Good morning, and welcome to the Iron Mountain third quarter 2021 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing star and then zero on your telephone keypad. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star and then one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star and then two. We will limit analysts to one question, and you can rejoin the queue. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Sarah Barry, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Chris. Good morning, and welcome to our third quarter 2021 earnings conference call. On today's call, we will refer to materials available on our investor relations website. We are joined here today by Bill Meaney, President and CEO, and Barry Hytinen, our EVP and CFO. After prepared remarks, we'll open up the lines for Q&A. Today's earnings materials contain forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our expectations. All forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties.
Please refer to today's earnings materials, the safe harbor language on slide 2, and our annual report on form 10-K for a discussion of the major risk factors that could cause our actual results to differ from those in our forward-looking statements. In addition, we use several non-GAAP measures when presenting our financial results. We have included the reconciliations to these measures in our supplemental financial information. With that, I'll turn the call over to Bill.
Thank you, Sarah, and thank you all for taking time to join us. We are pleased to have delivered strong performance in the third quarter, reflecting our broad offerings, deep customer relationships, resilient business model, and the strength of our team. This can be easily highlighted by our 7.4% total organic revenue growth. This strong overall organic revenue growth has been delivered by continued strength in our storage business, as well as double-digit growth in our new and existing digital offerings, including data center, InSight digital transformation services, and IT asset disposition or ITAD. Throughout the pandemic, including the most recent challenges of the Delta variant, our Mountaineers around the world have truly stepped up each and every day to put our customers first with a focus on growth.
I am both proud and humbled by this incredibly talented and dedicated team and what we've been able to accomplish through such a challenging time. Today's results, including our strong organic revenue growth exceeding 7%, is a direct result of their dedication in serving our customers in ways they need to keep their businesses growing. We have a lot to cover today, so I'll start with a brief overview of our results and key business drivers. During the third quarter, we reported revenue of over $1.1 billion and EBITDA of $418 million, both of which are new record highs. Our results are fueled by increased demand for our services across key markets and continued positive momentum in the business.
Our digital services and ITAD business continued to build on its prior performance and delivered almost 20% growth in the quarter. Today, we are proud to say that 95% of the Fortune 1000 are among the 225,000 of our loyal customer base. We have a growing footprint of more than 1,460 facilities, and with our recent expansion in the Middle East, we are now present in 63 countries, and we are supported by 25,000 Mountaineers across the globe. As we look ahead to future opportunities, there is no doubt the world has changed, but we're making the improvements to our business today to serve the changed needs of the world tomorrow.
That is why we have built, evolved, and expanded our trusted relationships with our customers as not only the leading storage platform of physical assets, but also the business services partner to support data center colocation, information security, data insights, secure IT asset disposition, and business process management. With this focus, we have expanded our total addressable market to more than $80 billion. Together with our strong customer relationships, focus on innovation, and 70-year heritage, we are operating from a unique position of strength. Now let's turn to some of the exciting events during the quarter. You'll hear us talk a lot about customer centricity here at Iron Mountain, and when we help our customers not only protect their information, but also unlock new revenue opportunities as well as cost efficiencies, that's a big win for our customers and ultimately for us.
We were proud to be featured as one of the winners of Google's first ever Google Cloud Customer Award for Financial Services for our work with a large financial institution. This is a great follow-on award from a couple years ago when we won their Machine Learning Artificial Intelligence Partner of the Year. For this award, we leveraged our expertise in mortgage document processing to train machine learning models to automate document classification and data extraction and validation, deliver advanced exception management, and unlock value for our customers.
In line with our automation-first mindset, we utilized Google's document understanding for AI algorithms in Iron Mountain's InSight platform to identify, classify, extract, and validate loan data to support authenticity, accuracy, and completeness. As a result of our services, the customer has seen efficiency improvements, including a 25% post-closing cost reduction, increased scalability, a shortened cycle time, and increased responsiveness to market demand, among other enhancements.
We are not only proud of our work with this financial services customer, but are also dedicated to continuing to enrich our customers' ability to protect and preserve their high-value assets and, in turn, assist them with gaining market share in their businesses through higher end customer satisfaction. I'm also pleased to report that Iron Mountain received the JPMorgan Chase Strategic Diverse Gold Supplier Award for our commitment to supplier diversity in the contributions of our very own supplier diversity program.
Together with our fellow gold suppliers, we have collectively agreed to increase spending with diverse-owned businesses and have set ambitious goals over the next three years. As part of this, we are on track to achieve our goal of $63 million in supplier diversity spend by the end of 2021. This is not just about our diversity goals, but it is also about helping our customers, like JPMorgan Chase and our fellow gold suppliers to drive improvements in supplier diversity, which we recognize is important for all communities in which we operate. By working together, we are having a far greater impact than any one company can achieve alone. I would now like to highlight our recent win working together with General Dynamics. You will recall we have been speaking for some time about the potential for our services inside the US federal government.
While the transformation of the federal government has taken some time, we are seeing over the past year major growth in our business across a number of governmental agencies. This growth is due not only to the resonance that our products are having with the government in assisting them on their own transformation paths, but also to the work our government team has done in partnership with the likes of General Dynamics. This partnership has already resulted in a 3-year Iron Mountain contract worth $23 million to help the Department of Veterans Affairs with their digital transformation in order to serve better our US soldiers. As part of this initial project, we're helping the US Department of Veterans Affairs digitally process an estimated 15 million official military personnel files.
Through digital transformation, this agency is taking a proactive approach to provide greater access to personnel files, as well as streamline the overall claims process in order to get veterans the benefits they deserve. In addition to our success with General Dynamics, I would like to highlight another win in our Global RIM segment. We've had a long-standing relationship with a major global financial institution for over 20 years, and we have recently expanded our relationship with them by signing a new 10-year global contract in which they committed to renew and consolidate all global records and data management business with us.
Through this work, along with our global scale, we won an additional 2-year contract for data restoration and migration services. We will provide the customer with clear, detailed information from backup tapes spanning 11 years, which will help them make informed decisions around data deletion, retention, and remediation.
Ultimately, we will reduce and enhance data management and compliance. Finally, turning to data center, we are well on track to exceeding our bookings target of 30 MW this year. In fact, through October, we stand at 24 MW. In addition to our continued growth in bookings this quarter, we closed on the acquisition of our new data center in Frankfurt. When we purchased the new Frankfurt data center, we inherited over 2 MW of existing clients, and we have expansion capacity of 8 MW for a total of over 10 MW on that site. Already in this quarter, we have signed 1.6 MW of new leases to this site and have a strong pipeline which should absorb the remaining capacity over the next 2 to 3 years.
I should also add that our first and purpose-built data center in Frankfurt is up and running, and a tenant which leases the entire 27 MW is moving in this quarter. With this transaction in Frankfurt, we now have a total potential capacity in Europe of more than 107 MW, which provides access to important interconnection markets for new and existing customers looking for reliable, flexible, and secure data center locations across the Frankfurt, Amsterdam, and London markets. Even with our rapid growth, sustainability remains at the core of how we offer data center capacity. Iron Mountain continues to source more than 100% of its energy used for data centers from renewable energy.
Moreover, as we announced in April, we took a significant step forward in the development of enhanced solutions for purchasing renewable energy by entering into an agreement to track the hourly load. I'm proud to announce that this September, we were able to report on our performance for the first half of the year for our data centers in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey that are benefiting from this agreement. Over the past several months, we have taken definitive steps towards a truly carbon-free energy supply, not just by offsetting our carbon footprint by purchasing and reselling renewables, but by matching renewable energy in the very grids in which we operate. We are the first company to join Google to adopt the 24/7 carbon-free energy goal, and we became a founding signatory to the new UN Carbon-Free Energy Compact being released at COP26 this week.
We can already publish 24/7 carbon-free energy performance at 3 of our campuses, becoming the first large colocation data center provider with this capability. We recognize that we are an important component of our clients' energy footprint, and we will continue to take every opportunity to minimize our environmental impact on their behalf. The awards and successes I outlined today are just a few among the various wins Iron Mountain has achieved this quarter. As we continue to deliver accelerated growth at IRM, in spite of the continued impact of COVID on some of our traditional service areas, I am confident that our resilient business model, expanded product portfolio, customer-first culture, and strategic transformation will continue to deliver strong sales growth. With that, I'll turn the call over to Barry.
Thanks, Bill, and thank you for joining us. The third quarter exceeded our expectations across each of our key financial metrics. Continuing the trend we have seen over the last few quarters, revenue continued to strengthen with a strong recovery in service revenue, reflecting accelerating rates of growth driven by the new service offerings Bill discussed. Our core physical storage business performed well, and we are seeing continued strength in our growth areas. Turning to our results for the quarter. On a reported basis, revenue of $1.13 billion grew 9%. Total organic revenue increased 7.4% year-over-year. As an example of the momentum we are building, on a two-year basis, our organic revenue growth continued to accelerate in the quarter. Organic service revenue increased $61 million or 18%.
Our team drove strong growth in both our global digital solutions business and secure IT asset disposition. Total organic storage rental revenue grew 2.3% with continued benefit from pricing and positive trends in volume. Adjusted EBITDA was $418 million, an increase of $42 million from last year. We exceeded the projections we shared on our last call as the team drove improved margin performance despite the stronger US dollar. AFFO was $263 million or $0.90 per share, up $47 million and $0.15 million respectively from the third quarter of last year. Turning to segment performance. In the third quarter, our Global RIM business delivered revenue of $996 million, an increase of $74 million from last year. On an organic basis, revenue increased 6%.
The team performed well with constant currency storage rental revenue growth of 2.7% or 1.8% on an organic basis. This performance reflects an acceleration in growth as compared to the last few quarters. Growth was driven by pricing and volume. With positive volume trends and the Middle East deal that Bill mentioned, total physical volume achieved a new all-time record of 744 million cubic feet. We are pleased with the underlying trends and continue to expect total volume on an organic basis to be flat to modestly up for the full year. Our traditional services business continued to recover from the pandemic, with revenue growing 14% year-over-year, albeit still down 4% from the levels achieved in 2019, reflecting the continued COVID impact.
Global RIM adjusted EBITDA was $443 million, an increase of $49 million year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 180 basis points year-over-year as a result of strong operating leverage and improved service margins. Turning to our global data center business, our team booked 9 MW in the quarter, and through the end of the third quarter, we have booked 22 MW. With our strong and building pipeline and the additional contracts we've already signed this quarter, we are confident in our ability to exceed our full-year guidance of 30 MW. In terms of revenue, as we projected, growth accelerated sharply to 22% year-over-year. In light of our strong performance year to date and prior year bookings, we now expect full-year revenue growth of at least mid-teens%, exceeding our prior projections.
Adjusted EBITDA margin of 40% was consistent with the expectations we shared on our last call and driven by build-out services at our Frankfurt facility. Turning to Project Summit, this quarter, the team delivered $38 million of incremental year-on-year adjusted EBITDA benefit. We continue to expect year-on-year benefits from Summit of $160 million, with another $50 million of year-on-year benefit in 2022. Total capital expenditures were $138 million, of which $100 million was growth and $38 million was recurring. Turning to the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with net lease adjusted leverage of 5.4x, slightly better than our projection. As we have said before, we are committed to our long-term leverage range of 4.5x-5.5x.
For 2021, we expect to exit the year at levels at or below the third quarter. From a cash cycle perspective, I would like to highlight that our team drove a 2-day improvement from last year and specifically call out that our day sales outstanding are at the best level they've been at in several years. With our strong financial position, our board of directors declared our quarterly dividend of $0.62 per share to be paid in early January.
Turning to our outlook, with the ongoing pandemic and where we are in the year, I feel it will be helpful to provide our view explicitly for this quarter. We expect total revenue growth to be in the high single-digit % range year-over-year in the fourth quarter. For EBITDA, we expect percentage growth to be in the range of low double-digit to low teens year-over-year in the fourth quarter. We expect year-over-year AFFO growth in excess of 30% in the fourth quarter.
As you may remember, last year we had an elevated level of maintenance CapEx in the fourth quarter as we caught up from pandemic-driven delays. On a more normalized level of CapEx spend last year, this implies at least 20% growth in AFFO in the fourth quarter of 2021. In summary, our team is executing well. Our pipeline is growing, and momentum continues to build across our business. Our addressable market continues to expand, and we feel confident in our ability to drive growth. We feel well-positioned and look forward to updating you on our progress following the fourth quarter. With that, operator, please open the line for Q&A.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star and then one on your telephone keypad. 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 and then two. We will limit analysts to one question, and you can then rejoin the queue. Our first question is from Sheila McGrath of Evercore. Please go ahead.
Hi. Yes, good morning. Bill and Barry, I've gotten questions from investors that bottom-line growth and margin improvement has benefited from Project Summit, and that benefit will be less of a factor going forward. Can you outline what revenue growth opportunities you are positive about for Iron Mountain looking out the next few years? A related question to that is, can you also outline how you're able to effectively present such a broad offering of products to your customers when it appears there'd be different contexts at the customers for storage versus data centers versus InSight?
Okay. Good morning, Sheila. I'll start with kind of strategically and where the product portfolio is going, and then I'll let Barry comment a little bit more on the nuts and bolts in terms of margin. Thanks for the question. I think first, you know, I think part of Project Summit, you've seen that show up in the record high EBITDA margin that we had this quarter. Thanks for the call-out on that. I think that, you know, that's an ongoing benefit that we'll have. You know, that EBITDA margin may move up and down depending on the product mix, and it comes to your product portfolio question.
On the product portfolio, part of Summit that you haven't seen directly, in other words, it isn't in the margin, is we've also taken a lot of the benefit of Project Summit and reinvested in the business. Besides, you know, actually driving the margin improvement that we printed today, we've also reinvested in the business, and that's really what's driven that total addressable market going from $10 billion to $80 billion that we've highlighted the last few quarters. Part of that $80 billion of new total addressable market is the almost 20% growth that we've seen in digital services, which is primarily our InSight-driven digital platform together with IT Asset Disposition business, right? Those are some of the new areas that I think you're highlighting behind your question.
We actually see, you know, that business is growing, you know, strong double digits, right? We see that continue. You take that on top of the growth and the continued acceleration and growth in our data center business, as I say, we're well on track to exceed our, you know, upgraded guidance last quarter of 30 MW of bookings for this year.
You know, we do expect to see continued levels of revenue growth like we've seen the last few quarters because, you know, this growth that we've seen in the top line, while we've seen, luckily some recovery in terms of our traditional service business, I think it's fair to say that we've seen an acceleration in terms of our revenue growth that's really driven by the new product areas and less from, you know, a what I would call a rebound from, you know, historically low activity due to COVID. I don't know, Barry, if you want to kind of comment a little bit around the margin.
Hi, Sheila. Good morning, and thanks for the question. I would say, you know, when we look at our outlook and you look at where our margin has been recently, where it's gonna continue to go, we have very favorable trends in pricing. I think that you will continue to see at least the level of pricing activity going forward as we've seen here over the last year or so. There's some macro trends there that are both positive for us, I think, on a pricing benefit. If you look at our data center business, the margin, as we talked about, has, on a transitory basis, been a little bit lower than where we expect it to go over time. That business is obviously dealing with some fit out on our Frankfurt facility, which is transitory here in the third and fourth quarter.
As we move forward, we see that margin expanding. That's obviously a very nice secular tailwind to the business. Then I would say when you look at ongoing productivity, we continue to see that. While Summit has been incredibly beneficial to the business, and we'll have more Summit benefit year-over-year next year, we certainly see the opportunity for additional productivity. The only other thing I'll say is, as you know, since you follow the company well, we've had a couple of relatively large sale lease back transactions over the last, you know, 12 months. While I expect to continue to do a relative amount of capital recycling, you know, that's been a big headwind on a year-over-year basis. If that comes down to a little more normalized level, going forward, that's also a benefit.
Thank you, sir. The next question is from George Tong of Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks. Good morning. As it relates to your overall growth portfolio, can you provide a sense of how quickly it grew and also discuss examples of recent success and traction outside of your data centers business?
Yeah. Thanks. Thanks, George. If you look at the 20% growth that we called out this quarter, or just under 20% growth, that's all non-data center. That's the ITAD or IT asset disposition business, and we've won some recent large global contracts for that, mainly for corporates that are trying to make sure that they both manage the secure destruction of any information that happens to be on their devices or hardware, as well as making sure that they can be managed in an environmentally friendly way. That's one part of it. The other part of it is just the rapid growth that we've seen in adoption of our InSight platform and overall digitization of people's information.
That's everything from people taking advantage to say, okay, when they're retrieving documents on a very simple basis, is we want to actually retrieve them electronically through the InSight platform where they can access those from a secure platform in the cloud, to digital mailroom, which is beyond the typical mailroom employee arbitrage model. Again, allowing people to have not only access to the information that comes through their mailroom, but to be able to operate in a hybrid work fashion. In other words, where people can work from home and the office and always have access to their information, to even some what I would call larger, more complex deals.
I mean, I just returned from the Middle East about a month ago, where we're working with a government there and their national archives to help them digitize everything about the way the government works, right? That's again using the InSight platform, but it's, you know, not just the InSight platform, but auto-classification of the documents to create metadata so that they can actually share the information digitally to the right people with the right security level in a way that can be managed for the long term. It's a multifaceted thing, but those are the areas that are really driving a lot of the top line growth that we see today, as well as our, you know, our data center business.
I mean, obviously, the data center business with the type of bookings that we have will continue to drive, you know, increasing levels of growth. I should, you know, not miss out, you know, the underlying growth of the more traditional side of the business, you know, mostly driven by pricing, you know, continues to travel along nicely.
Thank you, sir. The next question is from Shlomo Rosenbaum of Stifel. Please go ahead. Mr. Rosenbaum, your line is open. Just check that you're not muted.
Sorry, I was muted. Thanks for that. I wanted to ask a little bit about the storage business and some of the puts and takes that went through. It seems like there was an acquisition, something added about 10 million cubic feet. You guys are getting pricing. There's some organic growth. But when I go to the total revenue from adjusted storage, you know, when including the terminations and permanent withdrawal fees, it's really flattish sequentially. I just want to ask you, what are some of the puts and takes that you might have seen on a sequential basis? Because I think you commented last quarter expecting some volumes to come in that were pent up from COVID-19.
We're just wondering how this is translating into revenue as you kind of build through the year?
Hi, Shlomo. It's Barry. Thanks for the question. I'll try to unpack that for you. You are right, we did close on the transaction in the Middle East, which we think is a great platform for us to continue to grow in that region together with our existing business. I will note that that closed very late in the quarter in the second half of September, so really had almost no benefit to the quarter in terms of the financials, albeit, you know, it is in our Q3, as you note. That didn't really help the sequential. On the pricing, you might recall that at the beginning of the year, and then again on the first quarter call, I mentioned that all of the pricing we had planned for was already set as of March or April.
The sequential benefit on pricing was not much, and we weren't planning for it. The other thing I'll call out as you think about storage sequentially is we did divest the software escrow business in the first part of June last quarter. The sequential move from the second to the third on storage is about $6 million-$7 million of sequential decline due to that being in the second quarter, but not in the third quarter. All in, we feel quite good. In fact, I'll tell you that the storage revenue performed better than we were planning on a sequential basis.
As it relates to the point about pent-up demand, you recall last quarter we did note that, and that was in some of the economies, particularly in Asia. I'd say with some of the COVID and Delta variant and various other elements that occurred in some of those markets, we continue to have a pretty good sized backlog. Is that, Bill, anything you wanna add? No, I think that's accurate.
Thank you, sir. The next question is from Eric Luebchow of Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
Great. Thanks for taking the question. Wanted to touch upon a fairly topical area in data centers today. A lot of talk in the industry about, you know, cost inflation in terms of development costs, along with supply chain challenges and getting new equipment. Maybe you could just give us your perspective on what you're seeing in your footprint, whether that's, you know, any development cost inflation, any development delays in terms of timing, and also the impact of, you know, higher power costs, particularly in Europe. Then, you know, from a broader pricing perspective, do you think that, you know, this environment may be supportive of industry pricing moving upwards in the next couple years as, you know, we work through all these challenges. Thanks.
Thanks, Eric. I appreciate the question. Two or three points that, you know, I'll cover in your question. I think the first bit is that I would say that for 2022, in terms of supply chain, we're pretty well covered just because of lead time. To your point, we have seen, I would say 10-12 weeks increase in supply chain or lead time on some of the, you know, the MEP and related equipment, and even including steel in some markets. I think to your point we are seeing a lengthening of the supply chain, but I would say for 2022, we're well covered because that's already been in train and committed contracts to actually do that build-out.
We're, you know, now we're already looking at 2023, and we're factoring in that extended lead time for some of that equipment in our planning. You know, the good news, the bad news is that the lead times have increased. The good news is that we're well covered for 2022, so we've got the time to make sure we incorporate that in our planning for 2023. That's, I would say, one aspect. In terms of the increase in the prices, we're pretty well hedged for the 2022 commitments that we have because those are contracts that we've already let. We are seeing an increase in inflation in some of those raw materials.
That being said, because this is a business where the cost of construction is well known and quite transparent to our customer base, you know, we see trends, and we expect that to continue, that you know, our pricing will go in line with the cost of build. So, you know, I think we're kind of naturally hedged given the transparency of these businesses. In terms of the power cost, you know, we're pretty well covered for this year, but we have seen an uptick in pricing in pretty much all the markets as everyone's noticed. I would say that, you know, first part is I would say about 60% of our portfolio is in 2022 will be pretty much straight power pass-through.
We don't, you know, we don't have any exposure in terms of the power cost. The remainder is, most of that is still on long-term, you know, we've contracted for the power long term. You know, think of our business as north of 70% naturally hedged, and the part that isn't is up for renewal during the course of 2022, or a big part of it is. We don't really see power affecting us in any material way. In fact, you know, we see continued upward progression in terms of our EBITDA margins as we get into 2022. Thanks for the question.
Thank you, sir. Next question is from Andrew Steinerman of JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Hi, this is Alex on for Andrew Steinerman. Our question is regarding your guidance. Your guidance for high single-digit % growth in revenue and low double-digit to low teens % growth in EBITDA for fourth quarter appears to imply an adjusted EBITDA margin of about 36.5%. Can you confirm that we're doing the math there right, and maybe speak to some of the drivers behind that? Thank you.
Hi, Alex. It's Barry. Thanks for the question. Why don't I help you with both the revenue and the EBITDA, the way we're thinking about it. In the fourth quarter, you're right, we said about high single digits. Let's say that's 8 or 9% on the revenue side. Just to give you a couple of the puts and takes, we have the dollar is stronger, so we have less than a point of FX benefit year-over-year, and a similar amount from M&A, less than a point, because just as a reminder, as I mentioned to Shlomo, we divested that software escrow business in the second quarter. As a result, it's not much M&A benefit. That leaves you with about, call it 7% of organic constant currency growth.
With the strength of the data center business, that'll contribute probably 1.5 points alone because that business is performing very well. You should be working with your model and think like 20+% growth in the fourth quarter from our data center business. The balance would be coming from low single-digit growth in our storage rental revenue, and that'll be with good pricing contribution. Of course, the remainder is, as Bill's highlighted on the call, the very nice growth we're seeing out of our digital solutions and ITAD business. On the EBITDA side, you know, we're looking at low double-digit to low mid-teens growth. So let's say that's 13% or so, just to keep the midpoint there. For the purpose of this discussion, that's about, call it $48 million of year-on-year increase.
FX is a very small contribution, almost nothing, and M&A would be, actually a net negative, on a year-over-year basis in light of the escrow business was a very high margin. You know, think about data center as having a modest increase in margin sequentially still affected by the fit out in Frankfurt. A few million of benefit to EBITDA from data center. Our Summit project is doing phenomenally well, and the team is executing very well. You'll probably see $+30 million of year-over-year benefit in the quarter from that. Of course, pricing will continue to be a very strong contributor. The services margin, I expect to continue to improve, which you've been seeing throughout the year.
Naturally, there are some offsets with sale lease back, as I mentioned earlier, and higher levels of commission in light of the very good trajectory the team is driving on top line. You know, we're feeling very good about the fourth quarter as we sit here today, and look forward to talking to you about it in 90 days. Thank you. Have a great day.
Thank you, sir. This concludes our question and answer session and the Iron Mountain third quarter 2021 earnings conference call. Thank you for attending today's presentation, and you may now disconnect.