After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on a touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Paul Mansky with Benchmark Electronics. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Betsy. Thanks everyone for joining us today for Benchmark's second quarter fiscal year 2023 earnings call. Joining me this afternoon are Jeff Benck, CEO and President, and Roop Lakkaraju, CFO. After the market closed today, we issued an earnings release pertaining to our financial performance for the second quarter of 2023, and we have prepared a presentation that we will reference on this call. Both are available on the investor relations section on our website at bench.com. This call is being webcast live, and a replay will be available following the call. The company has provided a reconciliation of our GAAP to non-GAAP measures in the earnings release, as well as in the appendix to the presentation. Please take a moment to review the forward-looking statements advice on slide two in the presentation. During our call, we will discuss forward-looking information.
As a reminder, any of today's remarks, which are not statements of historical fact, are forward-looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties as described in our press releases and SEC filings. Actual results may differ materially from these statements, most notably due to ongoing supply chain constraints, macroeconomic conditions, and semi-cap equipment spending. Benchmark undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements. For today's call, Jeff will begin by providing a summary of our first quarter results. Roop will then discuss our detailed financial results and our third quarter guidance. Jeff will then return to provide more insight on demand trends by sector, business wins, and then closing remarks. If you would please turn to slide three, I'll turn the call over to our CEO, Jeff Benck.
Thank you, Paul. Good afternoon, and thanks to everyone for joining our call today. The company executed well in the second quarter as we delivered revenue and operating income above the high end of guidance, despite continued weakness in the semi-cap market and lingering component availability issues that impacted some output in the quarter. Specifically, we grew revenue 12% year-over-year in the quarter, when excluding supply chain premiums or SCP. We believe assessing our revenue growth, excluding the zero margin pass-through revenue, more accurately reflects company performance. As an example, SCP was $17 million in Q2 2023 and $91 million in Q2 2022. This represents a $74 million year-over-year reduction.
Excluding SCP, non-GAAP gross margins were 9.4%, up 1.5% from the prior year, while non-GAAP operating margins were 4.1%, up from 3.6% last year. This enabled us to deliver non-GAAP EPS at the higher end of our guidance range. Inventory came down modestly in the quarter, but we still have more to do to achieve our days of inventory goals. Lastly, we generated positive operating and free cash flow in the quarter. Looking at the drivers of our 12% growth, we saw double-digit year-over-year performance from four of our six sectors, including advanced computing, industrials, medical, and next-generation communications. Although our sequential performance in semi-cap was encouraging, industry commentary around potential timing of the broader market recovery appears to be shifting deeper into 2024.
Nonetheless, we firmly believe in the constructive long-term secular trends underpinning our anticipated future growth in this sector and are investing accordingly. We remain cautiously optimistic on the demand profile across our diversified sectors, which we believe will allow us to weather the current market uncertainty while continuing to deliver to our profitability targets. Before turning it over to Roop, I'd like to highlight a couple of key announcements we've recently made, reinforcing our ability to attract world-class talent to Benchmark. David Moezidis has joined us as Chief Commercial Officer, which is a new role at Benchmark. David's 30-plus years of industry experience in operations, engineering, sales, and marketing across tech, and specifically within EMS, make him an incredibly valuable strategic addition to the team. David will direct Benchmark's commercial strategy, including vertical market sector plans and our global go-to-market approach, leveraging his deep expertise to drive continued business growth.
At the same time, we also announced Dave Valkanoff has joined as our new Chief Operating Officer. Dave's a global manufacturing executive, known for his successful track record in driving lean principles and operational excellence. With over 30 years of experience in sectors such as aerospace and defense, industrial, automotive, and semi-cap, he brings extensive global operations knowledge to our team. We are very pleased to have both executives on board, and I'm confident they will make a significant impact. I also want to thank our current Chief Revenue Officer, Rob Crawford, for his contributions over the past four years and wish him well in his retirement, set to begin in August. Now, let me pass it over to Roop to share more detail on the June quarter and our guidance for Q3.
Thank you, Jeff. Good afternoon. Please turn to slide five for our revenue by market sector. Total Benchmark revenue was $733 million in Q2, which is 6% higher sequentially and 1% higher year-over-year.
As Jeff mentioned, excluding the effect of SCP, revenue was up 12% year-over-year in the period. The reconciliation of this and our sector-level performance can be found in the appendix section of the presentation materials. Turning to slide six, medical revenue for the second quarter was up 14% versus the prior year. Our growth was fueled by strength in existing programs and new programs ramping. Semicap revenue decreased 4% year-over-year, in line with our expectations. A&D revenue was down 10% year-over-year. Defense continues to be challenged by supply availability, coupled with the timing of program ramps. This was partially offset by growth in commercial aerospace. Industrials revenue for the second quarter increased 28% year-over-year, as new customer programs are ramping in areas including test and measurement and energy efficiency.
Advanced computing increased 19% year-over-year, as we benefited from the continued execution of multiple high-performance computing programs. In the next-generation communications sector, revenue was up 53% year-over-year. Our year-over-year performance was driven by continued secular strength in 5G infrastructure and satellite communications. In the second quarter, our top 10 customers represented 52% of total revenue. Please turn to slide seven. Our GAAP earnings per share for the quarter was $0.39. Our GAAP results included restructuring and other one-time costs totaling $3.3 million. For Q2, our non-GAAP gross margin of 9.1% decreased 10 basis points sequentially, primarily due to the lower revenue within our semi-cap sector. Excluding SCP, our gross margin was 9.4%, which was in line with guidance.
Our SG&A was $37.7 million, down sequentially because of cost actions taken in the first half, coupled with lower variable compensation. Non-GAAP operating margin was 4%. Excluding SCP, operating margin was 4.1%, representing the high end of our guidance range. In Q2 2023, our non-GAAP effective tax rate was 21.2%. For the quarter, non-GAAP EPS of $0.48 was $0.02 higher than the midpoint of our guidance. Non-GAAP ROIC in the second quarter was 9.5%. Please turn to slide eight to discuss the effects of SCP on a trended basis. In Q2, SCP declined to $17 million versus $18 million in Q1 and $91 million in Q2 2022.
Excluding SCP, our revenue in the second quarter was $716 million, a sequential increase of $39 million or 6%, and a year-over-year increase of $79 million or 12%. Please turn to slide nine to review our cash conversion cycle performance. Our cash conversion cycle days were 103 in the second quarter, compared to 109 days in Q1. The largest contributor to the decrease was a reduction in inventory. Total inventory decreased sequentially in Q2 by $22 million. Turning to slide 10 for an update on liquidity and capital allocation. In Q2, we generated $25 million of cash from operations and invested $8 million in CapEx to support continued growth in our Mexico facilities and enhance capabilities in our Precision Technologies business unit. We expect our CapEx spending in Q3 2023 to be between $10 million and $15 million.
For the full year 2023, we expect CapEx to range between $65 million-$75 million. Our cash balance on June 30th was $245 million. As of June 30th, we had $129 million outstanding on our term loan, $300 million outstanding borrowings against our revolver, and $246 million available to borrow under our revolver. In Q2, we paid our regular quarterly cash dividend of $5.9 million. Please turn to slide 11 for a review of our third quarter 2023 guidance. We expect revenue, excluding SCP, to range from $680 million-$720 million. SG&A expense will range between $36 million and $38 million. Excluding SCP, our non-GAAP operating margin range is forecasted to be 4.7%-4.9%.
As a reminder, this includes approximately 50 basis points of stock-based compensation. Our non-GAAP guidance excludes the impact of $1.6 million in amortization of intangible assets and $1.1 million-$1.5 million of estimated restructuring and other costs. Our non-GAAP diluted earnings per share is expected to be in the range of $0.51-$0.59, or a midpoint of $0.55. Other expenses net are expected to be approximately $9 million, due primarily to interest expense, expense, which has grown due to the higher rate environment. We expect that for Q3, our non-GAAP effective tax rate will be between 19% and 21%, the weighted average share count of 35.7 million. With that, I'll turn the call back over to you, Jeff.
Thanks, Roop. Please turn to slide 13. All metrics I reference here are related to demand trends we are seeing by sector are excluding the effect of SCP. In medical, we continue to see strong demand from our existing products while also ramping new programs. I'm particularly encouraged by the strong demand we are seeing in the defibrillator subsector, as the benefits to having these life-saving devices readily accessible are becoming increasingly well understood.... We continue to build on our future success during this past quarter, securing new wins across our offerings. For example, in manufacturing, we won a program to deliver subassemblies used in medical sterilization equipment. Within engineering, we won an engagement to design fluid pumps used in field applications by the DoD. Lastly, we were pleased to be awarded a collaborative design engagement with a company to develop cardiovascular treatment devices.
With the continued underlying medical product demand strength and a steadily improving supply chain, we expect solid year-over-year growth in the period and on a full year basis. Within semi-cap, we're encouraged by the better performance in the quarter and believe the March quarter may have been our low point for semi-cap revenue in the year. However, as I mentioned earlier, we have heard from several OEMs that the timing of the broader market recovery may be pushed out a bit further than initially anticipated. For Q3, we expect revenue to be relatively flat sequentially. However, the long-term secular growth drivers are still very much intact, including silicon penetration, the quest for ever-decreasing node sizes, and the global efforts to build a broader foundry ecosystem. We continue to invest in the space to capture disproportionate share as the next upswing commences.
Moving to the A&D sector, we continue to score new wins in defense. Just this quarter, we secured a manufacturing win to provide actuation control modules for an Extended-Range Guided Multiple Rocket System. Additionally, we expanded an existing engagement with the US Army to manufacture camera systems used in live round tank gunnery training ranges. Within commercial aero, both demand and our ability to meet it continues to improve for us. Combined, we expect Q3 A&D revenues to be up double digits sequentially and year-over-year. Turning to industrials, we position ourselves well to participate in megatrends, specifically automation, test measurement, and energy efficiency solutions. Examples of this in Q2 include a manufacturing win for geospatial devices, which enable efficiency and productivity in the agriculture and construction industries.
At the same time, our design engineering teams have secured new business, collaborating with customers in areas such as additive manufacturing, environmental controls, and security detection platforms. Looking forward, supply conditions in industrials are showing improvement, which we anticipate will continue. We expect sector revenue to grow year-over-year in the quarter and for the full year. In advanced computing, revenues were largely consistent with our guidance provided last quarter. As a reminder, our advanced computing efforts are not in the support of cloud or data center infrastructure. Rather, we help build some of the largest and most sophisticated high-performance computing machines in the world. These are often government agency-sponsored and, by definition, relatively macro-resilient. We highlighted last quarter that we expected to complete a significant project during the second quarter. This happened, translating to a sequential decline in revenue, albeit still up nearly 20% year-over-year.
Our third quarter will be the first full quarter without revenue from that completed project, translating to expectations of sequential and year-over-year declines. With the strong first half performance, coupled with a new win expected to ramp in Q4, we continue to anticipate growth in this sector on a full year basis. Lastly, in next-generation communications, we remain cautious on this sector, given the carrier and operator CapEx spending rationalization that is going on in the near term. We remain well positioned to capture investment in broadband infrastructure, demand for satellite communications, and new broadband connectivity programs focused on rural areas. However, some of these initiatives are exposed to infrastructure deployment delays and macro sensitivity. As such, we expect second half revenue performance to be challenged, with sequential declines in each of the next two quarters. Although on a full year basis, we continue to expect growth.
In summary, please turn to slide 14. While there is always room for improvement, I'm pleased with the team's execution in the quarter, despite the macro challenges and semi-cap cyclicality. Excluding SCP, Benchmark delivered 12% annual revenue growth in the quarter. At the same time, non-GAAP operating income grew 28% or more than twice the rate of revenue growth. The working capital initiatives we discussed on last quarter's call are beginning to bear fruit, with positive operating and free cash flow generated in the quarter. Looking to the second half, we expect to continue to reduce inventory and maintain our focus on operational execution, particularly as supply chains are expected to continue to improve, enabling us to fulfill more of our customer demand. We will protect investment from future growth sectors, particularly semi-cap, given our conviction in the long-term secular drivers.
Although as uncertain as to the shape of the recovery, we know it will come, and we will be ready for it. These collective efforts give us continued confidence we can grow revenue in the high single digits in 2023, when excluding the effects of SCP. With that, I'll now turn the call over to the operator to conduct our Q&A session.
We'll now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question today comes from Jim Ricchiuti with Needham & Company. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon. Just a question on the supply chain premium revenue that you're talking about. You, you may have given it, but what, what are you anticipating for Q3? I believe you said $17 million is what it was in Q2.
That's right, Jim. Hey, this is Roop. Good to have you. Q2 was $17 million. We actually didn't guide SCP for Q3 nor Q4. The guide we gave is exclusive of any SCP, as we've done throughout the year. As we've seen, though, the one thing I guess I'll comment incrementally is just, if you think about going back to Q2 of 2022, we were at a high point of 91. We've seen it sequentially decline. We do think we anticipate that that should continue to do so in the second part of this year. We haven't specifically guided to that.
Got it. Roop, any color you can give us on how we should be thinking about gross margins, just given some of the mix you're anticipating for the current quarter?
Yeah, actually, gross margins should continue to strengthen as we think about ramps coming through, getting up to more volume level, more distributed revenue throughout our network. We anticipate growing that gross margin towards the high nines, potentially, down at the 10% or so. We feel pretty good about that distribution.
Got it. Jeff, with respect to some of the market verticals.
Yeah.
Where, where do you have the most confidence? I mean, you've been anticipating, I think we've all been anticipating a pickup in A&D, but it seems like supply chain has been weighing on that, and maybe it's also your customers just dealing with their own issues. Apart from commercial.
Yeah, no, I'm happy to.
Holding up. Yeah.
Yeah, I'm happy to provide some color a little bit across the verticals. As you know, as we talked about semi-cap, you know, maybe initially we saw a bigger recovery in the second half of 2023, and we, you know, talking to our OEMs, we see that pushing into 2024. We're not expecting a significant step up in semi, but A&D is improving. Certainly supply chain is freeing up there, and we're continuing to ramp up there with a number of customers on the commercial side, seeing particular strength, but even some new defense stuff happening for us. Look for that to be a bit better, you know, in, in the second half. Then medical and industrial are both still, you know, good growth sectors for us. Held up well in the current environment.
We know we see pockets of depending on the segment, the customers in, where there might be softness, but we also see strength in other areas. We talked a little bit about that with medical around, like the defibrillator space, which, you know, it seems like everybody wants a defibrillator, you know, anywhere you can put it, right? Because they're really great life-saving devices, and so see strength there as well. With just turning to comms, you know, we've seen some, some push out of some larger, you know, infrastructure deployment that is probably weighing a little bit on that, but we think we're well positioned, and, and we've had a strong first half, so you know, that's, that's actually going to serve us well, but, but not, maybe not as strong in the second half of 2023, but hopefully that color helps.
It does. Thanks. I'll jump back in the queue.
Thanks, Jim.
The next question comes from Jaeson Schmidt with Lake Street. Please go ahead.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. I just want to follow up on the supply chain. I know it was down $1 million sequentially in Q2, and it sounds like you expect further declines from a supply chain premium standpoint in the second half. Just at a high level, has the supply chain environment continued to be a little weaker than you guys originally expected? Or, kind of how should we think about it, the improvement here in the second half and that supply chain premiums?
I, I would say broadly, it's continued to improve. You know, instead of what used to be, you know, a year ago, was thousands of parts, you know, earlier this year might have been hundreds, and now, you know, we're maybe it's a handful of things that are gating us. There's still some long lead times there, and there are still pockets where custom ASICs or some, even some of the legacy technology where, you know, all the supply went to some of the newer nodes, has been a challenging and continues to be challenging. It's, it's, it's hard to communicate to customers, "Hey, everything's great," you know, because there are still areas where we've seen it. We have seen a significant drop in supply chain premiums, as Roop just talked about it.
We kind of see that being sequentially down quarter-to-quarter in Q3. It's getting to the point where, you know, it's getting smaller as we go, and so, you know, that ability to forecast it perfectly is, is, is part of the reason that we're, we're saying: Look, let's just, you know, let's just guide without it, recognizing that it's, that it's a downward trend, and it was down, you know, over $74 million in Q2. We're kind of wrapping around where there's not as much need to be leveraging these brokers and, and going there because the broad-based supply chain has improved.
Okay, that's helpful. When you look at your backlog or business pipeline, have you seen any significant changes when it comes from, kind of decommit or cancellation standpoint?
I mean, broadly, I'd say it's holding very consistent. I mean, we talked about high single-digit growth in the year, which is kind of in line with where our thoughts have been. There are pockets where, you know, a customer, depending on what they're participating in or what's going on with them, may see some softness. You know, that's certainly weighing on, you know, certain areas. We kind of touched on it a little bit in, for example, in communication, next gen comms, that we've seen, you know, some there. Overall, I would say, you know, our diversified portfolio is serving us well. We're seeing, we believe, you know, when you exclude supply chain premiums, you know, from a product shipment, we expect four of six sectors to grow for the full year.
From that standpoint, you know, we're seeing things hold up pretty well.
Okay. Then just the last one from me, and I'll jump back in the queue. Just following up on sort of those comments on your communication segment. If I'm correct, I thought you guys originally expected that to be down sequentially in Q2. It obviously was up. What was sort of the primary driver there? Was it just sort of deployment, scheduling, or shipment timing?
Yeah, that's, that's fair to say, Jaeson. It was kind of some one-off. We, we got some parts that helped us produce a little more in the quarter and, and got it out the door, so that was helpful for us on that comms. As we indicated in the, in the latest kind of sequential view, based on our sector outlook, we are expecting comms to come down from a sequential standpoint. It's a little bit of just that timing and, and seeing how customer demand is, is profiling through the year.
Got it. Thanks a lot, guys.
Appreciate it, Jaeson.
No worries.
Thanks.
The next question comes from Stephen Fox with Fox Advisors. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon. A couple questions from me. First off, on the, semi-cap comments, can you just sort of maybe, dice it a little bit, closer in terms of new programs versus existing programs for the second half of the year? Are you seeing new programs get pushed out, or just certain types of new programs get pushed out, or is it all related to just sort of end markets of existing programs? How would you sort of describe the mix of what you're seeing, if things are going to stay flattish, you know?
Yeah, I would say, it's a little bit of both, and it's good that you kind of, that you dug into that a little color a little bit, because we, we just had a super strong year of bookings last year. A number of those programs, certainly expected a lot of activity in 2023, and some of those have pushed out. I will say they're still active in the sense that they're next generation tools, so there's no fear about, you know, losing a win or whatever. It's like where an OEM might have said, "Hey, let's build six tools this year." Maybe now we're building one, right? That's weighed a little bit, and we sort of anticipated going...
When we kind of recasted in February, we probably anticipated that we would see more activity on the new win front, building in 2023. I would say, while there's certainly a lot of programs going on, it has moved a bit to the right. Then just, we have a broader footprint of wins across tool sets, whether it's lithography or deposition or, you know, a lot of the front-end processes. So we have certainly seen from a broad base, right, that, that, that business came down and, and, you know, it stabilized. Certainly in Q3, we were guiding kind of sequentially flattish in the third quarter.
It's just, you know, we sort of anticipated initially that fourth quarter we'd be preparing for, you know, a huge, a huge ramp-up in Q4, and now we're, we're just hearing signals that, hey, it may be a little longer. While there's certainly demand, and we're seeing some strength in, some of the areas that are under restriction, on some of the legacy nodes, we're seeing people purchase those tools, and, and, there's OEMs are looking to fulfill that. I also would say some of the, some of the benefits, like of the CHIPS Act, you know, I, I'm not I don't see that at the beginning of 2024.
You know, it just recently was published that some of the builds here in Phoenix Valley are taking longer just because the labor force and such, to, to build those new fabs here in the valley, as an example. Still, still long in this space and believe that it's, you know, the, that the upswing, when it happens, will be significant, but right now, we're just, we're just not calling it in 2023.
Understood. On the aerospace and defense, if I have this right, I'm sorry, I don't have the slides in front of me, sounded like aerospace and defense, the defense piece was down quarter-over-quarter, commercial air was better. Do I have that fact right, first of all?
Yeah, that, that's, that's a fair way to.
Okay.
Characterize it.
We did have one defense program that we thought would start in 2Q that's pushing to 3 Q, so that was certainly a, a factor in that, in that weakness in defense.
Okay, and then my other part of that question on that number is just, I know that there's, you know, very specific part shortages there, you know, that are especially challenging to get. Do you guys feel like you are performing in line with the market there? The only reason I ask is because it sounds like one of your peers, was able to, to grow in aerospace defense, and you guys seem to have problems, in the defense piece quarter-over-quarter.
Yeah, I think it really comes down to program-specific kind of considerations there. You know, some of our programs, and we've commented in our sector outlook, we've got some program ramps that are expected to come later in the year, these sort of things. Part of it is what programs are you on specifically, where there could be growth. The other piece is we've got some new programs, new wins that came in in previous quarters that are ramping, that we expect to see throughout 2023. What we can say is commercial aero has performed more consistently through the year so far, and has been in an upward trend cycle.
Got it. Thanks for all that. Appreciate it.
Of course.
Always. No, no question.
As a reminder, if you wish to ask a question, please press star then one to be joined into the question queue. The next question comes from Anja Soderstrom with Sidoti. Please go ahead.
Hi, thank you for taking my question. I'm just curious, did you quantify how much revenue you left behind you to the supply chain challenges?
I don't know that we specifically called it out, but it was north of $100 million that we've kind of carried over. It's come down some over the last six months. I don't know if we addressed it on last quarter's call. Obviously, as supply chain frees up, we will fulfill more of that, but we still have a fair amount that, that is unfulfilled rolling into to the second half of this year.
Okay. Thank you. What other opportunities do you have to improve the cash flow other than bringing down inventory?
Well, Anja, I mean, I think we've got a number of, of items. You know, part of it is inventory, with, with the inventory we have, so we're actively working with our customers on, aligning the inventory levels and, and the demand schedule to the clear to build, these sort of things. I think those are really the primary. With that said, we, you know, obviously making sure that AR collections, we're on top of and these sort of things. The other things we're doing more strategically in terms of, strategic suppliers and terms, aligning those terms more effectively, as well as, finding greater flexibility from that standpoint within those terms. It's a multifaceted kind of, set of challenges to, to drive that cash flow.
The biggest priority is inventory, inventory alignment to clear to build, and then just bleeding down that inventory as we continue to grow.
Okay. Thank you. Then just lastly, in terms of the semi-cap and that being pushed out a bit, how do you think that's gonna affect your margins in, in terms of capacity utilization?
Yeah, maybe I'll start, in terms of, from a margin standpoint, maybe Jeff can, can add incremental color. I, I think, you know, as, as we've talked about semi-cap, especially the precision machining side, the semi-cap overall for us is a very strong market sector from a gross margin standpoint. We are making investments on a concurrent basis. It's why CapEx has, you know, we've, we've, provided the range that we have. We're gonna continue to invest in, in semi-cap because it is cyclical, and that market upturn is coming. What we have done is paced out those investments effectively, such that when they come online, how they might be a drag on, on margins is, is reduced or limited. Of course, as Jeff said, we've got some new programs that, that are starting to ramp there.
All of this, combined with the expectation that it will recover, is going to bode well from an overall enterprise margin standpoint. In the interim, we're very cognizant of managing the margin profile as we work through this softness.
Yeah, maybe I would just add, you know, on the EMS side of the business, you know, operational efficiency is improving, which is great. I think the incremental revenue that we've seen and, and product shipments has given a, you know, helps in areas of absorption, and so our margins are performing quite well. You know, you saw that in, in 2 Q, and you'll see it in the guide, without the recovery of semi- cap. You know, we kind of look forward to, semi- cap is on the higher end of our corporate gross margin. When we're, we're dealing with a downturn now, that's putting some pressure there that we've been able to successfully kind of overcome.
We're really, you know, we're really looking forward to the opportunity to continue to drive that further towards our strategic goal as semi-cap comes back with significant growth. Maybe that's how we think about it.
Okay. Thank you. That was all for me.
Thanks, Anja.
Okay. Thank you.
This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Paul Mansky for any closing remarks.
Thank you, Betsy, and thank you, everyone, for participating in Benchmark's second quarter 2023 earnings call. Before we go, I'd like to remind listeners that we'll be attending the 12th Annual Needham Virtual Industrial Tech, Robotics, and Clean Tech one-on-one conference on August 7th. With that, thank you again for your support, and we look forward to speaking with you soon.
The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.