Transcript
Operator
Operator Welcome to Comtech Telecommunications conference call for the third quarter of fiscal 2026. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Maria Ceriello, Senior Director of FP&A of Comtech Telecommunications. Please go ahead, Maria. Maria Ceriello Thank you, operator, and thanks, everyone, for joining us today. I'm here with Ken Traub, Comtech Telecommunications Chairman, President, and CEO, Mike Bondi, our CFO, Daniel Gizinski, President of our Satellite and Space Communications Segment, and Jeffery Robertson, President of Allerium. After Ken, Mike, Daniel, and Jeffery's remarks, they will be available for questions. Before we get started, please note we have a detailed discussion of the quarter in the press release and 10-Q we issued this morning, which are available on our website as well as the SEC's website. Certain information presented in this call will include, but not be limited to, information relating to the future performance and financial condition of the company, the company's plans, objectives, and business outlook, and the plans, objectives, and business outlook of the company's management. The company's assumptions regarding such performance, business outlook, plans are forward-looking in nature and always involve significant risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from such forward-looking information. Any forward-looking statements are qualified in their entirety by cautionary statements contained in the company's SEC filings. With that, I will turn it over to Ken. Ken Traub Thank you, Maria, and good morning, everyone. I appreciate you joining us today. I will start the call by providing you with a strategic context on the significant announcements we are making today. Mike will follow with a review of the numbers, Daniel will then provide an overview of the improved performance of our satellite and space business that helped us make the transactions we announced today possible, and then Jeffery will conclude with additional insights on exciting future prospects for Allerium. In my first conference call as CEO of Comtech Telecommunications, in early 2025, I had two phases of my discussion with you. The first phase was to share my background and my perspective on leadership. I emphasized then that I believe the most critical factor for success in leadership, particularly in a turnaround, is building trust with all key stakeholders. Trust is built through acting with sincerity and integrity, and most importantly, honoring promises. In the second phase of that conference call, I laid out a transformation plan that had four pillars, which I promised will be context-guiding principles. The first pillar, we will restore and enhance operational discipline throughout this company. Second, we will start to generate positive operating cash flow. The third pillar, we will conduct a comprehensive review of strategic alternatives. And the fourth pillar, we will strengthen the company's capital structure. Comtech Telecommunications recent operating and financial performance, together with the strategic and capital structure announcements we are making today, demonstrate that we are successfully delivering on each of those promises. Let me start with the first pillar, since that was the critical foundation to get to the next three pillars, including today's significant announcements. Comtech is today a dramatically improved company. We have a culture of operational discipline, accountability, and taking pride in successful execution. We are executing with a streamlined cost structure and delivering for our customers and other stakeholders. Comtech Telecommunications' emphasis on operational discipline is evident in everything we do now. This improved operational discipline has been key in achieving the second pillar. After several quarters of negative operational cashflow prior to my arrival, we are pleased to report that this quarter is our fifth consecutive quarter of positive operating cashflow. This has enabled us to maintain about $50 million of available liquidity. The return to positive cashflow has helped to restore Comtech Telecommunications' credibility and relationships with lenders, investors, customers, suppliers, and other stakeholders, and in turn, has put us in a stronger position in everything we do. On the third pillar, Comtech Telecommunications first announced a process of exploring strategic alternatives for its public safety business, Elarium, in 2024, before I arrived at the company. When I arrived, I announced the commitment to a broad and thorough strategic review process. I believe it's critical for such a process to be broad to consider all options and how the remaining company will be best positioned. A broad process also maximizes optionality. I also think it is best to pursue any such process from a position of strength. Now that we have accomplished the first two pillars, we created that position of strength to pursue the best strategic path and negotiate with confidence and optionality. We are very pleased with the outcome of the strategic alternatives process and the transaction we consummated with Galat to sell most of Satellite in Space for $157.5 million. I will talk more in a moment about why I believe sharpening the company's strategic focus on Elarion's public safety business is the right way to optimize the company going forward. but suffice it to say that this is a defining milestone for this company. The fourth pillar regarding the need to strengthen the company's capital structure is also critical and further addressed today. We have been fortunate that due to the progress we made in pillars one and two, we earned the trust of our creditors and they previously agreed to accommodations that have been very helpful to the company. For instance, the amendments we previously entered into on our loan agreements that provided for covenant holidays were a key factor in removing the going concern qualification from our financial statements, which in turn has been helpful with customers, suppliers, and partners. As a result of our continued success on pillars one and two and the consummation of the transaction to sell satellite in space being announced today, we've been able to successfully negotiate further improvements in our credit agreements and preferred stock, which strengthen our liquidity, financial flexibility, and strength going forward. All of these pillars have reinforced each other, resulting in a stronger and healthier company. Now I would like to return to the strategic rationale of the transactions we are announcing today. The sale of satellite in space means more for Comtech than generating $157 million in cash and retiring extensive debt. Under Jeffery Robertson's leadership, Allerium has been enhancing its mission critical solutions for public safety agencies and mobile network operators. With an improved capital structure, focused organization and strategic clarity, Allerium is poised to capitalize on its leadership in the public safety market and accelerate its growth. Over the next few months, as we await regulatory approval, we will be executing a transition plan to align the organization to be purpose-built to support Elarium's growth as a leader in next-generation public safety technologies and services. Elarium's growing portfolio of software, cloud-native, data-driven, and AI-enabled capabilities put it at the center of next-generation 911, call handling, location-based services, and data management. Upon closing, our transition to Elarium will mark the beginning of an exciting new chapter, one in which we will focus our investment, innovation, and execution on a singular mission, leading the evolution of public safety technologies as the market shifts from traditional voice-based systems toward data-centric communications, real-time coordination, and artificial intelligence-enhanced decision-making. We believe Elarium is uniquely positioned to lead this large and growing market for years to come. Finally, I would like to thank and compliment our entire team. We set ambitious goals during a period of significant challenge for this company. We remained disciplined in our execution and we delivered. Throughout our organization, in satellite and space, Elarium, finance, legal, IT, and people operations, I have seen the dedication, loyalty, and passion that is driving these significant achievements. I am personally so proud of this team and what we are accomplishing together. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Mike to walk through the financials. Mike Bondi Thank you, Ken, and good morning, everyone. As Ken just highlighted, it is extremely rewarding to see the significant progress that our organization is achieving on multiple fronts. Effectuating transformational changes like we have experienced to date over the past several quarters is not trivial and is a clear testament that our employees take extreme pride in what they do and in delivering successful outcomes. To that end, we are pleased to be delivering another quarter of positive operating cashflow and continued gross margin strength relative to our recent past. Now let's turn to the financials. Net sales for the third quarter were $106 million. This compares to $126.8 million in the third quarter of last year. The decrease in consolidated net sales reflected the decision to phase out certain low or no margin revenues in our satellite and space communications segment. Alarim reported net sales consistent with the prior year period, excluding a $3 million retroactive billing event that benefited the third quarter of last year. Gross profit in the third quarter was $36.1 million, or 34% of net sales, compared to $38.9 million, or 30.7% of net sales, in the third quarter of Fiscal 25. Our gross profit percentage reflects overall product exchanges and improved operational and financial performance as a result of our transformation initiatives to enhance efficiency, streamline product lines with a focus on strategic, higher operating margin products, and reducing cost structures in order to free up investment back into the business. The improvement in our gross profit percentage builds upon the quarterly trend achieved throughout fiscal 2025 and the first two quarters of fiscal 2026. In our third quarter of fiscal 2026, we reported an operating loss of $3.1 million, which compares to an operating loss of $1.5 million in the third quarter of last year. Our most recent quarter reflects $4.6 million of amortization of intangibles, $2.4 million of restructuring costs, $1.2 million of non-cash amortization of stock-based compensation, nominal CEO transition costs as further discussed in our Form 10-Q filed earlier today. Excluding such items, our consolidated operating income for the third quarter would have been $5.1 million or 4.8% of net sales. Again, the prior year period included the benefit of Elarium's three million dollars of retroactive billing events. Adjusted EBITDA in the third quarter was $8.2 million, or close to 8% of net sales, compared to $12.6 million in the third quarter of last year. The year-over-year comparison reflects the factors discussed above, including the prior year benefit from Malarium's retroactive billing event. Net bookings were $70.5 million in the third quarter, resulting in a book-to-bill ratio of 0.67. This compares to $71 million of net bookings and a book-to-bill ratio of 0.56 in the prior year comparable period. Over the past year, as part of our transformation plan, we have focused and prioritized our product development and sales efforts to eliminate certain low-margin revenues and to instead target higher-margin opportunities in which we have greater differentiation and can achieve improved cash flows. Such improvements in our financial performance and working capital discipline resulted in $6.1 million of positive operating cash flows for the third quarter of fiscal 2026 compared to $2.3 million of positive operating cash flows in the third quarter of last year. As Ken said, this marks our fifth consecutive quarter of positive operating cash inflows. Operating cash flows in the third quarter of fiscal 2026 included aggregate net payments of $4.1 million, principally for interest and, to a much lesser extent, income taxes, as well as $2.4 million in aggregate net payments for restructuring costs, including severance, CEO transition costs, and third-party professional fees. Turning to our individual segments, as anticipated, S&S net sales decreased compared to the third quarter of fiscal 2025, primarily reflecting our decision to phase out and eliminate certain low-margin and working capital-intensive revenues, such as the VSAT satellite systems and services contract. S&S net sales in the third quarter were $50.3 million. S&S operating income was $1.6 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2026 compared to $2.7 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2025. S&S adjusted EBITDA was $4.1 million, or approximately 8% of segment net sales compared to $5.7 million dollars in the prior year period. S&S operating income in the third quarter of fiscal 2026 was impacted by $800,000 of restructuring costs to streamline operations compared to $900,000 in the third quarter of fiscal 25. Now moving to Elarium. Net sales were $55.7 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2026, a decrease of $5.9 million compared to the third quarter of fiscal 2025. The period, I'm sorry, the prior year period included a three million dollar benefit related to a negotiated retroactive billing event to recover costs incurred in previous quarters. Excluding that benefit in fiscal 2025, Allerium net sales were actually consistent with the prior year period. Allerium operating income was $4.4 million and adjusted EBITDA was $10.4 million or approximately 19% of segment net sales in the third quarter fiscal 2026. The year-over-year decreases in operating income and adjusted EBITDA primarily reflect the one-time $3 million retroactive billing event I discussed earlier that did not repeat this year, as well as our increase in research and development and global market investments that Jeffery talked to. Allerium book-to-bill ratio in the third quarter was 0.32 compared to 0.91 in the prior year period. The ratio for the most recent quarter reflects the timing of large multi-year contract awards and is not unusual given Allerium's strong book-to-bill ratios of 1.06 and 2.51 in the earlier quarters of this fiscal year. Turning to the balance sheet, we announced earlier today that the company has entered into amendments with the existing senior creditors and subordinated debt holders and agreed to replace the existing series of convertible preferred stock with a new series of convertible preferred stock. These agreements, together with the sale of most of S&S's business, deliver immediate improvements that enhance the company's financial flexibility and represent the successful conclusion of the strategic alternatives process first publicly announced in 2024. The company anticipates that net proceeds from the sale of most of S&S's business will be approximately $143 million to $145 million, which will be used to reduce debt and recapitalize the business. In accordance with its existing credit facilities, the company will use 65% of the net proceeds from the sale of most of S&S to prepay the majority of its senior secured credit facility, with the remaining 35% of the proceeds used to prepay subordinated debt outstanding starting with repaying the subordinated priority term loan. This is expected to provide a stronger and healthier financial position for the company for the long term. As previously disclosed, we amended our credit facility and subordinated credit facility in October 2024, March of 2025, and July of 2025 to, among other things, suspend testing of the net leverage ratio, discharge coverage ratio, and minimum EBITDA covenants until the four-quarter period ending on January 31st, 2027. Such amendments combined with our significantly improved operational and financial performance led to our enhanced financial flexibility and the removal of our go and concern disclosures in our fiscal 2025 Form 10-K filed back in November of 2025. On June 14th, 2026, Comtech amended its credit facility and subordinated credit facility to among other things, further suspend testing of the net leverage ratio, fixed charge coverage ratio and minimum EBITDA covenants until the four-quarter period ending on July 31st, 2027. At April 30th, 2026 and June 12th, 2026, total outstanding borrowings under our credit facility were $119.7 million and reduced to $116 million, respectively. $3.6 million was drawn on the revolver at quarter end and was repaid in May 2026 in full. Total outstanding borrowings under our subordinated credit facility were $104.1 million and $104.8 million, respectively, including interest paid in kind or accrued on the $35 million subordinated priority term loan. These amendments do not include the $32.5 million of make whole amount associated with the $65 million portion of the subordinated credit facility. The liquidation preference of our outstanding convertible preferred stock was $218.2 million and $220.5 million respectively, excluding potential increases in the liquidation preference or other obligations that could be triggered by a change in control of the company. Our available sources of liquidity totaled $49.4 million at April 30, 2026, consisting of about $26 million of qualified cash and cash equivalents and about $24 million of remaining available Revolver loan capacity. As of June 12, 2026, our liquidity approximated $50 million and the remaining available portion of the Revolver loan was $27.3 million. Now, with that, let me turn the call over to Daniel Gizinski, president of our S&S segment. Daniel Gizinski Thank you, Mike. We're proud of our entire team who contributed to the significant turnaround and repositioning of our S&S business. We've come a long way as an organization, and today's announcement marks a significant milestone in our journey. GALOT is a natural home for the S&S business, and we are confident that Gilat's commitment innovation, customer support, and continued investment in the business will provide the right foundation for the next phase of growth for this business and our customers. It remains a top priority to continue supporting our customers, delivering against existing commitments, and continuing to support customer requirements. The third quarter reflected stronger demand across several areas where S&S has differentiated capabilities with key awards, including over $7 million in funding for several rapidly deployable troposcatter systems intended for use by an international government end customer, approximately $6 million in incremental funding for ongoing training and support of complex cybersecurity operations for U.S. government customers, approximately $4.9 million in incremental funding to design and manufacture antenna-related equipment for a U.S. government end customer and additional funded orders for long-range missile and rocket launch tracking systems, antennas, feeds, and satellite ground infrastructure solutions. S&S' book-to-bill ratio for the third quarter of fiscal '26 was 1.04x as compared to 0.8x in the prior year period after accounting for a $36.4 million debooking in the prior fiscal year associated with the U.S. Army global FSR contract. This was the first quarter since Q1 of fiscal 2024, in which S&S achieved a book-to-bill rate ratio greater than 1.0x. Additionally, subsequent to the end of the quarter, the company received orders totaling over $10 million to develop and deliver initial prototypes for extremely high frequency, low earth orbit satellite and communications equipment. As we move through the period between signing and closing, our priority in S&S is straightforward. supporting our customers, delivering against existing commitments, and maintaining the operational discipline that improved this business in the first place. We believe the momentum in customer orders underscores both the progress the S&S team has made and the strength of S&S's customer relationships. Jeffery will now provide more detail on Allerium, which is well-positioned to define the next generation of emergency communications. Jeffery Robertson Thank you, Daniel. Allerium is a complex feature and the core of our public safety technology company we are building. Public safety response is moving beyond voice toward data and more complex coordination and real-time decision-making as agencies and network operators face rising call volumes, increasing workforce constraints, and growing expectations for real-time situational awareness. This evolution is creating new opportunities for AI-assisted intelligent workflows and technologies designed to manage critical information during active incidents. Allerium is the first to bring together the complete emergency response ecosystem from device location to the systems, networks, and data that help drive action and connect people to emergency assistance. During the quarter, we increased R&D and go-to-market investment to extend that product leadership and support future growth. Following the sale of the MOS S&S, Elerion will be able to invest more decisively in advancing next generation 911, call handling, location-based routing and messaging for mission-critical public safety, and emergency communications. We are converting that R&D and go-to-market investment into concrete market progress. Our win with the Commonwealth of Kentucky demonstrates a first-in-market milestone for Allerium and validates the strength of our NextGen 901 platform at statewide scale. In Canada, we delivered more than a dozen NextGen 901 upgrades during fiscal 2026, reflecting growing momentum with public safety agencies as they modernize emergency communications infrastructure. The developments over the past year, including in the third quarter and our announcement this morning, lead us to believe that Allerium can help public safety move from connectivity to coordination and set the standards for the next generation of emergency communications. Key Allerium contract awards during the third quarter included approximately $6 million of additional funding related to a renewal of NextGen 911 services for a customer in the Midwestern region of the United States, $2 million in funding from a domestic Tier one mobile network operator to support the development and migration of various web-based mobile network services, and over 1.6 million in funded orders from another domestic tier one mobile network operator in support of various mobile network services. We also continue to build momentum across public safety and emergency communications. In April 2026, Allerium announced that its statewide Next Generation 9-1-1 program for Commonwealth of Kentucky had migrated 12 PSAPs in its first four months of operation, including delivering the first NG911 text and voice calls in the Commonwealth. In May 2026, Allerium announced the opening of a new purpose-built facility in Gatineau, Quebec, Canada, which builds on more than a dozen next-gen 911 upgrades that we have delivered across Canada this fiscal year and reflects our expanding role in modernizing emergency communications infrastructure. With strategic wins in the United States, Canada, and Australia, we believe Allerium's position as a trusted leader in 911, Next Generation 911, and public safety applications positions us increasingly well to deliver sophisticated solutions for other types of emergencies over time. Looking ahead, new emergency requesting devices, including wearables, connected vehicles, smart speakers, and AI-enabled cameras, and new delivery methods, such as satellite networks, along with expansion in the emergency workflow technologies, are expected to expand our addressable market and drive growth over time. Going forward, we will have a simpler operating model, a strengthened balance sheet, and a single strategic focus that will allow us to accelerate recurring software and services revenue, expand margins through operating leverage, and invest more decisively in the innovation of our public safety customers and what they depend on. Today, a significant and growing portion of Allerium revenue is recurring, giving us a stable, high-visibility foundation on which to build. Ken, back to you. Ken Traub Thank you, Jeffery. To sum up briefly, Comtech has successfully executed on each of the four pillars of our transformation plan and is now a stronger company. The sale of most of satellite and space, together with the credit agreement amendments and preferred stock agreements, brings the strategic alternatives process to a successful conclusion. And we are moving forward with greater strategic clarity. Over the next few months, we will execute a transition plan to align the organization to support Allerium strong future supported by long-term customer relationships, leading positions in Next Generation 911, call handling, location-based services, messaging, and other AI-enhanced, mission-critical public safety capabilities to address the significant market demand for more connected data-driven emergency response. As a reminder, Mike, Jeff, and Daniel will be joining me for Q&A. With that, operator, please open the call to any questions. Thank you. Operator At this time, we will open the floor for questions. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your touch-tone phone. To remove yourself from the queue, you may press star 2. Again, that's star 1 to ask a question, and we'll pause for just a moment to allocate your time to queue. And we'll take our first question from Keith Housum with Northcoast Research. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Keith Housum Good morning, gentlemen, and congratulations on the announcement. It wasn't what I was expecting this morning, but, you know, glad to see it, and again, I know it's a huge deal. Ken, obviously, you know, the operations turnaround within the S&S segment, you know, has been in swing here, but there's more room to go. I guess why now and why not wait a little bit longer to see if perhaps we can maximize the value any further? Ken Traub Good question, Keith. It's a balancing. The company's been looking at strategic alternatives for a long time because we have a heavy and expensive capital structure. And part of the reason why the company started considering strategic alternatives in 2024 was to address that capital structure. I believed that we needed to approach this process patiently and with a broad examination of all opportunities available to the company, and wait until we are in a position of strength to negotiate the right deal for the future of the company. So we looked at all options, right? And it was considered selling any aspect of the business. And we believe this is really the best way to optimize the long-term future of the business. Allerium has tremendous growth prospects. It's a really nice business. And we are now in a position where satellite and space has been turned around sufficiently. where we were able to consummate this type of a deal where it's a good outcome for the sale of this business, but even more importantly, it enables us to now reorient the entire focus of the company to support the long-term growth of Allerium. So we think the time was right. We finally got the company in the right position of strength to be able to negotiate a good deal for satellite and space. and we're leaving the remaining business in a very strong position for long-term growth. Keith Housum Obviously, it's been a long way in helping capital structure, but you're gonna still be remaining with a good amount of subordinated debt and your convertible for first stock, but you also have the shelf registrations been out there since April. What does the capital structure for the company look like a year from now? Ken Traub Well, we'll see. So the proceeds of this transaction will be used to pay down the debt. 65% of the proceeds of the sale of satellite in space will go to pay down the senior term loan. That in and of itself is almost all of the outstanding amount on the term loan. And so it will be easy for us to either use liquidity to pay off the balance or will be able to refinance with a new senior term loan. 35% of the proceeds will go towards paying the subordinated debt, and that will be more than sufficient to take out the most recent tranche, which is tranche three, and then we'll work towards tranche one and two. We would anticipate that once we consummate this transaction and we refinance the senior debt, those proceeds will be sufficient to take out the rest of the senior debt. And then we'll emerge, excuse me, the rest of the subordinated debt. Then we'll emerge with a really clean and healthy capital structure going forward. Keith Housum Appreciate it. And did I hear that you're gonna be, probably amendments will be suspending the debt leverage ratio for the debt until July 2027. Is that correct? Ken Traub That's correct. So that's a nice additional concession that we got from both the senior term loan lenders as well as the subordinated lenders. So that was one of the factors that was helpful to us in removing the going concern qualification when we last got the covenant holiday. And now we've got an additional covenant holiday And that combined with the company's consistent generation of cashflow, we're confident that we will continue to maintain the financial reporting without a going concern qualification. Keith Housum And then the cybersecurity business is gonna be retained as part of the FNS segment. Can you give us a little bit of a financial profile of that in terms of how much revenue and profitability that is? And is that an ongoing business for you guys? Jeffery Robertson Sure, so it's about $20 million in revenue, and it's net about a $3 million of EBITDA contribution. Keith Housum And then Jeff, as we look at the Elyrium business going forward, you know, excluding the comparable from prior year flat business, how are you thinking about the growth profile for Elyrium, both on the revenue side, but also in terms of profitability. Ken Traub Keith, thank you for your question. For the future, when we look at the profitability of the business, it's really a matter of using scale to our advantage to improve margin profitability. For instance, the more states we provide in XGen 9.1.2, the more we can leverage our infrastructure to improve those margins. And we're working very hard, along with Tom Guthrie, chief operating officer here to leverage that scale that we have every time we win a new region. The other area we see in emergency response is expanding on the workflow of what it takes to get a first responder to the scene and give them situational awareness. We think there's other things that we can do in that emergency response process that expand our TAM and we can grow the business with. Part of why we announced some of the investment in R&D this quarter and a little bit of an increase in it to deliver on that message. Keith Housum So do I think about the top line growth profile being three to five percent a year? Is that kind of fair? Ken Traub It is fair. I think. But we're not going to give, we're not giving guidance right now. Keith Housum My clarification, if I look at your adjusted EBITDA for a pro-forma basis is $34 million there. But if we want to think about going forward, we can probably think about the changes you're going to be making the business, the restructuring for additional 11 to 13 will be on top of that, correct? If I think about the business going forward? Ken Traub That 34 million is a pro-forma that's based on the historical EBITDA with adjustments for the historical EBITDA for Elarium, the cyber business, and corporate, minus the about $12 million of anticipated savings resulting from the transition. Keith Housum I'll turn it back over, guys. Appreciate it. Operator We'll move next to Mike Crawford with B Riley Securities. Your line is open. Mike Crawford The first question is are all of the stakeholders in agreement that this transaction with GWAT will not be argued as any change control that would trigger increase in the preferred B4 obligation? Ken Traub Good question, Mike, and yes, all stakeholders are in agreement that it is not a change of control transaction and does not trigger any of the liquidation preferences in the preferred. Mike Crawford And then just, Ken, to go back on your last statement, just to clarify, that $31 million, that's before you expect to take 12 million of corporate costs out of the business or is that including that stuff? Ken Traub It is, so it's, so the way to look at that 34 million is the historical, not the projected, Elarium EBITDA plus the cyber plus the cost of existing corporate, minus a estimate of the near-term savings of $12 million. Mike Crawford I'm sorry, so by minus, does that mean after that occurs with 34 million, if nothing else would be? Ken Traub So it's a pro forma. So the $34 million, Mike, is reflective of 12 million of cost savings. Mike Crawford And then, are there any other assets that you're retaining that might be surplus to requirements like any real estate owned? Or like, I'm not sure exactly what's going to get a lot like, you know, build facilities in Arizona, et cetera. Ken Traub No, we are retaining two operations. One in Florida and one in Buford, Georgia. That includes our cyber operations and a small services business in total $20 million of revenue. In addition, we are retaining legacy accounts receivable rights to collection of some legacy accounts receivable that will be incremental proceeds to the company. Mike Crawford Turning to William, I guess I have two questions. So it's great that a quote significant portion of that revenue is recurring. What percent of that business would you characterize as recurring? Jeffery Robertson Thanks, Mike. I mean, I'm not going to give exact numbers on our recurring revenue, but I would tell you it's a significant portion and we see it growing over time. As the business morphs, it's moving more from a traditional software license and modeling to a more recurring model for the business right across all our product lines. So I'm not prepared to give an exact number or percentage, but suffice it to say, it's a significant portion and growing. Ken Traub Yeah, and Jeff, I would add to that, just to highlight in our press release today, we announced for the RemainCo, there's $554 million of funded backlog for the segment. And typically, these are long-term contracts. They're mostly services, software-based services. Yes, from time to time, you'll have deployments upfront. So there might be some activity on the front end of a contract that will then run into monthly recurring services. But by and large, these are services that are provided on a consistent steady state. So the percentage, as Jeff said, is significantly high for the segment. And something else to bear in mind in this business, there's a mutual dependency. When states and municipalities work with our Eulerian business, they need our service. There's a very high switching cost, there's a dependency on working with us. These relationships tend to last for a long time. Mike Crawford Thank you, Ken and Mike, for that clarification. So, that high switching cost is a double-edged sword where it's hard to wrest away someone else's business. So, are there any re-competes coming up that you'll likely win given that there's a high switching cost? But conversely, are there any competitions that you're gunning for now that if you win, would add an additional way of growth to the business? Ken Traub Yeah, I'm gonna let Jeff answer the specifics, but we're not going to get into specific methods, but we'll give you more flavor on why we, key drivers of growth in the business, but go ahead, Jeff. Mike, you bring up an interesting point. Again, we're not going to get on specific deals or opportunities, but there are re-competes coming out in the marketplace, and what's changing is there are competitive features now as the market evolves, and we believe we have some very strategic competitive advantages, and part of that is because we do 9-1-1 co-handling NextGen as well as the network gives us some edges in these re-competes. So I'm pretty bullish on some of these re-competes and the competitive advantage we have going forward as well as some other services that we offer that differentiate us from others. And keep in mind, we are the largest direct provider of NextGen 9-1-1 to the states. And other competitors will either go through a local exchange carrier or a channel partner, whereas we are the largest that deal directly with the states. And I also think that gives us a distinct advantage to be able to customize to their needs. So there are re-competes coming out, but I also think there are some with competitive advantage that we can win or positioned well to win. Mike Crawford Well, thank you very much. Operator And it does appear that there are no further questions at this time. Maria Ceriello Well, I would like to thank you all for your ongoing support and we look forward to continue to keep you updated on our progress. Thank you all. Have a good day. Operator Thank you. This brings us to the end of today's meeting. We appreciate your time and participation. You may now disconnect.