Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the ATS Corporation fourth quarter conference call and webcast. This call is being recorded today, May 19, 2022 at 8:30 A.M. Eastern Time. Following the presentation, we will conduct a question and answer session, and instructions will be provided at that time for you on how to queue up. If anyone has difficulties hearing the conference, please press star zero at any time for operator assistance. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. David Galison, Head of Investor Relations at ATS. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. On the call today are Andrew Hider, Chief Executive Officer of ATS, and Ryan McLeod, Chief Financial Officer. Please note that our remarks today are accompanied by a slide deck, which can be viewed via our webcast and available at atsautomation.com. We caution that the statements made on our webcast and conference call may contain forward-looking information and our cautionary statement regarding such information, including the material factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the statements and the material factors or assumptions applied in making the statements are detailed on slide two of the slide deck. Now it's my pleasure to hand over the call to Andrew.
Thank you, David. Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for joining us. We're pleased to report another quarter of profitable growth for ATS, featuring record revenues, strong order bookings and order backlog, and continued adjusted EBIT margin expansion. Despite challenges in the global business environment, the year as a whole saw ATS produce double-digit organic revenue growth while achieving on-target contributions from newly acquired businesses. All of this reflected good execution of the ABM playbook by dedicated and resilient ATS teams worldwide. As part of our expand strategy, integration activities with all our recent acquisitions continued in Q4, and we completed the acquisition of HSG. Today, I will update you on our business, and then Ryan will provide his financial report. Starting with our financial value drivers.
Q4 revenues were a record $603 million, up 51% from Q4 last year, driven by a combination of acquired businesses and continued strength across our core operations. Organically, revenues grew 11% year-over-year. For the full year, total revenues were up 53%, including 20% from organic growth. Q4 order bookings were $638 million, up 38% year-over-year. Bookings were strong across most market verticals in Q4 and featured key wins within life sciences, consumer, transportation, and food. For the full year, bookings were up by 51%, driven by acquired businesses. Our adjusted EBIT margin for the quarter was 14.2%, representing margin expansion of 183 basis points from Q4 last year, with strong sequential and full-year margin expansion as well. Moving to our outlook.
We finished with a CAD 1.4 billion order backlog that includes several large enterprise programs that have longer durations. Our backlog is distributed across diversified, regulated industries where quality and reliability are mandatory. The size and composition of backlog provides us with a solid base of business as we head into a new fiscal year. By market, conditions remain generally positive in life sciences, with good activity level in our key sectors of medical devices, pharma, and radiopharma. Life sciences represented more than 50% of our ending backlog, and we expect it to remain a key vertical for ATS. In EV, we remain bullish as OEMs accelerate their investment plans. We received several additional orders for battery assembly systems during the quarter. Our experience and successful track record position us well as new complexities arrive from evolving battery technologies.
In food and beverage, we continue to see orders across both processing and packaging. Key drivers include a strong tomato season, demand for primary and secondary processing, and a growing need for automation and processing technology due to labor shortages, specifically in North America and Europe. In consumer, we're seeing ongoing activity in warehouse automation, as well as increased order intake from cosmetics customers during the quarter, a market which was particularly hit hard by pandemic-related effects. In energy, there is ongoing interest in nuclear power and grid battery storage to support green energy initiatives, and we're focused on funnel development in these areas.
In after-sales services, we have continued to expand our regional networks, and we're now providing local support to some of the customers of our recent acquisitions, such as SP, Marco, and CFT. This is a good start on our journey to increase value for acquired customers and share of wallet for ATS. We are progressing in our digital journey to develop combined technologies and service solutions to meet our customers' challenges on the shop floor. By way of example, we recently helped a customer drive better value out of Illuminate by analyzing their data to identify areas for immediate support, which drove a significant OEE improvement. In addition, based on knowledge generated from the data, we now providing ongoing support to the customer through health checks, upgrades, and a service level agreement with future potential to expand to other equipment and higher value services.
Next, I would like to address some of the macro issues facing the markets. In Ukraine, ATS has a small operation that serves as an internal supplier with 70 valued employees. We are maintaining regular contact and supporting our team, and we have made a donation to the Red Cross. Our donation is being used to fund mobile health teams, families displaced by the war, and emergency basic needs. Our thoughts are with those affected by this tragic situation. Relative to the pandemic, in many geographies, we've seen restrictions that were implemented in the early days of the pandemic lifted or reduced, but the situation remains fluid. We are working with our customers and employees to monitor the situation and address the challenges. Despite the difficulties in Q4 absenteeism in some geographies, our teams maintain their focus on delivering world-class performance for our customers.
Inflation, supply chain constraints, and competition for talent represent ongoing challenges. The situation remains dynamic for ATS and for our customers. Through the effort of our teams and the deployment of our ABM to date, we've had a good level of success in mitigating some of these challenges. However, we're not immune. That said, ATS is ideally positioned to assist our global customers with automation solutions that will strengthen their global supply chains and reduce both production costs and labor dependence. To summarize our outlook, this quarter included strong order bookings, order backlog, and a solid opportunity funnel. We remain encouraged by recent activity levels, while at the same time recognizing that this is a complex and volatile business environment with heightened risks to order intake timing and operational execution.
Our teams remain focused on problem-solving efforts to identify effective countermeasures to mitigate the effects with special ongoing attention to supply chain, assisted, as always, by our continuous improvement playbook, ABM. Moving to ABM highlights. During the quarter, we held our annual week-long set of President's Kaizen events, attended by our senior business leaders and employees from across the organization. This year, the President's Kaizens focus on both front-end sales and operational execution improvements. Two events focus on responding to supply chain challenges and one on engineering efficiency. The remaining three events targeted value selling, capture rate improvement, and finally, optimizing sales processes across three acquired businesses, Comecer, SP, and DF. Our EV team held a joint Kaizen workshop with General Motors to enhance machine throughput and support customer growth. Many SPT members participated in their first virtual boot camp, where they learned and applied ABM fundamentals.
As a result, 10 problem-solving and Kaizen events were planned at SP for April and May as we roll out our ABM playbook. We will continue to employ our global ABM boot camps in fiscal 2023. We are proud of the ongoing demand for and commitment to these boot camps. On M&A, acquisitions in strategic markets are an important complement to ATS's organic growth, market penetration, and customer capabilities. During the fourth quarter, we completed the acquisition of HSG Engineering. HSG is an industrial automation integrator primarily serving the pharmaceutical sector. HSG joined ATS's PA business to deepen its domain knowledge in the biopharma and pharmaceutical sectors and strengthen PA's regional presence in Italy. With a strong balance sheet, ATS will cultivate and evaluate acquisition opportunities consistent with our proven strategy.
Naturally, timing of acquisitions will be variable, and our approach to deploying our balance sheet will be disciplined and strategic. Of note, we continue to make progress integrating our acquired businesses. There is strong collaboration as we explore opportunities to grow our support and integrate service activities. Across ATS, our innovation activities are an ongoing part of our expand strategy. Globally, the team made solid progress in a number of areas. Our SuperTrak team continued to build the conveyance portfolio to enhance SuperTrak's potential in the life sciences and pharma industries. At our ATS Innovation Center in Cambridge, the team maintained its research collaboration with the University of Waterloo. In addition, the team developed new applications using the SYMPHONI platform, including a system for syringe production.
BioDot has developed new techniques for forming lyophilized beads based on the BioDot dispensing technology, which may open up synergies with SP, although this is still in early stages. Comecer continues to innovate and build on its strong portfolio of technology used in the production of a new radioisotope that is showing strong potential as a breakthrough in radiopharmaceutical cancer treatment. Our EV team remains focused on development of its battery assembly platform with innovations that increase throughput and yield through the early identification of defective battery cells in the assembly process. In summary, we are pleased with the results of the quarter and fiscal year as they demonstrate the strength and growth of our portfolio and offerings, and the resiliency of our global teams. Our commitment to providing best-in-class solutions to our customers is evident in strong order bookings and robust order backlog.
Our strong leadership team remains focused in our dedication to our employees, our customers, and in creating value for our shareholders. Our global teams did an excellent job in what was a very challenging environment, delivering strong results in fiscal 2022. I am thankful for and proud of their efforts and continued commitment. Now I will turn the call over to Ryan. Ryan, over to you.
Thank you, Andrew, and good morning, ladies and gentlemen. I'll start with an overview of our Q4 operating results, and then I'll provide color on our balance sheet. Starting with orders, bookings were CAD 638 million, up 38% compared to Q4 last year. Growth was driven by acquired companies, primarily CFT contributing CAD 81 million and SP adding CAD 66 million. Organic growth in bookings was 1%, offset by a 3% headwind from foreign exchange translation. For the year, bookings of CAD 2.5 billion were up CAD 830 million due to increases in life sciences and food. Of this 51% increase, organic growth was 21%, while acquired companies drove 34% growth. Foreign exchange translation had a negative 4% impact.
Our book to bill ratio for fiscal 2022 was 1.13 to 1, positioning us well for continued organic revenue growth. Moving to revenues. Our top line grew 51% in Q4 over the prior year. Our organic growth of 10.5% related primarily to growth within the life sciences and transportation verticals. Foreign exchange translation created a 3% headwind compared to Q4 last year. Acquired companies added 43% to revenue growth, with CFT and SP the primary contributors. For the year, revenues were CAD 2.2 billion, an increase of 53% from the prior year. Revenues from acquired companies contributed 37% to overall growth, while organic growth was 20%. This was offset by a foreign exchange translation impact of 4% for the year.
As expected, with the addition of SP, our revenue mix shifted to a higher weighting on product sales and shorter cycle original equipment, which provides a good balance to our longer duration project-based revenues. Our Q4 revenue mix was 59% from construction projects, 18% from product sales, and 23% from services. In Q4 of last year, this mix was 65% from construction sales, 8% from product sales, and 27% from after-sale services. We continue to focus on growing our after-sale service business with Q4 after-sale service revenues growing 14% sequentially and 68% year-over-year, including 21% organic growth compared to last year. Our Q4 ending backlog of $1.4 billion was 24% higher than Q4 last year.
Looking forward, our revenue conversion for Q1 is estimated to be in the lower end of the 40%-45% range of order backlog. Of note, this is an increase to our prior quarter range of 35%-40% and reflects the change in mix of our business. As a reminder, this estimate is based on revenue expectations for both the execution of projects from backlog and work that will be booked and billed within the quarter. Moving to margins. Included in Q4 gross margin were CAD 5.2 million of costs related to fair value adjustment of inventories acquired through acquisition. Excluding this adjustment, Q4's adjusted gross margin was 29.6%, 180 basis points higher than the comparable period a year ago.
Higher gross margin reflected operating efficiencies from strong project execution, improvements in the cost structure of our core business through previous reorganizations, increased after-sale service revenues, and other continuous improvement efforts achieved by deploying our ABM. To date, cost increases and lead time extensions in our supply base have not had a material impact on our profitability. In our systems integration businesses, we've been largely able to mitigate the impacts. In our product and original equipment businesses, we have seen some impact on margins from rising costs of certain commodities and components. Cost increases, notably for lead, aluminum, and stainless steel, continue to affect direct raw material purchases and add inflationary cost pressure on derivative component supply. Electrical components are still the primary category impacted on lead times.
From a risk mitigation perspective, we have a diversified supply base, with our top 10 suppliers accounting for less than 15% of our total external spend. No supplier represents more than 3.5% of our total spend. We continue to monitor the supply chain with concerted efforts made by our team to identify and implement countermeasures, including embedding secured supplier costs into new quotes, accelerating order timing, securing alternative sources of supply, and implementing pricing changes. Our ABM has served us well to date as we navigate and continue to address these pressures, which we anticipate will continue throughout fiscal 2023. ABM efforts, combined with our strong backlog, have served us well in managing our risk exposure. Going forward, we are focused on continuing to implement countermeasures to help offset these pressures in our business.
Moving to SG&A, expenses were $49.2 million higher than Q4 last year. This year's costs included $19.2 million of acquisition-related amortization, $1.4 million of acquisition-related transaction costs, and $1.9 million of restructuring costs, mainly related to ongoing cost rationalization in acquired businesses. These costs were partially offset by a $1.7 million favorable adjustment in respect of acquisition-related contingent consideration. Excluding comparable items in both periods, Q4's SG&A was $91.8 million, $37 million higher than last year, reflecting incremental SG&A costs from acquired companies, primarily CFT, BioDot, and SP. Fourth quarter stock compensation expense was $800,000, down $11.9 million from Q3 and down $6 million from last year.
The decrease in stock-based compensation costs as a result of lower expenses from the revaluation of deferred and restricted share units. Q4 adjusted earnings from operations were CAD 85.8 million, or 14.2% compared to CAD 49.5 million or 12.4% last year. The increase reflected improved gross margin and lower stock compensation expense, partially offset by higher SG&A expenses. Excluding acquisitions, our core business operated with a 16.8% adjusted earnings from operations margin. Adjusted earnings margins from our acquired businesses were 7.7% in Q4 compared to 7.4% in Q3. For the year, our core business achieved a 15% adjusted earnings from operations margin. We are pleased with this performance and are focused on continuing to expand our margins in both our core and acquired businesses.
In the short term, challenges in supply chain will continue to pressure our countermeasures. Moving to the balance sheet. In Q4, cash flows from operating activities were CAD 30 million, CAD 8.9 million lower than last year. This is primarily related to the timing of investments in non-cash working capital in certain customer programs. In fiscal 2022, we generated cash from operations of CAD 216 million, up from CAD 185 million last year, reflecting growth and improved profitability, partially offset by increased investment in non-cash working capital. Our non-cash working capital as a percentage of revenues was 8.2% in Q4, up from 6.3% in Q3 and 6.2% in Q4 last year. We invested CAD 16.3 million in CapEx in tangible assets in Q4 compared to CAD 13 million in Q4 last year.
Higher investments primarily related to growth in our business. In fiscal 2022, total CapEx in investment was $53 million. We expect to increase our CapEx in fiscal 2023 in order to support growth through additional capacity and investments in innovation. Overall, our CapEx budget for fiscal 2023 is expected to be in the range of $90-$110 million. On leverage, our year-end net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio was 2.8 to 1. On a pro forma basis, including the trailing twelve-month EBITDA contributions of acquired businesses, our net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio was approximately 2.6 to 1. We ended the quarter with $135 million of cash and availability on our credit facilities of $229 million.
Going forward, we're focused on maintaining our strong balance sheet while simultaneously supporting flexibility in our financing structure to continue pursuing our growth strategies. In summary, we're pleased with another quarter of good results, including record quarterly revenues, strong bookings and backlog, and margin expansion. These achievements reflect organic growth, contributions from our newly acquired businesses, and the ongoing deployment of our ABM playbook. Our global teams persevered in the face of adverse business conditions, allowing ATS to deliver best-in-class solutions to our customers and strong financial results. Now we'll open the call to questions from our analysts. Operator, could you please provide instructions? Thank you.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now conduct the question and answer session. To allow as many voices as possible to be heard, please limit yourself to two questions per turn. If you would like to ask a question, please press the star followed by the one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press the star followed by the two. Your questions will be pulled in the order they are received. Please ensure if you are using a speakerphone that you lift your handset before pressing any keys. One moment please for your first question. Your first question comes from David Ocampo, Cormark Securities. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Good morning, everyone.
Good morning.
Good morning, David.
Ryan, you touched a little bit about getting some pricing relief from some of your customers and being able to pass it through. I wanted to draw a little bit more on the enterprise contracts since those are a little bit more longer dated. I'm just curious, how much flexibility on pricing is there? I f inflation or your wages for your employees shoots up 10%, are you guys able to pass that off immediately, or does ATS have to find other ways to mitigate it, like the measures that you guys were talking about in terms of sourcing from different suppliers and what have you?
First of all, whether it's an enterprise program or a regular shorter duration construction contract, when we're doing custom work, we're going out and quoting our supply chain in both cases. Typically it's gonna be in the 60%-80%. We're not quoting 100% of our supply chain, but certainly the key components in the majority of our third-party materials. That's where we get some price protection on cost increases from our supply base. If there's a sudden price increase in a component we didn't source, that's when we're gonna look at alternative levers like utilizing alternative sources of supply. We might change design for certain components. Those are some of the measures that we've used and continue to use. In terms of people and other costs, we do factor in our expectation for wage increases, and that's part of our normal process in quoting as well.
No, that makes a lot of sense. Andrew, maybe one for you, and we've always talked about capital deployment and how your M&A pipeline is quite flush here. Just given the relative valuation on where ATS is trading today and maybe where the expectations are for some of your targeted companies, has your thought process changed on capital deployment? Can we expect more to be done on the NCIB? I know a little bit of shares got picked up there, but how should we be thinking about that going forward?
Good morning, David. If I step back, I'm gonna state first and foremost, we look at long-term shareholder value in our capital allocation plan. We have a well-thought-through strategy wrapped around this, and I'm gonna walk through the levers on this. First, you picked up on it, the NCIB, which when we see an area of opportunity, we have the ability to pull that lever. Your comment, you've seen some of that uptick. Number two, around M&A, when we look at the market, we continue to cultivate. When we think about long-term value creation, we wanna continue to cultivate. We wanna continue to assess and identify companies that are gonna be strategic for ATS.
Our funnel remains healthy, and we've aligned around areas that we view are gonna drive significant opportunities for both our customers and our shareholders. The only item here is, if you look at the M&A market, it is down year to date. N ot my words. The banks that we poll on this, down roughly 30%. Our cultivation efforts continue. The reason is, at times, cultivation is gonna take a year or two for the right asset, for the right targets. We've continued to build out and continue to have a strong funnel.
Okay. That's my two. I'll hop back in the queue.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from Mark Neville of Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
G ood morning, guys. Great quarter. Great job. Maybe just quickly to follow up first on David's question, just around price. On these programs or on any program, like, do you have the ability to go back and adjust price while the program's ongoing?
In some contracts, we do have that ability. Those are rare occasions today, and utilized more where we've got ongoing master agreements with customers typically.
Yeah. Maybe just on the margin, longer term, the 15% target, and I can't remember the number you quoted, but the legacy is close to 17%. When you think about the acquired businesses doing 7%, just big picture, when you think about these businesses longer term or what they should do, like should they look over time comparable to legacy or maybe even a bit better just given the mix?
I'll try and answer your question. The core business did 16.8% in the quarter. There's a favorable stock comp benefit there. We were at 15% for the year. I think that's a better reflection given if I look at the full year where there's a lot of variability in our stock comp expense. For the full year, it was more normal. We're quite pleased with that. In terms of the acquired businesses, there's a mix. There's some that are accretive to those margins and then others that are dilutive. CFT would be the one that I would call out, and we talked about it when we acquired the business. It was a low single-digit margin business.
We have a plan to increase those margins over time that we've laid out. We've made good progress. That's again, a business that is more susceptible to the supply chain headwinds that are happening today. That reflects their higher buy on raw materials and components like that. But we're pleased with the progress we've made in terms of taking costs out of the business, putting in some operational efficiencies. That said, there's still a ways to go with that business in terms of overall performance.
Got it. Maybe just on the CapEx budget for the year, Andrew or Ryan, whoever. Can you maybe just talk about it? T hat feels like a big number for you guys. Obviously, it's not an issue to fund it, but maybe just some of the things that you're doing this year that's taking up or where that money's going.
Yeah, it is a larger number. First of all, our total business has increased. The maintenance requirements are higher. Not from a percentage standpoint, but we're still in the low 2% range from a maintenance standpoint. But then we also have a number of growth initiatives to add capacity. They're primarily adding floor space in some of our key core locations. Those are areas where we have critical mass, critical footprint, but have seen a good growth in our business and really a need to expand. We're also increasing spend on innovation, and we've talked about that for a number of years, and that continues to be an important part of our growth strategy. All that said, there is some flexibility in our plans. G iven business conditions, we will continue to monitor and adjust as needed.
All right. I'll get back to you, but again, great job.
Thanks, Mark.
Thanks.
Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one now. Your next question comes from Maxim Sytchev of National Bank Financial. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good morning, gentlemen.
Good morning, Max.
A couple of questions, if I may. I think in the backlog flowchart, there was a CAD 73 million adjustment. Just was curious if you can comment on that because some of that was in relation to M&A, some of that scope changes, just in terms of how we should be thinking about that number. Thanks.
Yeah. In the quarter, about two-thirds of that is FX related, and primarily in the Euro, we saw that currency value decrease. And the balance, the other third would have been normal core scope changes in cancellations.
Okay. Yeah, quite small. Okay, that's super helpful. Thank you. Was wondering just in terms of you mentioned electrical components. Was curious around controllers and how chip shortages are impacting the suppliers of your suppliers and how much visibility you have on these issues and how that's being managed, if it's possible to provide any color there.
Yeah, sure, Max. I'll walk through this, but I wanna walk through it so you understand how we view it. If you look at our business, let's break it into two sections. There's the standard machines, and oftentimes on standard machines, we'll have, where possible, multi-controllers or controller agnostic. We will at times where we identify risk, build that into our process for engineering, for design to ensure. At times we don't have that, but it is more common in that area. You've got our custom machines. In general, you're gonna find that you're gonna have less optionality from a multi-controller perspective, but you're gonna have options at times or within a supplier to have multiple options within that supplier. We monitor this extremely close.
If a supplier has a component that's an A component and they're running into a shortage, we'll then look at an offset that says maybe a B or a D, and we have to design it in. Because we've got the engineering horsepower, we can do that. Alternatively, we'll also, because we know the global market, reach out to a distribution channel and do a longer-term buy on those components that we view are gonna need to have, call it, some protection. In the last case, at times, we've done this even recently, where we work with the customer on a change-out. So I would say we've managed this situation. We continue to be very focused on this. When we talk daily visual management, it is real. It is at every site, every location.
Because of our buy and our continued buy, we've continued to mitigate that risk. Just for a reference point, we have a very diversified spend, and no supplier makes up more than 3% of our spend. While it is a challenge and suppliers do get hit, we've been able to offset, and we continue to be very forward-looking in this to ensure that we minimize impact on our business.
Yeah. T hank you. That's very helpful disclosure. Just in terms of the by market outlook, was wondering how you think right now as COVID is receding, about organic growth rates on healthcare and related/unrelated question around EVs and the potential growth dynamics on transportation. Just curious to see if we should anticipate an acceleration in the latter. Thanks.
Yeah. Let me walk through that, and I'm gonna start with EV 'cause I mentioned it in my prepared remarks. We are bullish on this market, on this area, and we continue to see strong demand. As a matter of fact, even this week, I was meeting with a customer in this area where they view ATS as a very strategic supplier, and they're looking at not only our current technology, but ones we're working on from an innovation perspective to build that into their process. We have deep relationships with the OEMs here. We continue to see opportunity. We are well positioned in the space to help them as they navigate the complexities and changes, and we continue to stay very close around that change.
I f you think about not only the equipment, but then the servicing capability, the complexity around if a battery changes, you have to be able to move at their pace, and ATS just does a fantastic job of value creation here. If you then look at healthcare, look, this is a big piece of our business, and one we view as a growth trajectory. You mentioned COVID, and certainly we did see a nice uptick from COVID during that time period. We've largely pivoted back and we are on our base business and we continue to support many of the areas. I referenced radiopharma, medical devices, pharmaceutical manufacturing, and even with our new SP acquisition, we've seen even synergies with other businesses like Comecer and DF. We view that as a market that's gonna continue to support our aspirations and our growth trajectory.
Okay, 100%. Then just one last one for Ryan. In terms of because again like you're juggling all these supply chain issues, anything that we should be mindful of in terms of the non-cash working capital if you're trying to maybe overcommit on the inventory side of things or yeah just any directionality there. Thanks.
Yeah. We've made some investments into inventory to secure product for what I'd call longer than normal lead times. Not really material from an inventory standpoint. What's gonna drive our working capital is more on the project side in customer terms, commercial terms, and we did see a bit of an increase to eight, just over 8% this quarter. I expect we'll continue to be in that range. We might end up in the 10% range in certain quarters, but it's generally gonna continue to be in that area.
Okay. That's great. Thank you very much.
Your next question comes from Justin Keywood of Stifel. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Nicely navigated quarter with a tough backdrop. My question has to do with geography. I'm wondering if you're seeing any softness in Europe as compared to other regions. Also the revenue split in Europe by vertical, is that consistent with other regions? For example, would Life Sciences be 50% or perhaps even higher, given that ATS serves pharma companies that may be based in Ireland?
Good morning, Justin, and certainly thank you for the comment. Look, I'll take the first part of this and then Ryan can jump in on the second. We continue to see opportunity in Europe across the board. I have personally met with customers here and what I can state is our funnel remains healthy. We look at this as. Yeah, I would characterize as cautiously optimistic. The only area that I would say we have seen some impact, it is not material, but we have seen some impact, is we do have customers in Russia that we do not have at this moment. Therefore, we have seen that impact. It is not material on our results and therefore, it's not something we've outlined or highlighted. Ryan, why don't you take the second piece of that?
Just to put a fine point on Russia, it's less than 0.5% of our total revenue. To Andrew's point, not material. In terms of vertical markets, our food business is more weighted into Europe. The rest of the business is I would say fairly aligned with the geographic revenue split. Today, transportation would be a little bit more aligned into North America. Life Sciences is likely as well. Consumer is gonna be a bit of a mix, and energy is more North American. Food's really the one that's more heavily weighted into Europe today.
Great. Thank you for the context. A follow-on question for the food and beverage segment. I'm wondering if ATS provides automation work for baby formula, and if this is an opportunity for ATS to help given the current baby formula shortage going on?
We would characterize that in what we call secondary processing, and we are in this space. I'm not gonna get into all the areas we play in this area, but we do view this as an area that we can continue to grow into.
Given the current shortage for baby formula, does this elevate perhaps the demand for a better quality control given the Abbott Laboratories facility that was shut down and perhaps some increased attention to higher quality manufacturing in the space?
I'm just gonna kinda step back and say this is one of the reasons why we like regulated food and why we like secondary processing, is you're gonna have a heightened area of focus around ensuring that you meet the qualifications for the markets. Justin, just to give you some insight as to when we view the food space, regulated food, this is one of the areas why we like this space, is it has similar characteristics as our life sciences, where regulation, quality, dependency, these matter to our customers. While we're early in our journey with food at ATS, with CFT, with Raytec, with Marco, with other areas, we've made a nice progress here, and we do view this as going to be an area of growth for our corporation.
Understood. Thank you for taking my questions.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from Cherilyn Radbourne of TD. Please go ahead.
Thanks very much, and good morning.
Good morning, Cherilyn.
Andrew, my first question is for you. We know that you have ongoing dialogue with customers, so was just hoping to tap into that a little bit. Could you just update us on the tone of those conversations as the quarter progressed and macro uncertainty and inflationary pressures built? Did you get a sense that they were starting to approach CapEx more cautiously as a consequence, and/or have they started to look to ATS more for assistance with inflationary pressure?
Cherilyn, thank you for the question. I'm gonna get to this, but as you're well aware, we're 80% regulated, and that generally has a when we view it, the markets we serve today have longer tails on their growth. If I were to characterize my engagement with customers, I would say, in general, it's cautiously optimistic. M ore resilient markets, areas that when you think mid- and long-term, they've got labor shortage issues at times, and automation can support and help that.
As well as ATS has been very focused on continuing to expand our value to these customers, whether it be technology, whether it be helping them in their service and support, whether it be in getting their products to market at a faster pace. In general, I would say our communication has been solid. J ust to recap the quarter, very strong bookings quarter, very strong backlog as we go into the new year, and as I mentioned, a healthy funnel, as we look at the core markets today.
Great. Maybe for Ryan, just in terms of the organic growth in bookings this quarter, can you remind us of the size of the prior year EV booking that you're lapping? Maybe give us a bit more color on what you're seeing in nuclear and just how timing impact affected bookings in the quarter.
I'll start, and I'll let Andrew address the nuclear portion of the question. We had a couple of orders in Q4 last year that were in the $50 million range. A couple of significant ones. We have those. That's not unusual. In this quarter, we had a couple of orders in the $30 million range. Our organic growth in bookings was 1% this quarter. But we're always gonna see normal course variability because of the size of some of these orders. That's why I referenced our trailing twelve-month book to bill in my prepared remarks. We tend to look at this on a longer term basis.
Our organic growth rate in bookings for the year was 21%. T hat's a very good number. That's gonna be a tough one to beat going into next year, but something we're very proud of. L ike I said, we don't get too focused on a singular quarter, and we're pleased with the bookings. As Andrew talked about, we've got a very strong funnel, and our backlog is very strong as we go into the next year.
Cherilyn, I'll just walk through the nuclear side. I met with a very important nuclear customer earlier in the week, and we continue to see. I would characterize our focus here has been a niche focus. It's high value to our customers. We see continued potential expansion with our current customer base and with a renewed focus on nuclear resurgence and avenues and areas that we can expand that on a global basis. We often talk about decommissioning, we talk about other areas. As you see a shift from fossil fuels to this being an energy source, we do view additional opportunity here.
That's my cue. Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, once again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one now. Your final question is a follow-up from Mark Neville of Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
Thanks again. Maybe just on the backlog conversion guidance. Is this more a function of the higher guidance for the quarter, more a function of what's in the backlog or the structural change in the business from all the acquisitions over the past year or so?
Mark, it's both. We've added businesses that have more products. The equipment is shorter cycle, and we've also grown our services. All of that changes the mix a little bit, and helps it push us into that 40%-45%. Now that said, we do make this assessment every quarter. We look at our backlog and our expectations for how that's gonna get revenued. It really is a bit of both. Over the longer term, I would expect, given the change in mix in our business, that we'll generally be in that 40%-45% range. That said, if we have a number of large projects come on and they're early stages, we could see that percentage decrease as well. The short answer is it's a bit of both.
Got it. Maybe moving over to the supply chain. Andrew, appreciate all the color and how you're managing it. Again, I appreciate it's visual, every day, every location. Is there also a centralized supply chain team that's managing this f rom corporate level?
Yeah. Mark, we have both a centralized supply chain team, which by the way, this has been something we've talked about for years, where this has been one of our five points of focus on our margin expansion plan with supply chain. Our supply chain leader has built the team out here and globally. Remember, these are individuals that our focus is they pay for their costs. Not only do they perform, they've continued to expand and really drive the business. Short answer is yes, we have both. W e look at this from a macro perspective, i.e., global enterprise, all of ATS, because we can bring at times that full breadth of our focus to our supply base or a shift of supply base. Our growth really is gonna be helpful for us as we navigate these times.
Got it. If I can ask a last question just on M&A. Curious on a couple things . First, just given the macro uncertainty, is more stuff popping up? Curious if seller expectations have changed. Also curious, given the macro uncertainty, your appetite, for doing a deal or deals in this environment, if it's changed at all. Thanks. Thanks for the comments.
What we've seen is we haven't seen a massive shift in sellers, call it, approach to the market. The deals, I mentioned this earlier in the call, the deals have gone down in totality in their numbers, but we haven't seen a massive shift in expectations from sellers. W e are patient, we are focused, we are aligned with longer term value creation for our shareholders, and we're gonna keep that focus. I view our position having a strong balance sheet, having a critical core, having markets that we view are resilient, more resilient, is really aligned around the journey that ATS has been on. While I do say that it's a challenging environment, we're in a position to continue to build out our relationship and our funnel through this.
Got it. Thanks, Andrew. Thanks, Ryan.
Thank you, Mark.
Andrew Hider, there are no further questions at this time.
Thank you, operator. We're pleased with the performance this quarter and appreciate the efforts put forth from our talented teams to make it possible. Look forward to the new fiscal year and the opportunity to continue to deliver on our plans. Thank you for joining us. I look forward to speaking to you on our Q1 call in August. Stay safe and goodbye for now.