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Ciena - Q2 2024

June 6, 2024

Transcript

Operator (participant)

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Ciena fiscal Q2 2024 financial results Conference Call. All participants will be listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star and one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star and two. Please note that this event is being recorded. I would like now to turn the conference over to Greg Lampf, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Gregg Lampf (VP of Investor Relations)

Thank you, George. Good morning, and welcome to Ciena 2024 fiscal Q2 Conference Call. On the call today is Gary Smith, President and CEO, and James Moylan, CFO. Scott McFeely, Executive Advisor, is also with us for Q&A. In addition to this call and the press release, we have posted to the investor section of our website, an accompanying investor presentation that reflects this discussion, as well as certain highlighted items from the quarter. Our comments today speak to our recent performance, our view on current market dynamics and drivers of our business, as well as a discussion of our financial outlook. Today's discussion includes certain adjusted or non-GAAP measures of Ciena results of operations. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to our GAAP results is included in today's press release.

Before turning the call over to Gary, I'll remind you that during this call, we'll be making certain forward-looking statements. Such statements, including our quarterly and annual guidance, commentary on market dynamics, and discussion of opportunities and strategy, are based on current expectations, forecasts, and assumptions regarding the company and its markets, which include risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the statements discussed today.

Assumptions relating to our outlook, whether mentioned on this call or included in the investor presentation that we will post shortly after, are an important part of such forward-looking statements, and we encourage you to consider them. Our forward-looking statements should also be viewed in the context of the risk factors detailed in our most recent 10-K and our 10-Q, which we expect to file with the SEC later today.

Ciena assumes no obligation to update the information discussed in this Conference Call, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. As always, we'll allow for as much Q&A as possible today, though ask that you limit yourselves to one question and one follow-up. With that, I'll turn the call over to Gary.

Gary Smith (CEO)

Thanks, Greg, and good morning, everyone. As you've seen from the press release, today, we reported fiscal Q2 revenue of $911 million and adjusted gross margin of 43.5%. Our Q2 performance also included quarterly adjusted operating margin of 6.8% and quarterly adjusted EPS of $0.27. And we generated $42 million in free cash flow in the quarter. Later in the call, James will provide additional details about our Q2 financial performance, as well as highlights from the quarter with respect to our portfolio and business outlook. Since we spoke with you about 90 days ago, industry dynamics, and therefore our current operating environment, are largely unchanged. Specifically, the drivers of bandwidth demand remain strong and durable. Increasing cloud adoption and a growing number of AI use cases are accelerating global data generation.

As a result, network traffic is increasing and forecast to continue growing at a strong rate. This all really means that demand for bandwidth will continue to grow at 30% CAGR, if not more. But despite this positive secular demand, as we all know, it is taking longer than we and others in our industry initially expected for service providers to absorb and deploy the large amount of inventory they have accumulated over the last year or so. And we are still seeing some caution related to macroeconomic concerns, particularly internationally. Importantly, we continue to believe these dynamics are temporary, and we are seeing some encouraging signs of recovery beginning to emerge, including with respect to order volumes.

In fact, there were several highlights from Q2 that I think illustrate not only an improving service provider environment overall, but also accelerating cloud provider dynamics and the overall momentum in our business. Specifically, with respect to our service provider customers, orders in Q2 increased from the prior quarter, and service provider revenue was up sequentially in Q2. Our 10% customer in the quarter was a service provider. Very importantly, service provider inventory levels are starting to decline, and service provider engagement and RFP activity levels are higher than in the past several quarters, resulting in several recent new wins and a growing pipeline of opportunities.

For example, we secured a significant design win in Q2 with a leading North American Tier 1 service provider for a multi-year network evolution project that includes both our line systems as well as our transponders. Based on these data points, we believe that order flows from our service provider customers will continue to improve from here. Turning to our cloud provider customers in Q2. We secured important new design wins in this customer segment across terrestrial, submarine, and coherent pluggable applications as we leverage the opportunities presented by strategic investments to build out their data center infrastructures. Two of these wins include long-term awards for deployment of our optical systems across their global network infrastructure. We are also starting to build meaningful momentum with cloud providers for our coherent pluggables.

In addition to the significant design win we announced last quarter for our 400G ZR+ pluggables, we added two new cloud provider wins in Q2 for these products, including one that is a new customer to Ciena. Later this calendar year, we'll bring to market WaveLogic 6 Nano, our next generation coherent pluggable family. With this, we will be first to market with the power advantage of 3nm technology. In Q2, we're pleased to advise that we were already awarded business by a large cloud customer for this 800G ZR+ technology. As expected, in addition to our market-leading optical systems business with cloud providers, our coherent pluggable solutions represent an incremental business and market share growth opportunity for Ciena with these customers, particularly in shorter-reach DCI-type applications.

As a reminder, as much as 50% of our total revenue is driven now directly and indirectly from cloud providers. We anticipate continued growth from this customer segment in the second half of fiscal 2024, particularly as WaveLogic 6 becomes generally available for both systems and next-generation pluggable applications. This will obviously give us significant time to market advantage with cloud providers, who typically adopt these leading-type technologies more rapidly. Stepping back, understandably, there's been a lot of focus on short-term industry dynamics in recent quarters, and we continue to manage through those. Importantly, we remain focused on the longer-term demand drivers of our business and our growth opportunities. With that said, I'd like to take a few minutes to walk you through how we're thinking about the market will evolve and how we will benefit from that evolution.

As I mentioned earlier, the fundamental industry drivers of bandwidth demand and network growth traffic continue to increase. These drivers are increasingly being impacted by several business and network architectural trends. Obviously, first and foremost, an increasing portion of bandwidth demand and network traffic growth will be driven by AI.

Traffic flows from AI and machine learning will pressure all parts of the network, from broadband access to the metro to inside and around the data center, thereby impacting both service provider and cloud provider networks. As an example, one of our North American Tier One service provider customers recently reported they are seeing a dramatic rise in demand for high capacity, low latency network and edge services, specifically related to the advent of Gen AI and the complexity of hybrid multi-cloud architectures. Optical delivers the combination of high capacity and low latency essential to supporting this type of traffic.

Another opportunity where we have a significant funnel of opportunities is managed optical fiber networks, or known as MOFN. This term, MOFN, may be new to you, so let me briefly explain what it means. While cloud providers can build their own network infrastructure in many parts of the world, certain countries have specific rules for fiber ownership, policies on licensing, and standards for workforce qualifications. In addition, given the need to add capacity, sometimes very quickly, cloud providers are turning to MOFN, even in jurisdictions where there are no such restrictions.

With MOFN, telecom service providers build highly advanced optical networks and lease fiber pairs to cloud providers. This enables the cloud providers to quickly expand their reach and better serve their end users. This is an example of an indirect source of revenue from the cloud providers through our service provider customers.

Ciena is obviously uniquely positioned to lead this model by leveraging our strong relationships and presence with both global cloud and service providers. With all that in mind, I'd like to expand upon how we are investing to address these opportunities... I think to start with, I would say that all of our TAM expansion efforts are deeply grounded in the competitive advantage we have with our optical technology. It is well established and recognized that our industry-leading optical technology has been the driving force and foundational reason behind our success in serving the long-haul, subsea, metro regional, and DCI markets. We expect to continue to lead and take share in these markets with our best-in-class coherent technology. This includes the upcoming availability of WaveLogic 6, which will further extend our leadership in terms of performance, scale, and sustainability.

In addition, as I noted, our optical technology is also increasingly applicable to high-growth opportunities, where we are investing for growth by expanding our addressable market in three principal key areas. These include, number one, broadband access, and number two, metro routing, where both the high-capacity optical fiber connectivity we enable has become a foundational element of next-generation edge and metro networks. Number three, inside and around the data center.

The superior performance of our foundational optical technologies in a variety of form factors can serve the Cloud Provider trend towards disaggregated consumption models in support of AI fabric connections. In Broadband Access, we have the market-leading XGS-PON solution, providing our customers with modularity and openness that they haven't enjoyed in previous generations of PON deployments. This cost-effective, flexible, and sustainable OLT solution can address residential, enterprise, and mobility use cases.

Looking further out, as you know, we also expect to lead in 25GS-PON as it emerges next year. With prioritized customer investment in broadband access, fueled in part by massive public funding around the world, we estimate the 10G and above PON market will grow at a 55%+ CAGR to approximately $7 billion by 2027. Secondly, converged IP and optical layers in the metro are now being used to reduce costs, simplify networks, and achieve new levels of scale to support AI.

This is precisely what our coherent routing solution is designed to address with our purpose-built metro routers, including the 5,000 and 8,000 series platforms, as well as our recently expanded WaveRouter family. This solution offers our customers scaling choices, common next-generation IPOS, integration with the world's best optics and photonics, and the market-leading multilayer domain control to manage and fully converge these metro networks.

We estimate the metro routing market specifically will grow at a 12% CAGR to nearly $5 billion by 2027. Finally, number 3, in addition to our strength in data center interconnect, we see an expanding and incremental opportunity inside and around the data center that also leverages our optical technology leadership. As cloud providers continue to build massive data centers with high data rates to handle AI workloads, they are increasingly reaching power and space limitations. We believe that coherent technology and our high-speed interconnect solutions will ultimately better address the need for superior scale, power, and signal quality. This is similar to what we saw in the WAN, and while still early, we believe it is largely a function of time as to when a meaningful portion of inside and around the data center moves to these technologies.

In fact, we are already engaged with several cloud customers and ecosystem partners in this area as a direct result of our leadership in coherent, and we expect these engagements to increase and intensify over time. So in summary, we believe we are incredibly well positioned to continue growing our leadership in optical and are leveraging that technology, as well as our deep relationships with both cloud and service providers, to further expand our addressable market and deliver profitable long-term growth. With that, I'll turn it over to James, who'll provide details on the quarter's results as well as our business outlook. James?

James Moylan (CFO)

Thanks, Gary. Good morning, everyone. As Gary mentioned, we delivered solid fiscal Q2 financial results. Revenue in Q2 was $911 million. Adjusted gross margin was 43.5%, within the range of expectations. Q2 adjusted operating expense was $334 million. With respect to profitability measures, in Q2, we produced adjusted operating margin of 6.8%, adjusted net income of $39 million, and adjusted EPS of $0.27.... In addition, we generated $59 million in cash from operations and adjusted EBITDA of $86 million. We ended the quarter with approximately $1.4 billion in cash and investments. We repurchased approximately 1.1 million shares for $57 million during the quarter, and we continue to target share repurchase at $250 million total during the fiscal year.

Turning to some portfolio highlights from the quarter. In Optical, we added 20 new customers for WaveLogic 5 Extreme in Q2, bringing our total customer count to 290. To date, we've shipped more than 123,000 WaveLogic 5e modems. Revenue in Q2 for our Reconfigurable Line System, or RLS platform, was up 12% year-over-year, with 7 new customers in the quarter. And separately from our momentum with the cloud providers that Gary talked about, we gained 18 new customers in the quarter for our WaveLogic 5 Nano 400ZR and ZR+ pluggables, including service providers who buy these pluggables integrated into our optical systems and routers. We are also seeing strong early traction with WaveLogic 6 Extreme, which remains on schedule to become generally available within a few months.

With the industry's first and only 1.6 terabit solution, we are looking forward to a favorable competitive dynamic over an extended period, similar to what we experienced with WaveLogic 5 Extreme, in which we were the exclusive solution in market for more than 18 months. In fact, we already have orders from 14 customers around the world for WaveLogic 6 Extreme. In Routing and Switching, we continue to be well positioned to gain share with strong customer engagement and a growing portfolio of industry-leading solutions. In Broadband Access, we have more than 50 customers globally for our PON solutions. These include Tier One service providers, major MSOs, the largest U.S. rural broadband provider, as well as multiple regional Tier 2 and Tier 3 providers. We also have more than 100 customers using our coherent routing solution.

As Gary mentioned earlier, this solution leverages our optical leadership, including pluggables, and is key to expanding our addressable market in the converged metro. This solution includes our WaveRouter family, which Verizon recently selected, among other products in our portfolio, to evolve its long-haul and metro networks. Other portfolio highlights from Q2 include another very good quarter for platform, Platform Software and Services with 23% revenue growth year-over-year.

Our Global Services business grew 5% year-over-year and 6% sequentially, driven by another strong quarter for installation and deployment as we continue to help our service provider customers work through some of their near-term challenges. Turning now to guidance. We continue to believe that the fundamental demand drivers in our business are incredibly strong, and that data generation and network traffic will continue to grow at very healthy rates for the foreseeable future.

We are also seeing signs of improvement in the current environment. We can see this playing out in our hardware-related orders, which have increased steadily in fiscal year 2024 to date, and we expect to continue to increase. Based on our pipeline and current projections, we believe that orders will increase meaningfully in Q3 and actually have the potential to meet or exceed our revenue during the quarter. However, in the near term, while we see signs of improvement, the recovery of service provider order patterns is still slower than initially expected, as they continue to absorb and deploy large amounts of their inventory. Based upon all of these dynamics, we now expect fiscal year 2024 to be approximately $4 billion, which is at the low end of the range we previously provided.

We continue to believe that our adjusted gross margin for fiscal year 2024 will be in the mid-40s range. With respect to OpEx for the fiscal year, we continue to expect it to average $340 million-$345 million per quarter for the full year. For the fiscal Q3, we expect to deliver revenue in a range of $880 million-$960 million, adjusted gross margin in the low- to mid-40s range, and adjusted operating expense of approximately $345 million. In summary, we feel great about our business today and the continued execution of our long-term strategy. We have the world's leading optical technology to underpin our growth from a portfolio perspective.

... we have strong and expanding relationships with both service providers and cloud providers. That combination positions us incredibly well to help our customers address the rise in global data generation and AI-driven bandwidth demand that is accelerating traffic growth across their networks. With that, George, we'll now take questions from the sell-side analysts.

Operator (participant)

We will now begin the question-and-answer session. Anyone who has a question, please press star and one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star and two. Our first question comes from Tim Long in Barclays. Please go ahead.

Timothy Long (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)

Thank you. Maybe, if we could talk a little bit about kind of order book in the fiscal Q2. I'm not sure if you gave that. And then it sounds like the telco, you know, continues to push out, getting you to the lower end of the range. You know, what confidence do you have that we'll see that, you know, in October or January? When do you think we'll start to really see that telco business fully recovering? Thank you.

Scott McFeely (SVP)

Yeah, I'll speak to the backlog, Tim. We ended the quarter at about $1.9 billion in backlog. Based on what we see for the rest of the year, we do think our backlog will be down a bit, by the end of the year, maybe not in Q3, but by the end of the year, it'll be down a bit. Probably not, based on what we see now, to as low as the, long-term trend we had pre all of the COVID and supply chain situation.

Gary Smith (CEO)

So Tim, let me take the second part of that, you know, what gives us confidence to it? First of all, we've seen sort of a steady increase in the first half in orders from service providers. We expect that to jump a little more in as a little bit of a step function in Q3. As James said, in some commentary, we expect meaningful order increases in Q3, primarily led by the cloud, but also we expect an improvement in the service provider piece. And we're also seeing, you know, awards, the pipeline, the whole activity level is increasing. And sort of just as importantly, I think, to talk to your question, we're seeing, you know, the inventory levels come down and they are deploying, particularly in North America. You know, and we have good visibility into that.I think as we get out of the year, I think we'll see service providers in a more balanced supply, demand, inventory situation, as we come out of our fiscal year.

Timothy Long (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)

Thank you.

Gary Smith (CEO)

Thanks, Tim.

Scott McFeely (SVP)

Thanks, Tim.

Operator (participant)

Our next question comes from Karl Ackerman, BNP Paribas. Please go ahead.

Karl Ackerman (Research Analyst)

Yes, thank you. Good morning. In your deck today, you highlighted an emerging opportunity for coherent pluggables, both inside and around the data center. For inside the data center, are you suggesting these would be used in 7-10-kilometer links, or would there be shorter reach, links also possible? And I have a follow-up.

Scott McFeely (SVP)

Thanks, Carl. It's Scott. I think both opportunities are there. I think the more near one is the, you know, the shorter kilometer reach links, sort of around the data center, if you like. Think of it as a 2-10-kilometer type opportunity. I think, you know, the second one that you mentioned is as the data rates between GPUs are increasing and because of the power, the power usage and the restrictions on power, forcing more distributed architectures in these GPU clusters, the lengths of the links that need to get communicated, those coherent technologies, in our belief, are going to start to make their way inside, you know, sort of more the traditional clusters. That's a longer-term opportunity, but our position, you know, our strengths from a coherent technology is pulling us into many of those dialogues around future architectures, both with the end cloud customers, but also with ecosystem providers that service those customers.

Karl Ackerman (Research Analyst)

Very interesting and helpful. Thank you. For my follow-up, you indicated that orders—you've already received orders for WaveLogic 6e products, but do you expect WaveLogic 6e and 6 Nano will be GA in the second half of this calendar year? And I guess as you address that, does a muted outlook for telecom impede in any way the near-term demand uplift you see of these new products? Thank you.

Scott McFeely (SVP)

Yeah. So, so, first of all, yeah, to, to answer your timing question, yes, both the 6e and 6N will be in market, generally available this year, this calendar year. We made the comment actually, that, we had multiple orders for 6e. That's absolutely true, and it comes across, both service provider and, and cloud segments. We also have awards as well for 6N, so, not just 6e. So, and then to your question of does the service provider sort of get in the, the service provider dynamics of inventory, will not get in the way of, the ramp on those technologies? I would say not, because the early movers on those... tend to be the folks that are most, you know, have the highest bandwidth demand growth and have the tightest constraints on their fibers. So think of, think of the webscalers, think of the, the MOFN networks that are serving as those webscalers, and think of submarine networks.

Karl Ackerman (Research Analyst)

Very helpful. Thank you.

Scott McFeely (SVP)

Thanks, Karl.

Operator (participant)

Our next question comes from Tal Liani in Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Tal Liani (Research Analyst)

Hi, guys. My question is about the non-service provider. Two questions. First, cloud went down from 33% to 25% of this non-cloud portion, and I'm trying to understand what is driving the trends right now in the cloud, meaning they're investing heavily inside the data center. Doesn't it translate into more traffic outside that requires your solutions? And if that's the case, it means that they had tons of inventory before. So where are we on the absorption of cloud inventories? The second question is about the government and enterprise. This portion is growing, and can you talk about trends there, what's driving it, et cetera? Thanks.

Gary Smith (CEO)

Okay, let me take the first part of that on the cloud, Tal. You know, if you look at what we've done in the cloud space, we were up 50%, 57% last year. If you look at the first half of this year, we're up 14%. Revenues were down slightly in Q2. That's just normal, sort of, ebbs and flow, frankly. You know, the order flows we expect in Q3, and we're seeing in Q4, we expect both orders and revenue to increase in the second half of the year. You know, the other thing I would say about it is, yes, they're investing heavily inside the data center right now, and their cloud business is growing, you know, as witnessed by those numbers that I just gave you.

That's really before all of the AI stuff hits and comes out of the data center. That's really all in front of us. We are now seeing specific plans and engagements around network deployments in the second half and moving into early 25, you know, to deal with what they expect to be an increase in AI traffic as well. So, you know, I think we're very positive around the whole cloud space. And if you look at the first half, we took market share. You know, even though we have a very high market share in cloud, I want to be very specific about this, we took market share in the first half. And that's before you've got WaveLogic 6 coming online, which has a massive technology advantage. You know, you heard us talk about the orders.

Just in the last couple of quarters, you've got multiple strategic awards for 400G ZR+, and, you know, we talked about the new 800G ZR+ as well, which is obviously for WaveLogic Nano. So, and that's an incremental market opportunity for us, as Scott was just saying, around the short-reach WAN, and then eventually into the actual data center itself.

James Moylan (CFO)

On the government and enterprise side, Tal, we are showing growth in that sector, particularly on the government side. We were up last year, 22%-23%. Year to date, we're up about 6%. We see a lot of opportunity, particularly on the government side, and we're pushing hard to make sure we have the portfolio, the products, services, and software to meet the government's demands, which are increasing.

Tal Liani (Research Analyst)

Great. Thank you.

Gary Smith (CEO)

Thanks, Tal.

Operator (participant)

Our next question comes from Ruben Roy with Stifel. Please go ahead.

Ruben Roy (Managing Director)

Yes, thank you. Gary, I want to double-click a bit on some of the commentary you had on investing to address some of the opportunities and especially around the cloud service providers. One of the things that's coming up more recently at OFC and other events is it seems like there's a demand for customized architectures and that type of thing. So wondering, you know, as you think about, you know, those types of investments, are you thinking about disaggregating some of your market-leading technologies, i.e., DSPs or optical front ends, et cetera?

Gary Smith (CEO)

Yeah, let me take the first part of that. Scott, if you need to add to it. The answer to your question is absolutely, and we've been engaged with these guys for a while. You know, and when you—and if you think about it, we're an obvious choice for that, given our, you know, leading, uh, coherent technology. And, you know, however they want to consume that, be it in pluggable form or be it in more discrete component form, you know, it, it basically increases the velocity of our existing investments. There are things that we need to do, we believe, to, you know, make that applicable into that space, but that is all additional incremental market for us. I mean, we have zero market share and zero revenues from inside the data center right now.

So we are increasingly engaged, and given our, you know, the depth of our relationship with these folks, you know, we believe we're very well placed to, you know, benefit from that. And particularly, as you see the GPU intensity of the AI build-out, that is increasing data rates and increasing distances, which really plays into what we think will be, you know, an intersection point with the coherent technology.

Yeah, Ruben, we talked about the, you know, the opportunity of the coherent coming to solve some of the problems inside the data center. We're very cognizant of the fact that, you know, inside the data center, the key players there, whether they be the end cloud consumers themselves or other ecosystem players that play there, are, you know, have really grown up in a disaggregated model of consuming technology. We're very aware of that, and we're taking steps to make sure that we are ready to play there and absolutely are willing to play there. That's just the way it's gonna get consumed.

Ruben Roy (Managing Director)

That's great. Thank you. Just a quick follow-up. It was great to see the WaveRouter deployments at Verizon. Can you maybe just talk about conversations you're having with either other service providers in North America or elsewhere or cloud service providers on that product specifically?

Scott McFeely (SVP)

Yeah, if I take a bit of a step back, you know, WaveRouter is one of the products in a family of products that we call our coherent routing portfolio. And what we're seeing is, as service providers think about, you know, their sustainable role in the world going forward, their metro and access connectivity is really important to them, and they're looking at, you know, what they're gonna have to be able to deliver in terms of high capacity, low latency type networks. And that is, again, you know, playing into the strength of optics as a more and more important part of it. So we've built a family of purpose-built routers that, you know, is designed to go after that in an optimized way.

WaveRouter being the biggest part of that, you know, the biggest big brother of that family, if you like. If you take more broader from a coherent router perspective in the family, our 5,000 series, 8,000 series and WaveRouter, we've got over 100 customers worldwide deploying that today. You know, they're buying into the footprint optimization that you get on the purpose-built router. They're buying into the world-class optics, and they're also, very importantly, buying into the multilayer domain control that, you know, really allows them to enable convergence in their network. So that's where we're seeing the traction. WaveRouter itself is actually the redundant chassis version of that. So where people are deeper in their network, and they have high capacity and redundancy, that's where they land on WaveRouter as part of that broader story.

Ruben Roy (Managing Director)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Our next question comes from George Notter in Jefferies. Please go ahead.

George Notter (Managing Director and Equity Research Communications Equipment)

Hi, guys. Thanks very much. Just a couple of modeling questions. I was looking at the DSO number. I think it was 98 in the quarter. That's up 10 days sequentially. Was there something going on this quarter with linearity or collections? What can you say there? And then also, I wanted to ask about inventories. Your inventories were up sequentially. I know that you guys said previously that you don't expect them to go down that rapidly this year, but I guess I was a bit surprised to see inventories go up sequentially. So, any insights there would be great. Thanks.

James Moylan (CFO)

Yeah, we still expect, George, that by the end of the year, our inventory will be down from the end of last year by $200 million. There are some movements through the year based on what customers are doing and what our vendors are doing, but we think that by the end of the year, we'll be up $200 million or so below where we were at the end of last year. And the first part of your question was?

George Notter (Managing Director and Equity Research Communications Equipment)

Just the linearity question.

James Moylan (CFO)

Yeah.

George Notter (Managing Director and Equity Research Communications Equipment)

DSOs.

James Moylan (CFO)

Yeah, I don't think you should read a lot into that. We, we actually, have large customers who pay large amounts at certain times, and we were lucky enough in Q1 to get a, end of quarter amount paid that brought our DSOs down. My guess is our DSOs are gonna be in a range of 93-96 or so for the year. It's a little higher than that now, but, we'll be 93-96, my guess.

George Notter (Managing Director and Equity Research Communications Equipment)

Got it. All right. Fair enough. Thank you very much.

Operator (participant)

Our next question comes from Amit Daryanani with Evercore. Please go ahead.

Amit Daryanani (Senior Managing Director)

Yep, good morning, and thanks for taking my question. I have two as well. You know, I guess maybe the first one is, you know, when I think about your back half guide, one of the questions that folks seem to be kind of struggling with is, you're sort of implying 20%+ sequential growth in the October quarter at this point to hit the $4 billion number. That seems to be a very steep acceleration, given kind of what you've seen so far in the year. So I'd love to just understand, what's underpinning from a vertical basis, maybe the, the sizable acceleration that you expect in October quarter right now?

Gary Smith (CEO)

Yeah, listen, that's a very fair question, Amit. You know, I'd answer it in a number of ways. You know, what gives us confidence around that? First of all, we're seeing incremental improvements on service providers, not what we'd anticipated coming into the year, but we're clearly seeing, you know, incremental improvement in terms of orders, pipeline activity, et cetera. Secondly, we still have a very large backlog, and that also gives us some confidence around, you know, our, Q4, step-up, for the year. And, you know, the other thing I would say is we're seeing strong cloud provider engagement as well. Even though, you know, we're up 14% already, we expect, you know, a very strong second half from the, from the cloud providers as well.

So, you know, incremental improvements on the service providers, and we've got good visibility, particularly in North America, to them, you know, deploying their inventory that they've got. And we've got. You know, we're seeing good progress on that. So I think you put all of those together, and that's what gives us confidence, you know, in Q4.

Amit Daryanani (Senior Managing Director)

Perfect. That's really helpful. And then, you know, Gary, you sound incrementally more positive on the AI opportunity and how that's going to ramp up for you folks over the next couple of years. I'm wondering, given everything that you've highlighted so far, does that alter your view of the long-term growth range for Ciena as you go forward? And when do you think some of these AI opportunities will start to show up on your revenue stream? Thank you.

Gary Smith (CEO)

... Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, the question's always been in our space, you know, we see all the activity inside the data center, and logic would say that at some point, you know, to monetize, that has to come out, and I think we've all been collectively, you know, looking at that. I think we're beginning to see the signs of that right now. I mean, AI traffic is being obviously, you know, things like, the current models are being put out there, but the traffic flows are then blended with cloud, and it's difficult to see whether, you know, that's driving it or just the cloud expansion. We are now beginning to see specific engagements with the cloud players around provisioning for, you know, AI traffic as we get through next year.

So that, you know, is informing our sort of in, you know, improved confidence around that impacting it. Then, as you know, we've talked a little bit about inside the data center, that's, you know, a little more, obviously, you know, more nascent opportunity for us. We are excited by the disaggregation opportunity, which is all incremental to us there as well.

So you put all of that lot together, and there's a reasonable question, you know, our, six to eight percent that we put out there is basically what we can see right now from the TAM opportunities that we're, that we're driving. You know, could that improve, or a better way of putting it, should that improve over the next three years? The answer to that is probably yes, but really, the 6-8 is just what we can, you know, see right now and have visibility to. That could obviously increase as, you know, the AI traffic, you know, flows into both the cloud and the service provider networks, particularly in broadband.

James Moylan (CFO)

You have to remember that our core optical business is, it grows at only about 2%-3%, and even in that business, we've been able to do very well and take share. But the core of our business is not growing at a rapid rate. We'll depend upon all of the things that Gary spoke about, as well as routing and switching, to get to the higher growth rates we're calling, and hopefully they'll go up from there.

Gary Smith (CEO)

You know, if you look at the TAM, you know, in aggregate, the three main areas of the TAM, you know, it blends at over 30% CAGR. So, you know, we're hopeful that, that will, you know, impact our 6%-8% over time.

Amit Daryanani (Senior Managing Director)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Our next question comes from Simon Leopold and Raymond James. Please go ahead.

Simon Leopold (Managing Director and Senior Equity Analyst)

Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to first ask about the concentration of your cloud customers, because I guess the lumpiness that you've called out should have been expected. You had two really big customers in your October and January quarters. What I'm looking for is an understanding of how you expect the concentration within cloud evolves. Do you expect others to get more significant beyond the two that have been the major drivers of your direct-to-cloud revenue? And then I've got a quick follow-up I'll come back with.

Gary Smith (CEO)

I would say, obviously, that you know there are four large network-deployed cloud players that you know that we're all aware of. I think we are employed with all four, and you're going to get ebbs and flows between each of them, you know, as you go through that. I think it's fair to say we're expanding our relationship with all four of those, both in terms of new applications.

You saw all the pluggable announcements in the last couple of quarters, and that's a market really in this you know shorter connectivity, DCI connector, where we really don't have a lot of market share. So that's all incremental market share for us. So you've seen an expansion of that in addition to submarine, in addition to the MOFN stuff that I talked about around the world with service providers.

So you can see our relationship with those four are getting deeper, and they're broadening out, and that's before we have the opportunity inside the data center as well. Now, in addition to that, and we did announce, you know, a pluggable win with a new cloud provider that is not in those four. So you are seeing, you know, other cloud providers, not in the big four, come through globally, and we're engaged with most of those as well. So, you know, the overall opportunity in market is getting bigger, and we're increasing our market share in that space because of the multiple applications that we've got, and that's before we start to deliver WaveLogic 6.

Simon Leopold (Managing Director and Senior Equity Analyst)

Thanks. And then just as a follow-up, and maybe this is for Scott, is that the ZR market is thought of as a revenue headwind, but I presume ZR pluses would be somewhat different because that's a product or a technology that's not necessarily a standard and provides much better performance than the ZRs. Can you talk about how ZR plus affects your assumptions in the market overall? Thank you.

Scott McFeely (SVP)

Yes, just a couple points on that. Back on your last comment, just a reminder that the four big ones that Gary talked about, all four of those are in our top 10 customer base, so there's distribution there. And then there's the next tier. The next tier, you know, includes logos that you would recognize, as well as, let's just say, non-North American cloud providers that are moving outside their national territory, if you like, and looking for, you know, Western suppliers to provide that as well. We get, you know, good business to begin with through open opportunities on them, and as they get bigger, they start to build their infrastructure. And the reference that we had on our 400G ZR win this quarter was one of those logos.

So we start to see them sort of growing up, if you like, and becoming a bigger part of the industry, and we're, you know, benefiting from that. To your question on, you know, the dynamics of 400ZR and evolution to 800ZR and ZR+. I guess I just would, from our perspective, sort of have a different view of the 400ZR being a headwind, because if you look at where we actually participate, even though we have a massive market share position with the web scalers on all things transport, we don't really participate with them today on their campus metro DCI.

So for us, we look at that as a net opportunity and a tailwind, whether it be at, you know, current generation 400 gig ZR with our WaveLogic 5 Nano or next generation. And then, you're right, as we move to next generation, what's happening is, because of the power, you know, constraints and this sheer demand for compute, these data centers are getting pushed farther and farther apart. Geographical distribution is happening. Performance starts to matter again. So we're not designing to least common denominators of a 400 gig ZR. Performance matters, and, you know, I think that moves to our strengths as a technology provider.

Simon Leopold (Managing Director and Senior Equity Analyst)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Our next question comes from Samik Chatterjee in J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.

Samik Chatterjee (Executive Director)

Hi, thanks for taking my question. You're sounding a lot more positive in terms of the opportunity with telecom service providers, with bandwidth growth, as well as AI that you talked about. However, I mean, another way that investors, I think, are also looking at it is when we look at your telco revenue, like from 2019 every year, 2019, 2020, till, like, even 2024 around where you're at, it's been largely sort of in this $2.1-$2.2 billion range, pretty consistently. When we think about sort of pluggables, et cetera, it seems like the telcos have found a way to sort of drive the overall spend that they do, despite the increase in bandwidth, to a sort of very consistent level.

When you think about the drivers that you called out, how do you think about sort of breaking out of that sort of range in terms of what the telcos have spent? Are the telcos really willing to spend, or are they going to look at other ways, including, like, pluggables, to keep that spend to that sort of similar level? That's largely, I would say, the concern in terms of even as we sort of think about these broader sort of bandwidth acceleration trends, because telcos haven't really shown their appetite to spend more over time. Can you just share your thoughts on that, please, and I have a follow-up?

James Moylan (CFO)

Well, let me start to answer that, Samik, and I, I think there are a lot of different dimensions to this question. But the first thing I would say is that we've gone through a very unusual period in the industry, starting in 2020 with COVID, then followed by the supply chain dynamics and the, you know, the swinging of the pendulum back and forth. And so my own view is that the recent trends and the recent actual spends on the part of service providers are not reflective of a long-term trend. The other thing that's happened during this period is that service providers have spent a large amount of money on building out their 5G networks. So all of that is wireless gear in which we don't participate.

It's our view that, it's not gonna be a highly, or rapidly growing business, but we do think that over time, service providers will start to spend again, particularly on optical. Every indication that we see is that demand on their networks is growing, at least on their wired networks, and they're gonna have to spend to, build that out. In the near term, as we said, on the MOFN side, they're getting that opportunity from the, GCNs. And, you know, we've said in the past, this is in areas where the GCNs actually are, regulated to, prevented from owning fiber and owning the networks. But even in places where they can own their own networks, they want to get enough gear out there more quickly than they can do themselves.

And so they're entering into MOFN arrangements with service providers in the U.S. and other parts of the world. So we don't think that the near-term actuals reflect long-term trends. We think the service providers are gonna be just fine.

Gary Smith (CEO)

The other thing I would sort of add to that is, you know, you've got traffic growth, and you've got, as James said, MOFN Cloud driving that. We're also winning share. You know, we have leading technology in this space, leading relationships, and we're winning share in there. We're also TAM expansion, you know, some of our TAM expansions in terms of, you know, convergence of metro routing, et cetera, means that we're, you know, we're going to take share in those new emerging markets as well. So service providers is a challenging market, for sure, but we believe it will grow in our space, and they will absolutely need to spend and grow their wireline networks, as James said, for all the drivers that we know of, and that's before sort of AI really starts to...

They're gonna be responsible for delivering a lot of the broadband AI. And, you know, we're quite bullish on that broadband space. We think that, you know, we are going to get to a more normalized state with service providers as we get through to next year from an inventory balance point of view, and we are incredibly well positioned to take advantage of that, in addition to our confidence in the cloud relationships.

Samik Chatterjee (Executive Director)

Got it. And if I can just do a quick follow-up. James, you mentioned in your remarks that you're expecting orders in Q3 to be slightly above revenue, potentially. Is that really what's embedded in the Q4 guide? Because my math would indicate that you're sort of implying a 50% increase in the orders from Q2 to then sort of drive to that order level in Q3. Am I getting it in the ballpark in terms of what's embedded in the revenue recovery in Q4?

James Moylan (CFO)

You're in the ballpark. We do expect a meaningful increase in orders in Q3, based on everything we see now. And if things fall right, we could approach what we expect to deliver for revenue in the quarter. Whether we get there or not, we're gonna be close to what we deliver in revenue in Q3. And that order pattern is what drives a lot of our confidence for Q4.

Scott McFeely (SVP)

We're also—I'd also point out, we're carrying a big backlog, too, still.

Samik Chatterjee (Executive Director)

Thanks, Sumia.

Operator (participant)

Our next question comes from Ryan Koontz with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Ryan Koontz (Analyst)

Great. Hi, thanks for the question. Just circling back to some previous commentary around the 800ZR impacts. Can you specify when you think the timing of that impacts the cloud business, and which segments of cloud you expect 800ZR to impact in terms of, DCI, you know, metro, long haul, subsea? Thanks.

Scott McFeely (SVP)

Yeah, commercial availability of our product, Ryan, is gonna be late in the calendar year, this year. We wouldn't expect it to be, you know, a revenue impact for us until 2025. Certification cycles, and obviously, there needs to be host platforms and whatnot that these pluggables will go into.

James Moylan (CFO)

Yeah, the other thing that-

Ryan Koontz (Analyst)

Later in the year? Sorry.

James Moylan (CFO)

Sorry, Ryan.

Scott McFeely (SVP)

Yeah, you know, I think it'll take a couple of quarters beyond availability before it start to see, you know, any meaningful revenue.

James Moylan (CFO)

And just to be clear, Ryan, we, we still believe that the ultra long haul, submarine long haul market is gonna be a systems business, not a pluggable business. And we think the WaveLogic 6e is the one that's gonna drive that, and we'll be ahead of the market on that by a good long time.

Ryan Koontz (Analyst)

Yeah. That's great to hear. And just shifting gears real quick on the broadband side. Sounds like some decent momentum there. Can you maybe, kind of outline the different segments where you're seeing success in terms of cable and Tier 2s, and what your differentiation is, what the competitive environment is like there? Appreciate it. Thank you.

Scott McFeely (SVP)

Yeah, Ryan, and just to remind folks on the call that, you know, our play here was, is to intercept broadband PON at, you know, next-generation PON, 10 gig and above. You know, we've got a vertically integrated solution on the OLT side with our Tibit acquisition. It's a modular solution that brings with it benefits of cost and footprint. And, it's an open solution, unlike sort of past technology. So that's the value proposition. Resonating, I think we've got approaching 60 customers globally on that. It's across all the segments that you mentioned.

So, you know, tier one service providers, MSOs, large regional broadband providers, both, you know, U.S.-based and internationally, and a number of tier two, tier three broadband suppliers. The majority of those I'm mentioning are actually, you know, whole systems, but to remind folks, we also sell the Tibit technology as an individual component in the marketplace through other OEMs as well.

Ryan Koontz (Analyst)

Perfect. Thanks a lot, Scott.

Gregg Lampf (VP of Investor Relations)

Thank you, Ryan. Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. We look forward to catching up with everyone later today and over the next days and weeks. Have a good day.

Operator (participant)

Ladies and gentlemen, the conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.