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Aviat Networks reports robust growth, eyes fiscal 2025 By Investing.com

Aviat Networks , Inc. (NASDAQ: NASDAQ:) announced a significant year-over-year revenue increase in its Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2024 Earnings Call. The company reported total revenue of $117 million for the quarter, marking a 28% increase, and a full-year revenue of $408 million, up by 19%.

Aviat’s adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $12 million, and non-GAAP EPS reached $0.72. The Pasolink acquisition contributed notably to the revenue, and despite internal control challenges, the company anticipates growth in private networks and software sales for fiscal 2025.

Key Takeaways

  • Quarterly revenue rose 28% year-over-year to $117 million, with full-year revenue up 19% to $408 million.
  • The Pasolink acquisition added $25 million to the revenue, a 12% increase from Q3.
  • Adjusted EBITDA stood at $12 million for the quarter, and non-GAAP EPS was $0.72.
  • North American revenue increased by 2.5% to $56.2 million, while international revenue surged by 67% to $60.5 million.
  • The company’s backlog is at $292 million, with a gross margin of 35.3% GAAP for Q4.
  • Aviat plans to normalize operating expenses in the second half of fiscal 2025 and expects revenue between $450 million and $490 million.

Company Outlook

  • Fiscal 2025 revenue is projected to be between $450 million and $490 million.
  • Adjusted EBITDA is anticipated to range from $46 million to $52 million.
  • Q1 is expected to be the weakest quarter, with improvement throughout the year.
  • The backlog entering fiscal 2025 is approximately $290 million.

Bearish Highlights

  • A decline in CapEx spending among Tier 1 operators in Africa and the U.S. is noted.
  • The microwave segment is recognized as a late-cycle business, which may impact short-term growth.
  • Gross margins are expected to decline sequentially due to product mix dynamics.

Bullish Highlights

  • The Pasolink acquisition is performing well and contributing positively to revenue.
  • Private network and mobile 5G sectors are showing favorable trends.
  • Aviat achieved its highest private network revenue in three years during FY ’24.
  • Market share is trending positively.

Misses

  • There is a material weakness in internal controls due to personnel turnover and monitoring issues.
  • Gross margins are expected to experience a sequential decline.

Q&A Highlights

  • Management is committed to share buybacks after the quiet period restrictions.
  • The recent financial restatement had a minor impact on the share price.

Aviat Networks has demonstrated resilience and growth despite challenges in the market and internal control issues. The company’s strategic acquisitions and focus on emerging sectors like private networks and mobile 5G position it for potential success in the upcoming fiscal year. As Aviat addresses its financial control weaknesses and capitalizes on favorable market trends, stakeholders maintain a cautiously optimistic outlook for fiscal 2025.

InvestingPro Insights

Aviat Networks’ recent financial performance aligns with several key metrics and insights from InvestingPro. The company’s reported 19% revenue growth for the full year to $408 million is consistent with InvestingPro data, which shows a revenue growth of 18.48% over the last twelve months. This growth trajectory is further supported by an InvestingPro Tip indicating that net income is expected to grow this year.

The company’s gross profit margin of 35.47% for the last twelve months, as reported by InvestingPro, closely matches the 35.3% GAAP gross margin mentioned in the earnings call for Q4. This consistency in margins suggests that Aviat is maintaining its pricing power and operational efficiency despite market challenges.

An important InvestingPro Tip highlights that Aviat operates with a moderate level of debt, which could be advantageous as the company navigates through potential market uncertainties and invests in growth opportunities like the Pasolink acquisition. Moreover, the tip noting that liquid assets exceed short-term obligations indicates a healthy financial position, which is crucial for supporting the company’s projected revenue range of $450 million to $490 million for fiscal 2025.

While the article mentions a decline in CapEx spending among some operators, InvestingPro data shows a significant 13.7% return over the last week, suggesting that investors may be responding positively to Aviat’s overall performance and outlook. However, it’s worth noting that the stock has taken a big hit over the last six months, which aligns with the broader market challenges mentioned in the earnings call.

For investors seeking a more comprehensive analysis, InvestingPro offers 11 additional tips for Aviat Networks, providing a deeper understanding of the company’s financial health and market position.

Full transcript – Aviat Networks Inc (AVNW) Q4 2024:

Operator: Good morning. Welcome to Aviat Networks’ Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2024 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. Please note, this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the call over to your host, Mr. Andrew Fredrickson, Director of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.

Andrew Fredrickson: Thank you and welcome to Aviat Networks’ fourth quarter fiscal 2024 results conference call and webcast. You can find our press release and updated investor presentation in the IR section of our website at www.aviatnetworks.com along with a replay of today’s call. With me today are Pete Smith, Aviat’s President and CEO, who will begin with opening remarks on the company’s fiscal fourth quarter; followed by Michael Connaway, our CFO, who will review the financial results for the quarter. Pete will then provide closing remarks on Aviat’s strategy and outlook, followed by Q&A. As a reminder, during today’s call and webcast, management may make forward-looking statements regarding Aviat’s business including but not limited to statements relating to fiscal guidance, financial projections, business drivers, new products and expansions and economic activity in different regions. These and other forward-looking statements reflect the company’s opinions only as of the date of this call and webcast and involve assumptions, risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those statements. Additional information on factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements expressed or implied on this call, can be found in our most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed with the SEC. The company undertakes no obligation to revise or make public any revisions of these forward-looking statements in light of new information or future events. Additionally, during today’s call and webcast, management will reference both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to our press release which is available in the IR section of our website at www.aviatnetworks.com and financial tables therein which include a GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation and other supplemental financial information. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Aviat’s President and CEO, Pete Smith. Pete?

Peter Smith: Thanks Andrew, and good morning everyone. Let’s discuss Aviat Networks’ fourth quarter and full year of fiscal 2024 results and achievements. Highlights from the fourth quarter include total revenue of $117 million, which represents growth of 28% versus Q4 of last year. Revenue contribution from Pasolink of $25 million, a 12% increase versus the third quarter, adjusted EBITDA of $12 million, non-GAAP EPS of $0.72, adjusted EBITDA and non-GAAP net income accretion from the Pasolink acquisition in the quarter. For the full year fiscal 2024, Aviat achieved revenue of $408 million, growth of 19% versus last fiscal year, adjusted EBITDA of $48 million up 6% versus the prior year. Let’s reflect on Aviat’s accomplishments in fiscal 2024. We grew the core Aviat top line and expanded gross margins versus last year. Additionally, we closed the Pasolink acquisition and exceeded our plan from a profitability perspective. This strategic transaction strengthened our product portfolio and significantly bolstered Aviat’s international business to give us the scale necessary to serve our customers profitably in these overseas markets. We are pleased with the progress we have made on integration and are tracking ahead of our plans in terms of our investment thesis. Now let’s discuss highlights from the quarter starting with Pasolink, we grew Pasolink revenues in the quarter to $25 million an increased versus the prior revenue contribution. Importantly, the Pasolink acquisition was accretive to Aviat’s financials on an adjusted EBITDA and non-GAAP net income basis. We remain confident in the Pasolink business being EPS accretive in the coming fiscal 2025 first quarter, which is in line with our stated commitment to shareholders. Our dialogue with Pasolink customers continues to strengthen and we remain confident in ramping the revenue in fiscal 2025. Aviat’s voice of the customer process has been applied to Pasolink and the desire for a more powerful network management solution has been communicated. We took this feedback and recently released Pasolink support on ProVision Plus Aviat’s network management software. With over 800,000 active Pasolink radios in the field, this will represent a significant opportunity for Aviat in the years ahead. Based on this and other capabilities such as ProVision Plus on our access product line and FAS on competitor radios, we expect strong software business in fiscal 2025, up from our record software sales in fiscal 2024. We remain disciplined on costs within Pasolink as is reflected in earnings contribution from the business. Transition services costs remain, but we anticipate these to continue ramping down in the second half of fiscal year 2025. In private networks, Aviat continues to distinguish itself as a leader. In the quarter we had a significant statewide win converting a new customer from a legacy incumbent. We are excited about this project and anticipate initial revenue in fiscal 2025. Aviat was able to secure this takeaway because of our product’s performance and the level of service that we can provide to this public safety customer. Based on FCC filings, Aviat has incrementally added to its share of demand for U.S. private networks versus last year. There have been many outage incidents across the U.S. over the past several months that emphasize the importance of reliable public safety networks. At least eight states have seen statewide 911 outages so far this year. There is a wide gap in performance and reliability between the most modernized public safety networks and the least modern. Given the critical nature of these networks, there is a growing and persistent desire to ensure that all public safety networks across the U.S. are modernized and are capable of handling the significant increase in technology and data bandwidth that travel across these networks. We remain confident in private networks being a growth driver for Aviat. State and local government budgets remain healthy for fiscal 2025. Overall, state and city budgets are expected to grow 3% and 7%, respectively. Public safety spending is expected to grow approximately 5%. Investing in and improving public safety infrastructure remains a top priority across the political spectrum and we anticipate this tailwind for Aviat continuing in the years ahead. ARPA funding remains top of mind with government customers, as ARPA funds must be obligated by the end of this calendar year. Our team remains engaged with customers to assist in ARPA related projects as this deadline approaches. In Mobile Networks, our international business continues to offset U.S. Tier 1 softness. India remains a bright spot for Aviat as we continue to grow the number of Aviat radios deployed in the country as well as build on the large Pasolink base. Operators in India increasingly view Aviat as a technological leader as they evolve their networks to incorporate more e-band and multiband radios. Elsewhere in the world, share gain from our largest competitor remains an opportunity for Aviat, as was highlighted by the decision of the German government to move away from certain foreign vendors within the next five years. We anticipate more opportunities like this to continue to come to market, and given our strong portfolio of products and services, we are optimistic we can convert at a rate above our current market share. In rural broadband, we had a strong year with our Aviat store and experienced continued demand from the WISP customer base. Revenue from the store represented approximately 7% of overall revenue in fiscal 2024. Government programs such as (RDAS) helped to keep spending strong in this space. Last, a few comments around our previously disclosed material weakness and delayed 10-K filing will follow. Let me first apologize to our shareholders. We were disappointed in our ability to complete our year-end audit in a timely fashion. This is overshadowed and otherwise good story coming out of our fiscal 2024. The material weaknesses relate to key accounting personnel turnover we had in the third quarter of fiscal 2024. This turnover led to key controls not being performed as designed. Although this has not resulted in material changes to our financial results, it is still disappointing. The review of our internal controls resulted in certain recommended improvements which we are undertaking appropriately. In summary, the discovery of the material weakness together with the Pasolink acquisition made for a more lengthy and complicated audit process than we anticipated which led to our delayed 10-K filing. We look forward to putting this event behind us and re earning the trust of shareholders in fiscal 2025. Before turning it over to Michael to review the financial results of the quarter and fiscal year, I’d like to provide a quick introduction. Michael joined Aviat from Honeywell (NASDAQ:) where he was Vice President and CFO of Honeywell’s Energy and Sustainability Solutions segment. Prior to that, Michael led the finance function for various segment businesses at Honeywell, ABB (ST:) and GE. Given his past success leading multibillion dollar P&Ls and operating in different end markets, Aviat’s Board of Directors and I believe that Michael will upgrade Aviat’s ability to scale its business as we grow and provide continued process discipline and productivity throughout the organization. With that, I will turn it over to Michael.

Michael Connaway: Thank you very much, Pete, and good morning everyone. I’ll review some of the key fiscal 2024 fourth quarter and full year highlights and please note that our detailed financials can be found in our press release and all comparisons discussed are between the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2024 and the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2023 and follow a similar rubric on full year 2024 year-over-year comparisons as well unless otherwise noted. For the fourth quarter we reported total revenues of $116.7 million as compared to $91.1 million for the same period last year, an increase of $26 million or 28.1% year-over-year. North America, which comprised 48% of our total revenue for the quarter, was $56.2 million, an increase of 2.5% from the same period last year due to ongoing strength in our private networks business. For the full fiscal year in 2024, North America recorded revenues of $206.1 million, which is up 3% versus 2023. International revenue was $60.5 million for the quarter, an increase of $24.2 million or 67% from the same period last year. On the year, our international business hit revenues of $202 million versus $143.8 million last year, an increase of 41% year-over-year and in total we finished our 2024 fiscal year with $408 million in consolidated company revenues versus $344 million in 2023, an increase of 19% year-over-year and our fourth consecutive year of revenue growth. Our backlog at the ending of the fiscal year was $292 million. This is up versus our prior year end reported backlog of $289 million. As a reminder, we report on this metric annually to avoid the inherent quarterly fluctuations with a project based business. Gross margins for the quarter were 35.3% on a GAAP basis and 35.9% on a non-GAAP basis as compared to 35.9% GAAP and 36.2% non-GAAP in the prior year. Within our core business, non-GAAP gross margins were 38.7%. This strong result was driven by project and regional mix, as well as the impact from increased software sales. Pasolink non-GAAP gross margins for the quarter were 26%. This improvement versus the third fiscal quarter of 2024 was driven by improved scale and cost benefits from freight and logistics optimizations. We expect the gross margins from our Pasolink products to continue to improve during fiscal 2025 as we continue to rationalize our warehousing footprint and benefit from continuous improvement in our sourcing and supply chain operations. In aggregate, Aviat’s core gross profit margins in 2024 were 38% versus 36.1% in 2023, an increase of about 2.3 points year-over-year. Fourth quarter GAAP operating expenses were $35.7 million, an increase of $9.3 million from the prior year, driven by the addition of approximately $6 million in Pasolink related OpEx, increased core R&D expenses, and year end expenses. GAAP operating expenses include a $1.6 million restructuring charge. At Aviat we seek to continuously ensure that the company’s cost structure is properly aligned with our business. The Pasolink footprint yielded an opportunity for cost rationalization that we executed on in the quarter. Non-GAAP operating expenses, which exclude the impact of restructuring charges, share based compensation and deal costs were $31.3 million, an increase of $9.2 million driven by Pasolink and increased R&D costs. As Aviat continues to ramp down the transition services related costs with NEC as a result of the Pasolink acquisition, we expect our operating expenses to normalize in the second half of fiscal 2025. Note that this OpEx ramp down will be offset on a reported basis with the addition of our recent acquisition 4RF cost structure as we report our financials throughout our fiscal year 2025. The fourth quarter tax provision was $3.1 million, compared to $2 million last year. As a reminder, the company has approximately $450 million of net operating losses or NOLs that will continue to generate shareholder value via minimal cash tax payments for the foreseeable future. Fourth quarter GAAP net income was $1.5 million and non-GAAP net income, which excludes restructuring charges, share-based compensation, M&A-related costs, and the noncash tax provision was $9.2 million. Fourth quarter non-GAAP EPS came in at $0.72 per share on a fully diluted basis. Adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter was $11.9 million or 10.2% of revenue. On a full year basis, our adjusted EBITDA was $48.1 million in 2024 versus $45 million in 2023 or an increase of 6% year-over-year. Moving on to the balance sheet, our cash and marketable securities increased by $5.4 million to $64.6 million, driven by positive cash from operating activities of $8.3 million in the quarter. As of the end of the fourth quarter, we are in a net cash position of $16.3 million. For the full year, we generated cash from operating activities of $30.5 million. With that, I’ll turn it back to Pete for some final comments. Pete?

Peter Smith: Thanks, Michael. Before providing our fiscal 2025 guidance, I’d like to discuss our 4RF transaction announced in July. This was a tuck-in acquisition that closed at the beginning of July in our fiscal 2025. 4RF is known globally for the (APRISO) product line of narrowband point-to-point and point-to-multipoint radios and private LTE and 5G routers. The company is based in Wellington, New Zealand, kilometers from Aviat’s R&D facility in New Zealand. 4RF’s primary customer base is North American utilities given that neither our North American nor our New Zealand teams have engaged with integrating the Pasolink business, we are confident in being able to successfully and quickly integrate 4RF additionally through our diligence process, we were highly encouraged by customer feedback regarding the quality and reliability of 4RF products. Although 4RF is immaterial today compared to Aviat, we are excited about the customers it brings to Aviat, as well as the strengthening of our private network wireless access portfolio. This opens the approximately $200 million industrial SCADA market and the $1.4 billion cellular router market to Aviat neither of which were previously in our addressable markets. Since approximately 90% of Aviat’s and 4RF’s U.S. utility and public safety customers are not overlapping, we are excited about the cross-selling opportunity, and we’re already seeing some success. Ongoing investment projects and grid infrastructure, resilience, energy storage and modernization will drive opportunities for more connectivity and bandwidth needs within these private networks. With 4RF, as part of Aviat, we have a unique and compelling wireless portfolio to offer private networks. Aviat shareholders should expect 4RF to be accretive to Aviat’s overall gross margins. Turning to our guidance. Based on the company’s outlook, we are establishing our fiscal year 2025 guidance as follows: revenue to be in the range of $450 million to $490 million; adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $46 million to $52 million. Based on our current order pattern and backlog, we expect revenue to build through the fiscal year with our first quarter being the smallest from a revenue and earnings perspective and the fourth quarter being the largest. In addition, we will be wrapping up Aviat OpEx during the first two quarters of fiscal 2025 as we end the transition services agreement in late fiscal 2025, Q2. With that, operator, let’s open up for questions.

Operator: (Operator Instructions) Our first question comes from Scott Searle with ROTH Capital Partners. Your line is open.

Scott Searle: Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Pete, maybe just to quickly dive in on the comment on material weakness. Could you kind of update us in terms of what still remains outstanding on that front? Any details that are available behind it. And I guess as part of that, in terms of the historic restatement, it seems like it’s a pretty small number given the amount of time that that’s taking to get this done. I think it’s about $2 million or so in both Q3 and fiscal ’24. Could you just kind of take us through where the revisions were historically in those numbers? Thanks. And I had a couple of follow-ups.

Peter Smith: Yes, Scott, I think Michael will take the lead on this part.

Michael Connaway: Yes. So there were – I’d say three factors that drove the material weakness. The first was some key, I’ll say, personnel turnover in the finance department in – particularly in Q3 of 2024. That was one. The second, the company needed to improve its COSO control monitoring framework and then the third, there were also some controls that weren’t performed effectively, particularly in the back half of the year and really particularly in the third quarter, conjoined with the personnel leaving that I mentioned. So the first two drivers are well on their way to being fixed already within 2025. And we have every intention of getting this behind us and remediating the full scope of the material weakness within the year. So that’s a little bit of an update on the material weakness and what drove it. As it relates to the financial statement revision, there were two main drivers of it. One was the services contract in North America that upon further review had to true up its estimated cost to complete. We think that contract, in particular, was an isolated incident and through our internal exposure checks, we didn’t see any other issues of that built anywhere else in the North American contract book. And then the second one was the distributor arrangement that upon further review didn’t meet revenue recognition criteria, and we had to go back and revise the revenues in 2023. So those are the two big ones.

Scott Searle: Got you. Very helpful. And then, Pete, maybe to just dive in, in terms of the guidance for fiscal ’25. It sounds like you’ll continue to build over the course of the year from a revenue standpoint. Could you provide a little bit more detail in terms of maybe how September looks to start the year off and how that visibility is building into the December quarter at the current time. And maybe as part of that, let’s kind of couple in, North America was extremely strong in the June quarter despite headwinds from that Tier 1 customer. I’m wondering if you could address that issue as well and the outlook for North America.

Michael Connaway: Yes. Maybe I’ll take the Q1 part and then pass it over to Pete as it relates to the Tier 1s. But, so look, Q1 in terms of what we’re seeing now, we expect to be the lowest of the year from a revenue and profitability perspective. The delayed 10-K filing and audit distract management from focusing on the execution of the business. So we expect muted growth in the quarter at this point. We’ll talk revenues. We see revenues in the $93 million to $99 million range on the quarter.

Peter Smith: And so Scott, let me pick up the Tier 1 part, right? So if we look back over the past couple of years, there’s been lots of headlines about Tier 1 CapEx spending, and we’ve been largely unaffected. And last quarter, we expressed some concern about the U.S. Tier 1s, and we would say that it’s going to be most pronounced in this Q1, where in which we completed a big project we’re in between projects. And I would say that if in the January through June time frame, a couple of things that we have in our funnel materialize, then we would adjust our guidance in a positive way. And we also see with MTN, if you — they are publicly traded, they’re talking about a muted CapEx spend. So we would say in Africa and in the U.S. Tier 1 spending is down. And when I reflect on this to use some words from my industrial background, I think microwave is a little bit more of a late cycle business, meaning the headlines were driven and the fiber equipment suppliers were hit up by the CapEx, and we kind of were – quid on why not Aviat. And it’s because the way the networks get built out as you move to the suburbs and the rural areas, microwave keeps going. And I think right now, we’re seeing the CapEx headlines that were over the past couple of years having a short-term impact on us.

Scott Searle: Got you. Very helpful. And if I could, one last one and then I’ll get back in the queue. But just Mike, to follow up on your comments on the September guidance. Basically, if I’m looking at the mid-to upper end of that range, you’re looking at averaging $115 million to $125 million from the second quarter to fourth quarter. And I’m wondering if you could comment as well on NEC a little bit more. It sounds like there was a nice step-up going into the June quarter, both from a revenue standpoint and a gross margin standpoint. I’m wondering how that continues into the back half of calendar ’25 – excuse me, calendar ’24 as we’re looking at the December quarter and into the first half of calendar ’25. Thanks.

Michael Connaway: Yes. Maybe I’ll just do kind of the progression on revenues point. I’ll just, put simply, I would just confirm your mathematics. That is the way that we see revenue shaping up across 2025 is a little bit more muted in Q1 and then 115 plus in the rest of the quarters and then maybe pass it over to Pete on Pasolink.

Peter Smith: Yes. And on the Pasolink side, why are we modeling it that way, right, in the September quarter bookings would support that ramp. So I think a lot of investors are worried about the acquisition. The acquisition is incrementally performing and incrementally ramping up. And our – so we’re getting more and more confident in the Pasolink/NEC transaction, and we need to work our funnel to offset the CapEx decline in or leveling off in Tier 1s.

Scott Searle: Great. Thanks so much. I’ll get back in the queue.

Operator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Jaeson Schmidt with Lake Street. Your line is open.

Jaeson Schmidt: Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Just sticking with sort of the guide for fiscal ’25. Curious if you could share any sort of backlog numbers you have coming into fiscal ’25?

Michael Connaway: Yes. I mean we kind of mentioned in the remarks, it was right around 290, so up a little bit on a year-over-year basis is where we’re at on backlog.

Jaeson Schmidt: Okay. Perfect. And then I know you mentioned 4RF is immaterial compared to the core Aviat business. But do you expect growth from that business here in fiscal ’25?

Peter Smith: I would say it will be – we’ll see a little bit of growth, and we’ll see an immaterial amount of earnings contribution. So a little bit of growth. I mean, the little bit of growth will be offset in overall Aviat with what we’re seeing in the U.S. Tier 1 space, but so far, so good on the 4RF transaction.

Jaeson Schmidt: Got you. And then just the last one for me, and I’ll jump back in the queue. I assume gross margin will be down sequentially just given the top line number in September. But would you expect gross margin to also be able to build throughout fiscal ’25.

Michael Connaway: Yes. We do. I mean when you think about it year-over-year, the gross margin story on a full year basis will be a little bit dampened just given some of the mix dynamics, Jaeson. So you’ll see Pasolink, of course, ramp pretty significantly from a volume perspective year-over-year that will have a little bit of a dampening effect on gross margins in total for the business, just given the mix. And then Pete alluded to the Tier 1 dynamics. That’s if you were to piece that apart, it’s a bit more pronounced in North America from just a sheer volume perspective. So that also has a bit of a dampened mix effect but to answer your question more specifically about just kind of how we see gross margins from a modeling standpoint, we do expect that gross margins will similarly improve throughout fiscal year 2025 from a quarterly progression standpoint.

Jaeson Schmidt: Okay. Really helpful. Thanks a lot guys.

Operator: (Operator Instructions) Our next question comes from Theodore O’Neill with Litchfield Hills Research. Your line is open.

Theodore O’Neill: Thank you. Congratulations on the results for the quarter. Pete, my first question is if you could give us sort of a trend in private network and perhaps mobile 5G business and your view on market share there?

Peter Smith: Yes. So with respect to private networks, that’s principally in the U.S. Aviat FY ’24 with the highest private network revenue in the last three years. Q4 was the highest quarter in the last 11 quarters. We look at our share of demand and we would say it’s trending in a favorable – incrementally in a favorable direction. And then the – you asked about share mobile network operators. Look, this is the reason for our guidance are – that the U.S. Tier 1s CapEx is muted. We also see muted CapEx in Africa. What I should say is the – so the historical core Aviat Tier 1s are underperforming or muted, but the spending environment in the Pasolink Tier 1s is favorable. So that’s kind of the geographic spread of the Tier 1s. And I would say, when we did the Pasolink transaction, we thought that we would get more geographic diversity, get — have less risk with respect to any single customer, and that’s certainly true.

Theodore O’Neill: Okay. And my other question sort of echoing what was asked by the first analyst is the – regarding the restatement, the actual adjustments relatively minor relative to the impact of the share price and how much work you clearly had to do to reconcile a report at all. So I was wondering if this impacted your view on the buyback program particularly since you bought nothing back in the fiscal Q4.

Peter Smith: When we look at our capital allocation and our share price, we would certainly lean into share buybacks. The difficulty we have with the 8-K is the persistence of quiet periods. So I think your question is kind of leading the witness, but I would confirm what your question suggests, Theo.

Theodore O’Neill: Okay. Thank you very much.

Operator: And I’m not showing any further questions at this time. I’d like to turn the call back over to Pete Smith for any closing remarks.

Peter Smith: Okay. I’d like to thank everyone for dialing in. We appreciate the patience while we work to get the K out. And given our lateness, we will connect again soon and look forward to a good fiscal year ’25 and providing you updates. Thanks, everyone.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today’s presentation. You may now disconnect, and have a wonderful day.

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