CACI International - Q1 2021
October 29, 2020
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the CACI International First Quarter FY21 Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded. At this time, all lines are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will announce the opportunity for questions, and instructions will be given at that time. If you should need any assistance during this call, please press star then zero, and an operator will assist you. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Dan Leckberg, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations for CACI International. Please go ahead, sir.
Dan Leckberg (SVP of Investor Relations)
Well, thank you, Chad, and good morning, everyone. I'm Dan Leckberg, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations for CACI International. Thank you for joining us this morning. We are providing presentation slides, so let's move to slide number two, please. There will be statements in this call that do not address historical facts and, as such, constitute forward-looking statements under current law. These statements reflect our views as of today and are subject to important factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from anticipated. Those factors are listed at the bottom of last night's press release and are described in the company's SEC filings. Our safe harbor statement is included and should be incorporated as part of any transcript of this call. I would also like to point out that our presentation will include discussion of non-GAAP financial measures.
These should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for performance measures prepared in accordance with GAAP. Let's turn to slide three, please. To open our discussion this morning, here's John Mengucci, President and Chief Executive Officer of CACI International. John.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Thanks, Dan, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us to discuss our first quarter fiscal 2021 results and guidance. With me this morning are Tom Mutryn, our Chief Financial Officer, and Greg Bradford, President of CACI Limited, who's joining us from the UK. As we all continue to address the COVID-19 pandemic, I'd like to take a moment to thank our employees for their dedication. You all have risen above expectations to continue supporting the important missions of our customers and this company, and you've done so in a safe manner. You have also supported community programs, delivering food to hospitals, first responders, and food banks. Your commitment to fulfilling customer missions while supporting our communities and neighbors during this time is beyond admirable. I couldn't be more humbled by the positive impacts we have collectively delivered, and I thank each of you for your efforts.
Slide four, please. Now, turning to our first quarter fiscal 2021 results, we delivered significant growth, profitability, and cash flow. We grew revenue by 7% and net income and earnings per share by almost 40% compared to a year ago. Profitability was higher than expected, primarily as a result of favorable contract performance, as well as enhanced cost controls in the COVID environment. We continue to mitigate the impacts of COVID-19, working closely with our customers to safely return employees to work. This includes creative alternatives such as temporary shifts, redesigning work plans so more work is done outside of classified facilities, and utilizing teleworking to the extent possible. We are fortunate that our business has been less impacted by COVID compared to other parts of the economy, both by the nature of our work and the specific actions we have been taking.
We have had less than 1% of our 23,000 employee population contract COVID. This is a testament to the hard work being done throughout our company to ensure work continues in a safe manner for everyone involved. These efforts have been quite successful, mitigating the overall COVID headwind below our initial estimates. As a result of this progress and strong operational performance, we are raising our fiscal 2021 guidance to reflect higher revenue and net income growth, increased margin expansion, and even more robust cash flow. Tom will discuss all of this in more detail shortly. Slide five, please. About a year ago, we held an Investor Day during which we introduced our four-quadrant framework to describe our business. The framework depicts what and to whom we deliver. We deliver expertise and technology to enterprise and mission customers.
What's most important in that split is what we deliver: expertise and technology. When we provide expertise, we provide talent with specific technical, functional, and domain knowledge. When we provide technology, we provide software and hardware capabilities enabled by innovative R&D. Expertise delivers respectable margins with low capital requirements and the opportunity to build past performance and deep customer relationships. Technology is more differentiated with a higher growth addressable market and higher average margins. In order to enhance transparency into our business, we are now disclosing revenue by expertise and technology. You'll notice that in the first quarter of fiscal 2021, we reported growth in both revenue streams and drove faster growth in the higher margin technology stream. This is consistent with our strategy and supports our financial objectives to outgrow our addressable market and expand margins.
Slide six, please. We had solid contract awards in the first quarter, representing a book-to-bill of 1.3 times, with wins across all four quadrants and more than half of the awards representing technology work. We also continue to execute against our large and growing backlog of $22 billion, which is up 13% from a year ago. Within expertise, we won new work with the Department of Veterans Affairs to provide talent that will assist the VA in its financial management system modernization efforts. We also won work with the Department of Homeland Security to apply our data analytics experts to help them detect criminal activities. Within technology, we significantly expanded our work with DHS to provide enterprise IT, utilizing an innovative service model to enhance productivity and efficiencies for both CACI and our customer. And we won new cybersecurity work within the United States Army, DARPA, and the Intelligence Community.
In addition, we are continuing to ramp recent large technology awards like BEAGLE and TCS, leveraging our differentiated capabilities and strong past performance to expand these programs. For example, agile software development is increasingly being recognized for its benefits and being utilized on larger programs, sometimes consolidations of multiple contracts. Our industry-leading Agile Solutions Factory and past performance are competitive differentiators that allow us to bring new work onto large marquee programs such as these, which will continue to drive growth beyond fiscal 2021. Slide seven, please. To ensure CACI remains ready to address our customers' most critical priorities, we continue to invest ahead of customer demand. In addition to the higher value our customers receive, this investment allows us to generate intellectual property, enhance competitive differentiation, and drive future growth, all of which drives shareholder value.
In cyber, we are investing in both offensive and defensive technologies, as well as modeling and simulation environments to enhance training and effectiveness. Around 5G, we are investing in capabilities and technologies to collect and process new 5G signals and frequencies, adding 5G capabilities to our expanding number of sensors, and developing tools to ensure the resiliency of 5G networks. More broadly, we are addressing the convergence of signals intelligence, electronic warfare, cyber, and communications to enable the U.S. to dominate the electromagnetic spectrum. And around artificial intelligence, we have over 100 projects developing AI capabilities across many areas of our business. All of these investments are targeted at well-funded areas of the federal budget, supporting solutions necessary to combat both counterterrorism and near-peer threats, well, on the topic of investment. I'm very pleased with the performance of our recent acquisition of Ascent Vision Technologies, or AVT.
The bottom line is they're delivering in line with expectations, enhancing their EO/IR product offerings, and providing value-creating synergy solutions. We have had several joint meetings with representatives from the DOD Joint Counter-UAS Office, or JCO, discussing their desired enhancements to both the AVT mobile and CACI fixed-site offerings. Internally, we are already working on ways to leverage AVT's technology into CACI's large fixed-site counter-UAS installed base and vice versa. Slide eight, please. CACI has been in business for nearly six decades, and during that time, we have prospered through many election cycles. One thing we've seen is that investment in defense is bipartisan, especially in times of an elevated threat environment like we see now. Our addressable market remains healthy, with all indications we will continue to see sustained technology investment to support national security and IT modernization priorities.
When we look at CACI's capabilities against these priorities, we see tremendous opportunity within our $230 billion and growing addressable market. Our awards and backlog are a testament to CACI's ability to enable our customers to modernize IT infrastructure and business applications, secure networks and communications, and enhance offensive and defensive capabilities to enable the warfighter to dominate across all domains. Our alignment to these critical areas makes our business resilient, allows us to take market share, and gives us confidence in ongoing growth prospects. Now over to Tom to provide even more insights into our financial performance and increased guidance. Tom?
Tom Mutryn (CFO)
Good. Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. Let's turn to slide number nine. Our first quarter was an excellent start to the year. We generated revenue of $1.5 billion, representing overall growth of 7% and organic growth of 6% with a simultaneous increase in margins. As John mentioned, we have begun to disclose revenue by expertise and technology. Compared with the first quarter last year, expertise revenue grew 2.5%, and technology revenue grew over 12%. Technology programs, on average, are delivering margins about 300-500 basis points higher than expertise. Both expertise and technology activities are important to our enterprise and mission customers, and we see growth opportunities across all four quadrants. That said, the higher growth in technology is helping us drive our margin expansion. Adjusted EBITDA margin of the quarter was 11.3%, an increase of 190 basis points from a year ago.
The majority of this improvement was our ability to drive favorable contract performance on several programs, including our creative efforts to materially reduce costs on certain fixed-price contracts while operating under COVID. In addition, we were successful in navigating the new environment and minimized the direct and indirect impact of the pandemic. We continue to drive strong program execution and to control costs. We were able to keep our indirect costs in line with last year, indicative of our ability to realize efficiencies and control costs while investing for growth. Net income of $94 million increased 38% from the first quarter of last year, as did diluted earnings per share. Slide 10, please. First quarter operating cash flow, excluding our AR facility, was $193 million, an increase of $78 million from a year ago, reflective of our revenue growth, margin expansion, and effective cash collection and working capital management.
We successfully invoiced and collected revenue associated with Section 3610 work, even with the complex requirement. The deferral of the employee payroll tax payments under the CARES Act contributed around $30 million to the quarter's cash flow. DSO was at 54 days, excluding our AR facility, down from 59 days from last year. We closed the first quarter with net debt to trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA at 2.4 times, nearly unchanged versus last quarter, even with the acquisition of AVT. Slide 11, please. We are increasing our fiscal 2021 revenue guidance range by $50 million, which implies higher organic growth of around 6.3% at the midpoint. As we continue to successfully and safely return people to work, we expect the COVID-19 impact through calendar year-end to be around $50 million less than initially anticipated, a credit to our team.
We are also raising our fiscal 2021 net income and cash flow guidance. The $25 million net income range increase consists of around $10 million from the lower COVID impact, while the remaining is due to the first quarter one-time favorable contract performance. We now expect fiscal 2021 operating cash flow to be at least $600 million, driven by higher revenue, margin expansion, and continued strong working capital management. With expected FY 2021 CapEx of around $70 million, free cash flow is expected to be approximately $530 million. Free cash flow margin, that is free cash flow divided by revenue, adjusting for the $55 million annual payroll tax deferral, is very healthy at around 8%. In full-year free cash flow conversion, after adjusting for the payroll tax deferral, is expected to be in the 125% range as a percentage of net income at the midpoint.
The midpoint of our FY 2021 adjusted guidance also implies adjusted EBITDA margins of around 10.8%, up from 10% from last year. Excluding the items I already mentioned, the underlying margin of the business is unchanged from our initial guidance. We continue to demonstrate our ability to grow revenue organically while increasing margins. Given the strong performance, we now expect diluted earnings per share growth of around 18% at the midpoint. Lastly, our full-year effective tax rate is expected to be around 22.5%, with a lower tax rate in the second quarter due to the impact of vesting the stock awards which were granted in prior years. Slide 12, please. Turning to forward indicators, our prospects remain strong. For fiscal year 2021, we now expect 90% of our revenue to come from existing programs, 6% from recompetes, and 4% from new business.
We have $9.5 billion of submitted bids under evaluation, with over 70% of that for new business to CACI and 60% of the submitted bids representing technology work. We expect to submit another $16.4 billion over the next two quarters, with over 70% of that for new business to CACI and around 50% of expected submittals representing technology endeavors. With that, I'll turn the call back over to John.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Thank you, Tom. Let's go to slide 13, please. We delivered a very nice first quarter, growing revenue, expanding margins, and generating robust levels of cash. We are positioned well, performing well, and producing strong results. We are effectively dealing with the impacts of COVID and delivering organic revenue growth with margin expansion.
Before I turn the call over to questions, I'd like to address a concern that I believe is weighing on our sector broadly, and that is the potential for budget pressure over the next few years. Whether that turns out to be true or not, what I can confidently say is the CACI that entered the era of sequestration and budget downturns is very different than the CACI of today. We were primarily a company delivering enterprise expertise, mission expertise under OCO funding, and also had a significant element of our revenue coming from pass-through material buys for efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan. So we had a book of business susceptible to budget pressures and directly impacted by the drawdown in Southwest Asia. Today, our business is remarkably different.
We executed a purposeful strategy over the last eight years to add significant elements of technology to our portfolio, an area that is more resilient and differentiated in any budget environment. We provide mission expertise in areas like intelligence analysis, cyber, and engineering services. We have moved from enterprise expertise engagements to enterprise technology engagements, delivering capabilities in cloud migration, agile software development, artificial intelligence, and machine learning. In addition, since that shift, we have built a $22 billion backlog, almost four years of revenue of larger and longer duration contracts that gives us a higher level of growth visibility than ever before. The bottom line is we remain confident in our ability to create value for our customers and our shareholders. Our employees' talent, innovation, and commitment to our customers' missions is at the heart of CACI's strong performance and our success in executing this strategy.
CACI's culture of character and innovation is the driving force of our success, not the result of it. I am proud of how our people continue to perform in these unprecedented times, and I am honored each day to work alongside each of you. With that, Chad, let's open the call for questions.
Operator (participant)
Thank you, sir. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. We please ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. If you have additional questions, you may re-enter the question queue. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. And the first question will come from Robert Spingarn with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Robert Spingarn (Managing Director and Global Head of Aerospace & Defense Securities Research)
Hi, good morning, and thanks for taking my question.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
You bet.
Robert Spingarn (Managing Director and Global Head of Aerospace & Defense Securities Research)
John, you actually just hit on what I wanted to ask about, which is this disconnect, I think, in the stock and the backdrop. And it seems to us that the stock's discounting almost a 30% decline in free cash flow over the next presidential administration. And you did talk about how you're positioned. It would seem to us that even if there's budget pressure, there'll be a lot of focus on cyber and unmanned and on near-peer adversaries. Could you talk a little bit more again about your portfolio and how you address those and whether that 30% type number is even remotely possible?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah, Rob, thanks. I guess first off, you mentioned cash, which is an absolute focus of everybody throughout this company. I'm very, very proud of what the entire team has done, driving DSO down with an absolute focus. We are in a much better position today than we were even one year back, and I'll let Tom talk a little bit about that. Yeah, Rob, we're all watching what happens with our stock, and we're looking at are we positioned to the best of our ability as we move forward within this, as some people are saying, within this next era. Absolutely so. We are invested in things like artificial intelligence and machine learning and everything in the electromagnetic spectrum, things around investments placed very wisely and over a long period of time because we are a strategy-driven company. Strategy is the place where we come from.
We have always watched the electromagnetic spectrum. We firmly believe that whether a counterterror attack or a near-peer threat, we're going to be best served by quick-to-field technology. So we have invested heavily in EW. We've invested heavily in AI and machine learning and in 5G, both offensive and defensive measures, as well as within cyber. So as for where the government will continue to spend money, whether we're talking about reduced budgets or not, those are five to seven areas that both parties, both candidates have been very specific upon. Both want a strong national security. And where CACI is focused and where we deliver, more times than not, technology versus talent, we are absolutely focused on those areas, and we believe that is the key for our continued growth.
If I look at the intellectual property that we've picked up and the patents from our acquisition of LGS, from the capabilities of actually building devices and products from both AVT and Mastodon, those are all very well thought-out strategic M&As to ensure we had the right capability and the right customer gaps for us to persevere in any budget environment. Tom, you want to talk a little bit about cash?
Tom Mutryn (CFO)
Yeah, well, CACI, as John mentioned, is a focus of us. We believe strong cash flow is in all of our best interests. It kind of drives value to our shareholders. I'm very proud of the efforts to kind of reduce DSO, and I will note that under the COVID-19 CARES Act kind of regime, we've been successful in navigating some complex invoicing requirements and collecting very effectively and efficiently with very, very low invoice reject or rework rates, so happy with that cash flow conversion by any metric, free cash flow or free cash flow as a percentage of revenue or net income, etc. We've stacked up quite well and very proud of that.
Robert Spingarn (Managing Director and Global Head of Aerospace & Defense Securities Research)
So as a follow-up to what you both said, given that you're growing EBITDA 29% this quarter, the stock is trading at 10% free cash yield, at least the way we do the math. And based on the comments you both just made, is there a point where you say that your business is a better value than one you might acquire and you start to buy back stock?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah, Rob, thanks. Clearly, our capital deployment is something that Tom and I look at and we review with the board on a quarterly basis. We've always been focused at M&A as our number one priority for capital deployment. I'd also say that it wasn't more than seven or eight years back when we looked at that capital deployment strategy, and we looked at the ability for us to find any other properties out there that would quickly grow our capabilities and our customer relationships, and we bought back, I believe, 25% of our stock. So given where stock prices are today, as the CEO of this company, I always believe that it's undervalued. But we will continue to do those looks, continue to run our models, and always evaluate other investment options.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our next question will come from Tobey Sommer with Truist. Please go ahead.
Jasper Bibb (VP of Equity Research)
Hey, good morning. This is Jasper Bibb filling in for Tobey. So in the quarter, you're ramping on BEAGLE and TCS. I was curious what your experience has been there with hiring and working around some of the kind of COVID-related challenges with starting new projects.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah, Jas, thanks. So talk a little bit about BEAGLE and TCS, both two of our larger, more recent awards. I think we won BEAGLE second quarter last year, and then we picked up TCS fourth quarter of last year. On the BEAGLE side, we've completed all of our initial transition milestones. So that's pretty much the work that we do when it's to take away work from someone else. So all those transition milestones that have taken place are complete. And I'll also state the majority of those were during COVID. We continue to ramp up staff. We're continuing to bring new work on this program. And BEAGLE is a great example of what I shared during my prepared remarks.
Our Agile Solutions Factory is proving more and more each and every day how resilient it is and what a valuable asset it is and capability that we can bring to many customers. We're not into full swing there, but from what we've seen, we've been able to generate the applications and do the software development that our customer desires in a very small amount of time. On TCS, if you remember, about 50% of that was new. About 20% of that was a competitive takeaway. All of those transitions are over. We expect to see even more growth on that over the longer term. TCS is a catalog-type program where we deliver hundreds of different catalog services to our NGA customer set, and that ramp-up will pick up over time. So one very agile-based, one more of a catalog-based contract, and it's been going well.
Staffing in general, our portfolio is part expertise and part tech. So some of our elements are less dependent on hiring levels. If I looked at our hiring and our onboarding, it's pretty much on pace with what we expected. Clearly, with COVID, our attrition is down, but I think that would be a metric that I'd be hard-pressed to say that we were unique there. But it's not so much of talent acquisition, Jas. In our intel work, as we've mentioned, we still need to get people cleared and get them to the right facility or into the right country. And we're still struggling there, but we made great strides.
Jasper Bibb (VP of Equity Research)
Thanks. And then kind of, you mentioned speed to market as a priority earlier. So just with respect to opportunities and the mission tech vertical and the AVT deal completed last quarter, I was hoping you could speak to how you think about buying technologies to fill those gaps in your portfolio versus developing a solution in-house.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. So when we look at our investment strategy, we look at it in three different areas, right? We either provide internal investment, we acquire, or we partner. For things that are more commodity-based, you will see us partner: AWS, Microsoft, and others. Those are well-established, very well-run commodity-type offerings that we're able to partner with those companies for us to deliver both our enterprise and our mission tech. When you talk about speed to market, what we were really looking for there over the last three years, if you go back that far on some of the select M&As that we've done, we continually hear our customers, whether it's Army, whether it's Navy, whether it's Air Force, around speed to the field. So speed to fleet.
And since so much of the current counterterrorism battle and the up-and-rising near-peer battles are going to be around the electromagnetic spectrum, we really wanted to find a way that we could build software-definable anything products that could be delivered to either Special Operations Forces or across the larger Green Army or across every Navy airplane and Navy ship to make sure that they had the best signals protection that they could ever ask for. And the way we deliver that is through filling some of the capability gaps with LGS and Mastodon. LGS understanding the commercial electromagnetic spectrum better than anybody out there on the planet. So anything operating over 2G, 3G, 4G, and now 5G networks are well understood and well characterized by the folks within that business.
The more often we can take signal changes and threats that are in the electromagnetic spectrum, we can get those out to the field quickly via a software change versus a whole new device. That's what speed to fleet means. That's why we need to have absolute speed to market. I like where we are on AVT, where we are on Mastodon. We've done some great things within our LGS. We've expanded even deeper into 5G. I would see many of those products and those services and offerings find their way into a broader set of customers over the next three to five years.
Operator (participant)
The next question will come from Ben Arnstein with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Ben Arnstein (Equity Research Analyst)
Hey, good morning, everyone.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Good morning, Ben.
Ben Arnstein (Equity Research Analyst)
So I wanted to kind of follow up on Rob's question, maybe kind of asking this a different way. How do you kind of think about your top-line growth profile against the backlog and against some of the total addressable market growth rates that you outlined in the slides? And I mean, is it kind of reasonable or unreasonable to think about you being able to maintain mid-single-digit growth beyond this year?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah, Ben, thanks. I'm going to come at my answer differently. Ben, we watch top-line organic revenue growth just like everybody else does. But I think we do it a little bit differently than most. We're also combining that with bottom-line growth as well. So can we maintain a mid-single-digit revenue growth rate based on our backlog? Absolutely so. Can we achieve a higher single digit? Could we get into the double digits? Perhaps. But what I would ask is that every time we look at the growth that's most important to shareholders and to our customer sets, because increased margin, increased profit allows us to invest ahead of need to drive customer capabilities that they want to see faster, better, and cheaper.
So when I look at our growth model and our strategy that we put in place about eight years back, it was, "Let's get a deeper technology focus that will not only grow top line, but will grow bottom line." So that combination of top and bottom line, I think, is very unique in our sector. I think it's even more unique during the times that we see ourselves in. It's why we're so focused on this year's performance. Because if we can generate top and bottom line growth during the environment that we sit in today with a generational pandemic, and one would have to say a quite unique election coming up, then we're very confident that we can sustain our top and bottom line growth with a $22 billion war chest worth of backlog in very key investment areas across this federal government space.
Ben Arnstein (Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Thank you. And then just quickly, how much of a COVID-19 impact do you have kind of baked in for Q2?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. So we.
Tom Mutryn (CFO)
This is Tom. We spoke about a COVID impact initially between $100 million and $150 million for the first half of the year. Based on kind of recent performance, we reduced that by $50 million. And so we're expecting $50 million to $100 million kind of revenue impact for the first half of the year. I would say that's heavily weighted in the first quarter and less so in the second quarter. And this is really a testament, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, to the team's efforts of trying to navigate the COVID situation, kind of getting people back to work, working very closely with customers, program managers, contract organizations, trying to find creative ways to minimize that COVID impact.
At the peak, sometime in the April, May time period, around 10% of our hours were associated with CARES Act hours in the Section 3610 of the CARES Act. Last time we spoke, it was down to around 5%. Now it's approximately 1%. So we're relatively kind of reduced the impact of some of those direct COVID impacts. I also will say that there's some indirect COVID impacts as well. Harder to quantify, but there's a sense that sometimes task order modifications are delayed or ability to get clearances are delayed or approved overseas travel is delayed. And that is having an impact as well. But to answer your question, out of the first half impact, most of it is in the first quarter versus the second quarter.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. The next question is from Gavin Parsons with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Gavin Parsons (VP of Equity Research)
Hey, good morning.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Good morning, Gavin.
Gavin Parsons (VP of Equity Research)
Hey, guys. On the organic growth bridge or guidance for the year, the 6.3% full-year guidance implies pretty much the same rate of growth throughout the rest of the year as you had in the first quarter, even though Tom put a comment that the COVID headwind goes away, and then in the back half of the year, you lap some of the COVID headwinds that you had in the second half of fiscal 2020, so I think last quarter, you indicated growth would improve throughout the year, so did anything change there, or could you still see some sequential improvement if the pieces fall into place?
Tom Mutryn (CFO)
Yeah. So, Gavin, this is Tom. As you know, we guide for the full year, and oftentimes there's some shifts between quarters. And so we're comfortable with that full-year guidance. The first quarter turned out better than we thought, getting really nice performance in a number of areas I highlighted, kind of one or two. But for modeling purposes, I would assume that organic growth is somewhat flattish, plus or minus 100 basis points, quarters two, three, and four. It seems like a reasonable kind of way to kind of look at the models.
That being said, we're providing a revenue guidance range, getting in a plus or minus $200 million. And so we're within that guidance range, and we could be at the upper end. If things kind of go our way, we're able to accelerate some activities and the like. So there's kind of upside to that midpoint kind of by definition.
Gavin Parsons (VP of Equity Research)
Got it. Yep. That's helpful. Thanks. And then, obviously, still early, and things are probably still evolving. But any initial thoughts on whether or not COVID is having a structural or more permanent impact on how work is done or how contracts are awarded or focus areas of investment or anything along those lines would be great.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. Gavin, thanks. Yes and no. This is, I continually tell my own team, this is generational in nature. So a lot of us don't have that playbook. I honestly think we're sort of in inning six or seven of nine innings. But what I can tell you is this: I believe that ourselves and our customers have worked very well together to make certain that, one, people stay safe. Two, and I'll say it close to, is that we have a mission to protect this nation. And just like folks who enter wartime battles, you'd like to keep them safe, but they're going into battle. It's why our entire workforce was deemed essential as soon as the nation went into this COVID realm. So as long as we're in it, we believe we've taken the right measures. I like the way we have entered this phase.
I like the way that we've been executing during this phase, building temporary SCIFs. Literally, when we say that term, it sounds so easy. But taking a floor of 200 people, boxing all their information up, clearing their cubes out, redoing an entire floor, bringing secure comms in, and having the government approve that in the span of about three weeks, that's incredible measures. So what I start to think about is COVID is an impact. COVID is an opportunity as well. And that's not meant to disrespect anybody who has suffered during this. But from a pure company customer standpoint, I don't expect COVID to be gone by December 31st. I think our mitigation efforts have been quite successful. But we're looking at picking up additional work. We're doing a remote work capability setup for the Army and the National Guard.
We brought in about a $20 million award to quickly put telehealth support in place for NIH and CDC. From a business standpoint, post-COVID, I think enterprise technology, building more resilient networks, delivering even more mission tech faster is going to be the wave of the future. Often, these things like COVID, they don't set a trend. They actually accelerate it, and we were already in many places working on how do we do more software development work that's classified in nature in unclassified manners in a way that we can build code outside of a SCIF but bring it together in a SCIF, so how do we do what we like to call unclassified classified work? I think that is getting a very positive and a very honorable look by the intelligence community out there. I think we'll see forward changes there.
So all in all, against those changes and how we come out of COVID, very happy with how we are positioned. And it's nice to say that we've already been working many of those items with our customer set.
Tom Mutryn (CFO)
Yeah. And this is Tom. I'm going to add, in terms of our indirect workforce, what we have learned and what corporate America has learned is that we can accomplish the activities to facilitate supporting the organization while working remotely. And so certainly, ourselves, and again, in most every other company, are looking at ways to kind of work going forward in terms of facility footprint, technology, kind of video conferencing, workforce flexibility, and the like. And it opens up a whole slew of possibilities. Instead of looking for employees within the kind of greater Washington, D.C. area or pockets where we have folks, we can look broadly for talent to support CACI. And that should be powerful, both supporting our customers as well as kind of indirect activities.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. The next question will be from Cai von Rumohr with Cowen. Please go ahead.
Cai von Rumohr (Managing Director)
Yes. Thank you very much. So I'm joining a little bit late, but your bookings were good, but the book-to-bill 1.3 was a little below your normal average. And I think, Tom, you alluded to some task order delays. Maybe give us a little bit more color if you could in terms of what did you see in delays in this quarter? And maybe looking to the second quarter, do you expect any catch-up or maybe some color in terms of what we should look for in bookings in the second quarter? Thank you.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. Sure. Cai, thanks. Look, first off, I'm very pleased with our Q1 backlog of $22 billion, about 13% growth year over year. As you mentioned, 1.3x book-to-bill, and what I like to watch is 1.6x trailing 12 months. Look, you all have heard me say many, many times awards are lumpy. It's why I didn't shout from the mountaintops on a $4 billion quarter. It's why I don't get overly, overly worried based on where we are today. There's a lot of trends that are out there changing, right? Traditionally, I'd say we're in a mode of anything but being traditional. Our first quarter is sort of our largest quarter. I don't think that's going to be how this year plays out. We saw a few opportunities slide to the right, pretty much COVID-related. But also keep in mind, we always see slippage.
We just have a finer point on it. That was the point that Tom made earlier. On some of our larger task order work and some of our classified customer areas, since they're so directly impacted by COVID because they're in SCIFs and the like, some of those classified task orders have not come out at the pace that we would have expected them. Will we see those in the second and the third quarter? Absolutely so. We also had a couple of bids that just didn't break our way, and that happens every quarter. As for what we could see in second, third, and fourth quarter, some of the slips that came out of first quarter will most likely show up second.
I think we only have three jobs, Cai, that are out on protest, and we just had two of them solved this past quarter that were both resolved in our favor. So I don't have a crystal ball quarter to quarter. What I can tell you is that I would expect CACI to have another very strong awards year. And clearly, the awards we have in the first quarter joined with our $22 billion backlog has been more than sufficient for us to raise guidance in the first quarter. And we believe that that kind of mix will support both top and bottom line growth as we get towards the end of the year and we start looking forward to FY 2022.
Cai von Rumohr (Managing Director)
Terrific. Thanks very much. So you mentioned some of the COVID opportunities in terms of the new business picture. But when we think in terms of the cost side, were there any other pluses, near-term pluses from COVID to your P&L? What I'm thinking specifically of, less travel than you budgeted because of COVID. And as a result, there's less cost. And if it's a fixed-price contract, you can pick that up. Has that been a net plus to any extent?
Tom Mutryn (CFO)
Yeah. Cai, this is Tom. Yes, it is. I mentioned our indirect cost control. Indirect costs are flat versus kind of last year. The fact that employees are not traveling, I'm not going to too many investor conferences in person and staying at kind of New York or in Chicago hotels. Those add up and help kind of drive profitability, kind of less conference expense. And so those are some short-term positive cost impacts. We also saw a bit of a reduced kind of medical spending.
We saw that pronounced in the fourth quarter of last year where people were reluctant to go to doctors or hospitals because of certain fears of going into areas which were potentially higher kind of infection rates. And we continue to see some of that trend. So we're seeing some kind of reduced kind of medical expenses. Now, there could be some pent-up demand for those services, and they could rebound in the next few quarters. But that had some positive impact on the first quarter.
Operator (participant)
And the next question will be from Joseph DeNardi with Stifel. Please go ahead.
Joseph DeNardi (Managing Director of Equity Research in Airlines, Aerospace & Defense, and Government Services)
Yeah. Good morning. It's John or Tom. Can you provide a little bit of commentary around kind of the margin profile of the two new revenue buckets between expertise and technology? And if you could include some numbers in your answer, that'd be helpful. Thank you.
Tom Mutryn (CFO)
Yeah. So in the prepared remarks, I did mention that technology is coming in at higher margins on average than expertise, approximately 300-500 basis points. A relatively wide range I'm giving there for a couple of reasons. Every quarter, it may fluctuate. And so I want to have a range which is kind of long-term sustainable, and I don't have to kind of adjust those numbers. But if you look at the midpoint of that, that's 400 basis points improved kind of margin between the two. And the question is why? And I think John, in his remarks, explained the why. Expertise is often more commodity-like. We're providing very capable individuals, but we don't have a lot of kind of intellectual property concepts behind those.
Technology, both expertise technology and mission technology, have barriers to entry in terms of more sophisticated solutions. As a result of that, they command higher kind of margins.
Joseph DeNardi (Managing Director of Equity Research in Airlines, Aerospace & Defense, and Government Services)
That's helpful. And then can you just remind us, just from an M&A standpoint, what maybe the top two or three capabilities you're interested in acquiring would be? Thank you.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. Joe, we base our strategy. We look at each of our markets twice each year. And when we look at that, we are going to focus on the technology side first, whether it's on the enterprise side or on the mission side. So anything within that area. And I'd also say that as we look at our portfolio, we always look to bring in new customers. In some areas, it's tough to break into customer sets. So we may look at companies out there that have a different customer set than what we have, where we could move our enterprise and our mission technology to them. So I would say in short, very much on the technology front, not very deep looking at companies that can give us more of the same that we have in our expertise side, especially on the enterprise expertise.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. And the next question comes from Matt Akers with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Matt Akers (Equity Research in Aerospace & Defense and Government Services)
Hi. Good morning, guys. Thanks for the question.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Good morning, Matt.
Matt Akers (Equity Research in Aerospace & Defense and Government Services)
I wanted to touch on kind of the key investment areas you guys mentioned on slide seven. Is it possible to kind of size those and maybe talk about how fast they're growing relative to the total addressable market, either as kind of standalone products in themselves or to the extent that they kind of touch some portion of the $230 billion addressable market?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. Sure, Matt. So let's see. I've got chart seven up now. Let me talk about them. I'm not sure I've got growth rates and how each one grows, but I'll focus on the things that I'm focused on. First off, if they're on the chart, they're extremely important. Second, they garner the majority of my time and attention as well as the majority of our investment dollars. Cyber's going to be out there. I don't think anybody's going to turn news on one night without hearing something about cyber and really understanding what the news is talking about. There's a lot of battles going on today that are in the electromagnetic spectrum. When I think about cyber, for us, it's just as much offensive as it is defensive. We are keeping networks resilient, up and running. We're keeping inboxes clean of spam.
But we're also looking at mission data links. So think about command and control of satellites and munitions aboard flying aircraft. We understand where to drop those munitions and how to prosecute war because we understand GPS. We understand nav and timing. So a lot of the cyber work is out there focused on driving more resilient networks. And I would tell you that post-COVID, we expect to see a material amount of growth within that area because I honestly believe that across our customer set and across industry, we're going to need more secure networks for more of our folks to be home teleworking more days than they are in one of my facilities or in one of our customer facilities. On the 5G side, I mean, that's a technology explosion. We're working with our federal government customers as to how do they operationalize 5G.
But having brought in the deep domain knowledge and multiple patents around how we connect devices wirelessly, we see quite a lot of growth there. Electromagnetic spectrum is an area, frankly, that's a broad item. And I shared some of those examples earlier. Artificial Intelligence. We've been doing this. I've said artificial intelligence long before. We actually called it that. I throw machine learning in there as well, Matt. All up, we are spending a little north of $100 million a year in both IR&D and bid and proposal funds focused on these four areas here. So it is very important. It's very important to us because it's very important to our customers. And it's very important that they continue to fund those areas, which they are.
And if it's important to our customers and they fund them well, it's important to us as a publicly traded company that it's absolutely important to our shareholders. We're doing all we absolutely can to sort of change the game as to how companies deliver to the federal government to sort of get back to that speed to field and make absolutely certain that our investments are in the right area. And thus far, we've been right more times than we've been wrong.
Matt Akers (Equity Research in Aerospace & Defense and Government Services)
Got it. Thank you. That's helpful. I guess just one more on security clearances in that process. I think there were maybe some delays earlier in the year. Can you just give us an update on how that's going?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. Sure, Matt. We are starting to see that pick up. Just as we're returning to work in our customer facilities, our customers' employees are returning to those as well. I don't think we're near the full-up pace. But if we were at 10% when we last talked, we're probably in a 50%-60% realm now, which is about what we should expect through the month of November and December. And I'd like to hope that by that point, many, many more in the government security clearing offices are fully back to where we can get back to a more sense of "normal." Thank you.
Operator (participant)
And the next question will be from Sheila Kahyaoglu with Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Sheila Kahyaoglu (Aerospace & Defense and Airlines Equity Research)
Hey. Good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the time. And just a discussion around technology and expertise, I thought was pretty neat. So I have three questions on that topic. First, I guess, if you could talk about the differences in the book-to-bill or the growth that you're seeing in those businesses. Second, Tom, I know you gave a few comments a little earlier on the margin differential, but maybe if you could talk about the margin difference thus far and the potential looking forward, given it already represents 50% of sales. And then last one, I think this is just a cleanup item, but at the analyst day in 2019, you guys provided TAMs for these markets a little differently with quadrants.
You said mission was a $90 billion TAM at a 6% CAGR versus technology today presented as $90 billion TAM growing at 3%. So I think it could just be a different quadrant wording. But if you could provide some clarity on those three items? Thanks, guys.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Okay. Well, Sheila, thanks. Boy, we just start providing expertise in tech, and you are all over this, which is good for us.
Sheila Kahyaoglu (Aerospace & Defense and Airlines Equity Research)
I like it.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. Great. Thank you. Well, look, let me give you some broad comments, and we'll do our best between Tom and I. If I look at growth and the growth that we expect, we honestly haven't split out our backlog yet by expertise in tech because that would be going back four to five years. We've been trying to be very, very careful about allowing people to sort of follow new backlog along with us in the way that we put press announcements out there. The fact that Tom is sharing that 3 to 500 basis points, it's really to show why we're confident on growing margins year over year. Now, that sort of gives you what it looks like, what it looked like in FY 2020. I wouldn't be able to go back any further than that, but we would expect similar margins for similar work delivered.
So if I look at book-to-bill in each, when we had our investor day and we're looking at the amount of work that we've bid, we're sort of around the 50/50 mark of expertise and technology in our recent bookings, and I would expect that to continue for the near future. Margins, we do believe tech is always going to be higher than expertise. I'd also say that expertise isn't bad work, so I want to make absolutely certain that when we talk about one being better than the other, if they weren't good for long-term shareholder value, we wouldn't be in those markets at all. Total addressable market, yeah, I think it's $145 billion-ish in the expertise area, $90 billion in the TAM, and we're showing a compound growth rate of about 3%.
That's looking at where the government's spending money, what their future flows are, and how we expect those things to grow. This is an outside piece of information that we get each and every year. We're very happy with a $90 billion addressable market when we're barely doing $3 billion worth of work there. So I would see us to continue to grow faster in tech than in expertise. I would expect us to continue to see higher margins in tech than in expertise. And that's because there's a higher risk model when we do technology work than when we do expertise work. It's not that the work is less valued. It's just that there are more folks providing expertise. It's tougher, as Tom mentioned earlier, to differentiate. And the risk model is I'm delivering talent. I'm not creating hardware and software and the like.
Tom, anything you can add to those?
Tom Mutryn (CFO)
Yeah. You know, Sheila, in the prepared remarks, I did say that for the submitted bids, 60% of those are for technology. In the bids to be submitted over the next six months, around 50% are technology, so we think 50/50-ish, very similar to the current breakout of expertise and technology, and as John mentioned, both areas have growth opportunities in pursuing those. Now, we're not providing win rates, which will give future book-to-bill on those, but if you assume we're going after programs which we think we have a good probability of winning, otherwise we wouldn't go after them, that there would be similar characteristics in book-to-bill would be a fair way to look at that, and John did mention our press releases.
Every time you put a new award out in your press release, we're very careful in the last kind of year or so to specify which quadrant that work is in, and so that should be helpful to you trying to understand relative growth of those two areas.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Sheila, let me just follow up also. In the spirit of your question, we continually look at what information can we push out there. One, we always have to balance that between you all who actually follow us and model versus competitors who are out there listening to what kind of margins do we expect within these quadrants. So as I know you know, it's always a dance, and it's a balance. But we did make some guarantees at our last investor day that once we could confidently track these quadrants, just like it was a GAAP measure, to make certain that as we did comparisons, we were treating it just as if it was GAAP.
We're right now showing what we can show today. It doesn't say that we're not going to look for other ways to share more. We very much appreciate the spirit of your question.
Operator (participant)
And thank you. The next question will come from Louie DiPalma with William Blair. Please go ahead.
Louie DiPalma (Research Analyst in Industrials)
John, Tom, Dan, and George, good morning.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Good morning, Louie.
Louie DiPalma (Research Analyst in Industrials)
Different reports suggest that unmanned systems will continue to be a focus area under a potential new presidential administration. In June, the Army named your SkyTracker and the Ascent Vision X-MADIS as two of its preferred counter-UAS solutions. Does your expertise and track record in this area give you high confidence that you can win larger new awards in this space and also renew your $1.7 billion FS/DE task order when it comes up for renewal next year?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. Louis, thanks. I'll take your last question first. I won't provide too many comments, but we have provided outstanding support to both the counter-UAS offices and the like on our FS/DE contract. I think that was initially awarded around $800 million-$900 million, and the team's done an outstanding job of growing that one by adding additional scope. So all I'll say there is that we're well positioned, and we have performed extremely well. As to where the current administration or a new administration goes, yeah, on the unmanned side, we're more on the counter side, which is tracking unmanned assets. And as you mentioned, our mobile ones, we have quite an installed base today on the fixed side. We really can't talk a lot about customers who have bought it and where they are.
All I can tell you is that we like what the installation rate is of our fixed systems, as well as mobile, and the more quickly we can take modalities such as EO/IR that are very prevalent in an AVT solution and get those EO/IR assets onto our fixed site solutions. Every time we have a new modality, meaning a new way we can look for counter or counter-UAS, you can do that in the RF spectrum. You can do that EO/IR. You can do that with binoculars. I mean, there's a plethora of ways, but the more we can bring all that information in, it actually presents a much clearer picture. Now, where I look at unmanned systems, that to me, my mind moves to payloads that are on unmanned vehicles out there, and that brings to light what AVT does on the EO/IR side.
We would expect a portion of their growth to be supporting vendors who build those types of platforms, both here in the U.S. and across our Five Eyes country partners. When we did the AVT acquisition, they have a small group in Australia. They are developing software and the like, which is exportable back here to the U.S. We also have a group of folks who are indigenous to Australia, which means we are allowed to go after that work as well. So all in all, every dollar they could spend either in the unmanned vehicle world or countering those is a dollar of absolute perfect addressable market dollars for CACI.
Louie DiPalma (Research Analyst in Industrials)
Great, John. So are you saying with that payload commentary that you think that you could play a role in the Skyborg program that they've been trying to develop over the past month or so?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. Louie, as far as our reach is, that we believe we will be a partner player as unmanned systems continue to get not only developed, but continue to expand. I've been reading on where the U.S. Air Force is looking at manned plus unmanned. What I like about what we have on AVT, it's a full digital device. It does all onboard processing. It has AI and machine learning. And when you're looking at EO/IR and AVT turns, an analyst would much rather have the EO/IR gimbal and that system preprocess and learn as much about the terrain that the EO/IR ball is actually flying over because that's less burden on intel analysts who have to take all that information, sort through it, and look for areas of change.
So I won't single out Skyborg, but I will tell you anything that is flying on unmanned as well as manned is a great potential new customer for what AVT delivers.
Louie DiPalma (Research Analyst in Industrials)
Thanks.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. The next question is from Mariana Pérez Mora with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Mariana Pérez Mora (Director)
Good morning, everyone.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Good morning, Mariana.
Mariana Pérez Mora (Director)
So if I may, first, I'm going to do a follow-up to Sheila's question and then on the M&A front. So first one, I understand it is some data you received from third-party, but what do you think is the main driver for an average outlook on the next five-year growth on addressable markets to be about half it was a year ago?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Okay. I think the question was around five-year growth rates, Mariana?
Mariana Pérez Mora (Director)
Yes, around five-year growth rates because the ones you shared today is 1% growth at expertise and 3% at technology. And that is about half in a different split that a year ago in the Investor Day, you share 2% growth at enterprise and 6% growth expected at mission market.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. Yeah. Gotcha. Thank you. Yeah. So when I look at these numbers, and as I think we might have mentioned around Sheila's area as well, we're looking at compound annual growth rates over a five-year period. What I'm focused on is last year as a company, we were about $230 billion addressable market. Now we're at about $235 billion total addressable market. We end up picking up more in both of those areas because of some of the acquisitions that we've done, and it actually allows us to go after more and more work. Those compound annual growth rates, when we look out five years, we have federal government budgets for about three. So some of these are estimates. And when you get out to years four and five, the actual shape of that curve is more like a turtle's shell, right?
It sort of humps up, and then it gradually comes down. So we're actually looking at the full five-year growth, and we disclose five-year CAGR. What's very relevant to us is over the next two to two and a half years, what does that growth rate look like? Because our fees come out about two years ahead of when we're looking to bid on this work. So in all, $235 billion addressable market, $6 billion company. I won't say that it doesn't matter what that CAGR is because it does, but we've got plenty of new business we can go out there and chase.
Mariana Pérez Mora (Director)
Thank you. And then on the M&A front, I wonder if you could speak about M&A pipeline related to this. Yesterday, there were some rumors about a defense firm willing to divest its technology services business. Would you be interested in pursuing such a large acquisition? What are the lessons you learned from the CSRA experience?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yeah. I mean, it's not our policy to comment on specific M&A items. And I believe the question was around a major looking to divest some of their things. I mean, at the end of the day, M&A is our number one priority. Our M&As are very strategically driven. We use them to fill gaps that enhance existing capabilities. We use them to expand our customer base for everything which is out there. For any deal that we end up doing, it's got to fill gaps. It's got to expand our customer base. It's got to meet our strategic criteria. It's got to, is it financially compelling? If I had those capabilities and those customer sets, would that drive long-term shareholder value? So there's so many things that we assess, and we continue to assess on a daily basis.
But at the end of the day, they all have to pass some very stringent measures and things that we're interested in. The fact that it's the number one use of our capital means it's an extremely important feature and focus by both Tom and I and the rest of the team here, so and whether they're large or small, they have to meet all these criteria, and we're very confident in our ability to execute and integrate. Tom, anything to add?
Tom Mutryn (CFO)
Yeah, and I will continue to build on what John said. Again, simply put, when we look at an acquisition, the key question is, is this going to drive shareholder value? Here is CACI in the absence of the acquisition with a theoretical price trajectory over time. With the acquisition, will we drive value to our shareholders? And we use that same criteria whether looking at small opportunities or large opportunities. And that is something that we take kind of very seriously. And there was an earlier question with regards to possible share repurchases. Within that context, there's always alternatives. How do we drive that value? And that is what the team and the board of directors are primarily focused on.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our next question will come from Jon Raviv with Citi. Please go ahead.
Jon Raviv (Senior Equity Analyst in Aerospace & Defense Sector)
Thanks for fitting me in. So just for me, I'm talking about a lot of investing ahead of customer need. Just give us a sense of how that's different from five or even 10 or even 15 years ago. Thinking about IR&D and CapEx, and what does that mean for your risk profile? And then really relate here is, could that approach take some of the linearity out of your growth, for instance, a big competition or a big win in a given year? Might that margin or cash flow back to your year-end year base? Thank you.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Hey, Jon, I hate to have you do this, but your question was breaking up. Do you mind giving it to us one more time so we're answering the right thing?
Jon Raviv (Senior Equity Analyst in Aerospace & Defense Sector)
That's my fault. I apologize for that. Can you hear me all right?
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yes. Yep. Perfect.
Jon Raviv (Senior Equity Analyst in Aerospace & Defense Sector)
Okay. We got some big storms coming through the area here, as you know. So the question was about the investing ahead of customer need. How is that different from five, 10, even 15 years ago? Thinking about IR&D as a percentage of sales, CapEx as a percentage of sales. And importantly, could that approach take some of the linearity out of your growth? For instance, a big competition or a win in a given year, potentially setting, excuse me, margin or cash flow back on year-end year basis.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Okay. Jon, thank you. And sorry to have you repeat that. Look, yeah, yeah. So this focus on investing ahead of need, clearly the percent of IR&D spend over the last five to 10 years, you could draw quite a highly sloped curve as well as CapEx, right? But we've tried to do that in a balanced manner, right? We didn't triple CapEx and double IR&D. What we really are doing is we're always looking out two to three years and saying, where's the threat? Where are the threats? How will we play within those threats? Are we a prime or a sub? Are we a technology provider to someone larger, or do we go at these things on our own? Linearity is tough, right?
I mean, I don't today look at a situation where we would come in and fall prey to, I have to invest so much money to grow that I've got to take my margins down, okay? Now, if we win a $ multi-billion-dollar device production job, we have to do some near-term investments, perhaps. But in the normal course of business, all things being equal, we're going to continue to invest ahead of need in a very responsible manner because our focus is to grow top and bottom line and never sacrifice one for the other. I think I've said many, many times, I could grow top line pretty quickly, but I wouldn't have very happy shareholders. Because to us, it's a balance. At the end of the day, margins on work and quality of earnings matters, and that drives cash.
Nothing that I see in the foreseeable future that would cause us to do anything different than what we have done.
Tom Mutryn (CFO)
Yeah. Yeah. This is Tom. I will add that what we're able to do is both kind of control indirect costs and invest in it simultaneously, and some of the cost improvement initiatives, the shared service center, other types of activities provide some flexibility for us to simultaneously make kind of various investments, and so as we get larger in terms of an organization, it gives us more optionality to make those types of technology investments while delivering kind of margin enhancements which we are committed to, so that's one of the differences today than where we were a few years ago. We didn't have that luxury or the wherewithal to make those kind of larger investments. John mentioned over $100 million in B&P and IR&D, and again, we're able to do that in the context of increasing margins.
Jon Raviv (Senior Equity Analyst in Aerospace & Defense Sector)
Great. Thank you so much, everyone.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Yep. Thanks, Jon.
Operator (participant)
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to John Mengucci for any closing remarks.
John Mengucci (President and CEO)
Thanks, Chad, and thank you for your help on today's call. We would like to thank everyone who dialed in or listened to the webcast for their participation. We know that many of you will have follow-up questions. Tom Mutryn, Dan Leckberg, and George Price are available after today's call. Please stay healthy, and all my best to you and your families. This concludes our call. Thank you, and have a great day.
Operator (participant)
Thank you, sir. The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.
