Good morning. My name is Rob, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the SAIC first quarter fiscal year 2023 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, again, press star one.
Good morning and thank you for joining SAIC's first quarter fiscal year 2023 earnings call. My name is Joe DeNardi, Vice President of Investor Relations and Strategic Ventures. Joining me today to discuss our business and financial results are Nazzic Keene, our Chief Executive Officer, and Prabu Natarajan, our Chief Financial Officer. Today, we will discuss our results for the first quarter of fiscal year 2023 that ended April 29, 2022. Earlier this morning, we issued our earnings release, which can be found at investors.saic.com, where you will also find supplemental financial presentation slides to be utilized in conjunction with today's call and a copy of management's prepared remarks. These documents, in addition to our Form 10-Q to be filed later today, should be utilized in evaluating our results and outlook, along with information provided on today's call.
Please note that we may make forward-looking statements on today's call that are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from statements made on this call. I refer you to our SEC filings for a discussion of these risks, including the Risk Factors section of our annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. In addition, the statements represent our views as of today, and subsequent events may cause our views to change.
We may elect to update the forward-looking statements at some point in the future, but we specifically disclaim any obligation to do so. In addition, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures and other metrics which we believe provide useful information for investors, and both our press release and supplemental financial presentation slides include reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP measures. It is now my pleasure to introduce our CEO, Nazzic Keene.
Thank you, Joe, and good morning to everyone joining our call. I am proud of the financial results we delivered in our first quarter, representing our sixth consecutive quarter of positive organic growth, positioning us well to deliver on our full-year plan. After my remarks, Prabu will discuss results for the quarter in greater detail and provide our updated outlook. I would like to spend a moment discussing the results of some recent work we initiated internally to ensure all of our stakeholders, our employees, our customers, our partners, and our shareholders better know who SAIC is, why we do what we do, and the values that drive us. For over 50 years, SAIC has worked hand in hand as a trusted partner of the U.S. government, advancing our country's most critical no-fail missions.
We foster a culture where inclusion leads to innovation because we know the best outcomes come from diversity of thought across our 26,000 employees. Our legacy and leadership in enterprise IT and systems engineering and integration, coupled with our proven ability to provide solutions with speed to value, are competitive advantages that we leverage to drive profitable growth. The progress we have made on further strengthening our culture and our continued focus on the mission have directly contributed to the improving financial results we've delivered over the past several quarters.
In the first quarter, we reported revenues of approximately $2 billion, representing total growth of approximately 6% and organic growth of 4%, both of which were ahead of plan. First quarter adjusted EBITDA margin of 8.7% was consistent with our expectation for steady improvement through the year. Our first quarter results, combined with recent business development success, give us greater confidence in our increased revenue guidance. I am pleased with the performance we delivered and believe it speaks to the progress we are making.
I continue to see significant opportunity to increase the company's earnings organically as we further sharpen our strategic focus over the coming years. I would like to now provide a brief overview of how our business and portfolio strategy is evolving. While we continue to go to market and manage the business around our two customer-facing operating sectors, I want to highlight our key capability offerings that span those sectors, which we define as our Growth and Technology Accelerants, GTA, and our core, as shown on slide six and seven of our earnings presentation. Key capabilities within our GTA focus area include Secure Cloud, Enterprise IT, and Systems Integration and Delivery.
In fiscal year 2022, GTA accounted for roughly 27% of our total revenue and a greater share of our operating profit. We believe the investments we've made to develop differentiated, market -leading solutions and recent M&A activity position us well to capture more than our fair share of a growing pipeline. Our leadership within these domains is reflected in recent rankings from Gartner, which place SAIC's IT services market share at number one by revenue for the United States government vertical for both infrastructure implementation and managed services and application managed services. We expect to increase our GTA revenue to over 35% of the portfolio within the next three years, reflecting strong growth from this area of our business at accretive margins.
Our core includes engineering services, IT and technical services, and logistics and supply chain. Total revenue in fiscal year 2022 across these capabilities represented roughly 73% of SAIC's revenues. As we transform our portfolio towards a greater share of GTA over the next few years, we intend to grow core as well. Our strategic focus going forward will remain centered on creating the most rewarding and differentiated experience for our employees, investing in markets with growing demand where SAIC has enduring competitive advantages, and allocating capital to drive improving financial returns for our shareholders.
While SAIC's legacy and technical leadership has been in providing engineering expertise to help solve our customers' toughest challenges, we see more opportunities going forward to use these skill sets better to capture additional value as a technology integrator. We believe this has the potential to unlock improved opportunities for growth over the long term.
Recent program awards which give us confidence in this strategy include a key win in classified space and our expanding role as integrator on the Mark 48 program. These are great examples of evolving a program from principally talent and expertise-oriented to delivering a mission-specific solution fueled by our talented teams. We are confident in our strategy execution and in our ability to create long-term value for all SAIC stakeholders. I'll now turn the call over to Prabu for a discussion of our financial results and our outlook.
Thank you, Nazzic, and good morning, everyone. I will quickly summarize our first quarter results and then discuss our updated outlook for fiscal year 2023. We delivered strong performance in the quarter with revenues ahead of our plan at roughly $2 billion, representing total growth of 6%, of which 4% was organic. Revenue performance in the quarter benefited from solid on-contract growth and the timing of material sales previously planned for later in the year.
We delivered an adjusted EBITDA margin of 8.7%, primarily impacted by the timing of indirect expenses, and remain on track to meet our full year guidance of 8.9% with good visibility into expected margin improvement through the rest of the year. We reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.88, which benefited from the more favorable revenue performance in the quarter.
I'm pleased with our business development results in the quarter with net bookings of $2 billion. Our trailing 12-month book-to-bill is roughly 1.0, and we expect this to improve over the next few quarters based on recent competitive new business wins still in protest, representing over $1 billion in total contract value and squarely aligned with our GTA areas of focus.
We continue to see a growing pipeline as evidenced by a 15% increase in the value of submitted proposals to roughly $24 billion at quarter end. Importantly, the mix within our pipeline continues to change, with new business now representing roughly 70% of the value of submitted proposals, both materially higher sequentially and at this time last year.
We also see good progress in driving a greater share of our pipeline within markets that align with our longer-term growth objectives as represented by a greater share of opportunities within GTA as Nazzic discussed. This is an enterprise metric and will be a priority for the team. Based on results for the quarter and our updated outlook for the year, we are increasing our revenue guidance by 1% at the bottom end to a range of $7.43 billion-$7.55 billion.
Our guidance continues to assume low single-digit declines in 2Q and 3Q due to certain contract transitions before inflecting to low single-digit growth in 4Q, largely due to the benefit of additional working days. Our focus is driving on-contract growth to profitably grow the company, and we are confident in our ability to do so.
We are maintaining our full year margin guidance of approximately 8.9% and expect improvement in the second half of the year, led by a more favorable mix and the timing of certain new investments. We are increasing our EPS guidance by $0.10 to a range of $6.90-$7.20, which continues to assume an effective tax rate of approximately 24%.
Finally, our guidance for fiscal year 2023 free cash flow of $500 million-$530 million is unchanged, and I would remind you that it represents an over 10% increase at the midpoint versus fiscal year 2022 and assumes that the Section 174 amortization provision is deferred. Based on expected working capital trends and final payments related to the Halfaker acquisition, which both impacted first quarter results, we expect to generate 40% of our full year free cash flow in the first half of the year and 60% in the second half.
Our capital deployment priorities are unchanged, and we remain committed to a prudent de-leveraging of the balance sheet with a bias towards deploying excess free cash flow towards our share repurchase program. At this time, we do not expect to adjust our capital deployment plans as a result of the uncertainty related to Section 174 legislation and plan to repurchase between $200 million-$250 million of shares for the year after having repurchased approximately $100 million fiscal year to date.
As we noted in our earnings press release, the board of directors authorized a new share repurchase program for an incremental eight million shares, representing approximately 16% of our shares outstanding, which we intend to utilize over the next three years, market conditions permitting. We believe this authorization also reflects our ongoing commitment to effectively allocate capital and the confidence we have in executing our plan to drive sustainable, profitable growth and the energy we're investing to structurally improve our cash conversion.
I'm proud of the results we delivered in the quarter and believe our strategic focus on investing in GTA while sustaining our core business strengths position us well to maintain our forward momentum. I'll now turn the call back over to the operator to begin Q&A.
At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star then the number one on your telephone keypad. Your first question comes from the line of Sheila Kahyaoglu from Jefferies. Your line is open.
Hi, good morning, Nazzic, Prabu and Joe. Thank you so much. When we think about the guidance-
Good morning.
Thank you. It implies organic growth down 1% for the remainder of the year versus 4% organic for Q1. The loss of NASA AEGIS, I think, is two points. Prabu, I think you cited some working days that are some of the remainders of the slowdown. Can you just talk about, I guess, guidance, what your expectations are for on-contract growth, what the real core organic business is growing? You also mentioned GTA sales, Nazzic, and your number one position by revenues on Infrastructure Implementation and Managed services. How big is this business, and what are contracts that we might be familiar with in these areas?
Great, Sheila. Thanks. Great to hear your voice. Just a couple of comments as we think about the quarter and the guidance, and I'll let Prabu provide some color. I want to take the opportunity, first and foremost, to tell you and the team, and extend it to our 26,000 employees, how proud we are of the performance that we did have in the quarter. As you referenced, on-contract growth was certainly a key component of that, and we have, you know, tremendous opportunity to continue to drive that throughout the year.
The performance in Q1 did allow us to modestly increase the guidance, and Prabu will give you some color on that in a couple of key areas. We're very, very pleased with how we sit today and how the year is shaping up, giving us greater confidence in our ability to execute the growth over the course of the year. Prabu, do you want to provide a little color on the guidance? I'll circle back on the GTA then.
Morning, Sheila. With respect to the quarter itself, you know, good, strong revenue performance to start the year. I think I would think about the outperformance in Q1 as roughly half timing, and half what I'd call true performance goodness in the quarter. We certainly had good momentum in the quarter, delivering, you know, better growth than we expected even internally. Second data point, we've, you know, reflected in the prepared remarks that we expect as a result of the contract transitions to have, you know, modest contraction in Q2 and Q3, and then reflecting back to, you know, low single-digit growth in Q4 this year. I would say some of that is going to be dependent on timing of our new business pursuits.
Obviously, the extra working days in the fourth quarter will certainly help organic revenues in Q4. The reality is we've got about $1 billion of new business wins that are sitting right now in protest that is not reflected in backlog. To the extent we have good success in keeping those awards and pulling the revenues associated with those earlier in the year, you'll start to see some modest improvement to the outlook for Q2 and Q3, probably more likely Q3 than Q2. To me, that's what I think fundamentally drives where we end up in terms of the quarterly cadence for revenue itself.
To me, I'd say good start to the year, nine months left in the year, and I think I'm really especially pleased with the dedication, the intensity with which we executed at Q1, and hopefully we have a chance to continue that execution intensity over the remainder of the year.
Thanks, Prabu. Sheila, let me touch on your couple of questions on GTA, and if I don't get them quite right, just re-ask me, but I want to give a little bit of color. On the slide that's in the slide deck, you can see where we've shaded in in blue, you know, the kind of a proportion of the revenue that we achieve today in each of those areas, just to give you a sense for which ones are greater, which ones are less. We don't have specific numbers to report to you on those at this juncture, but that should give you some color as to what areas we have more revenue and what areas we have less.
As it relates to a couple of examples, if you think about the secure cloud environment, Cloud One is a program you're probably aware of where, you know, we support the Air Force, providing a one-stop shop for all the cloud migration activities. That would be a great example in that area. In the Systems Integration and Delivery program, you're probably familiar with Mark 48 torpedo, where, you know, we provide the manufacturing, the assembly, the test and delivery for that torpedo program in support of the Navy. Those are a couple of recent examples that hopefully you're aware of that give you some color on the type of work and the relationships we have with customers in those areas. Does that help?
Yeah, sure. Thank you so much.
Perfect. Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Gavin Parsons from Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
Hey, good morning.
Morning, Gavin.
Maybe just following up on that question for a moment. You know, you probably mentioned the 50% of the growth in the quarter is kind of core business performance. How repeatable is that through the rest of the year, you know, versus the pull forward, where it looks like you reiterated, you know, the second, third, and fourth quarter growth rates. Is there some upside on that front? And is there any change in your assumptions for AEGIS contribution for the year?
I would take the second part of the question first. No change in our estimate for the NASA AEGIS program. That program is behind us at this point. I'd say just headwinds associated with NASA AEGIS for the next 12 months or so. In terms of, you know, kind of what's implied in the guidance, Gavin, you know, I'll probably reiterate some of my earlier comments, which is, you know, we have some new business out there in protest about $1 billion - $1.1 billion. To the extent we get turned on those contracts a little sooner than what's implied in the modest contraction for Q2 and Q3, we'll start to see some revenue pickups from those newer programs.
Obviously, one is much bigger than the other. As is our typical, you know, practice, we don't comment on things that are in protest. We're just going to wait this out and see where we end up. There is potential here for some modest improvement over the course of the year. I will, you know, always caution us into thinking about this as a ramp on labor-based programs. It does take some time to ramp up. There are always some materials earlier in the program, so we'll have to get sort of an initial program review done to ensure that we have the amount of materials on the program sized appropriately.
There are some puts and takes here over the course of the year that we'll discover as we go through the quarters here. I'd say we're well positioned, and it's really going to be important to keep those wins that are in protest right now. Hopefully we have a chance to do a little bit better than what's implied in the guidance right now.
Great. That's helpful. Maybe just asking about the pipeline. You know, one thing that's struck me is that, you know, your backlog has grown quite a lot, and you still have a record pipeline. Can you talk about, you know, how much of that is, you know, maybe end market growth versus you expanding the addressable market you can pursue versus, you know, deciding to pursue more work? And how should we think about kind of the timing of conversion of the pipeline to backlog to revenue as we go forward?
Yeah, I'm glad you asked the question, Gavin. I think, you know, for us, Nazzic and I especially, it's really important to think about the pipeline over a really long period of time. It has been this company's focus for several years now to ensure that we have the right quality in the pipeline, t oo, that we have enough length in the periods of performance, so we actually have tangible visibility into the growth of the backlog and obviously the funding levels associated with the pipeline. I'd say fundamentally, I would attribute the increase in the size of the pipeline to real goodness from our BD teams, our sector presidents that are driving growth within the business. That's what's driving fundamentally most of the increase in the pipeline.
There's always an element of budget associated with, you know, seeing the end markets, you know, broaden out a little bit. I'd say it's probably less of a driver at this point. We all see the budget talk out on the Hill. We're not quite seeing the impact of that implied in the pipeline. I would say at this point, it's just solid execution, ensuring that we are bidding the right kinds of things and ensuring that we actually have accretive returns from a shareholder perspective to ensure we deliver value consistently.
I'd say the last thing I'd put down is, look, the NASA AEGIS loss was a big part of the portfolio, and we lost 2% of our top line. Nazzic and I are just very proud of how resilient the teams have been to bounce back and grow the pipeline consistently so we can continue to grow the company on a top-line basis. That's what I'd submit.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Matt Akers from Wells Fargo. Your line is open.
Hi. Good morning, guys. Thanks for the question. I wanted to follow up on the GTA kind of mix shift. I guess how much of that do you think is organic versus maybe any inorganic pieces that you may need to add? Also, is there any way to think of kind of how different the margins are between those two parts of the business and also sort of how capital intensive those two pieces could be?
Yeah, let me tackle some of that and then have Prabu provide some color as well. As we talk about the GTA, a couple of things just to highlight. Although we're referring to it for the first time in the acronym on this call, this has been part of the strategy that we've been in development of over the last couple of years. You know, we continue to refine the way we talk about it. We want to be more, you know, certainly be transparent with you all, let you all know what we're focused on and how we see that maturing over the course of the next couple of years. But it has been the journey that we've been on.
If you think back to the last couple of acquisitions, you referenced organic, and I'm going to circle back. It was to complement that part of the strategy. The numbers that we're sharing with you, the aspirations, the goals to get to a greater percentage of our portfolio in the GTA is predominantly organic. As Prabu, you know, provided a little bit of commentary on the pipeline.
As we look at our pipeline, as we pursue and put our investment dollars to, you know, capturing new business, we want to make sure that we are focused in those key areas, not at the expense of core, but to disproportionately grow that part of the portfolio greater than the core part of the portfolio so that we can in fact differentiate ourselves in the market, be more competitive in areas where we have solutions, we have capabilities. To your last question, also look for the opportunity to drive more accretive margins in the portfolio. So, I wanted to provide that little bit of color and then let Prabu to speak specifically about some of the details around that.
Thank you, Nazzic. Matt, thank you for the question. As Nazzic said, you know, this is our view of the organic expansion capability of the business. In terms of the margin rates, you know, we tend to think about this business as being roughly 200-300 basis points higher margin than the core part of the business. You can do the math and effectively get to low double-digit EBITDA margins for this kind of work. Recognizing if we have greater success than what's implied in the PowerPoint chart, we end up driving margins a little bit higher, but this becomes a source of margin expansion for the company, although it is not the only source for margin expansion. I think you actually touched on something just as important.
We don't view the, you know, the increase of GTA as a share of the pipeline and the revenue as requiring a change in the capital-light business model. We tend to see this as predominantly still very capital-light business. We are watching our capital investment in the business to ensure that we remain a good value proposition for our shareholders. I would say, you know, that we are not seeing a fundamental change in the capital deployment strategy as it relates to investments ahead of some of these production programs. I'd say fundamentally, no significant change there is how I'd characterize it.
Okay, great. That's helpful. Thank you. Then I guess I may have missed this, but can you quantify how big the cash payment for Halfaker was that did impact cash in the quarter?
Yeah. There were two predominantly change in control-related payments. One was Halfaker, and there was actually a modest payment on the Koverse deal from earlier last year. Together, I would call it about $25 million-$30 million. If you then did the math to, you know, bridge to last year's free cash flow, the remainder was primarily working capital change, including higher bonus payments in Q1 of this year compared to Q1 of last year. I always tend to think of those as good things for our employees. As I sort of normalize for those two things, we end up with free cash flow that's in that circa $160 million-$170 million on a normalized basis, with my air quotes here on normalized, but that's how we think about it.
That's great. That's helpful. Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Bert Subin from Stifel. Your line is open.
Hey, good morning.
Good morning.
Prabu, SAIC's leverage is toward the higher end of the industry. Can you just walk us through how you think about your leverage in relation to how aggressive you can be on the buyback program?
Yeah. Our leverage is sitting somewhere around 3.25 right now. Our expectation, which we communicated fairly consistently now, is that we would want to be in that circa 3.0. We've even said at points in time, we may be a little bit lower, and at points in time, we may be a little bit higher. As it relates to the capital deployment and buyback question, you know, here's sort of how, you know, we think about it. We are deploying free cash flow in ways that maximize shareholder value. We've mentioned, you know, fairly consistently now that our bias is towards our share repurchase program. That's not based on blind faith that the stock is cheap.
That's really based on our view that the valuation in general underlines tends to reflect skepticism on our ability to grow the business consistently. As Nazzic and I have, you know, pointed out, we have confidence we can consistently grow this business. We view the returns on our repurchase program as offering an attractive return on capital. As I think about it, we also think about the capital deployment in the context of the excess cash we generate on an annual basis. Therefore, as we think about the, you know, roughly eight million shares of incremental authorization and what's implied in terms of the, you know, share count out there, at, you know, roughly the eight million shares or so, that's about three years.
I have a chart in the supplemental data that showed the history of repurchases at SAIC, and I'd say this one's a little bit larger than the prior ones, but not out of tune with where we've been historically on capital deployment. We think there's capacity here in the organic cash generation of the business for us to be able to fund the repurchases out of excess capital, and we can, we believe, do this in a leverage-neutral way.
That's very helpful, Prabu. Thank you. Just to follow up to some of your comments earlier on, you know, thinking about the puts and takes of the business. I mean, one of the larger would seem outstanding items is just the Vanguard contract, which I believe is one of your largest contracts, and it's supposed to be recompeted into a multi-award contract that's going to be called Evolve. Is that still the case? And is that going to have any impact on FY 2023 organic growth, or is that something that's further down the road?
Sure. On Evolve, you know, it's. We're watching. It is a recompete that we're in the middle of. We tend not to comment a great deal on those recompetes. I think we've seen some programs, you know, slide to the right. We're watching the space here just like everybody else and watching the timeline here. It could have an impact on revenues in FY 2023 to the extent that the procurement process remains on track. Again, I think it's anybody's guess as to whether that happens or not this year. You know, candidly, if it pushes out of FY 2023, it becomes a consideration for FY 2024 revenue. We're just watching it just like everybody else. It is a complex procurement, and we're there executing the mission, and the team's doing a fantastic job right now.
Just a quick clarification question on an earlier answer. You said GTA is 200-300 basis points above. Is that above your average margin, so the 8.9%-ish , or is that above the core segment? Thank you for the comment.
It is above the core, and think of the core as low to mid-8%. It's about 200-300 basis points higher than that.
Thanks, Prabu.
Your next question comes from a line of Cai von Rumohr from Cowen. Your line is open.
Yes, thank you very much. The December quarter was basically very weak for the entire sector. You know, the budget got passed middle of March, and with COVID lifting, you know, I think there was a thought that bookings momentum would pick up. Could you give us some color on kind of the momentum you saw throughout the quarter and, you know, as you're going into this quarter, are we seeing a pickup in terms of your booking momentum?
Hi, Cai. It's Nazzic . Let me touch on a little bit of that, and then Prabu can provide some color as well. You know, I think we saw Q1 as fairly normative. We didn't see anything that was, you know, significantly out of the ordinary. Certainly, you know, the budget process has helped, I think, with some certainty, but outlays have been slower, and I think you've probably heard that throughout the industry. We do see a positive environment, and we continue to operate in that environment. I would characterize Q1 as fairly normative. As probably mentioned, we do have over $1 billion of new business in protest.
If you kind of partner that with the rest of Q1, I would say it was a relatively strong quarter as it relates to bookings. Obviously those will clear through the process over the next quarter or so. But I would just characterize it as fairly normative, and we don't see anything swinging one way or the other going forward. Obviously, as the government continues to execute on their budget, as we get towards year-end, we keep a close eye on some things that certainly could bubble up. But I would just characterize things as rarely normal for us.
Thank you, Nazzic. Cai, thank you for the question. I'd say, you know, broadly supportive budget environment. As Nazzic said, we are not seeing that translate necessarily into higher outlays on a month-to-month basis. In fact, looking at the data for the last six months of the government fiscal year, I cannot think of a year where the outlay pace has been slower in the last 20 years, candidly, except maybe 2003. To me, the data implies a slowness in the outlay, recognizing we've got a few months left here in the year, and we are likely to see some pressure build up in the system for higher outlays, but we're just going to have to sit back and watch it. As of at least April, we've not quite seen it in the data. I think Nazzic's exactly right.
It's been a fairly typical kind of normal quarter. You know, we do take a fair amount of time, you know, looking at what's in the pipeline, and not just the PWin, but also the PGo and, you know, likely pressure on timing. I think one of the reasons we're, you know, remaining a little bit cautious about the revenue guide for the year is that we are continuing to see some slowness in the way that the awards are coming out of the system. Therefore, we're just mindful of that and converting that backlog into revenue seems a little bit harder in a tough labor market.
Yeah, Cai. I also want to touch on something, and I think we touched on it earlier, but just to reinforce. You know, in addition to what I would consider normal bookings, that happen over the course of business, we are very focused on driving on-contract growth. As you know, as you've seen with our numbers and we've reported, we have tremendous ceiling in which to execute. In addition to what I'll call the normal blocking and tackling of winning new business, booking new business, clearing protest periods, our team is doing an exceptionally good job and in executing on-contract growth, retiring some of the ceiling, and certainly seeing some of that in our revenue performance.
Very helpful. Thank you. I have one, sort of follow on Vanguard. You mentioned that it's complex. I know that there are various pieces, but it's also an expanded recompete. Could you give us some color, like best case, if you win, you know it's bigger? And what are the pieces that we should be watching for? I mean, I assume they're not all equal size, but what are the ones that are, you know, the bigger ones and roughly when would you expect decisions on them?
Cai, I'm going to try to answer that as best I can, but I'm fairly certain you're not going to love my answer because I can't give you a lot of color. It is a very active open procurement. We are very fortunate to be one of the incumbents, as they do reposition this portfolio. You're right. The absolute value of all the, you know, the solicitations that will come out is greater in nature. Some of them I'm certain will be small business set aside. Some of them will be work streams that aren't in our, you know, kind of our long-term strategy. Some are absolutely those that we believe we have a very strong position to win and will absolutely win our fair share. With all that being said, I really can't quantify it for you.
They're still in the process of putting together their solutions solicitation strategy. You know, there's a lot of unknowns. At this juncture, I really can't give you an answer. I can tell you that we will pursue aggressively those parts of the business where we believe we can differentiate, where we can win, and we can deliver excellence to our customers. There probably are going to be some pockets that aren't part of our strategy or may just even be, you know, set aside for a small business portfolio. That's the best I can tell you at this point.
Thank you very much.
Your next question comes from the line of Tobey Sommer from Truist Securities. Your line is open.
Hi, Toby.
Hi. Good morning. I'd like to get your thoughts and update on the workforce turnover rates, any new initiatives, how those rates are trending year over year, sequentially, however you want to frame it. Does the GTA require a new aspect in filtering your hiring? Describe that if you could.
Toby, I lost the last sentence of your question. If you could just, something about GTA.
Sure. If you could describe the implications of your sort of hiring target employee?
As it relates to the labor market, certainly, you know, the labor market is tight, there's no question. Certainly if we compare our turnover rates to the height of COVID, we're seeing increased turnover as well, as is, I think, just about everybody in our industry and all technology industries. With that being said, we've remained very successful in our ability to hire great talent into the company. We have done some things, and I think there's a slide in the deck as we think about the value, you know, the value creation for our employees. We are very focused on ensuring that we have put together a competitive benefits package.
We are reinforcing the flexible work model that became, you know, one of the positives that came out of the COVID situation for our employee base. Our customers are doing the same. We continue to, you know, make sure that we are messaging to our employees, and we are investing in creating an environment and a workplace where employees choose to stay at SAIC every day. That is certainly part of our strategy. Our people strategy is absolutely an underpinning of our corporate strategy. I would just say that, you know, we're seeing turnover greater than we would like, but consistent with industry, and our ability to hire, I think is absolutely outstanding.
I don't, you know, it's something we pay attention to, but it's not something that, you know, that I think causes undue risk to the organization, probably actually the opposite. As it relates to the type of people that we look for as we focus on GTA, in some cases it's very similar skill sets. The way in which we deliver the work can be slightly different. The mechanisms, the contract mechanisms, delivering solutions, sometimes over just: Labor services, can be slightly different. In many cases, the type of people, the engineers, the software engineers, the cloud engineers, are oftentimes the same people. We've got some internal training that we're doing to make sure our workforce is ready as we expand this part of our portfolio.
We also look to hire individuals as well that help complement that. I don't view it as a radical shift in the type of people, the type of labor, and we'll just continue to build on the great workforce that we have today.
Thank you. Just another question on the workforce. Do you have any sense for whether we're still in like the most competitive environment with the biggest wage pressure in labor mobility? Or are there any signs that you would observe that say we have crested and we're either sort of stable sequentially or maybe even seeing some of those pressures recede?
I'll give you an opinion. You know, as I talk to colleagues in the industry and even in other technology industries, I think there is a common view that we may have already crested, that we're seeing some, you know, some of the less acute labor challenges across all the United States in technology. Certainly, you're hearing some of the major commercial technology players message that they're doing less hiring, and I think that that, you know, could be good for companies like us that need to do some hiring. I think it's too early to tell. We watch this every month. We watch the statistics. I think just based on some conversations, one could, you know, have an opinion that maybe we've seen the crest and it's getting better. Again, that's Nazzic's opinion. We don't have the data at this juncture to support that.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Louie DiPalma from William Blair. Your line is open.
Nazzic, Prabu, and Joe, good morning.
Good morning.
Hello.
Nazzic, when SAIC acquired Engility, one of the key drivers was to increase your exposure to the Space Force and the National Reconnaissance Office. It seems that the elevated geopolitical conflicts have resulted in a sharp increase in demand for geospatial/near-Earth observation services, and you're a key provider of those services. I was wondering, is space one of your focus areas for the GTA category that you outlined? Because it seems very strategic for you and a growing area. Thanks.
Yeah, Louie, great observation. You know, the simple answer is absolutely yes. Space is a critical part of our strategy, our growth strategy. You know, I think one of the reasons it's not called out in its own box is it spans many of these. You know, the work that we do in secure cloud or in enterprise IT or in systems integration also support many space missions. I would say absolutely, we've seen good growth in our space portfolio. We see continued opportunity in our space portfolio, really spanning all of those areas of the growth accelerators.
Thanks, Nazzic. That's helpful. One for Prabu. If you achieve the 65-35 split for GTA versus core in your fiscal 2025 as you've targeted, what is the implication on your current 8.9% margin?
The short version of that would be tens of basis points of improvement to our margin rate. Think of that as comfortably over 9%. Of course our aspirations are always higher than what's on a PowerPoint chart, so hopefully we have a chance to do a little bit better than that. I'd say tens of, you know, percent of improvement in margin rate. Again, as we flagged, you know, it's one of many avenues left for us to improve margin across the company, and this happens to be a really attractive one to grow the company and improve margins at the same time.
Awesome. That's it for me. Thanks.
There are no further questions at this time. I turn the call back over to Joe DeNardi for some final closing remarks.
Great. Thank you, Rob, and thank you to everyone for joining us today. We look forward to speaking with you next quarter.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.