Alithya Group Inc. (TSX:ALYA)
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May 5, 2026, 4:00 PM EST
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Earnings Call: Q4 2024

Jun 13, 2024

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to Alithya's fourth quarter and fiscal 2024 results conference call. I will now like to turn the meeting over to Alithya's management. Please go ahead.

Debbie Di Gregorio
Vice President, Finance, and Corporate Secretary., Alithya Group Inc.

Good morning, and thank you once again for joining us for Alithya's fourth quarter and fiscal 2024 results conference call. The press release and MD&A with complete financial statements and related notes were issued this morning and are now posted on our website. The webcast presentation can also be found on our website in the investors section. Please be advised that this call will contain statements that are forward-looking and which are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated.

These statements include, without limitation, our estimates, plans, expectations, and other statements regarding the future growth, results of operations, performance, and business prospects of Alithya that do not exclusively relate to historical facts, or which refer to future events, including statements regarding our expectation of our clients' demand for our services, our ability to take advantage of business opportunities, to leverage our service offering, IP, AI, and expertise to meet clients' needs, and to meet our goals set in our three-year strategic plan, as well as our ability to deploy our smart shoring capabilities. For more information, please refer to the cautionary note in our presentation and to the forward-looking statements and risk and uncertainties section of our MD&A available on our website. All figures discussed on today's call are in Canadian dollars, unless otherwise stated, and we may refer to certain indicators that are non-IFRS measures.

Please refer to the cautionary note in our presentation and to the non-IFRS and other financial measures section of our MD&A for more details. Presenting this morning are Paul Raymond, Alithya's President and Chief Executive Officer, Bernard Dockrill, Chief Operating Officer, and Claude Thibault, Chief Financial Officer. I will now turn the call over to Paul Raymond. Paul?

Paul Raymond
President and CEO, Alithya Group Inc.

Bonjour, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. This is an exciting time for Alithya, as Q4 marks the end of a year characterized by the continued progress of higher value services for our clients and greater operational efficiencies internally. As this quarter also marks the end of our fiscal year, we will focus on three main areas today. One, our Q4 results. Two, a look at our 2024 fiscal year. And three, an overview of our new three-year plan, which took effect this past April first. So let's begin with our Q4 results. Our fourth quarter results reaffirm our ability to improve our business despite challenging market conditions. Our clients recognize the growing value of our services. This can be seen in the ongoing progress of our margins.

Our Q4 gross margins, our adjusted EBITDA margin, and our net margins were all new highs for Alithya. Q4 was also a quarter of robust bookings. In fact, when excluding the two very long-term contracts, we achieved a book-to-bill ratio of 1.27. These are all very encouraging signs. I'm particularly proud of our team's results, despite the challenging conditions in our industry. I will now turn things over to Bernard Dockrill, our Chief Operating Officer, to discuss some of the projects and initiatives behind those numbers, followed by Claude Thibault, our Chief Financial Officer. I will then come back at the end to comment on our new three-year plan. Bernard?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Thank you, Paul. Our strong Q4 bookings were fueled by large wins in the healthcare and cybersecurity sectors. This includes a groundbreaking multimillion-dollar contract for services to the health and social services industry in Quebec. Over the next five years, we will be implementing a cloud-based Oracle ERP system designed to revolutionize supply chain processes across the products. The project will be delivered in partnership with LGS, an IBM company, who will serve as a system integrator. This is the type of project that stands as a testament to our strategic approach, and we continue to gain traction in the healthcare sector in North America by leveraging our extensive business transformation expertise. Overall, our sense is that the low growth in the Canadian market in recent quarters is about to reverse.

Some large banking clients have recently adopted a renewed focus on stalled projects, which suggests to us that the industry in general is beginning to recover, and that we will see growth in the financial services sector in terms of IT spending by the end of the fiscal year. In Canada, the shift to cloud computing is progressing steadily. The increasing demand for legacy application modernization and client requests for assistance in leveraging our IP solutions for application migration, intelligent document processing, and quality assurance, among other services, presents us with opportunities to grow our revenues. Additionally, this growth allows us to leverage more of our smart shoring capabilities. In the US, revenues were up Q4 and accounted for 39% of Alithya's overall revenue stream. This is up from 37% a year ago.

Those increased revenues were softened by an unfavorable foreign currency impact, which Claude will discuss a little later. Nevertheless, Q4 in the U.S. was a high-water mark for fiscal 2024 in terms of revenue, gross margin, and contribution to EBITDA. The US market accounts for 47% of our overall operating income in Q4. This is up from 38% a year ago. Both our Microsoft and Oracle ERP practices continue to grow in the U.S., and Alithya is seen as a high quality and trusted partner. In April, a major international wholesaler went live with an Alithya-implemented Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance and Supply Chain Management solution for their packaging and distribution operations for North America and Europe. This was the client's third deployment with Alithya, and the project enabled the client to retire multiple legacy systems as part of its digital transformation journey.

The successful completion of that project is a testament to the type of collaborative partnerships that drive the successful projects of our Microsoft practice, not only for ERP, but also for business intelligence, Azure, and training solutions. Q4 also saw positive growth and momentum in our Oracle business, including another significant win with a large energy-based network of five hospitals employing more than 18,000 people. Comprising Oracle Cloud Enterprise Performance Management, Enterprise Resource Planning, Supply Chain Management, and Human Capital Management, our extensive experience in deploying similar systems positioned us ideally for this project. This $12 million contract represents Alithya's largest healthcare win in the U.S. to date. It is also a logical step forward in our upward penetration of larger healthcare facilities across North America, with more than 120 enterprise solution implementations in that sector in recent years.

As major digital transformations continue to unfold in the US market, our operations remain vigilant in pursuing these large opportunities. I would now like to take a minute to expand on the bigger picture in terms of our smart shoring strategy and progress. Currently, over 8% of our overall workforce is located outside of our main geographies in the U.S., Canada, and France. With opportunities to create more value for our clients in Alithya, our intent is to continue ramping up our smart shoring capabilities going forward. Smart shoring options are now a common pillar to many of our active engagements and pursuits, providing access to a large, cost-efficient talent pool in our established locations. This additional capability enables us to compete where we may not have competed previously and provide greater value to our clients.

For example, with many organizations deeply involved in migrations to the cloud, AWS signed an agreement with Alithya in Q4 to re-retain our smart shoring team for the provision of cloud migration services. Alithya has been actively involved in the AI landscape for several years. We are proactively investing in our clients' AI upskilling with offerings such as our Alithya Copilot Academy, to become a trusted leader in this sector as well. The Alithya Copilot Academy is a comprehensive training program to benefit both beginners and advanced users. The weekly program, led by Alithya experts, includes hands-on sessions and workshops that provide a deeper understanding of Microsoft Copilot's functionalities and best practices. We also continue to invest in AI-assisted IP.

While many businesses have been eager to put the cart before the horse, Alithya is well positioned to help its clients prepare, capture, and structure their data using our proprietary RapidC apture tool to extract the most value. An exciting time for technology, and as organizations complete their preparations and approach the start of their AI journeys, Alithya will be there to accompany them. Smart shoring and AI provide a great segue into discussions about our new three-year plan, which Paul will cover later, as they are both critical components of that plan. I will now pass it over to Claude to go over some financial metrics. Claude?

Nicolas Giguère
Vice President and CFO, Alithya Group Inc.

Thank you, Bernard. Good morning. As mentioned, our fourth quarter fiscal 2024 was highlighted by continued performance improvements on many levels. Consolidated revenues came in at CAD 120.5 million, a year-over-year decrease, but a small sequential improvement versus the third quarter. Despite the current general market conditions in the technology services industry, approximately 84% of Alithya's Q4 sales came from existing clients, which we had in Q4 of last year. This demonstrates strong client relationships, trust, and satisfaction in Alithya's services, regardless of market trends. If we dive a little deeper, we can see that revenues in the U.S. increased sequentially by 7% to $50.4 million due to organic growth, although partially offset by a negative U.S. dollar variation. On a year-over-year basis, Q4 revenues in the U.S. also increased by 2.4%.

On a sequential basis, our international revenues increased as well by 2%. Now, in Canada, we still faced some challenges, as shown by our revenue numbers, both sequentially and year-over-year. Revenues decreased 5% sequentially to CAD 64.6 million, or 20.4% year-over-year. Those numbers reflect the fact that our clients in the Canadian financial sector are generally in a lower IT investment cycle, although we are seeing stabilization in terms of spending levels. In regard to gross margin as a percentage of revenues, however, we are reporting a fourth consecutive quarter of improvement.... I noted in previous quarterly calls how challenging it is to increase gross margin during lower revenue cycles.

However, we achieved sequential progression again, despite another quarter in a softer revenue context, and despite Q4 always posing a special challenge because of the annual reset of payroll benefits. Specifically, gross margin as a percentage of revenues increased to 32.1%, a record high, and up from 29.9% in the same quarter last year. On a sequential basis, gross margin percentage also increased in comparison to the 31.3% reported in the third quarter. Our gross margin percentage increased in all geographies year-over-year and sequentially, mainly due to higher value services, higher utilization, improved project performance, and geography mix. And this again, despite the employer benefit reset of January first. Now, looking at SG&A expenses, we have also witnessed significant improvements for consecutive quarters, and we are happy to see our cost control efforts continuing to bear fruit.

Total gross SG&A expenses in the fourth quarter amounted to CAD 29.6 million, a decrease of 17.7% year-over-year, which is a notable decrease when looking at numbers on an annualized basis, even when considering the non-recurring impairment charge of last year. SG&A expenses as a percentage of revenues came in at 24.6% in Q4, compared to 26.4% for the same period last year, namely a reduction of CAD 6.4 million, driven mainly by reduced salary expenses, decrease in share-based compensation, and a reduction in impairment. Overall, thanks to the above performance on cost management, our fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA amounted to CAD 10.5 million, which is slightly higher than the same period last year when our revenues were notably higher at an all-time high.

This shows very clearly how much progress we've made in terms of operational performance and how much our profitability could be as soon as we return to our higher historical revenue levels. We would also like to point out that at 8.7% adjusted EBITDA margin, we are within CAD 200,000 of the three-year goal we had set of reaching a minimum EBITDA margin of 9% by the end of fiscal 2024. Considering Alithya's overhead profile, and again, considering the current low revenue environment, we are quite confident that this performance is setting a strong base and great momentum for the next phase of our strategic plan. Also, our record high adjusted net earnings at CAD 6.1 million or CAD 0.06 per share, increased by 49% year-over-year and 40% sequentially.

I would also point out our accounting net income of CAD 2.3 million, which has improved significantly from -CAD 20 million in the same period of last year, even though Q4 last year had been impacted by certain non-recurring elements. Of note, we are reporting positive accounting net earnings for the first time since becoming public in 2018. A positive trend, which we have been calling out for a while. We got some help in the quarter from a non-recurring element, but we did move closer to reaching that milestone regardless. The market will surely appreciate seeing a positive accounting net earnings amount, but as a reminder, we have actually been always cash flow positive, despite recording accounting losses just because of high depreciation and amortization charges.

Finally, considering our CAD 10.5 million of adjusted EBITDA and our CAD 9.7 million of cash generated from operating activities before working capital variations, this translates into strong cash flow conversion of 92%. Of note, this is despite the fact that we had over CAD 2 million of severance in Q4, which is excluded from adjusted EBITDA, while obviously impacting cash flow, and which we expect to be decreasing going forward. With regards to our fiscal 2024 twelve-month results, we wish to point out a few metrics achieved despite the cyclical decline in revenues already discussed. Indeed, we achieved an overall improvement in our adjusted EBITDA margin, which came from a 140-point improvement in gross margin and a CAD 5 million reduction in SG&A expenses. In closing, let's discuss our liquidity and financial position.

Net cash generated by operating activities was CAD 9.7 million, representing an increase of CAD 5.3 million or 120% year-over-year. As of March 31, 2024, when combined with other cash flow elements, this resulted in total long-term debt reduction of CAD 9.8 million to CAD 117.4 million, and in our net debt to EBITDA multiple falling back below 3x. I will now pass it back to Paul to discuss our new three-year plan. Paul?

Paul Raymond
President and CEO, Alithya Group Inc.

Thank you, Claude, Our new three year plan took effect on April 1st, and we will be holding an investor day in September to present a detailed plan to all of our stakeholders. In summary, our plan aims to achieve a scale and scope which will allow us to leverage our geographic presence, our expertise, our integrated offerings, and our leadership positions to target higher value IT segments. Key to that process is our ability to continue building relationships of trust with our clients, our people, our investors, and our partners. We currently have valuable client relationships, which include both large industry and government organizations in our target markets. By amplifying the value we provide, we will create greater awareness and interest of Alithya's extensive slate of innovative solutions and services. Demand for both business and technology consulting is being driven by organizations' need to accelerate their digital transformation.

As organizational efficiency and optimization projects now rule the day, clients are shifting their emphasis towards cost control, efficiencies, and automation. Alithya is perfectly positioned to answer those needs. Most business leaders believe in the potential of AI and generative AI, but many are still without clarity on how to use it, either on a larger scale or on how to mitigate the associated risks. We see this challenge as a source of future growth for our business, as clients reach out for assistance in understanding and harnessing its potential with respect to their products, their services, and their operations. Our new three year plan also lays out strategies for Alithya to achieve between 5% and 10% of annualized organic growth, while increasing our EBITDA to a range of 11%-13%.

It also includes objectives to acquire complementary businesses totaling CAD 150 million in revenues over the next three years. We have a healthy funnel of high-value complementary acquisition targets, and we will continue to focus on the United States, Canada, and Western Europe. Moving forward, our intent is to also deliver an increasing percentage of our business using AI-based tools and our smart shoring centers. We believe the scaling up of our smart shoring operations will provide us with a greater pool of qualified experts and margin improvements, while opening new doors to provide services in areas where we do not currently compete. Finally, our new three-year plan also lays out steps towards achieving net zero emission certification. In conclusion, as I have said in the past, there will be more technology in our lives 10 years from now.

Technology is once again poised to change the way we work and live, and Alithya is excited to be in a trusted position to help all of our stakeholders harness the tremendous promises of these new technologies. We will now be happy to take questions. Operator?

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, should you have a question, please press the star followed by the one on your touchtone phone. If you'd like to withdraw your question, please press the star followed by the two. If you're using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any keys. Bernard Dockrill will be managing the Q&A session today. One moment, please, for your first question. Your first question comes from Gavin Fairweather from Cormark Securities. Please go ahead.

Speaker 12

Hi there, this is Graham on for Gavin. I just wanted to ask about the cadence of the smart shoring hires. I know last quarter you said it was about 5%-6% of the workforce, and now I think you mentioned it's over 8%. I know there's been some restructurings, like some headcount reduction, but maybe if you could just give a bit more color on sort of that jump in the percentage of smart shoring full-time employees, that'd be great. Thanks.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Great. Thanks, Graham, and good morning. This is Bernard Dockrill. As Julie mentioned, Paul Raymond is actually touring our smart shore centers right now and is unable to take the call today. So, Claude and I will be fielding your questions. And just timely, Graham, with the smart shore question. Yeah, so we did say roughly now our total workforce, about 8%, a little over 8%, is now in our smart shore centers and our non-core centers out of the U.S., Canada, and France. And we see that continuing to grow. It definitely is a priority for us.

As Claude mentioned, I think in the last call, you know, when we're seeing lack of the hiring growth, it is more difficult to ramp up in those centers, as we're not hiring as many. But we are happy with the progress we're making, and we got continued initiatives to continue this progress in the future quarters.

Speaker 12

That's great. Thanks. And then just on the bank projects that are sort of starting to come online, can you maybe give us a bit more color? Is that like something that's gonna happen in the second half of, or I guess, the first half of fiscal 25? Or is that gonna sort of take a few more months as they start to take these dormant products back online? Thanks.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yeah, great question. We have been seeing a lot more activity on some of the projects that were stalled in previous quarters. So they haven't yet turned into bookings or revenue, but we do anticipate from the activity we're seeing, that we will see some of these things come to fruition in the second half of this fiscal year.

Speaker 12

Amazing. And then just one more for me. So gross margins were obviously very strong this quarter, despite the seasonality with the payroll and benefits. Is that primarily on strong, you know, project execution? Would you attribute that more to that jump in the smart shoring, a percentage of smart shoring? Maybe just some more color on that would be great.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

... Yes, there's a number of factors that are impacting our gross margins. Definitely our delivery excellence and our delivery project delivery is improving, so margins are going there. The smart shoring has a positive impact in creating tailwinds there, as well as our utilization. We've been able to continually step up our utilization. And finally, the last thing is automation. We're seeing more automation in our projects, which allows us to, you know, replace labor completely, which has a great impact on our gross margins.

Speaker 12

That's amazing. I'll pass the line. Thanks.

Operator

Your next question comes from Jerome Dubreuil from Desjardins. Please go ahead.

Jérôme Dubreuil
Senior Equity Analyst, Desjardins Securities Inc.

Hey, bonjour tout le monde. Thanks for taking my questions, Bernard, good to hear your voice. First question is on the margin guidance for the longer term. You know, the question a lot of people are likely to have is, what are the assumptions behind the long-term guidance on margins? You know, in the past, you know, it's been a challenge to achieve this, but now we're really seeing good momentum. So are there assumptions in terms of organic growth resuming soon? And second part is, do you see further low-hanging fruit for you to meet that objective? Thanks.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yes, thanks, Jerome, for the question. Yeah, as we look forward, and we don't give guidance on the future, but you know, we do see the ability to have more of the smart shoring. As we discussed earlier, when we get more growth, it's easier to ramp up quicker in the smart shoring. We're seeing our clients much more open to doing more offshore as they're looking to get more for their dollar, as well as our utilization. We have made great improvements on our utilization, and that gets harder and harder to, the more improvements you make. But there is still some room there, we think, that we can continue to get better there.

As I mentioned before, our delivery excellence—we put a lot of programs in place over the last year, and we've seen great rewards from that in doing that. So I continue to expect that we'll see some there. But on the growth side, you know, the market's a challenging market right now, as you're seeing with interest rates. But we are seeing some activity that makes us feel that the second half of the year we may return to the growth levels that we were at previously.

Jérôme Dubreuil
Senior Equity Analyst, Desjardins Securities Inc.

Great. Second question for me, just a clarification. Is the healthcare deal with the government of Quebec included in the quarter's bookings?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yes, that deal, the two deals I mentioned in my remarks there, the healthcare deal in Quebec, as well as the large healthcare deal that we had in the U.S., both of those deals were in our Q4 bookings and provided a good uplift to those bookings in the quarter.

Jérôme Dubreuil
Senior Equity Analyst, Desjardins Securities Inc.

That's good to hear. And finally, for me, are you happy with the current mix of managed services? I mean, a lot of companies in the space have been using a higher mix of managed services in order to get better utilization. Is this something you're looking at to kind of transition your model towards, or you're happy with the current mix?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Definitely managed services provides a lot of advantages to our work, not just in the, you know, the margins on the managed services work, but also the long-term nature of managed service contracts. So a lot of the implementation work we do, a lot of our ERP implementation work we do, we're being more proactive on including managed service options in those agreements, which create a tail to those agreements. So definitely we'd like to see more managed services. It does provide advantages to our to our services mix and also reduce risks in future quarters as well. So it is part of our strategy to increase that.

Jérôme Dubreuil
Senior Equity Analyst, Desjardins Securities Inc.

Great. Thanks a lot.

Operator

Your next question comes from Rob Goff from Echelon. Please go ahead.

Rob Goff
Managing Director and Head of Research, Echelon

Good morning, and congratulations on the margin performance. It's, it's very impressive.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Thank you. Welcome.

Rob Goff
Managing Director and Head of Research, Echelon

And perhaps going back to the ERP win in Quebec, can you discuss your... how you are working with Oracle and IBM and the broader scope of that contract? And with that contract, would your share of that contract be relatively consistent with the win announced in the U.S. in terms of scale?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

If you can clarify your question as far as the relative scale to the US, it's the contract in Canada is slightly larger than the one that we had in the U.S., from our portion. And it is a consortium, where we are one player in that delivery team. LGS is the system integrator, and of course, Oracle is the software provider. Hopefully, I answered your question.

Rob Goff
Managing Director and Head of Research, Echelon

Sure. And is this a partnership that could be pursuing similar contracts in other provinces, or?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yeah, well, Oracle is one of our primary partners. So we do a lot of work with Oracle through our Oracle Cloud ERP, specifically in healthcare and also in the EPM space. So that's a partnership that's been around for a long time. And even with LGS here in Quebec and other areas, we have partnered in the past. And as we look at every deal, we look at every deal independently, and what is the best solution for our client? And if that involves partnering, we'll look at the partner and ecosystem and pick the best partner for the individual opportunity that we have. But definitely, with where we are right now with LGS, this is a very positive partnership that we have going.

Rob Goff
Managing Director and Head of Research, Echelon

Mm-hmm. And Kash, in terms of Canada, you're talking about the increased activity with the banks and how that's a second half consideration. Do you see Canada returning to year-on-year growth in the second half?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

As you know, we don't provide guidance, but with the activity we're seeing and what we started here in the first quarter, we've had some good bookings in Canada, in Quebec and outside of Quebec. So I do see some activity. Our pipeline is strong. One of the things we're seeing is larger deals in our pipeline, more strategic deals. Of course, those deals take longer to close. There's more people involved on the client side in the decision making, they're more complex. But it provides us with, you know, very positive, you know, forecasts as we look forward.

Rob Goff
Managing Director and Head of Research, Echelon

Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from John Shao from National Bank. Please go ahead.

John Shao
Analyst, National Bank Financial Inc.

Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. On smart shoring, could you maybe remind us what needs to be done here, you know, to potentially close down the gaps relative to your peers who have a much higher mix? How should we think about the pace of acceleration on that front?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Thanks for your question, John. And, yeah, smart shoring. There's a few things there that we're looking at. There's, first of all, our client delivery, which is the primary focus of our smart shore. And then also internally on some of our internal operations and moving more of that to our smart shore centers. So we have threads, if you will, that we're pursuing to grow those centers. As I mentioned before, as we look at new contracts that we're signing with our clients, there's more and more smart shore delivery built into those contracts. In some of our past contracts, it's tough to move because we've contracted sometimes on where we deliver the work from. So we're limited there. But as we grow and we renew these contracts, we are accelerating that.

As I mentioned before, our clients are very interested in it. I think in most industries right now, they're looking for further savings, further operational efficiencies. And smart shoring is one of the levers we can pull. Of course, it's not the only lever. We're looking more at the automation front as well to drive further efficiencies for both us and our clients. But as we do grow and we sign these new contracts, I do expect that our smart shoring percentage will continue to go in the right direction.

John Shao
Analyst, National Bank Financial Inc.

Okay, thanks for the color. In terms of the demand environment, it sounds like demand is about to return. On that note, how should we think about your staff utilization or capacity to potentially take on more projects?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yeah, great question. You know, there's only so much you can do with utilization. At some point, it's having the right skills available for the new projects going on. So we are very actively analyzing our pipeline and ensuring that what we have is available as a bench capacity aligns to the work we're seeing demands from our clients. So that's kind of the key activity there to make sure we can do that. But also, you know, going to the market, bringing on new talent as we bring on these new deals. You know, the deal here that we signed here in Quebec requires us to hire as well. We didn't have all that capacity sitting idle. So as we do that, we bring them on.

And of course, that has a little bit of an impact to your utilization as you, when you bring on the team, you have training, ramp up, where folks may not be available. So some of that has a bit of a headwind on that. But I do see as we grow, there will be a little bit improvement in the utilization as it, you know, stabilizes.

John Shao
Analyst, National Bank Financial Inc.

Okay. Got it. Thanks again for the colors above the line.

Operator

Your next question comes from Vincent Colicchio from Barrington Research. Please go ahead.

Vincent Colicchio
Managing Director and Senior Equity Analyst, Barrington Research.

Yes, Bernard, are you seeing in alignment with your expectation? And in particular, I'm interested in the two large healthcare deals you signed last quarter.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

As far as our ramp-up on that?

Vincent Colicchio
Analyst, Barrington Research Associates Inc.

Yeah. Is it ramping according to plan?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yes. So these are, again, large initiatives. They're multi-year initiatives. So it's not all ramping up at one time. So it will take a quarter or two before they ramp up probably to peak capacity. And the large deal in Quebec, of course, it's a five-year implementation and has a managed services tail on it as well for several years. So you know, the revenue is spread over that period of time. But the deal in the U.S., we are ramping that up, and it'll ramp up over the next two quarters or so.

Vincent Colicchio
Analyst, Barrington Research Associates Inc.

Overall, are you seeing a slowing in ramping to an extent?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Slowing of new projects or?

Vincent Colicchio
Analyst, Barrington Research Associates Inc.

Yes, yes, new projects.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yeah, a little bit of dynamics that are going on. One of the things we see in our pipeline is, especially in the ERP space, we're, we're bidding on more multi-pillar, contracts, so contracts that include, you know, ERP, SCM, HCM, EPM. And of course, those are, larger, more complex, deals. There's a, lot more buyers involved in the decision making, you know, the lines of business, the IT. So they take a little longer to, to close, but they're, you know, they're larger as well, so it's, you know, it's a good outcome for us. And again, the two big wins that we had in Q4, specifically in our, Oracle practice, that did take a lot of energy of the, team there to, to close those deals.

So right now we're, you know, refilling the cupboard, if you will, with new deals in that space, as we, you know, we did close successfully a couple big deals which impact our pipeline.

Vincent Colicchio
Managing Director and Senior Equity Analyst, Barrington Research.

And then the digital training business has been a laggard. Is that now on firmer footing?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yeah, very interesting question, Vincent. We look at our digital adoption practice, and you may have seen the press release on our Copilot Academy. That's that group, combined with our Microsoft team delivering that. So we are seeing a bit of an uptick there as we look at the AI space. There's a lot of adoption around AI. The market is looking for help on how does it fit in. So this is a Copilot Academy, something we put together to not only train our internal people, but our clients and prospects on AI. We do see a lot of demand in our digital adoption team, with AI training.

Vincent Colicchio
Managing Director and Senior Equity Analyst, Barrington Research.

Okay. Thanks for answering my questions.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Thank you.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder, should you have a question, please press star one. Your next question comes from Divya Goyal from Scotiabank. Please go ahead.

Divya Goyal
Director, Equity Research, Technology, Software, and Services, Scotiabank Global Banking and Markets

Good morning, everyone. Nice to speak to you here, Bernard. I wanted to get some more color on the Datum acquisition. There was a pretty sizable recovery on the earn-out recorded in the numbers this morning when we were reviewing them. Trying to understand a little that, and are there addition... Could there be a potential?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

I apologize, Divya, you broke up at the end. Can you repeat the last half of the question?

Divya Goyal
Director, Equity Research, Technology, Software, and Services, Scotiabank Global Banking and Markets

Yeah, I was just here. I wanted to get a little more color on the numbers that were released this morning. Are there earn-outs scheduled, and could we expect further recovery based on how that deal went?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yeah, I still can't hear you, Divya, but I believe your question's around data, the Datum acquisition and the earn-out and the progress we've made there and what we look at there. So, yes, that was the one-time adjustment there was with regards to the earn-out there based on our results in the last year. As we look to the forecast and part of that Datum acquisition was the Rapid Suite of products. And there's a couple of things in the Rapid Suite that right now have a lot of traction in the market.

You've heard Paul talk a lot before about the RapidCAPTURE, which is a utility which is AI-enabled for capturing paper and other unstructured data, and you know, putting that into systems. There's a lot of demand for that. Some of the existing clients actually have ramped up their usage of that product, so we see positive trends there. We also, with the RapidBRX tool that we have from that acquisition, which helps with legacy application modernization. You heard in my remarks, I spoke a little bit about some pickup on what we're seeing in both the Canadian and the US market around the move to the cloud, and that tool is core to what we're seeing there.

So we're seeing some opportunities this year that bundle with some of our other capabilities as well. So taking what we got from the Datum acquisition, bundling it with our AWS and our Microsoft practices, there is a lot of activity right now. So I do think the next year could show different outcomes than what you saw in the last year.

Divya Goyal
Director, Equity Research, Technology, Software, and Services, Scotiabank Global Banking and Markets

That'd be helpful-

Nicolas Giguère
Vice President and CFO, Alithya Group Inc.

Bernard.

Divya Goyal
Director, Equity Research, Technology, Software, and Services, Scotiabank Global Banking and Markets

Yeah, go ahead.

Nicolas Giguère
Vice President and CFO, Alithya Group Inc.

Sorry, I just wanted to add. I think you asked about future adjustments, and what we did in Q4 reflects our most recent forecast for Datum. The earn-out period ends next year, so this reflects our most recent forecast. So we are not expecting right now to have further adjustments to the earn-out. If that was the question, I also could not hear you very well.

Divya Goyal
Director, Equity Research, Technology, Software, and Services, Scotiabank Global Banking and Markets

My apologies. It's probably the network here. Yeah, I was actually trying to understand the earn-outs that are scheduled for Datum. Are there further earn-out scheduled? It sounds like you're not expecting recoveries, but are there further earn-out scheduled with Datum?

Nicolas Giguère
Vice President and CFO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yes. As I said, the earn-out period ends next year, June thirtieth. So we are currently expecting to make a payment on the earn-out based on the good performance of that acquisition, as Bernard explained very well.

Divya Goyal
Director, Equity Research, Technology, Software, and Services, Scotiabank Global Banking and Markets

That's helpful. And I know you don't provide the net earnings guidance, but obviously this time, the net earnings look pretty healthy. Could you provide some directional cadence on how should we expect to see net earnings in the quarters ahead?

Nicolas Giguère
Vice President and CFO, Alithya Group Inc.

... Maybe, Bernard, I can answer this one?

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Yes.

Nicolas Giguère
Vice President and CFO, Alithya Group Inc.

So if you look at our financial statements, you can see that what has been keeping us from reaching positive accounting net earnings has been mainly amortization and depreciation, and also integration, acquisition, and reorganization costs. And the most recent year, we've made reductions in headcount, and we've had some severance charges, fairly significant. And also interest charges is something we need to look at. So all these buckets are expected to decrease going forward. As we go forward, amortization, depreciation goes down. We're paying down debt, as I explained, so interest is going down. The interest rate has also gone down a bit, as you saw recently. And finally, we've reached a comfortable level for now in terms of reductions to SG&A, so that, too, severance payments should be going down.

So if you look at our information for Q4, you can see the amount that the non-recurring amount that helped us becoming positive, which obviously will not be there going forward. But we're still aiming to become net earnings positive over the coming quarters.

Divya Goyal
Director, Equity Research, Technology, Software, and Services, Scotiabank Global Banking and Markets

That's helpful. And last question that I wanted to get some little bit more color on, Bernard and Claude, either or, or Paul for that matter. The M&A that you have put in your strategic plan and expect that to be close to CAD 150 million, are there certain skill sets or proficiencies that you're looking to acquire, or is that an expansion across geographies? If you could provide some color on that, and that'll be all from me. Thank you.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Thanks, Divya. Maybe I'll start, Claude, and I'll let you add on at the end. So definitely M&A, we did give ourselves a target over the next three years. And as you know, it's we want accretive acquisitions, so it'll... You know, we're looking for the right targets, and that will dictate kind of how we perform against that. But really, as we look at the market, you know, where we are today in Canada, the U.S., and Western Europe, that is a big part of the IT spend globally. So our focus is going to remain where we are today in those markets, with the focus on the U.S. being the largest of those markets. Really, it's a space we wanna, we see the opportunity for growth.

When it comes to our service offering, it's really to extend where we are today. So there's, you know, we have a good play in ERP today, but there, there are other ERP packages out there that we would love to have those capabilities, so we can be a little broader there, especially in certain industries which kind of lean to some of the other packages that we don't support today. And then the service offering. We want to, you know, we're looking at the whole strategy of a trusted advisor for our clients. So when we do an ERP implementation or other things, we wanna be able to support them in their other areas.

So there's some gaps in our service offerings around those spaces, whether it's data and AI, love to strengthen our cloud capabilities in certain areas. So we're looking for those services, along in those geographies. Hopefully that answers. Claude, I'm not sure if you wanna add something to that.

Nicolas Giguère
Vice President and CFO, Alithya Group Inc.

No, that's, very well put.

Divya Goyal
Director, Equity Research, Technology, Software, and Services, Scotiabank Global Banking and Markets

Thank you.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Thank you, Divya.

Operator

There are no further questions at this time. I will turn the call back over to Bernard for closing remarks.

Bernard Dockrill
COO, Alithya Group Inc.

Well, thank you once again for your time this morning and your interest, and have a great day. Thank you.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for joining, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.

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