Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to NetScout's second quarter fiscal year 2022 financial results conference call. At this time, all parties are in a listen-only mode until the question and answer portion of the call. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. Tony Piazza, Vice President of Corporate Finance, and his colleagues at NetScout are on the line with us today. If you require operator assistance at any time, please press star zero. I would now like to turn the call over to Tony Piazza to begin the company's prepared remarks.
Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to NetScout's second quarter fiscal year 2022 conference call for the period ended September 30, 2021. Joining me today are Anil Singhal, NetScout's President and Chief Executive Officer, Michael Szabados, NetScout's Chief Operating Officer, and Jean Bua, NetScout's Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. There is a slide presentation that accompanies our prepared remarks. You can advance the slides in the webcast viewer to follow our commentary. Both the slides and the prepared remarks can be accessed in multiple areas within the investor relations section of our website at www.netscout.com, including the IR landing page under Financial Results, the webcast itself, and under Financial Information on the quarterly results page. Moving on to slide number three, today's conference call will include forward-looking statements.
These statements may be prefaced by words such as anticipate, believe, and expect, and will cover a range of topics that are not strictly historical facts, such as our outlook, our market opportunities and market share, key business initiatives and future product plans, along with their potential impact on our financial performance. These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, and actual results could differ materially from the forward-looking statements due to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions, and other factors, which are described on this slide and in today's financial results press release, as well as in the company's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended March 31, 2021, and the company's subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, all on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
NetScout assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking information contained in this communication or with respect to announcements described herein. Let's turn to slide number four, which involves non-GAAP metrics. While this slide presentation includes both GAAP and non-GAAP results, unless otherwise stated, financial information discussed on today's conference call will be on a non-GAAP basis only. The rationale for providing non-GAAP measures, along with the limitations of relying solely on those measures, is detailed on this slide and in today's press release. These measures should not be considered in isolation from or as a substitute for financial information prepared in accordance with GAAP. Reconciliations of all non-GAAP metrics with the applicable GAAP measures are provided in the appendix of this slide presentation and in today's earnings press release. They are also available on our website. I will now turn the call over to Anil for his prepared remarks. Anil?
Thank you, Tony. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Let's begin on slide number six with a brief recap of our non-GAAP results for the second quarter and the first six months of fiscal year 2022. We are pleased with our second quarter results, which have contributed to a solid foundation as we move into the second half of the fiscal year. Strong software-only product revenue growth in the second quarter supported our overall revenue increase, enhanced our margins, and improved our diluted earnings per share on a year-over-year basis.
Revenue increased more than 3% in the second quarter to $211.9 million, driven by product revenue growth of more than 10%, which was partially offset by a decline of less than 3% in the service revenue attributable to service provider consolidation and legacy product line atrophy compared with the same period last fiscal year. Diluted earnings per share increased approximately 24% to $0.47 compared with the same quarter last year.
On a year-to-date basis, for the six months of fiscal year 2022, revenue increased more than 3% to $402.2 million, driven by product revenue growth of more than 12%, which was partially offset by a decline of 3% in service revenue for the same reasons previously mentioned for the quarter. Diluted earnings per share increased approximately 22% to $0.67 for the first half of fiscal year. All these comparisons relate to the same periods in the prior fiscal year. Let's now move to slide number seven for some perspective on market trends and business insights. As guardians of the connected world, our solution continues to be vital.
We provide borderless visibility and cybersecurity solutions that assure and secure the performance, availability, and security of our customers' digital ecosystem. Our customer can leverage these solutions to compete more efficiently and effectively in the new economy, which is increasingly essential given the most recent challenges brought about by COVID-19 pandemic. Looking ahead, long-term technology trends, including 5G, digital transformation through cloud migration, and the requirements for greater cybersecurity protection are all setting the stage for NetScout's continued advancement. Elaborating on the cybersecurity area, we recently released our threat intelligence report for the first half of 2021. In the report, we noted that the global cybersecurity crisis has continued to accelerate. Attack frequencies are up and on track for another record-setting year.
The impact on both public and private organizations is tremendous, and these groups continue to seek solutions that can assist them with these enormous challenges while keeping the organization safe. Equipped with our Omnis Cyber Intelligence, we are well positioned to continue supporting customers in this area. Our Omnis Cyber Intelligence combines our leading service assurance monitoring, troubleshooting, and forensic capability with our cybersecurity intelligence detection and mitigation solution. We are already starting to see interest in this front, and Michael will discuss some advances in this area later on in his remarks. As we expect our new cybersecurity solution to play a larger role in our growth next fiscal year, we are also analyzing key metrics for this area of our business and plan to start reporting on them in our fiscal year 2023.
Now I would like to turn to our customer verticals to provide some more perspective on performance and the previously mentioned technology trends. During the quarter, as our customers dealt with the challenging supply chain environment and experienced procurement issues, our software-only solution enabled them to utilize their budgets more effectively by accelerating the timing of their purchases with us. This moved some deals that had been previously expected in the second half up earlier in the fiscal year. Conversely, the rise in software-only deals also helped to mitigate potential constraints on our operations from supply chain difficulties as well. In our enterprise customer vertical, revenue grew more than 7% in the first half of fiscal year 2022 compared to the same period last fiscal year.
Organizations are beginning to spend again as they emerge from the pandemic and restart previously delayed projects. We expect this spending momentum to continue and anticipate mid-to-high single-digit revenue growth in our enterprise customer vertical for the full fiscal year based on our current deal pipeline. Michael will highlight some of the customer wins we achieved during the quarter in this vertical in his remarks. Our newer enterprise products related to Smart Edge Monitoring for remote work environments, as well our Omnis cyber intelligence solutions which address the security landscape, have been gaining customer interest. We expect a greater contribution to our results from sales of this product in our next fiscal year as customers' offices start to reopen.
Such conditions will allow us to build our pipeline as our sales team resumes traveling, conducts more in-person customer meetings, and completes more proof of concept demonstrating the value of our solution in saving time, cutting costs, and reducing the meantime to resolution. Moving to our service provider customer vertical, for the first half of the fiscal year, revenue was down just under 1% compared to the same period in the prior fiscal year. Looking ahead, we expect 5G deployments to continue, and we are also advancing the radio frequency propagation modeling project orders we previously received, which will assist customers in planning their network. However, we also note the cautious spending environment in the service provider customer vertical as well as provider consolidation and atrophy of legacy product lines, which has resulted in lower service revenue.
As such, based on our current deal pipeline, we anticipate that this vertical could experience flat to mid-single digit revenue decline for the full fiscal year. I would also like to point out that we received the second-largest 5G-related order from a tier one domestic service provider during our second quarter. Michael will comment more on this service provider win during his remarks. Now let's move to slide number eight to review our outlook. With the first half of fiscal year 2022 behind us, we have a solid foundation to build on and are excited to continue working toward meeting our financial and operational objectives for the fiscal year. We continue to advance our Visibility Without Borders initiative.
This initiative is focused on expanding our business with current customers by leveraging our incumbency to access both existing and new budgets, acquiring new customers through new consumption choices, and expanding our reach into high-value adjacencies that can leverage our smart data such as expanded cybersecurity and big data analytics. As the world continues to emerge from the pandemic, we remain focused on meeting customers' need for service assurance and cybersecurity solutions that solve some of the connected world's toughest challenges. Based on our results to date and our current deal pipeline, we are reiterating our outlook for low single-digit revenue and diluted earnings per share growth in the full fiscal year 2022. Jean will provide a recap on the numbers in his remarks. I look forward to sharing our progress with everyone going forward as the fiscal year continues to unfold.
I will now turn the call over to Michael for additional updates.
Thank you, Anil, and good morning, everyone. Slide 10 outlines the areas I will cover on today's call. On the enterprise customer vertical front, we are seeing increased interest in our service assurance and cybersecurity solutions as organizations emerge from the pandemic and refocus on their important projects. In terms of service assurance projects, some of the drivers are data center transformation and business-critical application assurance project. Meanwhile, our new Omnis solutions are attracting greater interest on the cybersecurity front. From a service assurance solution perspective, in our enterprise customer vertical during the second quarter, we won a low eight-figure service assurance deal with a major domestic provider of human capital management services. The company depends heavily on its core business applications to fulfill its business obligations and found that its previous approach to solving issues was overly reactive and labor-intensive, making it ineffective and costly.
Using our nGenius technology, we demonstrated expedited issue resolution, which allowed the customer to identify and resolve in less than half an hour problems that historically required large war room meetings and many man-hours or even days for resolution. The needs fulfilled by our solutions in this example are not isolated to this company. Today, while the largest organizations still struggle with exploding complexity for which their existing tools are challenged to resolve, our solutions remain well suited to reduce their meantime to resolution. On the cybersecurity side, in our enterprise vertical, our Omnis security solutions are beginning to gain traction. During the quarter, we won a high six-figure deal with a domestic educational institution that purchased both our Omnis security solution as well as our Visibility as a Service or VaaS offering.
We won the deal against the incumbent due to the superiority of our security data set, as well as our patented and differentiated ASI technology, which has gained prominence in the industry over the past years. In the service provider and customer vertical, we continue to see momentum around 5G globally. Some customers are continuing their planning with radio frequency propagation modeling projects, while others are advancing their deployments. As Anil mentioned, during the second quarter, we won an eight-figure deal with a leading tier one domestic service provider. This is the second 5G-related order that we have received from this provider as they accelerate their 5G build-out and offerings to compete with domestic industry leadership.
Our market-leading solutions, combined with our responsive customer service, solid relationships, and strong incumbency, continue to win us business from this provider as they advance their offerings. In terms of go-to-market activities, we continue to launch new offerings and advance our partnerships and collaborations. From the perspective of offerings, we recently announced the launch of the Omnis Cyber Intelligence solution. By leveraging NetScout's market-leading service assurance technology, the Omnis Cyber Intelligence solution can provide insight into normal and anomalous network behavior to help mitigate network security risks earlier in the attack life cycle and stop future attacks. We also announced the launch of our Visibility as a Service or VaaS offering, which provides turnkey protection for customers' business-critical applications and digital services on a subscription basis.
This service allows companies to leverage the deep expertise of the NetScout VaaS engineering team to help monitor and troubleshoot issues quickly, as well as help alleviate the resource shortages faced by IT organizations worldwide. In terms of partnerships and collaborations, we recently announced a partnership with Palo Alto Networks involving the integration of our DDoS product with their security and orchestration product. This integrated solution will help enterprises reduce risk and increase service availability by enabling security operations center to detect, analyze, and mitigate security threats in complex hybrid environments. From a collaboration perspective, later this year, we'll be exhibiting at AWS's re:Invent show in Las Vegas to demo our collaboration with AWS in cloud migration and security areas. That concludes my prepared remarks. I will now turn the call over to Jean.
Thank you, Michael, and good morning, everyone. I will now review our second quarter and first half fiscal year 2022 metrics. As a reminder, this review focuses on our non-GAAP results unless otherwise stated, and all reconciliations with our GAAP results appear in the presentation appendix. Regardless, I will note the nature of any such comparison. Slide 12 details our results for our second quarter and first half of fiscal year 2022. Focusing on the quarterly performance, revenue grew 3.2% from the same quarter in the prior year to $211.9 million. Product revenue grew 10.5% year-over-year, primarily due to higher software-only product sales. Software-only product revenue was 45% of service assurance product revenue, compared with 27% in the same period of the prior fiscal year.
Service revenue declined 2.7% over the prior year's quarter. As we stated on our last earnings call, the decline in service revenue is primarily attributable to non-renewals associated with service provider consolidation and legacy product lines. Our second quarter fiscal year 2022 gross profit margin was 78.3%, up 3.6 percentage points over the same quarter last year. The increase is primarily due to the higher contribution from software-only revenue, which has a higher gross margin and lower contribution from radio frequency propagation modeling project revenue, which has a lower gross margin compared to the same period in the prior year.
Quarterly operating expenses increased 4.4% from the prior year, largely due to higher sales incentive compensation attributable to higher revenue, increased marketing program spending, and a onetime accrual reversal attributable to legal-related expenses and penalties that occurred in the prior year's quarter. We reported an operating margin of 22.3% compared with 19.4% in the same quarter last year. Diluted earnings per share increased by 23.7% to $0.47 from $0.38 in the same quarter of the last fiscal year. Turning to Slide 13, I'd like to review key revenue trends for the first half of the year. For the first six months of fiscal year 2022, the enterprise customer vertical revenue grew approximately 7.5%, while the service provider customer vertical revenue declined approximately 0.9%.
For the first six months of the fiscal year, approximately 52% of total revenue was generated from the enterprise customer vertical, with the remaining approximately 48% of total revenue generated from the service provider customer vertical. Turning to Slide 14, which shows our geographic revenue mix on a GAAP basis. Revenue by geography continues to be domestically weighted despite international revenue increasing compared with the same period in the prior year. There was one customer that represented 10% or more of revenue in the quarter, but no such customer for the first half of the fiscal year. Slide 15 details our balance sheet highlights and free cash flow.
We ended the quarter with cash equivalents, short-term marketable securities, and long-term marketable securities of $475.8 million, representing a decrease of $18.1 million since the end of the first quarter. Free cash flow generated in the quarter was $21.6 million. We repurchased $24.6 million or 921,299 shares of our common stock during the quarter at a weighted average price of $26.75 per share. We currently have capacity in our share repurchase authorization and, subject to market conditions, plan to be active in the market during our third quarter.
From a debt perspective, as of the end of the second quarter, we had $350 million outstanding on our $800 million revolving credit facility that matures in July of 2026. To briefly recap other balance sheet highlights, accounts receivable net was $162.9 million, down by $34.8 million from the end of March. DSOs were 64 days versus 75 days at the end of fiscal year 2021 and 65 days at the same time last year. Let's move to Slide 16 for commentary on our outlook. I will focus my review on our non-GAAP outlook. As Anil noted in his earlier comments, we are reiterating our non-GAAP outlook issued during our first quarter earnings call on July 29, 2021.
For fiscal year 2022, the expected revenue range is $835 million-$865 million, which implies low single-digit growth and reflects the slight pressure on service revenue that we continue to experience due to service provider consolidation and legacy product lines. The anticipated effective tax rate is expected to be between 21% and 23%. Assuming approximately 75 million weighted average diluted shares outstanding, the non-GAAP diluted earnings per share range is expected to be between $1.71 and $1.77. I'd also like to offer some color on our non-GAAP outlook for the third quarter of the fiscal year. As we assess the opportunities in front of us, we anticipate that third quarter revenue will grow in the low single digits on a year-over-year basis.
We also anticipate that the product mix for the third quarter will consist of higher radio frequency propagation modeling revenue. Due to the labor-intensive nature and higher cost of this type of revenue, we expect a lower gross margin in the third quarter than that of the same period in the prior fiscal year. Accordingly, we anticipate that our diluted earnings per share in the third quarter will be lower by mid-single digits compared with the prior year's third fiscal quarter. That concludes my formal review of our financial results. Before we transition to Q&A, I'd like to quickly note that our upcoming IR conference participation is listed on Slide 17. Thank you, everyone, and I'll now turn the call over to the operator to start Q&A.
At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. If you wish to remove yourself from the queue, please press the pound key. We do ask, in the interest of time, that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. We'll take our first question today from Matt Hedberg with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Hey, it's Dan Bergstrom for Matt Hedberg. Thanks for taking our questions. Could you talk a little bit about the strength in product revenues this quarter? Sounds like it was around software. You know, is that what drove the outperformance, or was it, you know, simply some deal pull forward? Maybe, you know, what's the view around product for the second half of the year with no easing comps?
Yeah. Thanks, Dan. I think as we talked about, there were multiple trends which were in favor. There was pent-up demand in the enterprise from last year. Our core business it continues to be strong. Some larger deals even though some of our new products, while they have a lot of interest, but the sales cycle for them has been much longer. At the same time, our big customers having a lot of confidence in our products and our solution and directions, and that's why they have been spending more money on our solutions versus some other stuff, especially since our software solutions don't have the challenges of supply chain and other things. Lastly, there were some orders which we are able to pull through, especially in service provider from the second half.
Overall, I think there was a lot of movement from the second half to the first half, but I think there were some upsides also which we are able to drive because of a combination of a software-only solution, which makes us more price competitive while driving higher gross margins because of the confidence many of our large customers have in us in terms of the direction of the company and the investment we have been making in the COVID time.
Thank you, Anil. Very helpful. Any commentary around the federal business of fiscal year-end here? I know you called out a good pipeline last quarter. You know, historically, there have been some puts and takes there. Just curious of the view around federal activity this quarter?
Yeah. I think that has been generally flattish, and maybe Jean have some comment on that. Overall, maybe Jean, you want to comment on that?
Sure. I would say overall, the government vertical grew around 30% for Q2. In that vertical, the federal portion of that, which is mostly the Department of Defense, grew in the upper teens%. It was a good federal quarter for us.
Great. Nice to hear. Thank you.
You're welcome.
We will take our next question today from Eric Martinuzzi with Lake Street. Your line is open.
Yeah, my question has to do with the services line. I think, you know, I need to get a better feel for that. Right now, at least at the midway point of the year, we're off about 3%. I'm wondering where you see that for the full year. In other words, does the back half have that same kind of trajectory as the front half did?
Sure. Hi, Eric. This is Jean. When I look at our first half over our second half, and assuming the midpoint of guidance, I would say the trajectory for the second half is to be a consistent percentage of revenue decline at around 3% for the second half. That would give you around a 3% decline for the full year.
What's behind this? Is this, you know, we're kind of running off hardware maintenance contracts, and they're not being replaced. Is this a kind of revenue recognition issue between software products where they come in the revenue line? What's the key driver of this minor decline?
Sure. I think there's really two pieces to that. As we mentioned, I think on the earnings call last quarter, the consolidation of two of the largest tier ones where the strategy is to expand into 5G and 4G, and some of the acquired assets tend to be older, and their plan is not to necessarily use that equipment going forward. They've decided not to renew our product on those pieces of the network. The other pieces we've talked about over the last few years is in some of the more discontinued product lines that you know older product lines that were acquired in Danaher. As those get less product being purchased, the people don't also renew their service.
You know, they move on to different solutions that we can provide.
Okay. Then it seems to me like the service provider side, we've got, you know, a terrific example of a large eight-figure win in the quarter, but then we've got an overall big picture commentary of a flat to mid-single-digit% decline. I don't know whether Michael or Anil you'd like to care to comment, but was that eight-figure transaction kind of an outlier in the grand scheme of things?
Well, no, I don't think so. Overall, the issue is the international service provider. There is still, I mean, they're not cranking on 5G investment, and there's still a lot of price pressures. Sometimes, quarter-over-quarter comparisons make it difficult when you have these large deals. Like last year, we had a very big, I would say, eight-figure deal from Asian provider, which I don't know whether it's repeatable this fiscal year, but certainly didn't happen this time.
I think overall, maybe the yearly trend is the more interesting one, which is that we have been able to maintain a good product revenue, even at flat for the year. Despite a flat, I mean, a very small single-digit decline, mainly coming from the service revenue which Jean talked about, despite the fact that the ASP of the products have come down because of software only. I think overall, I see that the trend is much better than what we had seen in the last three, four years.
Yeah, I certainly don't wanna take anything away from the quarter because I have had some hardware companies facing supply chain issues, and it's nice to have the optionality that NetScout has where you're selling a software solution and can actually benefit from budget shifts within your customers to accommodate that.
Yeah.
I don't wanna take anything away from that. Congrats on the quarter-
Thanks.
the reiteration for the year.
Thank you. Thanks.
We will move next to James Fish with Piper Sandler. Your line is open.
Hey, guys. Nice quarter and thanks for my questions. You know-
Sure.
We talked a little bit about earlier, ordering. I guess, is there any way to think about how much earlier we're kind of taking from out year growth? Like, is it, you know, the back half of the year only, or are we starting to even see some 2023 orders come in? Is there any extra backlog or product deferred to think about as a result of that? And, I guess also on the cost side, how are you guys mitigating the extra costs associated with transport and components at this time with the supply chain issues?
Yeah. Maybe let's see if I remember all the questions you've had. The first of them is that there's no pull-through from fiscal year 2023 orders, okay? It is from the second half, so it was part of the full fiscal year plan anyway. We do have, I mean, small component of the hardware, like very small portion, and we don't do any custom hardware. We had already accommodated that, and we work with vendors where we are one of the top customers of those vendors, so we get preferential treatment.
We are able to manage any potential supply chain issues or price increases proactively because we have been working with these customers for 10+ years, the suppliers, and we are such a big portion of their business.
Yeah. Jim, I think you hit the nail on the head for the quarter. Just to put it in an overall context, and since we have the software-only solution, there was at least one service provider customer who moved their calendar year 2021 budget from what we thought would be our next quarter into Q2. Given the timing of that, which came in towards the end of September, you know, we prioritized shipping those orders where they wanted to use those budgets.
To your point, it did create backlog that we will have for the second half of the year going forward, which is part of the reason why we feel more confident about the first half of the year doing so well, and the second half should be relatively commensurate to be able to get into our guidance range.
That's really great color, Anil and Jean. Two just follow-ups there. Actually two follow-ups generally. Dell, we didn't really hear much about that. I know it's very early days, but any contribution yet and how is that go-to-market kind of ramping? Then, Jean, as normal, I guess what was Arbor's growth rate this quarter and, between carrier and enterprise as well, for Arbor? Thanks, guys.
Maybe I'll cover the Dell question and Jean will go over the Arbor question, James. It's right now we have a lot of go-to-market activities going on, and we are looking at how the teams will play and we see the impact of this in next fiscal year, not this year. As we said that our software-only solution now have multiple preferred vendors. Even though you have a software-only solution, customers still have to buy the server hardware. Now with Dell, we have two vendors, and that's very convenient because they are more accessible in the international market than the previous vendor we had. Jean, you want to talk about Arbor?
Sure. Going back to the context that I gave about the timing of shipping our orders. Service provider for the first half of the year, which is where we focused on getting those orders out the door by the end of the quarter, grew at around 3%. We see, as Anil said in his comments, that that will probably flip for a full year to being flat to down slightly in the mid-single digits. When you look at Arbor would have had deals that were not required to ship at 9/30. On a year-to-date basis right now, Arbor looks like it's down in the mid-single digits.
However, as I think Anil said in his comments, we do expect that Arbor is going to grow for the full year in the upper single digits to low teens for the full year.
Thank you. Great quarter, guys.
Yeah.
You're welcome. Thank you.
Yeah.
We will take our final question today from Kevin Liu with K. Liu & Company. Your line is open.
Hey, good morning, guys.
Hi, Kevin.
I was just hoping you could add a little bit more color to some of the supply chain dynamics, particularly on demand for your solutions. Are you guys taking in any sort of benefit from kind of more software orders as customers look for ways to use up budgets that, you know, they may not be able to use for solutions elsewhere?
Yeah, that's exactly the thing. Obviously they still need to have a demand for our solution. The demand is defined by what they would have bought next in the second half. Sometimes they are able to use this. We are not a calendar fiscal year, so that also creates sometimes interesting dynamics because sometimes people want to use the budget for this calendar year, sometimes they want to use for the next fiscal year. Yeah, that's what allowed them to. I mean, we have bigger sized deals which are mostly software only, which has less supply chain issues than other vendors. Because of top customer, we already have a demand or funnel for the second half.
All that results in these kind of dynamics which happened this quarter.
To add some additional color to that, some of the large enterprise deals are multi-phased, as by design, partly to accommodate budget, you know, annual budget limits. Because of this chip shortage, they were able to accelerate multiple phases into a single phase of deployment as-
Yeah. Good point. Yeah.
Great. Maybe just one on security here. You know, obviously, the past two years have seen pretty significant increase in DDoS attacks, and I imagine that's benefiting your Arbor growth. How are you guys looking at this from more of a cyclical perspective? Do you think you'll be able to continue to grow on top of that, especially with the new solutions coming online next year? Or do you see kind of an ebb and flow there where, you know, maybe the DDoS demand goes down, but you'll have some of the new solutions to help offset that?
Yeah. I think overall we think the trend into next year will be higher growth in the security solutions. As a result, DDoS may be flat from this year in next year, but all the upsides coming from the Omnis solution. As I mentioned earlier, we might decide to carve out the revenue reporting of the security revenue separately, more officially starting with the next fiscal year as a result of that, because it probably will be much bigger portion of the overall revenue. We think timing is right. Some of our people have been expecting us to do it like other companies. All this, Kevin, means that we are expecting higher growth in security than in the overall business.
All right. Great to hear. Congrats on a strong quarter.
Thank you.
Thank you.
This does conclude our Q&A session. I will turn the call back to management for any additional or closing remarks today.
Thank you, everybody. This does conclude our call, and we appreciate everybody spending the time with us this morning. Have a good day.
This does conclude today's event. Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect at any time.