Good morning. Welcome to Alithya's first quarter fiscal 2025 results conference call. I would now like to turn the meeting over to Alithya's management team. Please go ahead.
Good morning, and thank you once again for joining us for Alithya's first quarter fiscal 2025 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.
These statements can also refer to future events, including those regarding our expectation of our clients' demands for our services, our ability to take advantage of business opportunities, to leverage our service offerings, IP, AI, and expertise to meet clients' needs, to stand out and excel in a competitive market, 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 risks and uncertainties sections of our MD&A, both 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 Debbie Di Gregorio, Interim Chief Financial Officer. I will now turn the call over to Paul Raymond. Paul?
[Foreign language] Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I'd like to begin by highlighting three notable achievements by our team for the first quarter. I will then turn things over to our Chief Operating Officer, Bernard Dockrill, to break down some of the specifics around our operational performance, followed by Debbie, our Interim Chief Financial Officer, to cover some financial highlights. First, in Q1, our team delivered yet another quarter of Adjusted EBITDA above CAD 10 million. In fact, our Adjusted EBITDA increased 11.1%, or by CAD 1 million over the same quarter last year on lower year-over-year revenues. Second, 83% of our Q1 revenues were generated by repeat clients who turned to us for value-added services above and beyond the scope of their initial projects.
Our gross margin as a percentage of revenues increased at 31.9%, compared to 28.9% for the same quarter last year. Third, in maintaining our efficiency focus, our SG&A spending remained sequentially steady in Q1, despite company-wide salary increases, and decreased by 2.6% compared to the same quarter last year. And one more thing. It should also be noted that our team delivered very strong net cash flow from operating activities of CAD 16.7 million. This represents a 120% improvement over the same period last year, further reducing our long-term debt. I'll now pass it on to Bernard to discuss our operations in more detail. Bernard?
Thank you, Paul. Despite soft global market conditions, we reported stable sequential revenues while maintaining our focus on profitability improvements. Geographically, we experienced a revenue decrease in Canada, primarily due to slower-than-expected information technology investments in the banking sector and certain client projects reaching maturity compared to the same quarter last year. We've continued to reduce the number of subcontractors and increase the proportion of our permanent employees. This has been a priority for a few years now, and we are pleased to see the result having positive impacts on our gross margins. Since the start of the year, we have successfully secured our position in several contractual vehicles with our largest public sector clients in Quebec. These agreements cover areas such as access management and security, organizational consulting, and cloud architecture and infrastructure. This demonstrates our ability to stand out and excel in a competitive market.
Also, our 6-year Oracle Cloud Supply Chain Management project for the Quebec government in the healthcare sector continues according to plan. Despite some delays in new project signings, our backlog remains strong. As of June thirtieth, our backlog represents approximately 16 months of trailing 12-month revenues. We see great promise in projects discussed with our largest clients, and our partnership with AWS is providing valuable support for the systems modernization work being conducted by our digital solution center in Quebec and our Smart Shoring operations in Morocco. Another key strength that we continue to build upon is our Smart Shoring strategy. Our experts in Morocco, Eastern Europe, and India are engaged in the delivery of major projects for some of our largest clients.
By the end of Q1, we increased our Smart Shoring workforce to 8.6% of our total workforce, up from 8.1% at the end of Q4. Additionally, Alithya continues to establish itself as a leader in cybersecurity expertise surrounding new standards in Canada for critical industries, particularly in the nuclear energy sector. On that note, in Q1, we secured a CAD 14 million operational technology implementation project, reinforcing our leadership in this sector. In addition to providing cutting-edge cybersecurity technologies, including AI-powered threat detection, Alithya's regulatory expertise assists clients to be compliant with relevant laws and standards. Now, looking at our U.S. business, the ongoing reduction of lower-margin business in Canada was largely offset by growth in our U.S. operations. This is due to the kickoff of projects from our strong bookings performance in fiscal 2024.
U.S. revenues increased by 3% year-over-year, largely due to our Oracle Cloud and Microsoft Dynamics ERP practices and a favorable U.S. dollar exchange rate. Beyond maintaining our active presence in the U.S. healthcare industry with Oracle Cloud, we have successfully expanded our business to include other sectors, including manufacturing and professional services. Our Oracle practice welcomed new projects in Q1 in these sectors, which demonstrates that we are on the right path to diversification. Our Oracle practice also continues its long-term focus on managed services to generate additional recurring revenues. We are initiating discussions as early as possible during the execution of our implementation projects as clients become aware of such future needs. Our Microsoft business also posted a strong performance in the first quarter of fiscal 2025. At the end of the quarter, our teams achieved an important recognition for our efforts and innovation initiatives.
Alithya was named as a finalist for the 2024 Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Global Partner of the Year award, honoring top Microsoft partners who have demonstrated excellence in innovation and implementations of solutions based on Microsoft technologies. Alithya has also achieved its Microsoft Advanced Specialization for infrastructure and database migration, which is an important step aligned with Microsoft's recommendation that its clients preferentially turn to partners with such advanced specializations for their projects. Alithya is currently one of only 220 Microsoft partners worldwide with multiple specializations in Microsoft Azure, spanning analytics, AI and machine learning, and business solutions. Additionally, Alithya has achieved 3 of 6 Microsoft specialization designations, with 2 more awaiting the auditing phase. This puts us in a very select group globally.
Our long-standing Microsoft partnership continues to open many doors, including a recent agreement to serve as a strategic Microsoft partner for clients migrating their end-to-end cloud automation platforms to Microsoft Power Automate. In June, we got the launch of the Alithya Copilot Academy during our quarterly call. Since then, we have seen a surge in interest from our clients. In Q1, we delivered Copilot services, including discovery workshops, technical readiness assessments, and training to several clients. Copilot services are just one of many ways in which we are helping our clients improve their AI preparedness. We continue to build up our portfolio of proprietary AI-leveraged products and solutions, including our Alithya Rapid Capture and Alithya Rapid QA solutions. Moreover, we are completing more fixed-price projects now, and these initiatives, combined with our IP and subscription services, currently represent over 27% of our total revenues.
I will now turn things over to my colleague, Debbie Di Gregorio, Alithya's Interim CFO, to take a closer look at the numbers. Debbie?
[Foreign language], Bernard. Good morning, everybody, and thank you for joining us today. It is a privilege to address you all for the first time and present our latest financial results. I've been spearheading the team that prepares financial disclosures for more than six years now, so I'm excited to share our achievements with you today during this call. As mentioned, our first quarter fiscal 2025 was highlighted by continued performance improvements on many levels. First, we are reporting stable sequential revenues. Consolidated revenues came in at CAD 120.9 million, a sequential increase of CAD 400,000 from CAD 120.5 million for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024. Despite the current global market conditions, approximately 83.1% of Alithya's Q1 sales came from existing clients, which we had in Q1 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 by $1.5 million, or 3%, to $50.7 million in Q1, due primarily to organic growth in certain areas of the business, including a favorable U.S. dollar exchange rate impact of $900,000 between the two periods. On a sequential basis, Q1 revenues in the U.S. also increased by $300,000, including a favorable U.S. exchange rate impact of $200,000. The U.S. now represents 42% of our revenues. Bernard addressed the challenges we faced in our Canadian business, as shown by our revenue numbers year-over-year.
Revenues in Canada decreased by CAD 11.9 million, or 15.4%, to CAD 65.1 million in Q1. But on a sequential basis, revenues in Canada increased by CAD 500,000. Regarding our gross margin as a percentage of revenues, we are reporting a third consecutive quarter of improved performance. As noted in previous quarterly calls, it is challenging for organizations to increase gross margins during times of slower revenue growth. However, once again, we achieved good performance with our gross margin as a percentage of revenues increasing to 31.9%, up from 28.9% in Q1 of last year, when we reported revenues that were 8.1% higher than this quarter.
On a sequential basis, gross margin as a percentage of revenues decreased only slightly compared to 32.1% for the fourth quarter of last year, despite salary increases that came into effect at the beginning of this fiscal year on April 1st. Our gross margin percentage increased across North America, both year-over-year and sequentially, mainly due to a proportionately larger decrease in the use of subcontractors compared to permanent employees, as mentioned by Bernard, and due to higher utilization rates, and this, again, despite salary increases which came into effect during the quarter. Now, looking at SG&A expenses, we have continued to witness significant improvements over consecutive quarters, and we are happy to see our cost efficiency efforts continuing to bear fruit. In the first quarter, total SG&A expenses amounted to CAD 31.7 million, a decrease of 2.6% year-over-year.
SG&A expenses as a percentage of revenues came in at 26.2% in Q1, compared to 24.7% for the same period last year. This was driven mainly by decreases stemming from impairment charges last year as part of Alithya's ongoing review of its real estate strategy, following the integration of acquisition and changes in working conditions in order to reduce the company's footprint and realize synergies, along with decreases in other costs, partially offset by increases in employee compensation costs. Overall, thanks to the above performance on cost management, our first quarter adjusted EBITDA amounted to CAD 10.1 million, an 11.1% increase year-over-year, which is much higher than the same period last year when our revenues were notably higher.
Again, this reflects our rigorous approach to not losing ground on the progress we've made in terms of operational performance, and it will position us well once we return to our higher historical revenue levels. Our Adjusted Net Earnings came in at CAD 4.9 million, or CAD 0.03 per share, an increase of 65.1% year-over-year. I would point out that our accounting net income of CAD -2.8 million in Q1 improved significantly from CAD -7.2 million in the same period of last year. Finally, considering our CAD 10.1 million of Adjusted EBITDA and our CAD 16.7 million of cash generated from operating activities, this translates into an impressive cash flow conversion of 165.3%.
Net cash generated from operating activities represented an increase of 120% year-over-year. As of June 30, 2024, when combined with other cash flow elements, this resulted in a long-term debt reduction of CAD 9.5 million to CAD 107.9 million. As for Alithya's net debt, during Q1, it decreased to CAD 97 million from CAD 109 million at the end of fiscal 2024. Primarily as a result of the decrease in long-term debt, partially offset by an increase in cash. Now, I pass it back to Paul. Paul?
Thank you, Debbie. So as you can see, since going public just over 5 years ago, Alithya has made great strides. Between our first full fiscal year as a public company, which ended March 31, 2019, and our trailing twelve months, based on our most recent first quarter, fiscal 2025, Alithya's revenues have grown 129%, and our gross margin dollars have grown 175%. Over the same period, our adjusted EBITDA dollars have increased 487%, but our market capitalization over the same period has decreased almost 13%. As our progress demonstrates, we believe we are doing the right things to build a sustainable Alithya over the long term, but the market has not recognized this progress, yet. We believe Alithya is a much more valuable company today than it was 5 years ago.
We have greater scale, and we are more diversified. We are in higher-end services of our industry, and over 80% of our revenues are from repeat clients. We are more profitable, and we are a growing company in a growing sector. As I often like to remind people, there will be more technology in our lives 10 years from now. Alithya has been serving as a trusted advisor to its clients for over 32 years, and we plan on being around for a long time to come. We have gone through many different phases of our economy. We have lived through recessions, hyperinflation, global pandemics, global and local crises, and everything in between. We have lived through many technological revolutions, evolutions, and fads, and we have always emerged stronger.
Today, our clients are leaders in their respective industries across North America and Europe, and they turn to us in growing numbers for trusted advice. Our experts operate from five different continents, and our future is bright. Still, Alithya is trading at a significant discount to its peers despite these facts. Rest assured that we remain undaunted and more focused than ever on delivering on our three-year plan. So before we move on to questions period, I'd like to take a moment to remind you that our virtual annual general and special shareholders meeting will take place at 10:00 A.M. on September 10th. Additionally, please note that our ESG report will be disclosed on the same day. Following the annual meeting, you're all invited to attend our Investor Day at 1:00 P.M., also on September tenth.
It will be a hybrid event, so please join us online if you are unable to make it in person in Montreal. Details for attending can be found in our Q1 press release and on the investor page of our website. The event will feature live presentations from our executive team, as well as video presentations from our senior management team, outlining our operating model for implementing our strategic plan. The management team looks forward to discussing our strategic plan targets and the strategies being implemented to achieve them. Please be sure to mark the date, September 10th, on your calendar. We will now be happy to take questions.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session for financial analysts. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one. To withdraw your question, press star two. One moment, please, for your first question. Your first question-
Hold the queue.
Your first question comes from Rob Goff from Ventum. Please go ahead.
Good morning, and congrats on the quarter. I know there are a lot of hard-fought, won gains within the quarter.
Thanks, Rob.
For my question, it's one of, how would you characterize, you know, the financial services outlook? Is it fair to say it's one of stabilization, where there are signs of growth, or would that be overly optimistic, pessimistic?
Yeah, thanks for the question. It's pretty stable right now. I mean, we're not seeing a rapid increase, and we're not seeing a further decrease. The decisions are just taking a lot longer. People are very careful, and there seems to be more interest in in business case-driven or efficiency-driven type projects, which, of course, take more, more time to to close and negotiate just because of the structure of deals. But yeah, I'd, I'd say it's pretty stable right now.
Oh, very good. And as a second question, you made mention of the Quebec Health and Social Services Ministry contract. Is there any more color or perspective you could provide in terms of how this could unfold and expand with success?
Sure. It's first of all, the project is on plan, and I just want to remind people that it is a six-year project with a very long tail in terms of support and maintenance. So the revenue coming from that project is very gradual, and it's on plan. It is one department only. So within the department, they have these regions. This is one region only. There are many regions in the province, so if this goes well, it does position us for the other regions as well. So it could be a much larger project over time, but this is not gonna happen overnight.
And when might you have clarity in terms of adding additional regions to the contract?
It's gonna be, it's gonna be probably a couple of years. I mean, if you look at typical rollout of a project of this size, it's usually a multi-year project. So before the other regions start moving, I bet it's several quarters out.
Very good. Thank you.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from John Shao from National Bank. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. So how should we think about your gross profit margin potential in a situation where the demand environment improves?
Thanks, thanks for the question, John. You know what? I'll ask Bernard to give you a bit more color on the gross margin, because we do get a lot of questions on that because of the improvements that we're showing. And he can give you a bit more color on it. Bernard?
Thanks. Thanks for the question, John. Yes, gross margin has remained a priority for us, even in the slower market that we've been in. There's a number of levers that we have. We talked a little bit about the reduction of our subcontractors and the use of more permanent employees. That has a positive impact on our gross margins. Our utilization rates continue to. As we grow and have more work, it's easier to increase those utilization rates. As I mentioned in our discussion, our Smart Shoring strategy continues to be a big part of where we wanna go. As we are growing, it's easier to increase or accelerate the use of Smart Shoring, and that also comes with strong gross margin improvement as well.
So a number of levers that we have at our disposal, and as we continue to get back into a growth mindset here, we will see, hopefully more on the gross margin side.
Yeah, thanks for the color. So it's a strong quarter of operating cash flow. So just curious, any changes to your working capital policy?
I'll let Debbie take that one, John.
Good morning. Well, we're always looking at conserving cash and making sure to manage our cash, so we continue during our journey through our cash management. But good policies going forward and continuing what we're doing. Nothing overly special, paying down the debt and having managing that debt and the cash.
A lot of dis-
Thank you.
A lot of discipline. A lot of discipline, John.
Thank you. I'll pass along.
All right.
Your next question comes from Divya Goyal from Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone. Paul, I actually wanted to get some more color on the bookings momentum here. It looks like the bookings came in slightly weaker than what we have seen over the recent quarters. So could you potentially provide some color, and what are the signs of stabilization that you are seeing across Canada and U.S.? Which verticals are you seeing stabilizing, BFSI and government? So help us understand how things are trending here.
Sure. Thanks, Divya, for the question. I guess my first comment would be, we always look at our bookings, and I've said this before, on a kind of on a 12, rolling 12-month basis because of the size of some of the contracts that we sign. A shift of a week from one quarter to the next can have a big impact, like we had in Q4. We brought in a lot of deals that might have taken longer, got into Q4, so we've had a very strong Q4. Q1 was a bit lighter, but we look at it on a rolling 12 months. So on a 12-month basis, we think is a better representation of what the future business is gonna look like. So we like that.
You have to take into consideration, there's a lot of things that go into what goes into the quarter or not. So for example, a big part of our backlog are projects tied to Microsoft and Oracle implementations, as an example. Well, depending on when their year end is, you'll see a lot of big contracts being signed before their year end. So that happened in June, in the, in Q4. So that's gonna happen in future quarters as well, depending on the partners themselves. I think just things are taking longer to close and then moving from one quarter to the next. We did have very strong bookings last year that are converting into projects this year, so we should be seeing upticks coming from that eventually.
I don't know, Bernard, if you want to add anything else on that.
No, I think you covered it, Paul. If you look at the trailing twelve months, our numbers are where we expect them to be, especially when you take into consideration the large contracts that we signed for the acquisition.
Yeah.
Very helpful. So one question that I wanted to understand was on the cost containment efforts. So Alithya has been doing a great job managing the cost over the last few quarters here. I wanted to understand these cost cutting that you've been doing on the real estate footprint and trying to minimize the footprint. Is it fair to assume that this cost cutting would be sustainable given your increase in Smart Shoring? And if you could provide some further color on what's how should we anticipate this cost cutting to go on for the coming quarters? Thank you.
Sure. Yeah, sure. Actually, just maybe to add on your previous question there, Divya, on the bookings. One thing that does not appear in our bookings, so in Q1, this latest quarter. We signed, Bernard mentioned it in his comments, but we signed many very large MSAs in the government sector, multimillion-dollar MSAs, but we do not recognize that in the bookings. Because the way we work with government is, we'll qualify for something, win the MSA, and we'll only put it in our bookings when we have the signed contracts or SOWs within those MSAs. So again, that kind of impacts, that is a zero impact short term, but it's very positive for us on the longer term. That's on the bookings. On the cost cutting, I just wanna differentiate between two things.
On the real estate side, it has a cash impact, but it does not really have a P&L impact because of the IFRS rules. So the cost cutting that we've done on the real estate side, you don't see a big impact in our numbers on that. The rest is more efficiency-driven, type things that Bernard was talking about. So one is focusing on the right business, so higher profitability, better business that we go after. That means picking our battles, being more selective in terms of what we go after, which also reduces our cost of sales, because then you're only chasing things that you know we have a good chance of winning, that have higher margins. The other piece in reducing our cost is really where do we do the work from?
Where do we leverage? We leverage lower cost areas to do more work, which again, impacts our cost savings, and there's still significant opportunity there. If you look at our comps out there, you know, in the 30%, 40%, 50% range of offshore usage, we're at just under 9%. So it is an area of focus that we believe we can grow. The other area is our use of IP, AI and IP leverage services, which is also growing. So the services that we do around that have higher margins, higher value. Even growing our offshore operations, we see that as even if we need to add real estate in those locations, we don't see that as an incremental cost. We actually see it as a savings opportunity.
Thank you. That's great color.
I don't know if that answers. I'm not sure if that answers your question completely.
No, it very well answers my question. Thanks a lot for all the color. Appreciate it.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from Gavin Fairweather from Cormark. Please go ahead.
Oh, hey, good morning. Maybe just on the bookings outlook. So looking forward, you, you know, you talked about longer sales cycles and a bit more focused on business cases, which is to commentary in recent quarters. But I guess I'm curious if you characterize the buying or demand environment as, similar or worse to three or six months ago, and maybe you could just touch on the pipeline size and whether that's growing.
Thanks, thanks for the question, Gavin. As you know, we don't give outlook. What I can say is we're not seeing a big change in the demand market or whichever, whatever you want to call it, than six months ago. I mean, for us, we're still focused on the same things. We're focused on growing the same areas that we're in. Some deals are taking longer, but they were taking longer six months ago as well. It's really a question that more of timing, like I was saying earlier. The seasonality of the bookings in our business varies. Like, we're in the summer months right now, things are slower. It's always the case. It's always been the case.
And then things pick up based on events or cycles that are sometimes outside of our control, like the year ends of our client or the year ends of Microsoft or Oracle or AWS. Whenever you're into those, you're working with those partners, their year end usually drives many deals. So, so we stay close to those things, but we're, we're comfortable working in the current environment. I mean, it's, it's - it changes. We work in many different environments and economic cycles, and, and we adapt, so we're, we're okay with what's happening right now.
I'm curious if the pipeline. I don't know if you want to comment on this, but the second question around the pipeline size. I'm curious if you are seeing just an expanding pipe and potentially in, you know, a year or so, maybe if the environment's a little bit better, we could see, you know, bookings reaccelerate, if you have that bigger pipeline.
No, we have a healthy pipeline. We're very comfortable where we're at.
Okay, got it. And then maybe just, maybe for Bernard, just on the offshore mix, I mean, nice to see that ticking higher, this quarter, despite, you know, the organic growth, not being, as fast. I'm curious if you view kind of the current pace of offshore mix moving higher as a reasonable expectation, you know, maybe before a macro recovery. Like, can you-- with, with a stable top line, can you keep pushing that higher?
Yeah, great question, and I think looking at the rates that we've had in past quarters and the growth in revenue, slow growth in revenue, we have been able to do it incrementally. As we do get back to larger growth, you know, we will have more opportunities to increase that, but that will come with growth as well. But I do believe we'll be able to maintain the momentum that we've had in past quarters, as we go forward as well.
Okay, great to hear. And then lastly, for me, nice to see the leverage tick lower. I know M&A is in your plans, but absent additional M&A, is the plan to just let the leverage on the balance sheet keep ticking lower and pay back debt? Or is there a level where if you got to, maybe you'd start to consider, you know, more share buybacks?
Yeah, thanks for the question, Gavin. As I was saying earlier, that given where the stock price is, it gets very dilutive for us to use our stock in transactions. So our balance sheet is very important to us right now. But as you can see, we're deleveraging very fast. We're around 2.6 right now, the net debt, 2.5, 2.6. We said we were comfortable between 2 and 3. We'll keep deleveraging, and when we have the right acquisitions to pull the trigger on, we'll have the cash to do it. Absent that, our stock's probably the best deal out there in the market right now for us to buy back.
So we, you know, our priorities, if you go based on our priorities, first one is to reinvest in the company, so acquisition. I'd say buyback is probably number two after that. So paying down the debt is very good right now based on where the markets are.
I think in previous quarters, you'd characterized the deal environment as one where high-quality companies hadn't seen a big, you know, revision in, in terms of the, the multiples that the vendors were looking for. Would you—is that still the case, or is, is maybe the, the more mixed macro environment starting to lead to a more favorable purchasing environment?
We're still seeing very interesting deal, deals, Gavin, in the range that we typically pay for. And the reason for that is our M&A strategy is a bit different than many other players. And I've mentioned this before, but we look for organizations that are very high quality, that fit into our platform, where the leaders wanna stick around. And the leaders who wanna stick around and see us as a platform for growth, have a very different perspective than somebody who wants to sell the cash out and leave. So we still see many opportunities. Again, we just need to make sure the three key factors are aligned, right? It's the right company at the right price and the people want to stick around. So we're still looking actively.
We have a healthy funnel. This-- We'll pull the trigger when all those conditions are met.
That's it for me. I'll pass the line. Thank you.
All right. Thank you, Gavin.
Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star one. Your next question comes from Rob Goff from Ventum. Please go ahead.
Thank you for taking my follow-up. You had commented in previous quarters that you find yourself bidding on more larger contracts. Could you talk to whether that remains the case and any RFPs outstanding in such a category?
Thanks for the question, Rob. So I won't comment on the outstanding stuff, but yes, we are still bidding on very large projects. As you saw in our latest bookings, we won one for CAD 14 million in cybersecurity in the energy sector in Canada. So we compete with very large companies in that area for these contracts. So yes, we continue to see those. And actually, what's nice about that is our scale, our current scale gives us access to those types of deals. So less competition. We compete with the very large companies, and for us, there's some opportunities to differentiate there with what we do and how we do it. So yeah, we're gonna keep looking for those larger opportunities.
Very good. Thank you.
Thank you.
There are no further questions at this time. I will turn the call back over to Paul Raymond for closing remarks.
Thank you very much, Julie. Thank you, everybody, for joining us today, and I look forward to seeing you at our Investor Day.
This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect. Thank you.