Hello, Luis. Such a nice pleasure to see you again.
Good morning.
Morning. Yet another hectic quarter. Please, take us through your presentation.
Good morning. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for attending this brief. For those that are new to the company, we are a space technology company. We are delivering products and satellites into space, but we are also delivering data. We have been on this growth journey for the past few years. This quarter is part of that. We showed again robust growth of our net sales. We are continuing our positive EBITDA, something that was for us quite important, and delivering also a positive operational cash flow from operations. What are things that have actually been important for us? There are targets. We are sticking to our targets. Overall, year on year, we are very confident that we can continue to deliver our plan of double-digit net sales growth, positive EBITDA, and positive operational cash flow. We have been also continuing to expand and grow our business.
We have done some structural changes to it over the last quarter. We have seen a stabilization, to some extent, of our order backlog into the numbers that we usually consider to be positive and safe for our company, where we want to be. Of course, this varies. We've got quite a strong pipeline in some areas that might actually grow that backlog quite substantially. Mostly, the story, I think, is that this continued growth that we are achieving, this ability to actually continue to expand the company and grow healthily into a positive EBITDA in a positive EBITDA environment. If we want to take a look at the next slide, please. There are a few things that we have focused very much over the past quarter, growing the visibility of the company.
You're probably, many of those that follow us as a company will have seen that we have been more present in the news, telling our story, explaining what we are doing a bit more. We have done quite a lot of interviews in newspapers, not just technical newspapers, not just space industry newspapers, but other publications that have a wider audience. It has been part of our reach-out activity over the last quarter, in particular. Also, we have done, as I said, some structural change inside the company. We have merged our products and missions business lines into one business line that now handles most of what we call hardware. This is all the products that we do for other people, for other companies, to enable them to build their own satellites or the satellites that we deliver to third parties.
This was done to actually bring together those capabilities across the group that handle production of equipment, production of hardware. This allowed us to streamline our management, streamline the way we produce, gaining some efficiency in terms of the way we produce our equipment, our hardware. That is something that is pretty good for the company. It will be good for the future. We also increased our data on our data and services business line. The net sales increased by 86% year- on- year. This is a show and a demonstration of the growth, the potential growth, and the real growth of this area of the business. We continue to see huge appetite for the type of data and services that we are offering to the market. Our challenge, as always, is to have enough data, to have enough satellites in orbit to generate that data.
We are seeing that the appetite has not diminished. Quite the opposite. It is growing. In that context, we expect in the next quarter to actually present towards the end of the quarter to present where we expect to be, where we expect to go, updating our strategy, and showing what new things we have been planning for the coming years, and particularly in the data and services side, but also on the defense side. What can we actually, how can we actually expand our business in that direction? That is something that it's an exercise that we have been doing for some time. We would like to present it to yourselves in the next opportunity towards the end of this quarter.
In this context of growth and in this context of expanding particularly our data and services part of the business, over this quarter, we did a directed share issue. We brought in one large new investor, Nova Capital, a global fund. This is important because this will allow us to accelerate our VIREON constellation. That is our Earth observation constellation. We have always said we wanted to do four satellites. We are already building two. With this new direct issue, we can actually move on to the next two, to build the full constellation of four satellites. In that way, actually answer the demand that we see on the market. That is an extremely important thing that we achieved by doing that direct issue. We are also using part of that money to support our maritime intelligence business.
Again, we are seeing quite a lot of interest in the type of data we are delivering. We are seeing a growth in that side of the business. For that, we need more satellites. Now, in the form of Inflection, we actually have our first big user for our constellation of maritime services from the U.K. government and the European Space Agency, the Inflection service. We effectively were already able to finance a substantial part of our future constellation. What we are doing now is helping with some of the money from the issue, but also looking at contracts, advanced contracts with customers to actually finance the construction and the deployment of our new maritime constellation. This is, again, an area where I see a huge amount of potential. We see quite a lot of demand for the type of data and services that we are delivering.
Of course, ultimately, this funding will also help us in addressing the European defense environment. We are seeing a huge amount over the last few months. We have seen a huge amount of interest in Europe for space, for defense. For that, we need to invest. We need to actually create new products, many of which are based on what we already have. They have to be adapted. They have to be able to actually supply the type of data in the environment that defense and security organizations demand. Those are areas that we are going to invest in. That was the reason of this direct share issue. If we go on to the next slide, we'll be able to look a little bit at the objectives for the rest of the year, for the next 12 months. Some of you will see that VIREON launch was delayed.
This was due to a third-party subsystem that we use on the satellite. The supplier found some issues. These have led us to have to redesign part of the satellite. That forced us to actually delay the launch, not something we like. We had some margin on our launch in terms of delivering data to our customers. Of course, we are eating into that margin. We are compressing it. That will put more pressure on our teams to actually deliver a satellite quicker once it is in orbit to deliver it operational. Not a situation we like, but it is a situation that we find ourselves in through someone else's problem. We will handle it. We will manage it, as we always do. We continue to work on the EPS-Sterna project. We have submitted our proposals. EUMETSAT and the European Space Agency are analyzing those.
EUMETSAT is finalizing the agreements so that they can approve the project and move forward. We were very happy to see the progress that was achieved back in July. Of course, I believe that we would all have liked to have had a 100% positive decision at that point to move forward. These big international programs always have these milestones that have to be achieved and negotiated. We are now waiting for EUMETSAT to meet again in September. Hopefully, at that point, they will be able to reach a consensus and move forward with the full mission. Nevertheless, it was very encouraging to see that they decided to move with parts of the project. They decided to actually decide on some authorizations to proceed. In parallel to that, the negotiations on the contracts are already ongoing. There are many discussions.
There is much work that is already being done to do that. In parallel, we are also continuing with Inflection phase one. That work is going well. We are running towards the next phase. We are preparing to go on to the next phase, again, in discussions with the agencies, showing the results, working with our partners. That's a very important part of Inflection. Work is in progress, but it is going well. It is achieving its objectives. On that point, Inflection and the whole maritime intelligence, we also saw with some encouragement that back in May, the International Maritime Organization, one of its committees, has finalized the draft for approval in 2026 of the introduction of VDES as the alternative to AIS. This will mean that in the future, ships can actually carry one or the other systems to deliver their obligations under tracking and safety at sea.
We see that as an extremely positive objective that will make it possible for vessels to actually replace their current AIS systems with VDES systems. There are rules of the game and rules of engagement and rules of use for VDES systems in the maritime domain. That will come into force. It will be approved this year or next year, to come into force on January 1, 2028. We look at that also with much encouragement. As you can see, this has been a busy quarter, as always, for the company. We continue to expand our footprint, to grow into new markets, particularly on the data and services. We continue to see a positive environment for our business and a growth environment. I will open, Carlo, I will open the floor for any questions that there might be. I think there will be some questions. I'll let you ask me.
Thank you, Luis. Yes, we received a lot of questions ahead of this presentation. Some of those, I think, you already ran through. As we speak, there are questions that are coming in. I will try to sort them into the same subject here in order to make it easier for you to reply and for anyone who is asking the questions to put it in the right space. I will start with referring to the direct share issue. This is a writer question. You emphasized attracting long-term investments, and you mentioned one of the big investors there. However, with no lockup in place, some participants sold their shares shortly after allocation. What is your reflection on this? I know that we did touch upon that on the latest or the last broadcast.
Indeed. I think, like I said on the last broadcast, actually having the lockup in place, the only thing it does is that it actually creates one day where everyone is expecting people to actually sell their shares. I think ultimately, it defeats, to some extent, the purpose of having a lockup. What we saw is that we have a very dynamic market. Some of the new shareholders decided to sell their shares. As I said, it's a very dynamic market. I look at some of the shareholders that have not sold their shares, and that is encouraging. Those were the ones we wanted to build a long-term relationship with, so we take that as a positive. Some of the shareholders, some of the new investors will always do that.
We could have put a lockup in place, but that would just create one threshold day that everyone knew something was going to happen. That probably would have been counterproductive. That was our logic. We will, of course, analyze, and we will see what happened. Were we to do something similar in the future, we would then actually take that lesson into account, of course.
This report and the reaction in itself could probably be a little indication here. Let's move on to some questions here. The EUMETSAT TELSAT project, you mentioned that. Could you be a little bit more granular? How many units do you expect short and long term?
Could you just repeat the beginning of the question, please?
Yes. The status of the EUMETSAT project, could you be more granular on how many satellites or units, I should say?
The EUMETSAT, the Sterna project, currently, EUMETSAT has publicly stated they would like to procure 20 satellites. That is, originally, we had quoted for 16 units. We supply the avionics, some of the avionics for the satellites, and supply the payload to OHB Sweden. That is a prime contractor for those satellites. Originally, they were talking about 16. They now are asking us to quote on 20 units. Of course, there are always backup units, so the number is always a little bit bigger than this. As in these big programs, you usually tend to build more than you need just in case something happens. That is the number. The plan is to build 20 satellites.
I believe the plan for EUMETSAT is to have six satellites in orbit at any one time, so some of the satellites are replacements for the other ones when they reach end of life.
A technical question here. The planned launch of the first satellite was initially planned to be launched in the first half of 2025, and as you mentioned, it's been delayed. Any chance both of the first two satellites can be launched at the same time? Is that a technical possibility?
It is a technical possibility, definitely. It's a question of some debate internally if we want to do that or not. There were reasons why we separate the launches. We wanted to launch the first one, see how it was operating, and if there were any corrections we wanted to do on the second one. It's subject to some internal debate right now if we want to do the two at the same time or if we want to separate them. That's an ongoing internal discussion. It's possible, yes. Do we want to do that? We haven't decided yet.
OK. Regarding the revenue and EBITDA for the data segment, you started more or less the presentation with the data segment and quite interesting growth and margins here. How much is attributable to Inflection?
A fair amount, indeed. Of course, we are actually doing that work. As I say, that effectively is about the service that our systems will deliver. There is quite a lot of work going on through that. Once those satellites are in orbit delivering services, we replace what is currently development work with real data delivery and service delivery. It should all be seen already as part of the same thing. The same teams are preparing that. Effectively, we are being paid to develop a service from space and from the data. That's quite a nice way of actually doing this. It requires a lot less investment to do the maritime domain system or satellites. That is all. We see that as quite a positive.
OK. I guess this would be a sort of follow-up question here coming in here. I think that referring to a potential bottleneck here. How are you investing in digital engineering to accelerate delivery timelines?
Very much. A lot of our work actually on the data and services over the last few months, over the last year or so, has not actually been on the satellite so much. We are doing quite a lot of building new satellites, but a lot of the work has been on the ground on developing the tools that allow us to process, store, distribute the data. The acquisition of Spacemetric is part of that. That's the last year. That's exactly why we did that. This is a specialist in the processing, in the storage, in the management of the data for our Earth observation satellites. That's exactly where we are going when it comes to the future of data, is how do we actually use that on the ground? How do we interact that with the analytics tools?
How do we interact that data with the AI tools that are now becoming so prevalent? A lot of the current work is on how we do that.
We will continue on the technical sides here. Is there a high demand for software development connected to the SDaaS side of the business? Or is the data primarily distributed through APIs or similar?
A bit of both. We've got some data that is distributed through APIs directly to our customers. In some cases, it's actually just deposited on the server. In other cases, we are developing software ourselves and developing applications. If you look at something like the Canopy service, that will be something that we do with our own software. It's a mix, and it depends on the type of customer and the type of data. Looking ahead, looking for the future, I see us doing a lot more of that processing, a lot more of the extraction of the information from the data in-house. It's a mixture.
We have a project question here, Project OSCAR. How is it progressing? What's the status? Next step for that project?
It's progressing well. The next step is actually getting that to a state where the potential customers, the partners that are partners now, actually want to use the data. It's very much about demonstrating capability of using AIS data for offshore energy production. The program is progressing well. It's doing what it is supposed to do. The next phase is something that we are in discussion with partners about, saying what they want to do once that project is concluded.
All right. We continue with, let's say, a granular question here. Ymir-1 , is that the way to pronounce it?
Which one, sorry?
Ymir-1.
Ymir-1.
Yeah. Now demonstrating VDES capability. What kind of a customer interest do you see? What's needed to move from interest to actual orders?
We are seeing quite a lot of interest. We are seeing lots of organizations that want to try VDES. Ymir-1 is always going to be a demonstrator. It is not capable of providing a service, but we have quite a lot of demand from people wanting to try. Some are government organizations that are asking for trials. Others are private companies. What is needed to actually move forward will be to have enough satellites to provide a service, a VDES service, and to have the terminals on the ground. What I mentioned earlier about the International Maritime Organization, their current decision, they are moving forward with VDES, the expected approval next year, and entry into the regulations, the solid regulations in 2028 of VDES as an accepted equipment on ships. That is very important. That will actually create the demand on the ground.
We need enough satellites in orbit that allow us to actually start providing that service. Through the work with one of our customers, there will be 12 VDES-enabled satellites in orbit towards the end of this year, the beginning of next year. Those will be the first ones. We will put our own constellation by 2027, 2028 in orbit. We need to have a critical mass of those satellites to actually be able to provide the services, the VDES-enabled services. These things all start staying together. Right now, we see a lot of demand, a lot of interest from organizations that are trying to understand how they can use VDES on their day-to-day.
As I say, it is a range of customers from governments that want to understand what kind of benefits VDES is going to bring, also how they are going to use it, to companies and organizations that want to understand how they incorporate VDES to their day-to-day maritime operations.
Thank you for that. We have a question regarding organizations and hardware. I will tie in that question to one of the questions that we have received before. How are the recent U.S. tariffs changed? The changes in tariff, if there are any, affecting AAC Clyde Space in terms of sales to the U.S., the supply chain, and your ability to pass on costs to customers?
In general, they have had some effect. I wouldn't say it's so much the monetary effect or the costs. It has been more the uncertainty. The major problem that we face, as most companies, is the uncertainty. How this is working and what is going to happen next week, what is going to happen next month. When we are doing contracts that are six months in duration, how is this going to evolve? We are in a good position because we have companies in the U.S. We have companies in Europe. We can actually choose where to manufacture, where to produce things, and that way avoid certain levels of tariff. As I say, the main problem has been uncertainty. We faced some uncertainty, for instance, in the U.S. when we were selling from our U.S. facility to other countries.
That was actually creating some difficulties, mostly because of the uncertainty, the lack of understanding from many operators about what the tariffs actually mean. That was more of a question and more of an issue. As I say, our protection is we are an international company. We can actually distribute production where it needs to be to mitigate the impact of tariffs. We are fairly relaxed about that. Like most companies, we don't like the uncertainty. It does affect the business. It does create barriers. It does create some difficulties and some issues with planning forward. We prefer not to have that. We are ready to manage.
At the moment at least, it's more that, let's say, your customers are sitting a little bit on their hands. That doesn't mean that any contract has been canceled. When they understand the situation and you think you can handle that.
Exactly. We did have one or two that threatened at some point, said we might have to actually kill a contract because we don't know. With time and better understanding, that hasn't happened. There is the uncertainty, yes. So far, everything we have been able to do. We have been able to do the business.
The demand is there.
Without too much disruption.
Yeah, the demand is there. Do you foresee significant changes in where you are building and developing your hardware as you further integrate the organization that you have acquired? More or less the same question, but focused on a different problem, I would say.
We foresee some optimization. We'll have to optimize. As I say, we will most likely have to produce more in the U.S. for certain applications. We have to produce certain things more in Europe for other products. We are going through that process of actually choosing, setting up facilities in different countries. We already have them. We already have that possibility. We see some work needed there. In parallel, we are optimizing our production. Having many small production facilities is usually not very efficient. Focusing production, most of it is actually subcontracted these days anyway. Focusing it in a couple of sites is probably the way to go. Then use the strength in our individual sites, design centers. There is a lot of knowledge, a lot of experience in those sites. We will use that. We will grow that capability.
The production function, we will tend to optimize it, to look at where we can get the best performance possible. That's where we are going.
Right. Thank you for that. Conscious of time here, I will wrap it up. I will have one of the questions that will require a forward-looking statement, perhaps, from you here. The current value of the pipeline, potential business, that is, if you compare that to last year, and feel free to answer as much and as granular as you like. If you compare the potential business that you now can envisage to last year, what would you like to comment?
I will make a distinction in here because sometimes it's used backlog and pipeline.
Yeah, I was coming to that.
I'll make the distinction. The backlog is one thing. I find it fairly comfortable. As I said, it is something that is for the kind of numbers in terms of revenue and net sales that we are planning to do. The pipeline is a different story. In some areas, it is extremely big. Our pipeline is huge in some areas. In other areas, there are more challenges. We have made no secret of some of those scenarios. There are more challenges. The pipeline is also very binary in some of the areas. For instance, when it comes to satellites, in some cases, you might have a large contract in terms of constellations, but it either happens or it doesn't happen. You have a big number or you have nothing. That is always the challenge with pipelines in the space industry. It's not unique. It's not new.
It's not unique to us. It's not a new thing to any in the industry. That is part of that. Part of the reason that we have been moving towards data and services is because there, the pipeline is more granular. Looking at companies, the contracts are smaller, many more contracts, smaller value, a bit like we do on the products. That allows us to actually have a much more stable, much more predictable backlog out of the pipeline because the contracts are small. There are many more, so you always have people coming through. For instance, on the satellite side, you tend to have very large contracts, but they either happen or they don't. There is no halfway house. You do 50% of the contracts in the pipeline. If you have a very large contract, it's either 100% or it's 0.
When it comes to data and products, it's different. We have big pipelines, and you always have a certain percentage that will come in. That's the difference. The pipeline remains strong. The pipeline remains strong, and now we are very much focusing on conversion. Some of the changes we are doing internally in the company have been to focus on conversion. How do we convert pipeline into backlog? That is very much a focus for the company right now.
Yeah, yeah, exactly. I know that you have, on previous occasions, been pretty confident when it comes to the order backlog, which gives you, let's say, a visibility going forward. Obviously, you may not be able to comment secondary opinions in the market. As I mentioned, I asked you in the Q1 here, if there are anyone who would have a sales estimate north of SEK 450 million, do you think that, given the fact what you can envisage in your order backlog, would that be far-fetched? Or is it more or less in line with what you can expect?
For 2025?
Yes.
Net sales, we stick to our prediction that we'll do double-digit growth this year. We will do positive EBITDA and positive operational cash flow. That's what we stick in terms of forecast for the year. I will not comment. I have my view. I will not comment further than that.
That's fair enough. Luis, it's truly a pleasure. There was a lot of questions, so there's a lot of interest. To all of you who have asked your question and feel that you need other answers or any other questions, we will forward those to the company and to the IR in that. I thank everyone who's been watching, and a special thanks to you, Luis. Thank you.
Thank you very much. Thank you, Carlo. Thank you, everyone. I wish you a great rest of the day.
See you later. Bye.
See you. Bye.