Good afternoon. My name is Ina, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Dye & Durham fourth quarter and year-end fiscal 2024 earnings call. I would now like to turn the call over to Huss Hirji, VP Investor Relations of Dye & Durham. Mr. Hirji, you may begin your conference.
Great. Thank you, operator, and good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to the Dye & Durham conference call. Before we start, we'd like to remind you that all amounts discussed on this call are denominated in Canadian dollars, unless otherwise indicated. Please note that statements made during this call may include forward-looking statements and information and future-oriented financial information regarding Dye & Durham and its businesses, and disclosure regarding possible events, conditions, or results that are based on information currently available to management, which indicate management's expectation of future growth, results of operations, business performance, and business prospects and opportunities. Such statements are made as of this day hereof, and Dye & Durham assumes no obligation to update or revise them to reflect events, disclosures, or circumstances, except as required by applicable securities laws. Such statements involve significant risks and uncertainties and are not a guarantee of future performance or results.
A number of these risks or uncertainties could cause results to differ materially from the results discussed today. Given these risks and uncertainties, one should not place undue reliance on these statements and information. Please refer to the forward-looking statements and information and future-oriented financial information section of our public filings, without limitation, our MD&A, and our earnings press release issued today for additional information. Joining us on the call today are Matt Proud, Dye & Durham Chief Executive Officer, Frank Di Liso, Dye & Durham Chief Financial Officer, and Martha Vallance, Global Chief Operating Officer. A question and answer session will follow the formal remarks for research analysts. I'll now turn the call over to Matt for opening remarks.
Thanks, Huss, and good afternoon, everyone. We've built one of the largest legal technology software companies in the world. Our customers depend on our products daily as mission-critical software to manage their business effectively and efficiently. You can see the momentum we're building with our fourth quarter results. We reported the highest revenue quarter in the company's history, excluding the impact of the TM Group divestiture, with CAD 120 million of top-line revenue. This represents 15% growth. We also generated the second highest level of Adjusted EBITDA, taking into consideration the TM Group divestiture, with CAD 69 million in the fourth quarter. While both revenue growth and EBIT are important, we remain focused on generating free cash flow after servicing all the company's obligations.
In this regard, I'm very pleased to announce in the quarter that we generated approximately CAD 32 million of leveraged free cash flow, a record quarter performance since the company's IPO four years ago. At Dye & Durham, we are very fortunate to be servicing the very attractive legal services end-market, which has an accelerated adoption of technology to improve efficiencies in their client experience. This means as a business, we're well-positioned across our tens of thousands of customers who are looking for streamlined workflows delivered through central dashboards with single sign-on and software interoperability. We've invested significant sums of money over the last couple of fiscal years to make this a reality for our customers, and as you can see from the results, this is now paying off.
Virtually all of our customers across the small and medium law segment, which we focus on, require mission-critical legal practice management software to run their practice. Equally as important, this same segment requires non-discretionary data and insight applications to conduct legal due diligence and the associated regulatory filings on behalf of their clients. Our strategy is to win by providing the interoperability to our customers at this intersection. Our financial technology business provides banking software to more than 100 financial institutions across Canada and Australia, including leading technology, payments, managed banking services, to name a few. Across our platform, our customers and their end customers rely on our solutions every day to complete transactions and move funds. This business is performing well and grew year over year and has produced revenue growth greater than 20% in fiscal 2024.
At the start of fiscal 2025, it's off to an even greater start. As you know, there's an ongoing strategic review of this business, which has been challenging to manage, given the distraction of recent activist activities that's been reported on. We continue to focus on our go-to-market strategy. As you can see, over the last two fiscal years, we've managed to build our ARR to CAD 137 million, a number which is rapidly growing. When we think of go-to-market at Dye & Durham, the strategy falls into two buckets. One, continue to focus on our top couple of thousand clients and putting them into minimum spend contracts. Two, start to focus more on our large tail of tens of thousands of customers and drive a larger subscription-based revenue model business.
We have approximately CAD 70 million of license-based subscription revenue today, and our recent investments are designed to involve our offering into a more modern SaaS-based relationship by providing a whole suite of products to a law firm that they require to run their practice, together with a single technology platform, instead of the more legacy common market practice of a single-point solution product offering. These point solutions are disjointed and require law firms to utilize multiple systems, which create complexity and a total lack of efficiency. We see an ability in the future years to significantly grow this subscription-based model, while continuing to transition our larger customers, that couple thousand I talked of, to minimum spend contracts. This will help us grow ARR even further.
Our strategy at Dye & Durham is to create the interoperability and bridge the requirements for law firms to use multiple systems in their day-to-day workflow. As you know, we've acquired a large number of practice management and data insights, and due diligence applications globally, and have worked very hard to integrate and create a consolidated platform and common brand for our customers around the world. This puts us in a great position to capture market share in this highly fragmented market that is forecasted to double by 2030. Our Unity global platform is core to this strategy, with the practice management and data insights and due diligence verticals.
Unity brings together all the tools a small or medium-sized business, a small or medium-sized law firm requires to run their practice, saving our customers time and money, and providing real operational cost efficiencies, as well as the latest technologies in the market, including a real reliance on AI. In addition to ARR growth, we also have a number of customers, like financial institutions, that generate revenue from us from contract overages and other revenue contracts or service agreements. Together with our ARR, this annual contracted revenue represents 51% of the total revenue in the fourth quarter. We believe multiple levers exist to continue driving value creation at Dye & Durham. On the transactional side of the business, the interest rate environment supports a normalization of market activity in real estate and M&A.
These are just two of a few drivers that are macro drivers in our transactional business. More transactions across our customer base generates more fees. Given our scale, this incremental revenue has an outsized impact on our bottom line, as there is little to no incremental cost to additional transactions. We also continue to optimize the market position and positioning of our pricing and transaction offering. As we develop new functionalities and enhance and expand our application set, we are aligning our pricing strategy with the value we deliver to our customers. As is evidenced by our results, our strategy is working. Organic growth rate came in at 8% during the fourth quarter, a number we're very proud of. Our market positioning and the green shoot in the macro market activity are bolstering our growth.
This result outpaced the growth contributed from acquisitions in the quarter. On acquisitions, acquisitions are still the main part of our strategy. However, we will continue to focus on driving organic growth, and when it comes to acquisitions, doing more smaller tuck-in M&A. This will allow us to focus on reducing our leverage ratio. That said, we remain very committed to driving leverage below four times as quickly as possible. At the same time, we've successfully demonstrated our ability to make acquisitions and deliver revenue synergies by cross-selling to our large customer base and optimizing our pricing strategy of the unmanaged assets in the market, in addition to reducing operational costs. We intend to remain disciplined.
To that end, subsequent to June 30th, we expanded our practice management offering across the Asia Pacific region with strategic tuck-in of Lexis Affinity in the Asia Pacific region. This acquisition is aligned with our existing offering and complements our strategic vision of growing ARR through our practice management offering and owning that intersection of data and PMS software. The business is headquartered in Sydney, Australia, and has approximately 60 employees across the APAC region, including Australia and New Zealand. The Affinity flagship practice management software services approximately 12,000 users in medium-sized law firms across the region. The upfront cost for Affinity, the upfront consideration for Lexis Affinity, plus another small tuck-in acquisition, was CAD 21 million subsequent to June 30th.
We were able to negotiate very favorable payment terms on both these acquisitions, meaning the remaining deferred consideration, total of CAD 48 million, will be payable interest-free over a multi-year period, and the company estimates a large portion will be paid for out of the Free Cash Flow generated from these businesses. I'm now going to turn it over to Martha to speak about our strong track record of capital allocation and acquisition results.
Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. As Matt mentioned, since the IPO, we have implemented a disciplined acquisition strategy that has significantly scaled the business by deploying approximately CAD 1.9 billion in capital. On slide 17, you can see the impact of these acquisitions. This group of acquired businesses account for more than three-quarters of the capital that we've deployed in our acquisition strategy. The performance speaks for itself. Across these acquisitions, we've consistently delivered double-digit compound annual revenue growth. Our largest acquisition, DoProcess, we have nearly tripled revenue since we acquired that business in late 2020. More recently, we acquired Credas, which provides KYC and AML capabilities used by lawyers to verify their customer's identity in the U.K..
This is a critical part of the customer onboarding process for lawyers, and a white- labeled version of the Credas technology is already now integrated with our practice management applications in the U.K., allowing our customers direct access to use this technology. Despite having owned this business for less than a year, the revenue of Credas is up over 30% since we closed the acquisition, and we expect strong performance to continue as we drive further adoption of this product amongst our U.K. customers. Our acquisition strategy has been centered around building a platform of scale and bringing together mission-critical technologies used in the legal and financial sector. We have been able to drive outsized returns for many of these acquisitions because they fit strategically into the business and the platform that we are building.
While this slide looks at the performance on a case-by-case basis, pulling back to a more full-scale view on the next slide, you can see the overall impact. We reported approximately CAD 40 million of adjusted EBITDA at the time of our IPO. We've acquired CAD 113 million in EBITDA since that time, at a cost of 16.6 times EBITDA. We've created significant value from those acquisitions, with CAD 103 million of organic adjusted revenue growth off of our pre-IPO and acquired EBITDA base. Our ability, post-acquisition, to repeatedly drive financial upside and extract incremental value from these businesses, has meant that our post-synergy EBITDA acquisition multiple is now down to 8.7 times. We will remain disciplined with our acquisition strategy.
We will deploy capital carefully on strategic tech and acquisitions, where we are confident that we can repeat our track record of driving strong post-acquisition performance, and we'll do this in parallel with our debt repayment targets. I'll now turn it over to Frank to discuss the financials.
Thank you, Martha, and good afternoon, everyone. This afternoon, we reported our fourth quarter and year-end fiscal 2024 results. Our results continue to demonstrate the resiliency and diversification of the business, with the support and growth in our practice management offerings, and our annual recurring revenue continues to grow, which reduces the reliance on real estate transactions. Our annual contracted revenue remains robust, driven by both our practice management and our payments infrastructure service lines. Revenue exposed to real estate transactions globally in Q4 was 50%, compared to 58% in the same period of fiscal 2023. It's important to keep in mind that fiscal 2024 is the strongest seasonal period for real estate transactions. Revenue exposed to real estate transactions in Canada was only 28%, compared to 33% in the same period of last year.
Our actual exposure to real estate transaction is even lower than 28%, as the Canadian figures include refinancing transactions. Annual recurring contracted revenue was 29% as of June 30th, compared to 18% at the same point in the prior year. As Matt mentioned, there are components of our revenue which we do not include in ARR, such as revenue from contracted overages and other revenues under contract with service arrangements. These are included in annual contracted revenue, which includes ARR, and was 51% in the fourth quarter, compared to 39% in the prior year period. We reported revenues of CAD 120 million and CAD 458 million in the fourth quarter and fiscal year 2024, respectively.
This represents growth of 15% and 14%, respectively, compared to the corresponding periods in fiscal 2023, when taking into consideration the sale of TM in August 2023. Revenue was unchanged in Q4 year over year and grew 1.5% in fiscal 2024, including the impact of TM in the prior period, mainly as a result of organic initiatives. We generated Adjusted EBITDA of CAD 69 million and CAD 258 million in the fourth quarter and fiscal 2024 periods, respectively. The growth of 5% and 6% in their respective periods was despite the divestiture of TM and its contribution in the prior periods. The improvements were primarily related to the growth in organic initiatives, as well as the impact of our Business Improvement Plan and lower direct costs.
We continue to maintain our strong EBITDA margins, coming in at 57% in the quarter and 56% for the fiscal year, which is in line with our target range, between 50% and 60%. Total adjusted operating expenses, which include direct costs, technology costs, G&A, sales and marketing, were 51 million and 200 million for the quarter and fiscal year periods, respectively, or 43% and 44% of revenue. Adjusted operating expenses for the quarter and fiscal year were lower by approximately 3.4 and 7.3 million, respectively, from the prior periods, which demonstrates the improvements from our Business Improvement Plan.
Net finance costs for the quarter were CAD 114 million and CAD 228 million for the fourth quarter and fiscal year periods, respectively, compared to CAD 37 million and CAD 132 million in the corresponding periods of fiscal 2023. The change in Q4 was primarily due to non-cash impacts arising from changes in the fair value of our convertible debentures, contingent considerations, cross-currency swaps, and a loss on settlement on our retired Ares facility. Adjusted finance costs, adjusted for these changes in fair value and settlement losses, was CAD 31.4 million, lower by CAD 4 million versus the prior Q4 period, which primarily reflects the savings from our refinancing transaction completed in April 2024.
Acquisition, restructuring, and other costs were CAD 9 million and CAD 29 million for the fourth quarter and fiscal 2024 periods, compared to CAD 9 million and CAD 59 million, respectively, in the prior period. The quarterly period was in line with the previous year. You can see the significant improvement we've made in the annual period, a 52% reduction compared to fiscal 2023. We believe we can deliver additional improvements in this cost over time as we take additional actions to increase our cash flow performance. The gains made from our business improvement plan earlier in the year support a significant free cash flow in the quarter. We have fully realized the CAD 70 million targeted free cash flow benefit from that plan in Q4 relative to the baseline period of fiscal Q1.
We have introduced a new non-GAAP key performance measure, which we'll continue to report on: leveraged free cash flow. Leveraged free cash flow was CAD 32 million in the fourth quarter. That is an improvement of CAD 38 million compared to when we initiated the business improvement plan in the first quarter of fiscal 2021. Even when taking into consideration the secured note interest impact, which is paid semi-annually, it is still a CAD 24 million positive improvement or approximately CAD 96 million annualized. This improvement includes savings achieved in a reduction of capital expenditures, lower net interest costs, lower adjusted operating expenses, as well as lower cash taxes paid.
The cost reduction plan arising from our refinancing transaction did result in a higher amount of severance costs in the fourth quarter, and we expect that to continue into the first quarter of fiscal 2025, due to the realization of synergies, which will have a benefit impact for the remainder of 2025 and beyond. As part of our refinancing transaction, we've also implemented new cross-currency swaps, which effectively hedge 100% of the cash foreign exchange movements and 85% of the interest rate movements. These swaps will have mark-to-market non-cash adjustments, which will result in period-to-period variability in our finance metric. You will see this in the fourth quarter with a CAD 20 million expense to our finance costs.
Now, turning to our balance sheet, our net debt stood at approximately CAD 1.26 billion as of June 30 th, 2024, which has been reduced by approximately 36 million since June 30 th of 2023. As we discussed on the last call, we repaid all of our amounts outstanding under the Ares credit facility with the proceeds from the refinancing transaction. The refinancing transaction in Canadian dollars consisted of approximately CAD 254 million of senior secured notes due in 2029, and approximately CAD 476 million in senior secured Term Loan B facility due in 2031, and CAD 105 million revolving credit facility. We understand the importance of reducing our leverage, and we have set a target to reduce it below four times total net debt to Adjusted EBITDA. That said, we have sufficient resources to manage our debt levels.
The business generates strong, sustainable cash flows. With that, I'll turn it back to the operator for the Q&A.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. We will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press star, followed by the one on your telephone keypad. Should you wish to cancel your request, please press star followed by the two. If you are using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any keys. One moment, please, for your first question. Your first question comes from the line of Robert Young from Canaccord Genuity. Please go ahead.
Hi, good evening. The organic growth increased sequentially, as you noted, from 4% to 8%, but ARR, the percentage of the revenue, declined from 3% to 29%. So it feels as though the organic growth came from other parts of the business. Maybe if you could just break that apart for me and give me a little more insight into where the growth is coming from here.
Yeah. So Rob, the ARR growth did decrease as a percentage of total revenue. It's mainly a result of the increase in overall transactions in the fourth quarter. As I said earlier, the fourth quarter is our high point of typically real estate transactions, so that decreased the percentage, although the absolute number did increase. We are seeing growth in other areas of the Canadian market, in particular the due diligence side, as well as the financial services side as well that helped with the organic growth in the quarter.
Okay. And then, you said that the two acquisitions that you'd made post a quarter, I think you said CAD 21 million. Was that for both? Is that the cash outflow for both those acquisitions in total?
That's correct.
Okay. And then, you had a special meeting that you had scheduled for August, and that's been postponed due to...
Is there a question there?
Sits today.
Rob, we're having trouble. Can you just repeat your question, please?
Sure. You had to postpone your special meeting, and I don't believe that there's a replacement date. If you just give us an overview of where that process sits, and then I'll pass the line.
Yeah. Can't say too much on that. As you know, the activist shareholders commenced litigation against us, which resulted in actions from the courts, which included us suspending the meeting or pushing the meeting. Because we don't have an outcome from that litigation yet, we don't have a date for the meeting. So we'll keep the market posted as we learn more. Again, this was a result of the activists taking action on us, and as a result of the judge's order, we had to push the meeting.
Okay. Thanks for taking the questions.
Thank you. And your next question comes from the line of Thanos Moschopoulos from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon. From a cost perspective, have you captured all the cost synergies from the restructuring program at this point? Or might there be some incremental to come that weren't fully realized in the quarter?
Look, we're always watching our cost base and managing it to make sure that we're able to, you know, properly deliver both for our customers and our stakeholders, our shareholders, most notably. That said, as you know, in the spring of this year, we did identify probably CAD 26 million of costs to come out of the business with a vast majority of that being kind of people related. And while it's always tough to take people costs out, it was kind of the right thing for the business. You know, again, we've executed on a vast majority of those cost savings. There's always kind of more work to do as you kind of continue to manage the business.
Okay. As far as the acquisitions, just to clarify, Lexis Affinity was the larger one of the two? And then can you comment on which geography the second one was?
Australia, and yes, it was the larger one of the two.
Okay. From a cash flow perspective, any puts and takes we should think about in the near term? I mean, obviously, there's the fact that, you know, some of your interest costs are semiannual, but aside from that, any specific puts and takes we should think about as we think about the first half of the year?
Yeah. So Robbie, sorry, Thanos. Yeah, you're right. The securities, the bond, is paid semiannually so that the next one is in October. So you should have reflected that. As I mentioned in my prepared remarks, you know, there were a higher amount of severance costs that hit in Q4, and we expect a similar amount in Q1. And those are the only two, I would say, factors right now reflecting us going forward, along with the continued business momentum that we have that's generating strong cash flows.
I'd add to that, we do remain pretty laser focused on, you know, reducing one-time charges. And a lot of the capital investment that we made over the last couple of fiscal years is shrinking significantly. So those are two areas that we are focused on.
Great. I'll pass the line. Thanks.
Thank you. And your next question comes from the line of Scott Fletcher from CIBC. Please go ahead.
Hi, good evening. I wanted to ask, just you mentioned sort of the focus being on tuck-in M&A in your prepared remarks, with these sort of the two deals sort of combining to be 20 upfront and 60 all in. Maybe if you could just help define sort of what you see as a tuck-in and what we can expect size-wise looking forward.
Yeah, I mean, I would define both of those as tuck-in. In those cases I mentioned, you know, while it was kind of sort of twenty upfront, we were able to negotiate, as I said in my prepared remarks, very favorable vendor financing terms, which enable us to pay for the remainder of the amount due interest-free out of, you know, majority of the cash flow over the coming years. So those are obviously very good opportunities. You know, and hard to come by, so particularly given the strategic nature of the business, those are the type of tuck-ins that we're looking for, going forward in the near term anyways.
With a larger focus, again, in the near term, on continuing to go to market, drive organic growth, and we are again focused on reducing our leverage ratio.
Okay, thanks. And then, just on that business, sort of as you said, it fits with the strategy. Is it something... Just to clarify, is that something where your due diligence products in Australia can be integrated to go to market in the same way you plan to do with Unity? And then will it be rebranded as Unity in Australia? Is that the idea?
Yeah, sure. I'll take that. So in LexisNexis, actually, our due diligence product is already integrated there. Prior to the acquisition, it was integrated with both us and a competitor of ours. So there is a very meaningful kind of cross-sell opportunity there. And then, yes, ultimately, you know, both of the acquisitions will be rebranded to our Unity Practice Management brand.
Okay, thanks. That's helpful. Appreciate it.
Thank you. And your next question comes from the line of Stephen Boland from Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Maybe just going back to the activists. One of your press releases, it did say that you, the court hearings were expected to be at the end of August. I'm just wondering, I know you can't talk much about them, but, did those hearings actually take place?
Yes, there was a hearing at the end of August, and we're waiting on a decision from the court.
Okay. Okay, that's helpful. Second question. Last quarter, you gave some guidance in terms of, you know, the coming strength of, the quarter you just reported. You talked about, you know, kind of record revenue, very strong EBITDA. I'm wondering, you know, if that momentum was carried into, you know, the, I guess it would be your Q1, 2025 quarter, and if you want to provide any kind of run rate or, you know, it's going to be a similar quarter in terms of, guidance and maybe I provided, I apologize if you have.
... Yeah, no, like, look, I, to give you color, look, our business continues to perform well. I talked about, you know, close to record, and as I said, when you back out the divestiture, it was a record revenue quarter, Q4. Q1 continues to look very strong. Our business is performing very well. I mentioned the kind of the what we're seeing is the strong continued growth in ARR, which is important to us, but obviously that's translating too into financial performance. So we're very happy with where the business is heading, and are very bullish and positive on the business.
Okay. And then, and it was touched on a little bit, but, just, you know, we talked a little bit-- you talked a little bit about cash flow, but what about, you know, capital allocation in general? I mean, the SIB, you know, is there gonna be another attempt for that, to pay down some additional debt or some of your, your converts? You know, what's the feeling on capital allocation?
Yeah. In regards to the SIB, it's a good question. As a condition of the larger refinancing we did, which really gave us a lot of flexibility and certainty over our capital structure for the next five years, we were required to make an offer to the convert holders, which we did. You know, we need to hold that cash in escrow on hand to fulfill that obligation when it comes due in, I think, a year and a half from now. So we don't have any intent to currently make another offer. I think at this point, we're making a positive carry on interest on that cash being held.
So it works well for us, and we're obviously making more interest than we're paying in interest on that convert. So, to the second point here of your comment, look, we're really committed with our capital allocation to getting our leverage ratio below four times as soon as possible. We know that's an impediment to the business. It's... We know investors want that. We understand the importance of it as a public company, and we're committed to get there quickly.
Okay. And just the Lexis, the two acquisitions, I mean, are these businesses that you've known for years and years, or was it an auction? I'm just curious how that some of this is still progressing, you know, after so many deals that you've done.
Yeah, on the case of one, we have a long-standing relationship with LexisNexis. They're obviously one of the largest legal tech companies out there, up with Thomson Reuters, and this is something we've been working on for over a year, and it was a very good opportunity for us with very stable financing terms. It was a unique opportunity that it was kind of hard to turn down.
Okay, appreciate the comments. Thanks, guys.
Thank you. And your next question comes from the line of Kevin Krishnaratne from Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
Hey there, good evening. Just a question on your ARR mix. It was 30%. I know you've given targets of getting to 50%. I can't recall when that, you know, timeline is, but do you have a view of where you'd like this metric to be at the end of the current 2025?
Yeah, so, yeah, we... You're right, Kevin, we do have those public metrics. That has not changed, so we'd like to reach 40% by the end of this fiscal period, and then get to 50% and beyond for the next fiscal period.
Okay, got it. Thanks for that. On the minimum volume pricing sort of strategy, can you talk about like the sort of behavior that you're seeing from your clients, from you know, lawyer, lawyers, offices when like, how are they setting the minimum? Do you feel like they're basically setting the minimum off of the you know, the current you know, sentiment in the market, or are they you know, booking in a little bit more you know, more transactions, being optimistic?
Like, what are you seeing in terms of, you know, what they're setting, and how do you think about, you know, if there is upside to come beyond, you know, at a faster rate than what, you know, might be currently in the market, will you be able to capture that in terms of, you know, beyond minimums? Just curious on what you're seeing sort of as these guys are setting the minimums.
Yeah. So a couple things. Keep in mind, this doesn't only apply to law firms that are involved in real estate transactions. We have a lot, you know, many customers that are using our products for corporate commercial-type searches and regulatory filings that we do the same thing with. So to answer your question more specifically, we have, you know, tiers and pricing associated with tiers for our customers. As a business, we always wanna get more minimum spend, and obviously clients wanna give you less, so it's an ongoing negotiation between our reps and, or account managers I should say, and the client on to where they can best fit. We've done a lot of work over the last 12, even 18 months, to...
And there's still a bit to go in some areas of the business where the tiers aren't standardized enough, and it's more based on percentages of spend. We want to get where it's all standardized, and we're kind of a lot of the way there, but not all the way there. But I hope that gives you some color and helps you understand kind of how we approach it.
Yeah. No, it's helpful. Thanks for that, Matt. Maybe for Frank, just a reminder on the sort of the cash flow, you know, dynamics of the minimums. Can't recall, do you get the cash on a minimum payment all upfront, beginning of the year? Is it every month, every quarter? How does the cash come in?
Yeah, the majority of the contracts are over three years, three years in tenure, and we get the cash. If they do not meet their minimum guarantee, we get the cash at the end of each of those three years.
End of each of those years. Okay, thanks. Just the last one for me. I had a press release out, it might have been a few weeks ago, just on the mortgage discharge product. I know that product is in Quebec and in Australia, but if you think about in Canada, can you remind us of, you know, how big that business is in Quebec, and how do you think about, you know, what that TAM opportunity is in Canada?
... Yes, it's a good question. Look, we think, as we've talked in the past, it's a very large TAM. And obviously, Quebec, we kind of have that full settlement business where we're involved in settling a very large majority of all mortgages in that market. The English Canada are very fragmented and decentralized in how payments and the settlement of mortgages happens, so like property transactions, to say. So look, as we, it is an incremental process. You add one bank, the next bank, the next bank. So today we have BMO and National, and so it's our goal to keep adding more banks and eventually kind of replicate what we've done in the province of Quebec.
Just to set expectations, it does take a long time. It took decades to do this in Quebec. In Australia, it took government intervention, took PEXA to do it. So it's. We're doing it slowly and organically, but when you get there, it really creates a lot of value for your customers when you can seamlessly, you know, settle a mortgage or a property transaction with the click of a button.
Got it. Okay, that's it for me. I'll pass the line. Thank you.
Thank you. Once again, that is star one to ask a question. Your next question comes from the line of Gavin Fairweather from Cormark. Please go ahead.
Oh, hey, good afternoon. First one for me, maybe you can just touch on the UK business. I know one of your growth levers was to bundle search in with the practice management business. Can you provide us an update on how that initiative is progressing?
So that, that's an initiative that's underway. It is factored into our ARR. We don't disclose the exact numbers that we've gotten from that, but of the customers that it applies to, we have been very successful in taking customers into practice management and being able to put them on minimum spend contracts for the real estate and property searches they require, to drive additional upside. So we'll see those results. A lot of that activity happened in the late half of fiscal 2024, so we should see a lot of that benefit in the coming fiscal year.
Okay, that's helpful. And then on the Canadian business, maybe just on the refinance side, I mean, you touched about, you know, green shoots, on the transactional revenue line. Curious if you're starting to see with, with rates falling down a bit more of a, a robust or normalizing, refinance line coming out of that Canadian business?
Yeah, not a ton. I mean, the Canadian business, the revenue we generate related to Canadian real estate transactions remains kind of sluggish. You know, what we're seeing is a lot of the rest of our business, whether it's subscription revenue, our fintech business and/or kind of transactions that are exposed to corporate commercial-type transactions are really picking up, you know, really significantly what we're seeing by revenue exposed to real estate being a bit more sluggish. But look, as interest rates come down, we remain optimistic. At some point, that comes back, and it's a huge cash cow for the business. So we're excited when that day comes.
Okay, thanks. We'll stay tuned. And then just maybe for Frank, just following up on the cash flow discussion. It looks like from my quick scan, that the investment in intangibles was a little bit higher this quarter. Can you provide any, you know, expectations around that line going into 2025 ?
Yeah. The, I think you're referring to the, capitalized tangibles that we had. You know, we are obviously drawing that down as over time, getting more efficient and actually prioritizing projects accordingly. So we do expect that line item to be lower in the future. But I think, you know, roughly in that CAD 20-25 million annually would be a target range.
Okay. That's it for me. Thank you.
Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I will now hand the call back to Mr. Hirji for any closing remarks.
Great. Thanks for all of you guys that attended, and we look forward to connecting with you for our Q1 results at a date to be communicated in the near future. Until then, have a great day. Thank you.