Perfect. Good morning, everyone in the room and online. Welcome to the Preliminary Results For The Year-E nding 31 March 2025 for Babcock International Group. Quite a lot to cover. It's been quite a year for the group, quite a year for the U.K., and quite a year for the world. I think it's clearly a new era for defense. If you look at what's going on at NATO, today, Babcock International Group is represented there because industry is close to government in working out how to make the world a safe place. That is one of the key things that's making the global market conditions increasingly supportive for companies like Babcock International Group. When you have declining budgets, which we've had for most of my working life, industry is somewhere where you make cost savings. Everything about your relationship is set up like this.
At a time when the free world is having to think about how to defend its values, industry becomes part of the solution. You have a completely different relationship. If I look at the tone of discussions I was having with governments at the Paris Air Show last week, it is about how do we drive capability. It is about how do we move faster together. It is a together thing. Yes, we need contracts. Yes, we need to be measured. Yes, governments need to get value for money, look after taxpayers' money. The way in which we are doing it is completely different from a year ago. That is true also in civil nuclear, where we are looking to progress civil nuclear as a key part of the green energy agenda. To partake in that kind of discussion, you need to be a strong company.
We have spent the last few years making Babcock International Group that strong company. That is now coming through in financial performance, which has enabled us to upgrade in year. It has given us balance sheet strength, and it has actually given us some capital to allocate, which not so long ago seemed a bit of a fanciful thought. Probably the core of most board discussions, in one way or another, is about capital allocation, both through the year and then at checkpoints at the half year and full year. We will come back to our capital allocation policy, but it is primarily about investing for growth, but also having a focus on shareholder returns. We have increased the dividend this year, and we have announced our first buyback. Most importantly, we have announced an upgrade to our medium-term guidance. David will take you through that later.
But just to set the scene, medium term in the city is a bounded number of years. David will touch on it. Clearly, beyond that, we are seeing increases in spend outside that time window. When I come back, I want to try and give a picture of the overall landscape, both within the medium-term guidance and beyond. That excitement comes after the key part of the show, which is my esteemed colleague.
Thank you, David. Good morning, everyone. FY25 was a good year on pretty much every measure. My main three messages today are: number one, this is a strong set of results, with revenue and profit growing well and ahead of our expectations at the start of the year. Number two, cash flow was very strong, alongside significant investment in the business, which, when coupled with the pensions progress, further strengthened the balance sheet. Number three, we've upgraded our medium-term guidance and announced the share buyback. Onto the trading results then. There are some very positive numbers on this summary slide. Some of these were announced in our April post-close statement, and there have been no changes to those numbers. Stepping through them quickly, organic revenue growth was another year of double-digit growth at 11%.
Underlying operating profit was up 17%, and margins continued the upward trajectory by 50 basis points to 7.5%. Cash conversion was 82%, despite the high capital investment in the business. Free cash flow was GBP 153 million, again, despite the high capital investment and GBP 40 million of an accelerated pension contribution. All the above led us to earnings per share growing by 23%. This enabled a 30% increase in the ordinary dividend, growing ahead of earnings, and a GBP 200 million share buyback announced this morning. We will now move on to revenue. This shows the 11% organic revenue growth by sector before we go into the detail. Marine and nuclear were the real drivers of the top line, although three of the four sectors grew in the year. Aviation, we expected to be roughly flat due to project phasing.
I'll come back to the sectors in a moment. Next, profit. This slide reconciles the various numbers to avoid confusion. You may remember that FY2024 had a couple of material one-off items netting to a GBP 73 million charge. There was a GBP 90 million program charge in marine and a GBP 70 million profit on disposal of property in land. Last year's reported profit and margin are on the far left of this slide. We add back the GBP 73 million net charge to get to the GBP 311 million, or 7%, in the middle of the slide. That is a more meaningful baseline of FY2024 performance. Against that baseline, we achieve the 17% organic profit increase in FY2025 to GBP 363 million and the 7.5% margin. The sector detail that I'm about to go through will use the reported comparator numbers just so that you are aware.
Onto the sectors. There is a lot of content on these slides for reference, but I'll just pick out the key points. Marine first. It was a good year in Marine, a good performance, with revenue growing 12% organically. This growth was driven mainly by the ramp-up of the SkyNet program in the first full year and the return to growth of the liquid gas business. Now, profit and margin variances in Marine need some explanation, as there were a couple of lumpy items last year. As I said, last year had the GBP 90 million program charge in the sector. Whilst the reported profit and margin improvement on this slide looks huge, if you add back the program provision to last year, it then looks like performance went backwards.
However, FY24 also had very strong profit contribution from the Arrowhead license sales we made, which were never going to be an annual event. They were not a one-off, but they were never going to be annual. My summary of all of that is that Marine has made real progress in the year operationally on both profit and margin. The FY25 numbers are a clean baseline for the future. The 6.1% margin was a decent return from where we were. Importantly, it is heading in the right direction. For those new to the story, this sector has about GBP 200 million of zero-margin revenue going through it, which is primarily Type 31. This weighs on the margin in Marine by about 100 basis points and will do for the next four years or so.
Also on the margin, the first year of the SkyNet program has been recognized at a prudent level, and we expect that to improve over time. The nuclear sector had a very strong year, growing at 19% organically. Cavendish Nuclear led the way with a 28% revenue growth due to increased demand in civil new build and decommissioning. Submarine support revenues also increased, including the ramp-up of the Victorious deep maintenance work. Infrastructure revenues, or MIP, grew in the year to GBP 504 million, but they did peak in H1, following the opening of Nine Dock. Moving to profit, Cavendish Nuclear not only benefited from the very high growth, it also improved its margins in the year, as we disclosed at the investor teach-in day last month. As we said then, Cavendish makes double-digit margins. The naval nuclear revenue growth also helped drive a better profit performance.
This was assisted by improved contract delivery, some contract change, and inflation recovery within some programs. All of these factors restored the margin to a more normal level for this business, at 8.8%. Moving to land, the highlight of the year was the signing of the GBP 1 billion reframe contract, which is the five-year extension of the army equipment support. This is not only because it is a really important order, but it is the culmination of several years of recovery from a position where neither the customer nor we were happy with DSG. Revenue growth was more modest in land overall. We had good growth period for U.K. and international defense with vehicle support and build. There was also growth in South Africa, particularly with equipment sales to the mining industry. This was partially offset by lower revenues in the rail business.
On the profit line, last year land had the GBP 17 million property disposal profit, which I mentioned earlier, and that distorts the reported numbers on here. Ignoring that one-off, profit was up 10%, and the margins were up 50 basis points, so good progress. Overall, land reached 7.7% margin, which is much better than the 5% it was on a few years ago and is on the way to a more normal margin for the business. Onto aviation. The highlight of the year in aviation was the signing of the French Mentor II contract we announced a few months ago. This is another important milestone in the building of a French defense business. On the revenue line, as expected, organic revenues went backwards by 4%, which is the impact of last year's H160 aircraft deliveries in France, with the program now in the longer-term support phase.
These types of contracts do have lumpy revenues, as aircraft are delivered, and I expect more of that in the future. Moving to profit, profits and margins both increased in aviation, with margins now up to 6.2% and further progression expected. This is obviously much better than a few years ago when the sector was break-even. Moving to the cash flow, this is the usual detailed slide, but I'll only pick out a few key numbers. In the middle of the table, we have the operating cash flow of GBP 296 million and cash conversion of 82%. The first thing to note is that this good cash conversion was delivered while still investing heavily in the business. You can see this when comparing the CapEx line and the depreciation line for both of the years on the table there.
This is the continued upgrade of infrastructure and systems around the group to drive better business performance. Organic investment in the business is our number one capital allocation priority. The second thing to note in the operating cash flow was the very small change to working capital. The combination of advanced receipts from customers and program milestones allowed the working capital to be flat year on year, whereas we were expecting a reversal. This reversal will happen in future, but we will work hard to minimize the impact on any one year. Now, down the bottom half of the table, we have free cash flow of GBP 153 million, which was good, especially as it is after an additional GBP 40 million of pension contributions, which I will come on to.
To me, the business generated nearly GBP 200 million of free cash flow in the year, despite the high levels of investment. I know some investors view pension deficit as debt and therefore consider free cash flow before pension deficit contributions. On that basis, the result would have been about GBP 240 million of free cash flow in the year. The second priority in our capital allocation policy is the retention of a strong balance sheet. This is important for customers as well as other stakeholders, given the critical things we do. For those new to Babcock, this slide shows how quickly the group has deleveraged from a very weak position a few years ago to a BBB plus company now with a gearing ratio of 0.3 times. This shows how cash-generative the group is.
The other topic which has historically impacted the assessment of balance sheet strength is the pension deficit. As I've said before, we always focus on the actuarial technical provisions measure of a deficit, not the accounting numbers, as this more accurately reflects the cash flows. The key points to note on this slide are that the aggregate deficit of the schemes is now around GBP 125 million, so substantially less than it was in prior years. During the year, we completed long-term funding agreements with all of our top three schemes, giving both the trustees and ourselves better visibility of the route to self-sufficiency and beyond for the schemes. As consideration for these deals, we accelerated GBP 40 million of deficit repair contributions in FY25.
As a result of all of that, we now expect future deficit repair contributions to total just GBP 20 million per annum for the next six years or so. That is substantially less than historically. Just to tie things back to capital allocation, our policy states that accelerating pension contributions is a capital allocation option should it be attractive. The GBP 40 million accelerated contribution in the year and the benefits it unlocked was capital allocation at work. To the medium-term guidance, at one level, this is really simple. Medium-term revenue guidance and medium-term cash flow guidance continue on the same trajectory as previous. We have had a double upgrade to the margin guidance. The first upgrade is to achieve the 8% margin earlier than we originally expected.
The second is to raise the target by 100 basis points to at least 9% within the medium term. At the capital markets day last year, I said that 8% was a waypoint, not a destination. We expect to achieve that waypoint in FY2026. On the revenue line, the mid-single-digit growth is a realistic target given the pipeline of opportunities we have today. The cash conversion of 80% plus recognizes that this is a highly cash-generative group that continues to invest, but also that we expect some unwind of working capital over the medium term. Given that the margin guidance is the one that has changed, I just wanted to add some color on how this is achieved.
As you can see from the graph on the left, we've established a track record of margin improvement over the last few years, and you can see that in the sector numbers. The right-hand side illustrates the actions that get us to 9%. These are a continuation of the margin accretion actions delivered to date. The zero margin revenue of GBP 200 million, on Type 31, when that trades out over the next four years, that gives us about 30 basis points on the journey. The remainder is driven through improved delivery, better risk management, and increased efficiency. The actions that get us there are similar to the ones we've already taken around the group. There are many examples I can give of things we've already done around the group and many of those that are to come.
This is continuous improvement everywhere rather than pulling one big lever in the center. This underpins our confidence in the delivery. 9%+ it is. With that, I'll now hand back to David.
Right. I'm going to explain the world in 10 minutes. As David said, everything is underpinned by performance. I was asked in a recent investor conversation, what is the biggest risk in this group? The biggest risk is one we will definitely avoid, which is complacency on delivery. We have done a great job, I think, in getting us to a place where we do deliver. There are still loads to go for, as you saw on David's last slide. Growth is underpinned by today's performance. Keeping driving performance will underpin all of the subsequent slides.
Whilst I talk about the big stuff, the thing you need to remember is we will never take our eye off the ball of performance. Because that performance drives access to this market. There are major structural drivers which are going to be around for a very long time. However, the various conflicts end, the world will feel unstable. Governments will feel the need to look after their citizens. For the first time in my career, I just told a journalist that actually I had to wait till my 60s to become cool as a business leader because it's now cool to be in defense, which is amazing. We actually matter and people recognize we matter. Whether it's global insecurity, but also the drive towards green energy, all of these things are moving in the direction of Babcock International Group.
Only a high-performing Babcock is able to access those opportunities. One of the key things in this is to try and combine that with the medium-term guidance and the long-term upside. The medium-term guidance, I mean, David was supposed to say he did not. Medium-term is three to five years kind of stuff, hopefully the front end of that. It is this term of this government in the U.K., it is the current Australian government. We are talking about the current political cycle. We are not counting things that are committed into future governments. In the U.K., we have got a commitment to increase defense spending in the next parliament and then defense and security in the parliament after that. That is outside the medium-term guidance window.
Our medium-term guidance is based on what we can see of this and manage, and that is largely in our control in that window. There is clearly significant growth opportunity beyond that as governments commit to their increased spending. To access that, you need to be in the right markets. Defense spending almost speaks for itself where we are with the Five Eyes. We do some stuff in the States with things like missile dudes, but particularly the other four, a very strong place to be, and with a growing capability for the export markets. You know our capabilities, you have been to capital markets days. Whether it is military flying, whether it is land support, as we have seen with the DSG refresh, the ability to operate in the near term is about optimizing what you have today, whether through training or upgrade or greater availability.
That's core to Babcock International Group's existence. As we look forward, the nuclear subs program is underpinned in the U.K. We're already doing some work on Orcus. There is a whole bunch of key programs that sit in our time window. Finally, I think we've talked a lot about whether we operate through strategic partnerships with SARB, HII, in Poland, with Safran we signed last week at the Paris Air Show, whether it's a licensing model with PT PAL in Indonesia or whether it's direct export working in conjunction with the U.K. government. That ability to collaborate with governments, with industry is core to driving success. We'll use different models in different places. As David said, sometimes we'll get a lumpy license fee. Sometimes we'll have a more enduring revenue stream when we're building for an export customer.
We'll pick the right model for the right market. The U.K., as I've touched on, 2.6% within the medium-term guidance window, 3% next parliament is outside the window. The 5% national security by 2035 is clearly outside. All of it provides a long-term trajectory. Whether it's ultimately 5 or 4.8 or 5.2, what Rachel Reeves said recently is true, which is for the first time in generations, plural, the defense industry can plan on growing budgets, not shrinking budgets. The U.K. SDR, I'll come on to the next slide, but it largely underpins what we want to do. As countries are looking at how they're really going to defend themselves, the kind of British first approach in the U.K., the Europe first approach is very much driving to identifying key long-term partners.
That is not just capability, as David said, that is strong balance sheet. Are you going to be here? Can we absolutely depend that if we commit to you for 20 years, that there is tangentially zero risk of you not being here in 20 years? Being the shape of company that can make those kind of commitments and can be trusted to deliver on them is fundamental to drive the growth. If we look at the SDR requirements, I would describe this as largely confirmatory of our strategy. Some of the stuff which is growth orientated, which sits outside this parliament, you know, has the caveat when money allows on it. That is the stuff that is in the next parliament, which will drive further growth. The commitment to the existing nuclear fleet is obviously fundamental, and the growth into a bigger nuclear fleet.
To put that in context on a timeline, the Dreadnought is a 2030s platform. Orcus is a 2040s platform. When we think of it in terms of upside versus medium-term guidance, within medium-term guidance, it is largely about the support of existing, plus a small plus getting ready for Dreadnought introduction through things like MIP, plus a bit of front-end Orcus. Outside that, you get the growth into the larger fleet. Cutting-edge frigates and an affordable navy is obviously core to who we are. We have the 10-year contract to support the carriers. We are in a strong position to support the transforming of the aircraft carriers into a multi-role platform. I can keep going down. In the army, obviously DSG gives more availability. A lot of the training we do will help with this conversion into a more flexible army.
Training for next-gen Air Force is obviously key through Ascent and stuff. We then, that we can then take some of those skills, particularly skills on non-flying training, into export markets. All of that is fundamental. The engine for growth, Sovereign Warhead, you know, if you were at the Cavendish teaching, that we're a big player in AWE. Defense exports, having, I've said many times, we can only export where the U.K. has a strong presence and is welcome. It's soft and hard power together. When we look at where we've succeeded and where we've failed, success is where we go hand in hand with government into export markets. Defense dividend is really important. We kind of have talked about it quite a lot, but never in this language.
This is about effectively how you get societal support for a growing defense budget by showing its broader value add to society. You know, we already make a significant contribution to the U.K. economy well beyond the spend by the government. We do a lot of regeneration. A lot of our sites are in quite low social mobility, low economic growth areas, and so we've already been putting a lot of effort in in terms of how we recruit, how we train, use of local SMEs. That is now getting ramped. We're already the U.K.'s largest employer of veterans. We offer every person who is leaving the armed forces an interview guaranteed for a, you know, we help them find the right job and then they get an interview. The government has ambitious targets for spend with SMEs.
We already spend over GBP 500 billion with SMEs. You can go down the list. We already do a lot of what was defense dividend. I do think that being able to put a wrap around that and have government value it properly will help secure our position in the U.K. Probably the thing that will excite our employees most is we're going to launch our first ever all-employee free share scheme. I guess I've just done it, actually. Sorry, Louise. Anyway, I've just done it. There we are. I've launched it. That's the flattest launch you'll ever hear. There's going to be one. In the civil market, I think the graph on the left is the most astonishing. That's the history of nuclear in the U.K.
Up to a peak in the late 1990s and then in decline. Now in a very short period, if you look at that graph, doubling what the maximum we have ever achieved. That is the government's ambition in nuclear. Quite hard to put numbers on what that means to Babcock International Group, except for it is big. Quite a chunk of it, you look at the shape of the graph, you get that big step up just outside the medium-term guidance period. We will see consistent growth in Cavendish, as you saw. As if you were at the teaching, there is just really big upside beyond that, but difficult to quantify. David touched on capital allocation. Organic investment really matters. A lot of our sites were tired. A lot of our systems were poor.
David's talked for the last few years about the need to have mandrolic systems to achieve control where the automated systems were letting us down. It will drive efficiency. We need both physical and IT investment, and that will continue. It is clearly making us not only a more cost-effective business, it's also improving our operational performance. Financial strength, I've touched on why customers need to believe in the long term. There's also, in the U.K., Rachel Reeves has talked a lot about so-called crowding in private sector investment on the capital front end, to level up effectively the spend profile for government and to accelerate capability. Now, we're not quite sure exactly how those will play out. We're starting exploratory discussions, but it's really important that we can always play. It's quite difficult to know at the moment what that ticket price is.
As one of the two major U.K. defense contractors, it would be a shame if we missed out on opportunities because something came along we could not fund. Difficult, difficult to know now. I expect that to evolve with the appointment of the National Armaments Director, the publication of the Defense Industrial Strategy. I expect that to become much clearer over the next 12 months. Ordinary dividend up 30%. I think we will focus on the increase, not the absolute. David's touched on pensions. That leaves two things. It leaves M&A and shareholder returns. We take M&A very seriously. There are key areas where we think it could add value to the business. We are custodians of shareholder money, like governments are custodians of taxpayers' money. It has to make sense.
We have got quite a long way through two in the year and walked away, I think, for very, very, very good reasons. We will not do it just because we feel desperate to do it. We will do it when we find the right thing on the right terms. The other alternative is shareholder returns. We have looked at the balance sheet. We looked at M&A and we have decided we can do a buyback this year because that is part of our capital allocation policy. It does not mean it will be every year. It could be that there are acquisitions one year. The board spends, under Ruth's guidance, a lot of time talking about capital allocation and the right choices. That obviously crystallizes at certain points, typically half year and year.
I think you can be confident as shareholders that the board understands its responsibilities on capital allocation to drive shareholder value. The other thing I'd say about the buyback is when we look at our plan and we look at the opportunities, we still think that's good value. It wasn't buyback in the absence of any alternative. It was because it was the right value alternative compared with, for example, the two acquisitions we looked at. If you look backwards, strong financial performance in the year, as David laid out. If you look a long way forward, the global momentum is in our direction. If you look in the near term, that's enabled us to upgrade medium-term guidance. Finally, we have a marine investor event in Rosyth on the 4th of September.
Now, September is traditionally a really good time for weather in Scotland. That is a small window. I really encourage you to come up and see all of the exciting things that we do in Rosyth beyond Type 31. With that, exciting questions, please. There is a roving mic. I'm not quite sure if we're taking questions online, are we? No, just in the room. Just in the room. That will teach you to not come.
Thank you, Sash Tusa from Agency Partners. Looking at the medium-term guidance for revenue growth, would it, how much of the GBP 500 million, roughly, of MIP and GBP 200 million of Type 31, do you expect to have dropped out from the revenues by the end of, you know, the far distant part of your guidance period, five years?
I should we see that 5% as being 5% including GBP 700 million of FAID, and so closer to closer to double digits underlying, or do you still expect to have a big chunk of that GBP 700 million in there, albeit it won't have been growing very fast, if at all? I'll let David do the detail because, as you know, I get into trouble if I talk about numbers. We certainly don't expect to stop shipbuilding. We expect Type 31, this program, to be replaced by other shipbuilding programs. It depends how you, whether you count that as a FAID or a replace. We expect MIP to continue, but probably not at these levels.
Yeah, good answer. I'm not sure what I can add to it. MIP, as you know, is hard to be precise on the forecast.
We do think it's peaked. We don't think it's going to disappear. It may tail off a bit. Type 31, as the program will be going for the next four years or so, but we expect to replace that with future programs. All of that is baked into the medium-term guidance.
Good morning, Chris Banbury, Peel Hunt, a couple of questions, please. With the margin guidance for 9%, you highlighted that about 30 basis points of the improvement is coming from zero FAID. Of the other factors, are any of those particularly important or is it relatively well spread and getting to the target? Secondly, on FMSP, could you please give us an update on the progress of the discussions and perhaps how the new contract might differ from the existing one? Thank you.
Yeah, I'll do FMSP and then David can do margins. We signed a heads of terms on the replacement program, and now we're into the detail. It is a, you know, it's a big program. If you look at the annual revenues and you multiply that by any number of years, it's a big number to go through the system. The current program finishes by the end of March this year, so it needs to be replaced clearly. I would say the big difference is, and it kind of goes back to my opening remarks about how the market's changed. The big drivers really for the last 20 years have been cost out. The big drivers going forward are about on-time and accelerated capability.
So, being incentivized, us being incentivized and actually the government partners being incentivized to work with us to deliver more faster. And bizarrely, not bizarrely, as you can imagine, if you deliver faster, generally it also ends up being cheaper. So, yeah, the big shift is from a cost analytic to an output analytic.
Yeah, and on the margin, we did have a go at this actually, but if you remember at the capital markets day, we said those six things are quite interlinked. So they're not actually separable when you look at it. And you think, well, is growth at a higher margin just growth or is it better productivity as well? So, actually you can't split. But I think the simple answer is it's probably broadly spread across all of them.
If you look at the number of actions we've got, it's probably broadly spread. It might be slightly different in different sectors. For example, aviation I think will be more driven by the move to being a defense business. Obviously that's going quite well in France and you've seen that. Across the group, it's probably evenly spread.
Thank you.
Hi, it's David Perry, JP Morgan Chase & Co. I've got three, please. First one probably for you, David L. Can you just talk a little bit about the nuclear deterrent in the SDR? I'm intrigued that it was the second bullet point in the press release. I'm a bit embarrassed to say I don't really understand what they were talking about. They talked about Renew and a sovereign nuclear deterrent slash warhead. I'm just intrigued what Renew means. I didn't know these things wore out.
They talked about GBP 15 billion. I do not know what that includes and what is the accessible pot for Babcock is the first question. From a submarine point of view, if I do not, I will talk about it as I think about it, not as they, as the press release. There are two constituent elements of the deterrent. There are the submarines and the weapon system. On the submarines, they said, firstly, they said Dreadnought would not get Life X, which is actually quite important. I should be not of this world when these decisions get made, but you have got Dreadnought, then you have got SSNR, then you have got Dreadnought replacement. That is kind of laying out the timeline. That is quite important because obviously we Life X V boats at the moment. That does not reduce our workload.
It just means that we'll do proper deep maintenance rather than Life X, which is different. On the deterrent, there is a program at Aldermaston to effectively develop a new warhead, including material. That is what that GBP 15 billion is. A sizable chunk of that is accessible to us.
Okay. Has it always been or is this a new opportunity?
I would say that there is a growing chunk that is accessible. If you look at the history of Aldermaston, going back, but AWE going back a few years, for a while it was a GOCO, government-owned contractor-operated, if you're not British, run by Serco and Lockheed Martin. That was then taken in-house, so it was not renewed. They have run it largely in-house, and now they are kind of going back to a more traditional government-owned, but with significant subcontracts.
They are moving to a new model. I would say it is an evolving opportunity.
I was going to ask, my next question is to David M., but I am going to be greedy. Just keep the mic and just follow up on Sasha's question. Can I just say how much that does not surprise me? Sasha asked the question really politely, but I will just ask it more bluntly. If I read the first 10 pages of your release and I listen to your comments, I cannot reconcile it to mid-single digit organic growth. It just seems like it should be a lot higher. What is it we are missing or do you think you are just being very prudent?
I do not think we are being very prudent because we have got a tail off in MIP to compensate, first of all, because we are not doing the, if you do not count this kind of thing, it is in aggregate. We have got a tail off in MIP, number one. Number two, if you actually just do it from a budgets down point of view, within the time window, budgets are not growing that much for spend. You know, governments do not just spend on industry. They spend on the armed forces. They spend on pensions. They spend on all sorts of things. Budgets are not growing that much in the time period of the medium-term guidance. I think it is well centered. Could it be better? Of course, it could be better. I certainly hope it is not worse.
It, but I think it, you know, it is what we can see today that makes sense. We do not have to, we do not have to pull rabbits to make it happen. If we pull a rabbit, we will beat it. I think what I was trying to lay out is I think sort of beyond that three or four, if governments around the world get near their targets, then there is real opportunity to go significantly beyond outside that time window.
Okay. Very, very clear. Maybe the next two for David M. David, you said in your speech, you know, 8% was seen as a waypoint. What about nine? I mean, is there anything about the government contracts that sort of give you a natural ceiling, like the single source regs or anything, or would nine also be a waypoint?
The second and last one is, you had a slide on capital allocation, but if I can just probe a bit more, I mean, you should, based on the new guidance, generate well over GBP 200 million of free cash flow every year now. Just the split in particular, I'm intrigued between dividends and share buybacks, unless you do something else, if you could just talk to that. Right.
Okay. Fine. 9%, I think it's a little early to say whether that's a waypoint or not. I think certain businesses, so Cavendish, for example, are already past it. I think certain others, particularly ones with regulated pricing, as you suggest, may have a ceiling. I think for us at the moment, it's definitely a good target.
We did say 9% plus, but I think it's a little early to say, with the current business mix, whether it's just a waypoint that we would then go beyond. That's that one. I've forgotten your second. I'll answer the second one. We've seen dividend as a board, as a long-term commitment that we won't step back from. At the moment, given where we are and all of the potential capital allocation opportunities, including working with governments, plural, buyback is a point in time decision. We're not saying that buybacks will happen every year. We're saying this is a buyback because it's this year's decision. If we see a big organic or inorganic growth opportunity that consumes capital, it might not be a buyback in a year. One is a long-term commitment. The other is an in-year decision.
Morning, George McWhirter from Berenberg.
Two questions, please. Firstly, on the nuclear dismantling and refueling opportunity, I think you won a contract on that recently for about GBP 100 million. And I think it was also in the SDR. Can you just comment on how you expect the revenue from that to trend in your midterm guidance, please?
Yeah. So, that contract, so there's the contract and then there's the overall program. We do expect it to be a growth engine and therefore it is part of medium term. It will obviously go beyond the medium term window. That contract will spread over a number of years. In the scheme of things, it'll be relatively small, but obviously it's a new contract stream. It's growth. We are hoping, and we can't predict the phasing exactly, that this will be the start of a much bigger program. Thank you.
The second one was just on the JVs that you've talked about. We've quite a few different companies. Which ones of these do you think will be most relevant for you in the midterm guidance, please?
Oh gosh, I think that's really difficult to answer, and I wish you hadn't asked. I think that's why it's good to have multiple choices. If I look at PGZ in Poland, it could just be a bit more frigate support, which is GBP 100 million, currently GBP 100 million order that runs over a number of years. Or it could be much bigger. If I look at the deal we did with Safran last week, if we win two or three of the orders we targeted, that could be, that could be material or we might not win. Diso SARB.
I think I would look at it slightly differently, which is we take them all very, very seriously. We do not need to land them all big to hit medium term guidance. Going back to David's point, if they all landed big, that would be more than we are planning.
Morning, James Beard from Deutsche Bank. Two questions, please. Firstly, you mentioned you walked away from two M&A opportunities during the year. Could you give us a little bit more color about why you walked away from those opportunities? And secondly, on AUKUS, there has been some recent press speculating that the new U.S. administration might be slightly more doubtful about that program going forward. Can you just give any sort of additional color from your side on that? Yeah. Okay.
I'll do, so the first one, because the business plan that, so I think in both cases, the upside that we could see, no, actually I didn't even, that's not true. Basically, when we diligence the business plan, it didn't stack up. In one case, our view was the CapEx requirement was materially different to the one in their plan, enough to make the plan not valid. In the other case, there were business winning assumptions that we didn't believe were valid and in fact proved not to be valid. Those are the two reasons. In terms of Orcus, I guess any new administration reviews all its big programs, particularly its international one. The U.K. reviewed GCAP within the SDR. You could argue it reviewed Orcus within the SDR since the SDR restated its commitment. It must have reviewed it.
I don't think it's unusual for an administration to review a program seriously. I think it's a natural thing to do. Nothing we're hearing from our U.S. partners I would describe as worrying at the moment, but they've obviously only just started the review. Thank you.
Thank you, Sasha Tusa again. On the Single Source Regulations Office, SDR has some quite interesting comments in two separate places about how the government intends to change that and how that SSRO appears even to them to be a burden on industry rather than a benefit to government. What would you like to see in terms of changes? And do you think we will ever see any material impact from that?
The answer to that could take up the rest of this. I'll try and be concise.
It's a very good question. It's a really important question. It goes back to what I said about the last two decades. The last two decades has been about cost. SSRO is about cost, inspecting cost, and then auditing cost. It's all about cost. If that's not your primary concern, it's a key concern, but it's not your dominant concern going forward. If you want to motivate industry to be innovative, if you want to motivate industry to take on more risk, deploy more capital, the way the rules are written don't make that easy. When government talks about collaboration, I think what it's trying to talk about is changing the capital risk, innovation, delivery, change that whole dynamic to motivate industry to step up. The current regs aren't designed to do that. They're designed to control cost.
I think it will be a big part of the National Armaments Director's job to work out what, how to measure those things. The government has indicated they want to do it collaboratively with industry to work out what motivates industry to do those things. I think it's actually quite a big opportunity where government gets more, but we can take on more of the things we're good at, so we get more.
Thank you. A couple of questions on aviation. Again, SDR states fairly bluntly that the Hawks need to be replaced as soon as possible. Yeah. It then says the U.K. needs new fast jets, and it uses the term fast jets, but you seem to be proving in France that you can train pilots to go straight into a combat capable jet using turboprops.
Can you persuade the U.K. or the RAF of the efficacy of the mental process as opposed to buying a Hawk replacement?
Okay. I read fast jets as they need to replace F-35, not they need a fast jet. They do not, the Hawk is not a fast jet. It is a slow jet. What is a medium speed jet? It is a subsonic jet. It is a subsonic jet. Okay.
My body still says jets and not [crosstalk] fast train raiders. I think the evolution of Ascent from its current training environment into a new one is one potential opportunity for collaboration. Not saying it will happen, but clearly it runs for another few years and could be adjusted to deal with a number of these questions.
Just final aviation question.
You seem to be dipping your toe in the water of some sort of red air capability in France, which was something that a couple of years ago you said you did not want to get into. Now, that was specifically related to Asdot, which had extremely demanding requirements and similarly very high costs. What is changing now and what do you see as being the next opportunity?
Now, what we said was we would not do fast jet red air and we are not doing fast jet in France. We are doing, we are using, we are doing L-39. We are doing the slow, the subsonic jet part, in our bid. We are working with a company called Top Aces on fast jet red air. We would not do fast jet red air.