ADTRAN - Q3 2024
November 7, 2024
Executive Summary
- Q3 revenue of $227.7M with sequential growth, non-GAAP gross margin expansion to 42.1%, positive non-GAAP operating profit ($2.5M), and third consecutive quarter of positive free cash flow ($23.2M).
- Mix stabilized: Subscriber Solutions +9% q/q; non-U.S. revenue 55% as EMEA/APAC improved; large service provider sales +10% sequentially; one >10% customer in-quarter.
- Optical likely bottomed in Q3; bookings accelerated; management expects all segments up in Q4 and guided Q4 revenue to $230–$245M and non-GAAP op margin to 0–4% (sequential growth inflection).
- Cost program traction: non-GAAP GM up ~320 bps vs Q3’23 (42.1% vs 40.3%); OpEx held flat q/q; working capital improved (DSO 70 days, inventory reduced), underpinning FCF.
- Consensus estimates (S&P Global) were unavailable due to vendor rate limits; thus, beat/miss vs Street cannot be determined at this time (values from S&P Global unavailable).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
- What Went Well
- Mix and profitability: Non-GAAP gross margin rose to 42.1% (+17 bps q/q) with non-GAAP operating profit of $2.5M; FCF of $23.2M on $42.0M operating cash flow.
- Demand signals: Bookings accelerated; non-U.S. revenue 55% with strength in EMEA/APAC; large service provider sales +10% sequentially.
- Portfolio momentum: 13 new optical customers; 12 new Access & Aggregation customers; Subscriber Solutions +9% q/q driven by ONTs/RGs (+25% q/q, +102% y/y).
- What Went Wrong
- Optical revenue still down q/q (-4%); lingering European customer inventory overhang likely to clear early Q1 next year; management still seeing cautious carrier capex.
- U.S. softness in Access & Aggregation led to slight aggregate decline despite international strength.
- GAAP profitability remains pressured: GAAP gross margin 37.4% and GAAP operating margin -10.5%; GAAP diluted EPS -$0.36 in Q3.
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the ADTRAN Holdings Incorporated Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Release Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer period. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press star one again. During the course of the conference call, ADTRAN representatives expect to make forward-looking statements that reflect management's best judgment based on factors currently known. However, these statements involve risks and uncertainties, including the risks detailed in our earnings release, our annual report on Form 10-K, and our filings with the SEC.
These risks and uncertainties could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements, which may be made during the call. We undertake no obligation to update any statement to reflect the events that occur after this call. In addition, the financial measures discussed during the course of this conference call are preliminary estimates. They consequently remain subject to the company's internal controls and procedures and are subject to risks and uncertainties, including, among others, changes in connection with quarter-end adjustments.
Finally, during the course of today's call, we will refer to certain preliminary non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of non-GAAP to GAAP measures and certain additional information are also included in our investor presentation and our earnings release. The investor presentation found on ADTRAN Investor Relations website has been updated and is available for download.
It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Tom Stanton, Chief Executive Officer of ADTRAN Holdings. Sir, please go ahead.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Thank you, Rochelle. Good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us for our Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. With me today is ADTRAN Holdings CFO, Uli Dopfer. Following my opening remarks, Uli will review the quarterly financial performance in detail, and then we will take any questions you may have. We executed according to plan in Q3 and made improvements across several key operating metrics. During the quarter, we continued to grow our non-GAAP operating profit and generated positive free cash flow for the third consecutive quarter. Our quarter-over-quarter performance was driven by further improvements in our non-GAAP gross margin as we maintained our reduced cost structure and grew revenue. During the quarter, we also saw signs of further improvement in customer activity and bookings. Geographically, 55% of our revenues were generated outside of the U.S., as we experienced higher demand from both our EMEA and APAC regions.
Both the U.S. and non-U.S. regions benefited from a 10% sequential increase in large service provider sales. Diving deeper into the portfolio details, Optical Networking Solutions added 13 new carrier customers this past quarter, as we continue to introduce our Optical portfolio to our fiber broadband customer base. As we have previously noted, we had expected our Optical networking revenue to bottom in Q3, and we continue to believe that that will have been the case. While revenue was in line with our expectations, bookings continued to accelerate, supporting our optimism. In our Access and Aggregation Solutions, we began shipping products to 12 new carrier customers. Revenue in our Access and Aggregation Solutions was up outside of North America. However, it was down slightly in the aggregate due to slower sales in the U.S. We expect revenue from our Access and Aggregation Solutions to increase in the upcoming quarter.
Our Subscriber Solutions category increased 9% quarter-over-quarter. This growth was driven by an increase in sales of our residential ONTs and RGs, which were up 25% quarter-over-quarter and a strong 102% year-over-year. Within this category, we added 11 new customers to our latest SDG series of Wi-Fi platforms. As demand for fiber broadband continues to grow, we expect to continue to increase our revenue and customers in this category. In addition to residential broadband, we continue to see strong demand for our carrier Ethernet CPE solutions, as carriers connect more businesses with higher-speed fiber services. Looking ahead, you may have seen our recent press releases announcing customer trials to bring 50 Gb PON connectivity to the market.
As customers begin to realize the value of converging residential, business, and mobile backhaul into a single network, the breadth and power of our open disaggregated networking platforms will further differentiate ADTRAN from our competition. While 50 Gb access technology is still in its early stages, we remind listeners of the ascendancy of XGS PON, which has quickly become the preferred access technology for PON deployment. The adoption of these higher-speed access technologies is an ideal match for our broader fiber networking portfolio. As service providers deploy higher-speed access networks, they must upgrade their backhaul networks with a mix of 100 Gb, 400 Gb, and 800 Gb coherent optical solutions. We currently offer edge-optimized transport solutions to address this need. To support these new access technologies, we have a full suite of in-home networking platforms, SMB solutions, and carrier Ethernet CPE to address the full range of subscriber connectivity needs.
This complete solution offering, from the core to the customer premise, is managed by our Mosaic Software Suite and covers everything from optical networking automation to proactive in-home network monitoring. With it, we partner to help service providers deliver best-in-class subscriber experiences as they automate the scale of their fiber networks. Transitioning to our operational performance, we continue to make progress with the program we launched last year to improve our profitability and operating cash flow. The results can be seen on our Non-GAAP gross margins over the last nine months of 2024, which improved from 38.6% last year to 41.9% this year. This improvement was directly related to operational efficiencies and lower overhead costs that were driven by both site and product consolidation.
This past quarter's performance, paired with our improved outlook, reinforces our confidence that our long-term operating model of gross margin percentages in the low to mid-40s and operating profit percentages in the low double digits. We continue to move forward with our capital efficiency program as we are working to monetize non-strategic business-side assets. We hope to update you next quarter on tangible results as we continue to progress. In summary, we had a successful quarter in terms of improving our financial positioning while growing our customer base and investing in our strategic platforms as major opportunities in the U.S. and Europe are still ahead of us. While we remain confident in our long-term outlook, we expect more meaningful growth in the current quarter.
We will continue to take a cautious approach with our forecast and operating model, given the relatively cautious spending we still see from our service provider customers. This approach has proven to be successful over the past few quarters, and we have stabilized our results in a difficult macro environment, and we expect meaningful improvements in profitability once market conditions improve. With that, I will turn things over to Uli to provide a review of our financial results, and following Uli's remarks, we'll answer any questions you may have. Uli?
Uli Dopfer (CFO)
Thank you, Tom, and thank you to everyone on the call this morning. I will first walk you through our Q3 2024 financial performance, and then I will discuss our expectations for the fourth quarter. Revenue in the third quarter was $227.7 million, a sequential increase and above the midpoint of our guidance. Our Network Solutions segment delivered $181.5 million, accounting for approximately 80% of total revenues in Q3, compared to 79% in the prior quarter. Our Services and Support segment delivered $46.2 million, or 20% of total revenues in the quarter, compared to 21% in the prior quarter. From a product category perspective, Access and Aggregation delivered $67.1 million, or approximately 29% of total revenue, which was down 4% sequentially. Our Optical Networking Solutions were $70.5 million, or 31% of total revenues. This was also down 4% sequentially.
Subscriber Solutions were $90.1 million, or 40% of total revenue, and this was up 9% sequentially. We had one customer represent more than 10% of our revenue in the quarter. Non-GAAP gross margin during the quarter was 42.1%, an increase of 17 basis points sequentially. The improved gross margin is reflective of our ongoing efforts to optimize our supply chain and supply-related processes. Non-GAAP operating expenses in the third quarter were $93.3 million, in line with levels in Q2 2024. For the third quarter of 2024, our non-GAAP operating profit was $2.5 million, or 1.1% of revenues, which was again above the midpoint of our guidance range. This compares to a non-GAAP operating profit of $1.5 million, or 0.7% of revenues, in Q2 2024. The increase in operating margin and profitability was attributable to improved gross margins and stable OpEx.
Non-GAAP tax expense for the third quarter of 2024 was $1.1 million. This is a result of the non-deductibility of impairment charges and losses for which no tax benefits can be realized, including the $2.4 million dividend attributed to the minority shareholder interest of ADTRAN Networks SE, as well as $3 million credit related to an adjustment to the redeemable non-controlling interest. In the non-GAAP diluted loss per share was -$0.05 compared to a loss of -$0.12 in Q2 2024. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow statement, during the quarter, we continued to improve our working capital by $33.9 million. Trade accounts receivable were $172 million at quarter end, resulting in DSO of 70 days. This compares to 75 days in the prior quarter. Our inventories were down to $282.9 million at the end of the quarter.
Accounts payable were $173.4 million, an improvement of DPOs of 7 days. The improved working capital resulted in an operating cash flow of $42 million compared to $19.9 million in Q2 2024. Consequently, we generated $23.2 million of free cash flow in Q3 2024. At the end of the quarter, cash and cash equivalents were $88.5 million, a quarter-over-quarter decrease of $22.7 million. This decrease includes the scheduled annual dividend payment to the minority shareholders of ADTRAN Networks SE of $10.1 million and $17.4 million in repurchases of ADTRAN Networks SE shares that were processed during the quarter. In summary, we have made significant strides in our operational performance and execution. Revenue increased on a sequential basis, we expanded gross and operating margins, and we generated positive free cash flow during the quarter. We are seeing improvements in each of our key end markets and are growing our customer base.
The continued trend to increase fiber access and optical transport globally is a catalyst that we believe will help us to drive accelerated profitability and increased cash generation. Turning now to our outlook for the fourth quarter, we expect revenues to range between $230 million and $245 million and non-GAAP operating margin between 0% and +4% of revenues. Once again, additional information is available on ADTRAN's Investor Relations webpage at investors.adtran.com.
And finally, I'd like to welcome the addition of our new Vice President of Investor Relations, Peter Schuman, who many of you may know. Peter is here today with us, and he will be ramping up his new role. Please reach out to him for any investor relations inquiries. This concludes the prepared remarks portion of the call, and I will now turn the call back over to the operator to begin the Q&A session.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and join the queue. If you would like to withdraw your question, simply press star one again. The first question comes from George Notter with Jefferies. Your line is open.
George Notter (Equity Research Analyst)
Hi guys, thanks very much. Nice to see the improved results and free cash flow generation. I guess I'd like to start just by kind of getting an update on where the excess inventory situation is right now. I know that the Optical business, I think, was the area that's most recently been struggling with excess customer inventory, but can you give us an update on kind of where that is and when you think that inventory will be gone and when you expect the business to improve?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah, so I think I mentioned in my notes, George, that we did see a pickup in bookings in the quarter, which was good to see because, as you know, bookings have been dropping for a few quarters now. So I think that's directly related to inventory situations at customers. We still have a customer, I'm not saying that there aren't other smaller ones, but a customer in Europe that has an inventory hangover that we think will last through probably the first part of the first quarter. But I think our expectations are that they'll, and we're already seeing from that customer that they don't have everything of everything. So we're already seeing pickups there, but that's kind of the last big overhang that I'd say is notable.
On the CPE side, I mean, we've had some pretty strong growth there, so that seems to have worked itself out for the most part. The same thing on Access and Ag.
George Notter (Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Okay. Great. And then I was also curious, by the way, when you talk about that particular customer in Europe, I think you're referencing more Optical inventory as opposed to the other product line.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah, that's correct. Now, the other product lines are, but I won't call this optical. Let me be clear about. I mean, inventory, but let me be clear about this. We have large customers that buy in chunks, right? So they'll buy a big block of equipment, and then they'll deploy it over two to three quarters, and they'll buy another big block of equipment. I wouldn't consider that inventory. I consider that just how they operate. But that's an ongoing phenomenon that will always be there.
George Notter (Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Great. Okay. Thanks, and then also wanted to ask about sort of the real estate update. I know you guys said you're going to give people a bigger, I guess, disclosure next quarter, but anything you can say? Obviously, you guys are in the process on the north and south towers. I think there was a sale leaseback option here on the east building. I'm just curious on where that is now.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
I would just say it's moving forward. I mean, we have interested parties, more than one. I think that the financing of different things, for instance, the sale-leaseback environment, has gotten better as well. So yeah, we're hopeful we can actually dig into more detail on the next call.
George Notter (Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Okay. I'll pass them along. Thanks very much. I appreciate it.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Okay.
Operator (participant)
So next question comes from the line of Michael Genovese with Rosenblatt Securities. Your line is open.
Michael Genovese (Senior Research Analyst)
All right. Great. Thanks so much. It is nice to see the better results. I agree with that and I want to dig in on the sustainability of the better trends, so this is kind of a broad question, but can you get, because I want to ask about both North America and EMEA and the big opportunities that you're saying in front of you, both for existing business, so the kind of key drivers of the existing business, and then the new wins that you are going after, so I know that's a lot of questions in there, but I'd love to hear your comments.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah. And I think it's both. So we have some customers, as you're aware, that are just ramping up. So I would call those existing wins. Some of them are operationalized not at all, right? And then some of them are, as I mentioned before, we expect to be operationalized right around the beginning of the year. And now that operationalization happens, and sometimes we're talking about a national carrier that's just very country-specific, and Germany is an example of that, the U.K. is an example of that, albeit both of those have alt carriers as well. But then we also have some multinationals that we're bringing online. So those are coming on country by country. I mentioned, I think on the last call, that Sweden is one of those larger countries where we have kind of a wholesale swap-out that's going to be happening.
And although we're already selling to, I think, three countries with that carrier, we have another country that is yet to be online. So we have several of those that will be coming online in the first half, with some of them happening right around, let's say, January, February. And then we have new carriers that we have won that are not yet, one of them I'm just now getting into the lab with. That's a multinational carrier. We expect that the first country there to be deployed will probably be in Spain, and that will happen later on in the year. So it's really a mix. And then you have, to really complicate things, you have BEAD coming in, which is also a mix. We have carriers that our current plans are that they're going to be deploying and accessing BEAD funds, and those are existing customers.
And we have quite a mix of those, as you're aware. And then we have new customers that are just going to be popping up left and right, some of them are very new municipalities or whatever that may actually jump into that mix. So I think it's a broad mix of different customers.
Michael Genovese (Senior Research Analyst)
Okay, so if we could kind of summarize though, so I mean, the guidance is the best sequence of growth we've seen for a while in the fourth quarter.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah. Yeah. That's generally the guidance.
Michael Genovese (Senior Research Analyst)
How about next year? What are you thinking about growth?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah. That's generally, I mean, what we're seeing right now, it is still, well, let me see if I can summarize it in a different way. Our existing customer base is improving. And I would say that the majority of what we're seeing right now in order activity is with our existing customer base, right? And so now I'd consider what we do in the U.K. as existing customer base. I'd consider what we do in Germany as existing customer base. So yeah, that's really where you're seeing that improvement. And I think that's just a matter of inventory drawdown. There is, without a doubt, a big push on fiber deployment. For most of the customers I talk to, their fiber acceptance rate, when they're the first one in the community, is very strong. And we're seeing that in our subscriber business.
I think your question is new versus old, and I think really, if we're talking about it in the near term, it's going to be heavily driven by existing customers.
Michael Genovese (Senior Research Analyst)
Okay. That's super helpful. Two more from me. I think you said you had 13 new Optical customers in the quarter. Are you seeing any impact from the announced acquisition in the space? The companies that have been acquired didn't seem to do any better in their service provider business. So is share gain from them happening now, or is that more in the future?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
I don't think it's moving the needle now. I know that there are RFPs that have been generated that were in a more favorable light because of the potential disruption and what happens when you try to merge product lines. But I don't think it's not near. It didn't materially move that customer base, the add-on customers that we have.
Michael Genovese (Senior Research Analyst)
Yep. Okay. And then the final one for me is, I guess, in a scenario, if BEAD were to just not happen, I mean, first of all, do you think that that's a possibility now, given the election this week? And then secondly, how much would that impact you? How important is BEAD? Would there be other drivers in the U.S. market that could replace some of that if BEAD were to go away? What do you think about that?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah. There are multiple drivers, not just in the U.S., but around the world. And the fundamental driver is people want fiber. And if there's an end-user demand, it's typically satisfied to the extent that it's not a very rural area. And you've got carriers today, some of them have been public about it, that are setting up their capital structure to deploy fiber. And you've even got private equity coming in to help bolster that capital structure. So I think it's going to be built. Now, you can argue about the elongation of the timeline depending on how rural you are, but this phenomena that we're getting into right now is not a BEAD-driven phenomena. I think BEAD just adds fuel to that fire.
Michael Genovese (Senior Research Analyst)
Okay. Great. Thanks so much for the questions.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Okay.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from Tim Savageaux with Northland Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Tim Savageaux (Senior Research Analyst)
Hello?
Operator (participant)
Yes, sir.
Tim Savageaux (Senior Research Analyst)
Sorry about that. Yep. Can you hear me?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yep.
Tim Savageaux (Senior Research Analyst)
Okay. Great. I want to focus on the uptick in guidance for Q4 as well, but maybe along a couple of different lines. I mean, it sounds like, given the commentary on bookings and your previous comments on optical, you might expect that to grow in Q4. But anything to call out there from either a segment perspective in terms of what you see the potential to drive that sequential growth, or also U.S. versus international?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
We are stronger international than in the U.S. with Optical. So I mean, without a doubt, Europe is growing. We expect some growth here in the U.S. too. And we have added some, we'll call, cross-sold customers here in the U.S. We've started to add, those are starting to come online. So there'll be some there. But to be honest with you, what's driving that optimism is just we've seen an increase in the booking rate. And that's pretty much across the board.
Tim Savageaux (Senior Research Analyst)
Yeah. That's where I was going to follow up there. So you'd expect similar types of increases across segments, I guess, is what you're saying, maybe a little more biased toward Europe.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Oh, yeah. Yeah. But yes. Well, the answer is yes. I mean, if I had to, and you're asking me to, so with knowing as little as I know right now, yeah, I would expect all of the segments of the business to be up in Q4.
Tim Savageaux (Senior Research Analyst)
Great, and I wanted to follow up. I think you made a comment about Q3 about large carriers increasing 10%, and I'd like to get a little more color on that. Is that commentary across segments, I guess?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah. That's across segments. That's total business.
Tim Savageaux (Senior Research Analyst)
Oh, okay. And you mentioned access and aggregation down in the quarter in the U.S. So I assume that large carrier commentary is probably also internationally or maybe European-focused?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah. If I look at the large carrier segment, I think every geographic region that we serve was up. Just some were up more than others. Did you get that?
Tim Savageaux (Senior Research Analyst)
I did. Thanks. Yeah. Trying to take notes and mute and unmute here. Sorry. Okay. Last one for me, and I think you kind of answered this to some degree with the existing customer, but you are adding a pretty substantial number of new customers, so for looking at a quarter of the outlook, to the extent that's existing customers, are we looking at 2025? And I distinguish between net new customers and ramps that have been won and haven't occurred. Maybe if you look at those two categories, some of the new customers you went through here on the call, as well as the ramp of deals that you mentioned that are already in process, sounds like that should be a, those should be 2025 growth drivers more so than in the year.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Oh, yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. Yes. The new growth drivers are heavily weighted. Yeah. They'll be in 2025. I mean, the whole key to us is, you know this. You've been following the business for a while. It's all about how long does it take you to get through the lab? I mean, that's the hardest part, and that's the hardest part to forecast. Having said that, we've got a few that are really at the very tail end of that that should happen in the first quarter, and then they'll just be coming on after that. Did that answer your question? I'm not sure if I did.
Tim Savageaux (Senior Research Analyst)
It does. Yep. Thanks very much.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Okay.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from Bill Dezellem from Tieton Capital. Your line is open.
Bill Dezellem (Founder, President, and CIO)
Great. Thank you, Tom. You've essentially touched on this with your answer to several different questions, but I want to very specifically ask you to discuss the meaningful deployments that are ahead of you. And I think that's the phrase that you used in your opening remarks. Would you dial into that as much as you can, please?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah. So as you're probably aware, but we have to be a little bit customer-sensitive here, but we have talked about a multinational that has multiple countries that were already deployed in three of those countries. Sweden will be the last one that'll be coming on, hopefully towards in the first quarter of next year. We have another very recent win, I don't think it's been publicly announced, that will be coming on. It's hard to give a timeframe on that because it's a very large carrier. Our first deployment, our first country for deployment, is Spain, and then they have properties throughout the world, including South America. And so that's one that will be. Now, we have to compete in each of those areas, but that'll be one that I think, in aggregate, will be a very good customer.
We also have another carrier that I spoke to before that we expected to be through the lab at the end of this year. That's a Tier 1 carrier, a multinational tier-one carrier that I think is progressing really well. In fact, we may already be through the lab, and now we're into an FOA. Those are the biggest ones. We have some carriers both in the U.K. and in the U.S. that are kind of at a different tier, but they're still material carriers. We have one that is here in the U.S. that has started rolling out with the SDX that has very good growth plans, kind of recapitalized, and are moving forward. I would say we have two of those here in the U.S. that are doing that, and the driver for one of them is it's basically going out and just being first in market.
And they are, without getting too much into names, I mean, they're very well known for the activity that they've been doing. And then we have another one that's been in market for a long time, a very large Tier 2 carrier that is looking to go and upgrade their network to 10 Gb. And all of those are opportunities that will come to fruition in 2025. So it's a broad mix. And then you've got BEAD that just is. It's kind of hard to list the number of customers. We have a very large MSO that hopefully will be participating in a meaningful way in BEAD, and then we have a bunch of other carriers, as well as Tier 1s right in the US. So it's hard to give you a complete list, but in general, I would say 2025 is looking good.
Bill Dezellem (Founder, President, and CIO)
So, Tom, we have followed you all for a long time. And the number of deployments that you're talking about seems significantly greater than what we would normally think of in the past. Is that a fair perspective? And so essentially, we're now transitioning from this difficult drought, if you will, due to the inventory reduction that's taking place across the industry to almost the opposite, where the monsoons are coming with many, many deployments. Are we thinking about that right?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
I hesitate with the term monsoon because I'm just such a, I tend not to like them. But in general, I agree with your sentiment. Yeah. I mean, we have never had this many opportunities where we have - this is not opportunities that we're in RFP. This is opportunities that we've won, but we've never had that many come online. I mean, if you look at all the opportunities that we've talked about over the last year, year and a half or so, right, one of them is really in full deployment. One of them has just started in full deployment, and all the rest are at different stages, including some that were at the tail end of getting into deployment. So I would say absolutely yes.
In the U.S., I think we've been through somewhat of a slow period, and you've gone through kind of a recapitalization period with some of these carriers, and now they're out, and their whole mission in life is to deploy fiber, and if you follow the industry for any period of time, we have never seen such a wholesale move towards a new access technology ever, right? It's just never been there, and you have government stimulus that may or may not come. I think it's going to be really, really hard to unwind, but I would not say it couldn't be unwound because things that you think can't get done get done sometimes, but it does not all change the underlying driver, which is people want fiber connectivity, and they'll pay for it, and so I think the premise of your statement is correct.
I hope it's a monsoon. I'd love to go out and sit in the rain.
Bill Dezellem (Founder, President, and CIO)
Sounds terrific. Thank you for the complete answer. Really appreciate it.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Okay.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Ryan Koontz with Needham & Company. Your line is open.
Ryan Koontz (Research Analyst)
Thanks. Most of my questions have been answered, but maybe, Tom, one last swing at the U.S. broadband business, and let's call it your run rate business, not new customers, not BEAD-related, but just think about 2025 with your existing customer base. What is your view on that? Are there some setbacks there? Are there still some of these Tier 2s that are going through a recap or going through a PE acquisition that are still sounding like soft for next year? Or do you think your run rate business from 2024 to 2025 looks pretty stable and can see some growth?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah. All right. So taking BEAD out is kind of a BEAD takeout because it's hard to know how much of the environment is being impacted today by BEAD anticipation. So it's kind of an unknown, probably, weight that's on the market. That if BEAD doesn't happen, then that weight goes away, right? So I do think you have people that are thinking, "Hey, let me figure out what BEAD opportunities I'm going after and how aggressively I have to bid before I kind of set in stone my entire capital plan." So that weight is on there today. So if you take BEAD out and say that BEAD is gone, then that weight is gone.
I guess maybe the easiest way to answer it is I don't know of any customer today that's a material customer to us that I would expect softer. I don't see softer. There may be some that end up being flattening.
Ryan Koontz (Research Analyst)
It certainly could be delayed, right, with the change of administration. It could move out. It could move completely out of 2025 in a heartbeat.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
It could. It could. But I do believe, and I could be wrong here, but I do believe the BEAD weight on capital spending is already in place. So softer would be difficult. And you can only be softer for so long before you have a problem, right? At some point in time, somebody's going to overbuild that. And unless it's a really rural area, right, I think there is just a demand driver that is somewhat of a kind of constant pressure on getting something built.
Ryan Koontz (Research Analyst)
Yeah, and of that run rate business that you have in the U.S. this year, how is it kind of roughly split between Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3 for you? Can you remind us?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
This year, it's been definitely more Tier 2, Tier 3, less Tier 1. Yeah. I think you understand the reason.
Ryan Koontz (Research Analyst)
Yep. And then on the Optical side, can you remind us where you're seeing the most traction for the products that you acquired through ADVA? Where's your wheelhouse? If you look at that big optical business, what applications are you seeing the most traction with? Is it more like optics?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
It's metro edge. There's some growth on the enterprise side for secure optical, but it's metro edge, large enterprise. And in metro edge, I would lump backhaul of aggregation networks. That's our sweet spot. We're strong in pretty much all of Europe, including large carriers. And then it's being introduced into the Tier 3, and we're seeing positive movement in the Tier 3 space here as people start to figure out how they're going to backhaul their networks.
Ryan Koontz (Research Analyst)
Great. One last question here. Can you update us on your thinking around the minority shares in terms of where that is now on the balance sheet and what you're thinking is forward? Are you seeing redemptions? And I know there, what can you comment that you can share with investors about what your plan is there?
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Yeah. I mean, so there's a bunch of shareholders. There's some fairly large ones that we stay in contact with. I don't think the mindset on those investors has changed. The typical redemptions, we do see redemptions from time to time. We did see a redemption, but it was a very unique case this last quarter. Really no change. I mean, right now, our mission with our capital plan, to be honest with you, is pay down our debt. When we pay down the debt, we have the ability then to figure out what we want to do over time. We plan on taking those shares and taking them off the market, but our first thing right now is just get rid of our debt.
Ryan Koontz (Research Analyst)
Got it. Super helpful. Thanks. Thanks, guys. Great quarter.
Operator (participant)
We have another question from the line of George Notter of Jefferies. Please ask your question.
George Notter (Equity Research Analyst)
Oh, hi. Thanks. It's just a quick one. I noticed that your DSO calculation was down, I think, five days. Is there an improvement in linearity here, or is there an improvement in collections, or what drove that? Thanks.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Uli?
Uli Dopfer (CFO)
Yeah. It's just essentially, it's customer mix, and then, of course, we put a lot of effort in collections also, but it's just the result of how customers fall and how our shipments fall. Sometimes in our industry, it's usually quarters are pretty much back-end loaded, and sometimes it moves the needle in the one or the other direction.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
I think linearity probably got a little bit better, George, but I don't think it materially changed. I think it's still back-end.
George Notter (Equity Research Analyst)
Fair enough. Thanks a lot.
Tom Stanton (CEO)
Okay. All right. Looks like we are out of questions. Thank you very much for joining us on the call this morning, and we look forward to talking to you next quarter.
Operator (participant)
Ladies and gentlemen.