20:25We're looking at IRAD efficiency through prioritization and return thresholds. And given our unique strategic positioning and focus on growing faster than the market, We should see operating leverage with accelerated organic growth. Netting all of that together, While we have more work to do prior to communicating specific long term targets for Mercury, I do see a ClearPath back to predictable organic growth that delivers mid-twenty percent adjusted EBITDA margins and strong free cash flow conversion. I look forward to coming back to investors later in the fiscal year to review our progress to date and provide more insight into our long term financial targets. Turning now to our outlook for FY24 on Slide 8. Speaker 200:21:13While we have taken and will continue to take actions to improve predictability, Organic growth, margin and cash flow. Fiscal 2024 will be a transition year. Consistent with our go forward philosophy to Dave will discuss our guidance in detail, but at a high level, we expect flat revenue at the midpoint with margin improvement throughout the year. While we're not providing quarterly guidance, I will say that Q1, which is a seasonally low quarter, is expected to be below Q1 last year's revenue and adjusted EBITDA with negative cash flow. As we continue to work through execution challenges and enhance our visibility through management system and process improvements, We anticipate improved profitability in the second half and positive cash flow for the year. Speaker 200:22:17While we are taking a cautious approach to guidance, I want to reiterate that our business model is sound and I have not seen any challenges that are not resolvable with proper focus and execution mindset and ultimately enhanced management processes and systems. With that, I'll turn it over to Dave to walk through the financial results for the quarter the year, and I look forward to taking your questions. Dave? Speaker 100:22:45Thank you, Bill. I'll start with a brief introduction, then present our Q4 fiscal 'twenty three results as well as our fiscal 'twenty four guidance. 1st and foremost, I'd like to thank Michelle McCarthy for serving as the Interim CFO for the last 6 months. I look forward to working closely with her as she steps back into her role as our Chief Accounting Officer. The majority of my career spanning the last 4 decades was at Raytheon where I served in numerous finance roles Up through Vice President and CFO of Integrated Defense Systems and prior to that as Vice President and CFO of its Intelligence Information and Services segment. Speaker 100:23:27The main focus in those roles was on operational finance, managing programs, developing financial plans and forecasts, as well as maximizing return on invested capital with a particular focus on networking capital improvement. It was at Raytheon that I worked with Mercury as a supplier. I gained firsthand knowledge of the unique capabilities the company brings, which are critical to mission success. The ability to design and develop affordable open architecture defense electronic solutions Reduces risk and accelerates time to market, aligning with the drive toward outsourcing in the defense industry. In my initial weeks here, I've been impressed by the agility and drive of the Mercury team. Speaker 100:24:17I would also Echo Bill's view regarding the strength of Mercury's long term business model and the ability to return to above average market growth and profitability with an enhanced operational focus. As Bill mentioned, our results for the quarter and the fiscal year were disappointing. Our financial performance throughout fiscal 'twenty three and especially the Q4 obscures the underlying strength of our core business. In fact, the majority of the more than 300 active programs we are managing are performing well and generating margins in line With historical trends of above 40% across production programs and lowtomid30s across development programs. Our financial performance for the quarter and the year is masked by approximately 20 programs that have experienced unique and outsized cost growth, primarily related to development challenges. Speaker 100:25:17Specifically, our financial results were impacted by approximately $29,000,000 in the 4th quarter $56,000,000 in the fiscal year across these challenged programs. We continue to experience minimal net changes across the rest of our program portfolio. As discussed in Q3, Our proportion of development programs and execution has nearly doubled from approximately 20% in fiscal 2021 to approximately 40% in fiscal 2023. We have realized risks as certain of these programs have entered final stages of Test and qualification in the fiscal year. Given nearly 90% of our program portfolio is firm fixed price contracts, Incremental labor and material costs result in negative impacts to revenues and margin in the period recognized. Speaker 100:26:13Outside of this small population of challenged programs, we continue to experience predictable and profitable performance across the remainder of the program portfolio. We have taken aggressive and immediate actions to ensure Enhanced execution and operational focus across programs to mitigate further risk. With that as background, please turn to Slide 9, which Details of Q4 results. Demand remains strong as evidenced by bookings of $294,000,000 With a book to bill of $1,160,000 in the quarter, yielding backlog of $1,100,000,000 and up 10% year over year. Revenues for the Q4 were $253,000,000 down $37,000,000 or 13% on a total and organic basis as compared to the prior year of $290,000,000 Revenue was below expectations primarily as a result of cost growth on the challenge programs. Speaker 100:27:14As total program costs increase on firm fixed price contracts that are recognized over time, the measure of progress on those programs decreases. This results in a delay and or reversal of revenues in the period that the costs are recorded. To a lesser extent, Award and material timing also impacted program execution in the quarter. Gross margin for the 4th quarter decreased to 26.6% from 41.3 percent in Q4 2022. Gross margin contracted primarily as a result of over 11.50 basis points are approximately $29,000,000 of impact from challenge programs in the quarter. Speaker 100:27:58This reflects the reduction in revenues coupled with incremental charges associated with loss accruals as well as deferred program cost recognition. The remaining contraction in gross margin is a result of the higher than historical mix of lower margin development programs as well as unfavorable manufacturing variances and reserves. GAAP net loss and loss per share in the 4th quarter was $8,200,000 and $0.15 respectively, as compared to GAAP net income and earnings per share of 16,900,000 and $0.30 respectively in the prior year. The year over year decrease was a result of approximately $29,000,000 of impact from challenge programs. The 4th quarter operating expenses also included a reduction of approximately $7,000,000 for the forfeiture of Stock based compensation related to the departure of our former CEO. Speaker 100:28:55Adjusted EBITDA for the 4th Quarter was $21,900,000 compared with $71,600,000 in the prior year. The decrease was primarily due to lower gross margins resulting from the impact of challenged programs as well as reduced operating leverage. Free cash flow for the Q4 was approximately 4,000,000 Including the 2nd payment of $7,000,000 related to the R and D tax legislation and better than our view of breakeven entering the quarter. Turning to our full year results on Slide 10. Fiscal 2023 was a solid year for bookings. Speaker 100:29:33Our book to bill was 1.10 Compared to $1,080,000,000 in fiscal 2022 yielding backlog of over $1,100,000,000 This backlog supports a High level of visibility as we enter fiscal 2024. Fiscal 2023 revenues were $974,000,000 down 1% Total and 3% organically. Our fiscal year revenue decline was primarily a result of production award delays due to execution challenges across several development programs. In addition, incremental cost Growth delayed progress and therefore revenue recognition on certain programs. Gross margin for the fiscal year decreased 32.5 percent from 40% in the prior year. Speaker 100:30:22Gross margin contracted by approximately 580 basis points As a result of approximately $56,000,000 of impact from challenged programs incurred in the year. The remaining contraction in gross Margin is a result of the higher mix of lower margin development programs as well as unfavorable manufacturing variances and reserves. GAAP net loss and loss per share in fiscal 'twenty three was $28,300,000 and $0.50 respectively, as compared to GAAP net income and earnings per share of $11,300,000 and $0.20 respectively in the prior year. The year over year decrease was a result of approximately $56,000,000 of impact from challenged programs. Adjusted EBITDA for fiscal 'twenty three was $132,300,000 compared with $200,500,000 in the prior year. Speaker 100:31:20The decrease was primarily related to lower gross margin and reduced operating leverage. Free cash flow for the fiscal year was an outflow of Approximately $60,000,000 including payments of $26,000,000 related to the R and D tax legislation. The remaining outflow is reflective of growth in both unbilled receivables and inventory as a result of execution delays across our challenge programs. Slide 11 presents Mercury's balance sheet for the last 5 quarters. We ended fiscal 2023 with cash and cash equivalents of $72,000,000 We have $511,500,000 of funded debt under our $1,100,000,000 revolver, which provides us with significant financial flexibility. Speaker 100:32:08Turning to cash flow on Slide 12. Our billed receivables remained flat, while unbilled receivables increased approximately $6,000,000 quarter over quarter. During the quarter, we successfully resolved the critical technical challenge dramatically improving our yields on a product common across many of our programs. We began final shipments and converted approximately $20,000,000 of long standing unbilled receivables to build receivables on these programs during the quarter. This reduction was more than offset by new unbilled balances recorded in the quarter. Speaker 100:32:45More importantly, the resolution on this common product platform will enable the conversion of an additional $50,000,000 of long standing unbilled receivables over the course of fiscal 2024. We also leveraged our receivables factoring arrangement at levels similar to the prior quarter. Inventory decreased for the first time in 8 quarters as we improved our processes and management systems to better align Procurement of materials with manufacturing cycles. Other non cash items, net and other operating assets and liabilities Primarily reflect the activity within our tax accounts related to the R and D tax legislation. Working capital continued to grow as a percentage of sales, largely driven by increased unbilled receivables and inventory. Speaker 100:33:39We expect continued progress towards the completion of challenged programs to serve as a catalyst for the start of a significant reduction of unbilled receivables. The following production awards associated with this program will consume inventory resulting in improved asset efficiency and cash flows beginning in fiscal 2024. I'll now turn to our financial guidance for the full year fiscal 2024 on Slide 13. We have shifted our guidance approach in fiscal 2024 to guide annually rather than quarterly. While we have taken steps to improve predictability, fiscal 2024 will be a transition year. Speaker 100:34:20As such, We're taking a more conservative approach to guidance for the year. Given our attractive positioning within the defense technology market, Our existing franchise production programs and the sole source nature of approximately 2 thirds of our portfolio, We expect the demand environment to continue to support strong bookings. As a result, we expect a positive book to bill in fiscal 2024. Our fiscal 'twenty four guidance for total company revenues is $950,000,000 to 1,000,000,000 This represents flat growth at the midpoint. Our backlog entering fiscal 2024 supports a high level of revenue visibility, Providing more than 70% forward coverage over our revenue range, this exceeds historical levels of forward coverage entering the fiscal year. Speaker 100:35:14We expect improved revenue linearity between the first and second half of the year as compared to prior years. Gross margins in the first half of the fiscal year will approximate those of fiscal 'twenty three as we transition through the challenge programs and balance the potential for unknown risks that may materialize through final stages of completion. Gross margins will increase throughout the year as we receive and execute on the expected follow on production awards and begin to shift from the higher mix of lower margin development programs. GAAP results are $0.10 to $0.10 GAAP results include approximately $9,000,000 of restructuring charges related to Cost savings efforts announced today. We expect fiscal 2024 adjusted EBITDA in the range of $160,000,000 to 185,000,000 Up 30% at the midpoint from fiscal 2023 and reflecting adjusted EBITDA margins of 16.8% to 18.5%. Speaker 100:36:31Adjusted EPS is expected to be in the range of $1.14 to $1.48 per share. Adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margins reflect a marked improvement in gross margins, although not a full recovery To historical levels, reflecting the potential for unknown risks materializing as we transition through the final stages of execution on on our challenge programs, specifically in the first half of the year. As such, our adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margins in the first half will be below the comparative period in fiscal 2023. In addition, adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margins reflect net cost savings of $20,000,000 to $22,000,000 associated with the workforce reduction as well as reductions in discretionary and third Party spend announced today. These cost saving actions will result in annualized net savings of approximately 24,000,000 We expect positive cash flow for the fiscal year inclusive of a full year of cash outflows related to R and D tax legislation. Speaker 100:37:41Cash flow will be second half weighted as we complete a majority of our challenge programs, ship and bill final product and convert unbilled receivables to billed receivables and then to cash. We expect improvement in net working capital by the end of the year as we begin to see reductions in unbilled receivables and inventory with more meaningful reductions over the longer term. Looking beyond fiscal 2024, Mercury is well positioned for stronger growth, margin expansion and improved working capital. We expect our current backlog and strong slate of existing programs coupled with increased defense spending to drive a return to above industry average revenue growth. On the bottom line, as we complete our challenge programs and our mix transitions from the current weighting of development programs To higher margin production programs, we expect to see a natural uplift in gross margins beginning in fiscal 2024. Speaker 100:38:41In closing, our strategy remains sound. The organization is centered around 4 priorities: Enhancing execution to deliver predictable performance, building a thriving organic growth engine, Addressing our cost structure to improve margin expansion and driving free cash flow release and improved conversion. Executing on those priorities will not only enable a return to historical revenue growth and profitability, but will also drive further margin expansion and cash conversion demonstrating the full potential of our business model. With that, I'll now turn the call back over to Bill. Speaker 200:39:22Thanks, Dave. Operator, please proceed with the Q and A. Operator00:39:35We ask today that you limit yourself to one question. Thank you. Your first question comes from the line of Seth Seifman with JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 300:39:48Hey, thanks very much and good afternoon And welcome, guys. I guess, maybe starting off, Bill, if you could talk a little bit about what you've seen that gives you the confidence, A, that Mercury Is a national asset. And B, with regard to outsourcing, it's something that the company has talked about For some time, but I was wondering with a fresh set of eyes kind of how you see that opportunity. Is this something you Talk about at the with the senior levels of management at the defense primes about how they want to out source more of their cost base or is it something that you see that happens more on kind of a case by case basis and how you think about that opportunity over time? Speaker 200:40:44Yes, Seth. So thanks very much for the question. And just as a reminder, I've been in and around this space for a few decades. So when I speak to some of the trends that I see that are relevant to Mercury, many have been in place for a while or been in work for a while. And I've also, having been on the Board for over a year, had a perspective coming in. Speaker 200:41:09And I'd say that that perspective coming in I've always felt like Mercury was in an outstanding position strategically In the market, from a macro standpoint based on major funding trends around defense electronics, the growth rates, The opportunity to bring capability enhancements to platforms on time constants that matter, make a difference today In missions and serving men and women in uniform and having a difference in their lives. So I knew coming in that Mercury was well situated, favorable tailwinds from a funding standpoint, market growth standpoint And had established program positions on franchise programs with long duration run rates. With respect to outsourcing, that's been a trend that's been in work across aerospace and defense And across contractors who have supported the federal government for decades. In our space, we certainly see it with the Tier 1 Primes who are really forced to focus on what are their core strengths and where are they going to focus And in turn, where are they going to rely on the supplier base? And that's where I think we bring a very unique angle with our Commercial model of investing in products that have relevance across platforms, It also drives our margin profile along with it. Speaker 200:42:48And so I think it's a trend that's here to stay. It's been in work for A long time and it's certainly relevant to Mercury and our positioning. So I've had a chance to see that over time from the outside To think about it certainly coming in when I joined the Board a year ago and now to see it up close and personal while I've been in the interim role Over the last couple of months. Speaker 300:43:14Okay, great. Thanks. I'll stick to one. Thank you very much. Operator00:43:19Your next question comes from the line of Ken Herbert with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 400:43:27Yes. Hey, good afternoon, Bill and Dave. Maybe, Bill, just to start off, as we think about the fiscal 'twenty four guide And you think about the bridge on the EBITDA from sort of the $132,000,000 to the midpoint of the guidance range, how much Is implied in terms of improvement from the $56,000,000 headwind you had from the 20 programs In 'twenty three relative to growth of the core business and other cost actions, I mean, I guess it would be really helpful if you can help with some detail As the key moving pieces on the EBITDA bridge. Speaker 200:44:03Yes, Ken. I'll go ahead and start and Dave I can chime in and maybe if we use Slide 7 as a reference point. If you maybe work right to left On the chart and think about FY 'twenty four, or at least I'll give you a sense of how we're thinking about it. I think we have pretty conservative assumptions around the program mix shift over time. So we're really thinking about a gradual shift in mix As we work our way through FY 'twenty four, maybe exiting the year with a more favorable mix, but pretty conservative assumptions around a gradual As you move over to the cost reductions, we're assuming that we'll see most of the benefit from Those cost reductions, but not the full run rate. Speaker 200:44:54And then we'll certainly see the normalized comps. So I think that gives you a feel for From the right hand side of the chart, how we're thinking about the midpoint of guidance and implicit in that, how much we're Accounting for unknown unknowns on the development programs as we work our way through the back part of execution on those Speaker 400:45:21Okay. So I guess just to summarize then, obviously, The guidance implies a fairly conservative view on the improvement on the impact of the challenged programs, which Theoretically, it could be where you could see perhaps the most upside in the guide as we think about 2024? Speaker 200:45:40I think that's an appropriate way to look at it. And again, I would take as a backdrop our view on guidance this year, recognizing it's The transition year and we've got some moving pieces as we're executing on the back portions of these development programs, We think that's a prudent way to be thinking about guidance. Speaker 500:46:01Perfect. Thank you. Operator00:46:05Your next question comes from the line of Jonathan Ho with William Blair. Your line is open. Speaker 100:46:11Hi, good afternoon and Congratulations on the new opportunities. I guess my first question or the only question I'll ask is, with the program execution challenges, Why has it taken maybe this long to resolve some of these issues? Is there some additional detail that you can provide? And what sort of gives you the Confidence that you'll be able to resolve those remaining challenges that were referenced and just given that it seems like it's a fairly large number of them. Thank you. Speaker 200:46:40Yes, Jonathan, thank you. And just to put things into context, when we talk about the challenged programs that Really masking the underlying performance of the business. In actuality, it's a fairly small number of programs. And we're talking On the order of about 20 programs where we have well over 300 programs across our portfolio, The majority of which are performing very predictably, very profitably and represent a very healthy business that's been I'll give you a little insight into what we've done over the last 45 days. We've brought the senior team across All relevant functions from engineering manufacturing, our program managers, our program management leadership And we literally have reviewed every development program. Speaker 200:47:41And so we started with the first eleven that the company spoke about in Our Q3 call, we extended that to any development program that was deemed to have some risk Profile associated with it that the teams were looking to mitigate. And then we ended by looking at the programs that were low risk. So by the time we finished that process, we had gone through every program in the every development program in the portfolio. And we took a very stringent eye on the activities to complete those programs and our estimates to complete. And the result of that analysis is reflected in the EAC growth and the cost growth that was reflected In the quarter. Speaker 200:48:33How we got there? I think it's pretty clear to me at this point that as the company Grew through acquisitions that we acquired some very strategic footprint and development programs that, As we said in the script, are going to have a fantastic return for the company. They're going to result in new production runs on franchise Programs that will be predictable and profitable and have a long run associated with them. But at the same time, Our engineering, our program management and some of those other critical process areas and functions Didn't mature at a rate that we grew as we acquired these programs. And that's what we're working our way through right now. Speaker 200:49:19So some of the things that we've instituted right away is not only those cross functional detailed reviews of our programs and their cost to complete, But also doing it on a monthly basis so that we can unroot or root problems and challenges as they emerge And tackle them very quickly. So that's just a piece of what we put in place right now. So while we can't sit here today and say that We won't have any issues on development programs as we go forward. I feel very good about the rigor that we put into Establishing our cost to complete, getting all of the experts in the company to stare at those programs and contribute to the assessment of our cost to complete and give us a robust view of what it's going to take to execute on the remainder of these challenge programs. Speaker 100:50:13And if I could add, Jonathan, this is the comprehensive nature of these reviews, It puts us in a position where we get an earlier warning of risks and as they start to realize it gives us a longer runway to be able to go mitigate those risks. So seeing those things earlier And being able to react to them is a critical part of how we're going forward. Speaker 500:50:43Thank you. Operator00:50:46Your next question comes from the line of Michael Ciarmoli with Truist. Your line is Speaker 500:50:51open. Hey, good evening, guys. Welcome and thanks for taking the questions. Speaker 200:50:59I guess just Speaker 500:51:02One quick one and then I guess for the past 12 months, 24 months, we've heard an extremely Large amount of detail about supply chain impacting this business. And I think here we are and on this call, no one's brought up supply chain. So has that been a Factor at all in some of the negative performance? And then the second one I wanted to ask, you've got $760,000,000 of backlog that's shippable. Can you give us any color on the margin profile there? Speaker 500:51:31Are those are some of these challenged 2020 development programs critical to getting that Product out the door? Speaker 200:51:40Yes. Hi, Michael. Thanks for the question. I guess I'll start with the second part of that. And the answer is yes. Speaker 200:51:47When we look at and we have, we've gone through a detailed review of our inventory and our unbilled, which is The bulk of where we've seen the increase in working capital over the last couple of years, the ability for us to free up cash Is largely tied to executing on these development programs. And so as we execute on the development programs, get hardware out the door, Then begin the production programs associated with those. We'll not only be able to burn down the unbilled Receivables, but also be able to burn down the inventory. And that's our focus right now is really releasing cash that's been trapped in the company. Speaker 500:52:31Okay. Okay. What about that backlog that's shippable? I mean, any color on the margin profile there? Speaker 200:52:39Well, I mean, that's really in the unbilled receivables that you're referring to. Speaker 500:52:44Okay. Speaker 200:52:45Yes. I mean, the when the working capital that's tied up in the business right now, it's primarily in unbilled receivables And in inventory. And what we're focused on literally program by program is shipping hardware so that we can invoice and collect cash To burn down the unsold receivable. And then the inventory, that has ticked up over time, And that also will burn down as we transition the development programs into production because of many times the company bought inventory Ahead thinking that the development would come to an end at a certain point in time and as that's dragged to the right, that inventory Has been in place and is awaiting production programs to get kicked off so that we can consume that inventory. Speaker 100:53:36And Jonathan, just this is or Michael, sorry. This is Dave. If I could just add a couple of thoughts. From a supply chain standpoint, the reason we're not focused on talking about that so much here is because we've actually seen It starts to normalize in terms of lead times. And so where we had significant risk in the past, we talked about and so had Extended our purchasing to an earlier time. Speaker 100:54:08We're starting to go back and revisit all of those lead times working with Our suppliers to ensure we're not bringing in material too early to help us with our inventories as we go forward. Speaker 500:54:21Okay, great. Helpful. Thanks guys. Speaker 200:54:25Thank you. Operator00:54:27Your next question comes from the line of Sheila Kahyaoglu with Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 600:54:33Hi, guys. Good afternoon and welcome. So much to digest in your script and I appreciate all that you've put together. I just maybe wanted to step back from all this and I hate this sort of question, but what do you think went wrong? Was it just simply acquisitions weren't integrated and the company grew too Quickly not caring for margins. Speaker 600:54:53Do you think this is more structural or a process oriented problem? And how do you think about the processes you'll fix if it is that over the Top line. Speaker 200:55:03Yes. I think big picture, the company has scaled up and Inorganically moved into areas that I think are very attractive areas to be in, but requires Processes that are mature in areas like program management, system engineering, etcetera. And I think we're seeing the growing pains associated with that on some of these development programs. So to answer your question directly, I don't think it's so much structural. I think it's more process oriented. Speaker 200:55:35And these aren't challenges that Companies or leaders that have taken on development programs haven't seen before. They're very fundamental process type So we have a team in place that is squarely focused on these development programs, not only the ones that we have in house, but maturing our processes so that we can execute more effectively on development programs In the future. So I would characterize it more as a process maturity challenge that we are laser focused on and already have Maturing process is underway than anything that's more structural in nature. Speaker 600:56:21And I guess just on the processes over the next few months, how will you change it? How do you make the systems more mature so there's checks? And Have you found anything wrong with the contract structures on the development side, that you know might need to be changed? Yes. Speaker 200:56:37I think on the process maturity, that's a journey. But like I said, it's already well underway. So when it comes to Reviewing our development programs, we're doing it with a higher frequency right now, I would say with more rigor because of the people that we have Involved in those processes, and we're getting very granular when it comes to things like burning down Speaker 100:57:11Yes. And Sheila, I would add that when you talk about the structure of some of the contracts that We've had in the past firm fixed price contracts with billing at delivery And we've been working with our customer set to ensure that we have milestones that are better aligned with how we're Spending money on these programs. So we're working through that. At the same time, we're working with our customers to ensure we have Really solid alignment in our contracts around the scope of what's being performed. Speaker 600:57:48Thanks. Operator00:57:52Your next question comes from the line of Jan Franz Engelbrecht with Baird. Your line is open. Speaker 700:58:00Good evening, Bill and David. I'm on for Peter today. So I just had a question. In the prior release, we heard about 12 development programs that was causing most of the issues and 4 of those programs related to a single technology, but today's release calls out 20 challenging challenge programs. So could you just call out, If you can, what's your review sort of identified? Speaker 700:58:26Was this 8 additional development programs or Was there existing programs? Just sort of help me bridge the gap from 12 to 20? Thank you. Speaker 200:58:37Yes. So if we put it in the context of the impacts in the Q4, where we saw a difference from guidance to our actual EBITDA of about $33,000,000 About $29,000,000 of that was incremental program costs that we saw. And I'd say about a quarter of that were tied to the programs that were discussed in the 3rd quarter call. The balance of that was tied to about an equivalent number of programs that were separate from the programs that were discussed Last quarter. And so I think that gives you a sense of the programs last quarter as they're working their way through development stabilizing And then also the rigor of the review that we put in place across the rest of our portfolio and all of the other Development programs in our portfolio. Speaker 200:59:30I think I would characterize it that way. Dave, anything to add? Speaker 100:59:33Yes. No, I agree, Bill. And so The 20 programs includes the approximately 20 includes the 12 from the previous quarter. And what I would say is that of those initial ones where Bill said about a third of the growth That it's really driven by a very small subset of those original programs. The vast majority of them, Problems were resolved, the programs are on track and there was no further degradation in the program costs. Speaker 701:00:09I appreciate the color. I'll jump back in the line. Thank you. Speaker 201:00:13Thank you. Operator01:00:15Your next question again comes from the line of Seth Seifman with JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 301:00:22Hey, good afternoon. I just wanted to follow-up quickly on the revenue guide. And so if we look at the midpoint, Not really looking for growth in 2024 and looking for sales to be down, I guess in the Q1 year on year. And I guess if you could talk a little bit about what it is in the portfolio That's preventing you from growing this year. I mean, I understand there are execution problems on certain programs. Speaker 301:00:53But from a growth perspective, we're seeing at Your customers tend to be the major contractors and we can all see revenue inflecting higher For those companies, their costs are your revenues. Why would Mercury not be participating And some of the growth we're seeing across the industry, especially when the limited growth we saw in 4 of this year was somewhat driven, I guess, by negative EACs, which I assume won't be repeating. Speaker 201:01:26Yes. I know, appreciate the question. And I will say that one of the benefits of this increase in mix That we have of development programs, we've talked about the fact that historically it's been in the range of eighty-twenty and more recently we shifted to sixty-forty-forty Operator01:01:52.:] Speaker 301:01:52We're going to continue to see Speaker 201:01:53the development programs and then turning on the production programs that go with those that become long running, predictable And highly profitable. To get there, we have to execute on and finalize the development programs. And that's really what's in front of us in 24. And the more effectively we're able to get through the development and turn on production, the sooner we'll be able to see the inflection point and Benefit of those long run production programs in our organic growth rate. So I think we're taking a fairly balanced view of our Execution in FY 2024 across those development programs and the transition to turning on the production programs. Speaker 101:02:37And I would add, as Bill said, we're focusing our resources on these challenge programs and getting them done because the sooner we get those Done, the sooner we turn on those production awards, which is going to help us across the board from growth standpoint, from inventory, from Working capital in general and those programs where we're focusing resources are programs where incrementally the revenue is not That great in the beginning part of the year, but it will turn into something much larger as we go forward. Speaker 301:03:11And on the production portion of those programs, are those contracts established And signed or will you now go ahead and when the development is done, then negotiate and sign production contracts With your customers on these programs. Speaker 201:03:31Yes. They're not signed and they're typically dependent on the development programs being executed. But I think we view the conversion of those development programs to production programs as a very high rate. And in some cases or many cases, we're the sole source provider. So it really comes down to just finalizing the development, Delivering those first few units so that the production contracts can be awarded. Speaker 301:03:58Okay. Okay. And then maybe if I could just sneak in a final one. Last week, you guys put out a press release about LTAMs. Can you talk about the role of LTAMs in all of this? Speaker 301:04:09I 20 programs is a it's not a huge number relative to the total number of programs in the company, but Relative to a single program, it's a large number. Did LTAM's figure very prominently in the challenges that you guys have And how helpful will this be in releasing some working capital? Or is this just one of several and we shouldn't think about it having a very Meaningful Speaker 201:04:37impact? I would think about it more going forward as a program that we're very excited about, As opposed to one that's been a major contributor to our challenge programs. Speaker 301:04:50Great. Thank you very much. Operator01:04:54This concludes our question and answer session for today. I turn the call back over to Bill Ballhaus. Speaker 201:05:01Well, thank you very much. I'd like to thank everybody for joining us this afternoon and I look forward to talking during our Q1 Earnings call. Thank you. Operator01:05:13This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways Leadership Refresh: Mercury appointed Bill Ballhaus as CEO, Dave Farnsworth as CFO, and added three experienced directors to the board to strengthen governance and sharpen operational focus. Core Business Strength: Management asserts that while roughly 20 development programs incurred ~$56 million of temporary cost overruns (about 580 bps), the majority of its 300+ programs remain predictable and profitable. Four Strategic Priorities: The company is focused on resolving challenged programs, building an organic growth engine, expanding margins through about $24 million of annual cost savings, and unlocking free cash flow by reducing working capital (potentially $300 million+). Fiscal 2024 Outlook: Mercury expects flat revenue of $950–1,000 million, adjusted EBITDA of $160–185 million (16.8–18.5% margin), a seasonally soft Q1, and positive cash flow in H2 as development programs transition to production. Long-Term Path: As execution improves and development converts to higher-margin production, the company targets mid-20% adjusted EBITDA margins, sustained above-market organic growth, and strong cash conversion. A.I. generated. May contain errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallMercury Systems Q4 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) Mercury Systems Earnings HeadlinesMRCY Q1 Earnings Call: Revenue Beat Expectations, Margins and Cash Flow Improve Amid Backlog TransitionMay 19 at 11:53 AM | msn.comTop Executive Sells Thousands in Mercury Systems Stock!May 16, 2025 | tipranks.comTrump’s treachery Trump’s Final Reset Inside the shocking plot to re-engineer America’s financial system…and why you need to move your money now.May 21, 2025 | Porter & Company (Ad)Mercury Introduces First Safety-Certifiable, SOSA-aligned Mission Computer for Aviation PlatformsMay 14, 2025 | globenewswire.comMercury Systems (NASDAQ:MRCY) Price Target Raised to $33.00 at The Goldman Sachs GroupMay 14, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comTop Executive at Mercury Systems Makes a Major Stock SaleMay 12, 2025 | tipranks.comSee More Mercury Systems Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Mercury Systems? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Mercury Systems and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Mercury SystemsMercury Systems (NASDAQ:MRCY), a technology company, manufactures and sells components, products, modules, and subsystems for aerospace and defense industries in the United States, Europe, and the Asia Pacific. Its products and solutions are deployed in approximately 300 programs with 25 defense contractors and commercial aviation customers. The company offers components, including power amplifiers and limiters, switches, oscillators, filters, equalizers, digital and analog converters, chips, monolithic microwave integrated circuits, and memory and storage devices; modules and sub-assemblies, such as embedded processing boards, switched fabrics and boards, digital receivers, multi-chip modules, integrated radio frequency and microwave multi-function assemblies, tuners, and transceivers, as well as graphics and video boards; and integrated subsystems. It also designs and develops digital radio frequency memory units for various modern electronic warfare applications; radar environment simulation and test systems for defense and intelligence applications; and signals intelligence payloads and EO/IR technologies for small UAV platforms, as well as onboard UAV processor systems for real-time wide area motion imagery. The company was formerly known as Mercury Computer Systems, Inc. and changed its name to Mercury Systems, Inc. in November 2012. 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There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Day, everyone, and welcome to the Mercury Systems 4th Quarter Fiscal 2023 Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded. At this time, for opening remarks and introduction, I'd like to turn the call over to the company's Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Dave Farnsworth. Please go ahead, Mr. Farnsworth. Speaker 100:00:23Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us. With me today is our President and Chief Executive Officer, Bill Ballhaus. If you've not received a copy of the earnings Press release we issued earlier this afternoon, you can find it on our website atmrcy.com. The slide presentation that Bill and I will be referring to is posted on the Investor Relations section of the website under Events and Presentations. Turning to Slide 2 in the presentation. Speaker 100:00:52I'd like to remind you that today's presentation includes forward looking statements, including information regarding Mercury's financial outlook, future plans, objectives, business prospects and anticipated financial performance. These forward looking statements are subject to future risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results or performance to differ materially. All forward looking statements should be considered in conjunction with the cautionary statements on Slide 2 in the earnings press release and the risk factors included in Mercury's SEC filings. I'd also like to mention that in addition to reporting financial results In accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles or GAAP, during our call, we will also discuss several non GAAP financial measures, Specifically, adjusted income, adjusted earnings per share, adjusted EBITDA, free cash flow, organic revenue and acquired revenue. A reconciliation of these non GAAP metrics is included as an appendix to today's slide presentation and in the earnings press release. Speaker 100:02:02I'll now turn the call over to Mercury's President and CEO, Bill Blauhaus. Please turn to Slide 3. Thanks, Dave. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. In this call, I'll cover 3 topics. Speaker 100:02:161st, introductory comments on recent changes, actions taken at the company and my initial impressions second, our priorities and focus going forward And third, expectations for our performance, both for FY 'twenty four and longer term. I'll then turn it over to Dave to discuss our results and look forward to wrapping up with Q and A. Before diving in, I wanted to take a moment to recognize the efforts of Speaker 200:02:42the Mercury team, Their demonstrated resilience over time and their dedication and commitment to serving our clients and their important missions. As we've discussed throughout the company, with our recent announcements, we are on a very clear path to unlock the intrinsic value of Mercury for our customers, Shareholders and employees through enhanced operational focus. As a team, we realize that what we need to do is within our control, And we all recognize that's a great place to be. Please turn to Slide 4. Let me start by summarizing some of the recent changes at the company. Speaker 200:03:20At the end of Q4, the Board concluded its review of strategic alternatives and implemented several important changes to put Mercury on a path Over the past 2 months, the Board has made positive governance changes, appointing Roger Krone and Jerry DeMuro to the Board, Both well respected industry veterans with CEO experience and appointing Scott Ostfeld to the Board who brings an important shareholder perspective. I have known these 3 individuals for a number of years and I'm delighted to have them on the Board. In addition, The Board affected a smooth leadership transition with the valuable addition of Dave Farnsworth, a seasoned Defense Technology leader as Chief Financial Officer. And with today's announcement, I am humbled and excited that the Board has placed its faith in me to lead Mercury through its next phase of value creation. We have significant work ahead of us, and I'm confident based on what I've seen over the last year as a Board member and more recently as interim CEO that we can and will make tangible progress toward predictable, profitable organic growth with improved cash conversion in fiscal 2024 and beyond. Speaker 200:04:35I also want to take a moment to thank Bill O'Brien for his 15 years of service To Mercury and for his significant leadership in navigating through this recent transition period as Chairman of the Board. Before I go too far, I'll give you a little background on myself. I began my career as an aerospace engineer designing and building high powered communication satellites For government and commercial applications around the world supporting demanding missions and delivering very complex satellite systems. One of my key takeaways from that experience was that as a young engineer, I didn't need to worry about things outside of my control. I realized that if I just came to work every day, focused on solving the customers' hard technical problems better than anybody else, Being a good teammate, doing the right thing and delivering programs on cost and schedule, everything else would take care of itself. Speaker 200:05:31Customers would be happy, shareholders would be happy, and as employees, we would have a lot of fun outperforming our competitors. That was about the 1st decade of my career and over the last 20 years, I've led a number of aerospace, defense and technology businesses. Like Mercury, many of these businesses had great fundamentals, but needed renewed focus to restore and drive strong shareholder returns. In each of these situations, I've worked with high performing teams to drive a culture of relentless focus on enhanced execution that led to significant value creation and returns for shareholders. This experience, Combined with my knowledge of this leadership team and Mercury's superb positioning in the market gives me the utmost confidence that we will be successful in realizing the inherent growth, profitability, cash flow and ultimately value of this national asset. Speaker 200:06:32Since taking on the interim CEO role on June 26, I spent significant time with the team digging into the details of the business Informing an assessment of Mercury and its value creation potential. Specifically, I have visited our major centers of operation and personally led reviews of our challenge programs and expanded those reviews to include 100% of our current development programs, their estimated cost to complete and any roadblocks or risks to completion. I've engaged with the growth organization to review the health of our new business pipeline and our approach to accelerate organic growth. The leadership team and I have rapidly assessed our cost structure, Taking initial actions to right size our organization and improve margins in fiscal 2024 and beyond. And as a leadership team, we have reviewed our major unbilled receivables balances by program and our inventory in detail to establish burn down plans and drive Please turn to Slide 5. Speaker 200:07:40Based on the last year plus That I served on the Board and my work recently with the team, here are my initial impressions and takeaways. First impression, Mercury's strategy is sound. We are a national asset in the defense and industrial base. At a macro level, we are positioned in an attractive growth market, Defense Electronics, and more importantly, we are situated in the right parts of that market Poised for significant electronic modernization. And finally, with enhanced customer focus and execution excellence, Mercury will continue to benefit from increased outsourcing by our defense prime customers. Speaker 200:08:31All these factors give me confidence in our ability to 2nd impression, over the past several years, the company grew inorganically into strategically attractive areas, but didn't fully integrate some of the businesses and mature processes and management systems to align with Mercury's evolving business portfolio. In my experience, this is not uncommon in businesses that grow rapidly via acquisitions. At Mercury though, The immaturity and lack of full integration of key functional areas have led to the serious challenges the company experienced Forecasting business performance over the past several quarters. That said, maturing in these areas is doable within our control and underway. My third and most important takeaway is that while our recent results are disappointing, the majority of our business is performing well, Delivering predictable and profitable growth. Speaker 200:09:31However, this solid performance has been masked by approximately 20 programs that are experiencing unique and outsized costs, primarily temporary cost growth related to initial development challenges. In fiscal 'twenty three, these few programs impacted our financial performance by approximately $56,000,000 Said differently, our reported margin in 2023 does not at all reflect a structural shift in our margin profile. It is the composite of a very predictable and profitable core business obscured by an atypically large mix of development programs and cost challenges on a subset of programs that are resolvable and temporary in nature. And looking beyond our recent results, I'm encouraged by 3 factors. First, the majority of our business is performing very well. Speaker 200:10:272nd, the temporary execution challenges that are masking this performance are occurring on a small subset of programs, most of which are development in nature and are all solvable. And third, the current larger than normal mix of development programs reflects the potential for increased highly predictable and profitable business as the programs transition into production. With those introductory comments, I'd like to now transition to our priorities and focus going forward. So please turn to Slide 6. Our enhanced focus on execution includes 4 priority areas: 1st, delivering predictable results Through improved execution on challenge programs. Speaker 200:11:132nd, building a thriving organic growth engine that leverages our unique strategic positioning 3rd, expanding margins through a rationalized cost structure and improved program gross margins and 4th, driving improved free cash flow conversion and near term cash release. These priorities are central to unlocking the intrinsic value in the business. Let me provide some additional color on how we're approaching each of them. First, on delivering predictable results. In assessing our program portfolio, Our core business consisting of franchise production programs as well as a large portfolio of performing development programs is healthy and delivers solid gross margins, which gives me a lot of confidence in our long term business model. Speaker 200:12:04Currently, there are two factors that have pressured and added variability to our recent results. First, as discussed in Q3, We have been successful winning a number of development programs that has led to a shift in our program mix from 20% development programs in FY 2021 to 40% development programs in FY 'twenty three. We know this mix shift is temporary in nature And a positive leading indicator of future growth as our development programs are a precursor to higher margin, long term production contracts. But given that our development programs typically run at approximately 1,000 basis points lower gross margin than our production programs, We have experienced near term margin pressure tied to this mix shift. 2nd, as I mentioned earlier, because our management Inherent in many of these development programs, a small number of programs have become challenged, leading to unanticipated and temporary impacts Our overall performance. Speaker 200:13:16In FY 'twenty three, execution challenges on approximately 20 programs, A majority of which are development in nature drove approximately $56,000,000 of impact or approximately 580 basis points of margin contraction. We are squarely focused on mitigating the effects from the challenged programs, completing them and transitioning them into production. We have strengthened our program reviews on development programs with increased frequency and internal rigor and tightened program management 2 of these programs moved into production in Q4, 5 more Have or are expected to transition in H1 with the majority completing throughout FY 2024. While I can't promise we are done seeing the impacts from the challenge programs on our results, I can say that these execution challenges are resolvable, Temporary in nature and the full force of the organization is focused on overcoming them. As we make progress through the year And as we return toward a more typical program mix, I believe the profitability of the core business will begin to become visible as we progress And finally, even at the increased levels of investment associated with the challenged programs, I'm confident that we'll see a high return on those programs as they transition from one time development to ongoing long term Profitable production runs. Speaker 200:14:51Our second focus area, delivering consistent industry leading organic growth, Requires the 2 growth engine that is bidding and winning new contracts at an appropriate level given our scale after years of inorganic growth. Our book to bill has averaged slightly above 1.0 over the past 8 quarters, which isn't adequate to meet our growth aspirations. Going forward, we are focused on driving a higher book to bill, which will help meet our long term growth objectives and above market growth rates reflecting our attractive market positioning. Sizing up our growth engine will take some time, But the good news is that we aren't opportunity constrained given our market positioning. I've had the opportunity to successfully work through similar growth Scaling exercises several times in my career to accelerate organic growth. Speaker 200:15:45There is a consistent progression associated We're targeting pipeline and levels of bid activity as leading indicators to revenue growth. We are beginning that work today, Led by our growth organization and while it will take time to translate into revenue, I am confident that a healthy growth engine combined with Mercury's strong positioning, will lead to industry leading organic growth. Our 3rd area of focus is margin expansion through targeted improvements to both our operating expense and gross margin. As mentioned earlier, we have taken initial actions to simplify our organizational structure, facilitate clearer accountability and aligning to our priorities, including embedding impact processes and execution into the business, Streamlining our organizational structure and removing areas of redundancy between corporate and divisional organizations and reducing SG and A headcount and rebalancing discretionary and third party spend. This first set of actions will generate approximately $24,000,000 in annual run rate cost savings, including approximately $20,000,000 to $22,000,000 of net benefit to FY 'twenty four. Speaker 200:17:01These savings are reflected in our FY 'twenty four outlook, which Dave will discuss shortly. In the near term, we are evaluating additional efforts to drive further efficiencies in SG and A, R and D Investment and manufacturing footprint among others. Our 4th focus area is driving improved free cash flow conversion and cash release. Over the past 2 fiscal years, Mercury has delivered $333,000,000 of adjusted EBITDA, but generated negative $107,000,000 in free cash flow, which is clearly unacceptable. Since FY 'twenty, Working capital has grown from approximately 35% of revenue to approximately 65% of revenue in FY2023. Speaker 200:17:47This growth has primarily been driven by increases in unbilled receivables and inventory and is a direct result of the temporary execution Our focus in this area is as follows: 1st, resolve execution challenges and ship and bill against legacy program unbilled balances second, continue to improve asset efficiency In our new overtime revenue programs through cash neutral or positive terms and tighter alignment of manufacturing cycles with customer deliveries And 3rd, better align the receipt of inventory with our manufacturing execution cycles and pursue advanced Funding for material where possible. We believe these actions will help return the company to historic levels of net working capital, representing a future cash release opportunity of approximately $300,000,000 or more over time. With that description of our focus going forward, I'd now like to discuss our expectations for both our long term business model and guidance for FY 'twenty four. Please turn to Slide 7. Looking at our model and focusing on margins considering recent history. Speaker 200:19:04With 2023 as a reference point, as we improve our program execution and resolve our challenge programs, We will remove approximately 580 basis points of headwind in our margins, which is partially offset on a go forward basis by approximately $22,000,000 or 2.30 basis points related to annual incentive plan bonus that was not paid in FY2023 Due to underperformance, based on recent actions to improve our cost structure, we see another 250 basis points of benefit. We also expect to return to a more normal mix of production versus development programs over time, which will have margin uplift given the 1,000 basis points lower average gross margins on development programs. Assuming we return to our historical eightytwenty mix of production versus development programs, we could experience an additional 200 basis points of margin expansion demonstrating a clear path to 22% adjusted EBITDA margins over time. Beyond that, we have several additional levers to drive margin. We will continue to focus on program execution, Not only on our development programs, but on our already profitable production programs to drive gross margin improvement. Speaker 200:20:25We're looking at IRAD efficiency through prioritization and return thresholds. And given our unique strategic positioning and focus on growing faster than the market, We should see operating leverage with accelerated organic growth. Netting all of that together, While we have more work to do prior to communicating specific long term targets for Mercury, I do see a ClearPath back to predictable organic growth that delivers mid-twenty percent adjusted EBITDA margins and strong free cash flow conversion. I look forward to coming back to investors later in the fiscal year to review our progress to date and provide more insight into our long term financial targets. Turning now to our outlook for FY24 on Slide 8. Speaker 200:21:13While we have taken and will continue to take actions to improve predictability, Organic growth, margin and cash flow. Fiscal 2024 will be a transition year. Consistent with our go forward philosophy to Dave will discuss our guidance in detail, but at a high level, we expect flat revenue at the midpoint with margin improvement throughout the year. While we're not providing quarterly guidance, I will say that Q1, which is a seasonally low quarter, is expected to be below Q1 last year's revenue and adjusted EBITDA with negative cash flow. As we continue to work through execution challenges and enhance our visibility through management system and process improvements, We anticipate improved profitability in the second half and positive cash flow for the year. Speaker 200:22:17While we are taking a cautious approach to guidance, I want to reiterate that our business model is sound and I have not seen any challenges that are not resolvable with proper focus and execution mindset and ultimately enhanced management processes and systems. With that, I'll turn it over to Dave to walk through the financial results for the quarter the year, and I look forward to taking your questions. Dave? Speaker 100:22:45Thank you, Bill. I'll start with a brief introduction, then present our Q4 fiscal 'twenty three results as well as our fiscal 'twenty four guidance. 1st and foremost, I'd like to thank Michelle McCarthy for serving as the Interim CFO for the last 6 months. I look forward to working closely with her as she steps back into her role as our Chief Accounting Officer. The majority of my career spanning the last 4 decades was at Raytheon where I served in numerous finance roles Up through Vice President and CFO of Integrated Defense Systems and prior to that as Vice President and CFO of its Intelligence Information and Services segment. Speaker 100:23:27The main focus in those roles was on operational finance, managing programs, developing financial plans and forecasts, as well as maximizing return on invested capital with a particular focus on networking capital improvement. It was at Raytheon that I worked with Mercury as a supplier. I gained firsthand knowledge of the unique capabilities the company brings, which are critical to mission success. The ability to design and develop affordable open architecture defense electronic solutions Reduces risk and accelerates time to market, aligning with the drive toward outsourcing in the defense industry. In my initial weeks here, I've been impressed by the agility and drive of the Mercury team. Speaker 100:24:17I would also Echo Bill's view regarding the strength of Mercury's long term business model and the ability to return to above average market growth and profitability with an enhanced operational focus. As Bill mentioned, our results for the quarter and the fiscal year were disappointing. Our financial performance throughout fiscal 'twenty three and especially the Q4 obscures the underlying strength of our core business. In fact, the majority of the more than 300 active programs we are managing are performing well and generating margins in line With historical trends of above 40% across production programs and lowtomid30s across development programs. Our financial performance for the quarter and the year is masked by approximately 20 programs that have experienced unique and outsized cost growth, primarily related to development challenges. Speaker 100:25:17Specifically, our financial results were impacted by approximately $29,000,000 in the 4th quarter $56,000,000 in the fiscal year across these challenged programs. We continue to experience minimal net changes across the rest of our program portfolio. As discussed in Q3, Our proportion of development programs and execution has nearly doubled from approximately 20% in fiscal 2021 to approximately 40% in fiscal 2023. We have realized risks as certain of these programs have entered final stages of Test and qualification in the fiscal year. Given nearly 90% of our program portfolio is firm fixed price contracts, Incremental labor and material costs result in negative impacts to revenues and margin in the period recognized. Speaker 100:26:13Outside of this small population of challenged programs, we continue to experience predictable and profitable performance across the remainder of the program portfolio. We have taken aggressive and immediate actions to ensure Enhanced execution and operational focus across programs to mitigate further risk. With that as background, please turn to Slide 9, which Details of Q4 results. Demand remains strong as evidenced by bookings of $294,000,000 With a book to bill of $1,160,000 in the quarter, yielding backlog of $1,100,000,000 and up 10% year over year. Revenues for the Q4 were $253,000,000 down $37,000,000 or 13% on a total and organic basis as compared to the prior year of $290,000,000 Revenue was below expectations primarily as a result of cost growth on the challenge programs. Speaker 100:27:14As total program costs increase on firm fixed price contracts that are recognized over time, the measure of progress on those programs decreases. This results in a delay and or reversal of revenues in the period that the costs are recorded. To a lesser extent, Award and material timing also impacted program execution in the quarter. Gross margin for the 4th quarter decreased to 26.6% from 41.3 percent in Q4 2022. Gross margin contracted primarily as a result of over 11.50 basis points are approximately $29,000,000 of impact from challenge programs in the quarter. Speaker 100:27:58This reflects the reduction in revenues coupled with incremental charges associated with loss accruals as well as deferred program cost recognition. The remaining contraction in gross margin is a result of the higher than historical mix of lower margin development programs as well as unfavorable manufacturing variances and reserves. GAAP net loss and loss per share in the 4th quarter was $8,200,000 and $0.15 respectively, as compared to GAAP net income and earnings per share of 16,900,000 and $0.30 respectively in the prior year. The year over year decrease was a result of approximately $29,000,000 of impact from challenge programs. The 4th quarter operating expenses also included a reduction of approximately $7,000,000 for the forfeiture of Stock based compensation related to the departure of our former CEO. Speaker 100:28:55Adjusted EBITDA for the 4th Quarter was $21,900,000 compared with $71,600,000 in the prior year. The decrease was primarily due to lower gross margins resulting from the impact of challenged programs as well as reduced operating leverage. Free cash flow for the Q4 was approximately 4,000,000 Including the 2nd payment of $7,000,000 related to the R and D tax legislation and better than our view of breakeven entering the quarter. Turning to our full year results on Slide 10. Fiscal 2023 was a solid year for bookings. Speaker 100:29:33Our book to bill was 1.10 Compared to $1,080,000,000 in fiscal 2022 yielding backlog of over $1,100,000,000 This backlog supports a High level of visibility as we enter fiscal 2024. Fiscal 2023 revenues were $974,000,000 down 1% Total and 3% organically. Our fiscal year revenue decline was primarily a result of production award delays due to execution challenges across several development programs. In addition, incremental cost Growth delayed progress and therefore revenue recognition on certain programs. Gross margin for the fiscal year decreased 32.5 percent from 40% in the prior year. Speaker 100:30:22Gross margin contracted by approximately 580 basis points As a result of approximately $56,000,000 of impact from challenged programs incurred in the year. The remaining contraction in gross Margin is a result of the higher mix of lower margin development programs as well as unfavorable manufacturing variances and reserves. GAAP net loss and loss per share in fiscal 'twenty three was $28,300,000 and $0.50 respectively, as compared to GAAP net income and earnings per share of $11,300,000 and $0.20 respectively in the prior year. The year over year decrease was a result of approximately $56,000,000 of impact from challenged programs. Adjusted EBITDA for fiscal 'twenty three was $132,300,000 compared with $200,500,000 in the prior year. Speaker 100:31:20The decrease was primarily related to lower gross margin and reduced operating leverage. Free cash flow for the fiscal year was an outflow of Approximately $60,000,000 including payments of $26,000,000 related to the R and D tax legislation. The remaining outflow is reflective of growth in both unbilled receivables and inventory as a result of execution delays across our challenge programs. Slide 11 presents Mercury's balance sheet for the last 5 quarters. We ended fiscal 2023 with cash and cash equivalents of $72,000,000 We have $511,500,000 of funded debt under our $1,100,000,000 revolver, which provides us with significant financial flexibility. Speaker 100:32:08Turning to cash flow on Slide 12. Our billed receivables remained flat, while unbilled receivables increased approximately $6,000,000 quarter over quarter. During the quarter, we successfully resolved the critical technical challenge dramatically improving our yields on a product common across many of our programs. We began final shipments and converted approximately $20,000,000 of long standing unbilled receivables to build receivables on these programs during the quarter. This reduction was more than offset by new unbilled balances recorded in the quarter. Speaker 100:32:45More importantly, the resolution on this common product platform will enable the conversion of an additional $50,000,000 of long standing unbilled receivables over the course of fiscal 2024. We also leveraged our receivables factoring arrangement at levels similar to the prior quarter. Inventory decreased for the first time in 8 quarters as we improved our processes and management systems to better align Procurement of materials with manufacturing cycles. Other non cash items, net and other operating assets and liabilities Primarily reflect the activity within our tax accounts related to the R and D tax legislation. Working capital continued to grow as a percentage of sales, largely driven by increased unbilled receivables and inventory. Speaker 100:33:39We expect continued progress towards the completion of challenged programs to serve as a catalyst for the start of a significant reduction of unbilled receivables. The following production awards associated with this program will consume inventory resulting in improved asset efficiency and cash flows beginning in fiscal 2024. I'll now turn to our financial guidance for the full year fiscal 2024 on Slide 13. We have shifted our guidance approach in fiscal 2024 to guide annually rather than quarterly. While we have taken steps to improve predictability, fiscal 2024 will be a transition year. Speaker 100:34:20As such, We're taking a more conservative approach to guidance for the year. Given our attractive positioning within the defense technology market, Our existing franchise production programs and the sole source nature of approximately 2 thirds of our portfolio, We expect the demand environment to continue to support strong bookings. As a result, we expect a positive book to bill in fiscal 2024. Our fiscal 'twenty four guidance for total company revenues is $950,000,000 to 1,000,000,000 This represents flat growth at the midpoint. Our backlog entering fiscal 2024 supports a high level of revenue visibility, Providing more than 70% forward coverage over our revenue range, this exceeds historical levels of forward coverage entering the fiscal year. Speaker 100:35:14We expect improved revenue linearity between the first and second half of the year as compared to prior years. Gross margins in the first half of the fiscal year will approximate those of fiscal 'twenty three as we transition through the challenge programs and balance the potential for unknown risks that may materialize through final stages of completion. Gross margins will increase throughout the year as we receive and execute on the expected follow on production awards and begin to shift from the higher mix of lower margin development programs. GAAP results are $0.10 to $0.10 GAAP results include approximately $9,000,000 of restructuring charges related to Cost savings efforts announced today. We expect fiscal 2024 adjusted EBITDA in the range of $160,000,000 to 185,000,000 Up 30% at the midpoint from fiscal 2023 and reflecting adjusted EBITDA margins of 16.8% to 18.5%. Speaker 100:36:31Adjusted EPS is expected to be in the range of $1.14 to $1.48 per share. Adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margins reflect a marked improvement in gross margins, although not a full recovery To historical levels, reflecting the potential for unknown risks materializing as we transition through the final stages of execution on on our challenge programs, specifically in the first half of the year. As such, our adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margins in the first half will be below the comparative period in fiscal 2023. In addition, adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margins reflect net cost savings of $20,000,000 to $22,000,000 associated with the workforce reduction as well as reductions in discretionary and third Party spend announced today. These cost saving actions will result in annualized net savings of approximately 24,000,000 We expect positive cash flow for the fiscal year inclusive of a full year of cash outflows related to R and D tax legislation. Speaker 100:37:41Cash flow will be second half weighted as we complete a majority of our challenge programs, ship and bill final product and convert unbilled receivables to billed receivables and then to cash. We expect improvement in net working capital by the end of the year as we begin to see reductions in unbilled receivables and inventory with more meaningful reductions over the longer term. Looking beyond fiscal 2024, Mercury is well positioned for stronger growth, margin expansion and improved working capital. We expect our current backlog and strong slate of existing programs coupled with increased defense spending to drive a return to above industry average revenue growth. On the bottom line, as we complete our challenge programs and our mix transitions from the current weighting of development programs To higher margin production programs, we expect to see a natural uplift in gross margins beginning in fiscal 2024. Speaker 100:38:41In closing, our strategy remains sound. The organization is centered around 4 priorities: Enhancing execution to deliver predictable performance, building a thriving organic growth engine, Addressing our cost structure to improve margin expansion and driving free cash flow release and improved conversion. Executing on those priorities will not only enable a return to historical revenue growth and profitability, but will also drive further margin expansion and cash conversion demonstrating the full potential of our business model. With that, I'll now turn the call back over to Bill. Speaker 200:39:22Thanks, Dave. Operator, please proceed with the Q and A. Operator00:39:35We ask today that you limit yourself to one question. Thank you. Your first question comes from the line of Seth Seifman with JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 300:39:48Hey, thanks very much and good afternoon And welcome, guys. I guess, maybe starting off, Bill, if you could talk a little bit about what you've seen that gives you the confidence, A, that Mercury Is a national asset. And B, with regard to outsourcing, it's something that the company has talked about For some time, but I was wondering with a fresh set of eyes kind of how you see that opportunity. Is this something you Talk about at the with the senior levels of management at the defense primes about how they want to out source more of their cost base or is it something that you see that happens more on kind of a case by case basis and how you think about that opportunity over time? Speaker 200:40:44Yes, Seth. So thanks very much for the question. And just as a reminder, I've been in and around this space for a few decades. So when I speak to some of the trends that I see that are relevant to Mercury, many have been in place for a while or been in work for a while. And I've also, having been on the Board for over a year, had a perspective coming in. Speaker 200:41:09And I'd say that that perspective coming in I've always felt like Mercury was in an outstanding position strategically In the market, from a macro standpoint based on major funding trends around defense electronics, the growth rates, The opportunity to bring capability enhancements to platforms on time constants that matter, make a difference today In missions and serving men and women in uniform and having a difference in their lives. So I knew coming in that Mercury was well situated, favorable tailwinds from a funding standpoint, market growth standpoint And had established program positions on franchise programs with long duration run rates. With respect to outsourcing, that's been a trend that's been in work across aerospace and defense And across contractors who have supported the federal government for decades. In our space, we certainly see it with the Tier 1 Primes who are really forced to focus on what are their core strengths and where are they going to focus And in turn, where are they going to rely on the supplier base? And that's where I think we bring a very unique angle with our Commercial model of investing in products that have relevance across platforms, It also drives our margin profile along with it. Speaker 200:42:48And so I think it's a trend that's here to stay. It's been in work for A long time and it's certainly relevant to Mercury and our positioning. So I've had a chance to see that over time from the outside To think about it certainly coming in when I joined the Board a year ago and now to see it up close and personal while I've been in the interim role Over the last couple of months. Speaker 300:43:14Okay, great. Thanks. I'll stick to one. Thank you very much. Operator00:43:19Your next question comes from the line of Ken Herbert with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 400:43:27Yes. Hey, good afternoon, Bill and Dave. Maybe, Bill, just to start off, as we think about the fiscal 'twenty four guide And you think about the bridge on the EBITDA from sort of the $132,000,000 to the midpoint of the guidance range, how much Is implied in terms of improvement from the $56,000,000 headwind you had from the 20 programs In 'twenty three relative to growth of the core business and other cost actions, I mean, I guess it would be really helpful if you can help with some detail As the key moving pieces on the EBITDA bridge. Speaker 200:44:03Yes, Ken. I'll go ahead and start and Dave I can chime in and maybe if we use Slide 7 as a reference point. If you maybe work right to left On the chart and think about FY 'twenty four, or at least I'll give you a sense of how we're thinking about it. I think we have pretty conservative assumptions around the program mix shift over time. So we're really thinking about a gradual shift in mix As we work our way through FY 'twenty four, maybe exiting the year with a more favorable mix, but pretty conservative assumptions around a gradual As you move over to the cost reductions, we're assuming that we'll see most of the benefit from Those cost reductions, but not the full run rate. Speaker 200:44:54And then we'll certainly see the normalized comps. So I think that gives you a feel for From the right hand side of the chart, how we're thinking about the midpoint of guidance and implicit in that, how much we're Accounting for unknown unknowns on the development programs as we work our way through the back part of execution on those Speaker 400:45:21Okay. So I guess just to summarize then, obviously, The guidance implies a fairly conservative view on the improvement on the impact of the challenged programs, which Theoretically, it could be where you could see perhaps the most upside in the guide as we think about 2024? Speaker 200:45:40I think that's an appropriate way to look at it. And again, I would take as a backdrop our view on guidance this year, recognizing it's The transition year and we've got some moving pieces as we're executing on the back portions of these development programs, We think that's a prudent way to be thinking about guidance. Speaker 500:46:01Perfect. Thank you. Operator00:46:05Your next question comes from the line of Jonathan Ho with William Blair. Your line is open. Speaker 100:46:11Hi, good afternoon and Congratulations on the new opportunities. I guess my first question or the only question I'll ask is, with the program execution challenges, Why has it taken maybe this long to resolve some of these issues? Is there some additional detail that you can provide? And what sort of gives you the Confidence that you'll be able to resolve those remaining challenges that were referenced and just given that it seems like it's a fairly large number of them. Thank you. Speaker 200:46:40Yes, Jonathan, thank you. And just to put things into context, when we talk about the challenged programs that Really masking the underlying performance of the business. In actuality, it's a fairly small number of programs. And we're talking On the order of about 20 programs where we have well over 300 programs across our portfolio, The majority of which are performing very predictably, very profitably and represent a very healthy business that's been I'll give you a little insight into what we've done over the last 45 days. We've brought the senior team across All relevant functions from engineering manufacturing, our program managers, our program management leadership And we literally have reviewed every development program. Speaker 200:47:41And so we started with the first eleven that the company spoke about in Our Q3 call, we extended that to any development program that was deemed to have some risk Profile associated with it that the teams were looking to mitigate. And then we ended by looking at the programs that were low risk. So by the time we finished that process, we had gone through every program in the every development program in the portfolio. And we took a very stringent eye on the activities to complete those programs and our estimates to complete. And the result of that analysis is reflected in the EAC growth and the cost growth that was reflected In the quarter. Speaker 200:48:33How we got there? I think it's pretty clear to me at this point that as the company Grew through acquisitions that we acquired some very strategic footprint and development programs that, As we said in the script, are going to have a fantastic return for the company. They're going to result in new production runs on franchise Programs that will be predictable and profitable and have a long run associated with them. But at the same time, Our engineering, our program management and some of those other critical process areas and functions Didn't mature at a rate that we grew as we acquired these programs. And that's what we're working our way through right now. Speaker 200:49:19So some of the things that we've instituted right away is not only those cross functional detailed reviews of our programs and their cost to complete, But also doing it on a monthly basis so that we can unroot or root problems and challenges as they emerge And tackle them very quickly. So that's just a piece of what we put in place right now. So while we can't sit here today and say that We won't have any issues on development programs as we go forward. I feel very good about the rigor that we put into Establishing our cost to complete, getting all of the experts in the company to stare at those programs and contribute to the assessment of our cost to complete and give us a robust view of what it's going to take to execute on the remainder of these challenge programs. Speaker 100:50:13And if I could add, Jonathan, this is the comprehensive nature of these reviews, It puts us in a position where we get an earlier warning of risks and as they start to realize it gives us a longer runway to be able to go mitigate those risks. So seeing those things earlier And being able to react to them is a critical part of how we're going forward. Speaker 500:50:43Thank you. Operator00:50:46Your next question comes from the line of Michael Ciarmoli with Truist. Your line is Speaker 500:50:51open. Hey, good evening, guys. Welcome and thanks for taking the questions. Speaker 200:50:59I guess just Speaker 500:51:02One quick one and then I guess for the past 12 months, 24 months, we've heard an extremely Large amount of detail about supply chain impacting this business. And I think here we are and on this call, no one's brought up supply chain. So has that been a Factor at all in some of the negative performance? And then the second one I wanted to ask, you've got $760,000,000 of backlog that's shippable. Can you give us any color on the margin profile there? Speaker 500:51:31Are those are some of these challenged 2020 development programs critical to getting that Product out the door? Speaker 200:51:40Yes. Hi, Michael. Thanks for the question. I guess I'll start with the second part of that. And the answer is yes. Speaker 200:51:47When we look at and we have, we've gone through a detailed review of our inventory and our unbilled, which is The bulk of where we've seen the increase in working capital over the last couple of years, the ability for us to free up cash Is largely tied to executing on these development programs. And so as we execute on the development programs, get hardware out the door, Then begin the production programs associated with those. We'll not only be able to burn down the unbilled Receivables, but also be able to burn down the inventory. And that's our focus right now is really releasing cash that's been trapped in the company. Speaker 500:52:31Okay. Okay. What about that backlog that's shippable? I mean, any color on the margin profile there? Speaker 200:52:39Well, I mean, that's really in the unbilled receivables that you're referring to. Speaker 500:52:44Okay. Speaker 200:52:45Yes. I mean, the when the working capital that's tied up in the business right now, it's primarily in unbilled receivables And in inventory. And what we're focused on literally program by program is shipping hardware so that we can invoice and collect cash To burn down the unsold receivable. And then the inventory, that has ticked up over time, And that also will burn down as we transition the development programs into production because of many times the company bought inventory Ahead thinking that the development would come to an end at a certain point in time and as that's dragged to the right, that inventory Has been in place and is awaiting production programs to get kicked off so that we can consume that inventory. Speaker 100:53:36And Jonathan, just this is or Michael, sorry. This is Dave. If I could just add a couple of thoughts. From a supply chain standpoint, the reason we're not focused on talking about that so much here is because we've actually seen It starts to normalize in terms of lead times. And so where we had significant risk in the past, we talked about and so had Extended our purchasing to an earlier time. Speaker 100:54:08We're starting to go back and revisit all of those lead times working with Our suppliers to ensure we're not bringing in material too early to help us with our inventories as we go forward. Speaker 500:54:21Okay, great. Helpful. Thanks guys. Speaker 200:54:25Thank you. Operator00:54:27Your next question comes from the line of Sheila Kahyaoglu with Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 600:54:33Hi, guys. Good afternoon and welcome. So much to digest in your script and I appreciate all that you've put together. I just maybe wanted to step back from all this and I hate this sort of question, but what do you think went wrong? Was it just simply acquisitions weren't integrated and the company grew too Quickly not caring for margins. Speaker 600:54:53Do you think this is more structural or a process oriented problem? And how do you think about the processes you'll fix if it is that over the Top line. Speaker 200:55:03Yes. I think big picture, the company has scaled up and Inorganically moved into areas that I think are very attractive areas to be in, but requires Processes that are mature in areas like program management, system engineering, etcetera. And I think we're seeing the growing pains associated with that on some of these development programs. So to answer your question directly, I don't think it's so much structural. I think it's more process oriented. Speaker 200:55:35And these aren't challenges that Companies or leaders that have taken on development programs haven't seen before. They're very fundamental process type So we have a team in place that is squarely focused on these development programs, not only the ones that we have in house, but maturing our processes so that we can execute more effectively on development programs In the future. So I would characterize it more as a process maturity challenge that we are laser focused on and already have Maturing process is underway than anything that's more structural in nature. Speaker 600:56:21And I guess just on the processes over the next few months, how will you change it? How do you make the systems more mature so there's checks? And Have you found anything wrong with the contract structures on the development side, that you know might need to be changed? Yes. Speaker 200:56:37I think on the process maturity, that's a journey. But like I said, it's already well underway. So when it comes to Reviewing our development programs, we're doing it with a higher frequency right now, I would say with more rigor because of the people that we have Involved in those processes, and we're getting very granular when it comes to things like burning down Speaker 100:57:11Yes. And Sheila, I would add that when you talk about the structure of some of the contracts that We've had in the past firm fixed price contracts with billing at delivery And we've been working with our customer set to ensure that we have milestones that are better aligned with how we're Spending money on these programs. So we're working through that. At the same time, we're working with our customers to ensure we have Really solid alignment in our contracts around the scope of what's being performed. Speaker 600:57:48Thanks. Operator00:57:52Your next question comes from the line of Jan Franz Engelbrecht with Baird. Your line is open. Speaker 700:58:00Good evening, Bill and David. I'm on for Peter today. So I just had a question. In the prior release, we heard about 12 development programs that was causing most of the issues and 4 of those programs related to a single technology, but today's release calls out 20 challenging challenge programs. So could you just call out, If you can, what's your review sort of identified? Speaker 700:58:26Was this 8 additional development programs or Was there existing programs? Just sort of help me bridge the gap from 12 to 20? Thank you. Speaker 200:58:37Yes. So if we put it in the context of the impacts in the Q4, where we saw a difference from guidance to our actual EBITDA of about $33,000,000 About $29,000,000 of that was incremental program costs that we saw. And I'd say about a quarter of that were tied to the programs that were discussed in the 3rd quarter call. The balance of that was tied to about an equivalent number of programs that were separate from the programs that were discussed Last quarter. And so I think that gives you a sense of the programs last quarter as they're working their way through development stabilizing And then also the rigor of the review that we put in place across the rest of our portfolio and all of the other Development programs in our portfolio. Speaker 200:59:30I think I would characterize it that way. Dave, anything to add? Speaker 100:59:33Yes. No, I agree, Bill. And so The 20 programs includes the approximately 20 includes the 12 from the previous quarter. And what I would say is that of those initial ones where Bill said about a third of the growth That it's really driven by a very small subset of those original programs. The vast majority of them, Problems were resolved, the programs are on track and there was no further degradation in the program costs. Speaker 701:00:09I appreciate the color. I'll jump back in the line. Thank you. Speaker 201:00:13Thank you. Operator01:00:15Your next question again comes from the line of Seth Seifman with JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 301:00:22Hey, good afternoon. I just wanted to follow-up quickly on the revenue guide. And so if we look at the midpoint, Not really looking for growth in 2024 and looking for sales to be down, I guess in the Q1 year on year. And I guess if you could talk a little bit about what it is in the portfolio That's preventing you from growing this year. I mean, I understand there are execution problems on certain programs. Speaker 301:00:53But from a growth perspective, we're seeing at Your customers tend to be the major contractors and we can all see revenue inflecting higher For those companies, their costs are your revenues. Why would Mercury not be participating And some of the growth we're seeing across the industry, especially when the limited growth we saw in 4 of this year was somewhat driven, I guess, by negative EACs, which I assume won't be repeating. Speaker 201:01:26Yes. I know, appreciate the question. And I will say that one of the benefits of this increase in mix That we have of development programs, we've talked about the fact that historically it's been in the range of eighty-twenty and more recently we shifted to sixty-forty-forty Operator01:01:52.:] Speaker 301:01:52We're going to continue to see Speaker 201:01:53the development programs and then turning on the production programs that go with those that become long running, predictable And highly profitable. To get there, we have to execute on and finalize the development programs. And that's really what's in front of us in 24. And the more effectively we're able to get through the development and turn on production, the sooner we'll be able to see the inflection point and Benefit of those long run production programs in our organic growth rate. So I think we're taking a fairly balanced view of our Execution in FY 2024 across those development programs and the transition to turning on the production programs. Speaker 101:02:37And I would add, as Bill said, we're focusing our resources on these challenge programs and getting them done because the sooner we get those Done, the sooner we turn on those production awards, which is going to help us across the board from growth standpoint, from inventory, from Working capital in general and those programs where we're focusing resources are programs where incrementally the revenue is not That great in the beginning part of the year, but it will turn into something much larger as we go forward. Speaker 301:03:11And on the production portion of those programs, are those contracts established And signed or will you now go ahead and when the development is done, then negotiate and sign production contracts With your customers on these programs. Speaker 201:03:31Yes. They're not signed and they're typically dependent on the development programs being executed. But I think we view the conversion of those development programs to production programs as a very high rate. And in some cases or many cases, we're the sole source provider. So it really comes down to just finalizing the development, Delivering those first few units so that the production contracts can be awarded. Speaker 301:03:58Okay. Okay. And then maybe if I could just sneak in a final one. Last week, you guys put out a press release about LTAMs. Can you talk about the role of LTAMs in all of this? Speaker 301:04:09I 20 programs is a it's not a huge number relative to the total number of programs in the company, but Relative to a single program, it's a large number. Did LTAM's figure very prominently in the challenges that you guys have And how helpful will this be in releasing some working capital? Or is this just one of several and we shouldn't think about it having a very Meaningful Speaker 201:04:37impact? I would think about it more going forward as a program that we're very excited about, As opposed to one that's been a major contributor to our challenge programs. Speaker 301:04:50Great. Thank you very much. Operator01:04:54This concludes our question and answer session for today. I turn the call back over to Bill Ballhaus. Speaker 201:05:01Well, thank you very much. I'd like to thank everybody for joining us this afternoon and I look forward to talking during our Q1 Earnings call. Thank you. Operator01:05:13This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by