NYSE:CIEN Ciena Q1 2024 Earnings Report $73.42 +0.76 (+1.05%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$73.32 -0.11 (-0.14%) As of 04:49 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 Ciena EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.66Consensus EPS $0.48Beat/MissBeat by +$0.18One Year Ago EPS$0.48Ciena Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.04 billionExpected Revenue$1.02 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$16.85 millionYoY Revenue Growth-1.80%Ciena Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date3/7/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, March 7, 2024Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsCiena's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, June 5, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 12:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Ciena Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMarch 7, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, and welcome to the Ciena's Fiscal First Quarter 2024 Financial Results Conference Call. All participants will be in listen only mode. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Greg Olams, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:41Thank you, Dave. Good morning, and welcome to Ciena's 2024 fiscal Q1 conference call. On the call today is Gary Smith, President and CEO and Jim Moylan, CFO. Scott McFeely, Executive Advisor, is also with us for Q and A. In addition to this call and the press release, we have posted to the Investors section of our website an accompanying investor presentation that reflects this discussion as well as certain highlighted items from the quarter. Speaker 100:01:10Our comments today speak to our recent performance, our view on current market dynamics and drivers of our business as well as a discussion of our financial outlook. Today's discussion includes certain adjusted or non GAAP measures of Sienna's results of operations. A reconciliation of these non GAAP measures to our GAAP results is included in today's press release. Before turning the call over to Gary, I'll remind you that during this call, we'll be making certain forward looking statements. Such statements, including our quarterly and annual guidance and our long term financial outlook and discussion of market opportunities and strategy, are based on current expectations, forecasts and assumptions regarding the company and its markets, which include risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the statements discussed today. Speaker 100:01:59Assumptions relating to our outlook, whether mentioned on this call or included in the investor presentation that we will post shortly after, are an important part of such forward looking statements and we encourage you to consider them. Our forward looking statements should also be viewed in the context of the risk factors detailed in our most recent 10 ks and our 10 Q, which will be filed with the SEC today. CN assumes no obligation to update the information discussed in this conference call, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. As always, we'll allow for as much Q and A as possible today. As a reminder, we'll be hosting investor group meetings with the sell side at OFC later this month. Speaker 100:02:42We look forward to seeing many of you in San Diego. With that, I'll turn it over to Gary. Speaker 200:02:48Thanks, Greg, and good morning, everyone. As you've seen from the press release today, we reported strong fiscal first quarter results, including revenue of 1,040,000,000 dollars and adjusted gross margin of 45.7 percent. Our Q1 performance also included very strong profitability metrics with quarterly adjusted operating margin of 13.2% and adjusted EPS of $0.66 Additionally, we generated $250,000,000 in free cash flow within the quarter. The drivers of bandwidth demand remain strong and we believe very durable, and network traffic is increasing as a result. And we remain incredibly focused on growing our business and capturing additional market share. Speaker 200:03:43Specifically, we are taking advantage of bandwidth growth and cloud adoption trends to extend our leadership in optical and to expand our addressable market, particularly in metro routing and broadband access. Fundamental to these growth ambitions is the expansion of our relationship with cloud providers as they rapidly grow their global networks. Reflecting these expanded relationships, in Q1, non telco revenue accounted for over 54 percent of our total revenues. And of that, direct cloud provider revenue was $346,000,000 in the quarter, up 38% year over year and both of our 10% customers in the quarter were in fact cloud providers. Orders from cloud providers were also up year over year in Q1, and we continue to secure new deals with all of the major players in this segment. Speaker 200:04:51In Q1, for example, we had a significant design win for our 400 gs ZR Plus pluggables with a very large cloud provider, which we plan to begin for its future global architecture based on our RLS platform. So it is very clear that we've been broadening our engagement with cloud providers, including discussion around how we can leverage our leading innovation as AI becomes a growing driver of traffic and a great opportunity for us. In fact, with about 50% -plus market share in data center interconnect, we are incredibly well positioned to benefit as more data centers are built and when AI traffic flows begin to come out of those data centers. We are also developing solutions for inside the data center, a whole new market for us. And this is based on our next generation pluggables family as existing technologies are unlikely to satisfy the rapidly increasing requirements for this critical application space. Speaker 200:06:06This momentum really exemplifies the strong confidence we have in our position with cloud providers and our belief that we will have a very strong 2024 with them as we continue to expand these important long term relationships. However, at the same time, the normalization of order volumes from our service provider segment is not materializing as we expected. We were very clear in our commentary last quarter that our fiscal 2024 financial performance would be largely determined by the timing and magnitude of order flow from our service provider customers, particularly those in North America. More specifically, we expected to see orders from these customers begin to increase significantly in Q2. And as we sit here today, it is taking longer than we and many in the industry anticipated for these customers to absorb their high levels of inventory. Speaker 200:07:07This is in part due to difficulties installing and deploying equipment, including site readiness and access to fiber, which is limiting their placement of new orders and the absorption of existing inventories. In addition, in other parts of the world, we are seeing some caution driven largely by macroeconomic concerns that are contributing to lower than expected order volumes from service providers in certain international geographies almost entirely and predominantly being Europe. Our current view based on our discussions with customers is that we now expect a recovery in order patterns from service providers to occur more gradually over the next few quarters. And Jim will speak shortly about how we expect this to impact our business outlook, but I want to emphasize that we and our customers view these dynamics as temporary. And to be clear, we are confident in the durability of the demand drivers in the industry and our ability to continue to take share and grow over the mid to longer term. Speaker 200:08:19In fact, there are several key highlights from our Q1 performance that really illustrate the strength of these fundamental demand drivers. In Optical, we continue to take share and remain the undisputed leader across virtually every domain, including metro, DWM, DCI, submarine and long haul. During Q1, we added 11 new customers for WaveLogic 5 Extreme, bringing our total customer count to 270. And to date, we've shipped more than 115,000 WaveLogic 5e modems. WAVEServer had a record quarter as well in Q1 with more than $250,000,000 in revenue, reflecting a 34% growth year over year. Speaker 200:09:06Quarterly revenue doubled year over year for our reconfigurable line system or our RLS platform, with 8 new customers in the quarter bringing the total to nearly 70. And for our WaveLogic 5 Nano 400ZR and ZR Plus pluggables, we gained 19 new customers in the quarter and now have a total of 86 total customers. Looking ahead in optical, we're already taking orders for WaveLogic 6 Extreme, the industry's first and only 1.6 terabit solution, which will become generally available this summer. In fact, we've already announced 2 of these wins, Southern Cross and Vocus. Further, WaveLogic 6 Nano, our next generation pluggables family, will feature products such as 800 gig ZR in the latter half of calendar twenty twenty four. Speaker 200:10:07In routing and switching, where we've been making both organic and inorganic investments, we continue to execute our strategy to expand our TAM into faster growing markets. And in Q1, we had double digit revenue growth year over year for the combination of our 3,005 1,000 series platforms. And our 8,100 continues to gain traction as we scale our metro and coherent routing capabilities. And we now have more than 50 customers around the globe for this platform. We continue to build momentum with this portfolio, including our WaveRouter platform, of which we are building additional form factors to address a wider range of applications over time. Speaker 200:10:54Other portfolio highlights for Q1 include notably another very good quarter for platform software and services with 22% revenue growth year over year and 9% sequentially. We also saw 13% revenue growth year over year in our Global Services business, and this is most notable because it was driven by another strong quarter for installation and deployment, which really illustrates our role and visibility in helping In summary, we delivered a strong performance in our fiscal Q1. Our technology leadership position has never been better and will continue to improve. Our customer engagements remain focused on helping them meet the growing demand for bandwidth, digitally transform their operations and monetize their networks faster. And more recently, positioning them for the rise of AI and what it means to network infrastructure and operations. Speaker 200:12:02We remain very confident in the opportunities ahead and in the execution of our long term strategy. With that, I'll turn it over to Jim, who will provide details on the quarter's results as well as our business outlook, particularly in the context of the current service provider order dynamics that I referenced earlier. Thank you, Jim. Speaker 300:12:24Thanks, Gary. Good morning, everyone. As Gary stated, we delivered very strong fiscal Q1 financial results. Total revenue in Q1 was 1 $400,000,000 adjusted gross margin was 45.7 percent reflecting a favorable product mix. Q1 adjusted operating expense was $337,000,000 a bit lower due to delays in certain internal projects and lower sales incentive compensation. Speaker 300:12:56With respect to profitability measures, in Q1, we delivered strong results including adjusted operating margin of 13.2%, adjusted net income of $97,000,000 and adjusted EPS of $0.66 In addition, we generated $266,000,000 in cash from operations. Adjusted EBITDA in Q1 was $160,000,000 Finally, we ended the quarter with approximately $1,500,000,000 in cash and investments. Inventory levels came down $66,000,000 from Q4 and we repurchased approximately 6 190,000 shares for $32,000,000 during the quarter. We are continuing to target the repurchase of $250,000,000 total during the year. As we turn to guidance, I want to reinforce a few points. Speaker 300:13:59Most importantly, the fundamental demand drivers of our business including growth in bandwidth demand remain very strong. Bandwidth demand has grown at 25% to 30% per year for decades and with AI applications imminent shows no signs of slowing. We continue to grow our business and gain share with cloud providers in connection with their network expansion and data center infrastructure build outs. And our deep relationships and engagements with service provider customers continue to position us well in opportunities across both optical and routing and switching domains. However, we remain in a period of uncertainty, which has come about as a result of the whiplash effects on industry supply chains caused by shortages of key components, elongated lead times, huge orders by customers in response and inventory builds of networking gear by our customers. Speaker 300:15:08They are working down this inventory and things are getting better. However, it is taking longer than we and many in the industry anticipated for Tier 1 service providers in North America to work through these high levels of inventory and this is impacting their placement of new orders. Additionally, we are seeing increased caution from certain European service providers related to macro concerns. All of this is largely consistent with what our customers, competitors and suppliers have been reporting in recent weeks months. We continue to believe that these dynamics are temporary and currently expect to see orders improvement over the next few quarters. Speaker 300:15:58Taking all of these factors into consideration, we are adjusting certain elements of our annual guidance for fiscal 2024. We now expect revenue for fiscal 2024 to be in a range of $4,000,000,000 to $4,300,000,000 down from our previous expectations of 1% to 4% growth over fiscal 2023. With respect to adjusted gross margins in fiscal 2024, we continue to expect it to be in the mid-40s range with some variability by quarter. For adjusted operating expense, we intend to continue investing strategically both to advance our leadership position in our key markets and to expand our addressable market in key growth areas. However, taking into account our current revenue outlook for the year, we are now planning for operating expense to average $340,000,000 to $345,000,000 per quarter in fiscal year 2024, down from our previous guidance of 3 $55,000,000 per quarter. Speaker 300:17:10With respect to Q2, we expect to deliver revenue in a range of $850,000,000 to $930,000,000 adjusted gross margin in the low 40 percentages range given expected product mix and lower volumes in the quarter and adjusted operating expense $340,000,000 to $345,000,000 Finally, we are updating our 3 year financial targets. As a reminder, given the severity and duration of the rebalancing of supply and consumption, our fiscal 2023 was a year of outsized revenue growth, over 20% and well above our historical growth rate of 6% to 8%. Our outlook today is that for these same reasons, our fiscal 2024 revenue growth rate will be substantially lower than the historical rate. Given this revised view, using our updated fiscal year revenue outlook of $4,000,000,000 to $4,300,000,000 as a baseline year, we believe that 6% to 8% CAGR best represents our long term growth rate. And in a market growing low to mid single digits percentage, Sienna's expected revenue growth rate will ensure continued market share gains. Speaker 300:18:39In summary, the industry is experiencing some near term headwinds as our customers recover from the supply chain challenges that they've seen in recent years. Bandwidth demand though continues to grow at at least the historical 25% to 30% annual rate. Underlying demand drivers of that, which now include AI, ensure that this will continue well into the future. Our leading technology and focus on growing our portfolio to address new markets as well as our deep relationships with both service providers and cloud providers position us extremely well to address the evolving network priorities of our customers. We expect to continue growing our market share and to deliver profitable growth over the long term. Speaker 300:19:34Dave, let's turn the call now over to analysts for Q and A. Operator00:19:39We will now begin the question and answer session. The first question comes from Samik Chatterjee with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:20:08Thank you. Thanks for taking my questions. Maybe for the first one, if I can just ask for a bit more color on the order patterns you're seeing both on the telco and the webscale side? I mean, any color on the sequential order trends there? Because from the commentary of the Q2 guide, at least, it does appear like telco orders probably were a lot worse than you were expecting. Speaker 400:20:32But any more color there in terms of the magnitude of the sequential order trends between those two verticals that you're seeing? And I have a follow-up. Thank you. Speaker 300:20:40Yes. Just Samik, let me try to describe the dynamics here. We've just gone through Q1, which is historically a relatively low orders quarter for us, but they came in about where we expected and are slowly improving. But the premise for our guide for this year was our view based on everything we had heard at the time that Tier 1 service providers would be working through their inventory at a faster rate and would begin to normalize their ordering patterns by Q2. That was our premise for our plan and for our guide. Speaker 300:21:22What's happening is that it is taking them longer to work through their inventories. There are all sorts of issues too with respect to fiber, with respect to site readiness, with respect to labor. And all of this is causing them to take longer to work through the inventory that they have accumulated over the last year and a half. Let me make it clear though that they are down in inventory and things are getting better. We do expect higher orders in Q2, but we do not think now that they're going to be at the level that would enable us to reach our Q2 guide and our full year guide. Speaker 300:22:00So that's what's happening. In Europe, it's really at the edges, but clearly the macro situation in Europe is not strong and we're just seeing lower orders and expect to see lower orders from them for the year. Speaker 200:22:16Sameet, to your point on the cloud, that sort of contrast with the cloud, which you saw the numbers in Q1, we were up 38% year over year. We expect to see that continue to be strong throughout and good order flows throughout the year. Obviously, we've grown tremendously there, I think, 50 odd percent growth last year. We're not going to see that kind of growth, but we're going to have a very solid year in the web scale. Speaker 400:22:46Okay. Got it. Got it. And for my follow-up, if I can just clarify, Jim, your comments about the long term growth guide prior quarter. I think the previous guide was for fiscal 2024 to 26 to be 6 to 8. Speaker 400:22:59I didn't exactly it seemed like you were sort of reiterating that guide, but I didn't exactly capture what you're trying to imply in the updated long term guide that you provided. Speaker 300:23:10Yes. If you think about what we said at the beginning of the year, we said 6 to 8 over 3 years and that was starting off with a lower growth rate in 2024, which implied perhaps a slightly higher growth rate in the later years. We're now saying that you should if you're doing a 3 year forecast for us, you should take fiscal 2024 as your base and assume a growth rate of 6% to 8%. Now that sounds like a guide. We're not trying to guide for 2025 right now. Speaker 300:23:42We could well be better than that. We hope it will be. But we think for modeling purpose, it's as good a guess as any. Speaker 400:23:49Okay, got it. Thank you. Operator00:23:53The next question comes from Amit Daryani with Evercore. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:24:01Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions as well. I guess maybe to start with the updated guide at this point sort of implies that you have a very steep ramp in the back half of the year for Q3 and Q4. I think you're almost implying like mid teens sequential growth for the back half. Can you just talk about what gives you the confidence and you can get that kind of growth given the downtick you just saw from your telco customers? Speaker 500:24:23And then maybe an extension of this, if the orders from these telco customers don't materialize the way you expect, is the risk more than you have the low end of the guide or how do I think of that dynamic as well? Speaker 200:24:34Yes. Hi, Amit. Yes, it's clearly a step function into the second half that we actually thought we'd start in Q2. We are seeing the orders, as Jim said. This is not a sort of binary event. Speaker 200:24:48We are seeing progress in the absorption, inventory going down and we are seeing a service provider orders that sort of gives us confidence. And obviously, we have deep partnerships with these guys and we're installing some of the equipment as well. So we particularly in North America where we have insight into it. I think the other dynamic that we're in a better position now is people have released their budgets And their budgets really haven't changed as I think most people have seen. CapEx has not changed at all amongst most of the major carriers for this year and their intent is absolutely there. Speaker 200:25:30But what we've got greater insight into now is the planning and timing of those installations. As we've turned the year, the budgets have been released. We're now sitting in early March. We do have a better visibility into it than we did and it's not as much of a step function, if you will, Amit, as we'd anticipated before. And that's where we've best reflected the change in the guide. Speaker 500:26:01Got it. That's really helpful. And then, Neil, if I could just follow-up, cloud continues to perform extremely well for you folks. I'm wondering if there's an element of some of the AI demand that tend to come into your numbers right now? Or do you think the AI opportunity is still much more for future narrative, but it's not impacting numbers right now? Speaker 500:26:17Let's just understand what's driving the cloud trend and if AI is if you have time to see some AI benefit already? Speaker 200:26:24I would say we're not really seeing the now there is some AI traffic with the various offerings, Gemini, etcetera, GPT that's out there. So that is generating some traffic, but not obviously not an appreciable step function. I think our understanding with these guys is that's all to come really about how they monetize the broader dimensions of AI. They're investing massively right now as we all know in compute and figuring out how to then release that for monetization, which will then flow into the network. So, what we're seeing is just basically business as usual cloud growth. Speaker 200:27:05I think you are seeing an acceleration of that. You've seen the SaaS companies do well as another sort of gauge of that. And I think we're seeing very robust. You saw it last year, we were massively in network deployments with these guys. And that was really cloud. Speaker 200:27:22I don't think you're seeing virtually any of the AI step function that we're all anticipating in those numbers yet. Speaker 500:27:33Great. Thank you. Speaker 600:27:35Thanks Amit. Operator00:27:38The next question comes from Tal Liani with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Yes. Hi, guys. Speaker 600:27:47How do we know that what we're seeing here in service providers is not structural? That it's in your comments, you're talking about cyclical downturn that will recover absorption of inventory. When you talk to the carriers, they talk about a permanent decline in spending, their desire to spend less. Are there any parts of their spending that could be more structurally down that could be replaced by something else? Or do you have really confidence that this is just cyclical? Speaker 200:28:26Yes. Tal, it's a good question and obviously one that we're super focused on. I would separate it out. I would say in North America, I do not believe there's a structural sort of issue to it. It's really about absorption, their CapEx, what they want to their intent is actually to spend more and absorb more. Speaker 200:28:44And I think with all the major service provided, that is their intent. They want to catch up with their network builds. I do think that there is a reticence around 5 gs. Obviously, it's not been the monetization event for many carriers around the world that was anticipated. And I do think that there's a curtailing of that spend, my own personal belief, I think is structural. Speaker 200:29:10I do not think that will have a major impact on the transmission and infrastructure build. I mean, they're very focused on access and the build out there in North America. So I think in total to it, I do not think there's a structural issue, notwithstanding my comments about 5 gs. Europe, I would think a little bit differently on. I think they have some inherent structural challenges there. Speaker 200:29:32You have 180 carriers in Europe. You have some tiny jurisdictions with multiple carriers, makes no economic sense. And I do think that, a, you're seeing a bit of a downturn in the economy in certain key countries like Germany, which is hugely influential in Europe. And I think they are more receptive to those kinds of challenges than the North American model where the economy continues to do well. So I think there are, tell some structural issues associated with the European piece and that's not new news. Speaker 200:30:10But they are more sensitive to the economic challenges. Speaker 300:30:14And India, we think is still going up into the right. They're going to continue to build out their networks. We had a big year with India last year. We're going to be sort of flattish with them this year. But India is going to be a great place for us for a long time. Speaker 200:30:30We're not seeing any of that in Asia Pacific either that sort of uncertainty. Speaker 300:30:34The one thing I would say Tal is the driver for our business is demand for bandwidth. And that has grown and continues to grow at very rapid rates. Now the people who are building networks to manage that demand really the structure has somewhat changed toward the cloud providers. If you go back 10 years ago, they weren't buying any network gear. They're buying a significant part of it today. Speaker 300:30:59It's very possible that that could expand over time. If there is any shift, that would be the shift from service provider to cloud providers. Speaker 200:31:08Certainly in the long haul. Yes. Speaker 600:31:12Great. Thank you. Speaker 700:31:14Thanks, Tal. Operator00:31:15The next question comes from Simon Leopold with Raymond James. Please go ahead. Yes. Speaker 600:31:22Hey, thanks guys. It's Jeff Koji in for Simon. So I was just hoping you can maybe hash out the strength in Europe this quarter, maybe how that reconciles with your comments on maybe the weakening macro outlook there and as well as like Huawei swaps or displacement opportunities, sounds like it's going really well in India. Thank you. Speaker 300:31:47Yes, I'll deal with the first part. Our regional report reflects the region into which we deliver equipment. It doesn't Europe were driven by cloud providers, not the service providers in Europe. Speaker 500:32:09On the Speaker 300:32:09Huawei thing, there's still an opportunity ahead for it. Now the whole supply chain and COVID situation was actually a benefit to Huawei because they had gear and service providers really wanted to stick with the status quo. They didn't necessarily want to build out stuff. And so for a combination of those two reasons, Huawei did pretty well over the last 2 years. The desire of Western economies to reduce their dependence upon China in general and Huawei in particular has not abated. Speaker 300:32:45And we think that once we get through all of this dynamic of supply chain and everything else that happened over the last few years, their desires will events themselves in substitution of Huawei. We're seeing it in some places already, in the Nordics in particular, in some places in Southern Europe, but we think it's going to continue. Speaker 600:33:09Great, great. Appreciate it. And for my follow-up, we are getting there's been a lot of noise buzz rather around the intra data center opportunity for Coherent Technology. Maybe you can just help us understand like how that could be cost effective or when it will be cost effective and what you think about the timing there and the sizing of that opportunity for you guys? Thank you. Speaker 800:33:35Yes. A way to think about it is, as the flow rates between GPUs increase And as the distances increase as they're forced to because of constraints like power, a lot of techniques that were used in the WAN part of the network that brought Coherent to the forefront will replay themselves inside the data center. And some of the leaders in Coherent, we being the market leader there, are going to have opportunities to use our technology in sort of that adjacent market. From a timing perspective, I think you're looking at sort of the next generation, which is probably 2025 and beyond to get in there. The consumption models will be quite different than the system business on the land. Speaker 800:34:23But the key fundamental technologies are the same things that we've been working in the Coherent space over multiple generations. Speaker 600:34:33Great. Yes, I think Coherent has put out a forecast for data com transceivers could be like $15,000,000,000 by 2028. Is there a percentage that you would put that could be coherent? Speaker 800:34:47Yes. At this point, I think it's a little early to try to size how that slices off. There's obviously a if you're coming at it from the existing generation of technology, you're trying to extend the life of that technology as long as you possibly can. And then the substituted technology that we're talking about here is obviously trying to intercept. Where that saws off, I think is still a bit of a crystal ball. Speaker 300:35:12But just to be clear, we do have a development track to develop those kinds of products in our R and D roadmap. And we are talking with major data center providers. So we're going to stay right on top of it and when and if the shift occurs, we're going to be a Speaker 600:35:28part of it, we hope. Thanks guys. Operator00:35:38The next question comes from Meta Marshall with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:35:44Great. Thanks for taking the question. Wanted to dig into Europe a little bit. I know in the past, maybe some of that European telco spend was actually kind of indirect cloud spend as they kind of helped with data center build for some of those customers. And so just wanted to get a sense of kind of if any of the weakness you're seeing is kind of on the indirect part and if any of that's just due to kind of power constraints that we're hearing about and kind of building out data centers or just any commentary there on kind of the indirect portion? Speaker 900:36:19And then maybe just as a follow-up question, just as Jim on how much you plan to kind of work down inventory levels across the year would be helpful. Thanks. Speaker 200:36:32Hi, Meta. Yes, there has been a shift over a few years where particularly the cloud providers used wholesale type capacity in Europe. Increasingly, in the last sort of couple of years, they've been going direct and taking dark fiber. And I think that has impacted some of the service providers, particularly the wholesalers. And obviously, we're they come direct to us as opposed through the carrier. Speaker 200:37:04So I think you have seen that dynamic, particularly in Europe. That's not the case in most other international jurisdictions where you've got regulatory issues and the rest of it. So it's much more of a hybrid in other countries such as India. But I do think that has impacted somewhat some of the wholesale capacity in Europe is now direct into the hyperscalers? Speaker 300:37:35On the inventory question, Meta, we said that we were going to improve and reduce our inventory levels this year and we will. As you saw, we reduced our inventory by $66,000,000 in Q1. And we've slowed the rate of material into our system to match our demand forecast. So we are confident we're going to take our inventory down this Because Q2 is going to be a bit lower than we expect and the rest of the year a bit lower as well, We're probably not going to get down as low on inventory as we said we would. I think we said we're going to get it down by $300,000,000 or something like that. Speaker 300:38:19And I think we'll get it down by a couple of $100,000,000 I would think. But I think on the other hand, it might grow in Q2 because situation is a little bit late breaking for us and we can't react to it quickly enough. But we will drive inventory down for the year by at least a couple of 100,000,000. Speaker 900:38:37Great. Thank you. Operator00:38:40The next question comes from George Notter with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:38:46Hi, guys. Thanks very much. I guess I'm curious about where your product lead times are right now. I'm wondering if product lead times are quite short and that's leading to some of the excess inventory taking longer to bleed off. Can you just talk a little bit about that dynamic lead times versus buffer stocks at customers? Speaker 800:39:08George, lead times, we have a very broad portfolio, so lead times vary. But if you wanted a single number on it, we sort of have published 12 weekly times to our customers. The reality is, as we've executed through Q1, we are executing at a much better rate than that in terms of lead times. We're approaching getting back to sort of pre pandemic lead times, not quite there yet, but approaching getting back to that. And I think that does have an impact in terms of our customer order behavior patterns, because if they don't need to place it with 52 week lead time, they're not going to place it with 52 week lead time. Speaker 700:39:47Got it. And then I'm sorry, normal pre pandemic lead times were what range also 20 weeks or Operator00:39:54Depending on Speaker 800:39:54portfolio for us, it was mid single digits for weeks. Speaker 200:39:59Depending on the product line. Operator00:40:02Got it. Okay. And do you Speaker 700:40:04think it's the case that customer inventories are is the issue it sounds like the issue is mostly North America. Is it broad based across North America? Or is it more concentrated around a handful of customers? Speaker 200:40:20I would say it is North America. It's 1 or 2 examples internationally, but they're not super meaningful to this conversation. I think it's mainly North America and it's mainly the Tier 1s. But it is sort of shared challenge across most of the larger carriers in North America, who obviously tried to get out ahead of the whole supply chain piece. But now you've got this dynamic where we and other vendors are turning up with enormous amounts of equipment. Speaker 200:40:51I mean, I think we shipped 24% more equipment last year than we did the prior year. And you think about all those trucks turning up at the same time with a bunch of other vendors to put the system together, and that's causing the challenges around their capacity and all the various facets of people, storage, logistics, fiber availability, etcetera to back up. And it's just taken longer than we all, including them, would like or anticipate. And to your earlier point, until we kind of move down through that path and particularly with reduced lead times is it's super logical as to why we see the orders being what they are. They are improving and we are seeing the deployment. Speaker 200:41:42I want to stress that this is not a sort of binary event. It's we're seeing improvements in absorption. The inventories are coming down. We're seeing an increase in orders in service providers. It's just not the step function I think we collectively anticipated. Speaker 300:41:59And to be clear, in this context, we're referring not just to telecom service providers but MSO service. Yes. Speaker 200:42:06I'd include cable in there too. Yes. Operator00:42:09Okay. Thank you guys. Good. The next question comes from Michael Genoves with Rosenblatt Securities. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:42:20Great. I wanted to follow-up on the last question, because I understand mostly what you're talking about with these North American service provider challenges, but the comment on fiber availability, could you flush that out a little bit more? I'm kind of struggling to come up to speed with what that means. Speaker 800:42:43Hey, Michael, you probably can appreciate the majority like the big builds and equipment consumptions are when people are putting down new routes or lighting new fibers. The process of procuring those fibers, even though everybody has intentions to put more fiber in the ground, as North American customers have announced, There's a process of construction there and it takes time. And I think it's exasperated by the labor market in North America as well. So getting access to the fiber, tension is there, timing is taking longer, going through characterization of that fiber and then finally doing the construction to light it. It's just taking longer than we had anticipated with the volume that they're trying to do. Speaker 800:43:25They're working through it. Our visibility to it and where we can help our customers is on our installation services and you can see that is up period over period quite substantially. It is happening. It's just taking longer than we anticipated going into the year. Speaker 600:43:41Okay, great. And then, I guess my next question, just the competitive environment, for DCI, I mean, it seems like you've maintained a very high level market share in DCI. As ZR has become more important, are you finding a different set of competitors in the market? Or how has the competitive environment changed recently in DCI, if at all? Speaker 800:44:11Yes. I think 2 different views of it, I guess. The ZR impact has not impacted our business at all. In fact, you can see record quarters for Waveserver in our Q1 20 24 results, a massive Waveserver and that's all DCI or for the most part all DCI. So it's clearly not impacting our business as some people may have impacted our business with the web scale was up like 57% year on year for last year for 2023. Speaker 800:44:51So again, big parts of that is various different flavors of data center interconnect. So clearly not having a negative impact there. And in fact, I think you do the math and the market size, you'll conclude that we gain share with the GCNs last year. In terms of the number of competitors from a pluggable perspective, yes, you start to get different sort of consumption models. At the end of the day, it's still a very limited number of folks that are investing in the key technologies that go into these ZR plugs. Speaker 800:45:23You get various different ecosystems that are trying to put them together. You know, I'm a firm believer from a philosophy perspective. If you don't own some of the core technologies, you're probably not long for that world. But that will take some time to play out. And as you know, we own and control our own destiny in all those key technologies. Speaker 300:45:45And just to be clear, we have roughly 50% market share globally with webscale companies. If you take out that which Huawei does, which is just about entirely in China, then it gets to be a bit higher than that. So we're very comfortable with our share position and we think it's going to remain at that level. Probably hard for us to gain share from this point because they all want a second source, but we'll take 50% plus. Thanks so much. Speaker 1000:46:17Thanks Mike. Operator00:46:19The next question comes from Alex Henderson with Needham. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:46:24Great, thanks. Was hoping we could talk a little bit about the mix between product and service in the 2024 expectations. I realized that service was up quite a bit in the January quarter, but it was actually down significantly quarter to quarter because the January quarter is typically a lockdown quarter for most service providers. In terms of mix, you pointed out that there was a shift to transceivers, which they will install, but not line systems. So I'm assuming that the line systems installation is going to increase meaningfully quarter to quarter. Speaker 1000:47:07And therefore, you're looking at what $210,000,000 to $220,000,000 of service, which would imply that the product sales are down, what, 25% to 35% something in that range? And how does that play out over the course of the year as the installation continues to be churning through what's been shipped as opposed to new shipments? And then does it fall off at some point after an under shipment period? So we get out into the 4th quarter and into the first half of twenty twenty five, does this service start to roll off? Can you give us some guidance on that? Speaker 300:47:58Let me give a little context here, Alex. You have to think about that services business. Really it's 2 businesses. 1 is maintenance and 1 is installation. Those are the 2 things that we do. Speaker 300:48:08We have some other consulting type practices and advanced type services, but those 2 make up the bulk of it. The maintenance expense is going to grow essentially as our product sales grow because almost everybody takes maintenance with our products. So that's one piece. On the implementation side, it's not one size fits all. For most of the larger carriers in the U. Speaker 300:48:34S, we don't do a ton of installation. Now we have started to as they are trying to work through their inventory levels. But in the past, we didn't do a lot of installation for them. In places like Asia, South America, sometimes in Europe, we do a lot of installation. So our services mix is going to be, I think more related to where our sales are. Speaker 300:48:58And I'd say this that we love expanding our implementation business and we'd love to continue to help our big customers here in the U. S. And that's what we're trying to do. Scott? Speaker 800:49:10Yes. That's the dominant dynamic, Jim. You're right. I think there's some nuances in there. The installation services pieces of it, it varies by geography and it varies by portfolio. Speaker 800:49:24So historically, we haven't done a lot of installation services on our running and switching portfolio, for example. As those solution sets get more sophisticated as our customers are and will continue to look to us to do more installation. You know, at the mixed geographically, in some parts of the world, we do those installation services ourselves in some parts of the world. The customers do themselves in some parts. They turn to 3rd party partners to do it. Speaker 800:49:50And there's a it varies quite a bit on the mix of where that revenue is coming from. And that's going to change over time. In addition to that, it's not a major piece of it. But our services team is also busy trying to expand their service offers to our customers and that we hope to grow over time. We think our service business is going to continue to grow at or above the growth rate for the company. Speaker 1000:50:12Just to be clear though, the seasonal swing between the January and the April quarter, normally services are lower in the Q1 because of the lockdown. Are we expecting it to be up sequentially, 2.12%, 2.15%, something like that, in which case the majority of the quarter to quarter decline is in the product side? Speaker 300:50:38It's always very risky to try to give individual slices of what we expect of our business. I would think this because of the dynamics that we talked about, because we will show growth in Q2 in our overall business, it is likely that services will grow as well. So I don't have a number for you, but I think it'll probably grow just like the products revenue will grow in Q2. Speaker 400:51:03Okay, thanks. Speaker 100:51:07Thanks, Alex. Operator00:51:09The next question comes from David Vogt with UBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:51:21David, your line might be muted. Thanks. Speaker 1100:51:23Sorry, guys. I was on mute. Thanks again for all the color. Maybe just digging back into backlog and orders, maybe, Tim, can you help us understand where backlog exited the quarter? I think last quarter, you'd mentioned it was roughly around 2,600,000,000 dollars And so what we're trying to figure out is what the orders look like going forward and how to kind of triangulate the growth rate in 2025 in terms of an order trajectory? Speaker 600:51:48And I have a follow-up. Speaker 300:51:50Our backlog we ended backlog at Q1 at $2,200,000,000 So you can sort of calculate what our orders were in Q1. We said last quarter that we expect our backlog, generally speaking, to come down for the full year because we are approaching historical levels of lead times and customer ordering behaviors are probably going to track those in the past, which means that our ending year backlog is going to approach a level like the levels we had prior to all the craziness of the past 3 years, which traditionally has been about 35% to 40% of the coming year's revenue. And that consists of a $1,000,000,000 or so of services and about $1,000,000,000 of products and software. That's what it's been historically. I mean that's what makes up the 2.2. Speaker 300:52:53Great. Speaker 1100:52:53And so maybe if I just extrapolate that comment in 2024 into 2025, maybe I'm doing the math wrong here, but it would imply that your order growth rate in 'twenty five would have to be up somewhere like 35% to 40% relative to 'twenty four. Are we doing the math rate? And if that's the case, what does that imply for SP orders coming back next year? I know you didn't give full year guide yet. It's early. Speaker 1100:53:14But just trying to kind of triangulate on how we get to those that 6% to 8% multi year target that you just provided? Thanks. Speaker 300:53:24Rather than give you a number for our growth rate in orders next year, what I would say is this. A healthy business, which we've had for a long, long time prior to the supply chain disruption and COVID and all that sort of stuff, we typically ran orders in a given year at some fraction above our revenue, whether it was 5%, whether it was 10%, some number like that. So we're not at those levels right now, which means that we do have to have some catch up as we move through the next couple of quarters and possibly some catch up next year. But that's what we expect our order volumes to be, 1.05 times to 1.1 times our revenue for a year, for example, and it varies by quarter. Speaker 200:54:12And Yudu, that's obviously a function of the lead time piece as well. Typically, our and then if the world ever gets normalized, it would be slightly ahead of the revenues for the year. Now there may be some bumpiness as we get into that. I mean, for example, in 2022, I think our orders were close to $6,000,000,000 just to give you an order of magnitude around the challenges that we're having from a backlog point of view. Speaker 1100:54:36Got it. No, helpful, Gary. Thanks, Jim. Appreciate it. Speaker 100:54:40Thanks. Thanks, David. Operator00:54:43The next question comes from Reuben Roy with Stifel. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:54:49Yes. Thank you for taking my question. Gary, I had a follow-up on some of the commentary around AI and then just increasing order rates with cloud. And just trying to work through not seeing yet sort of the impacts of traffic growth outside of the data center, the traffic that you've mentioned being created by the GPUs, etcetera, and yet the order rates are up. So am I right in assuming that the cloud DTI business is mostly for a long haul? Speaker 700:55:19And if that's the case, can you talk to sort of how you're thinking about the sustainability of sort of those orders around that specific business, Cloud DCI? Speaker 200:55:30Yes. I think it is. It's more of a mix than you think around long haul and metro amongst these. When we talk about them and we all tend to these hyperscalers as sort of generic grouping. You think about their business models, they're all very different, be it search, be it cloud, etcetera, Azure type services. Speaker 200:55:51So therefore, their networks are actually very different as well and including all of the submarine cables and the metro piece and the rest of it. So these are now very large, very complicated global networks that is not just simple data center connectivity, point to point. They are they use 6,500 in full configuration with resilience, etcetera, across there. So they are fully blown intelligent networks. So to your point, Ruben, Ram, then the traffic that they're obviously flowing right now is data center to data center. Speaker 200:56:34The opportunity is when you get the AI applications coming out of the WAN, they have to go to consumers in their various forms, be them enterprise or general consumers. And it has to pass across that network. And also, from a model point of view, it needs to talk to the instantiation locally, be it edge compute or whatever the devices are. It needs to maintain connectivity to it. It's not just you dump the model down there at the edge of the network and you're good to go for a month. Speaker 200:57:08This stuff has to maintain connectivity. So, we're all sort of very excited about the opportunity, but that hasn't yet come out of the data center. But they're obviously investing massive amounts of investment in the compute and in the application and monetization of that. That has not that investment has not flowed to the network yet. Speaker 800:57:33The other dynamic on the AI piece having impact on the LAN traffic is because of the massive amounts of compute and the power required to do that. Every one of the cloud providers more geographical distribution. And guess what, when you do that, you've got to network them together. So that's going to be more transport, more networking gear. That's going to be another dynamic as AI starts to have an influence on, I'll just say the classic transport part of the network. Speaker 800:58:11I think I'd add, Gary, in terms of where are we today with these folks. Yes, it's their campusmetroDCI, it's their terrestrial core networks, it's their submarine networks, but it's also across our transport portfolio, it's line systems, it's coherent modems and however they want to instantiate it. And to some people's surprises, it's our software portfolio and it's our services portfolio as well. So it's quite a broad set of solutions that were in those in that segment with. Speaker 700:58:44I really appreciate the detail guys. That's really helpful for me. If I could sneak in a quick one for Jim on gross margins. Jim, just sort of maintaining the mid-40s for the full year, given lower volumes and lower revenue. Can you just I might have missed this, but did you talk through mix or linearity of how you think gross margins play out over the next several quarters? Speaker 300:59:04Yes. I think they're going to be a bit lower in Q2 and that's a mix and volume because as we said, we're not going to have the volume that we expected in Q2. But I think we'll average in the mid-40s for the full year. We started the year at 45.7%. It was a good strong start and we'll get back to something like that. Speaker 700:59:26Understood. Thank you. Speaker 100:59:28Great. Thank you, Ruv, and thank you everybody for joining us today. We appreciate your attention and we look forward to seeing everyone at OFC. Thank you and have a good day. Operator00:59:39The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today'sRead morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCiena Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Ciena Earnings HeadlinesCiena Announces Reporting Date and Web Broadcast for Fiscal Second Quarter 2025 ResultsMay 7 at 9:00 AM | businesswire.comIs Ciena Corporation (CIEN) A Hidden AI Stock to Buy Right Now?May 5 at 6:13 PM | insidermonkey.comGold Hits New Highs as Global Markets SpiralWhen Trump took office in 2017, gold was just $1,100 an ounce. By the time he left, it had soared to $1,839. Now… as new tariffs take effect, gold is breaking records again. You've hopefully already seen this in action… but gold is surpassing $3,000 per ounce for the first time EVER.May 7, 2025 | Premier Gold Co (Ad)Windstream Wholesale and Ciena Complete WL6e Trial to Advance 800G Service AdoptionMay 5 at 10:03 AM | finance.yahoo.com3 Stocks Estimated Up To 47.2% Undervalued Offering A 21.5% Discount OpportunityApril 29, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comCiena price target lowered to $65 from $73 at RosenblattApril 23, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More Ciena Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Ciena? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Ciena and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About CienaCiena (NYSE:CIEN) provides hardware and software services for delivery of video, data, and voice traffic metro, aggregation, and access communications network worldwide. The company's Networking Platforms segment offers convergence of coherent optical transport, open optical networking, optical transport network switching, IP routing, and switching services. Its products include 6500 Packet-Optical Platform, Waveserver stackable interconnect system, and the 6500 Reconfigurable line system, and the 5400 family of Packet-Optical platforms, as well as 8100 coherent routing platforms; 3000 family of service delivery switches and the 5000 family of service aggregation switches, as well as 8700 Packetwave Platform and 6500 Packet Transport System. This segment also sells operating system software and enhanced software features embedded in each of its products. The company's Blue Planet Automation Software and Services segment provides multi-domain service orchestration, inventory, route optimization and analysis, multi-cloud orchestration, and unified assurance and analytics services. Its Platform Software and Service segment offers MCP domain controller solution, and OneControl unified management system, as well as planning tools. The company's Global Services segment provides maintenance support and training, installation and deployment, and consulting and network design services. Ciena Corporation was incorporated in 1992 and is headquartered in Hanover, Maryland.View Ciena ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Disney Stock Jumps on Earnings—Is the Magic Sustainable?Archer Stock Eyes Q1 Earnings After UAE UpdatesFord Motor Stock Rises After Earnings, But Momentum May Not Last Broadcom Stock Gets a Lift on Hyperscaler Earnings & CapEx BoostPalantir Stock Drops Despite Stellar Earnings: What's Next?Is Eli Lilly a Buy After Weak Earnings and CVS-Novo Partnership?Is Reddit Stock a Buy, Sell, or Hold After Earnings Release? Upcoming Earnings Monster Beverage (5/8/2025)Brookfield (5/8/2025)Anheuser-Busch InBev SA/NV (5/8/2025)ConocoPhillips (5/8/2025)Cheniere Energy (5/8/2025)McKesson (5/8/2025)Shopify (5/8/2025)Enbridge (5/9/2025)Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. - Petrobras (5/12/2025)Simon Property Group (5/12/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, and welcome to the Ciena's Fiscal First Quarter 2024 Financial Results Conference Call. All participants will be in listen only mode. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Greg Olams, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:41Thank you, Dave. Good morning, and welcome to Ciena's 2024 fiscal Q1 conference call. On the call today is Gary Smith, President and CEO and Jim Moylan, CFO. Scott McFeely, Executive Advisor, is also with us for Q and A. In addition to this call and the press release, we have posted to the Investors section of our website an accompanying investor presentation that reflects this discussion as well as certain highlighted items from the quarter. Speaker 100:01:10Our comments today speak to our recent performance, our view on current market dynamics and drivers of our business as well as a discussion of our financial outlook. Today's discussion includes certain adjusted or non GAAP measures of Sienna's results of operations. A reconciliation of these non GAAP measures to our GAAP results is included in today's press release. Before turning the call over to Gary, I'll remind you that during this call, we'll be making certain forward looking statements. Such statements, including our quarterly and annual guidance and our long term financial outlook and discussion of market opportunities and strategy, are based on current expectations, forecasts and assumptions regarding the company and its markets, which include risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the statements discussed today. Speaker 100:01:59Assumptions relating to our outlook, whether mentioned on this call or included in the investor presentation that we will post shortly after, are an important part of such forward looking statements and we encourage you to consider them. Our forward looking statements should also be viewed in the context of the risk factors detailed in our most recent 10 ks and our 10 Q, which will be filed with the SEC today. CN assumes no obligation to update the information discussed in this conference call, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. As always, we'll allow for as much Q and A as possible today. As a reminder, we'll be hosting investor group meetings with the sell side at OFC later this month. Speaker 100:02:42We look forward to seeing many of you in San Diego. With that, I'll turn it over to Gary. Speaker 200:02:48Thanks, Greg, and good morning, everyone. As you've seen from the press release today, we reported strong fiscal first quarter results, including revenue of 1,040,000,000 dollars and adjusted gross margin of 45.7 percent. Our Q1 performance also included very strong profitability metrics with quarterly adjusted operating margin of 13.2% and adjusted EPS of $0.66 Additionally, we generated $250,000,000 in free cash flow within the quarter. The drivers of bandwidth demand remain strong and we believe very durable, and network traffic is increasing as a result. And we remain incredibly focused on growing our business and capturing additional market share. Speaker 200:03:43Specifically, we are taking advantage of bandwidth growth and cloud adoption trends to extend our leadership in optical and to expand our addressable market, particularly in metro routing and broadband access. Fundamental to these growth ambitions is the expansion of our relationship with cloud providers as they rapidly grow their global networks. Reflecting these expanded relationships, in Q1, non telco revenue accounted for over 54 percent of our total revenues. And of that, direct cloud provider revenue was $346,000,000 in the quarter, up 38% year over year and both of our 10% customers in the quarter were in fact cloud providers. Orders from cloud providers were also up year over year in Q1, and we continue to secure new deals with all of the major players in this segment. Speaker 200:04:51In Q1, for example, we had a significant design win for our 400 gs ZR Plus pluggables with a very large cloud provider, which we plan to begin for its future global architecture based on our RLS platform. So it is very clear that we've been broadening our engagement with cloud providers, including discussion around how we can leverage our leading innovation as AI becomes a growing driver of traffic and a great opportunity for us. In fact, with about 50% -plus market share in data center interconnect, we are incredibly well positioned to benefit as more data centers are built and when AI traffic flows begin to come out of those data centers. We are also developing solutions for inside the data center, a whole new market for us. And this is based on our next generation pluggables family as existing technologies are unlikely to satisfy the rapidly increasing requirements for this critical application space. Speaker 200:06:06This momentum really exemplifies the strong confidence we have in our position with cloud providers and our belief that we will have a very strong 2024 with them as we continue to expand these important long term relationships. However, at the same time, the normalization of order volumes from our service provider segment is not materializing as we expected. We were very clear in our commentary last quarter that our fiscal 2024 financial performance would be largely determined by the timing and magnitude of order flow from our service provider customers, particularly those in North America. More specifically, we expected to see orders from these customers begin to increase significantly in Q2. And as we sit here today, it is taking longer than we and many in the industry anticipated for these customers to absorb their high levels of inventory. Speaker 200:07:07This is in part due to difficulties installing and deploying equipment, including site readiness and access to fiber, which is limiting their placement of new orders and the absorption of existing inventories. In addition, in other parts of the world, we are seeing some caution driven largely by macroeconomic concerns that are contributing to lower than expected order volumes from service providers in certain international geographies almost entirely and predominantly being Europe. Our current view based on our discussions with customers is that we now expect a recovery in order patterns from service providers to occur more gradually over the next few quarters. And Jim will speak shortly about how we expect this to impact our business outlook, but I want to emphasize that we and our customers view these dynamics as temporary. And to be clear, we are confident in the durability of the demand drivers in the industry and our ability to continue to take share and grow over the mid to longer term. Speaker 200:08:19In fact, there are several key highlights from our Q1 performance that really illustrate the strength of these fundamental demand drivers. In Optical, we continue to take share and remain the undisputed leader across virtually every domain, including metro, DWM, DCI, submarine and long haul. During Q1, we added 11 new customers for WaveLogic 5 Extreme, bringing our total customer count to 270. And to date, we've shipped more than 115,000 WaveLogic 5e modems. WAVEServer had a record quarter as well in Q1 with more than $250,000,000 in revenue, reflecting a 34% growth year over year. Speaker 200:09:06Quarterly revenue doubled year over year for our reconfigurable line system or our RLS platform, with 8 new customers in the quarter bringing the total to nearly 70. And for our WaveLogic 5 Nano 400ZR and ZR Plus pluggables, we gained 19 new customers in the quarter and now have a total of 86 total customers. Looking ahead in optical, we're already taking orders for WaveLogic 6 Extreme, the industry's first and only 1.6 terabit solution, which will become generally available this summer. In fact, we've already announced 2 of these wins, Southern Cross and Vocus. Further, WaveLogic 6 Nano, our next generation pluggables family, will feature products such as 800 gig ZR in the latter half of calendar twenty twenty four. Speaker 200:10:07In routing and switching, where we've been making both organic and inorganic investments, we continue to execute our strategy to expand our TAM into faster growing markets. And in Q1, we had double digit revenue growth year over year for the combination of our 3,005 1,000 series platforms. And our 8,100 continues to gain traction as we scale our metro and coherent routing capabilities. And we now have more than 50 customers around the globe for this platform. We continue to build momentum with this portfolio, including our WaveRouter platform, of which we are building additional form factors to address a wider range of applications over time. Speaker 200:10:54Other portfolio highlights for Q1 include notably another very good quarter for platform software and services with 22% revenue growth year over year and 9% sequentially. We also saw 13% revenue growth year over year in our Global Services business, and this is most notable because it was driven by another strong quarter for installation and deployment, which really illustrates our role and visibility in helping In summary, we delivered a strong performance in our fiscal Q1. Our technology leadership position has never been better and will continue to improve. Our customer engagements remain focused on helping them meet the growing demand for bandwidth, digitally transform their operations and monetize their networks faster. And more recently, positioning them for the rise of AI and what it means to network infrastructure and operations. Speaker 200:12:02We remain very confident in the opportunities ahead and in the execution of our long term strategy. With that, I'll turn it over to Jim, who will provide details on the quarter's results as well as our business outlook, particularly in the context of the current service provider order dynamics that I referenced earlier. Thank you, Jim. Speaker 300:12:24Thanks, Gary. Good morning, everyone. As Gary stated, we delivered very strong fiscal Q1 financial results. Total revenue in Q1 was 1 $400,000,000 adjusted gross margin was 45.7 percent reflecting a favorable product mix. Q1 adjusted operating expense was $337,000,000 a bit lower due to delays in certain internal projects and lower sales incentive compensation. Speaker 300:12:56With respect to profitability measures, in Q1, we delivered strong results including adjusted operating margin of 13.2%, adjusted net income of $97,000,000 and adjusted EPS of $0.66 In addition, we generated $266,000,000 in cash from operations. Adjusted EBITDA in Q1 was $160,000,000 Finally, we ended the quarter with approximately $1,500,000,000 in cash and investments. Inventory levels came down $66,000,000 from Q4 and we repurchased approximately 6 190,000 shares for $32,000,000 during the quarter. We are continuing to target the repurchase of $250,000,000 total during the year. As we turn to guidance, I want to reinforce a few points. Speaker 300:13:59Most importantly, the fundamental demand drivers of our business including growth in bandwidth demand remain very strong. Bandwidth demand has grown at 25% to 30% per year for decades and with AI applications imminent shows no signs of slowing. We continue to grow our business and gain share with cloud providers in connection with their network expansion and data center infrastructure build outs. And our deep relationships and engagements with service provider customers continue to position us well in opportunities across both optical and routing and switching domains. However, we remain in a period of uncertainty, which has come about as a result of the whiplash effects on industry supply chains caused by shortages of key components, elongated lead times, huge orders by customers in response and inventory builds of networking gear by our customers. Speaker 300:15:08They are working down this inventory and things are getting better. However, it is taking longer than we and many in the industry anticipated for Tier 1 service providers in North America to work through these high levels of inventory and this is impacting their placement of new orders. Additionally, we are seeing increased caution from certain European service providers related to macro concerns. All of this is largely consistent with what our customers, competitors and suppliers have been reporting in recent weeks months. We continue to believe that these dynamics are temporary and currently expect to see orders improvement over the next few quarters. Speaker 300:15:58Taking all of these factors into consideration, we are adjusting certain elements of our annual guidance for fiscal 2024. We now expect revenue for fiscal 2024 to be in a range of $4,000,000,000 to $4,300,000,000 down from our previous expectations of 1% to 4% growth over fiscal 2023. With respect to adjusted gross margins in fiscal 2024, we continue to expect it to be in the mid-40s range with some variability by quarter. For adjusted operating expense, we intend to continue investing strategically both to advance our leadership position in our key markets and to expand our addressable market in key growth areas. However, taking into account our current revenue outlook for the year, we are now planning for operating expense to average $340,000,000 to $345,000,000 per quarter in fiscal year 2024, down from our previous guidance of 3 $55,000,000 per quarter. Speaker 300:17:10With respect to Q2, we expect to deliver revenue in a range of $850,000,000 to $930,000,000 adjusted gross margin in the low 40 percentages range given expected product mix and lower volumes in the quarter and adjusted operating expense $340,000,000 to $345,000,000 Finally, we are updating our 3 year financial targets. As a reminder, given the severity and duration of the rebalancing of supply and consumption, our fiscal 2023 was a year of outsized revenue growth, over 20% and well above our historical growth rate of 6% to 8%. Our outlook today is that for these same reasons, our fiscal 2024 revenue growth rate will be substantially lower than the historical rate. Given this revised view, using our updated fiscal year revenue outlook of $4,000,000,000 to $4,300,000,000 as a baseline year, we believe that 6% to 8% CAGR best represents our long term growth rate. And in a market growing low to mid single digits percentage, Sienna's expected revenue growth rate will ensure continued market share gains. Speaker 300:18:39In summary, the industry is experiencing some near term headwinds as our customers recover from the supply chain challenges that they've seen in recent years. Bandwidth demand though continues to grow at at least the historical 25% to 30% annual rate. Underlying demand drivers of that, which now include AI, ensure that this will continue well into the future. Our leading technology and focus on growing our portfolio to address new markets as well as our deep relationships with both service providers and cloud providers position us extremely well to address the evolving network priorities of our customers. We expect to continue growing our market share and to deliver profitable growth over the long term. Speaker 300:19:34Dave, let's turn the call now over to analysts for Q and A. Operator00:19:39We will now begin the question and answer session. The first question comes from Samik Chatterjee with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:20:08Thank you. Thanks for taking my questions. Maybe for the first one, if I can just ask for a bit more color on the order patterns you're seeing both on the telco and the webscale side? I mean, any color on the sequential order trends there? Because from the commentary of the Q2 guide, at least, it does appear like telco orders probably were a lot worse than you were expecting. Speaker 400:20:32But any more color there in terms of the magnitude of the sequential order trends between those two verticals that you're seeing? And I have a follow-up. Thank you. Speaker 300:20:40Yes. Just Samik, let me try to describe the dynamics here. We've just gone through Q1, which is historically a relatively low orders quarter for us, but they came in about where we expected and are slowly improving. But the premise for our guide for this year was our view based on everything we had heard at the time that Tier 1 service providers would be working through their inventory at a faster rate and would begin to normalize their ordering patterns by Q2. That was our premise for our plan and for our guide. Speaker 300:21:22What's happening is that it is taking them longer to work through their inventories. There are all sorts of issues too with respect to fiber, with respect to site readiness, with respect to labor. And all of this is causing them to take longer to work through the inventory that they have accumulated over the last year and a half. Let me make it clear though that they are down in inventory and things are getting better. We do expect higher orders in Q2, but we do not think now that they're going to be at the level that would enable us to reach our Q2 guide and our full year guide. Speaker 300:22:00So that's what's happening. In Europe, it's really at the edges, but clearly the macro situation in Europe is not strong and we're just seeing lower orders and expect to see lower orders from them for the year. Speaker 200:22:16Sameet, to your point on the cloud, that sort of contrast with the cloud, which you saw the numbers in Q1, we were up 38% year over year. We expect to see that continue to be strong throughout and good order flows throughout the year. Obviously, we've grown tremendously there, I think, 50 odd percent growth last year. We're not going to see that kind of growth, but we're going to have a very solid year in the web scale. Speaker 400:22:46Okay. Got it. Got it. And for my follow-up, if I can just clarify, Jim, your comments about the long term growth guide prior quarter. I think the previous guide was for fiscal 2024 to 26 to be 6 to 8. Speaker 400:22:59I didn't exactly it seemed like you were sort of reiterating that guide, but I didn't exactly capture what you're trying to imply in the updated long term guide that you provided. Speaker 300:23:10Yes. If you think about what we said at the beginning of the year, we said 6 to 8 over 3 years and that was starting off with a lower growth rate in 2024, which implied perhaps a slightly higher growth rate in the later years. We're now saying that you should if you're doing a 3 year forecast for us, you should take fiscal 2024 as your base and assume a growth rate of 6% to 8%. Now that sounds like a guide. We're not trying to guide for 2025 right now. Speaker 300:23:42We could well be better than that. We hope it will be. But we think for modeling purpose, it's as good a guess as any. Speaker 400:23:49Okay, got it. Thank you. Operator00:23:53The next question comes from Amit Daryani with Evercore. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:24:01Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions as well. I guess maybe to start with the updated guide at this point sort of implies that you have a very steep ramp in the back half of the year for Q3 and Q4. I think you're almost implying like mid teens sequential growth for the back half. Can you just talk about what gives you the confidence and you can get that kind of growth given the downtick you just saw from your telco customers? Speaker 500:24:23And then maybe an extension of this, if the orders from these telco customers don't materialize the way you expect, is the risk more than you have the low end of the guide or how do I think of that dynamic as well? Speaker 200:24:34Yes. Hi, Amit. Yes, it's clearly a step function into the second half that we actually thought we'd start in Q2. We are seeing the orders, as Jim said. This is not a sort of binary event. Speaker 200:24:48We are seeing progress in the absorption, inventory going down and we are seeing a service provider orders that sort of gives us confidence. And obviously, we have deep partnerships with these guys and we're installing some of the equipment as well. So we particularly in North America where we have insight into it. I think the other dynamic that we're in a better position now is people have released their budgets And their budgets really haven't changed as I think most people have seen. CapEx has not changed at all amongst most of the major carriers for this year and their intent is absolutely there. Speaker 200:25:30But what we've got greater insight into now is the planning and timing of those installations. As we've turned the year, the budgets have been released. We're now sitting in early March. We do have a better visibility into it than we did and it's not as much of a step function, if you will, Amit, as we'd anticipated before. And that's where we've best reflected the change in the guide. Speaker 500:26:01Got it. That's really helpful. And then, Neil, if I could just follow-up, cloud continues to perform extremely well for you folks. I'm wondering if there's an element of some of the AI demand that tend to come into your numbers right now? Or do you think the AI opportunity is still much more for future narrative, but it's not impacting numbers right now? Speaker 500:26:17Let's just understand what's driving the cloud trend and if AI is if you have time to see some AI benefit already? Speaker 200:26:24I would say we're not really seeing the now there is some AI traffic with the various offerings, Gemini, etcetera, GPT that's out there. So that is generating some traffic, but not obviously not an appreciable step function. I think our understanding with these guys is that's all to come really about how they monetize the broader dimensions of AI. They're investing massively right now as we all know in compute and figuring out how to then release that for monetization, which will then flow into the network. So, what we're seeing is just basically business as usual cloud growth. Speaker 200:27:05I think you are seeing an acceleration of that. You've seen the SaaS companies do well as another sort of gauge of that. And I think we're seeing very robust. You saw it last year, we were massively in network deployments with these guys. And that was really cloud. Speaker 200:27:22I don't think you're seeing virtually any of the AI step function that we're all anticipating in those numbers yet. Speaker 500:27:33Great. Thank you. Speaker 600:27:35Thanks Amit. Operator00:27:38The next question comes from Tal Liani with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Yes. Hi, guys. Speaker 600:27:47How do we know that what we're seeing here in service providers is not structural? That it's in your comments, you're talking about cyclical downturn that will recover absorption of inventory. When you talk to the carriers, they talk about a permanent decline in spending, their desire to spend less. Are there any parts of their spending that could be more structurally down that could be replaced by something else? Or do you have really confidence that this is just cyclical? Speaker 200:28:26Yes. Tal, it's a good question and obviously one that we're super focused on. I would separate it out. I would say in North America, I do not believe there's a structural sort of issue to it. It's really about absorption, their CapEx, what they want to their intent is actually to spend more and absorb more. Speaker 200:28:44And I think with all the major service provided, that is their intent. They want to catch up with their network builds. I do think that there is a reticence around 5 gs. Obviously, it's not been the monetization event for many carriers around the world that was anticipated. And I do think that there's a curtailing of that spend, my own personal belief, I think is structural. Speaker 200:29:10I do not think that will have a major impact on the transmission and infrastructure build. I mean, they're very focused on access and the build out there in North America. So I think in total to it, I do not think there's a structural issue, notwithstanding my comments about 5 gs. Europe, I would think a little bit differently on. I think they have some inherent structural challenges there. Speaker 200:29:32You have 180 carriers in Europe. You have some tiny jurisdictions with multiple carriers, makes no economic sense. And I do think that, a, you're seeing a bit of a downturn in the economy in certain key countries like Germany, which is hugely influential in Europe. And I think they are more receptive to those kinds of challenges than the North American model where the economy continues to do well. So I think there are, tell some structural issues associated with the European piece and that's not new news. Speaker 200:30:10But they are more sensitive to the economic challenges. Speaker 300:30:14And India, we think is still going up into the right. They're going to continue to build out their networks. We had a big year with India last year. We're going to be sort of flattish with them this year. But India is going to be a great place for us for a long time. Speaker 200:30:30We're not seeing any of that in Asia Pacific either that sort of uncertainty. Speaker 300:30:34The one thing I would say Tal is the driver for our business is demand for bandwidth. And that has grown and continues to grow at very rapid rates. Now the people who are building networks to manage that demand really the structure has somewhat changed toward the cloud providers. If you go back 10 years ago, they weren't buying any network gear. They're buying a significant part of it today. Speaker 300:30:59It's very possible that that could expand over time. If there is any shift, that would be the shift from service provider to cloud providers. Speaker 200:31:08Certainly in the long haul. Yes. Speaker 600:31:12Great. Thank you. Speaker 700:31:14Thanks, Tal. Operator00:31:15The next question comes from Simon Leopold with Raymond James. Please go ahead. Yes. Speaker 600:31:22Hey, thanks guys. It's Jeff Koji in for Simon. So I was just hoping you can maybe hash out the strength in Europe this quarter, maybe how that reconciles with your comments on maybe the weakening macro outlook there and as well as like Huawei swaps or displacement opportunities, sounds like it's going really well in India. Thank you. Speaker 300:31:47Yes, I'll deal with the first part. Our regional report reflects the region into which we deliver equipment. It doesn't Europe were driven by cloud providers, not the service providers in Europe. Speaker 500:32:09On the Speaker 300:32:09Huawei thing, there's still an opportunity ahead for it. Now the whole supply chain and COVID situation was actually a benefit to Huawei because they had gear and service providers really wanted to stick with the status quo. They didn't necessarily want to build out stuff. And so for a combination of those two reasons, Huawei did pretty well over the last 2 years. The desire of Western economies to reduce their dependence upon China in general and Huawei in particular has not abated. Speaker 300:32:45And we think that once we get through all of this dynamic of supply chain and everything else that happened over the last few years, their desires will events themselves in substitution of Huawei. We're seeing it in some places already, in the Nordics in particular, in some places in Southern Europe, but we think it's going to continue. Speaker 600:33:09Great, great. Appreciate it. And for my follow-up, we are getting there's been a lot of noise buzz rather around the intra data center opportunity for Coherent Technology. Maybe you can just help us understand like how that could be cost effective or when it will be cost effective and what you think about the timing there and the sizing of that opportunity for you guys? Thank you. Speaker 800:33:35Yes. A way to think about it is, as the flow rates between GPUs increase And as the distances increase as they're forced to because of constraints like power, a lot of techniques that were used in the WAN part of the network that brought Coherent to the forefront will replay themselves inside the data center. And some of the leaders in Coherent, we being the market leader there, are going to have opportunities to use our technology in sort of that adjacent market. From a timing perspective, I think you're looking at sort of the next generation, which is probably 2025 and beyond to get in there. The consumption models will be quite different than the system business on the land. Speaker 800:34:23But the key fundamental technologies are the same things that we've been working in the Coherent space over multiple generations. Speaker 600:34:33Great. Yes, I think Coherent has put out a forecast for data com transceivers could be like $15,000,000,000 by 2028. Is there a percentage that you would put that could be coherent? Speaker 800:34:47Yes. At this point, I think it's a little early to try to size how that slices off. There's obviously a if you're coming at it from the existing generation of technology, you're trying to extend the life of that technology as long as you possibly can. And then the substituted technology that we're talking about here is obviously trying to intercept. Where that saws off, I think is still a bit of a crystal ball. Speaker 300:35:12But just to be clear, we do have a development track to develop those kinds of products in our R and D roadmap. And we are talking with major data center providers. So we're going to stay right on top of it and when and if the shift occurs, we're going to be a Speaker 600:35:28part of it, we hope. Thanks guys. Operator00:35:38The next question comes from Meta Marshall with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:35:44Great. Thanks for taking the question. Wanted to dig into Europe a little bit. I know in the past, maybe some of that European telco spend was actually kind of indirect cloud spend as they kind of helped with data center build for some of those customers. And so just wanted to get a sense of kind of if any of the weakness you're seeing is kind of on the indirect part and if any of that's just due to kind of power constraints that we're hearing about and kind of building out data centers or just any commentary there on kind of the indirect portion? Speaker 900:36:19And then maybe just as a follow-up question, just as Jim on how much you plan to kind of work down inventory levels across the year would be helpful. Thanks. Speaker 200:36:32Hi, Meta. Yes, there has been a shift over a few years where particularly the cloud providers used wholesale type capacity in Europe. Increasingly, in the last sort of couple of years, they've been going direct and taking dark fiber. And I think that has impacted some of the service providers, particularly the wholesalers. And obviously, we're they come direct to us as opposed through the carrier. Speaker 200:37:04So I think you have seen that dynamic, particularly in Europe. That's not the case in most other international jurisdictions where you've got regulatory issues and the rest of it. So it's much more of a hybrid in other countries such as India. But I do think that has impacted somewhat some of the wholesale capacity in Europe is now direct into the hyperscalers? Speaker 300:37:35On the inventory question, Meta, we said that we were going to improve and reduce our inventory levels this year and we will. As you saw, we reduced our inventory by $66,000,000 in Q1. And we've slowed the rate of material into our system to match our demand forecast. So we are confident we're going to take our inventory down this Because Q2 is going to be a bit lower than we expect and the rest of the year a bit lower as well, We're probably not going to get down as low on inventory as we said we would. I think we said we're going to get it down by $300,000,000 or something like that. Speaker 300:38:19And I think we'll get it down by a couple of $100,000,000 I would think. But I think on the other hand, it might grow in Q2 because situation is a little bit late breaking for us and we can't react to it quickly enough. But we will drive inventory down for the year by at least a couple of 100,000,000. Speaker 900:38:37Great. Thank you. Operator00:38:40The next question comes from George Notter with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:38:46Hi, guys. Thanks very much. I guess I'm curious about where your product lead times are right now. I'm wondering if product lead times are quite short and that's leading to some of the excess inventory taking longer to bleed off. Can you just talk a little bit about that dynamic lead times versus buffer stocks at customers? Speaker 800:39:08George, lead times, we have a very broad portfolio, so lead times vary. But if you wanted a single number on it, we sort of have published 12 weekly times to our customers. The reality is, as we've executed through Q1, we are executing at a much better rate than that in terms of lead times. We're approaching getting back to sort of pre pandemic lead times, not quite there yet, but approaching getting back to that. And I think that does have an impact in terms of our customer order behavior patterns, because if they don't need to place it with 52 week lead time, they're not going to place it with 52 week lead time. Speaker 700:39:47Got it. And then I'm sorry, normal pre pandemic lead times were what range also 20 weeks or Operator00:39:54Depending on Speaker 800:39:54portfolio for us, it was mid single digits for weeks. Speaker 200:39:59Depending on the product line. Operator00:40:02Got it. Okay. And do you Speaker 700:40:04think it's the case that customer inventories are is the issue it sounds like the issue is mostly North America. Is it broad based across North America? Or is it more concentrated around a handful of customers? Speaker 200:40:20I would say it is North America. It's 1 or 2 examples internationally, but they're not super meaningful to this conversation. I think it's mainly North America and it's mainly the Tier 1s. But it is sort of shared challenge across most of the larger carriers in North America, who obviously tried to get out ahead of the whole supply chain piece. But now you've got this dynamic where we and other vendors are turning up with enormous amounts of equipment. Speaker 200:40:51I mean, I think we shipped 24% more equipment last year than we did the prior year. And you think about all those trucks turning up at the same time with a bunch of other vendors to put the system together, and that's causing the challenges around their capacity and all the various facets of people, storage, logistics, fiber availability, etcetera to back up. And it's just taken longer than we all, including them, would like or anticipate. And to your earlier point, until we kind of move down through that path and particularly with reduced lead times is it's super logical as to why we see the orders being what they are. They are improving and we are seeing the deployment. Speaker 200:41:42I want to stress that this is not a sort of binary event. It's we're seeing improvements in absorption. The inventories are coming down. We're seeing an increase in orders in service providers. It's just not the step function I think we collectively anticipated. Speaker 300:41:59And to be clear, in this context, we're referring not just to telecom service providers but MSO service. Yes. Speaker 200:42:06I'd include cable in there too. Yes. Operator00:42:09Okay. Thank you guys. Good. The next question comes from Michael Genoves with Rosenblatt Securities. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:42:20Great. I wanted to follow-up on the last question, because I understand mostly what you're talking about with these North American service provider challenges, but the comment on fiber availability, could you flush that out a little bit more? I'm kind of struggling to come up to speed with what that means. Speaker 800:42:43Hey, Michael, you probably can appreciate the majority like the big builds and equipment consumptions are when people are putting down new routes or lighting new fibers. The process of procuring those fibers, even though everybody has intentions to put more fiber in the ground, as North American customers have announced, There's a process of construction there and it takes time. And I think it's exasperated by the labor market in North America as well. So getting access to the fiber, tension is there, timing is taking longer, going through characterization of that fiber and then finally doing the construction to light it. It's just taking longer than we had anticipated with the volume that they're trying to do. Speaker 800:43:25They're working through it. Our visibility to it and where we can help our customers is on our installation services and you can see that is up period over period quite substantially. It is happening. It's just taking longer than we anticipated going into the year. Speaker 600:43:41Okay, great. And then, I guess my next question, just the competitive environment, for DCI, I mean, it seems like you've maintained a very high level market share in DCI. As ZR has become more important, are you finding a different set of competitors in the market? Or how has the competitive environment changed recently in DCI, if at all? Speaker 800:44:11Yes. I think 2 different views of it, I guess. The ZR impact has not impacted our business at all. In fact, you can see record quarters for Waveserver in our Q1 20 24 results, a massive Waveserver and that's all DCI or for the most part all DCI. So it's clearly not impacting our business as some people may have impacted our business with the web scale was up like 57% year on year for last year for 2023. Speaker 800:44:51So again, big parts of that is various different flavors of data center interconnect. So clearly not having a negative impact there. And in fact, I think you do the math and the market size, you'll conclude that we gain share with the GCNs last year. In terms of the number of competitors from a pluggable perspective, yes, you start to get different sort of consumption models. At the end of the day, it's still a very limited number of folks that are investing in the key technologies that go into these ZR plugs. Speaker 800:45:23You get various different ecosystems that are trying to put them together. You know, I'm a firm believer from a philosophy perspective. If you don't own some of the core technologies, you're probably not long for that world. But that will take some time to play out. And as you know, we own and control our own destiny in all those key technologies. Speaker 300:45:45And just to be clear, we have roughly 50% market share globally with webscale companies. If you take out that which Huawei does, which is just about entirely in China, then it gets to be a bit higher than that. So we're very comfortable with our share position and we think it's going to remain at that level. Probably hard for us to gain share from this point because they all want a second source, but we'll take 50% plus. Thanks so much. Speaker 1000:46:17Thanks Mike. Operator00:46:19The next question comes from Alex Henderson with Needham. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:46:24Great, thanks. Was hoping we could talk a little bit about the mix between product and service in the 2024 expectations. I realized that service was up quite a bit in the January quarter, but it was actually down significantly quarter to quarter because the January quarter is typically a lockdown quarter for most service providers. In terms of mix, you pointed out that there was a shift to transceivers, which they will install, but not line systems. So I'm assuming that the line systems installation is going to increase meaningfully quarter to quarter. Speaker 1000:47:07And therefore, you're looking at what $210,000,000 to $220,000,000 of service, which would imply that the product sales are down, what, 25% to 35% something in that range? And how does that play out over the course of the year as the installation continues to be churning through what's been shipped as opposed to new shipments? And then does it fall off at some point after an under shipment period? So we get out into the 4th quarter and into the first half of twenty twenty five, does this service start to roll off? Can you give us some guidance on that? Speaker 300:47:58Let me give a little context here, Alex. You have to think about that services business. Really it's 2 businesses. 1 is maintenance and 1 is installation. Those are the 2 things that we do. Speaker 300:48:08We have some other consulting type practices and advanced type services, but those 2 make up the bulk of it. The maintenance expense is going to grow essentially as our product sales grow because almost everybody takes maintenance with our products. So that's one piece. On the implementation side, it's not one size fits all. For most of the larger carriers in the U. Speaker 300:48:34S, we don't do a ton of installation. Now we have started to as they are trying to work through their inventory levels. But in the past, we didn't do a lot of installation for them. In places like Asia, South America, sometimes in Europe, we do a lot of installation. So our services mix is going to be, I think more related to where our sales are. Speaker 300:48:58And I'd say this that we love expanding our implementation business and we'd love to continue to help our big customers here in the U. S. And that's what we're trying to do. Scott? Speaker 800:49:10Yes. That's the dominant dynamic, Jim. You're right. I think there's some nuances in there. The installation services pieces of it, it varies by geography and it varies by portfolio. Speaker 800:49:24So historically, we haven't done a lot of installation services on our running and switching portfolio, for example. As those solution sets get more sophisticated as our customers are and will continue to look to us to do more installation. You know, at the mixed geographically, in some parts of the world, we do those installation services ourselves in some parts of the world. The customers do themselves in some parts. They turn to 3rd party partners to do it. Speaker 800:49:50And there's a it varies quite a bit on the mix of where that revenue is coming from. And that's going to change over time. In addition to that, it's not a major piece of it. But our services team is also busy trying to expand their service offers to our customers and that we hope to grow over time. We think our service business is going to continue to grow at or above the growth rate for the company. Speaker 1000:50:12Just to be clear though, the seasonal swing between the January and the April quarter, normally services are lower in the Q1 because of the lockdown. Are we expecting it to be up sequentially, 2.12%, 2.15%, something like that, in which case the majority of the quarter to quarter decline is in the product side? Speaker 300:50:38It's always very risky to try to give individual slices of what we expect of our business. I would think this because of the dynamics that we talked about, because we will show growth in Q2 in our overall business, it is likely that services will grow as well. So I don't have a number for you, but I think it'll probably grow just like the products revenue will grow in Q2. Speaker 400:51:03Okay, thanks. Speaker 100:51:07Thanks, Alex. Operator00:51:09The next question comes from David Vogt with UBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:51:21David, your line might be muted. Thanks. Speaker 1100:51:23Sorry, guys. I was on mute. Thanks again for all the color. Maybe just digging back into backlog and orders, maybe, Tim, can you help us understand where backlog exited the quarter? I think last quarter, you'd mentioned it was roughly around 2,600,000,000 dollars And so what we're trying to figure out is what the orders look like going forward and how to kind of triangulate the growth rate in 2025 in terms of an order trajectory? Speaker 600:51:48And I have a follow-up. Speaker 300:51:50Our backlog we ended backlog at Q1 at $2,200,000,000 So you can sort of calculate what our orders were in Q1. We said last quarter that we expect our backlog, generally speaking, to come down for the full year because we are approaching historical levels of lead times and customer ordering behaviors are probably going to track those in the past, which means that our ending year backlog is going to approach a level like the levels we had prior to all the craziness of the past 3 years, which traditionally has been about 35% to 40% of the coming year's revenue. And that consists of a $1,000,000,000 or so of services and about $1,000,000,000 of products and software. That's what it's been historically. I mean that's what makes up the 2.2. Speaker 300:52:53Great. Speaker 1100:52:53And so maybe if I just extrapolate that comment in 2024 into 2025, maybe I'm doing the math wrong here, but it would imply that your order growth rate in 'twenty five would have to be up somewhere like 35% to 40% relative to 'twenty four. Are we doing the math rate? And if that's the case, what does that imply for SP orders coming back next year? I know you didn't give full year guide yet. It's early. Speaker 1100:53:14But just trying to kind of triangulate on how we get to those that 6% to 8% multi year target that you just provided? Thanks. Speaker 300:53:24Rather than give you a number for our growth rate in orders next year, what I would say is this. A healthy business, which we've had for a long, long time prior to the supply chain disruption and COVID and all that sort of stuff, we typically ran orders in a given year at some fraction above our revenue, whether it was 5%, whether it was 10%, some number like that. So we're not at those levels right now, which means that we do have to have some catch up as we move through the next couple of quarters and possibly some catch up next year. But that's what we expect our order volumes to be, 1.05 times to 1.1 times our revenue for a year, for example, and it varies by quarter. Speaker 200:54:12And Yudu, that's obviously a function of the lead time piece as well. Typically, our and then if the world ever gets normalized, it would be slightly ahead of the revenues for the year. Now there may be some bumpiness as we get into that. I mean, for example, in 2022, I think our orders were close to $6,000,000,000 just to give you an order of magnitude around the challenges that we're having from a backlog point of view. Speaker 1100:54:36Got it. No, helpful, Gary. Thanks, Jim. Appreciate it. Speaker 100:54:40Thanks. Thanks, David. Operator00:54:43The next question comes from Reuben Roy with Stifel. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:54:49Yes. Thank you for taking my question. Gary, I had a follow-up on some of the commentary around AI and then just increasing order rates with cloud. And just trying to work through not seeing yet sort of the impacts of traffic growth outside of the data center, the traffic that you've mentioned being created by the GPUs, etcetera, and yet the order rates are up. So am I right in assuming that the cloud DTI business is mostly for a long haul? Speaker 700:55:19And if that's the case, can you talk to sort of how you're thinking about the sustainability of sort of those orders around that specific business, Cloud DCI? Speaker 200:55:30Yes. I think it is. It's more of a mix than you think around long haul and metro amongst these. When we talk about them and we all tend to these hyperscalers as sort of generic grouping. You think about their business models, they're all very different, be it search, be it cloud, etcetera, Azure type services. Speaker 200:55:51So therefore, their networks are actually very different as well and including all of the submarine cables and the metro piece and the rest of it. So these are now very large, very complicated global networks that is not just simple data center connectivity, point to point. They are they use 6,500 in full configuration with resilience, etcetera, across there. So they are fully blown intelligent networks. So to your point, Ruben, Ram, then the traffic that they're obviously flowing right now is data center to data center. Speaker 200:56:34The opportunity is when you get the AI applications coming out of the WAN, they have to go to consumers in their various forms, be them enterprise or general consumers. And it has to pass across that network. And also, from a model point of view, it needs to talk to the instantiation locally, be it edge compute or whatever the devices are. It needs to maintain connectivity to it. It's not just you dump the model down there at the edge of the network and you're good to go for a month. Speaker 200:57:08This stuff has to maintain connectivity. So, we're all sort of very excited about the opportunity, but that hasn't yet come out of the data center. But they're obviously investing massive amounts of investment in the compute and in the application and monetization of that. That has not that investment has not flowed to the network yet. Speaker 800:57:33The other dynamic on the AI piece having impact on the LAN traffic is because of the massive amounts of compute and the power required to do that. Every one of the cloud providers more geographical distribution. And guess what, when you do that, you've got to network them together. So that's going to be more transport, more networking gear. That's going to be another dynamic as AI starts to have an influence on, I'll just say the classic transport part of the network. Speaker 800:58:11I think I'd add, Gary, in terms of where are we today with these folks. Yes, it's their campusmetroDCI, it's their terrestrial core networks, it's their submarine networks, but it's also across our transport portfolio, it's line systems, it's coherent modems and however they want to instantiate it. And to some people's surprises, it's our software portfolio and it's our services portfolio as well. So it's quite a broad set of solutions that were in those in that segment with. Speaker 700:58:44I really appreciate the detail guys. That's really helpful for me. If I could sneak in a quick one for Jim on gross margins. Jim, just sort of maintaining the mid-40s for the full year, given lower volumes and lower revenue. Can you just I might have missed this, but did you talk through mix or linearity of how you think gross margins play out over the next several quarters? Speaker 300:59:04Yes. I think they're going to be a bit lower in Q2 and that's a mix and volume because as we said, we're not going to have the volume that we expected in Q2. But I think we'll average in the mid-40s for the full year. We started the year at 45.7%. It was a good strong start and we'll get back to something like that. Speaker 700:59:26Understood. Thank you. Speaker 100:59:28Great. Thank you, Ruv, and thank you everybody for joining us today. We appreciate your attention and we look forward to seeing everyone at OFC. Thank you and have a good day. Operator00:59:39The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today'sRead morePowered by