The Descartes Systems Group - Earnings Call - Q3 2026
December 3, 2025
Transcript
Moderator (participant)
Thanks, and good evening, everyone. Joining me in person on the call today are Ed Ryan, CEO, Allan Brett, CFO, and Ed Gardner, EVP, Corporate Development. I trust that everyone has received a copy of our financial results press release that was issued earlier today. Portions of today's call, other than historical performance, include statements of forward-looking information within the meaning of applicable securities laws. These statements are made under the safe harbor provisions of those laws.
These forward-looking statements include statements related to our assessment of the future and current impact of geopolitical trade, tariff, and economic uncertainty on our business and financial condition, Descartes' operating performance, financial results and condition, cash flow and use of cash, business outlook, baseline revenues, baseline operating expenses, and baseline calibration, anticipated and potential revenue losses and gains, anticipated recognition of revenues and incurrence of expenses, potential acquisitions and acquisition strategy, cost reduction and integration initiatives, timing of management changes, the approval and potential share purchase under a Normal Course Issuer Bid, and other matters that may constitute forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions, and other factors that may cause the actual results, performance, or achievements of Descartes to differ materially from the anticipated results, performance, or achievements implied by such forward-looking statements.
These factors are outlined in the press release and in the section entitled "Certain Factors That May Affect Future Results" in documents filed and furnished with the SEC, the OSC, and other securities commissions across Canada, including our management's discussion and analysis filed today. We provide forward-looking statements solely for the purpose of providing information about management's current expectations and plans relating to the future. Use caution that such information may not be appropriate for other purposes. We don't undertake or accept any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements to reflect any change in our expectations or any change in events, conditions, assumptions, or circumstances on which any such statement is based, except as required by law. And with that, let me turn the call over to Ed Ryan.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Thanks, Scott, and welcome everyone to the call. Today we're reporting record-strong quarterly revenues and Adjusted EBITDA. We're now ahead of our year-to-date plans and focused on a strong end of the year. We're excited to go over these results with you and describe how we're well-positioned to help our customers in an environment where they're making many tariff and artificial intelligence investment decisions. But first, let me give you a roadmap for this call. I'll start by hitting some highlights of last quarter, some aspects of how our business performed, and how we're positioned to help customers. I'll then hand it over to Allan, who will go over the Q3 financial results in more detail. After that, I'll come back and provide an update on how we see the current business environment and how our business was calibrated for Q3.
We'll then open it up to the operator to coordinate the Q&A portion of the call. Let's start with the third quarter that ended October 31st. Key metrics we monitor include revenue, profits, cash flow from operations, operating margins, and returns on our investments. For this past quarter, we again had strong record performance in each of those areas. Total revenues were at a record high of $187.7 million, up 11% from a year ago. Record high services revenues were up 16% from a year ago with our continued focus on generating recurring revenues. Record net income was up 20% from a year ago. Record income from operations was up 24% from a year ago. Record Adjusted EBITDA was up 19% from a year ago. Our Adjusted EBITDA margin was up three points from a year ago to 46%.
We generated a record high of $73 million in cash from our operations, up 22% from a year ago, so strong record results across all of these key metrics. At the end of the quarter, we had $279 million in cash, and we were debt-free with an undrawn $350 million line of credit. That included us using $37 million of our cash in Q3 to acquire Finale Inventory, an acquisition that we discussed on our September financial results call. We remained well-capitalized, cash-generating, growing, and ready to continue to invest in our business. Our principal growth drivers in Q3 were largely the same as I've described in detail in past quarters. They are as follows. First, Global Trade Intelligence. It remains a chaotic tariff and trade environment for our customers. In the last 90 days, our customers have seen these significant changes.
One, a truce on tariffs between China and the U.S., extending the tariff status quo while negotiations continue. Two, tariff expansions on metals, copper, timber, and furniture. Three, tariff relief for foodstuffs. Four, new reciprocal trade agreements between the U.S. and countries like Argentina, Switzerland, and Malaysia. And five, the implementation and temporary pause in enforcement of BIS 50, a regulation that expanded the number of denied parties that the U.S. entities needed to screen against. We continue to be a provider of choice for our customers for tariff data, sanctioned party assistance, and research on trade flows. We help our customers keep their business flowing and help them plan for tomorrow. When things are changing rapidly, they rely on us for timely and accurate updates. In Q3, the changing trade environment provided strong demand for our solutions. Second is foreign trade zones.
The uncertain trade and tariff environment has many of our customers needing more of our help to find the most efficient way to import goods. One mechanism that's being investigated by more of our customers than ever before is foreign trade zones, or FTZs. These are designated spaces for U.S. companies to import goods on a tariff and duty-deferred basis, only triggering payment when the goods are removed from the FTZ for shipment into free circulation. There's a detailed regulatory regime to manage these FTZs, including keeping track of everything flowing in and out of the FTZ and regular government reporting. However, with heightened and uncertain tariffs, it has become an effective way for our customers to manage their imports and cash flow. We've seen higher demand for our FTZ solutions than in previous years, and that was a good driver again this quarter. The third is e-commerce customs clearance.
Earlier in the year, the U.S. eliminated the de minimis exemption, which allowed foreign companies to ship goods duty-free to U.S. customers where the value of the goods was less than $800. With that exemption gone, foreign e-commerce sellers needed to adapt to a new regulatory structure with new filings and submissions of tariffs. To do this, these sellers and their brokers need solutions that can handle large volumes and velocities of shipments that interact with U.S. customs and get goods cleared quickly to prevent delivery delays. We have market-leading solutions to help these high-velocity importers, and it was a strong driver of growth in the quarter. The fourth is real-time shipment visibility. Shippers and brokers want real-time visibility into the location of shipments in transit. Shipment tracking is an expected part of the consumer experience, so this is critical information for customers.
In the business-to-business environment, shipment tracking allows for better planning on preparing delivery resources, whether they be loading dock doors or human resources unloading trucks. Getting accurate location information isn't always simple, particularly in the truck market, as many smaller independent truckers may not have the technology to provide automated location information. However, our MacroPoint solutions are the best at getting tracking information, leveraging carefully designed mobile applications and artificial intelligence agents. This market-leading tracking rate led to continued strong network performance by MacroPoint in the quarter, so similar revenue drivers to previous quarters have contributed to our record revenue performance this quarter. When combined with the cost rationalization effort we undertook earlier this year, we also had record operating performance. The next thing I want to talk about is artificial intelligence because it's becoming a bigger and bigger part of our business.
I mentioned artificial intelligence helped our MacroPoint business, but I wanted to take a bit more or talk a bit more about how AI impacts Descartes overall. First, let me give some context for when you're thinking about Descartes and AI. Descartes is a network business with a huge network infrastructure. We run the Global Logistics Network. We're built by connecting huge numbers of shippers, carriers, governments, and logistics intermediaries together. We are not an enterprise software business. Logistics and supply chain problems are not enterprise problems. They are inter-enterprise problems and challenges. To solve them, you need data from multiple external sources, and that's what we do. We transmit and house massive amounts of data. We help our customers source trusted, clean, formatted, and real-time data because that's what's most valuable to them.
So the questions I've been getting from shareholders, analysts, and others is, what's the impact of artificial intelligence on Descartes' business? The answer is that the impact is overwhelmingly positive. I'll talk about this in detail, but in summary, AI increases demand for our data and decision-making tools. Our customers want massive amounts of clean, formatted, real-time data to help them make decisions on our own network or to power their own AI investments. Data is the fuel for AI solutions. That data needs to be from a trusted source. Everyone knows poor data can lead to poor decision-making and execution. AI allows us to offer new solutions and services leveraging our network infrastructure and data, and AI allows us to run our network and business more efficiently. Now, let me go into a bit more detail. The first, GLM data powers AI.
AI tools massively speed up the pace of automation for our customers. With AI agents or Agentic AI, we expect that most of our customers will eventually be running some form of AI tools to automate processes within their business. These AI tools are powered by data. Businesses that will be the most successful with AI are the ones that can train their tools with enormous amounts of current and clean data. In the supply chain and logistics world, that means that our customers' AI strategies and successes rely on getting more clean data from their trading partners. Our customers need information about things like the location, schedule, and amounts of resources not in their control, including inventory, vehicles, vessels, and people. This is why AI makes Descartes' Global Logistics Network even more important for the customers.
The global logistics network helps our customers get massive amounts of real-time data from an enormous number of global trading partners, delivered in a clean manner that can power AI tools. The scale, reach, and global nature of Descartes' network has never been more important to our customers. Descartes is a network business. We get paid as we help customers get and process more data. We believe that AI is a huge potential tailwind in demand for our global logistics network. The second is that the GLM data includes the collective intelligence of the network. We expect that our customers will use AI to answer questions about how to best run their own businesses, and the power of AI may mean that they'll be able to answer questions that they haven't even thought of asking yet.
But some of those questions will be best answered using the collective intelligence of data available on the global logistics network. Think of it as the difference between predicting the traffic patterns on a particular road using only vehicles in your own fleet compared to being able to get a better answer for traffic patterns using the vehicles of every participant on the global logistics network. Or the difference between responding to a shipment delay by limiting yourself to one airline you've worked with versus every possible alternative with an air carrier available over the global logistics network. Collective intelligence available over a massively scaled network matters when you're solving inter-enterprise solutions, and that collective intelligence is another data source that powers AI for our customers. The third area is the GLM fuels AI with real-time information.
Further, the most successful businesses will power their AI with current information so that the answers they get aren't stale. For that, our customers really need real-time and constantly updated information from a trusted source dedicated to data, and that's what the Global Logistics Network provides. We're processing shipment moves and getting location information in real time. We're quickly updating compliance rules, sanctioned parties, tariff rates, trade agreements and regulations, shipping rates and schedules. We live, eat, and breathe supply chain and logistics at scale, and we believe that's even more powerful business in the AI world. So we believe that just the fact that our customers want to use AI increases demand for the Global Logistics Network, but AI also allows us to make meaningful changes in the services and value we deliver to customers, and also in how we make our own operations more efficient and effective.
Next area is AI enables new GLM services for our customers. We recently ran an internal employee AI Descartes hackathon with exactly that goal in mind. What are our employees' ideas for using AI to deliver more value to customers or making our business more efficient? We had overwhelming employee interest and participation with more than 50 new suggestions for projects, and this is in addition to the projects we've already completed or have underway. Generally, we leverage AI for customers in two ways. One, by delivering new automated services that were too expensive or challenging when they were manual, and two, by allowing our customers to leverage the large amounts of data on the GLM to get better or faster answers that can help them manage their business. An example of new automated services includes using agentic AI with our MacroPoint business.
MacroPoint helps our broker and shipper customers get location information on in-transit shipments. Oftentimes, we can get this information from direct data feeds to vehicle telematics or trucking company transportation management systems. However, there's still a substantial number of small and/or independent truckers that don't have those technological capabilities. Having a staff of hundreds of people to call these trucks and ask them where they are just isn't economically feasible for our customers. However, with Agentic AI, we can work with them to download and use our mobile app or automate inquiries to truckers and get more tracking information for our customers much more efficiently. In just a few short months, we've had more than 300,000 outreaches using our AI agents, resulting in more than 180,000 drivers joining the MacroPoint network. The result is happy customers, more billable tracked loads for our customers.
So it's a great example of an enhanced service that just wasn't feasible before AI automation came to the table. Some other things that we're already got underway for our customers: natural language searches of our GLM data mine, U.S. import information, and faster results to get competitive intelligence. Automated logic into nine-party screening to deal with challenging match scenarios on parties with ambiguous names and addresses. This allows customers to process large shipment volumes more quickly. Free trade eligibility assessments using AI recommendations based on past practices, helping our customers reduce their tariff bill. Automated tariff classification suggestions for goods, using AI agents to interpret lengthy carrier rate agreements and present optimal selection recommendations. And finally, leveraging actual historical delivery service times for particular businesses to allow for better planning decisions. AI also allows us to run our own network more efficiently.
AI allows us to make our own internal operations more efficient by automating tasks, minimizing human error, and enabling oversight and analysis that wasn't previously possible. For us, AI can help us with these areas such as enhanced network security as we deploy tools to monitor, target, and even counterattack malicious activity, more intense network performance monitoring to minimize service disruptions, code development by providing engineers with a running start with suggested code and development or maintenance of services. This is something we're already seeing great benefit in, and finally, automated and self-serve customer service leveraging the enormous amounts of product documentation that we produce, so AI is a great opportunity for Descartes and for our global logistics network. We believe it will spur further demand for our trusted, real-time, clean, formatted GLM data and the collective intelligence of the network.
It's already allowing us to deliver additional value to our customers with enhanced services, and it's helping make our business more efficient. We believe that the inter-enterprise scaled network infrastructure of our business puts us in a much better position to benefit from AI than legacy or emerging point or enterprise technology solutions. To sum up before I hand it over to Allan, Q3 was a very strong quarter for us. Trade and tariff uncertainty fueled demand for many of our services. We saw AI have a meaningful impact on our service delivery to customers, and we completed an acquisition in our e-commerce pillar that's already contributing. An excellent job all around by our Descartes team. I'd like to touch on one other item outlined in our press release today, and that is that we're planning on a CFO transition after the end of this fiscal year.
Allan has decided that after more than 30 years as a public company CFO, including 12 at Descartes, he wants to take steps towards retirement. So Allan will be handing things over to Ed Gardner in March 2026, consistent with our established CFO succession plan. Allan is going to stick around in the business as an advisor to help us with the CFO transition and also more generally to keep helping our business grow. It continues to be a great privilege to work with Allan. He cares for the business a ton, which I think is reflected in his desire to stay involved with the business going forward. We're also thrilled to have Ed Gardner ready to assume the CFO role, someone that I've worked with for more than 20 years and that Allan has worked with over his entire 12-year stint at Descartes.
Ed has a ton of financial experience with our business and the many acquisitions that we brought on board and will likely already be a familiar face to many shareholders and analysts. With Allan and Ed's long working relationship together, we expect a seamless transition in March. So those are our plans for the future, but we still have Allan in the saddle until March. So now I'll turn the call over to him to go through our Q3 financial results in more detail. Allan?
Allan Brett (CFO)
Hey, thanks very much, Ed. Appreciate those words. So as indicated, I'm going to take you through our financial highlights for our third quarter, which ended on October 31st. We're pleased to report record quarterly revenue of $187.7 million this quarter, an increase of 11% from revenue of $168.8 million in Q3 last year.
While revenue from acquisitions completed in the past 12 months, including the acquisitions of 3G TMS and Finale Inventory completed earlier this year, contributed nicely to this growth, our growth in services revenue from new and existing customers from our existing solutions was also a very significant driver of growth this quarter when compared to the same period last year. Looking at our revenue details further, our revenue mix in the quarter continued to be very strong, with services revenue increasing 16% to $173.7 million compared to $149.7 million in the same period last year, representing approximately 93% of total revenues in the third quarter this year. Based on these results, we estimate that organic services growth on an FX neutral basis came in right around 7% in Q3, after averaging closer to 4% in each of Q1 and Q2 this year.
While we saw some reasonable strength in our transaction volumes in Q3, the majority of the growth in services revenue this quarter continued to come from strong results in the Global Trade Intelligence pillar, as well as in strength in our e-commerce fulfillment and customs filing business and our Transportation Management solutions, including MacroPoint trade visibility solution, again this quarter. As expected, partially offsetting the strong growth in services revenue, license revenue came in at $1.7 million or 1% of revenue in the quarter, down from license revenue of $3.5 million recorded last year in Q3. While professional services and other revenue came in at $12.1 million or 6% of revenue, down from $15.6 million in the third quarter last year.
That's mainly a result of the inclusion of approximately $3.7 million of low-margin hardware sales from our GroundCloud business in our Q3 results in last year's comparable period. As indicated, these lower license and hardware sales were expected, and we continue to focus on driving growth in services revenue across our business. For the first nine months of this year, revenue came in at $536 million, an increase of 11% from revenue of $484 million in the same period last year. Again, with revenue from acquisitions completed this year, as well as organic growth in our existing solutions, both driving this revenue growth. Again, services revenue drove this growth year-to-date, growing approximately 15% over the same nine-month period year-to-date last year.
Gross margin came in at 77% of revenue in the third quarter, up from gross margin of 74% of the third quarter last year, again driven by the low-margin hardware sales we recorded in last year's results. Excluding these hardware sales, gross margin would have improved slightly over the same quarter last year as a result of the continued leverage we experienced with revenue growth from new and existing customers. Operating expenses increased by approximately 11% in the third quarter over the same period last year, and this was heavily related to the costs coming from the acquisitions completed in the past 12 months, offset partially by the cost benefit of the restructuring plan that we put in place during Q2 of this year.
So as a result of continued cost control and the operating leverage we get from both acquisitive and organic revenue growth, we recorded Adjusted EBITDA growth of 19% to a record $85.5 million or 45.6% of revenue, up from $72.1 million or 42.7% of revenue in the third quarter last year. For the first three quarters of the year, Adjusted EBITDA has increased by 15% to $241 million from $210 million in the same period last year, with Adjusted EBITDA ratios increasing to 44.9% from 43.4%. If we look at our GAAP financials, net income came in at $43.9 million or $0.50 per diluted common share in the third quarter, up nicely from net income of $36.6 million or $0.42 per diluted common share in the third quarter last year.
We should also note that the income tax expense for the third quarter came in at $14.5 million or 24.8% of pre-tax income, which is slightly lower than our blended statutory tax rate of 26.5%, mainly as a result of recognizing some previously unrecorded R&D tax benefits from previous periods. Net income for the nine-month year-to-date period was $118 million or $1.35 per diluted common share, compared to $106 million or $1.21 per diluted common share in the last year in the nine months, again as a result of higher operating profits from our growing business. With these operating results and strong AR collection offset partially by higher cash tax payments in the quarter, cash flow generated from operations came in at $73.4 million or 86% of adjusted EBITDA in the third quarter, up from $60.1 million or 83% of adjusted EBITDA in the third quarter last year.
For the nine months year to date, our operating cash flow has increased 20% to approximately $190 million or 79% of adjusted EBITDA, up from $159 million of adjusted EBITDA in the same nine-month period last year. In these nine-month periods, cash flow from operating activities was impacted by the following. First, in this year, cash flow was negatively impacted by approximately 10% of gross revenue. In the comparable period last year, cash flow was negatively impacted by the payment of $25 million in contingent consideration from previous acquisitions, which was not a critical part of the acquisitions. So we set some background on the actual operational plan, which is solution and exposure at some corporate operations to targeting based on GAAP compliance and generally set cash flow from operations in 80%-90% of our adjusted EBITDA typical.
So all we actually did was comment on the operating results and the challenge in acquisitions and the transference of revenue versus business. Strong revenue and Adjusted EBITDA from operations in that quarter. We did not intend to publish the. Our GAAP cash flow was more than the book growth of approximately $13 million at the end of that quarter. That included some cash operation. This was actually offset by the use of approximately $13 million cash. This was at the initial data at the beginning of the quarter. As a result, we have $27 million cash which was required to be used for $350 million dollar credits, available to deploy towards deeper acquisitions for our first few consistent credits. To close the final quarter, our business. 2026, so the three months ended January 31st of the fall.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
After incurring approximately $4.3 million in capital additions in the first nine months of the year, we had to incur approximately $1 million-$2 million additional small CapEx in the fourth quarter of this year. We had to use approximately $500,000 of our cash balance in the fourth quarter to complete the year-to-date. The amortization expense will be approximately $21 million for the fourth quarter, with this figure being subject to adjustment for foreign exchange rates and future acquisitions. Our income tax rate for the first nine months of the year came in at approximately 24.1% of pre-tax income, which is just below our blended statutory tax rate of 26.5%.
For the fourth quarter, we currently expect our tax rate will come in fairly close to our blended statutory tax rate, and as a result, we should experience a tax rate in the range of 24%-28% of pre-tax income in Q4. However, as always, we should state that our tax rate may fluctuate quarter by quarter from one-time tax items that may arise as we operate internationally across multiple countries. And finally, after incurring stock-based compensation expense of $14.8 million in the first nine months of the year, we currently expect stock compensation to be approximately $6 million in the fourth quarter, subject to any forfeitures of stock options or share units. So that's it for the financial update. As Ed mentioned, we have a well-planned CFO transition in the works, and I'm excited to be able to work with Ed Gardner on this. Hey, thanks, Allan.
These continue to be challenging business conditions for our customers. From a tariff and trade perspective, I outlined earlier some of the things that have happened over the past 90 days. Looking forward, the U.S. Supreme Court is considering the legality of many tariffs with no identified timeline for resolution. Customers are also adjusting to new commodity-specific tariffs, and given the speed with which they were implemented, remain uncertain about additional tariff changes they may see in Q4, and there remain ongoing geopolitical tensions impacting trade, whether it's tensions in the Middle East impacting trade lanes, the ongoing war in Ukraine impacting it and its resulting trade sanctions, or the potential new. Again, understanding how consumers will behave in this economic environment, and the early returns seem positive. This buying reaction will have a big impact on general economic activity and shipping related to inventory replenishment in 2026.
For Descartes, we've grown during challenging business conditions in the past. Our plan is to continue to do so now. Some of the things that we believe continue to put us in a good position to do that include we're particularly strong in global trade intelligence. We believe we can provide a ton of help to our customers in an environment where people are looking for information or help managing tariffs, continually updating sanctioned party lists, thirsting for competitive intelligence, dealing with increased export licensing complexity, and implementing new duty-deferred foreign trade zones. We're diversified globally. We've got domestic transportation solutions that can be used around the world, and where there's shifting international trade relations, we have an established global logistics network that can be leveraged by our customers.
Our network model and processing of large amounts of clean, formatted real-time data put us in a great position to capitalize on AI opportunities. We have a total growth model. We have an extensive track record of acquisition activities to complement organic growth. Changing market conditions often provide us with even more opportunities to add solutions for our customers and grow by acquisition. Finally, we're a well-capitalized cash-generating business. At Q3 quarter end, we had $279 million in cash and $350 million in undrawn line of credit. In our quarterly report, we provided a comprehensive description of baseline revenues, baseline calibration, and their limitations.
As of November 1st, 2025, using foreign exchange rates of 71 cents to the Canadian dollar, 115 to the euro, and 132 to the Great Britain pound, and including the estimated contribution from the acquisition of Finale Inventory, we estimate that our baseline revenues for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2026 were approximately $161 million, and our baseline operating expenses were approximately $98.5 million. We consider this to be our baseline adjusted EBITDA calibration of approximately $62.5 million for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2026, or approximately 39% of our baseline revenues as at November 1st, 2025. We're currently operating above our expected adjusted EBITDA operating margin range of 40%-45%. Our margin can vary in any period given such things as revenue mix, foreign exchange movements, and the impact of acquisitions as we integrate them into our business.
For now, we're keeping our target range at 40%-45%. However, we'll monitor how we're performing over the coming quarters to consider whether any upward adjustment is appropriate. We've noticed that there's been uncertainty in public market conditions that have contributed to lower than historical valuation multiples for many logistics and supply chain technology companies, including Descartes. Considering how Descartes is currently performing, we remain optimistic about our ability to achieve our long-term financial plans. However, it's uncertain how public markets will trade for the foreseeable future, given everything going on in the world. With that uncertainty, we believe it's prudent and in Descartes' interest to apply to start a normal course issuer bid to have the option to purchase Descartes shares in the open market over the next 12 months, if and when we think it makes sense.
Having the normal course issuer bid mechanism available to us will allow us to react quickly and appropriately to differing public market conditions. These remain uncertain times for our customers. It's a challenge for them to know what they can rely on in this global trade environment. Our goal is to continue to show our customers and other stakeholders that the one thing they can rely on is Descartes. Thank you to everyone for joining us on the call today. As always, we're available to talk to you about our business in whatever manner is most convenient for you. With that, Operator, I'll now turn it over to you for the Q&A portion of the call.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press the star followed by the one on your touchtone phone.
Should you wish to cancel your request, please press the star followed by the two. If you're using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any keys. Once again, that is star one. Should you wish to ask a question? Your first question is from Chris Quintero from Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open.
Chris Quintero (VP and Equity Research Analyst)
Hey, Ed. Hey, Allan. Allan, and congrats on a fantastic run here, and best of luck in your next part here of your life journey. I want to double-click on the organic growth rate, specifically around the transaction volumes. Allan, you said reasonable strength. So what did you exactly see there? Was there an improvement in the volumes, or was it kind of largely stabilization? How would you describe the volume component here?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
A lot of the volume we picked up was from our competitors. If you look at the trade stats, Ocean and Truck were fairly flat, but we were able to grow in those areas because we had solutions that were more attractive to customers than some of the one-hit-wonder competitors that we've had in the past, and that enabled us to pick up in areas like the Type 86 filings. We picked up quite a bit of business in the BIS 50 area where new government regulation came in, and we were able to take our position in the market and go in and get a lot of new customers with bigger contracts that committed to us for a long period of time, like we have in past customs filing initiatives.
Things like that added up to, even in the face of transportation statistics, that we probably would like them to be better, but we were able to grow substantially because of our position in the market. And a bunch of the AI things that I mentioned on the call are already helping. I don't think I said it in the prepared comments, but MacroPoint was at 87%, which is the highest truck rate in the industry by 20 points. But still, the customers want to track all their shipments. And we're now using AI to get that number up. It's now 90%. And just in a couple of months, that shift occurred. And that's not only more money for us, it's happier customers. And they're paying us more money, but they want to track all their shipments.
That put us in a situation where our customers are happy, we're making more money, and we're beating our competitors handily because they haven't moved to market with these kinds of solutions as fast as we have.
Chris Quintero (VP and Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Okay. Establish kind of industry volume trends, but you all just really took some market share here in the quarter. I would love to follow up on the AI commentary you gave, Ed. Totally makes sense from the MacroPoint perspective, improving that tracking percentage rates. How do you think about the monetization angle of it? Are you charging higher prices? Is there a separate SKU to get some of this agentic capability? How do you think about that more broadly?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
It's probably a bunch of different ways, but some of the more pertinent ones, and we said we had that challenge with the employees that identified new things.
It's doing more for our customers with the data that we already have. So I'll give you an example. Take a shipment's delayed, and we know when it's supposed to be there, and we see something happen with a plane or a truck or a ship that goes, "Hey, there's going to be a problem with this shipment." We could identify that that's going to be a problem. We can figure out what to do about it and execute it for them. And I can imagine a world in a couple of years where I'm charging a customer to do all of that, but that work used to take them hours and hours internally, and they wouldn't even come up with a very good solution for it.
I could see a world in a couple of years where we may be telling a customer, "Hey, that shipment you have, it's going to be eight hours late." And they go, "Oh, why? Why is it going to be late?" And we go, "Because it was going to be late five days, and we figured out the problem, and we booked you going somewhere else. And as a result, you're only going to be delayed a few hours." And to our customers, that's great news. It would cost them hundreds of dollars to deal with that and have an angry customer.
In the world I just described, we identified the problem faster than they ever would have done it themselves, came up with the best solution we could possibly come up with under the circumstances, and rebooked them, which they'll pay for, and got them in a situation where they got bad news, and it didn't work out that badly because we used AI tools and the data on our network to come up with a better solution for their customer.
Chris Quintero (VP and Equity Research Analyst)
Awesome. Thanks so much, guys.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Thank you, Chris.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Your next question is from Dylan Becker from William Blair. Your line is now open.
Dylan Becker (Research Analyst)
Hey, Eddie. Allan, thanks for the question here. And Allan, congrats on the retirement. All the best. It's been a pleasure working together.
Maybe sticking on the theme of AI with you, Ed, to start, I appreciate all the color on kind of the opportunity for value and monetization to come. But maybe if we think about the implications to kind of the moat and platform defensibility of the network here, maybe there's perception, or at least the thought of threat in competition entering the space. It feels like the scale network that you guys have is a massive differentiator, but wondering maybe how you think about the network as a leg up, not only in compounding value, but also maybe the complexity of trying to replicate this or something like this from scratch.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
I mean, I've been in the network business my entire life. And just give you two examples. You can't really compete with us as a network until you have all the connections.
No one's going to switch from my network to yours if you only have half of the connections that I have. They need people that come in and solve the entire problem. And that makes it very hard for someone new to come in and compete from scratch. Same with the data content business. You have to have all the data. You can't just get some of it and then start competing with us. It's not attractive to customers. And what that means is you have to spend a whole lot of time and effort upfront to recreate those businesses. If you even could, and you can get any customers to do it, it's like by the time you start being able to monetize it, you could be five, 10 years in.
I can tell you just on the network side, the data all changes, and the connections all change over that period of time. We had the advantage of starting from the beginning when all of this started and building all of this stuff. There hasn't been a new network entering in 20 years. Data content, same thing, right? As people got to collecting the data content. How do you get all of it? Because that's what you need to start. The reason our data content businesses are so profitable is we don't charge any individual customer too much money. We have collected all the data over time, and now we just have to update it. That has a certain cost to it. Once you get over that cost, it is a very profitable business because all the new customers are pure profit.
If you wanted to try and start that from scratch, you're losing money for years and years and years to get to the point where you have your head above water. And it just made it unattractive for people to try and get back into it. So I look and go, "Hey, with all the stuff that we do for these people and the amounts that we charge them, it's not that attractive to get into it. You're going to lose a lot of money for a long period of time until you get into it, and it's probably just not worth it to people." And that's why we haven't seen anyone try to do it.
Dylan Becker (Research Analyst)
That makes perfect sense. Thanks, Ed. And maybe switching over to Allan or Ed, if you have thoughts on this as well too.
But on the services, the organic services step up. How should we think about kind of the sustainability of subscription demand, given we continue to highlight multiple moving parts and factors driving sustained complexity here? And then if you do think, and you segment it out on kind of the volume recovery side, more of a market share story at this point, how should we think about kind of the volume normalization continuing to play out over time as maybe we get a sense of normalcy at some point here in the future?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Well, I mean, I'll take it if I don't have anything else to add, and you can jump in. I think our customers, they don't know exactly what's going to happen, and there's a lot of uncertainty out there. I called out a lot of it on the call.
I think when that uncertainty goes away, you're going to see increases in volumes, and assuming the economy is in good shape when that happens. And frankly, we don't know the answer to that question. What we do know is that we've got to run our business to keep making 10%-15% and really trying to beat 15% growth in EBITDA, no matter what happens. It's why you saw us make the moves we did earlier in the year to cut costs. Not that we wanted to cut costs, it's that we thought, "Hey, we make one promise to our shareholders, and that's that we're going to make 15% or attempt to be even better than that every year more than we did the last." And we are laser-focused on that. And there's some things we can't control in the business, some things we can.
The things we can, we want to try and control on the revenue side, and certainly on the cost side, though, we have a lot of control. And it's not that we like making the moves that we didn't. No one likes firing people or cutting costs somewhat substantially, but we said that's what we have to do to run our business properly and to keep people wanting to invest in our business so that we have the money to go out and buy more companies when other companies get themselves in a whole lot more trouble than we do because they're not willing to make those tough decisions, and we are. I think that's what separates us from a lot of the other smaller players in this industry that it's easy to be a high flyer.
It's like what happens when one of the engines blows, and you got to kind of keep running the business until you can get more power.
Dylan Becker (Research Analyst)
Very helpful. Thanks, Ed. And congrats again, Allan.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Thank you.
The next question is from Paul Treiber from RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now open.
Paul Treiber (Director)
Oh, thanks for taking the question. And congrats, Allan, on the retirement. Just the first question, the U.S. Department of Transportation has announced a number of changes to U.S. trucking regulations. How do you see those impacting your domestic trucking business, positively or negatively?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
I don't know that they're going to have a big impact on us. Most of the time, governments come in and put rules in place, and we help customers comply with those rules.
I'm not sure if that's going to happen with these particular rules, but when you have to track your trucks more accurately, when you have to make sure your drivers are legal, when you have to make sure your drivers are not driving overtime and things like that, you need software solutions to track it if you have a big fleet, and guys like us come in and help people deal with that, and oftentimes help them act more efficiently in the process, so buy our software, comply with some government regulations, but we'll also help you run your fleet more efficiently so we can save you money at the same time so that you have the money to kind of pay for this new rule the government put in, so I see comments are going to be. They'll always be coming.
They're always going to have more rules for truckers. And we just want to be there and prepared to help them with the ones that we think we can solve for them and have software that we give them that saves them money in five other places too so that they can continue to afford to pay for some of these things and operate more efficiently, even though the government just told them they had to do something.
Paul Treiber (Director)
And then just a second question. Just on capital allocation, you did mention valuations are down. You're putting in place the NCIB because it sounds like you see opportunistic opportunities. How do you look at the balance between repurchasing shares and capital deployment on acquisitions? Is there a priority for one versus the other? Does it depend on relative valuations of each?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
We see a lot of stuff for sale right now, and we think the winner in this space is going to continue to bring businesses in and make them part of their own business. We think with our network, we're in a very good position to do that. There's lots of businesses that would be better if they operated on top of our network, and I see AI driving a whole lot more business in that way as well. Almost every AI tool I've seen in the logistics and supply chain space looks like a feature to me. I'm sure there was some guy years ago working at WordPerfect and thinking, "Oh, well, I've got the best word processor in the market.
I've got the legal market all tied up." And all of a sudden, Microsoft stuff comes in and goes, "And I have Excel, and I have PowerPoint, and I have your email, and all this stuff." And you go, "They can't compete anymore." And I think we're in that kind of situation with the network that we have. A lot of these businesses are in desperate search of customers, and they will one day be a feature just like Word or WordPerfect is a feature as part of the Microsoft suite of tools. I could see these things getting layered onto our network and being a lot more valuable as a result. And so I think you're always going to see us gravitate in that direction.
At the same time, we recognize that probably because of AI and maybe a couple of other things that are going on in the market, not much to do with us, other than maybe a misunderstanding a little bit of our business. If there's someone out there saying, "Hey, Descartes and Enterprise Software Company," I'm going like, "Not really. We're a network, and we're different than those other guys." And if you're thinking you're going to take all the enterprise software guys down a little bit because AI might harm them, I go, "You shouldn't be putting us in that same category because we have a lot of things that are probably going to take advantage of AI." And we still have to deliver. We still have to make those things happen, as you always do.
But I like our chances, and I like the cards that we have in our hands right now a lot better than I do many other people. And I think that's going to continue to result in more and more acquisitions for us. And as long as we see that, we're going to be trying to buy businesses up. That having been said, when our multiple drops to a level that we think is way lower than it should be and we have some cash on hand, we might see us picking up some stock. Right now, it's out there as a placeholder to make it quicker to do if we wanted to do it. And otherwise, we're going to keep going about our business. And if we believe the market values us properly at some later point, we might not be as focused on it.
But right now, we go, "Hey, it's gotten beat up a lot," and maybe in our mind, unfairly.
Paul Treiber (Director)
All right. Thanks for taking the questions. And congrats again, Allan.
Allan Brett (CFO)
Thanks, Paul.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Your next question is from Kevin Krishnaratne from Scotiabank. Your line is now open.
Kevin Krishnaratne (Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Hey there. Good evening. Thanks for taking my questions. I've just got one. Allan, also, congrats and thanks. It was a pleasure working with you. Hope to continue to do so going forward in your roles. E-commerce, you talked about that being a beneficiary to your organic growth. I know you touched on sort of the transactional piece with the filings and seeing the benefit there. Can you maybe talk about what you're seeing? You've been beefing up that business, Finale Inventory, SellerCloud. You mentioned the holiday season. Things are looking good to start off.
Any kind of color there, maybe the size of this business, the growth, and sort of what you're seeing there with the growing piece of your e-commerce business?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
I think it's like 12% now, Allan. Don't correct me if I'm wrong, but it continues to grow. We continue to pick up good assets there that we think provide solutions to the customers that will benefit them and our network in the long run. Finale is a great add-on to SellerCloud. Finale, if they had a customer that got too big at some point, they used to kind of that customer would graduate from there and leave and go to somebody else. Now, all of a sudden, we have the ability to have them graduate and go to our next solution up, SellerCloud. That's attractive for us.
And maybe shows you how a lot of acquisitions go on the Global Logistics Network. A lot of times, 20 years ago, we were buying stuff and thinking, "I hope it grows, but I'm not going to count on that. I'm going to count on being able to cut costs and manage the business more efficiently than the people we bought it from." Now, with 26,000 customers and growing, we start to look at these things and go, "We can't help but grow these businesses. There's just too many people on our network that would like them." And the example I always use when I'm out talking to shareholders is I buy some company with 500 freight forwarders, and they love it. And I look and go, "Wow, we have 5,000 freight forwarders.
So if I buy this company, the first thing I'm going to do is walk it around to the other 4,500 and say, "Hey, what do you think of this?" Now, they're not all going to buy it initially, but they're all going to take a look if we ask them to. I mean, we've got big relationships with all these people. And when we walk around a new solution to everyone, they have to look at it. And a lot of times, with these smaller companies that were buying, they didn't feel like they had to look at it previously. They looked and went, "Oh, I don't have to meet them," whatever. So all of a sudden, Descartes buys the company, and they kind of have to take a look at it. And sometimes, they take a look at it and buy it. And that's good news for us.
That e-commerce space has been going great. We keep picking up more assets there. And those assets, we've been able to grow them all. So that's exciting for us. And I think it's going to continue to be a good space for us, and you'll see it's continued to expand in over the years.
Kevin Krishnaratne (Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Good to hear. Thanks a lot. I'll pass the line. Thank you.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Thanks, Kevin.
Operator (participant)
Thank you.Your next question is from Stephanie Price from CIBC. Your line is now open.
Stephanie Price (Equity Research Analyst)
Hi there. It's Sam Schmidt on for Stephanie Price. I have a question around the year-to-date adjusted EBITDA growth. It's tracking towards the higher end of that 10%-15% target growth range. How should we think about growth there going forward?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
I think you're going to continue to hear us say 10%-15%. We've beaten 15% many times over the last 20 years.
Unapologetically. I think we were up almost 30% one quarter, if I remember correctly, seven or eight years ago. As our network gets more and more profitable, as our revenue picks up at a higher growth rate, when Scott and I started running the business directly 15 years ago, we were growing like one, two, three percent. And all of a sudden, now we're growing at four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10 percent, depending on what's going on, and I go, "It's a heck of a lot easier to get to 15% EBITDA growth with 7% organic services growth because I can leverage that and get that up, get the EBITDA up to 10 or 11 or 12 percent." And then I add on a couple of acquisitions, and all of a sudden, I'm well over 15. I don't think you're going to hear us say a different number.
We think that's a number that we will always be in a good position to hit. And we think that if we can keep growing that EBITDA every year, our stock price has to kind of follow along. I was explaining that to one of my kids the other day while he was an investment banker and now he's a private equity guy. And I was going, "Look, I don't know what's going to happen to the stock price over time. Companies like ours are valued at different multiples, and we don't have a ton of control of that month to month. But we do make more money every year, and that has to end up showing up in the stock price." And we're pretty confident we can continue to do that. And if we do, it's tough for the stock to not keep going up.
Stephanie Price (Equity Research Analyst)
That's helpful. Thank you.
I'll pass the line.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Thanks, Tim.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Your next question is from John Schouder from TD Cowen. Your line is now open.
John Kernan (Managing Director)
Thanks for taking my question, Allan. Congratulations on your retirement. Good luck with the next chapter. I just want to ask your customer mentality at this point. I understand they're still waiting for some more clarity, but do you think at a certain point they're going to develop some kind of fatigue and, as a result, they're more willing to spend regardless of the environment?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Yeah, we'll see. I hope that's the case. I think as they get more certainty, they will be willing to spend. And we're seeing in the 60% of our business, it's subscription sales. We really haven't seen any slowdown. It popped up significantly in the pandemic, and it's never really stopped. The transaction volumes are ebb and flow.
They zoomed up in the middle of the pandemic and zoomed back down again and got back to kind of a steady pace. And then they've been up and down for the last two years. But I'd call it lackluster transaction performance. But our subscription sales have continued. I think most of the world realized that logistics and supply chain was a lot more important than they thought it was in the middle of that pandemic because the customers were telling them that. And the first place you put your money is into technology because that's where you get the biggest bang for your buck, and that's where the customer notices the most. And so I think that's been great for us. It continues to this day. And we hope when transaction volumes pick up that we're going to benefit from that. I'm pretty sure we will.
In the meantime, we're running our business as best we can to try and keep it in 15% EBITDA growth every year and keeping it a great solution for our customers so that they always want to use us, and they want to sign more contracts with us. And we spend a lot of time doing that, and I think it's going to pay off.
John Kernan (Managing Director)
Got it. I also wanted to go back to the restructuring you did earlier in the year. Can I assume this quarter's OpEx and EBITDA include a full run rate of your cost savings?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Yeah, that's correct, John. Absolutely. The full impact. We had partial impact in Q2, and now the full impact is in Q3.
John Kernan (Managing Director)
Sounds good. Thank you.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Thanks, Tim.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Your next question is from Lachlan Brown from Rothschild & Co. Your line is now open.
Lachlan Brown (VP)
Hi, Ed.
Allan, congrats on an excellent tenure as CFO. Thanks for squeezing me in. I'll keep it to the singular question. In terms of the strong organic delivery in the quarter, you mentioned you're taking share on market volumes. But how should we think about the contribution from other growth drivers like cross-selling, pricing, and new logos? Was there an acceleration of any of those drivers quarter on quarter? Thanks.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
This time, yeah, I mean, as I mentioned earlier, we've been very successful taking stuff away from our competitors. Cross-selling inches up every year. 15 years ago, it was minimal, 20% or something. Now you look at it, and it's 60%-70%, 65%-70%. And we continue to get better at that.
Probably about five questions ago, I explained why as we get a bigger and broader solution set, it's tough for the customers to not consider it and take it seriously, and then the thing I mentioned at the end of the last question is important, right? We spend a lot of time making sure that our customers get what they were promised. I mean, I would joke with people, but it's true. We will lose money to make sure that you got what you wanted, and you know how serious we are about making money, but it's really important to us that our customers get what they were promised. There's only one FedEx in the world. I could say it about any of our big customers, but I don't want them hating us.
I want them to think Descartes would do anything I needed to do to make sure that I was successful in doing it. And you could look and say, "Hey, that's because you charge recurring revenue fees, right? You want to get your money." And there's some truth to that. But maybe more broadly, we want them to think we're a good company to do business with, that we're fair, and that we try our hardest, and that we try to make sure that the customer gets what they want. You've heard us say customers for life a lot of times on these calls. That's what we're talking about. Because I want them, when they have their 32nd contract with us, I want them to be quite happy to sign the 33rd, 34th, and 35th contract with us. It's really important to us.
From 20 years ago where maybe the company wasn't so focused on that kind of stuff, and now it is. I think we know that's the right way to behave. If I'm buying something from someone, if they stick with me and make sure that they're trying their hardest to make sure they get what they want, I'll deal with the problems. I mean, some of these things are complicated. I'll deal with problems as long as I know that they're going to keep trying to make sure that I'm successful. We've gone to great lengths to do that. I think that's a big part of the reason that you see our cross-selling continue to tick up every year because the customers know we care about them.
Lachlan Brown (VP)
Yeah. That's very helpful. Yeah,
Ed Ryan (CEO)
I would just add, Lachlan, that price remains similar to other quarters.
Price is a very small part of that growth in Q3 and similar to past quarters as well. So no big change there. We're using price increases responsibly to offset inflationary costs for us, but it's not the main driver of our growth. Of course.
Lachlan Brown (VP)
Congrats on the strong result. Thanks.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Your next question is from Mark Chappell from Loop Capital]. Your line is now open.
Tim Greaves (Equity Research Associate)
Hi, this is Tim Greaves on for Mark. Thank you for taking my question. I guess my one will be on the TMS replacement cycle. Are you seeing evidence of that accelerating? And where is Descartes winning versus the legacy TMS competitors?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
I don't know that I see it accelerating, but it's a decent market for us right now. We continue to pick up more transportation management solutions.
We have six or seven of them right now, depending on what kind of customer you are. Forwarder, broker, 3PL, big retailer manufacturer, these types of things. And we have a lot of good solutions to solve those problems. We continue to look at other TMSs when they come up or AI features that we think would be a good part of a TMS. And I think we're going to continue to remain in the leadership position there, especially with some of the companies that the mid-sized companies that used to do it get bought up, and they lose their focus, and they lose their people. And we just keep sticking in there and buying more companies that can solve more types of problems for customers. And over time, I think that has helped us win the day.
We have a lot of different solutions that solve a lot of different problems. And people look at us and go, "Those guys are going to be around. They're not going to get bought up by a private equity firm, and everything's going to go to hell in a handbasket." They're a public company that's neutral in the industry. They're a size and scale of.
Moderator (participant)
Thank you. I think we just lost Ed's voice there, but he was just emphasizing that we're well diversified and with the size and scale to manage properly. So yeah, are you back? Sorry, we're just having a little audio problems for Ed, but hopefully that answers it for you.
Tim Greaves (Equity Research Associate)
Yeah. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you once again. That is Darwin should you wish to ask a question. And your next question is from Scott Group from Wolfe Research. Your line is now open. Hey, guys.
Colin Eberhardt (CTO)
This is Colin for Scott.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Hey, sorry, guys. This is Ed Ryan. I just got thrown off the call, but I'm back now.
Colin Eberhardt (CTO)
All good, Ed. This is Colin for Scott. We recently saw a competitor announce a change in their pricing philosophy to get away from per-user fees. Maybe what % of your revenue is based on per-user pricing versus volume-based or fixed pricing? And how do you think about this evolving in a world where some of the brokers and forwarders are talking about structurally reducing headcount?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Yeah, I've heard this argument a bunch of times. There's a bunch of different ways we price. It's not just per user. We have all types of transaction processing charges, even in some of our subscription services, per truck, per mobile handheld device, and yeah, sometimes per user. I don't think that's going to be a big challenge for us.
If they start to have less people using the system because they become more efficient, we're going to come up with a different way to extract value. I know the guy you're talking about, and I think they probably shot too high, and they have a lot of problems with customers right now because of that. And I think if you see us start to do that, it's going to be a more reasonable approach to it.
Colin Eberhardt (CTO)
Okay. Helpful. And we're seeing some of the forwarders seeing pretty big increases in customs revenue as a result of the de minimis going away. Are you guys also seeing that benefit? And how does a big increase in customs filings and customs complexity impact you guys going forward?
Ed Ryan (CEO)
I mean, you'll hear us say all the time on these calls that complexity helps us, and I think that's correct.
Look at the situation we're talking about here with the Type 86 filing. We've almost doubled our revenue in that space in just a couple of months. And honestly, a year and a half ago, we were very concerned they were going to cancel the de minimis, and all of that business could go away. And what ended up happening was our sales team came up with the approach of, "We'll just keep charging you for all the shipments that you make per shipment," same way we were doing it before. And instead of making a Type 86 filing, which is going away, we'll make a Type 1 filing. And so we were able to switch our customers over to that solution. And we were thinking we were doing pretty well.
And then our competitors started really struggling to handle Type 1 filings with the massive amount of volume that some of the bigger players were producing, millions and millions of transactions a day. And our network had the ability to deal with that because we've been doing customs filings for FedEx and DHL and UPS and a lot of other big players for years and had already dealt with millions of transactions a day. And so we had, as a network operator versus a software company, which I think a lot of the other guys were just software companies, we had a network that was robust and able to process the transactions quickly. And we saw almost all of them switch over to us, and it really ended up being a gigantic benefit for us in the last several months. So happy about that.
Colin Eberhardt (CTO)
Okay. Thanks, Ed.
Operator (participant)
I'll turn it back. Thank you. Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. Please proceed with the closing remarks.
Ed Ryan (CEO)
Hey, thanks, everyone. We look forward to reporting back to you on Q4 in March. And otherwise, if you're looking for one-on-one discussions with us, please reach out to us, and we'll find a way to talk to you. Have a great day, guys.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, the conference has now ended. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.