Good morning and welcome. Welcome to our FY 2022 results presentation. Welcome both to the, those of you in the room here in London and also for those online. I'm John Haworth, Head of Investor Relations at QinetiQ. I'm joined by Steve Wadey, our CEO, and Carol Borg, our CFO. Steve and Carol will run through the presentation, after which there'll be time for you to ask questions. Steve, over to you.
Great. Thank you, John, and good morning everybody and, as John said, welcome to our FY 2022 results. I'm immensely proud of the determination and commitment that our people have shown over the last year in pulling together to overcome a challenging first half and delivering a strong second half performance across the group. The sad events in Ukraine have reinforced the vital importance of a technologically advanced defense industry to society. In the short term, we've seen a modest increase in demand for our capabilities, but more fundamentally, the conflict has reinforced the strategic long-term needs of our customers for differentiated solutions. Such as our recent contract with the Royal Navy to support them in developing their future maritime air force through an interoperable mix of crewed and uncrewed systems.
With a strong balance sheet and an increasing demand for our high-value solutions, I'm confident in our long-term strategy to deliver our increased ambition, as we outlined at our investor seminar last month. The agenda this morning is as follows, I'll start by giving you the headlines. Carol will provide a commentary on our financial results, and I'll come back and give you a strategic update, and we'll then open up for any questions. Let's start with the headlines. We've delivered good progress with a strong second half momentum. Orders are up 9% on an organic basis, maintaining a robust order book. Revenue is up 5% on an organic basis.
Profit is GBP 137.4 million, equivalent to 11.4% margin before the complex project write-down, which is now fully closed, as we said in our quarter four trading update. Cash performance remains strong with 114% cash conversion up from 98% last year. Earnings per share is GBP 0.206, and the full year dividend is up 6% at GBP 0.073. With continued discipline and execution of our customer focus strategy, we have secured record order intake across the group at GBP 1.23 billion, delivered excellent revenue growth in Australia up 26%, and in the U.K. up 12%, driven by good program delivery across all our major contracts. U.S. revenue recovery was slower than expected, but our momentum is building with 20% year-on-year growth in orders.
At a group level, we've now achieved 75% revenue growth over the past six years. Looking forward, we start the year in a healthy position. We have GBP 900 million of the year's revenue under contract, and we are maintaining expectations for group performance. World events are heightening the market needs for our distinctive offerings, and as we shared at our investor seminar, we have increased the scale of our ambition to grow the company to more than GBP 2.3 billion of revenue, representing a further 75% growth over the next five years. To realize this ambition, we have a robust plan underpinned by investment in organic growth and strategic acquisitions with an enhanced focus on our environmental, social, and governance responsibility. We are focused and on track to deliver sustainable global growth over the next five years and deliver enhanced shareholder return.
Our performance has been underpinned by a number of significant operational highlights across our global company. In the U.K., we delivered NATO's largest missile defense exercise, leveraging our successful investment in the long-term partnering agreement. The Engineering Delivery Partner contract continues to grow with GBP 320 million of new orders, and we secured more than GBP 160 million of digital intelligence orders, demonstrating the criticality of our cyber and information advantage offering. In February, I was delighted to welcome Shawn Purvis as the new President and CEO of our U.S. business. She is strengthening her team and focused on improving our operational performance, including winning larger, longer-term programs such as the $70 million production phase for the next generation bomb suit.
Our Australian business continues to go from strength to strength, including winning AUD 97 million of new contracts to deliver technical and engineering services. Following the pandemic, I'm really pleased to see our target systems business fully recovered with the largest ever order intake at GBP 42 million. In Germany, we continued flying operations throughout the year and are focused on pursuing future opportunities for both operational training and special missions. Finally, our space business in Belgium has had a really excellent year with a number of record contracts from the European Space Agency and delivered record revenue. These are just a few of many operational highlights across the company where we are delivering high-value solutions critical to national defense and security challenges, demonstrating our strategy in action. I'll now hand over to Carol to take us through the financial results.
Thanks, Steve, and good morning everyone. It's really lovely to see some of you again, in person following our investment seminar, a couple of weeks ago. I intend to provide more detail confirming what we presented in our Q4 trading update, that our FY 2022 results will be marginally ahead of our previous guidance and current market consensus expectations. As Steve alluded to, FY 2022 has been a year of two halves. Our first half was indeed challenging, impacted by two discrete short-term issues. Drawing on the resilience, strength, and disciplined execution across the entire organization, we have delivered a strong second half, and overall have delivered good underlying operational performance at a group level for the full year. This slide shows our top six financial KPIs that summarize our financial performance for the year.
The top row shows that we have delivered our largest order intake at GBP 1.23 billion, growing 7% on a reported basis, demonstrating high demand for our distinctive offerings. Strong revenue at GBP 1.32 billion, growing 3% on a reported basis through good program execution and delivery across all our major contracts. Strong cash performance with underlying net cash flow from operations at GBP 215.3 million, an increase of 8% on a reported basis, largely due to robust working capital management. You're all aware that we had a complex project write-down in our H1 results. As communicated in our Q4 trading update, we have now fully closed the complex project contract and the financial impact remains the GBP 14.5 million write-down with no additional financial risk.
To assist in understanding of our underlying performance, I will make some comparisons to results pre-write-down. The second row shows we have delivered good underlying operating profit at GBP 137.4 million, which is equivalent to 11.4% margin pre-write-down, consistent with our short-term guidance. If not for the write-down, we would have delivered underlying profit in line with last year. This impact flows through to the remaining two KPIs. Underlying return on capital employed of 26%, decreasing by two percentage points, and underlying basic earnings per share of GBP 0.206 , decreasing by 7%. In summary, good progress with strong second half momentum, resulting in overall good underlying performance in FY 2022 at a group level. Now onto orders. We've secured impressive order growth at GBP 1.23 billion, growing 7%, 9% on an organic basis.
As referred to by Steve, in EMEA Services, this has included GBP 320 million of Engineering Delivery Partner, EDP, framework orders, GBP 115 million under the Weapons Sector Research Framework, and in excess of GBP 160 million from Defence Digital and Defence Intelligence. In global products, this has included a $62 million order for the full rate production contract of the SPUR robots. We continue to build a significant order backlog at GBP 2.83 billion as at the March 31st, 2022. What is pleasing to see is our success in winning new business for our distinctive offerings outside the long-term partnering agreement, LTPA. The LTPA is a large multi-year contract that was booked in prior years. As we deliver revenue under this contract, this will naturally reduce the LTPA order backlog.
Order backlog excluding the LTPA is continuing to steadily increase with 7% CAGR increase now standing at GBP 1.33 billion. We can also see the realization of our previously stated strategy of moving towards larger, longer-term contracts. In FY 2022, 34% of our orders were greater than GBP 5 million in contract value, an increase from 28% two years ago. Steve will present how this translates into our pipeline later in the presentation. Revenue. We have delivered strong revenue at GBP 1.32 billion, growing 3%, 5% on an organic basis. This has been driven by 13% organic growth in EMEA Services, primarily due to ongoing EDP growth, new work under the Weapons Sector Research Framework contract, and work delivered under the major service provider contract in Australia, again, as referred to by Steve earlier.
Global products was down 16% organically due to the U.S. revenue performance recovery being slower than expected. H2 U.S. revenue was in line with H1 revenue, largely due to changing market dynamics and the U.S. defense budget being constrained by the extended Continuing Resolution. We start the new financial year with approximately GBP 900 million of the group's FY 2023 revenue under contract, compared to GBP 800 million of the FY 2022 revenue under contract at the same time last year. This reflects strong performance in our key framework contracts and provides a greater level of confidence in the delivery of our FY 2023 results. We have delivered good underlying operating profit at GBP 137.4 million, ahead of the GBP 135 million that we guided in the Q4 trading update. This represents a decline of 9%, 12% on an organic basis.
As illustrated on this chart. Pre-write-down underlying operating profit would be in line with last year, equivalent to 11.4% margin, consistent with our short-term guidance. EMEA Services delivered 14% organic growth, driven by revenue increases and continued focus on operational efficiency. Unfortunately, this only partially offsets the decrease in global products, which, as communicated in our H1 results, was primarily due to slower recovery in the U.S. and the complex project write-down. Now turning to the divisional split of the group performance. First, we have EMEA Services. EMEA Services has delivered significant year-on-year growth across all businesses, driven by successful implementation of our strategy to win larger, longer-term contracts, which gives us greater visibility on and margin stability. We have increased orders by 6%, revenue by 13%, and operating profit by 14%, all on both a reported and organic basis.
Operating profit margin remains strong at 12.8%, slightly ahead of last year, reflecting ongoing disciplined contract delivery and execution and cost control measures. With a book-to-bill ratio of 1.1 x, excluding the LTPA, we have maintained a substantial order backlog, which gives us good forward revenue visibility. Next, on global products. Global products has had a number of notable achievements in year, including the full rate production FRP contract for SPUR robots, which I mentioned earlier. As referred to by Steve, our targets business delivered a record high order intake. These achievements have unfortunately been offset by slower performance recovery in the U.S., nothing of which is new, rather it is consistent with what we have mentioned in our H1 results.
Order intake was up 8%, 20% organically, driven by the achievements I have just mentioned, partially offset by the write-down, which impacted orders by GBP 22.5 million. Revenue was down 23%, 16% organically, largely driven by slower recovery of the U.S. performance as I explained earlier, with operating profit at 0.7%. Excluding the impact of the write-down, the operating profit margin would be 6%. We continue to work towards double-digit operating margin for this division in the medium term. While we've experienced slower recovery in the U.S., momentum is building, as evidenced by a book-to-bill ratio of 1.2 x. We are confident in the local leadership teams to deliver strong revenue and profit performance in FY 2023. On to cash.
We have delivered strong cash with underlying net cash flow, cash flow from operations of GBP 215.3 million, equating to a cash conversion of 114%, largely due to robust working capital management. Listening to stakeholder feedback, we have changed our cash conversion definition to reflect our pre-capital expenditure cash flows as a proportion of EBITDA in order to demonstrate how we convert our profit, excluding interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization, into cash flow. Under this new definition, we achieved underlying cash conversion of 114%, an increase from 98% last year applying the new definition. Also, we invested GBP 84.3 million in capital expenditure, predominantly driven by the ongoing LTPA and digital transformation. We retain a strong balance sheet to support investment in our long-term growth strategy.
After paying tax of GBP 20 million and dividend of GBP 40.2 million, we delivered a net cash position of GBP 225.1 million as at March 31st, 2022. We maintain a rigorous approach to the deployment of our capital, scrutinizing organic and inorganic opportunities in the same manner to ensure returns to our shareholders appropriately reflect the risks. As I presented at our investment seminar three weeks ago, we have a clear and concise capital allocation policy that we continue to deploy for the benefit of all of our stakeholder groups. Examples of what we executed under this policy in FY 2022 are as follows. Priority one, investing in our capabilities, both organically and inorganically. I mentioned on the previous slide our GBP 84 million organic investment in capital expenditure.
We continue to explore inorganic opportunities that support our long-term growth strategy, evidenced by a specific adjusting item recognized this year in relation to an unsuccessful inorganic acquisition opportunity. Priority two, maintaining balance sheet strength. As mentioned on the previous slide, we have delivered excellent cash performance, both in terms of cash conversion and ending cash balance. Our balance sheet could support leverage if we felt it appropriate for the right strategic acquisition opportunity. This is not a target, but something we are open to considering to support the long-term growth of the group, obviously, if it passes our three investment gates of strategic fit, economics, and deliverability. Priority three, providing a progressive dividend to shareholders.
We have announced a full year dividend of GBP 0.073 per share, an increase of 6% from last year, and have made dividend payments of GBP 40.2 million during the year. Finally, priority four, returning our excess cash to shareholders. We continue to regularly review this to ensure consistency with our overall strategy. While we have had a material cash balance for a few years, and with good operational performance and strategic rigor, this may continue to increase in the short term. We are comfortable with this, as it gives us the flexibility in prosecuting our strategy, as you will hear from Steve later in the presentation. Other technical factors. The following slide shows the result of the other technical factors contributing to our financial results and the expected trajectory into FY 2023. Net finance expense is expected to remain consistent into next year.
Effective tax rate is expected to increase due to the growth in proportion of international profits. Tax cash outflow is expected to remain consistent into next year. Net working capital is expected to realize a modest cash outflow as a result of our growth ambition. Capital expenditure is expected to increase to the upper end of our guidance of GBP 90 million-GBP 120 million as we continue to invest in our customer-facing propositions, our employee value proposition, and our business infrastructure. Finally, our outlook statement. We enter FY 2023 with confidence, a healthy order book, GBP 900 million of revenue under contract, and positive momentum.
We remain confident to deliver in line with our current expectations for FY 2023, with mid-single digit organic revenue growth and operating profit towards the middle of our 11%-12% expected range, lower than our medium to long-term guidance, driven by inflationary pressures and our continued investment to support future growth. As you will hear from Steve, our ambition is to deliver circa 75% growth in the next five years, as we have delivered in the last six years, with revenue of more than GBP 2.3 billion in FY 2027 and beyond. This means we are targeting mid-single digit % compound organic revenue growth over the next five years, with strategic acquisitions further enhancing this growth.
We are targeting an operating profit margin of 12%-13% in the mid to long term, and ROCE is forecast to remain strong at the upper end of the 15%-20% range. With that, I'll now hand back to Steve.
Great. Thank you, Carol. Now let's turn to our strategic update. QinetiQ's investment case is to grow an integrated global defense and security company operating in attractive markets with distinctive offerings to deliver enhanced shareholder returns. Over the last six years, we've built a company delivering good operational performance, as shown from the left to the middle of this slide, growing by 75% to GBP 1.32 billion of revenue, and growing operating profit at 6% per year, excluding the one-time writedown. By focusing on our customers' needs, we've also increased our forward visibility with our three-year revenue cover nearly doubling to GBP 1.9 billion, and our five years order pipeline more than tripling to GBP 7 billion.
Building on this strong momentum, and with recent world events reinforcing the long-term needs of our customers, we have chosen to increase the scale of our ambition. Our plan is to grow by another 75% over the next five years to more than GBP 2.3 billion revenue, as shown from the middle to the right of this slide. As you heard from my team at the seminar last month, we see 30% of this growth coming from the U.K. and more than 50% coming from Australia and the U.S. This plan is enabled by our strong balance sheet and underpinned by rigorous financial discipline through both organic opportunities and strategic acquisitions. We're at an exciting stage in the development of the company and are focused on delivering sustainable global growth for all our stakeholders over the long term. The global security situation is worsening.
Tensions have risen to new heights following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and the Indo-Pacific threat remains. These threats are driving budget prioritization and defense modernization. This picture shows our addressable market in each of our home and priority countries and our current market share, demonstrating that we have significant growth potential. In the United States, the budget request this year has the largest ever requirement for research and development and test and evaluation of advanced technologies such as cyber, space, and artificial intelligence. Science and technology also remains at the heart of the U.K.'s strategy, with GBP 6.6 billion investment over the next four years into research and development and rapid experimentation of next-generation capabilities. The Australian defense budget continues to grow rapidly with a strong commitment to building sovereign industrial capability, including test and evaluation and robotics.
In the last year, we have also seen the creation of a trilateral partnership between the governments of Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States, known as AUKUS. The AUKUS partnership, initially formed with a focus on submarines, has recently been expanded to include advanced capabilities such as counter-hypersonics. By focusing on these countries and their increased emphasis on novel capabilities, we see heightened need for our high-value solutions to drive growth into an addressable market worth more than GBP 20 billion per year.
Within this market context, our strategy is unchanged and is increasingly relevant, providing a clear focus for our business decisions and our investment choices. We are a company with a clear focus, with a clear purpose, vision, and customer value proposition that we call mission-led innovation, co-creating cost-effective solutions to meet our customers' needs at pace, as we have seen reinforced by the conflict in Ukraine.
As we embark on the next phase of growth, we are increasing our emphasis on our people, who are at the heart of delivering our growth strategy and are passionate about our customers' purpose, company's purpose. We're investing in our high-performance inclusive culture to ensure we are continuously creating a safe and secure environment for everyone to thrive. As our people thrive, our business will thrive, and we will deliver sustainable growth. We're already making good progress in building this integrated defense and security company through global leverage of our unique capabilities across the group. Over the past six years, we have significantly improved our customer focus and upskilled our business-winning capability, enabling us to win larger, longer-term programs consistently.
Working in partnership with our customers and our suppliers, we have successfully grown positions on major contracts, such as the Engineering Delivery Partner program in the U.K., the Optionally Manned Fighting Vehicle in the U.S., and the major service provider in Australia. Our momentum continues to build with record order intake this year at GBP 1.23 billion. Through continued focus on program execution, we have delivered excellent year-on-year revenue growth in Australia, up 26%, and in the U.K., up 12%. In the U.S., revenue recovery was slower than we expected, largely due to the U.S. defense budget being constrained by the extended Continuing Resolution. However, with 20% growth in new awards and a new leadership team under Shawn Purvis, we are creating a strong foundation for growth both this year and beyond.
Building on our track record of growing the company by more than 75% over the past six years, we are well-positioned to grow by a further 75% over the next five years. Our major focus for growth is in our three home countries, the U.K., U.S., and Australia, where we are pursuing similar opportunities to support their shared defense and security mission. Through our multi-domestic strategy, we continue to sharpen our focus on co-creating and delivering these distinctive offerings that add value to our customers. As I've shared before, we deliver mission-led innovation through these offerings as shown on the slide. We optimize our capabilities internally through leveraging our solutions globally so that we can maximize growth opportunities externally through single routes to market. By applying this business model, we create value for our customers and enable growth.
Let me give you a current example in our distinctive offering of experimentation and technology. In the U.K., we are world leaders in weapons research and are at the cutting edge of developing laser-directed energy technology. We make an important contribution to the U.K.'s sovereign capability as identified in the government's Integrated Review. We are currently leveraging these world-class skills into our Australian business to develop sovereign capability and support next-generation laser technology, a key focus area under AUKUS. With increasing demand for our high-value solutions to national defense and security challenges, our offerings are increasingly relevant. A critical element of the success of this strategy is applying disruptive innovation to accelerate solutions for our customers with even greater agility and pace. As I mentioned before, the threat environment has become increasingly complex, as evidenced by recent and current events.
Our adversaries are deploying novel capabilities, as seen in Ukraine with the first operational use of a hypersonic strike missile. This changing character of warfare demands a major shift in our customers' response to neutralize such threats. Our response to this environment is to ensure that we remain at the cutting edge of technology, which can be rapidly integrated into interoperable solutions that create operational advantage. I've already mentioned that we are a world leader in weapons research, and last year we secured GBP 115 million of orders to develop advanced technologies, including exploring the application of directed energy for counter-hypersonics. Creating technology is not enough. Disruptive innovation requires us to partner with our customers and industry to co-create solutions which rapidly pulls our technology through into operational use.
Our approach to innovation has enabled us to win larger, longer-term programs and grow our five-year orders pipeline to over GBP 7 billion. We've achieved more than 25% growth in the pipeline over the last two years, with 2/3 coming from orders worth more than GBP 5 million. This expansion in our pipeline underpins our confidence in future growth. To ensure our growth is sustainable, we are enhancing our focus on environmental, social, and governance responsibility. We already have a significant environmental agenda, including managing over 50 internationally recognized conservation sites. We also work closely with our customers to co-create sustainable solutions, such as the modernization of St Kilda, a world-class heritage site in the middle of our world-class test range, as shown in the picture.
From a social perspective, we are a people business, and we want our people to feel inspired and everybody have the opportunity to realize their full potential. This year, we are enhancing our focus on both physical safety and well-being, committing an additional GBP 10 million into our reward offering, focused on supporting those on lower pay due to the rapidly increasing cost of living and embracing the many forms of difference that make us stronger, including a new global target of 30% women across the company by 2030. Effective governance is critical to our sustainability. We are focused on strengthening our own skills and processes as well as those of our supply chain.
Driven by our company purpose, we take the ethics of defense seriously and carefully consider who we do business with and the projects that we undertake to protect lives and secure the vital interests of our customers. This year, we're taking our focus on ESG to a new level with 17.5% of all leadership incentives focused on delivering these commitments. To realize our ambition, we have a clear strategic business plan focused on creating a global leader in mission-led innovation. The picture on the right illustrates the current breadth of our six distinctive offerings in each of our home countries. This provides a guide for our business decisions and strategic investment choices with a long-term objective to build a full suite of offerings in each of our home countries so that we grow coherently into our GBP 20 billion addressable market.
To achieve this objective, we drive organic growth by building local capability and leveraging our offerings across countries, such as the launch of our new test and evaluation sovereign skills program to transfer our world-class capabilities from the U.K. into Australia and creating new opportunities through our global campaigns. In addition, our strong balance sheet provides the capacity to undertake strategic acquisitions that strengthen our capabilities, extend our customer base, and build scale. We are actively managing a pipeline of opportunities with a priority focus on Australia and the U.S. as we covered in some detail at the investor seminar last month. Our organic and acquisitive strategy is underpinned by continued investment in our people, technology and capabilities to ensure that we stay ahead and are even more relevant to the changing character of warfare.
With a robust plan to drive disciplined execution of our strategy, we're on track to realize our global ambition. In summary, I'm incredibly proud of how our people have pulled together to overcome a challenging first half and deliver a strong second half performance. We achieved 9% orders growth and 5% revenue growth on an organic basis, and delivered GBP 137.4 million in profit, equivalent to 11.4% margin before the complex project write-down. We've continued to drive disciplined execution of our strategy, which has now delivered 75% revenue growth over the last six years.
World events have heightened the market needs for our distinctive offerings, and as a result, we've increased the scale of our ambition to grow the company to more than GBP 2.3 billion of revenue, representing another 75% over the next five years. With a robust plan underpinned by investment in organic growth and strategic acquisitions, I'm confident that our long-term strategy will realize our ambition. We are focused and on track to build an integrated global defense and security company to deliver sustainable growth with enhanced returns for our shareholders. Carol and I will now be happy to take any questions. Hand over to you.
Thank you, Steve and Carol. We will do questions in the room here first, followed by those online. For those in the room, please may I ask you to raise your hand, and wait for a microphone. For those online, there is a phone number provided for you to ask your question if you could dial into that. Let's start in the room here first. Charlotte?
Morning. Charlotte from Barclays. First one from me is just on your five-year growth ambition. You said in the press release that 30% of that growth would be coming from the U.K. and that your Australian and U.S. home countries are your targets for M&A. I'll assume that's all organic growth, and it represents about GBP 300 million of revenue incremental by 2027. Could you just give us a bit more detail on what your assumptions are behind that in terms of where the growth areas are for the U.K.?
Thanks, Charlotte. Maybe just a bit of color first. Of the 75% growth over the next five years, we see about half of that coming from organic growth and half coming from acquisitions. As we said in the statement, the priority for inorganic is Australia and the U.S., but not solely. We will look at other acquisitions if appropriate. Coming to the U.K. growth, the assumption is that 30% notionally is organic, and you know, Carol can add some color to that.
It's really through continuing doing the things that we've been doing over the last four or five years, whether that's in your engineering services such as EDP, we see that continuing to bring, you know, net positive momentum to the company and expanding some of the services that we've modernized in the long-term partnering agreement, including greater throughput, you know, from some international customers. The 30% is organic. It will come from, you know, bigger, larger programs. The Weapons Sector Research Framework that we mentioned, we still see that as a major contributor. You've seen GBP 115 million of order intake on the Weapons Sector Research Framework contract, which is a huge achievement.
Therefore, with the dynamics that we're seeing, you know, out of the Integrated Review and that continued focus on technology modernization and R&D, we'll see that come through research frameworks, engineering service framework contracts, and the long-term partnering agreement. Carol, do you want to add?
Yeah. Maybe just an add on that. Charlotte, you obviously know that we don't segment by countries, but the U.K. is split across EMEA Services and global products. In FY 2022, EMEA Services did grow by about 12.6% in terms of revenue growth, and we are just further to our call just earlier, we are guiding around 4%-5% revenue growth across the global group in the future. We'll see a little bit more of an uptick on global products in FY 2023, beg your pardon. EMEA Services will come down to more mid-single digit growth rates in FY 2023.
Does that answer your question?
Yes, it does. Yeah.
Morning. It's Richard Paige from Numis. A couple of questions from me, please. Looking in EMEA Services in a bit more depth, the cyber business has obviously grown quite strongly over the last three years. It's now, what, 29% of divisional sales? I think it was 18% only three years ago. Could you just give a bit more color about what's happening there and obviously that trajectory of growth can go forward? Moving to global products, the U.S. order intake's obviously much stronger. You've got greater visibility starting this year. What sort of trajectory should we see, particularly from the U.S. business this year? I'm thinking first half, second half, working forwards and obviously with that QTS order book as well.
Okay. I'll start off maybe, let's do each one and we'll add some comments on each one. First of all, what's happening in the cyber business? Well, what's happening is exactly what we plan to happen, which you'll remember, five years ago, we recruited James Willis, you know, to come in with his background, you know, of that cyber domain, and he's built a strong team, and he's driven that growth. He's done that exactly as we planned to do, which was focusing on, you know, the customer, partnering and building larger, you know, longer-term projects. You know, publicly, I think the first large win was the BATCIS program around Battlefield and Tactical Communication and Information Systems. That program has, you know, grown revenue rapidly.
It's very similar in the mainline defense sector as EDP, slightly different scale, but those type of engineering and technical services. In the announcement, you may not have gone through in detail, we've won some significant orders to modernize the intelligence and information management systems for certain parts of defense command. There's some contract wins identified, you know, in the report. It's really about that continued momentum, you know, Richard, of focusing on the customer and building up those longer-term contracts. As you saw, you know, in one of the headlines, you know, that amounted to GBP 160 million of additional awards across what is called Defence Digital in U.K. Strategic Command.
You know, we are one of the, you know, primary partners there now in that sort of relationship. It's just really good focus and good momentum. We expect to see more of that, you know, over the coming years, and of course, that will contribute, you know, to the 30% growth that Charlotte was asking about. Do you want to cover a bit more on EMEA, and then we talk about the U.S.?
I think you've covered EMEA.
Okay. All right. Well, I'll go on to the U.S. Well, yeah, on the U.S., I won't be specific about next year. You know our plan. Our plan is that we will aim to more than double the size of the business over the next five years. You know, Shawn's doing a great job. You know, she's in the business now for just over two months. She's building a team focused on, you know, operational performance. You know, she's particularly, you know, building a business development capability, which is entirely analogous to what we've done in the U.K. over the last, you know, five years, and that focus on partnering, you know, real opportunities, longer term opportunities. I would expect that to start to bring, you know, you know, benefits.
I mean, the focus is what we've said before, you know, Richard, more than double over the next five years. You know, significant component of that will be organic, but as we've clearly, you know, identified over the last year, and hopefully, you know, if you like my, you know, Harvey Balls chart, you know, you can see where the emphasis, you know, is not just of organic growth, but also where we will be looking to put our capital, to work through strategy-led acquisitions.
I might add on this one, if I may.
Okay. Yeah.
Obviously, U.S. forms part of the global products business. Just to reiterate, ordinarily, in FY 2022, 0.7% operating profit margin, if not for the writedown 6% compared to 9.8% last year. We are still working towards our trajectory of moving towards double-digit operating margin in that division in the midterm. Richard, to your point around timing, Shawn's in. We've had a great kick up in terms of orders, great book-to-bill ratio, but she's still bedding in her team. My recommendation would be not to be too bullish in terms of seeing that in the first half. We will take the full year to get that through. I'm not sure we'll get to double digits in FY 2023, but I think we'll have a good go at it. I would suggest that it's the trajectory over the full year that you can see the global products business rebounding.
Thank you. Just to follow up on. It's probably too early to be talking about this, but you've obviously set out a five-year strategy. When do you start properly sitting down on the LTPA renewal? 'Cause that will be in that time frame.
The renewal officially, as everybody knows, 'cause it's transparent, is 2028. It's something we're working on every day now, because, you know, we're continuously looking about how do we, you know, modernize the services and make, you know, various, you know, elements more attractive, you know, for both, you know, the U.K. customer and as I referred to Charlotte, attracting in further international usage. I mean, just as an example of the success of that program, the test aircrew training project that you remember, which was one of the big first, you know, projects, in the last two years, and I think we used to get a lot of questions whether we would attract greater international throughput.
The U.K. throughput is increased by 50% on test aircrew training, and the international throughput has tripled in three years. That's an incredible example that when you modernize something based on what a customer needs, you do become attractive, and then you get the, you know, the increased revenue, therefore, return. We're talking all the time, you know, about what those needs are going to evolve to be, you know. The Integrated Review, you know, set out, you know, what future defense trends were, what was needed in terms of how systems would modernize, and therefore, you know, we can then get ahead of the game to think about how we modernize the test and evaluation services. I didn't speak to it, but it was on one of my charts.
I talked about digital T&E, which we've talked about before. You know, that is probably, you know, one of the, you know, big elements of how you create a blend of live and virtual test and evaluation. We're making, you know, good progress with our customer on our digital T&E platform that will complement, you know, the services that we give in the long-term partner agreement. It's called the Defence Experimentation and Evaluation Capability. That's our strappy name for our sort of digital T&E platform. The more that we do those things, you know, the more attractive we will become. In my mind, you know, staying ahead of the game, being customer-focused, you know, 2028 is something that will just, you know, sail past. That's the plan.
Thank you.
Thanks. Good morning. David Farrell from Jefferies. A couple of questions. Firstly, just in terms of M&A, clearly the public markets have rerated strongly, post Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Just wondering, has that impacted the conversations you've had with potential M&A partners over pricing? Or are they sufficiently removed from the public markets that it doesn't feature? My second question was around the space business within global products. I think I'm right in saying the Russians have said they're no longer going to collaborate with NASA, the European Space Agency as well. Does that impact the outlook for that business?
Okay. Two sort of great questions. On the M&A re-rerating with Ukraine, directly, I would say no. It's probably a bit of a yes and no question, because clearly something like Ukraine creates uncertainty. You know, so you can see a sort of downside or an upside, you know, effect of that. I guess until we're, you know, in that significant sort of final stage of pricing, then it's quite hard to sort of answer the question. In terms of, you know, our pipeline, our level of discussion, you know, has anything directly changed? Not at this stage.
You know, on space, I'm afraid the answer's gonna be no again, because, you know, we've got a good blend of programs that have got no sort of direct connection between ESA, you know, and Russia. They're independent European programs. So not only are they fully funded by the European Space Agency, but we also have some standalone commercial programs, you know, that we're running from the Belgian business. So, you know, no direct impact that we see at this stage.
All right. Good to hear.
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Hi, it's George McWhirter from Berenberg. Just a question on your order pipeline. It's gone up about GBP 1 billion - GBP 7 billion. Please can you just talk about the drivers behind that? Thanks.
Yeah. I mean, what's quite interesting, if you go on my slide to the first chart on page 17, it's actually gone from just under GBP 2 billion - GBP 7 billion in six years, George. So, you know, hence my, you know, more than tripling over six years. The fundamentals of that were, and I'm afraid I've got to go back in history, you know, when we first launched the strategy in 2016 and the primary driver was, you know, customer focus. The group at that point in time, you know, had very little competitive work, and it really wasn't focused on how it could partner, understand customer needs and, you know, grow large programs. We went through a sort of major change program to upskill, you know, our business winning capability.
I think we replaced 60% of our business development capability in the company. We changed our processes. We built board to board in relationships with all of the major industrial, you know, partners in the defense and security world. We kept focused. You know, what's happened really is that you know through that you know persistent focus of understanding the customer need, partnering, you know, working out how we can blend our skills and our supply chain skills, you know, that's why we've delivered record order intake this year, and it's why the pipeline continues to expand. I think really it's that simple. Keeping to a simple model, you know, focusing on that and driving it through.
As I said, the fact that our pipeline is now at GBP 7 billion, you know, that gives us, you know, huge confidence that the growth trajectory will, you know, continue from an organic growth perspective. But that's the key to answer your question, George. Having, like, not the ability to see you, I don't know. Oh, sorry, you're there. I thought it was an online. You misled me that it was online. Sorry, George. Does that answer your question?
Yeah, that was really helpful.
I knew you were there. I could have looked at you.
Hi there. Thank you. Charles Armitage from Citi. First of all, on the LTPA, I mean, that's you really need to win that from a strategic position. As I understand it, the more you invest, you get a return on that. Presumably, if you were to lose it, you would get a reimbursement from the government, from the stuff you've invested. Can you give us any idea of the size of that?
First of all, we're not gonna lose it, as per my prior answer. If you step back over the last four years, we've committed just over GBP 400 million, you know, with this contract to modernize it. It's becoming very attractive. It's getting high utility, and it's on point with delivering what the customers require. That particular scenario about what would happen in such a scenario isn't something that I'd want to sort of talk about, you know, publicly. There's clearly a lot of commercial, you know, aspects around how, you know, a contract would break.
You know, the clear focus for us is making sure that through that investment, which is very positive and is giving us, you know, good returns and giving the customer what the customer wants, that we continue to do that so that it's just more and more attractive, more and more relevant. As I said to Richard, we just sailed past 2028. If I look at where we were in 2015, you know, when I joined, it, you know, it was a real challenge, you know. That's just, you know, six years ago, you know. The engagement with the customer, the feedback from the customer, you know, is brilliant, you know. It's being used in so many different ways.
With six years to go, to that point, we're just, you know, it's a bit like the, my answer to the business winning, you know, answer. We're just going to keep to, you know, that focus of, you know, listening, understanding, being ahead, investing, and make sure that it's just continuously attractive, and move forward. In fact, you know, over the long term, we probably see the demand, you know, for the type of activities going through the LTPA is growing. Certainly I've had questions about whether the focus on, you know, digital T&E will reduce throughput. We don't see that as the case at all. We see it blending, you know, live and virtual capabilities together to actually enhance the spectrum of offerings that we put through, you know, the LTPA.
I think that as long as we keep that model, you know, going, it's a scenario that I don't see occurring. It's a nice poison pill as well, it seems to me. You might say that. I would say we'll deliver what the customer needs, so we sail past 2028.
The next question is, we've seen defense budgets across Europe at least promised to go up. Quite a lot of it seems to be about resilience and the ability to sustain warfare rather than necessarily new warfare. You know, stockpiling. Can you just sort of walk through how your different businesses will benefit from those increasing defense budgets? You know, the LTPA, there's not gonna be much more testing because it's gonna be more of the same thing. In hypersonics or whatever else, there will be more to advanced weapons and so forth. Just sort of pushes and takes.
Yeah. Interesting to a comment you made there. Even in recent weeks, we've had increased testing. My answer to the question is a sort of multilevel. First of all, you know, there have been some countries where you've seen immediate change to defense budgets, Germany probably being the case in point. You know, other countries haven't yet, but, you know, clearly there's a backdrop, you know, of tension that might lead to increased budget. I think the important thing for us is it's clearly helpful to have a positive outlook to, you know, macro defense spending.
I think that our primary issue is what are those budgets prioritized on, which I think is what your question is really getting at. We see that prioritization reinforcing both aspects of, you know, our mainstream business. Certainly, the engineering services activity, we see that it will expand because engineering services are the key to how customers develop, integrate, you know, and get capability into the front line, including how, you know, they may need to enhance stockpiles. We do see, you know, that creating a positive dynamic on engineering services. Really importantly, the technology-led modernization side, and I mentioned that quite a lot today, you know, we do see, you know, significant reprioritization.
I mentioned the U.S., you know, $30 billion higher for this year, includes the largest ever request for research development and test and evaluation in technologies. The U.K. budget has an incremental GBP 6.6 billion on advanced technology. You know, understanding, and you've seen this in Ukraine, that technological advantage is critical, you know, reinforces, you know, what we do every day. I think that sort of outlook is positive for both of our dynamics, and therefore, whilst we, and this may have been a subtlety in what we presented at the investor seminar and today, whilst we haven't changed the scale of our addressable market, we've still referred to that as more than GBP 20 billion.
Because of those dynamics that I've just described, that's why we've increased the scale of the ambition to GBP 2.3 billion for the company within that addressable market, because we see that heightened need in the market for the offerings that we supply.
One more, possibly two, if I may. Inflation. Can you just talk about escalation clauses, the ability to pass on inflation, what you're seeing? Do you want to take this one?
I can take that one. Our business is largely a people business. Wage inflation is a key element of the things that we're looking at. Steve mentioned in his presentation, we're investing GBP 10 million in our award employee value proposition, which goes a long way at trying to address that inflationary measures, particularly for our lower income earners across the organization. That's also, I think I mentioned as well, I think I know I mentioned, that we're investing about 100 basis points of our margin into investments that includes inflationary measures as well. The other side of the coin is, you know, revenue protection cost base. We enter FY 2023 with GBP 900 million of revenue under contract.
We ordinarily are 50% hedged, either through cost plus contracting mechanisms or in fact variation of price clauses. We've still got a bit to get, right, in terms of delivering next year. I feel that we've got a good handle on it, on the assumptions that we've included, to deal with the inflationary pressures, obviously faced by other organizations as well as ours, in the immediate term.
Of course. GBP 2.3 billion, mid-single digit organic growth. I can work my calculator compound growth. That gets me to about GBP 1.7 billion. You need to buy about 600-ish million. That's, you know, that makes quite a dent or likely to make quite a dent in your cash pile. Back of the envelope, doesn't seem as though there's gonna be an awful lot of cash to return to shareholders beyond the dividend, progressive dividend.
Do you want to go first?
I'll go first. Yeah. Again, we have a very clear and concise capital allocation policy. Return of excess cash to shareholders is a priority, but there are obviously others that come before that. Investing in organic and inorganic opportunities is certainly there. I think our balance sheet strength also shows that we could support some leverage up to, you know, starting with a two, maybe going a bit higher than that in the short term, before we come back. It's certainly something that we certainly, it's part of our strategy and something that we've set our stall out to achieve.
Yeah, I would just reinforce. I think we've been totally transparent about what our strategy is. We've been totally transparent about the capital allocation policy that you know, Carol's outlined. You know, and as you've seen from our results, you know, from what was in the middle column, you know, we had GBP 3.7 million of charge related to an acquisition that we chose not to proceed with, which also shows, you know, discipline, you know, in the way that we think about acquisitions. Our priority, as Carol said, is organic growth, you know, focused on the countries that we've mentioned. You can also see, and I mentioned Australia and U.S. as being our priorities, you know, when it comes to acquisitions. You know, we will put our balance sheet to work under a strategy-led capital allocation policy. That is the plan. Good questions.
Morning. Hi, it's Annabel from Stifel. Just two questions please, after Charles' marathon. The first one on the circle chart. Thank you for that on page 24. Just really from a sort of an M&A standpoint, and I know that we are thinking of larger scale acquisitions. Do we have a preference here to broaden the offering in circles that are already partially filled? Or could we go into a blank circle as it currently stands?
It's always hard with a generic question. But the answer is, we could do either. It's a very simple depiction to try to, you know, help, you know, guide you. But yes. If we take an example of, you know, engineering services in the U.S., you know, 90+% of our engineering services in the U.S. is around the Army. You know, could we consider, you know, moving, you know, that breadth into, you know, air or maritime through an appropriate capability expansion? Yes, we could. Would we consider, you know, moving into a complete blank circle in the U.S. around cyber and information advantage?
Yeah, absolutely, because it complements what we currently have in the U.S., and we can see strong leverage, you know, across, you know, the countries in line with what we do in the U.K. The answer is, it could be both of those scenarios, Annabel. You know, the acquisition that we were taking exceptionally seriously during the course of the year, you know, would've filled, you know, some of those significant white spaces as well as expanding the customer domain. It actually did both, given the scale that it was. If your question then moves on to, well, are you focused purely on one scale? The answer is no.
Our pipeline that we're looking at, you know, we'll be looking at acquisitions in the, you know, $100 million class up to multi-hundred million dollar class. Again, the world of acquisitions, as we all know, you know, it does take two to tango. We have an active pipeline. We have many, you know, parallel discussions, and time will determine exactly what we proceed with to fill in those charts.
Cool. Thank you. Second question, possibly less generic. Just on QTS. Great sort of rebound there after the delays we saw with COVID. Given new product development, winning new customers, I mean, is there sort of a way we can think of how that the growth rate in that business over the next two, three years?
Yeah. Do you want to answer first?
In terms of just the financials-
Yes
around QTS?
Yeah.
Yeah, no, QTS has had a really strong rebound, and we're back to FY 2019 levels. We've got over the hump of COVID, and I'm really encouraged with the record order intake, Annabel, that we've seen in QTS this year. From a financial perspective, they're my comments on that. Maybe you could build on them.
Yeah. Well, I mean, like you, I was really pleased 'cause I remember a year or so ago being asked, "Well, you know, given the impact on QTS, will it ever come back?" We were very clear that the need for the type of target products and services that we provide, you know, have got long-term need in this sector. I think that's evidenced by the GBP 42 million orders this year. I'm really pleased that it's coming back. In terms of where the business goes in terms of product development, you know, and we've talked about these two before, but there are two next-generation products that are just coming online now, which we're seeing active customer demand for.
One of them is our supersonic target called the Rattler missile. In fact, we didn't talk about it 'cause we had a lot to talk about. This is a good example of global leverage. We won a $10 million order in the United States as a sort of a cross-selling success between our Canadian operation into the U.S. The U.S. is now procuring, you know, from QTS. That's a really significant milestone, and we expect that demand for low-cost supersonic targets to grow. The second that we've mentioned before is the next generation Banshee NG. It's now completed its development testing around the sort of turn of this calendar year.
that we now have two or three customers lined up. We see, you know, that coming forward. We have those two next-generation products that will continue, you know, the short-term, you know, sort of order intake and revenue growth as it comes back. Then more longer term, I sort of refer to the sort of picture, you know, on the front of the presentation. You know, the ability to have got to a point where, you know, we're now in a partnership with the Royal Navy, as an example, looking at their future maritime air force, which is then looking at how you might team effectively uncrewed systems such as, you know, these type of advanced targets with, you know, crewed aircraft. You know, it actually gives us the ability to explore further evolution of that target business.
Yeah, we're doing well today. We've got two products coming onto the stock, and I think that we're about to enter a new sort of epoch, if you like, of next generation development beyond those two. Yeah, very much pleased to have bounced back and see, you know, great long-term potential for QTS.
Cool. Thank you.
Are we done?
No questions online.
Great. Well, thank you very much for joining us today. Thank you for your questions, and look forward to any other questions in due course. Thank you.
Thank you.