Tēnā koutou katoa. Nau mai, haere mai, ki te ana hui atawhai[Foriegn Language]. Which in English translates, "Hello, everyone, and welcome to this annual meeting." On behalf of the rest of the board and management team at EROAD, welcome to the EROAD Annual Shareholders' Meeting for 2023. My name is Susan Paterson. I recently assumed the role of Chair of EROAD, having been a director since 2019. I'm joined on stage by fellow directors, Graham Stuart, who has led us capably as Chair for the past 5 years, Tony Gibson, who joins us for his last meeting, and Selwyn Pellett, who is the former CEO of Coretex. We are joined online by Barry Einsig and Sara Gifford from the USA.
Barry and Sarah joined us in person last month for several days of important meetings and are able to join virtually today, helping to reduce our carbon footprint. We are also joined by Aaron Woolsey from our audit partners, KPMG, and I'd like to acknowledge we have a rep, we have Troy, representative of Volaris, here today, our new substantial shareholder. Before we begin, a friendly reminder to put your phone on silent, and in case of emergency, please follow the instructions of our event facilitator. Please follow the emergency exit doors out of the meeting room and to the nearest assembly point, which the team can direct you to. For this year's annual meeting to run smoothly, I would also like to go over how questions, answers, and voting will work. Today's meeting is being held both in person and online through Computershare's online meeting platform.
For those of you attending the meeting virtually, if you would like to submit a question, you can select the Q&A tab on the right half of your screen, type in your question, and press Submit to send your question through. The Q&A is always open, so please feel free to submit questions throughout the meeting. These will be addressed at the end of the meeting. Questions may be moderated if we receive multiple questions on one topic or amalgamated together. Any questions not answered in time will receive an email response after the meeting. Voting today will be conducted by way of poll on all items of business. I will shortly open the voting online for all resolutions to allow plenty of time for voting.
If you are eligible to vote at this meeting, you will be able to cast your vote under the Vote tab and select your voting direction from the options shown on the screen. Once the voting has opened, the resolutions will allow votes to be submitted. You can vote for all resolutions at once or by each resolution. Once your vote has been cast, a tick will appear. You can change your vote up until the time I declare the voting closed. Prior to the poll closing, simply select Change Your Vote and choose another voting choice. The Q&A tab can also be used for help. If you need assistance, please submit a question asking for help, explaining what you need help with, and a Computershare representative will respond to you directly. I now declare voting open on all items of business.
I will give you a warning before I move to close the voting. Today, I will be speaking to EROAD's core purpose, key developments from the board's perspective over the past 12 months, and key focus areas for the current financial year. I will then hand over to Mark and Margaret for a discussion of EROAD's financial and operating performance over the past financial year, alongside an overview of our core strategic priorities and how, as a business, we are executing against these. We will then move to the formal part of the meeting and take questions.
Towards the end of 2023 financial year, we consulted a number of key stakeholders in order to define a new purpose for the company, which you can see on the slide: "Delivering intelligence you can trust for a better world tomorrow." This represents a progression of our previous purpose, creating safer and more sustainable roads, and speaks to the ongoing integration of the Coretex business. It also aligns with our public tagline, "Empowering transformation." As a hardware-enabled SaaS business, we see this purpose as reinforcing our commitment to delivering innovative solutions with a strong ESG focus, a core part of our value proposition for our customers. The benefits from a compliance, safety, and operational efficiency standpoint is what ensures our customers stay with us, and we are able to win market share.
It is the exceptional value we add to our customers, and indeed society, that makes EROAD such an attractive place to work. I would like to outline some of this value up front. Firstly, road user charges. EROAD produced the first electronic distance recorder approved by Waka Kotahi, the New Zealand Transport Agency, for road user charges, and offers 4 of the 7 electronic distance recorders currently approved by the NZTA. EROAD's electronic RUC solutions overcome the shortcomings of mechanical hub odometers, supporting customers in meeting and not exceeding their RUC obligations, delivering a streamlined compliance, reducing administrative burdens, and providing visibility around RUC status and charges. As government revenue decreases from fuel taxes and more electric vehicles are on the road, Road user charges are critical in funding the building of infrastructure and roads, they are going to become even more important. Health and safety.
Road safety and creating a safe workplace is a key for EROAD and each customer that we serve. EROAD takes pride in delivering driver-friendly tools, insights, and reports that can improve road safety in real time when it matters. By delivering solutions and analytics that can track vehicle performance, operator behaviors, driving patterns, and potential safety hazards, EROAD is empowering our customers to proactively address and mitigate road-related risks for customers, their people, and all road users. Environmental footprint. EROAD places sustainability at the heart of its operations. We voluntarily report on our sustainability journey annually, which you can see in our second annual sustainability report, partnering with Toitū Envirocare to capture EROAD's full emissions profile. EROAD's platforms support customers in their understanding of their environmental footprint, informing strategies and plans for reducing their emissions. Later this year, we will introduce EROAD's innovative decarbonization tool.
This has been developed in working with New Zealand's Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority. EROAD's solution is capable of identifying areas where fleets are producing excess emissions and opportunities for change. Exoneration. EROAD recognizes the vital role drivers play in our customers' operations and the challenges drivers face as eyewitnesses to incidents and accidents. EROAD's dash cams and telematic data offer a dependable and verifiable means to safeguard customers' drivers and assets from incidents and complaints. High-definition video quality captures important details like registration plates and clear views of the road and the driver, while the telematic data offers insights into speed, driving behavior, conditions, and reactions, enabling an objective, verifiable record of events. Lastly, cold chain. EROAD solutions enables customers to measure what matters in cold chain delivery, with re-remote management of trailers and detailed trip-based temperature reporting, supporting compliance with food safety rules.
Core temps and logarithms predict, with accuracy, the core temperature of EROAD's customers' products in real time, mitigating the need for time-consuming manual temperature probing. These solutions, coupled with predictive maintenance powered by AI, support fewer failed loads and improved traceability, saving customers time, money, and fuel. Board renewal. Secondly, EROAD is all about our people. At the governance level, we have an outstanding group of people to take us forward, and I want to highlight their diverse backgrounds and unique contributions. Graham Stuart has excellent capital markets experience, but also in international markets. As you are aware, he recently handed over the chair role and will remain a non-executive director of EROAD, also taking over as chairman of our Finance, Risk and Audit Committee until his retirement at an appropriate time in the future.
He has contributed enormously to EROAD during his 5 years as chair, a period that included the acquisition of Coretex, a recent strategic refresh, and of course, the COVID-19 pandemic. I'm honored to be taking the reins and look forward to continuing to support the business as it delivers on its core purpose and value proposition for our customers and our communities. Barry Einsig is one of our North American-based directors and has very strong transportation and technology experience, including with Cisco. He knows the US transport operators well, having worked both for them and as a service provider, and has expertise in hardware and software. Sara Gifford is our other North American-based director, who has decades of experience in SaaS businesses across sales and technical operations, including in the transport and logistics sector.
Selwyn Pellett is the former founding CEO of Coretex and has strong supply chain and telematics experience in Asia, North America, Europe, and Australia, along with excellent sales and marketing experience. David Green, as we recently announced, will join the board on the 1st of August as an independent non-executive director, and stand for election at the ASM in 2024. He brings significant experience, both as a board director and as a former senior executive of ANZ and Deutsche Bank. We will no doubt benefit from his wealth of expertise in finance, governance, and strategy, as well as his experience in overseeing large change management projects. David replaces Tony Gibson, who in March this year advised the board he would not be offering himself for re-election at today's meeting. Noting the EROAD board guidelines on director rotation, Tony will be retiring from the board today.
He was a member of the board for over 13 years, and has included time as chair of the board and also chair of the Remuneration, Talent, and Nomination Committee. I'd like to thank Tony for all the valuable contribution he has made to the company over that period, and wish him all the best for the future. Finally, myself. I have 25 years of governance experience in NZX and ASX company boards, but also globally as a former management consultant to numerous international and domestic companies. I have a particular passion for the positive impact technology can have on businesses, especially from a sustainability point of view, and continue to champion these efforts at EROAD. These recent changes to the board are part of our long-standing and ongoing renewal process.
We seek people that have the right combination of governance, technology, industry, and finance experience to ensure the interests of our shareholders are protected and enhanced at all times. Lastly, I would also like to mention that, as we recently announced, after taking some time out of the business, Steven Newman has rejoined EROAD as an independent consultant to our technology board committee. Technology is at the heart of EROAD's business, and ongoing investment in its enhancements will be an important part of our strategy. Steven's skills and experience will help guide that strategic investment and ensure it delivers. I know I speak on behalf of many of us at EROAD in welcoming him back. Turning now to management. Let me assure you, we have a real leader in Mark Heine, our CEO. After stepping up as acting CEO, Mark was appointed CEO last year.
He clearly, clearly demonstrated how well he could inspire and motivate our team. Mark brings his 8 years of knowledge working within the EROAD business to the fore, while working with customers and external parties to understand the environment and galvanize the board, management, and all EROADers around a shared, compelling, and doable strategy going forward. Mark will take you through the leadership team he has assembled later. However, I can assure you, the board is delighted with the talent and structure Mark has pulled together. It is a real mix of domain expertise alongside dedication and teamwork. The team has come from internal succession, reflecting our talent development program, the return of people who have left for other opportunities but returned to EROAD as a great place to work, and the new talent we've been able to attract based on our purpose and culture.
The progress they are making is tangible. This leads me to the key developments over the past year. Towards the end of 2022, EROAD undertook an in-depth strategic review of the business with the support of McKinsey & Company. As a result of this review, we settled on a clear plan to prioritize our business, which was built around the identification of 4 key opportunities for improvement. Firstly, optimizing our segmented service model, given our current customer mix. Enhancing research and development payback via faster speed to market and project prioritization. Better capturing large enterprise clients in North America with our differentiated product offering. Improving our unit economics as cost out initiatives are realized and customer growth occurs. The resulting strategic plan, which is now being implemented, will see EROAD return to being cash flow positive and drive further growth via 2 programs.
The first of these is turning around the core, and the second, growing North America. Turning around the core is built around embedding a deep focus on cash and efficiency across the entire EROAD business. In practice, this means tailoring service levels appropriately to drive profitable performance relative to the clients we service in each geography and vertical. Streamlining Research and Development functions, and focusing Research and Development spend to ensure maximum return on investment, as we are acutely aware of the need to be judicious when investing shareholder capital. Creating operating efficiencies where possible to rightsize the cost base and generate operating leverage as we win new business. As part of these efforts, total cost out of NZD 10 million was achieved in financial year 2023, and a further NZD 10 million is targeted for this financial year.
The second part was growing North America, which is built around the need to better realize the value of our assets in what is a key growth market for EROAD. This means increasing revenue growth from large enterprise customers, including the provision of whole of fleet solutions, alongside greater integration. Targeting the transportation vertical with whole of fleet solutions, completing our scalable and competitive product offering for enterprises, and scaling up our North American focused enterprise sales team. In parallel with the focus on growing our presence in North America, in recent months, we have also been working with our advisors, Goldman Sachs, to identify partnership options to contribute expertise, additional market access for EROAD to gain further growth in the North American market, and potentially also contribute fresh capital. Discussions with various parties are ongoing, related to different opportunities.
Our aim was to have something finalized in time for today's meeting. By their nature, these opportunities take time to consummate, and we continue to prioritize those discussions, which the Board considers will deliver the best outcomes for shareholders over the long term. We remain committed to each of our geographies. Management is executing well, as evidenced by the renewal of key contracts and winning new business within our markets, where we see highly complementary opportunities. Mark will talk more about this later. Our New Zealand business is cash generative, with a focus on multi-product adoption, and there are increasingly ways we can leverage our market leadership and client relationships to grow in Australia. While our ability to service large enterprise clients is providing good momentum in North America.
This momentum in North America is largely down to the acquisition of Coretex, which we completed in December 2021. From a strategic standpoint, this was absolutely the right thing to do, as it accelerated our product roadmap by at least two years and formed the basis of our strong product market fit in the region. It gave us access to new verticals, particularly refrigeration and construction, and considerably bolstered our pipeline of opportunities, as well as our US leadership team. While the integration process took longer than anticipated, the process was hampered by COVID, our ability to travel, but also by inventory issues such as global supply chains, which were disrupted. We also had some challenges in bringing the two technologies together. As Mark will talk to, we have now integrated functionality between our two platforms, and this is resonating extremely well with customers.
This leads me to the board focus for our current financial year, most importantly, ensuring the execution of the strategic plan. As a board, we have set our management team clear targets for delivering against these goals, and we are pleased with the performance to date. These include the guidance we have provided to the market, which will see the business deliver revenue growth of between 6%-9%, positive of EBIT of up to NZD 5 million, that's normalized for the accelerated 3G replacement program, continued cost out with an additional NZD 10 million targeted as cost outs this financial year, and focused R&D spend of NZD 30 million. Achieving this guidance will in turn put EROAD on the path to free cash flow by FY25 and positive cash flow by FY26.
These have been set within EROAD's funding capability. The management team continues to exercise strong financial discipline to ensure that this remains the case. We are continually looking to optimize our capital structure to ensure we have both the right balance for flexibility and growth. We are still exploring a range of options, including our approach to strategic and technological partnerships in North America, as previously mentioned. These milestones and related metrics that Mark and Margaret will speak to shortly, represent measurable targets for investors to judge EROAD's performance against. We believe that achieving these targets will maximize value for shareholders as a standalone business. It's important to acknowledge that EROAD's share price performance has been unsatisfactory for the past year, for reasons related to the market, but also of our own making.
The board has been acutely aware of this, firmly believes that with the hard work largely done, our strategic plan in place, and given where we are along our path towards achieving positive cash flow, we are now at a point where shareholders will start to reap the rewards. Against that backdrop, on the 22nd of June, Volaris submitted a Non-Binding Indicative Offer for all EROAD shares outstanding at a price of $1.30 per share. As the board disclosed to the market earlier this month, we undertook a thorough process alongside our advisors, Goldman Sachs and Chapman Tripp, with that review concluding that the NBIO materially undervalues our business.
We have taken this process very seriously and taken our time to assess a number of measures in determining this outcome, including our own expectations of future performance of the business based on execution against the strategy I have outlined. I can assure all shareholders that going about this in the proper way has been our first priority. Ultimately, the board remains deeply committed to maximizing value for our shareholders. We believe we have the vision, plan, and people in place to do so. Thank you so much for attending today's meeting, either in person or online. I'd now like to hand over to Mark Heine and Margaret Warrington for the CEO and CFO address.
Thank you, Susan. Good afternoon, everyone. My name is Mark Heine, and I'm EROAD's Chief Executive Officer. This is my 2nd year presenting at the Annual Shareholders' Meeting as CEO. I'm joined by Margaret Warrington today, who will also address the meeting. As Susan has said, in many ways, it was a challenging year. It has also been a very fruitful one in terms of direction that we are taking and the strengthened team that we now have in place. We've also done a lot of great work in reimagining our purpose, as Susan talked to, which has really helped define who we are and what we stand for. I wanna start today by thanking everyone across the business for your efforts and ongoing commitment as we deliver the outcomes for our clients in a truly sustainable way.
Before going into an overview of FY23 and our strategy and outlook for FY24, for the benefit of investors who are least familiar with EROAD, I want to give a quick overview of the business. As you can see, we are far more than just a road user charging company. We are truly a data creator and aggregator business, which empowers our customers to transform their businesses. Our numbers are immense. We have over 10,000 customers, with over 250,000 drivers, driving over 227,000 units being monitored by us. These units travel over 9.2 billion kilometers annually. For some context, that's more than the distance between the Sun and Neptune, and back again.
Daily, over 116,000 persons are using our platform to ensure that their drivers are compliant, their loads are being delivered, and driving efficiency and obtaining insight through their operations. This leads to safer vehicles being on the road each day, less fuel being used, goods being delivered in a more efficient manner, and real money being saved by our customers and their businesses. We are truly delivering intelligence our customers can trust for a better world tomorrow. This week, we achieved a major milestone for EROAD. For the first time, we exceeded 100,000 units in North America. This significant milestone ensures we're a credible player in the North American market and validates the strength of our offering, together with the ability of our team to market, to sell, to install, and to support our customers in our offerings.
During FY23, we made great progress in stabilizing the foundations of the business as we sit and begin delivering against our new strategy. If you recall, at the last Annual Shareholders' Meeting, I laid out three key priorities for EROAD in FY23. These were: to build growth momentum in North America and New Zealand, build and maintain an engaged culture aligned to the vision of a merged EROAD, and to deliver on our product and platform integration. I'll first detail how EROAD has performed against each of these priorities, and then discuss how we win businesses in North American market. I'll hand over to Margaret Warrington, our CFO, who will talk to our financial highlights for the past year and touch on the first part of our strategy that Susan talked to of turning around the core.
I'll talk to our progress around growth in North America, update you on our platform integration with Coretex, and finish with an update on our current trading and how we're tracking against our long-term targets. As mentioned, the first priority from last year's ASM was to build on the growth momentum in North America and New Zealand, and in particular, build on the growth acceleration provided by the merger with Coretex. In New Zealand, we added over 9,500 net units, up almost 9% year-on-year. Over 1,000 customers renewed their plans with us, which represented over 28,000 units being renewed for another term. Key enterprise customers, such as Bigfoot and Higgins, renewed their contracts, representing 1,200 units between them.
As you can see, more than 2/3 of our new revenue came from existing customers, which reflects our strong market presence and our ability to continue to add value to these customers. With that said, there are still plenty of opportunity to grow through new customers, and a key highlight for this year was winning the whole-of-fleet contract with Fonterra for a total of more than 500 units, with 50 units being installed in FY23. We've worked very hard over the years to build a strong market presence in New Zealand. However, we do not take this position, nor our customers, for granted, and we're proud to maintain ongoing continuous improvement across our operations. As part of this focus, as Susan mentioned, EROAD has been busy developing a decarbonization tool that will be made available in New Zealand later this year.
This solution is designed to help our customers to operate in a more sustainable and cost-effective manner for their heavy vehicles. Inspired by EROAD's 2022 sustainability survey, this solution emerged from customer feedback, which noted the continued challenges our customers have in tracking and measuring sustainability performance, which hampers the successful pursuit of their environmental priorities. EROAD's innovative decarbonization tool will bring new visibility and transparency for customers into their carbon emissions, highlighting areas where fleets may be producing excess emissions and opportunities for change through a range of reports supporting data-driven decision-making. This project has been co-funded by New Zealand's Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority, and EROAD is proud of this relationship and EECA's continuous support for us.
This week, we once again held our Fleet Day in Hamilton in conjunction with the Waikato Regional Council, with over 800 current and potential customers and more than 50 exhibitors in attendance. True to our renewed purpose, this year's theme was centered on road safety, sustainability, and fleet efficiency, all underpinned by data and technology. The fact this event has become one of the largest annual transport industry events in New Zealand is a testament to the scale and support that EROAD has been able to achieve in this market. Overall, New Zealand remains cash generative market for us. We continue to focus on multi-product adoption and broadening how we support our current customer fleets, as well as winning new customers. There remains scope for further opportunities. We expect to maintain good growth here in FY24.
We also launched our 3G replacement program in New Zealand, which Margaret will talk to, which presents further opportunities for us for product upgrades. Turning to North America, we added over 7,300 net units, up 8% year-on-year. 110 customers renewed their plans at EROAD, representing 7,200 units being renewed for another term. This was driven by one of our major enterprise customers, ABC, which renewed their contract with us for a further 6,000 units. A real highlight was that during the year, as we've announced previously, we won a contract with the leading North American food services company, Sysco, for over 9,000 units. Winning an enterprise customer of this caliber is an incredibly important touch point that speaks to EROAD's ability to win flagship customers in the crucial North American market.
Even without this customer, we sold approximately 14,000 units in North America in FY23. We are focused on ensuring we have the products and competitive advantages in the verticals we are targeting. As you can see, more than 30% of our new revenue comes from new customers, as we're still relatively early in our growth journey in this market. The total addressable market in North America exceeds $10 billion and is expected to more than double by 2030. Following the Coretex acquisition, with our unique IP and local market knowledge, we believe we are well-placed to grow our customer base, while the wealth of the data we collect helps provide targeted solutions for customers and maintains a competitive advantage.
I thought it'd be useful to provide a little bit more color today around how we go about winning key enterprise customers, especially in North America, given how important this is to our strategic plan. While specific details of our customer contracts and relationships are confidential, we can share with you insights about our experience of the complexities involved in winning new customers and the ways they're working to demonstrate to prospective customers why EROAD is the right choice for them. In November last year, we publicly announced a new 5-year agreement with initial order to supply our fully integrated CoreHub technology and SaaS solution to over 9,000 Sysco trucks. That is to say that EROAD's technology supports supply chain assurance for Sysco, one of the largest food services distributors in North America.
Winning customers like this rely on robust, rigorous procurement processes, focusing on understanding customer needs and enabling confidence in the EROAD solution. We typically operate with a small EROAD technical team, working collaboratively with our customers, engaging in a reliable way, delivers results in getting new customer contracts across the line. We recognize and identify very early on in our pipeline processes that winning customers comes down to a technological and innovation evaluation of our capabilities by our customers' key stakeholders. Our multidisciplinary team typically involves our Director of Technology, our CFO, our EVP of Sales, our Senior Product Manager, Engineering Resources, and of course, our legal team. We collaborate with customers on any operational issues with our account providers through multiple discovery sessions and can rapidly respond with working prototypes of how EROAD could work with our customers in addressing their issues.
This collaboration and targeted engagement style brings trust, encourages enhanced stakeholder engagement, and based on experience in North America, in the sales that we have won. In working with our customers, we're finding that enterprise organizations are typically on a journey to unlock new creative solutions by leveraging near real-time data across the operations. EROAD's Core360 platform provides the technology to achieve a continuous contextualized data stream from enterprise customer fleets, their drivers, and also their loads. Throughout the entire procurement process, EROAD operates from the premise that large enterprise customers are typically not just looking for a telematics vendor, and instead, a trusted innovation partner.
By applying this mindset, we tend to win the hearts and minds of enterprise customers, with feedback demonstrating that our ability to collaborate, undertake fast iterations, communicate clearly, and take a customer-centric approach are critical factors for securing a win and executing on successful rollouts. For EROAD, winning successful enterprise customers provides a massive tailwind through providing us with referenceable customers, engendering credibility and trust with those we're delivering for, and the industry as a whole. Turning to Australia, we added over 1,500 net units, up almost 11% year-over-year. 51 customers renewed their plans for EROAD, representing over 1,100 units being renewed. Around half of this was attributable to a key enterprise customer, Jim Pearson Transport, who renewed their contract, representing more than 600 units.
While Australia is our smallest markets, it remains an important part of our growth outlook, given the significant opportunities in servicing trans-Tasman fleets, reflecting the high percentage of new revenue that we are winning from existing customers. We are excited by our prospects for building quickly off a small base, with New Zealand customers realizing the significant value add EROAD makes to their organizations and wanting the same advantages in the Australian market. Overall, we continue to win business across each of the geographies we operate in, despite challenging market conditions, as we and our customers continue to emerge from COVID-19 and deal with elevated cost pressures. However, these cost pressures help accelerate the adoption of systems that deliver improved efficiencies and better fleet utilization, especially for larger enterprise customers that we are targeting.
We are very proud of the work our people have done to continue to win and retain these high-quality customers. The second priority that I flagged at last year's ASM was to build and maintain an engaged culture aligned to the vision of EROAD following the merger with Coretex, which we have previously referred to as EROAD 2.0. Our people, of course, are at the very heart of what we do, and while COVID-19 has been a challenging time for us, I believe we've assembled an incredible team that's right behind our purpose and our strategy. The vast majority of the team is now in place, and while I won't speak to each of the team members in turn, I would like to call out a few important areas where we have strengthened our capability.
Firstly, AK joined the business through the acquisition of Coretex as our President of North America and as our Chief Innovation Officer. He has more than 10 years' industry experience and understands how to take technology solutions to customers to enable greater efficiency and productivity, which considerably enhances our sales proposition. Secondly, Steen Andersen joined us during the year in the newly created role of Chief Transformation Officer. He has more than 20 years' experience working with SaaS businesses, with a focus on customers and execution. Steen oversees our transformation program to ensure we are building stronger operational execution, so we can deliver sustainable and profitable growth. Lastly, demonstrating our commitment to sustainability, we've appointed Craig Marris as our Chief Sustainability Officer.
Craig helps to provide solutions to customers as they look to decarbonize their fleet and adopt technology as part of their commitment to enhance safety, driving better operational efficiency, and reducing their carbon footprint. This is a team that I back to deliver the results we know that our shareholders want us to deliver on. As CEO, a core part of my role is empowering this team to ensure they can deliver for our customers, and as such, we continue to remove silos, optimize resource alignment, devolve decision-making where appropriate, and empower our product managers and our engineers. I'm excited to see how this team performs in the years ahead. Many of the EROAD team are here today, and I encourage you to talk to them at the conclusion of today's formal business.
The third priority I flagged at last year's ASM was to deliver on our key product and platform integration. The acquisition of Coretex in 2021 was a step change for our business, accelerating our strategic growth and providing immediate scale in North America. In addition, the acquisition provided us with significant scope to offer our key customers a fully integrated service. We've made significant progress in building out our integration platform that enables data and product features to be synced across both the EROAD and Coretex platforms. We now have integrated functionality between our two platforms, enabling testing, which is in progress, and we'll start beta testing with customers in the upcoming weeks. Once fully launched, this will have several near-term benefits. The first, the ability to sell and share tax functionality in our Core360 platform across North America using EROAD's tax products.
Integrating our EROAD Clarity Dashcam with our SaaS Clarity Replay solution for our Core360 customers. This enables users to review and retrieve footage within Core360 and opens up our addressable market to Coretex customers that have long been asking for a connected camera. The ability to leverage CoreHub technology to deliver a new generation of RUC certified products right here in New Zealand. I'm very proud of what we've achieved over the past year, which has resulted in our solid financial results for FY23, including meeting our guidance. I'll now hand over to Margaret to talk about our FY23 guidance, along with our turnaround plan.
Welcome to our shareholders. As you can see, we met our FY23 guidance and made excellent progress in managing the cost base, as both Susan and Mark have referred to. We delivered revenue growth across all our markets, with normalized revenue slightly ahead of expectation, while future contracted revenue is at nearly NZD 220 million. We delivered normalized EBIT of -NZD 4.5 million at the midpoint of our guidance range. The increase in operating costs reflects the full year of the combined Coretex and EROAD, and we've made great strides in reducing our cash burn from NZD 4.2 million per month in the first half of FY23 to NZD 1.8 million per month in the second half of 2023.
We've taken NZD 10 million of cost out on an annualized basis in FY23, and we're on track to achieve a target of an additional NZD 10 million in FY24. This has resulted in our free cash flow improving considerably throughout the year, while our available liquidity, including our debt facility, headroom, and cash balance, was NZD 27.5 million at the end of March 2023. As Susan emphasized earlier, this gives us the requisite funding support to return to a positive and sustainable cash flows, and we continue to manage this across the business with rigor. Importantly, this positive trend has continued into FY24. We have further reduced our monthly cash burn at NZD 1.5 million per month for Q1 FY24, down 16% from the second half of FY23.
We have also not had to draw down on our debt facility during the first quarter. Yet have grown our net units by nearly 8,000. It's worth noting that if it were not for the additional operating and hardware expenditure to support the accelerated 4G rollout program in Australia and New Zealand, we would have been free cash flow positive much sooner. While we had naturally planned for this, COVID disruptions to global supply chains meant that the switch program needed to be more concentrated once the hardware assets were available. What is pleasing is that we're able to support the accelerated program from within existing funding. While it has given us the opportunity to implement new hardware with several customers. We will continue to drive new adoptions over the coming years.
To date, 40% of all units across New Zealand and Australia are now 4G compatible, and from August, mid-contract upgrades will commence at volume. There's excellent progress with the rollout. Moving on to how we're executing against the first part of our strategy that Susan talked to, turning around the core. During FY23, we reduced our cost base largely via lowering headcount and through property portfolio changes. This year, we are focused on the accelerated 3G replacement program, further reducing our SaaS costs, better supply and negotiations, and overall expense reduction, including the launch of our customer self-help portal. I'm pleased to report that in the current financial year, we have already identified approximately $7.5 million of the targeted $10 million of savings.
All of this has been achieved while ensuring we have the right infrastructure in place to support the growth of the business, a testament to the team's efforts in managing costs and driving efficiency improvements. With that, I'm going to hand back to Mark to talk about the focus areas for FY24, to discuss further progress in Q1 and the outlook for the rest of 2024.
Thank you, Margaret. Along with the cost initiatives that Margaret has just talked to, one of the areas that we're focused on this year is customer service segmentation. For example, 51% of our revenue comes from our top 160 customers, while our smallest 700 customers account for only 13% of revenue. Getting segmentation right will help us focus investment on the right areas. We also to continue to stabilize and simplify our product offering through our integrated platform and our focus on rolling out our integrated CoreHub SaaS solutions in North America for key enterprise customers during the first half of FY24.
In the longer term, our growth horizon is in North America, which is centered around our strategy of expanding our enterprise customer base, based on our target verticals. We continue to invest in our capability there as we scale. As Susan referred to, we are progressing discussions with various parties throughout our advisors, through our advisors, Goldman Sachs, which has the potential to accelerate our progress in this market. I look forward to reporting on our progress as we continue through this journey. It is very pleasing to be able to deliver on a number of strong proof points for the first quarter of FY24, which demonstrates the progress we're making on delivering against our strategy. Firstly, we've made solid progress across six key enterprise customers during the quarter. We sold 5,300 new units. We renewed a similar number with over four...
with over 4,600 units installed in that quarter. Our enterprise customer rollouts are progressing well. As Margaret mentioned earlier, we grew net units in the quarter by over 8,000. We won a 1,950-unit upgrade with GoBus, as well as another 1,000 new units that will be implemented over the course of the next 16 months. We've secured a preferred supply agreement for a new key customer operating vehicles in Australia and New Zealand. Are in the process of renewing and expanding contracts with key existing customers, including one after a rigorous RFP process for an Australian headquartered organization which tested our products against 9 competitors....
I would also like to call out that for the first time in 10 years that we're aware of, we've implemented a price increase with CPI for most of the customers in Australia and New Zealand, and have started a global pricing review. This reflects the added value enhanced products have and the service that we provide customers, which is reflected in our growing AMRR. As Margaret mentioned, we are 40% through our 3G replacement program. We've also continued to improve our cash position without the need to further draw down on our debt. While we've already achieved another NZD 7.5 million in annualized cost savings in the financial year. All in all, an outstanding first quarter, and I look forward to updating you further on our first half results in November.
Lastly, as I mentioned, just this week, we exceeded 100,000 connections in North America, which is a major milestone for this business. To the outlook, I'm pleased to share our outlook for FY24, including our revenue of $105 million-$180 million, reflecting continued growth across all three of our geographies. We're targeting EBIT of up to $5 million, normalized for our 3G replacement program, and we're targeting an R&D spend of $80 million. Hitting these milestones will put EROAD firmly back on track to be free cash flow neutral by FY25 and positive by FY26. Finally, I want to remind everyone of the targets we have set for us for FY26. We introduced these targets at our Investor Day in March, as they underpin the outcomes of all the strategic work that we are doing.
While it is early days, we saw good progress against these in FY23, this has continued in our current financial year. Achieving these metrics will deliver significant returns from our assets and from our ongoing investment. Some metrics, such as customer churn, we're already in line where we want to be, with our asset retention rate remaining at a very high 95%. Most of the new business we win in New Zealand is from our competitors, while in Australia, we see our customers look to move to our competitor products only to return. This gives us a lot of confidence in our offering. Our customers are generally sticky to us due to the hardware component that we supply, increasingly, however, the integrated nature of what we do and bring to their business further entrenches us into the organizations.
As our customers grow, we tend to grow with them. However, we need to ensure we're continually evolving our customer solution to remain at the forefront of the industry, especially in New Zealand, where we are the market leader and are focused on further growing our strong service culture. Our R&D programs are more targeted with this in mind, and we'll continue to invest in R&D, but we'll keep the spend at around NZD 30 million for the foreseeable future. Average lease duration will extend out as we build out our enterprise customer base that typically have longer contract durations. While there remains a lot of work to be done, our team is well prepared to tackle the challenges ahead and continue executing against our strategic plan. I look forward to reporting further progress in delivering on our strategy on sustainable and profitable growth in the future.
I'll now hand back to Susan.
Thank you, Mark and Margaret. We will now move to the resolutions and take questions with regards to each resolution before opening the floor to general questions. Voting for the resolutions will be conducted by poll, to be carried out by EROAD's share registrar, Computershare. The procedure for the conduct of the poll and for in-person attendees will be as follows: voting papers have been provided with the notice of meeting. Pens, where required, will be distributed. If you do not have a voting paper, please see a Computershare representative at the registration desk, who will provide you with a voting paper. Indicate your vote for, against, or abstain by placing a tick in the appropriate box.
If you're here as a proxy for a shareholder who has not marked proxy discretion on their proxy form, your vote will be automatically counted in accordance with the voting directions given by your appointer. Please sign the voting paper provided when you arrived at the meeting. If you are a proxy holder and you have been granted a discretion on how to vote the resolution, please use the voting paper provided when you arrived at the meeting. After recording your vote, please remember to sign your voting paper, then place the paper in the boxes provided, which will be circulated by Computershare staff, and also available at the back of the room. Having collected the votes, they will be taken for counting. The results of the poll will be announced via the NZX and ASX as soon as they are available.
Please note that the board recommends that you vote in favor of each of the three resolutions. Resolution number 1 is the re-election of Barry Einsig. The first resolution relates to the re-election of Barry as a director. The board considers Barry will be an independent director, if elected, and supports his re-election. Barry joined EROAD's board in January 2020. Barry brings considerable knowledge of the North American transport market, as well as global automated and connected vehicle expertise. There is a profile of Barry in the notice of meeting. Barry, thank you for joining us from Pennsylvania. We would now like you to say a few words to the meeting.
As you said in the board-
Yeah, I'm unmuted on my end.
You're good to see him now. Thank you, Barry.
Okay. Thank you. As you see on the board pack, my bio is in there. I've got 30 years of experience in transportation technology systems globally. As you heard from Mark and Susan, last year was a turnaround year, and, and, taking, cost out of the business. Our go forward focus is free cash flow and profitability. We have a good engaged team with refreshed leadership. My lens on North America, is that freight and logistics had a down year last year, in part because of the pull forward of so much supply chaining during the quarantine years. We sort of saw, saw a bubble in those years, and now we have kind of flattened back out.
We continue to see safety and regulatory constraints continue to be a major focus of our customers. There continues to be a driver shortage in North America, and the federal government is moving closer to a national pilot for what we call vehicle miles traveled or mileage-based user fees, which, of course, there in New Zealand, you call the RUC. Especially proud this year of setting up the Tech Committee, and excited to welcome Steven back into the business to participate, leveraging his strengths and, of strategy and knowledge and tech background. I think it's important to remember that the reason, part of the reason for setting up the Tech Committee is the technology is not only strategic to our business, but it is our business.
Digital transformation and technologies are moving faster now than they ever have, and they're more important to make sure they're prioritized appropriately, and that's part of the function of the committee. It's shown that up to 12% of global Fortune 500 companies have technology committees, and the ones that have a higher percentage are in the tech space. Last year, McKinsey's research indicated that operating margins are 100-600 basis points higher for companies that have technology committees over their peers. Finally, supporting some of the most significant technology decisions the business is making, we have a remarkable group in Selwyn and Sarah already on board. Of course, bringing Steven in, I think we'll have an excellent contributory group. Thank you, Susan.
Thank you, Barry. Is there any discussion or questions from the floor? Kalindi, do we have any online questions on the online platform? No, we don't. There being no further discussion, I now put the first resolution to the meeting: that Barry Einsig, having retired in accordance with NZX Listing Rule 2.7.1, be re-elected as a director of EROAD. Please mark your voting papers for resolution one, or for virtual attendees, select your voting choice from the options shown under the Vote tab on your screen. Resolution two. The second resolution relates to the auditors' fees and expenses. Is there any discussion from the floor, or Kalindi, do we have any online questions with regarding that?
There being no further discussion, I now put the second resolution to the meeting: that the directors be authorized to fix the fees and expenses of KPMG as the auditor of EROAD. Please mark your voting papers for resolution two, or for virtual attendees, select your voting choice from the options shown under the Vote tab on your screen. Resolution three: Non-binding Say on Pay vote. The third and final resolution relates to EROAD's remuneration report. EROAD has presented a remuneration report to shareholders for the year end of 31st March 2023 in the financial year annual report, which you can find on pages 124-143 of our annual report. Consistent with the Australian Say on Pay regime, EROAD's shareholders now have the opportunity to vote to adopt EROAD's remuneration report.
This resolution is a special resolution and will be passed if more than 75% of those shareholders entitled to vote and voting on the resolution, in person or by proxy, vote in favor. The outcome of the vote regarding the adoption of EROAD's remuneration report will be non-binding. However, as outlined in the notice of meeting, if EROAD's shareholders do not adopt the remuneration report today, then at next year's Annual Shareholders' Meeting, shareholders will be presented with a spill resolution that will only be voted on if the remuneration report is also not adopted at next year's Annual Shareholders' Meeting. Consistent with the Australian Say on Pay regime, no vote may be cast on the resolution by individuals whose remuneration is detailed in the remuneration report or closely related party, as defined by the Corporations Act of them.
Provided that directed proxy votes may be cast by those persons, and undirected proxy votes may be cast by me as Chair of this meeting. In either case, we're appointed as proxy on behalf of any shareholder who is not prohibited from voting. Is there any discussion? Kalindi, no discussion online either? There being no further discussion, I now put the third resolution to the meeting: that EROAD's remuneration report for the year end of 31 March 2023, as set out in the FY23 annual report, be adopted. Please mark your voting papers for resolution 3, or for virtual attendees, select your voting choice from the options shown under the Vote tab on your screen. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes our resolutions, and I will close the voting shortly... Thank you. Voting is now closed.
The results of these votes will be released to the NZX and ASX as soon as they are available. Computershare will now collect any other outstanding voting papers in the room. Thank you, everybody. We will now open up to questions from shareholders or proxies in the room and online. For those attending in person, please raise your hand and we'll get a microphone to you so that everybody can hear your question. Can you please start by introducing yourself, your name, and whether you are a shareholder or a proxyholder? If you are a proxyholder, the name of the shareholder that you are representing. For those attending virtually, please select Q&A tab, type in your question in the box, and press Send to submit.
As mentioned earlier, we'll try and get through as many questions as possible, but if not all the questions are able to be answered, we will follow up after the meeting. Are there any discussions or questions from the floor, firstly?
Thanks. Alex Paul, shareholder. It's gratifying that the board is confident in the strategy going forward and the growth that's going to come. It's gratifying that it's pleased with management performance and what's been recorded. Unfortunately, the market doesn't share that confidence. There's been a sustained share price collapse, and that's probably the only word for it, over the last year, down to a low of NZD 0.52 in May. There's been a sellout of long-term institutional investors to be enabled Volaris to build up its over 18% shareholding. I noticed that we mentioned the word, "we believe" that what we're looking to do going forward will address the concerns of the negative market sentiment that does hang around EROAD at the moment. It is specific. Other tech companies have recovered in their share prices, like Serko and Xero and Vista.
EROAD has not. I'd really be interested in some comment from the Chair on what specifically the board has done to talk to the market, to understand where the sentiment's coming from, and confirm that its strategy going forward will address that negative sentiment, and the people in this room will see a recovery of share price from, you know, NZD 1.40 to where it used to be.
Thank you, Alex. The board and the management have spoken to a number of shareholders, and we believe that we have addressed that through both our strategic review and the resetting of our strategic plan, and looking at refocusing our expenditure. As you'll be aware, we've taken a lot of the expense out of the company and balancing that with growth. We believe actually putting out the numbers and what we expect from the company and then delivering on those numbers, as we did in FY23, will build up the confidence of the market. We believe we've done a lot in restructuring and reshaping the management team, getting the right people in place in the business, and, you know, you will have seen that happen over the past year.
We believe we're very, very focused, you know, on the market, focusing our investments in technology in the right areas that will deliver to those significant customers, like the Cisco that we've brought on board. Fundamentally, it's about us getting on and delivering on our strategy and making sure we do that going forward. Everybody from the whole board, as well as the management team, are completely focused on that. Mark, would you like to add anything else to that?
Thank you, Chair. Just to add to that, too, we did have Investor Day back in March with over 70 attendees, where we launched our new strategy, which was well received and good conversation had with our investors at that time. We're also very much focused on sustainable, profitable growth. To achieve that, we've had to look very long and hard at the cost base that we've had over historically, and we've refined that quite significantly, as you would have seen. There's a clear pathway to hit cash flow neutral by FY25 and FY26, which will have a real impact on our share price in the long term. Because if you look at technology businesses, those who are strongly focused on cost base and growth are being recognized with a elevated sharehold, share price performance.
Thank you. Are there any other questions from the floor? Got a couple down the front here. Thank you.
My name is Clyde De Souza. I'm a shareholder. I've got three broad areas that I want to ask. One's an endorsement, one's a question around the business model, and one is a recommendation. Let's go to the endorsement first. I just want to say publicly, I endorse the board's response to the takeover. I see value a lot higher. To contextualize it, I used to be head of research for Citigroup. I used to be New Zealand head of IB for Citigroup. I can see why the share price went down, and I can see why the share price goes up. Only for Volaris's sake, I see value at around NZD 2.25 in a takeover now. That's the first thing. That's the endorsement. Well done. Thank you. Secondly, the business model.
One of the key things that the market has focused on, and I think they are, is the capital structure and capital capacity. The two things I'd say is, have you all addressed looking at securitization? In one fell swoop, that would remove that potential overhang. The second thing is this, I'm actually an advisor to a SaaS company in this, in this kind of a space. In fact, Volaris has approached them as well earlier on this year. The observation I'd make is this. For their business model, they sell the hardware. In actual fact, this huge capital demand on the change to 4G, they're making money from that. They make money from resale of the hardware, and they make money from the installation. Their issue is the same as you.
In the fact, getting it done in time, because everyone wants to do it at the last minute. Both those questions would be interesting, given that you all used to do securitization as well.
Yeah. Thank you. Graham, would you like to pick that up as Chair of FRAC? Probably a better one for Margaret, I think. She's been more currently thinking about it. Margaret?
The short answer is yes, we do think about it a lot. The longer answer is we actually now have, with the acquisition of Coretex, all the commercial models in place. What we're doing is trying to respond to our customer needs and customer wants in terms of how we deal with that. There is, you would have seen, Clyde, because I know you and I have talked via email. You would have seen that, through the unit economics work, we're trying to express what we do and when we get a return, regardless of whether that unit is leased or sold outright. Our focus really has been on removing the cost from the business, so we bring forward that return and ensuring we deliver the customer needs.
Yeah, because I. Sorry. I see it as a for capital, it's always a trade-off what you do in the stage of the cycle you are in, and you all are, I perceive you all as being in a growth phase, and capital is more expensive, and the most expensive capital is obviously equity. There's this whole perception out there, that you are, pending a capital raise, which I personally don't think, 'cause there are several solutions along the way. The last thing I want to say, and that was, that is my third point, is a recommendation. While, and it's this, EROAD is a very small market cap stock. It gets poorly covered. The coverage tends to be more junior analysts to a more experienced.
Some of the coverage is blatantly naive in their understanding of stuff, by my perception. Again, I've been around 40 years, and been head of research. It's, I find it disappointing. You'll need to, if you can, be more timely and be more fulsome in your interaction, because when I do look at your shareholder register, it's mostly retail. With no retail coverage or limited retail coverage or poor retail coverage, they are at a disadvantage. I am fine, but most people are not. That's the recommendation. Thank you.
Thank you, Clyde. We'll certainly take that on board and be a focus for us.
Thanks. I'm Bruce Parkes. I'm a shareholder and proxy holder for the New Zealand Shareholders' Association. Your sustainability report is quite a good document. Next year we hope to see some more hard numbers in there.
Mm-hmm.
Looking at your decarbonation tool, that should be fantastic in the new, in the current climate. Are there other providers with stuff on the shelf, or are you the only one in this area?
Mark, I'll let you take that.
In terms of others out there, in New Zealand, we're not really aware of others in the vehicle space who are focused on decarbonization as much as we are. We are certainly focused on that, and we believe we're going to have a market-leading product there. If we look more broadly into North America, there are other providers looking into this space as well. We do believe that we have a great tool that we can launch into the market as well- into that market as well, sorry. We're also working with Cisco around some EV solutions we can provide them, too. They're ordering about 800 electric vehicle trucks. We're supporting them on that deployment around understanding standard charge, helping them manage their compliance offering as well, and helping them on their decarbonization journey that, in that area, too.
We do have some great tools coming up that we can launch, but we do believe we're the market leader here, but it's a bit more competitive in the North American market.
Thank you. You went to the Clean Transportation Expo in California this year. What sort of feedback did you get from that?
... There's no doubt about it that sustainability and decarbonization is absolutely key to every transport operator in North America. We were mainly gathering information and seeing customers and contacts at that symposium. I must say, I've sort of been a little skeptical about, you know, how much difference we can make from here in New Zealand. Definitely, we all need to be absolutely doing our bit, but when you look at the scale of the investment in decarbonization in North America, it is so substantial. Nobody is really talking anymore about 2035, 2040. They're all accelerating the decarbonization back to 2030. It's just accelerating, accelerating at a rate, especially with their IRA Act.
We're in a very sweet spot, I think, going forward, given the data and the insights that we can give to help people rearrange their fleets and be able to decarbonize. Again, you know, as I was saying at the beginning, with being able to have the road user charging functionality, as people stop buying fuel and paying fuel excise tax, the governments are going to have to collect revenue some other way to pay for their infrastructure. That's not only roading infrastructure, but it's also charging infrastructure. We're extremely well positioned to be able to assist users in that regard.
Thank you. Will the 3G, 4G upgrade be completed this year?
No, our units roll back to 2G, we actually are in a position where we can go at the pace our customers are driving in, in many situations. We're working with customers to work out what their needs are and how we can swap them out within a profile that continues to keep the units operating for them, but also manages both cash flow and customer needs. It'll continue through beyond this financial year.
Thank you. Sorry for going on. Mainfreight yesterday reported a downturn in business. Have you seen that, and it affected any of your customers?
Mark, what's the latest on... Well, you, you can see all the little dots on the screen, so we can see it quite, quite closely as to what the, what the transportation, profile is looking like.
We gave an update note today around Q1 performance. We're still seeing good growth across all of our markets. We're not feeling it yet. Anecdotally, talking to customers, some of them are doing a bit harder right now. As cost increases, they're really impacting on their business, but by and large, it's not having a demonstrable impact at all on ours. Indeed, we had 8,000 net new connections in Q1, which is a pretty strong start to the year.
Thank you. One last, last question or comment. The terminology in your reports and presentations are sometimes a bit hard for us older people. I'm pleased you have a glossary. However, in your end of year result presentation, talking about integration, you mentioned a data ingestion engine. What is that?
Happy to explain that. When you have two platforms, like we have in my EROAD and also the Coretex 360 platform, what we've built is sort of a middle layer between the two. Ingesting the hardware from each other platform to enable us to visualize that data on respective platforms and also to allow us to launch new products. As we mentioned today, Clarity Replay and Clarity Dashcam products, that visualization integration platform enables us to take data from what's historically an EROAD product and now show it on a Coretex 360, which is historically a Coretex platform. It's around enabling value for customers by using our product set on either side.
We'll try and be clearer going forward. Thank you, Bruce. Calindy, do we have any online questions to address? We do? Thank you. Cool.
Given the huge amount of data you are aggregating and creating, how will the company embed AI technology into your product offering to enhance productivity and unlock more customer value?
Mark, thank you.
Anything to do with AI is always an iterative process, which takes time. Already been looking at using AI for our reefer solution. Looking at predicting when it might shut down or fault codes, which could happen on those as well. We're looking at, iteratively, over time, what sort of solutions we can bring AI in to have the most value for customers. That's one proof point. No doubt there'll be other opportunities as we further use the tool across the business to unlock new opportunities.
Great. One more, please, Sharon?
One more question. What more can you tell us about the partnership discussions underway? Is there likely to be other takeover offers?
At, at, at the moment, as I signaled in my talk, we are in discussions with a number of parties, but those are all, at this stage, confidential. You know, we're moving ahead on those discussions, and actually, a number of them are actually complementary to each other, so we may progress with, you know, 1 or 2 more. We're not... We're certainly underway in, in those and really looking at, we're looking for strategic partnerships. Some of those may bring capital to the business, but otherwise, we're really looking at how we can part- partner with them to help accelerate our growth. Are there any more questions from the floor? There's 1 more at the front here. Thank you.
Thank you. Yes, good afternoon. Malcolm Stokes, shareholder. My question is regarding the scheme of arrangement, and clearly, the share price at around NZD 0.80 prior to that offer of NZD 1.30 was quite a lift. I, I can't help thinking that it was an opportune position, and even at the share price of around NZD 1.40, the, you know, the prospects of them getting, you know, the full, the full control, I mean, they've got 18 odd % now, and a guarantee that those shareholders will have an increase in the price if, if they do increase their price. It, it could go through.
I, and I think about shares I had in Tilt Renewables, and we had a, an independent director, and my question really is going to be about the independent directors holding out to, to maintain this company as a New Zealand company, rather than allowing, you know, a, a cheap shot to, to remove it. Going back to Tilt Renewables, it was Mercury and Infratil who had the major shareholder in that. They offered two. Mercury offered NZD 2.50. They got together, and they, they wouldn't increase the price. The independent director, Fiona Oliver, held fast and said, "This price is not, is not acceptable." You know, they owned about 70% at the time. They increased that shareholding to about 83, and they didn't budge.
They, they, they extended the offer, twice, I believe, and that was the maximum they could do, but they didn't, they didn't get to the 90% required. They, they got to about 80% odd, from memory. Then they, they called it quits, and then they went and had a rights issue, and that was one of the things that they said, "We need more money. We need more money. Sell your shares to us, and you won't have to pay any money." The rights issue was offered at NZD 1.75, so it was NZD 0.60 less than the offer price, and in the end, Fiona Oliver allowed the shareholders who remained to get NZD 8.10. That was the value that they, Infratil and Mercury, paid for the remaining shares, NZD 8.10.
We had to put more money in, of course, but that was the result. I'm just looking at this price of NZD 1.30, and what the share price has been, and where it has been. At, you know, you had a rights issue at around NZD 4.00. You raised a lot of money, and now, you know, it went down to NZD 0.50, NZD 0.60, and when that offer was made, it was NZD 0.80, and now they're offering NZD 1.30. Wow! You know, why didn't they offer NZD 3.00 when the company was trading? Because they weren't interested. They're only interested in the value, and the value is seen as a bargain. I would recommend that the independent directors here stand up and say, "Hell with that.
Let's, you know, get this company back on, on, on track or on road, and, and make it work." Let them, you know, lift their offer. If they can convince enough shareholders, they'll take control. That's fine. All I'm saying is, you know, stand up and say, "This offer is not strong enough." Why did they offer that sort of amount? Because it seems a bargain. That's all I have to say.
Thank you, Mr. Stokes. I think, as the independent directors and board has demonstrated, you know, we did take the offer seriously. We did a lot of work around it, but we do have a lot of belief in our future strategy and our management team to deliver it, and we decided that it didn't represent sufficient value to progress, so we have declined that offer at this stage. Thank you.
Are there any other comments from the floor? If there's not, thank you everybody for your continued support of EROAD, your questions, and for your attendance today. That ends the formal part of the meeting, and I now declare the meeting closed. I do invite those present...
Sorry, we can't provide any refreshments to those people, virtually, but I do invite those present in person to join us for refreshments and to chat with members of the board and the management team. Thank you very much for your attendance.