Hello, this is the Chorus Call Conference Operator. Welcome to Vecima Networks' first quarter fiscal 2025 earnings conference call and webcast. As a reminder, all participants are in listen-only mode, and the conference is being recorded. After the presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Analysts and institutional investors who wish to join the question queue simply press star and one on your touch-tone phone. You'll hear a tone acknowledging your request. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up the handset before pressing any keys. Should you need assistance during the conference call, you may signal the operator by pressing star and zero. Presenting today on behalf of Vecima Networks are Sumit Kumar, President and CEO. Judd Schmid, Chief Financial Officer. Today's call will begin with executive commentary on Vecima's financial and operational performance for the first quarter fiscal 2025 results.
Lastly, the call will finish with a question-and-answer period for analysts and institutional investors. The press release announcing the company's first quarter fiscal 2025 results, as well as detailed supplemental investor information, is posted on Vecima's website at www.vecima.com under the Investor Relations heading. The highlights provided in this call should be understood in conjunction with the company's unaudited interim consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes for the three months ended September 30th, 2024, and 2023. Certain statements in this conference call and webcast may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities laws from which Vecima's actual results could differ. Consequently, attendees should not place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements.
These statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding management's intentions, beliefs, or current expectations with respect to market and general economic conditions, future sales and revenue expectations, future costs, and operating performance. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict and/or are beyond our control. Vecima disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by law. Please review the cautionary language in the company's first quarter earnings report and press release for fiscal 2025, as well as its annual information form dated September 19, 2024, regarding the various factors, assumptions, and risks that could cause actual results to differ. These documents are available on Vecima's website at www.vecima.com under the investor relations heading and on SEDAR at www.sedarplus.ca.
At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Mr. Kumar to proceed with his remarks. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning and welcome, everyone. Thank you for joining us. Our 2025 fiscal year got off to a busy start with a number of strategic developments in our VBS and CDS segments. I'm going to start today with an overview of these and other highlights. Judd will follow with details on our first quarter financial performance, and then I'll return to talk about our outlook going forward. Starting with our Video and Broadband Solutions segments, on October 11th, we announced our tuck-in acquisition of Falcon V Systems, which brought us two important new technologies. The first is called Principal Core, a platform virtual orchestration technology that Falcon has been developing over the past five years. It helps operators move towards their vision of convergence across multiple access platforms: cable and fiber access, and even mobile going forward. Meanwhile, it enables smooth multi-vendor and multi-core interoperability.
The second is Falcon 's Test Suite solution. This is an end-to-end test platform that lets operators significantly speed up and scale their DAA software upgrades, particularly in multi-vendor, multi-core environments. The Access Test Suite drives substantially faster iteration, verification, and deployment for operator projects rolling out to millions of homes and subscribers. Noting again that DAA represents the first time that the industry is distributing software, compute, and intelligence out and into the network itself, and in so doing, unlocking materially higher capacity and performance. It's distributed access architecture in name and in function. Both technologies are critical for operators pursuing network convergence strategies, which aim to integrate different types of access networks and traffic into a single network and broadband services infrastructure in order to simplify management, speed deployments, and reduce costs. Simply stated, they're highly valuable technologies for operators. They're also an excellent fit for Vecima.
As you know, flexibility and interoperability are key product differentiators for Vecima, and we expect Principal Core and Test Suite will become important components of our overall and wide-reaching set of cable and fiber access solutions. That in turn accelerates the roadmap and expansion plans we have for our Entra Cloud platform overall, including vPON and our newly launched Virtual Cable Modem Termination System, or vCMTS. I should als o point out that the lead customer for the Falcon V software platforms is Charter, also the lead customer for many of our own Entra DAA solutions, so this combination will advance convergence of the provisioning and orchestration layer across Charter's access ecosystem, and right out of the gate, it gives us a multi-year rollout agreement for our newly acquired products.
In terms of other developments in the VBS segment, we need completion of additional field trials for our Entra EXS1610 All-PON Shelf as we prepare for broader deployments going forward. This is another innovative Entra solution that provides maximum flexibility for customers by enabling them to cost-effectively deploy fiber to the premises in any market or hub
deployment, particularly in footprints where their fiber access networks are higher in density. We also increase customer engagement for our new vCMTS platform during the quarter as we progress lab trials with our lead Tier 1 customer and initiate new lab trials with additional Tier 2s and 3s. We continue to set our sights on initial revenue contribution from vCMTS software, possibly as soon as the latter part of this fiscal year.
Q1 also brought us further advances for our next-generation DOCSIS 4.0 technology as we demonstrated the interoperability of our DOCSIS 4.0 Remote PHY device against third-party cores. At the SCTE TechExpo, we also showcased our new unified 4.0 platform with Cox Communications. In our Content Delivery and Storage segment, we made significant strides with both our OpenCDN and dynamic ad insertion technologies. Earlier this week, we announced implementation of a first phase of dynamic ad insertion with Hotwire Communications in preparation for their full adoption of dynamic targeting down the road. In another key development, we announced an exclusive global agreement with Digital Harmonic yesterday to market its KeyFrame Media Optimization product. This is a very high-value solution that substantially optimizes video quality and reduces bit rates while reducing costs for operators significantly.
We'll begin offering it as a part of our comprehensive Media Scale suite of products starting immediately. So a number of key technology developments in both VBS and CDS as we started our new fiscal year, and each one builds on our industry-leading portfolio of DAA and IPTV products. In terms of operating results, sales in Q1 of CAD 81.9 million represented the second highest quarterly sales in Vecima's history and were up 33% year-over-year. Our VBS segment drove the lion's share of this, led, of course, by next-generation Entra sales. To add a bit of historical context again, four years ago, Entra contributed just CAD 5.2 million to our Q1 sales. This quarter, that's grown to CAD 68.3 million, an over 13-fold increase that underscores both the success and importance of our Entra DAA portfolio.
Looking at some Entra highlights more closely, it was another strong quarter for ERM3 Remote PHY deliveries to Charter as part of their Hybrid Fiber Coax upgrade initiative. As we've mentioned previously, Charter intends to use our solution for a substantial portion of their footprint-wide cable access network upgrade to DAA, and as such, it represents a major multi-year revenue opportunity for Vecima and one that's still in the initial phases of its roll-out. Q1 also brought the first volume shipping of our new EN9000 GAP node platform, and deliveries are progressing well. The EN9000 is a powerful and future-proof solution that enables customers to easily transition to 10 gig, 10G , and DOCSIS 4.0 technologies while protecting their current network investments.
Our Entra Optical 10 gig fiber access products were also a significant contributor to Q1 results, but not quite to the same extent as we've seen in previous quarters. This relates to a somewhat slower starting timeline for the $42.5 billion federal BEAD Program than initially expected. While our customers are still actively progressing their funded rural broadband fiber expansions, for the most part, they're doing so today with support from the existing Rural Digital Opportunity Fund. Looking at other parts of our VBS segment, you'll recall we've been anticipating a slowdown in our Commercial Video sales for some time now. Customers are shifting to next-gen technologies like Terrace IQ. These products are also increasingly accounted for under DAA categories. We saw that slowdown materialize in Q1 with a decrease in Commercial Video sales both year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter.
Overall, however, it was a solid start to the year for our VBS segment with ongoing strength from Entra. Turning to our CDS segment, as we've discussed previously, sales in this segment tend to be more lumpy, with timing of large projects able to produce significant quarterly swings. That was the case in Q1 as we experienced delays related to customer IPTV deployment projects and expansions. We expect to see those projects get underway again in Q2, helping to strengthen CDS results. Despite the project delays, the CDS segment did achieve very robust services sales in Q1, which underscores the strong and increasing support components of the business as the number and the size of deployed systems in the market continues to grow. Our Telematics segment also had another good quarter as we continue to attract new customers for our very successful asset tracking business.
We're now monitoring over 72,000 assets for over 200 customers. So overall, a busy start to the year with key technology developments setting the stage for Vecima's future and ongoing growth. I'll be back to talk more about our outlook in just a few minutes, but first I'll turn the call over to Judd to review our financial results. Judd?
Thanks, Sumit. Good morning, good afternoon to everyone. Today I'll be reviewing our first quarter fiscal 2025 financial performance in more detail. For purposes of this call, I'll assume that everyone has seen our Q1 fiscal 2025 news release, MD&A, and financial statements posted on Vecima's website. As Sumit indicated, we achieved a solid start to the year with our second-best quarterly revenue of $81.9 million. That was up 33% year-over-year, although 6% below the all-time record performance we achieved in Q4. Our video and broadband solution segment contributed first quarter sales of $72.9 million, with revenues growing 65% year-over-year. As we expected, Entra DAA sales were the key driver. Supported by the volume rollouts of our new EN9000 GAP node, our Q1 DAA sales grew 76% year- over- year.
On a sequential quarterly basis, VBS segment sales were down 2%, reflecting an essentially flat quarter for Entra, together with the anticipated decrease in Commercial Video sales. At $4.5 million, Commercial Video products were 15% lower year-over-year and 23% lower quarter-over-quarter as customers transitioned to next-generation platforms. In our content delivery and storage segment, we experienced a significant quarterly revenue fluctuation with Q1 sales of $7.2 million, decreasing 54% year-over-year and 35% quarter-over-quarter. As Sumit noted, lumpiness is normal for this segment, but we expect to see a solid recovery in Q2. Turning to Telematics, this segment turned in another solid quarter with sales of $1.7 million, increasing 5% year-over-year as we achieved gains with our movable asset solution strategies.
Gross profit for the first quarter increased 14% year-over-year to $34.2 million, reflecting higher sales partially offset by lower gross margin of 41.7% as compared to 48.8% last year. The shift in our gross margin is mostly product mix related and reflects the rollout of our new Entra EN9000 GAP platform, which carries a lower margin profile. As well, the reduction in high-margin CDS product sales impacted our Q1 margins. I also want to note that starting in fiscal 2025, that in order to report more comparably to our competitors, we've changed the way we've recorded our sales commissions, which are now being reported for the most part in operating expenses instead of cost of goods sold. This change has been reflected for all prior periods being reported and increased our gross margins between one and a half and two percentage points in those prior periods.
Our first quarter operating expenses, including share-based comp and acquisition-related expenses, increased $2.3 million to $29.6 million, but as a percentage of sales, OpEx decreased 36% from 44% in Q1 of last year. The notable changes year-over-year were as follows. R&D expenses increased by $1.6 million- $11.9 million, reflecting higher salary and wage costs as we continue to invest in future product development. Investing in R&D is what keeps Vecima a leader in our space. Adjusting for deferrals, amortization of deferred development costs, and income tax credits, our actual cash R&D investment increased to $15.1 million from $13.4 million, but as a percentage of revenues, also decreased to 18% from 22% of revenues in Q1 of last year. First quarter sales and marketing expenses were $1 million higher at $9.4 million, mostly due to higher variable compensation, as well as additional expenses aimed at supporting future sales.
As a percentage of revenue, our sales and marketing expenses decreased to 12% from 14% year-over-year. First quarter G&A expenses decreased by $700,000 to $7.5 million. This reflects a decrease in depreciation and amortization, partially offset by higher staffing costs and professional fees. As a percentage of sales, G&A expenses decreased to 9% from 13%. Taken as a whole, we maintained continued tight control of our operating expenses in Q1. We consider this to be a positive trend and continue to spend only where necessary to support the future growth of the company. Looking at our bottom-line results, first quarter operating income was up 69% year-over-year to $4.5 million. This primarily reflects the higher VBS sales and partially offset by lower CDS sales despite overall lower consolidated gross margin percentages.
We recorded a foreign exchange gain of $ 500,000 in the first quarter, which compares to a foreign exchange loss of $ 600,000 in the same period last year. A strengthening Canadian dollar positively impacted the translation of monetary liabilities, resulting in that FX gain. As a result, we achieved Q1 net income of $ 2.1 million, or $ 0.09 per share, which was up from $ 1.7 million, or $ 0.07 per share in the same quarter of fiscal 2024. Year-over-year revenue growth, together with stabilization of operating expenses, helped us increase our adjusted EBITDA to $ 11.6 million in Q1. That was 43% higher than in the same period last year where we saw $ 8.1 million of adjusted EBITDA. Now, turning to the balance sheet, we ended the fourth quarter with $ 2.2 million in cash as compared to $ 2.1 million last quarter to end fiscal 2024.
Working capital of $83.5 million decreased slightly from the $84.9 million at the end of last quarter. Still solid, but we plan to continue to drive sales of existing on-hand inventories in order to further monetize this working capital component. Lastly, cash flow provided by operations for the first quarter increased to $24.4 million from $8.4 million during the same period last year. As a result of this $16 million increase in cash flow from operating activities, we were able to pay down our revolving line of credit by $15.8 million in the first quarter. Our quarter-end draw on our line of credit was sitting at $36 million. And as noted in our year-end call, our draw on our line of credit peaked at $81.7 million at the end of the third quarter of fiscal 2024. So continued progress in paying down this line.
On a final note, the Board of Directors approved a quarterly dividend of $5.50 per common share payable on December 16th, 2024, to shareholders of record as of November 22nd, 2024. It's important to note that this dividend will be designated as an eligible dividend for Canadian income tax purposes. Overall, despite a slight downturn in quarter-over-quarter revenues and a change in product mix affecting gross margins, we had a solid start to the year. Our robust year-over-year sales growth and continued tight control of our operating expenses helped us once again achieve strong bottom-line performance. Now back to Sumit to discuss our outlook update for the rest of the fiscal year.
Thank you, Judd. As we move forward, we see fiscal 2025 as a solid growth year for Vecima, with momentum building more strongly in the second half. On the DAA side, volume deployments of our platforms are continuing to ramp up, including the EN9000 GAP node. By the second half, we expect to be layering in EXS1610 All-PON Shelf deliveries, together with another Remote OLT variant we're introducing this year. And our new Falcon V solutions will also provide additional revenue opportunities as the year progresses. As I mentioned earlier, we've tempered our expectations of what we'll see from the U.S. BEAD Program for this year. But over time, we expect this $42.5 billion U.S. rural broadband funding program to be a significant growth driver and opportunity for our fiber access portfolio.
In the interim, we're continuing to see strong demand from operators accessing funding from the existing Rural Digital Opportunity Fund. Looking further ahead, our entry into the vCMTS market provides another significant growth driver opportunity for Vecima. All told, our multiple product rollouts and recent developments are creating a strong foundation for VBS growth in fiscal 2025 and beyond. Turning to our content delivery and storage segment, we anticipate a stronger second quarter as IPTV projects that were delayed in Q1 start to get underway, and we continue to see full-year segment growth supported by existing and new customers' IPTV upgrades and expansions, as well as the continued rollout of our new dynamic ad insertion products. OpenCDN is also expected to start providing some contribution in fiscal 2025, with our first deployments expected in coming quarters.
Added to this, we expect to realize opportunities for our new partnership with Digital Harmonic. The new KeyFrame technology offers massive savings and capacity increases for operators and is poised for wide-scale adoption. This also provides access to new customers, creating opportunities to grow other lines of our MediaScale business in turn. Longer term, we continue to see robust future growth potential as IPTV and OTT streaming services markets continue to expand and the open caching and dynamic advertising growth engines we have developed mature. Finally, in our Telematics business, we expect continued profitable growth as demand for our newer movable asset tracking services grows and as additional subscriptions come in from the fleet tracking market.
On a consolidated basis, we expect our product mix to deliver a gross margin slightly below our target range of 45%-49% for the full year in fiscal 2025, reflecting our product mix for the year, as Judd discussed. However, by year's end, we anticipate a significantly stronger exit run rate from gross margins, driven by increasing contributions from Entra Optical and our introduction of Entra vCMTS later in the year. In summary, we remain confident in the overall expansion of the business in fiscal 2025. The convergence of opportunities in our VBS and CDS segments, combined with our expectation of continued profitable growth in the Telematics segment, has created a foundation for strong full-year growth in fiscal 2025 and a remarkable runway for Vecima's longer-term success. That concludes our formal comments today. We'd now be happy to take questions. Operator?
We will now begin the question- and- answer session for analysts and institutional investors. To join the question queue, you may press star, then one, on your telephone keypad. You will hear a tone acknowledging your request. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing any keys. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. We will pause for a moment as callers join the queue. The first question comes from Steven Li with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Hey, guys. My first question to me is on Charter. When they reported, they said the CapEx for the year came in lower than expected. They spoke of software certification and integration. Does that impact your rank with them in any way?
Oh, thanks, Steven. Good morning. Yeah. So I think, as you said, Charter kind of provides some color around where they're standing today. And as we've always said, they're conducting a major upgrade program. A major Tier 1 operator like this has to do significant qualification and verification efforts on a system-level basis. That includes not only Vecima's Remote PHY products, but the virtual CMTS, all the way downstream to the modems and upstream on the provisioning and billing systems. So that takes. They have to work through a significant process of verification on the complete software integration.
Now, as we've talked about for a long time, I mean, Vecima excels at that integration effort and the interoperability. So we're in good stead in that regard. But on a system basis, it is taking them the requisite time to launch that program. The good news is that this phase that's attached to this overall cable access upgrade, the stage to move to DAA for the first time, is anticipated to get underway as we go forward.
Okay. And then on the press release on Digital Harmonic, can you give us some more colors to me? Are you expecting this partnership to drive revenues in fiscal 2025?
We are. I mean, there's a lot of built-up demand in the customer set. We've got global exclusivity in media and telecom. And the solution stands apart for its capability to reduce bit rates and increase quality by leveraging things like generative AI and machine learning. And that's what's very attractive to a very broad set of potential customers, including operators and streamers and content providers. So this is incremental savings in bit rates, incremental improvements in quality from anything they're doing with encoding and transcoding today. And it's based on patented technology on the AI side and the signal analysis and what's happening there. So it's very unique. It's very attractive. And there's a lot of opportunity in the funnel. So we are expecting contribution to build into the picture this year.
Is there a start-up phase or even in Q2 we start to see contribution?
Q2 is probably a little bit quick on that side. Of course, conversations and engagements have been ongoing even before we announced the agreement. So that's continuing to develop. So somewhere in this fiscal year, we're expecting to see things come into the overall consolidation in the CDS segment from KeyFrame.
Got it. Okay. And then my last question Sumit is the commentary on BEAD delays. Do you have any BEAD revenues in your fiscal 2025 forecast at this point or not really?
At this point, I think we've looked at it very realistically. With respect to BEAD, I think about 55 and 56 states and territories have gone through this volume 2 or phase II of the initial application process. Now they're moving to the final proposal phase where they select ISPs and submit all the details of their plans. They have up to a year to do that after they complete that phase II of the application. We're seeing things as continuing to develop. In the context of the timeframe of fiscal 2025, I think our forecast is more driven by the existing RDOF program.
Thank you.
Thanks, Steven.
The next question comes from Ryan Koontz with Needham. Please go ahead.
Hi, thanks for the question. And I hear your commentary, Sumit, on gross margin down on product mix of the Entra nodes versus RPDs. And I wonder if you can comment on how you think about that mix going forward relative to your gross margin commentary for the year. And is there a different procurement process for those two different products from your major customers?
Yeah. Thanks, Ryan. Good morning. Good afternoon. And yeah, I think that when we talk about the influence of the mix and the distinction between the EN9000 GAP platform and things like the RPD module, we've said the RPD module is, of course, where largely the software is implemented, and that carries a higher margin profile for us. On the other hand, the EN9000 GAP node, while it may be a lower margin product in the sense, it continues to offer this very strong result for the end customer in the sense of the modularity and the future-proofing of the network it affords. And what we can do is, once you have that footprint of things like the EN9000 GAP platform strung into the cable plant, you can upgrade the software modules with that, time and time again within it.
So it's the blending of those that we look at overall. With respect to how it influences the margin profile within fiscal 2025, there is this, especially with respect to Tier 1 operators, this opportunity to buy the module separately from the platform. And we've implemented a lot of uptake for the RPD modules already in getting ready for this upgrade. And now we're in the phase where they're matching those up with the GAP platform. So that's going to be a continued influence in the mix for us, especially in the first half of fiscal 2025 leading into Q2. So we're expecting that uptake of the GAP platform to be a bit of a headwind in our mix overall in VBS for Q2. But once we get into the second half, then that starts to even out a bit more.
The optical products come into the picture as a higher proportion of our VBS segment again with the RDOF and the fiber-to-the-home programs there. So we've had a little bit of this Tier 1 timing aspect where there were modules preceding platforms. And ultimately, the two are deployed together.
Right. I mean, are you seeing a follow-up there? Are you seeing customers buy the GAP node, maybe only partially configured, and be able to add more modular capacity as time goes forward?
Yes. And very much so. So when a Tier 1, for example, is buying a GAP platform standalone, today they may have some inventory of 3.1 RPDs to match and populate within it. Of course, as we go to 4.0, we even have fiber access modules in the roadmap for the GAP platform. So there is this opportunity set, of course, to fill in with modules separately from the platform.
Got it. And then a quick follow-up on your Falcon Test product. Sounds like some good traction there. Are you seeing some traction there with the subscription-type pricing model for that, or Tier 1s are still requiring more of a license-type model?
Yeah. I think, especially in that set of technologies and orchestration and verification, the favored model is still in the view of licensed capacity on that basis. But there's a significant amount of traffic over time to add to the license picture in terms of how much capacity is flowing through those products. So yes, while it's not necessarily subscription-based, it does tie quite directly to how much they're leveraging the solution.
Got it. That makes perfect sense. And then just the last one on the product side, a lot of talk about evolution to smart amps and different ways to implement the different features there. Are there requirements in your node and GAP-type products that you have to implement to support these new different approaches to smart amps at all? Or how does that affect your product line? I guess is my question.
Yeah. I mean, big picture, of course, when you're looking at the portfolio generally, especially unified portfolio, there's still how you layer down segment that between extended spectrum and FDX. So I think I'll try to distinguish those two categories a bit. So when you're doing extended spectrum, of course, you're going to 1.8 gigahertz, and smart amps aren't really a factor in that equation. And when we talk about our engaged customer set, we continue to see, of course, everything is the unified technology. But in terms of instantiation of that, we see a little bit more preference for extended spectrum. Of course, as any of our potential customers move towards an FDX and they're thinking, then the interop with the smart amps will be a factor.
Got it. Perfect. That's all I've got. Thanks for the questions.
All right. Thanks, Ryan.