SecureWorks Corp. (SCWX) Q1 2021 earnings call dated Jun. 04, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Paul Parrish — Chief Financial Officer
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Wendy Thomas — President of Customer Success
Analysts:
Sterling Auty — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Saket Kalia — Barclays Capital — Analyst
Brian Essex — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Fatima Boolani — UBS — Analyst
Hamza Fodderwala — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Christopher Speros — Stifel — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good morning and welcome to the SecureWorks’ First Quarter Fiscal 2021 Financial Results Conference Call. Following prepared remarks, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]. We are webcasting this call live on the SecureWorks’ Investor Relations website. After the completion of the call, a recording of the call will be made available on the same site.
Now, I will turn the call over to Paul Parrish, Chief Financial Officer. You may begin.
Paul Parrish — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks everyone for joining us. With me today is our CEO, Mike Cote. During this call, we will reference non-GAAP financial measures including non-GAAP revenue, gross margin, operating expenses, operating income, net income, EPS, EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA and adjusted free cash flow. A reconciliation of these measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in our web deck and press release. Please also note that all growth percentages refer to year-over-year change unless otherwise specified.
Finally, I’d like to remind you that all statements made during this call that relate to future results and events are forward-looking statements based on current expectations. Actual results and events could differ materially from those projected due to a number of risks and uncertainties, which are discussed in this morning’s press release and our SEC reports.
Now, I’ll turn it over to Mike.
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Thanks, Paul. For us here at SecureWorks, the past couple of months has brought a renewed commitment to our teammates and their families, our customers, and the communities in which we live. It has also renewed our commitment to being the essential cyber security Company for a digitally connected world. At SecureWorks, we believe in a collaborative approach to cyber security, customers, partners in SecureWorks all working together and formed by the sharing of analytics, data and intelligence. We are re-imagining how security is done by developing scalable software solutions, powered by analytic created from world-class threat intelligence and backed by our industry-leading incident response capabilities.
We are providing more differentiated value to our customers and to the security community at large. We leverage our deep security operations expertise to innovate, and create security solutions that are simpler, faster and more capable. Put simply, our purpose is to secure human progress by outpacing and out maneuvering the adversary. The SecureWorks advantage is a unique approach to software and services, with security at the core, designed to be consumed the way customers want, based on their evolving business needs.
We are singularly focused on security. This is our only business, and our only focus is on the protection of our customers. During the first quarter, and in response to COVID market demands, we quickly pivoted to remote delivery methods. In fact, we moved to remote workforce, continuing to deliver our products and solutions seamlessly to our worldwide customer base.
I’m proud of our team’s ability to be flexible and resilient under any circumstance. We have a connected workplace environment and our prior proactive investments in business continuity processes and digital transformation really paid off. Our recognized challenges remain against the COVID backdrop, but I’m pleased with our sales momentum of the Red Cloak Managed Detection and Response or MDR solution.
In Q1, we added 50 MDR customers on our new SaaS-based Red Cloak platform. ACV signings in Q1 were below our original plans, but good based on our revised COVID expectations. As we rise to these challenges through fiscal ’21, you will see us focused on the following three areas. We will continue to advance our delivery of new software-based solutions to customers. To further our focus on our customers, we recently promoted Wendy Thomas to President of Customer Success, underscoring our commitment to delivering a differentiated customer experience.
And our goal is to get solutions in front of more prospects and customers through our go-to-market evolution by expanding our channel partnerships, as we announced last month. Our new software solutions are a compelling opportunity for channel partners to grow their business and partnership with the best cyber security team in the industry. Q1 was a busy quarter for product innovation and expansion. We continue to evolve our cloud native Red Cloak platform and TDR application, with a range of new integrations, analytics, and user experience improvements, focused on strengthening the ability for organizations to detect and respond to threats.
Red Cloak TDR also earned high marks in the MITRE ATT&CK Evaluation. And I was pleased that TDR performed well across the visibility and detection threat landscape, particularly our ability to manage early threat detections and we achieved these results just six months after the product’s launch. Additionally, we recently expanded our MDR service wrapper, with support for VMware Carbon Black Cloud endpoint standard as part of our continued partnership with leading security point product vendors and to help customers get more value out of their tools.
As part of our broader activities and adjusting to COVID, we quickly pivoted to identify new ways to partner with our customers by offering remote vulnerability assessment, flexible incident management retainers, and security assessments. There is no company better positioned to keep customers safe through the evolving digital landscape.
Let me give you a few customer examples. First, a $4 billion revenue, 13,000 employees, life sciences’ customer that partners with physicians to innovate products for structural heart disease and critical care, so patients can live longer, healthier and more productive lives. Our roadmap enable them to integrate, simplify and improve the effectiveness and efficiency of their security. The customer is seeing differentiated value from our managed Red Cloak Threat Detection and Response software covering our full environment and a complete outcome based solution. That’s the power of scalable software with world-class security expertise at the core.
Second, a long time European technology customer with $5 billion of revenue, and 17,000 employees, needed their security operations to scale with our growing business. They selected our Red Cloak MDR solution that secures their technology landscape across endpoint network and cloud, providing even greater value with our end-to-end capabilities.
This is a great example of a long-time customer adopting our new software as they transition to the cloud. And finally, another customer example, a regional commercial bank with $15 billion of assets under management. This is a model example of how our consulting services can help create opportunities for our software subscription solutions.
During our engagement to test their security posture, we established a trusted relationship that was ultimately leveraged due to the differentiated value in our software driven Red Cloak MDR solution. These are just a few examples of how we’re providing value and helping our customers grow their businesses securely.
We are leading the future of security, giving customers the speed and scale of machine learning coupled with cloud powered data and analytics, backed by a world-class cyber security team. There’s power and momentum from our singular focus on security to bring software driven solutions to market through our industry-leading threat intelligence, through our channel program, all to protect our customers and make the world safer. That’s why we’re here, it’s what we do, and no one does it better.
Now, I’d like to turn it over to Paul to take you through the full financial results.
Paul Parrish — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Mike. We are pleased with our Q1 financial results in many respects. Some highlights include strong growth in our subscription business, led by our software solutions, improved operating leverage and positive adjusted EBITDA for the eighth consecutive quarter. Maneuvering within our dynamic global environment, we maintained our strong financial position and made progress with our new software solutions and launched our new channel program, as you just heard from Mike.
In the first quarter of FY ’21, revenue of $141.2 million exceeded the top end of our guidance range and represent 6.3% increase over Q1 FY ’20. Revenue from our managed security solutions, including increased revenue from our TDR, MDR offerings grew 7.3% year-over-year and comprised 75.3% of total revenue. Consulting revenue increased 3.2% year-over-year, led by double-digit sequential and year-over-year performance in our incident response and technical testing offerings.
Finally, revenue outside the US topped the $40 million mark for the first time, representing 29% of total revenue in the first quarter, up from 24% of total revenue last year and consistently strong growth in the U.K, Middle East and Japan. We exit the quarter with annual reoccurring revenue of $438 million. Gross margin totaled $82.1 million in the first quarter of FY ’21, or 58.1% of revenue, a 260 basis point increase from the prior year, representing our seventh consecutive quarter of year-over-year non-GAAP gross margin improvement.
First quarter operating expenses totaled $80 million compared with $76.3 million last year. Research and development expenses stayed steady as a percent of revenue totaling 16.1% of revenue in the quarter compared to 16.2% in Q1 FY ’20. Sales and marketing expenses were 26% of revenue in the first quarter compared to 28.2% for the prior year Q1. In Q1 FY ’21, we incurred lower travel-related costs associated with increased remote activities as a result of COVID.
General and administrative expenses totaled 14.5% of revenue in the first quarter compared with 13.1% for the same quarter last year. The increased costs were primarily attributable to professional fees and consulting costs incurred in Q1 FY ’21. Adjusted EBITDA in Q1 was $5.6 million compared with $0.8 million last year. Cash flow used in operating activities was $20.3 million in the first quarter, compared with a $3 million use of cash in Q1 FY ’20.
Relative to other quarters, our first quarter cash flow from operations is impacted by the payment of annual bonus compensation. Unique to Q1 FY ’21, DSOs slightly increased to 75 days from 72 days in Q4. The current quarter, DSO increase was primarily related to the payment delay requests from our customers whose operations were impacted by COVID.
At the end of Q1 FY ’21, 6% of our accounts receivable were under such a payment modification request. We finished the quarter with cash of $156 million, which increased from $111 million at the end of the first fiscal quarter last year. Capex was $1 million in the first quarter and our $30 million credit facility remains untapped.
Now for guidance. In the second quarter of FY ’21, we expect both GAAP and non-GAAP revenue to be in the range of $135 million to $137 million. And we expect non-GAAP net income per share performance to be between $0.01 to $0.03. We remained focused on continuing to execute our strategic plan and may give quantitative full year guidance in future periods.
Our immediate focus is on our customers and our employees, as we respond to their needs in this situation. I know you share our concern in this matter. As we move into Q&A, I want to reiterate Mike’s thanks to our SecureWorks’ teammates for their dedication to our customers and on behalf of the entire SecureWorks’ team, we appreciate your continued interest and support.
Wendy Thomas will join Mike and I during the Q&A session. Operator, please open the lines for the questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
I will now open the call for questions. [Operator Instructions]. Our first question comes from the line of Sterling Auty from J.P. Morgan. Your line is now open.
Sterling Auty — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Yeah, thanks. Hi guys. I’m wondering if the strength internationally and the strength in incident response were the same. In other words, was the strength internationally driven by incident response or other parts of the product and services portfolio?
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Good morning, Sterling. It’s Mike Cote. I appreciate the question. They were not connected, it was nothing unusual. We continue to see strong performance out of our European operations and of Japan, and as — it’s not specifically IR related.
Sterling Auty — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Got it. And then the one follow-up is, how do you — what are the marketing plans and sales motions to help convert the strength that you saw in incident response into further managed service, and product sales moving forward?
Wendy Thomas — President of Customer Success
Hi, this is Wendy Thomas. So, it’s a great question and definitely something that we look to leverage. There is really two things that are important to us around incident response. Really, many of our strategic kind of testing services, so, one is of course a source of lead gen, and when you’re in the trenches with those customers being able to then help them build out a — an ongoing security program to secure them is definitely what we do.
And the other thing about those for us is that they help us make our underlying platform more intelligent. So we immediately protect all of our customers with the learnings that we get from those incident response engagements.
Sterling Auty — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Got it. Thank you.
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Thanks, Sterling.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Saket Kalia from Barclays Capital. Your line is now open.
Saket Kalia — Barclays Capital — Analyst
Okay. Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions here. Hope everyone is doing well.
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
We are. Good morning, Saket.
Saket Kalia — Barclays Capital — Analyst
Hey. Good morning, Mike. Mike, maybe just to start with you. Can you just talk a little bit more about TDR? And just a general increasing software offerings here? It makes a ton of sense for customers that might want a DIY solution. I’m curious, who you feel TDR is potentially replacing at a customer when you’re in a competitive situation? Any thoughts on that sort of competitive backdrop with TDR realizing that it’s still early?
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Yeah. So, great question. I appreciate it. I’m going to take the first part of this, and then actually I’ll bounce it over to Wendy and let her add a few things. I think starting with the fact that from a pipeline perspective as we shifted to the new cloud-based software, I will put TDR in a bucket and then our new Managed Detection and Response offering is really up either managing or co-managing that with our customers. So, they can be in a position where they can effectively take it all over themselves.
And I think it’s important to remember when you say DIY. This is really a cloud sourced community effort, whereas you’re working on the platform or the TDR application on the overall platform that we’ve talked about now for a little while. You will have the ability to work collectively, or you currently have the ability to work collectively and cooperatively across the environment.
But our pipeline today as we’ve shifted to the new cloud-based offering and TDR/MDR has grown almost 400%, and it currently represents about 25% of the overall pipe and that’s in the last six months, that growth. And at the end of Q — from the end of Q1 to today, it’s up another 13%. So we’re seeing in the overall economic environment, we’re seeing good demand for it. I’m going to let Wendy sort of bounce in the second part of your question, kind of the overall, the competitive landscape and sort of how we see this evolving over time. Wendy?
Wendy Thomas — President of Customer Success
Yeah, sure. Thank you. Look, we see convergence in many of the kind of individual security product markets or industry quadrants that are in place today, even our own in terms of MSS. As things converge into whatever you want to call XDR or security analytics program, and what we see is our unique advantage to take advantage of that convergence is that one, we — data is not enough.
And so having data doesn’t mean you actually know how to secure an organization. So co-leading that is insufficient. What we do is really take advantage of the fact that we have worked with leading security point product tools in that telemetry for many years now. We understand it, we’ve tagged it. And we can cross correlate across that data in order to provide really holistic visibility and security for customers. And so our customers consistently tell us that the value they see is in our security analytics and remediation expertise that both our technology and our teams bring to bear across all of their environments. And so that and the fact that security is really what we do, right?
So we’re not using security to sell infrastructure or something else that might leave gaps that customers can close on their own. And that’s really where we bring the holistic solution to bear across things that were previously standalone products.
Saket Kalia — Barclays Capital — Analyst
Got it. That makes a lot of sense. Maybe for my follow-up for you, Paul. Can you just talk a little bit about sort of broad-brush economics with MDR versus your traditional MSS offering. I’m not sure if that’s, that’s sort of a contrast that, that you guys think about internally. But I think about sort of MDR is kind of a step-up above sort of your traditional MSS prevention and detection. So the question is, are your MSS customers, your traditional MSS customers, may be willing to pay more for that MDR sort of service wrapper, or is that something that maybe you see your MDR customers perhaps retain at higher rates? How do you think about the economics, I guess with MDR specifically? Does that make sense?
Paul Parrish — Chief Financial Officer
It does. And that’s sort of — we focus on it a lot. It’s a very good question for us too. We see MDR as higher margins for us. It’s a quicker install. With MSS, it’s usually a little more lengthy process. MDR is very fast, and it’s actually getting faster and faster as the product continues to mature. We have an average higher revenue per unit and our sales cycles continue to fluctuate a little bit around that, but it’s very much a faster sales cycle around selling MDR than it is the traditional MSS.
Saket Kalia — Barclays Capital — Analyst
Got it. That’s very helpful. Thanks guys.
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Thank you. The only thing I’d add to the end of that, Paul, is that it also fits well into the channel strategy and the things that Maureen is driving for us.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Brian Essex from Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Brian Essex — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Hi. Good morning and thank you for taking the question. And hope everything — everyone is well. Mike, I just wanted to ask you, I think last quarter when we spoke, it sounded like some professional services engagements were getting pushed down. It seems like that’s maybe where some of the better performance — or I guess, better than expected performance came from this quarter. Can you talk a little bit about what you’re seeing on a professional services side, and how sustainable some of that performance might be relative to what I think — was expected to be down this quarter actually came in kind of low single-digit growth?
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
So, Brian. I appreciate the question. I — I think we sort of said in the prepared remarks, and I was really pleased and quite frankly proud of our team and the way we fluctuated over a week, I shouldn’t say fluctuated, the way we moved over a weekend to a fully remote workforce continuing to deliver on the products and solutions including our consulting solutions around the globe. And it really underscores kind of the ability of not only our team’s resilience in this environment, but how quickly our customers were able to adapt with consulting solutions and services, which we were more concerned about than we were in the subscription, because those have been delivered remotely in the new software applications, but our consulting solutions, where we’re able to quite frankly deliver remotely without missing a beat.
Brian Essex — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Great. That’s helpful. And then on the — maybe to follow-up, maybe a little bit of color on the margin. I think that gross margin is a bit better than we had expected, particularly given the mix that we see in the revenue. Maybe a little color on where the strength there came from, and was that a function of renewals and pricing power in the quarter due to the kind of macro environment or is there something else kind of moving the margin there?
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Yeah, we think it’s from the efficiencies just gained from managing a remote environment, able to do more work remotely. You know, you cut out the travel or you cut out some of the lost time and delivering those services to our customers, basically the same labor force that we had delivered, the higher labor or higher work, thus, the efficiencies from that fell right to our bottom-line.
Brian Essex — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Great. Thank you very much.
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Thank you, Brian.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Fatima Boolani from UBS. Your line is now open.
Fatima Boolani — UBS — Analyst
Good morning. Thank you for taking the questions. Paul, I’ll start with you. You quantified the exposure or impact rather to your accounts receivable as a result of customers requesting payment term flexibility into our concessions. I’m wondering if we take a step back, if you can talk to us a little bit about your exposure at the revenue and maybe bookings level to some of the more challenged industries. And to what extent — or to what extent can you describe churn and/or renewal behavior in characteristics within these verticals over the last three to six months? And then I have a follow up for Wendy if I may.
Paul Parrish — Chief Financial Officer
Okay, fine. Thanks for the question. So we were focused on that through the — our process of understanding the impact on our business from what’s going on from COVID. And if you recall, we have no customer segment that exceeds 10% of our revenue. So as you look across the different sectors that are impacted by COVID, your thoughts go first to the travel and entertainment space. And so we took a hard look at that, and we have customers in that space. And they are some of the customers that are asking for some of the understanding around their receivables. And we don’t have a large number in any one industry. But we took that in consideration as we set our reserves. And that’s why I referenced the 6% of our receivables, having that type of request around it. So we feel comfortable that we’ve appropriately looked at this, and the risk there around the ability of our customers to pay are acceptable to us and we think we have appropriately reserved.
Fatima Boolani — UBS — Analyst
I appreciate that. And Wendy for you, under your purview around customer success. I wanted to get a better sense of what initiatives or efforts you have in place to drive the overall debt retention rates higher as we think about increasing a number of software offerings that are flowing into the mix maybe balancing that with services level churn on the very lower end MSS side and then certainly with some of the more sophisticated and complex IR engagements that — that you’re involved with. Would love to kind of understand the most sensitive levers within those to really get dollar net retention back up to over 100%? And that’s it from me. Thank you.
Wendy Thomas — President of Customer Success
Sure. Glad to. So, probably you’ve heard us talk about evolving our approach to security as the industry has evolved. In our product portfolio, which I have led for the last few years, has really been focused on evolving to put tools in the hands of our customers in the form of software, and really evolving our service offerings to align with different levels of security expertise at the organizations we serve, right? So some have their own teams and they want access to our deep expertise and some really need us to handle things on their behalf.
What we haven’t spoken to you about is, this customer experience as a differentiator. And for us, the focus areas on that, we’ve done a good bit of work around ramping up our listening posts across the customer journey and really accelerating our real time feedback and engagement loops. And so we see opportunities there to really start to create a more connected customer experience, especially as customers evolve their solution sets with us.
So where we’re really focused on is, especially as we move towards more of the software product side, things around ensuring high levels of adoption and checking in with customers often, creating opportunities for them to give us a real time feedback on products and features and usage and their experience. And so the initiatives around not just improving our level of real time customer sentiment and engagement, but also around focus on adoption and product support. You’ll hear more about that as we kind of build out the program here. But we think this is a great opportunity for us as we evolve as a Company.
Fatima Boolani — UBS — Analyst
That’s very clear. I appreciate that. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Hamza Fodderwala from Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open.
Hamza Fodderwala — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Hi. Good morning. Thank you for taking my question. I was wondering if I could start off with a bit of a broader question first. Just — well, broadly, how are you seeing budget priorities within security start to be perhaps reprioritized in this environment? And how do you see that — which parts of the portfolio within SecureWorks do you see that benefiting and which parts of the portfolio do you think are being de-emphasized perhaps?
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
So this is Mike. First of all, thanks for the question. And it’s a good question and an interesting one. And I can’t say that we’ve seen wholesale shifts in budgets from a security perspective, at least in the customer base and prospect base we’re dealing with. Clearly work from home was where everybody ran quickly to ensure that they had the infrastructure set up for those that didn’t. But I think most of the large organizations had some part of their employee base working from home and security clearly followed quickly behind and ensuring as we’ve kind of laid out the strategy with what we’re doing on the Red Cloak platform or with TDR to ensure we cover network endpoints, the cloud and business systems, we have continued to see an interest across the spectrum.
We also offered some unique consulting opportunities to help make sure people as they moved and pivoted to the work from home, had an opportunity to test and understand and ensure that they’re — that they have the proper controls in place and that those controls are working as expected. So, I mean, I guess that’s what I’d say, I don’t know. That’s [Indecipherable].
Hamza Fodderwala — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
That’s helpful. And just for a follow-up question. I know that you’re not giving quantitative guidance for the full year. But any color you can give us on — based on your pipeline today, what you’re seeing sort of into the back half of the year? And what would you have to see in your pipeline or from your customers to give that full year guidance again going forward?
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Yeah, it’s a great question. And I think what I would tell you is, the bigger issue is not necessarily the view from our customers. But I just think the overhang from the economic environment on a global basis, and as people talk about — we’ve heard for last 90 days, the V, the W, the Swish, the U, the bathtub. I think the uncertainty and the macro environment from an uncertainty perspective is sort of the bigger question that we’re trying to get our arms around. We are — I gave some preliminary data on our pipeline since the beginning of Q2, and I think we’re feeling pretty good about how things are shaping up. But there’s still a lot of work to do and a lot of uncertainty around when people will actually make the buying decisions that would give us comfort going in. And we did give guidance on Q2, so kind of comfort going into Q3, Q4.
Hamza Fodderwala — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Got it. Thank you very much.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Gur Talpaz from Stifel. Your line is now open.
Christopher Speros — Stifel — Analyst
Hi, this is actually Chris Speros on for Gur. Thanks for taking my question and congrats on the quarter. For Mike, can you talk about the demand that you’re seeing for the Dell SafeGuard offering and how the SafeGuard pipeline is shaping up for the rest of the year?
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Sure. I’m going to let Wendy take it actually, because she manages that.
Wendy Thomas — President of Customer Success
Hi. Good morning. Yeah, so that — that relationship is strong and really that was born as sort of an initial partnership with the Dell Technologies family for a unified and secured set of workspace solutions. So we’re pretty proud of that partnership. Now with Carbon Black, who has been a long time partner of us and obviously as part of VMware now. And so while it’s early days since the launch and kind of November, December timeframe with Carbon Black, we have seen good growth there, good traction quickly, and more importantly, see a lot of opportunities to expand our footprint with those organization to come in through that program, but then, really need extended security across their entire platform.
Christopher Speros — Stifel — Analyst
Thanks. And one more for Mike. Can you talk about the SecureWorks’ new global partner program and the initial feedback that you’ve received on the initiative from the B channel?
Michael R. Cote — Chief Executive Officer and Director
Sure. Thanks, Chris. So we launched it two weeks ago, actually, I think it was two weeks ago from today we had over 200 attendees on the launch, the virtual launch. We’ve had a lot of interest, actually signed up 25 new partners already. So Maureen and her team are very busy. There’s conversations ongoing with over another 100 partners. And we’ve been excited to see the media interest around the globe and the early interest and opportunity from a momentum perspective. So, in a short period of time, I think Maureen and her team have done a really good job getting us out of the gate.
Christopher Speros — Stifel — Analyst
Great. Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. At this time, I’m showing no further questions. I would like to turn the call back over to Paul Parrish for closing remarks.
Paul Parrish — Chief Financial Officer
That wraps up today’s call. A replay of this webcast will be available on our Investor Relations page at secureworks.com along with our Q1 FY ’21 web deck with additional financial tables.
Thanks again for joining us today.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks].