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Blockchain.com Adds Prediction Market With SnapMarkets


Incubated by Blockchain.com, SnapMarkets prediction market has announced its launch.

According to Blockchain.com, SnapMarkets will transform the “traditionally slow prediction markets with lightning speed.” The platform promises moves in seconds, not minutes. SnapMarkets claims to be the fastest prediction market in operation.

SnapMarkets aims to provide real-time changes:

“It is a high-speed, skills-based environment where users can call direction with precision and feel the outcome almost instantly.”

SnapMarkets is described as the future of prediction markets. Blockchain.com explains:

“Every 30 seconds, a new BTC prediction round begins. You get a short window to read the market, make a call, and lock it in. Up or down. You choose your entry level. As low as one dollar, scaling up depending on how confident you are. When the clock closes, the market decides. If you call it right, you win. Simple as that. We added a social layer because markets are not isolated. Instead of just individual calls, SnapMarkets is an interactive experience. There is a live chat alongside real-time price action. You can see how others are thinking, track streaks, and climb a global leaderboard. Over time, it becomes clear who actually understands market momentum and who is guessing.”

Users can connect with Blockchain.com or any other DeFi wallet. While Bitcoin may be the first event-driven option, more are in the queue.

 

 



Most Important Chapters for BBS 3rd Year Finance | Full Chapter details | How to pass Ideas



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Last 5–10 years TU questions practice
Many questions repeat (especially theory)
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10 days = enough if focused
3 days → theory
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Aim: 40–60 marks (pass + good score)
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Don’t leave any question blank
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Global Compliance Carbon Markets: Auction Mechanisms


Carbon allowance allocation methods in global compliance carbon markets (CCMs) are key market design choices. The allocation of allowances influences the formation of carbon prices, the emission costs for covered entities, and market efficiency. The decision to allocate allowances freely or via auction mechanisms is a critical design feature that affects all stakeholders in the carbon market ecosystem, including covered emitters, market operators, financial intermediaries, and investment firms. In recent years, global CCMs have shifted from free allocation toward auction-based allowance distribution. The calibration of auction mechanisms is a policy choice that plays a critical role in determining market outcomes.

This report reviews the auction mechanisms of global CCMs and evaluates their effectiveness, measured by various indicators of market quality. The research is designed to inform the investment industry about various auction mechanisms and to provide practical guidance on participating in auction markets. By reading this report, financial intermediaries and investment firms will be better informed to guide their decisions to participate in the primary market, while policymakers and market operators will be able to determine how best to calibrate allowance allocation in their respective markets.

This report is the latest addition to CFA Institute Research and Policy Center’s carbon market research portfolio. Given the global expansion of carbon markets, An Effective Tool for Net Zero and Enhancing the Voluntary Carbon Market: Gaps and Solutions provided detailed overviews of global compliance and voluntary carbon markets, respectively, to help investment industry participants better understand their mechanisms. In light of the rapid growth of carbon-related trading products in secondary markets, Global Compliance Carbon Markets: Structure Explained provided an in-depth analysis of the market structure of global CCMs’ secondary markets, offering practical guidance for the investment industry on engaging with CCMs.

Given the significant increase in carbon auction market participation by financial intermediaries and investment firms, as well as the broadened global impact of carbon pricing on firms arising from the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), this report complements previous studies by focusing on the primary markets of global CCMs. The report consists of three main sections:

  • The “Auction Mechanisms” section reviews the auction mechanisms of major CCMs that adopt auctioning. It explains the auction rules, frequency, processes, auction share of allowances, and market development. It covers CCMs in the European Union, New Zealand, California, Quebec, Washington state, and the United Kingdom, analyzing the similarities and unique features of each system.
  • Next, the “Auction Effectiveness” section evaluates the effectiveness of CCM auction mechanisms. It applies three indicators from different dimensions — auction-market price stability (difference between the auction price and prevailing secondary market price, relative to the market price), demand depth (bid-to-cover ratio), and reserve price bindingness (auction clearing price premium) — to assess CCMs in the EU, California, and the United Kingdom. The analysis links these indicators to the specific characteristics of each system.
  • The section “Auction Effectiveness Determinants” explores the key factors that may influence the effectiveness of CCM auctions.

Key Findings:

  • The share of allowances auctioned in global CCMs has steadily increased over time. Among CCMs that use auctioning, the primary auction structure is a single-round, sealed-bid, uniform-price auction. To conduct auctions, CCMs use dedicated platforms — the European Energy Exchange (EEX) for the EU, the Western Climate Initiative, Inc. (WCI, Inc.) for California, and the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) Futures Europe for the United Kingdom. Beyond these similarities, each CCM displays distinct characteristics. The EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) has the longest auction history, the largest auction volumes, and the highest frequency (three days per week), making it the most mature auction market. The California Cap-and-Invest Program, formerly the Cap-and-Trade Program, conducts quarterly auctions and uses a relatively strict, annually increasing auction reserve price mechanism that can directly influence auction price levels. The UK Emissions Trading Scheme (UK ETS) holds biweekly auctions. As a newer and smaller CCM, the UK ETS has a tighter auction supply.
  • Investment professionals participating in primary auction markets should be mindful of differences in auction effectiveness across CCMs.
    • As the most mature CCM, the EU ETS has auction clearing prices that are broadly aligned with prevailing secondary market prices. Its auction mechanism demonstrates strong resilience to external shocks and capacity for post-shock self-adjustment. In the long run, the auction mechanism maintains stable, moderate demand depth and a steady auction supply.
    • As a developing CCM, the UK ETS auction tends to clear at a small discount relative to secondary market prices. The alignment between auctions and the secondary market improves over time. The auction mechanism also exhibits stable, moderate demand depth and a steady auction supply. Auction clearing prices are consistently above the constant auction reserve price.
    • As a CCM with a strictly annually increasing auction reserve price and relatively low auction frequency, California’s auction clearing prices are generally aligned with secondary market prices, although occasional large deviations occur because of the strict reserve price policy and the frequency mismatch between auctions and secondary market trading. Demand depth is more volatile, driven by fluctuations on both the demand and supply sides, and oversupply can occur. In most cases, the reserve price is binding; clearing prices are close to it. Auction outcomes are therefore more constrained by reserve prices than driven by market forces.
  • Policymakers and CCM market operators that wish to strengthen the effectiveness of allowance auctions may focus on the efficacy of holding more frequent auctions and increasing the share of allowances auctioned versus free allocation, thereby promoting broader participation in the primary market and enhancing the trading volume and liquidity of allowances in the secondary market. The market design choices discussed in this report can strengthen market functioning by improving transparency, reducing price dispersion and volatility, and stimulating demand.

Investment professionals can use this report to guide their participation in global carbon auctions, such as by determining which CCMs to participate in and whether it is profitable to engage in the primary markets. Policymakers can draw on this report’s findings to make targeted improvements to auction mechanisms.

Trek Bicycle’s CEO reads 52 books a year, hates smartphones, and says Milton Friedman was wrong



John Burke has run Trek Bicycle for nearly three decades, long enough to have lived through bike booms and busts, a pandemic that briefly made his company one of the hottest businesses in the world, and a post-COVID hangover that has left internal sales dashboards “all red” for more than a year and a half. He’s also read enough books — about 52 a year, every year, meticulously cataloged in a personal spreadsheet of 1,100 lifetime lessons — to have strong opinions about nearly everything.

One of the strongest: a company’s legacy is measured by its impact on the world, not its financial returns.

“Making a profit is the lifeblood of a business,” he told me in Las Vegas, backstage at the Great Place to Work For All Summit. “But the success of the business is not just measured in how much money you make — it’s in the impact that you make.”

Burke said he couldn’t speak for other companies, since he’s “been playing for the same team for 42 years,” but when he looks out at corporate America, he said, “there’s been a decay in the purpose of companies over the last 25 years.” And then he got historically minded. “If you go back, an economist once said that making a profit is the only responsibility of a company … and that’s not Trek.”

(The actual quote was published in a New York Times op-ed in 1970 as the great University of Chicago economist Milton Friedman wrote: “There is one and only one social responsibility of business—to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it stays within the rules of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud.”)

Just consider, Burke said, what Trek has done for women’s cycling.

The women’s cycling moment

In 2018, he recalled, someone walked into his office and told him how women’s professional cycling teams were actually treated: flown in the night before races, competing on secondhand bikes, earning almost nothing. Burke vowed to add a full-scale women’s team from that day onward.

From that day onward, Burke said, Trek treated its women athletes the same as its men — same bikes, same resources, same investment. The team won nearly everything for three years running. And then, Burke said, something bigger happened: every other major team in professional cycling followed suit. “No Trek, no change in women’s cycling,” he said flatly. “Milton Friedman wouldn’t have approved that decision. If he was on the board, he would not have approved it.”

It’s the kind of story Burke returns to when people ask what Trek’s 50th anniversary is really about. The company is marking the occasion with a coffee-table book cataloging 50 ways it has changed the world and a 43-minute documentary premiering June 18 at the Orpheum Theatre in Madison, Wisconsin, with author Jim Collins in attendance. “What I’m most proud of at Trek is how we’ve changed the world, not what the financial results have been. When I’m gone, I don’t think anyone’s gonna make note of that.”

Riding through the bust

Trek’s current headwinds are real. After a COVID-era demand explosion that strained supply chains and pushed bikes off shelves faster than they could be built, the market reversed sharply — and Trek has been working through excess inventory and restructuring pressure ever since. The company, which generates roughly $2 billion in annual revenue and employs more than 5,000 people globally, has faced layoffs and product line reductions as it recalibrates.

But even in the downturn, Trek has been rapidly moving up the Fortune 100 Best Companies to Work For list — No. 42 in 2026, up from its first appearance at No. 94 in 2023. (It was actually No. 4 on the best places to work in retail.)

Burke said he sees the two things as connected rather than contradictory. The survey, he told Great Place to Work CEO Michael C. Bush, “is the centerpiece of how we run HR.” And the best time to take its temperature, he argued, is when things aren’t going well.

Gen Z doesn’t exist

Burke’s contrarianism extends well beyond corporate purpose. When asked what advice he would give to Gen Z workers, he nearly exploded. Burke is a no-nonsense Midwesterner, and he insisted that work has always been work, just like when he got his first job, diving ponds at a Wisconsin golf course to pick balls up off the soggy bottom.

“There’s no such thing as Gen Z,” he told me. “All this generational stuff is overblown. If you go back and study the last 100 years of what’s made successful people, it’s all the same.” He recalled being in Germany in the late 1980s as the Berlin Wall fell, listening to older Germans lament that the younger generation was lazy. “That’s what they’re saying today in America, is Gen Z doesn’t work. It’s like, that’s true. People want to be successful at work.”

“Every generation has probably had its quirks,” he allowed, but people have always had to work hard to get ahead, and that has never changed. “That doesn’t work today and it didn’t work 20 years ago. It didn’t work 50 years ago.”

A late convert to AI

On artificial intelligence, Burke said he arrived late — but he’s convinced it’s not hype. For most of the past few years, it felt abstract. His IT director kept telling him something big was coming, but the tangible applications weren’t obvious. Then, about six months ago, something clicked.

“Holy shit,” is how Burke describes the moment. “Look at what can actually be done.”

He said he thinks AI’s adoption curve will make the internet and the iPhone look gradual. “The internet affected business like this,” he said, gesturing slowly. “The iPhone, maybe a little steeper.” Then his hand shot up. “AI — I don’t know if society’s ready. But we’re going to find out, because it’s unleashed. And you’re going to know here pretty quick.”

Trek, by Burke’s own accounting, is not ready. He placed the company at 13 out of 100 for AI readiness relative to its peers, but his eyes bugged out when I told him that didn’t sound like a good rating. “Thirteen is good! It’s a great rating,” Burke said. “One of the things we do best as a company is take a concept and spread it throughout the company.” He said he’s tried to build a culture at Trek that “confronts the brutal facts,” moves fast, and always seeks to learn. When people tell him he’s wrong, he said, he gets curious. “I’m more interested in how we improve. I’m not interested in proving that we’re right.”

Burke said his office has two massive whiteboards and he spends his day framing puzzles for himself and his staff, “and getting the smartest people in the company to solve the puzzles. That’s how I spend my time.”

The phone is the problem

Burke’s embrace of AI exists in sharp tension with a deep, personal hostility toward smartphones. His conversion on that front came from an unlikely source: a chance meeting with Dr. Richard Davidson, the University of Wisconsin-Madison neuroscientist and founder of the Healthy Minds Center, who has spent decades studying mental health and the meaning of happiness. Burke said he was ashamed because he tried to postpone the meeting, thinking he was too busy. His assistant overruled him. “She goes, ‘You know, that meeting with Dr. Richie is Wednesday, and you will be there.’”

As he got to know Davidson, he learned of a remarkable life story: graduating from high school at 14, then NYU at 16, then a PhD from Harvard by 21 years old, and a later meeting with the Dalai Lama, who told him, “Richie, your mission in life is to bring joy to the world.”

“Now I’m kind of slithering under the table as I blew this guy off,” Burke told me in his typically blunt fashion. But he had a question for Davidson: he asked where mental health in America stood today, on a scale of 100, relative to 1984. Davidson’s answer: 23, down from 100 in 1984. “It’s in the toilet. Unbelievable.” The culprit, Davidson said, was the phone.

Consider the Masters golf tournament, Burke said, one of the last major public events where phones are banned from the grounds. “What’s everybody doing? They have a smile on their face. Nobody’s trying to take a picture of somebody else. No selfies. They’re talking to each other.” He estimated the happiness level is three times what it is at a comparable phone-permitted event. “It’s the greatest experiment in the world.”

We’ve Pissed Off Just About Everybody’

Burke is not a politician and does not want to be one. He served on the President’s Council on Physical Fitness under George W. Bush and has written three books about American civic life, but describes himself as neither Republican nor Democrat. What he is, unmistakably, is frustrated.

The $39 trillion national debt strikes him as a moral failure as much as a fiscal one. “Somebody’s all proud they just came out with a $1.5 trillion defense budget,” he said. “You shouldn’t be proud. You should be embarrassed. We can’t afford a $1.5 trillion [budget]. Why not make it two-and-a-half [trillion dollars]? Well, you can’t make it two-and-a-half because you can’t afford it … the answer is no. We’re 5% of the world’s population, and we spend 38% of the world’s defense dollars. It makes no sense.”

On trade and geopolitics, Burke was equally unsparing. Trek manufactures globally and has navigated years of tariff disruptions, but it framed America’s current isolation as something deeper than a supply chain headache. “To accomplish things in life, you need to have friends. To accomplish things as a country, you need to have friends. And we’ve pissed off just about everybody.” He ticked through the list: Canada, Europe, Japan, South Korea, Australia. “I can’t tell you why we’re pissed off at Canada,” he said. “I genuinely cannot tell you.”

The root problem, in his view, is a leadership class that has confused self-preservation with public service. “We elect leaders whose primary motivation is not the success of the United States — it’s to perpetuate their own jobs. And it’s embarrassing. It is absolutely embarrassing.”

52 books, 1,100 lessons

Burke said he reads 52 books a year, almost exclusively nonfiction. His reading system, refined over the past four years, is rigorous. He reads the first sentence of every paragraph. If it grabs him, he reads the rest. If it doesn’t, he moves on. “I’ve never read a bad sentence to start a paragraph which turns into a good paragraph,” he said. “Doesn’t happen.” (While this might imply that he’s a skimmer or speed reader, this method suggests that he starts roughly 100 books a year, and only finished around 50.)

When he finishes a book, he goes back through his underlines and enters only the lessons he wants to carry for the rest of his life into a personal spreadsheet — now more than 1,100 entries deep. The system was inspired by Jim Collins, who visited Trek in 2018 and suggested writing down one lesson per book. Burke took it further. The impetus was a bike ride with his wife, during which she asked him to summarize the lessons from one of his favorite books, Simon Sinek’s The Infinite Game. His answer, he recalled, was “lame. Really bad retention.” He went home, reread the book, underlined it, and built the spreadsheet.

Current reading: The Algorithm, about a former Elon Musk lieutenant now on the board of General Motors, focused on simplification and speed — themes Burke is applying directly to Trek’s supply chain overhaul, which benchmarks Toyota and aims to triple the company’s operational efficiency score by 2028.

Still learning, still moving

For all his impatience with American institutions — corporate, political, technological — Burke’s worldview is ultimately an optimistic one, grounded less in ideology than in a belief that self-improvement is always available to anyone willing to do the work.

At Trek, he said, the lesson applies to the company as much as any individual in it: focus on what you can control, confront the brutal facts, and keep moving. “85% of the opportunities in the business,” he said, citing The Founder’s Mentality, “are within their four walls. And sometimes you get a lot of people who want to look out the window instead of looking in the mirror, 85% of the opportunities in the business are looking in the mirror.”

Wolfe Research lowers Sotera Health stock price target to $19 on valuation




Wolfe Research lowers Sotera Health stock price target to $19 on valuation

Rhode Island Using State Deposits to Help First-Time Home Buyers Get 3.99% Mortgage Rates


Here’s something creative I haven’t seen many try (other than the home builders) to close the affordability gap.

The State of Rhode Island is using treasury deposits placed directly with local banks and credit unions to subsidize mortgage rates.

The end result is helping a first-time home buyer secure a 30-year fixed mortgage at below-market rates, starting as low as 3.99%.

In addition, there’s no private mortgage insurance (PMI) required on these loans either, regardless of down payment.

Collectively, it might be enough to get more homeowners in the door, despite ongoing affordability woes.

How RI AnchorHome Works: 3.99% Mortgage Rates and No PMI When You Buy Your First Home

While it kind of sounds like the temporary and permanent rate buydowns being offered by home builders, it operates quite a bit differently.

Instead of the state handing out grants or becoming the actual mortgage lender, they’re strategically depositing public funds in local depositories.

In turn, those participating banks are armed with more liquidity, giving them the ability to offer below-market mortgage rates to select applicants.

The program is known as “RI AnchorHome,” and is being facilitated by Treasurer James A. Diossa’s office.

How it works is fairly simply. A qualifying first-time home buyer gets approved for a mortgage through one of the participating lenders (such as Navigant Credit Union, Coastal 1, or Washington Trust).

Then the State of Rhode Island deposits matching funds into that same financial institution to offset the cost of offering a below-market interest rate with no PMI.

Those deposits provide the bank with a source of low-cost funding, and in return they can offer the buyer a special 30-year fixed rate as low as 3.99%, despite rates being around 6.50% currently.

Importantly, the home buyer still gets a traditional mortgage issued and serviced by the bank. And the state doesn’t take on any credit risk.

The program started as a pilot with $60 million in deposits and was recently expanded to $80 million after unanimous approval from the State Investment Commission.

The deposits are short-term, fully collateralized, and renewed annually, so the state keeps control of its cash while earning a modest return.

It’s a clever public-private partnership designed to make homeownership more attainable in a high-rate environment without the usual gimmicks.

This Looks to Be a Good Deal, But Check the Closing Costs!

Whenever I see deals like this, I tell people to look at the big picture. There is no free lunch, though in this case borrowers might actually win.

The state is essentially giving up some potential yield on its deposits to make these lower mortgage rates possible in order to better its state, with no real downside to the homeowner.

Sure, buyers still have to qualify under normal underwriting guidelines, complete mandatory first-time homebuyer counseling, and meet specific program rules.

Those include being a first-time buyer with no other property, buying a primary residence in Rhode Island, and having an income of no more than 110% of the statewide median.

Lastly, the maximum loan amount is $525,000 for a single-family home and $575,000 for a duplex.

But other than that, if you can snag the low advertised rate of 3.99% and there aren’t excessive closing costs, what’s not to like?

Oh, and if you put down less than 20% and can avoid PMI at the same time, it’s even sweeter.

After all, one might argue that the more money borrowed at 3.99%, the better.

The RI Treasurer’s office says the goal is to build generational wealth and strengthen local communities.

It’ll be interesting to see if other states start emulating this deposit-based model in the future.

Here in California, we’ve relied on other approaches, such as the “Dream For All Shared Appreciation Loan,” which requires zero down payment in exchange for a share of future equity.

While they’re all good initiatives on the surface, you do wonder if they mostly address the demand side as opposed to the supply side of the problem.

Read on: Try out my new mortgage rate calculator to see how much you can afford at different interest rates.

Colin Robertson
Latest posts by Colin Robertson (see all)

Authorized User Bonus for Chase United Cards: Easy 10,000 Miles


Authorized User Bonus for Chase United Cards

Emails are going out to Chase United cardholders with an offer to earn 10,000 bonus miles for adding an authorized user. There’s no direct link, so you just need to check your inbox.

Offer Details

Earn 10,000 bonus miles when you add a new authorized user to your United credit card by June 30, 2026. For the first authorized user added to your account, you will earn 10,000 bonus miles. Any additional authorized users added to your account during the promotional period will not earn bonus miles. Bonus miles will not exceed 10,000 bonus miles.

Guru’s Wrap-up

This is an easy bonus. You get 10,000 miles just for adding an authorized user. 

Just remember that you’re fully liable for any charges the authorized user makes, so only add someone you trust. With this bonus you don’t even need to make a purchase so you don’t need to give them the physical card. Once the bonus is secured, you can remove the authorized user at any time without affecting your account standing.

Another thing to note is that if someone adds you as an authorized user on their card, that account may show up on your credit report and count against your own 5/24, potentially blocking you from being approved for new Chase cards. You can just call the Chase reconsideration line and ask them to exclude authorized user accounts from their review, which they’re often willing to do.

HT: itrytopaytaxes

Live Bitcoin Trading on Binance Futures 1 Minute Timeframe



Watch Bitcoin trading happen in real-time and see the profit potential. This video shows how quickly the crypto market can move, perfect for trading crypto. See the potential for bitcoin gains, even if you’re trading for beginners.

👉 Important Disclaimer: This video is for educational/demonstrational purposes only—not financial, legal, tax, or personalized advice. Trading leveraged products (forex, crypto, etc.) involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors; you may lose all invested capital. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Trade at your own risk.

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Why Some Real Estate Investors Build Wealth Faster Than Others


Imagine two investors, Grinding Gretchen and Relaxed Rachel, who both start with $50,000 to invest. 

Most people—including Gretchen—think they’ll sprint or trip based on market timing, hustle, luck, or choosing the perfect market. 

Rachel takes a different approach. Here’s why investors like her will not only come out ahead in the long run, but also have more fun and get better sleep along the way. 

Good Investors Don’t Time the Market

It’s so tempting to try to time the market, because it feels like you should be able to spot the bottom and the top—they always look so obvious in hindsight. 

You’ve heard it before, but it bears repeating: Time in the market always beats timing the market. You don’t have to be perfectly right twice (buying and selling); you don’t skip years-long periods trying to wait for the perfect moment to invest. Remember, the next market low could still be priced higher than today’s pricing, given all the appreciation between now and then.

Trying to time the market also encourages bad behaviors like trend chasing and panic selling. You see one asset class overperforming and say, “That must be the next big thing! I’ll put a bunch of money in that.” Meanwhile, that asset class has already done most of its booming and is poised for a crash. 

Or you look at an asset class that has recently crashed and say, “I won’t touch that with a 10-foot pole.” That asset class is actually poised for recovery. “Buy when there’s blood in the streets” and all that. 

Consistent Investing

Instead, investors who win in the long term keep investing slowly and steadily, month in and month out. There’s a term for this in finance: dollar-cost averaging. I practice it with my stock investments and my real estate investments. 

Every month, I invest around $5,000 in a new passive investment through my co-investing club. Collectively, we invest $400,000 to $800,000, but I personally just invest $2,500 to $10,000. 

I can hear the skeptical voice in your head now: “I don’t have that much to invest every month.” There are two solutions to that problem: Either invest at a slower cadence (like bimonthly or quarterly) or boost your savings rate. Start by freezing your lifestyle inflation. 

Because that’s part of Grinding Gretchen’s problem: She keeps spending more as she earns more, so she never has as much left over to invest as she wants, and she keeps moving the goalposts on how much nest egg she needs. 

As old investments pay off, reinvest the returns. You earn compound returns from consistent investing over years, not waiting on the sidelines to try and find the “perfect” deal. 

Leverage People, Not Just Money

When real estate investors hear “leverage,” they immediately think “debt.” 

Sure, that’s one type of leverage. But it’s not the only type. 

To begin with, you can leverage other people’s expertise. That’s a huge advantage to an investment club: You get the benefit of all the other members’ knowledge. My co-investing club vets deals together on a big video call so we can all grill the operator and analyze risk together. 

Speaking of operators, that raises another type of leverage: labor and time. After a miserable decade-plus as a landlord and active investor, I unloaded all my rental properties in my late 30s. Today I only invest passively, which includes investments like syndications, silent joint venture partnerships, private notes, and funds. 

Someone else hassles with tenants, property managers, city inspectors, contractors, and the like. I just watch the cash flow hit my bank account. 

Your time is a limited resource. Every hour you spend putzing with tenants and toilets is an hour you can’t spend boosting your career, building a side business, or spending time with family or friends. 

Liability Management

When I was an active investor, I took on both legal liability and debt liability. I was sued several times as a landlord. It sucked, costing me money, time, stress, and lost sleep. 

On the debt side, when I signed for loans, I didn’t just put up the property as collateral. I had to sign a personal guarantee. If I defaulted, the lender could come after every personal asset I own. 

I don’t have that liability risk as a passive investor. No one can sue me or come after my personal assets. That risk is outsourced to the deal operator. This matters to your long-term success as an investor for two reasons. 

First, losses could wipe out your entire net worth, and then some. A judgment doesn’t go away when your net worth hits $0; creditors can attach liens to your home and garnish part of each paycheck you earn. 

Second, it can also demoralize you so badly that you quit investing in real estate entirely. Either way, it’s Game Over for you. 

Risk Management

Liability is, of course, one type of risk. But investors face many other types of risk, and the best investors layer in several ways to mitigate them. 

I’m willing to accept market risk. The stock market and the real estate market don’t always go up, after all. Sometimes they dip or even crash. (That’s one reason I practice dollar-cost averaging—so I get the benefits of those lower prices and don’t get too peeved.)

Even so, I still look for protections against it when possible. I want to see conservative underwriting assumptions such as slow rent growth projections and high expense growth projections. I want to see a solid preferred return, low operator fees, and an operator with plenty of their own skin in the game. 

I also look for extra downside risk protections. For example, in some of the private partnerships we’ve negotiated in my co-investing club, the operator guaranteed us a minimum return on our investment, even if the deal underperformed. In one of those cases, a house flip didn’t go our way, but we still earned the 8% floor return on it

Again, your goal as an investor is longevity, building long-term wealth. You’ll have your share of hiccups along the way, so try to minimize risk where you can and spread it out where you can’t. 

One of those is operator risk. I want to make sure that the operators I invest with are both competent and honest. While you can never eliminate that risk 100%, you can minimize it through operator due diligence

Portfolio Planning

Long-term success as an investor also involves intentional planning for your portfolio. How much of your portfolio should sit in stocks? In real estate? In bonds? In alternative investments? 

Within your stock portfolio, how much should be U.S. versus foreign? Small-cap versus large-cap?

Within your real estate portfolio, how much do you want in income-oriented versus growth-oriented investments? 

I’m a huge proponent of diversification. In fact, I diversify my real estate investments in not one or two but six different ways. I want investments spread among many cities and states, operators, and asset classes. I want my investments to mature along different timelines. 

That’s part of why I invest $2,500 to $10,000 per investment. I know I won’t always hit a bull’s-eye—a few investments will inevitably underperform. But others will overperform, and most will perform around the middle of the bell curve. That distributed bell curve is exactly what I want from my returns. 

That helps me sleep at night, rather than tossing and turning over that one deal I put $100,000 into that’s underperforming. 

Tax Planning

There’s another type of diversification I want too: tax benefits. 

Some passive real estate investments come with outstanding tax benefits. Others don’t come with any, but they come with other advantages, like stable passive income. 

With my equity investments (including syndications and JV partnerships), I practice the “lazy 1031 exchange” to keep deferring my taxes indefinitely into the future. 

Investments that don’t offer any tax advantages (like private notes) are often a better fit for a self-directed IRA or solo 401(k). Read up on some clever uses of your IRA for more ideas.   

The bottom line: Investors who get strategic to minimize their tax burden build wealth faster because they’re leaking less money to taxes. 

$0 to $1 Million in Seven Years Without a High Income

My wife is a school counselor (same salary as a teacher). I run a small business that has always been more of a passion project than a cash cow. Yet we went from starting over financially to a net worth of over $1 million in less than seven years. 

We built wealth faster than most investors for many of the reasons outlined above: consistency and staying power. In particular, it helped that we lived on a tiny budget and invested such a high percentage of our income. 

Those savings went toward high-return investments like stocks and passive real estate investments. We invested steadily without grinding through the side hustle of active investing. 

Many investors just can’t stomach the thought of relinquishing control over their investments. So they keep building that active investing business, grinding with tenants and toilets and property managers and contractors. And they still suffer from plenty of risks outside their control, such as market risk. 

I started earning better returns after easing my grip on control. That’s the price of leveraging other people’s time, but it also helps maintain that staying power of continuing to invest year after year and compounding your wealth. 

And that’s how you ultimately win the investment game. 

Aviat (AVNW) Q3 2026 Earnings Call Transcript


Image source: The Motley Fool.

Date

Monday, May 4, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET

Call participants

  • President and Chief Executive Officer — Peter Smith
  • Chief Financial Officer — Andrew Schmidt
  • Chief Accounting Officer — Jonanna Mikulenka

Takeaways

  • Total revenue — $100.0 million, reflecting a decline from $112.6 million in the prior year period, with management citing $9 million in project pushouts and demand shifts at several Tier 1 customers due to the Middle East conflict.
  • Gross margin — 29.3% GAAP and 29.4% non-GAAP, both below last year’s 34.9% and 35.8%, respectively, attributed to volume, regional, and product mix factors.
  • Adjusted EBITDA — $4.4 million (4.4% of revenue), down from the previous year’s level, with margin declines linked primarily to the aforementioned third-quarter revenue timing and mix challenges.
  • Non-GAAP EPS — $0.06, indicating positive earnings on an adjusted basis, while GAAP loss per share was $0.16.
  • Operating income — $0.9 million GAAP and $3 million non-GAAP, down from $9.3 million GAAP and $13 million non-GAAP in the prior year, as reported by Schmidt.
  • Inventory reduction — Sequential decline of $4.0 million in inventories, contributing to working capital normalization.
  • Book-to-bill ratio — Maintained above 1.0 on a trailing twelve-month basis, according to Smith.
  • Cash and debt — $78.1 million in cash and marketable securities, $104.3 million in outstanding debt, resulting in net debt of $26.1 million.
  • Regional revenue mix — North America contributed 46.2% ($46.2 million) and international segments 53.8% ($53.8 million) of total revenue this quarter.
  • Utility segment — Now nearing 10% of total business, with management stating a strong growth pipeline aligned to broader U.S. grid modernization and AI-related demand.
  • MDU opportunity — Live deployments underway in more than five markets; Smith stated, “we would be comfortable saying it’s an eight-figure opportunity in fiscal year ’27,” with more precise estimates forthcoming after year end.
  • BEAD program positioning — Management anticipates purchase orders tied to the Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) program “should begin in mid- to late calendar 2026,” with Aviat’s opportunity dependent on allocation to fixed wireless access, estimated by Aviat as “between 10% and 15%” of awarded funds.
  • Aprisa LTE router — Smith described the Aprisa platform and LTE router business as on pace for “over 50% bookings growth this fiscal year,” with initial public safety orders received in the U.S., Europe, and Latin America.
  • Expense management — GAAP operating expense reduced to $28.3 million versus $30 million one year ago; non-GAAP operating expense fell to $26.4 million.
  • Share repurchases — Approximately 20,000 shares repurchased for $0.5 million during the quarter.
  • Fiscal 2026 guidance — Raised to $428 million-$440 million revenue and $35 million-$40 million adjusted EBITDA for the full year.
  • NOLs and deferred tax assets — Aviat retains over $450 million in net operating losses, “generating shareholder value via minimal cash tax payments for the foreseeable future.” Schmidt stated, “there is a reasonable possibility that within the next few quarters, we will be able to release a significant portion of the [foreign] valuation allowance,” implying a potential one-time GAAP income uplift.

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Risks

  • Smith explicitly stated, “Quarterly results were impacted by the conflict in the Middle East, where we saw certain project pushouts and unfavorable end-of-quarter demand shifts in several Tier 1 customers totaling approximately $9 million in revenue.”
  • Peter Smith noted, “The lower adjusted EBITDA margin this period was driven primarily by the unfavorable timing of Q3 revenues previously discussed,” and added that “the challenge is timing related.”
  • Smith emphasized continued environment-driven caution in guidance: “we want to not have the difficulty in achieving the expectations we set at the end of the June quarter. So that’s why there’s the range.”
  • Freight cost inflation was described by Smith: “in the recently concluded quarter, there was some freight inflation. And going forward, we’ll adjust our freight prices as well.”

Summary

Aviat Networks (AVNW 33.35%) explicitly reported a revenue decline, tying the shortfall to $9 million in project pushouts from Tier 1 customers due to the Middle East conflict. Profitability metrics, including gross margin and adjusted EBITDA, also trended downward, attributed directly to lower volumes and adverse product mix. Management provided clear guidance for the full year, with expectations for revenue between $428 million-$440 million and adjusted EBITDA of $35 million-$40 million, stating normalization is anticipated in the fourth quarter. The call highlighted significant new revenue prospects in multi-dwelling units, U.S. utilities, and public safety, alongside positioning for BEAD program funding, with management indicating these drivers could lead to materially higher revenue in fiscal year 2027. Share repurchases, working capital improvements, and a possible upcoming release of foreign deferred tax allowances were also cited as supportive of longer-term value creation.

  • Smith stated Aviat holds a “favored position as the supplier of choice” in MDU deployments, with live projects currently underway and a measurable ramp expected in fiscal 2027.
  • Management asserted that North American gross margins remain healthy: “Again, pricing is in good shape. We just have to get back to expected volumes.”
  • “Utilities will deploy $1.4 trillion on capital spending plans over the next five years,” Smith referenced, positioning Aviat’s network offerings as essential for grid modernization, substation monitoring, and wildfire detection.
  • Forty-six of fifty-six U.S. states and territories have executed final BEAD award agreements; Aviat’s BEAD-related revenue ramp is most likely in calendar 2027, according to direct customer feedback cited by Smith.
  • Product introductions, such as bringing the all-indoor radio to international markets and Pasolink radios to North America in fiscal 2027, represent further addressable market expansion exceeding $250 million, per Smith’s remarks.
  • Smith confirmed “no more Aviat technical milestones” are required for current MDU projects, with the focus shifting to customer ramp and next-generation product delivery over the next six to nine months.
  • Smith described Aviat’s Build America, Buy America credentials and domestic manufacturing footprint as valuable in supporting rural broadband and utility demand, reinforced by recent national policy focus.

Industry glossary

  • MDU (Multi-Dwelling Unit): A business segment focused on wireless connectivity solutions for apartment buildings or similar residential complexes, often involving large-scale deployments for Tier 1 service providers.
  • BEAD (Broadband Equity Access and Deployment Program): A U.S. federal program allocating funding to expand broadband access, with funds awarded to states and territories for infrastructure buildout, including fixed wireless projects.
  • Aprisa: Aviat’s branded platform for LTE routers and software-enabled transmission systems, targeting utilities, public safety, and industrial communications.
  • Book-to-bill ratio: The ratio of new customer orders received to units shipped and billed in the same period; values above 1.0 indicate a pipeline that supports future revenue growth.
  • NOL (Net operating loss): The accumulated losses from prior periods, which can be used to reduce taxable income in the future, providing ongoing tax benefits.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Pete Smith, Aviat’s President and CEO, who will begin with opening remarks on the company’s fiscal quarter, followed by Andy Schmidt, CFO, to review the financial results for the quarter. Pete will then provide closing remarks on Aviat’s strategy and outlook, followed by a question-and-answer session. Jonanna Mikulenka, Aviat’s Chief Accounting Officer, is also with us on the call. As a reminder, during today’s call and webcast, management may make forward-looking statements regarding Aviat’s business, including, but not limited to, statements relating to fiscal guidance, financial projections, business drivers, new products and expansions and economic activity in different regions.

These and other forward-looking statements reflect the company’s opinions only as of the date of this call and webcast and involve assumptions, risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those statements. Additional information on factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the statements expressed or implied on this call can be found in our most recent filings with the SEC. The company undertakes no obligation to revise or make public any revision of these forward-looking statements in light of new information or future events. Additionally, during today’s call and webcast, management will reference both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures.

Please refer to our press release, which is available in the IR section of our website at www.aviatnetworks.com and financial tables therein, which include a GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation and other supplemental financial information. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Aviat’s President and CEO, Pete Smith. Pete?

Peter Smith: Thanks, Andrew, and good afternoon. Let’s review the highlights from the third quarter. Total revenues of $100.0 million, adjusted EBITDA of $4.4 million, non-GAAP EPS of $0.06, lowered inventories by $4.0 million versus the December quarter, maintained a trailing 12-month book-to-bill ratio greater than 1.0. Quarterly results were impacted by the conflict in the Middle East, where we saw certain project pushouts and unfavorable end-of-quarter demand shifts in several Tier 1 customers totaling approximately $9 million in revenue. Now let me talk more about our end markets and key developments.

In the U.S., we see reason for optimism in the quarters ahead as we gain increased visibility on timing of our multi-dwelling unit or MDU opportunity. growing demand from utilities as they invest to meet increased power demand from artificial intelligence build-outs and the nearing arrival of the Broadband Equity Access and Deployment or BEAD program. On the MDU, we have increased confidence in the level of commitment to this project from our Tier 1 customer, and we believe that we have secured a favored position as the supplier of choice. This is translating to increased visibility on timing for the markets we have won and opening the door to additional market areas for deployment.

For the projects in progress, we have installations occurring now and through the rest of Q4. These are still relatively small, and we expect a larger step-up during fiscal 2027. As the Aviat installations progress and we compete for additional markets related to the MDU opportunity, we are seeing more prospects to provide services and other value-added solutions to our Tier 1 customer. Overall, we are feeling better about this opportunity today than at any other previous point and believe we will have meaningful revenue contribution from this project in fiscal year 2027. Further, we have validated our next-generation offering in this area. Should subscriber growth materialize, we anticipate demand for this next-gen product in fiscal year 2028.

Private networks remain Aviat’s largest segment today. And within private networks, utilities are Aviat’s second largest customer group in this segment. Aviat has been strategically focused on growing our presence and offerings with utilities over the last several years with product innovations like our ultra-high-powered 11 gigahertz radio and the 2024 acquisition of 4RF. Even prior to the demand brought on by artificial intelligence and data center build-outs, there was a growing need for increased investment in America’s grid from a modernization and reliability standpoint. Today, the outlook for Aviat and utilities is quite robust. Recent industry reports suggest that utilities will deploy $1.4 trillion on capital spending plans over the next 5 years.

This forecast is up over 20% versus a year ago. Approximately half of this spend will go towards transmission and distribution, where Aviat’s network hardware is critical for smart grid connectivity and management. substation monitoring and security, crew communications and wildfire detection. Power generation has become the primary constraint and a fundamental determinant of growth for artificial intelligence or AI. This build-out of the grid lifts the importance of mission-critical communication and Aviat is well positioned to capture increasing share of demand in this market. The utility segment is approaching 10% of our overall business.

Our funnel of opportunity is strong and the discussions we are having with many of the largest utilities in the U.S. signals that this growth opportunity will remain for several years ahead. Lastly, on the BEAD program, our customers continue to signal that purchase orders related to the program should begin in mid- to late calendar 2026. This is consistent with the message we have told investors for approximately a year now. However, as final approvals are made, the set of opportunities is beginning to take shape. 46 of the 56 states and territories have signed their final award agreement. The total funding for the approved deployment spend to date is approximately $20 billion.

The size of Aviat’s opportunity depends on the allocation of BEAD funds towards fixed wireless access, which in our estimation stands between 10% and 15% of the award dollars. The allocation of funds to wireless has been increasing over time. Feedback from four of our wireless Internet service provider customers who have all won BEAD deployment projects signal that calendar 2027 will likely see the largest ramp purchase orders for Aviat. But we still remain very early in the fund deployment life cycle, and we’ll provide updates as available.

Aviat stands at the ready to assist all of its customers with BEAD opportunities, thanks to its Build America Buy America certifications, our e-commerce Aviat store presence and our leading position in serving rural broadband needs. Apart from these growth drivers, we have invested in our road map. We’ve taken our North American all-indoor radio to international markets. We are also bringing Pasolink radios to North America in early fiscal 2027. Both these represent installed base opportunities for an addressable market of over $250 million. I will now turn the call over to Andy to go through the financial results.

Andrew Schmidt: Thanks, Pete, and good afternoon, everyone. Before going through the financial results, I’d like to briefly introduce Jonanna Mikulenka, who joined Aviat in January as our Chief Accounting Officer. She brings with her over 30 years of accounting experience, including previously serving as Chief Accounting Officer and Corporate Controller at other public companies. She is already making a great impact to the overall Aviat team and will help us to achieve our goals. Welcome, Jonanna. Now I’ll review some of our key fiscal 2026 third quarter results.

Please note that our detailed financials can be found in our press release and all comparisons discussed are between the third quarter of fiscal year 2026 and the third quarter of fiscal year 2025, unless otherwise noted. For the third quarter, we reported total revenues of $100 million as compared to $112.6 million for the same period last year. Revenues for the 9-month period were $318.8 million versus $319.3 million for the year ago 9-month period. North America, which comprised 46.2% of our total revenues for the quarter was $46.2 million. International revenues, which made up 53.8% of total revenues were $53.8 million for the quarter.

On a year-to-date basis, North American revenues were $151.7 million, up by $2.1 million or 1.4% versus the same period last year. International revenues were $167.1 million in the first 9 months of fiscal 2026 as compared to $169.7 million in the first 9 months of fiscal 2025. Gross margins in the third quarter were 29.3% on a GAAP basis and 29.4% on a non-GAAP basis. This compares to 34.9% GAAP and 35.8% non-GAAP in prior year periods. The change in gross margins is primarily due to volume, regional and product mix in the quarter as compared to the year ago period. For the first 9 months of fiscal 2026, gross margins were consistent with the prior year.

Gross margins were 31.7% on a GAAP basis, 32.1% on a non-GAAP basis. This compares to 31.3% GAAP and 32.1% non-GAAP versus the period last year. In regard to operating expense, we continue to work on opportunities to increase process efficiencies to drive down our expense. Third quarter GAAP operating expense were $28.3 million, down versus $30 million in the year ago period. Non-GAAP operating expense, which exclude the impact of restructuring charges, share-based compensation and deal costs, were $26.4 million or $0.8 million lower than the year ago period. Third quarter operating income was $0.9 million on a GAAP basis and $3 million on a non-GAAP basis.

This compares to $9.3 million GAAP and $13 million non-GAAP in the year ago period. For the 9-month period, GAAP operating income was $13.4 million, up $11.7 million versus the first 9 months of last fiscal year. Year-to-date non-GAAP operating income was $20.5 million, up $4.4 million or 27.6% versus the year ago period. The third quarter tax provision was $0.2 million. As a reminder, as of fiscal 2025 year-end, the company has over $450 million of net operating losses or NOLs that will continue to generate shareholder value via minimal cash tax payments for the foreseeable future.

As it relates to the valuation allowance against some of our foreign deferred tax assets, we believe that there is a reasonable possibility that within the next few quarters, we will be able to release a significant portion of the valuation allowance. This is good news for Aviat shareholders. The potential release of the valuation allowance is due to increased and sustained profitability in our international entities, thanks to revenue growth and cost management. Similar to when Aviat released its valuation allowance in the U.S. approximately 5 years ago, this will create a onetime GAAP income benefit to the company in the quarter the release occurs.

While exact timing of this release is uncertain, it is reasonable that it could occur at some point in the next four quarters. Continuing, third quarter GAAP net loss was $2.1 million and non-GAAP net income was a positive $0.7 million, which excludes restructuring charges, share-based compensation, M&A-related and other nonrecurring expenses and noncash — and also the noncash tax provision. Third quarter GAAP loss per share was $0.16 on a fully diluted basis and non-GAAP earnings per share came out at a positive $0.06 on a fully diluted basis. Adjusted EBITDA for the third quarter was $4.4 million or 4.4% of revenues.

For the 9-month year-to-date period, adjusted EBITDA was $24.8 million, an improvement of $2.8 million or 12.5% versus the comparable period last year. The lower adjusted EBITDA margin this period was driven primarily by the unfavorable timing of Q3 revenues previously discussed, which was partially offset by improving operating expense performance. We expect a seasonally strong Q4 revenue, which will drive EBITDA margins back to expected levels. Moving on to the balance sheet. Our cash and marketable securities at the end of the third quarter were $78.1 million. Our outstanding debt was $104.3 million, bringing the net debt position to $26.1 million. Aviat made continued improvements in its balance sheet this quarter.

Unbilled receivables were lowered for the second consecutive quarter. The third quarter balance was $5.4 million lower compared to the fiscal 2026 second quarter ending balance. This brings our total unbilled receivables balance to $85.3 million. When compared against our short- and long-term advanced payments and unearned revenue balance of $77.6 million, the net of the two balances is $7.7 million. We would consider this to be in the normal range of where these two balances would net out. Inventories were also lower sequentially in the quarter by $4 million. Cash in the quarter was partially used to pay down accounts payable, which was lowered by $33.3 million sequentially.

This progress in normalizing working capital strengthens Aviat’s ability to use its balance sheet to further its growth opportunities. Lastly, Aviat repurchased approximately 20,000 shares in the quarter for $0.5 million. With that, I’ll turn it back to Pete for some final comments. Pete?

Peter Smith: Thanks, Andy. I will now provide an update on our fiscal 2026 guidance. Based on our year-to-date results and our current outlook for the fourth quarter, inclusive of the war-induced pushouts, we will continue to address our expense base, and we’ll continue to pursue cost savings initiatives. We’re updating our fiscal 2026 guidance to be full year revenues to be in the range of $428 million to $440 million, full year adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $35 million to $40 million. Our Q3 challenge started at the beginning of March, and the challenge is timing related.

Despite this temporary setback, we see normalization of demand in Q4 and are highly encouraged by the progress of our growth initiatives and the potential impact on FY ’27. With that, operator, let’s open it up for questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Jaeson Schmidt of Lake Street.

Jaeson Schmidt: Pete, I just want to start with that $9 million in pushouts. Do you expect to recognize those orders here in Q4?

Peter Smith: So I think some of them — and look, we want to be conservative with respect to — it looks like though there is more conflict today. I would say some of that has already shipped. And we’re just at the in the March time frame, some of the Tier 1s got conservative, and we just want to be careful about potential repeat. So that’s why we guided the way we did. I can definitively say some of that has already shipped in the first 2 weeks of the current quarter.

Jaeson Schmidt: Okay. That’s helpful. And then looking at the MDU opportunity, it definitely sounds like you guys are making great traction there. Can you remind us how we should think about the size of this opportunity?

Peter Smith: Yes. Let me just give a little more flavor. So we have live deployments in more than five markets. All of those markets are open for sale. The size of the opportunity is going to be tied to the all-important number of subscribers that sign up. Early indications are favorable. We see with those deployments an opportunity for additional services and insight and work we would be comfortable saying it’s an 8-figure opportunity in fiscal year ’27. Now the problem with that is 8 figures goes from $10 million to $99 million. I think that’s where we’re comfortable saying $8 million.

And over the next 2 months or 3 months, we think we can be more exacting in how big of that opportunity. It’s the most exciting growth program in Aviat, and we’re totally focused. We’ll say 8 figures for now. And I would say that when we get through our year-end and we incorporate this into FY ’27 guidance, we can be more specific and give you a more narrow range, Jaeson.

Jaeson Schmidt: Okay. That’s fair. And then just last one for me, and I’ll jump back in the queue. Last quarter, you highlighted some nice traction with your LTE router. Just curious where that pipeline is today and what you’ve seen over this past quarter?

Peter Smith: Yes. So our upgrade on the Aprisa LTE router, we feel really good about it. We’re on track for the overall Aprisa business to exceed 50% bookings growth this fiscal year. We’re also starting to attach incremental software and accessories to our product sales. We’re seeing expansion across all segments including utilities, oil and gas, public safety and all geographies with strength in North America and Europe. The police applications are small but growing, and we’ve received initial orders in public safety in the U.S., Europe and Latin America. That was a — the platform for this is a small — it was a small acquisition. So it’s a small base, but it’s growing.

And to put this in context, microwave backhaul is, let’s call it, a slow growth market when something like the Middle East conflict happens, it’s tough, and we really feel our growth program in fixed wireless access around MDU, the Aprisa platform for public safety and utilities. These are the things that are going to permit us in FY ’27 to outgrow the microwave market.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Scott Searle of ROTH Capital Partners.

Scott Searle: Pete, maybe just to dive in, in terms of the guidance, it sounds like we had $9 million of pushout, some of which has shipped already into the fourth quarter, but it’s still a pretty wide variance out there of $109 million to around $121 million. I’m wondering if you could give us some of the puts and takes. It sounds like the Mid East continues to be a little bit of a headwind there. But I’m kind of wondering what you see at the higher end of the range and the lower end of the range. And as part of that, the gross margin, it sounds like that starts to recover with some utilization.

But I wonder if you could clarify a little bit more. It sounds like you’re talking about it returning more to normal levels. I just want to clarify, is that 32%, 33% that we should be thinking about? And I had a couple of follow-ups.

Peter Smith: All right. Go ahead.

Andrew Schmidt: Scott, this is Andy. Good to hear from you. I’ll just start with the gross margin part. You’re exactly right. Our year-to-date gross margin, 32% plus. Once we get back to normal volumes, Q4 is our best quarter seasonally. So we expect to have a good Q4. Once we’re back at normal volumes, you’re going to see, again, expected performance in gross margin. And just to reiterate, we — we didn’t see gross margins drop due to price compression, not at all. Again, pricing is in good shape. We just have to get back to expected volumes.

Peter Smith: Okay. And then with the range, so we want to — and let’s say, we have the same end of quarter dynamics where Tier 1s push out and we’re not able to get stuff into the Middle East. And today, in India, they said they had a jet fuel. So we’re hedging on that. So that’s why there’s the range. And just for a company at our scale, it’s harder to deal with these risks, and we want to not have the difficulty in achieving the expectations we set at the end of the June quarter. So that’s why there’s the range.

We — obviously, we want to do as well as we can to be — to deliver on the higher end, but we want to be conservative and acknowledge the environment as it is.

Scott Searle: Maybe a couple of quick follow-ups for Andy, just in terms of the gross margins in terms of how you’re managing memory and incremental freight costs now. So are you still comfortable with maintaining that gross margin outlook given the current pricing environment that we’re seeing there? And maybe a quick follow-up on the balance sheet as well. Small improvements again this quarter. I’m wondering if there’s a longer-term target that you could give us in terms of expected free cash flow that you’d be able to generate in terms of working down DSOs and improving inventory turns?

Andrew Schmidt: Sure. So I’ll start with the gross margin. And to your point, you bring up the usual suspects in terms of, let’s call it, inflationary items. Again, this company works very diligently in terms of offsets to inflationary items. So again, that comes down to negotiating power in terms of commodities, all the way down to utilization, let’s say, in terms of our efficiencies internally. So again, we work diligently in terms of looking for offsets to normal inflation items you might hear from your other coverage universe.

In terms of balance sheet, yes, we still see a lot of greenfield opportunities in terms of addressing both our accounts receivable, accounts receivable and terms of aged accounts are really next on our barometer. We expect unbilled to continue to come down. We have good traction two quarters in a row, which means we’ve cracked the nut in terms of the equation on how to attack that. That’s good. We expect inventories to continue to improve. It all drives basically cash flow that should exceed adjusted EBITDA. So that’s what we’re shooting for. And we see clear daylight in terms of next number of quarters continuing this trend. We don’t expect it to end.

Scott Searle: And if I could just — sorry…

Peter Smith: Well, Scott, did you want the memory and freight stuff or…

Scott Searle: Yes, please.

Peter Smith: So memory in microwave radios is a small part of the BOM. We were in a good inventory position. We could see probably 2 quarters out there being a little bit of inflation. We will work to offset that with respect to price. I would say in the recently concluded quarter, there was some freight inflation. And going forward, we’ll adjust our freight prices as well. So that’s to answer the inflation part of your question. Memory is small.

And then if you want to think about what we see in supply and demand in components, I can imagine a couple of quarters out that trailing edge CPUs enter the dialogue that is occurring with memory, but that hasn’t — does not impact us yet. And we will probably buy ahead on CPUs where the trailing of CPUs where it makes sense.

Scott Searle: And Pete, if I could, two just larger, more macro kind of follow-ups, if you will. Nokia, there have been hearing out there that in terms of their time line and expected divestiture of the wireless transmission business that’s creating some opportunities for other vendors in Europe and elsewhere. I’m wondering what you’re seeing on that front. And also, I’ve gotten some questions as it relates to Nokia’s FWA business being sold to Inseego, how that impacts you? And secondly, just in terms of the MDU opportunity, are there any other technical milestones that you need to hit at this point? Or are we good and we’re just kind of waiting for the MDU customer to start to ramp?

Peter Smith: Yes. There’s no more Aviat technical milestones, right? However, let’s say, in the next 6 months to 9 months, we need to deliver the next-generation project or product configuration, and we’re on track for that. And really, right now, it’s working out our fixed wireless with the customers’ back office and everything else that’s in the overall stack in delivering fixed wireless to apartment buildings. So we feel really good. And we think that our microwave system engineering is really winning the day versus the competition there.

The — with respect to what Nokia announced on Capital Markets Day back in November of 2025, I think the playing field is level between everyone who is listening on the call that, that announcement has happened, and we know very little beyond that. The Inseego purchase of fixed wireless access would suggest that Nokia is executing on the announcement that they made in the back of November, but I don’t have anything further to add with respect to their intent to execute on the microwave portion. And the other part of your question is what is it doing in the competitive landscape? I think I don’t know if and when it will come for sale.

I would say Aviat and Aviat’s competitors are very engaged in developing alternatives should that property be trade or should that property become, let’s say, neglected within the portfolio of Nokia. So I don’t know what’s going to happen with respect to the sale. I do know that we and our competitors are active in terms of trying to make sure that the customer base has microwave solutions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from the line of Theodore O’Neill of Litchfield Hills Research.

Theodore O’Neill: Pete, just a follow-up on a previous answer. You mentioned that issue in India was related to jet fuel. And I was wondering, are these issues related to simply you or your customers getting around? Or is it trying to avoid a conflict zone?

Peter Smith: It’s not — it’s trying to move stuff. You need to have jet fuel to move, and that’s — the comment about freight inflation is tied to the construction and supply of jet fuel, and that was a headline I wrote from India. But where does it really show up is it shows up in our freight costs.

Theodore O’Neill: Okay. And my other question is, there was an executive order about the Defense Production Act amended for the grid infrastructure. And I was wondering if that is going to drive some private network business at the utilities. And by extension, if that would also drive some private network business to the AI data centers?

Peter Smith: Okay. I think — yes, so the Defense Product Act, it was recently a presidential executive order to push the modernization of the grid. I don’t believe that, that was for data center or AI. It was just because the country has not focused enough on the core grid and reducing bottlenecks and the grid expansion and resilience. And what we see from that is it didn’t call out microwave or critical communications. But as the modernization push happens, we see an increased ramp in grid builds. Our pipeline of utility opportunities is increasing. And as the utility yard gets bigger, the need to extend the microwave coverage goes up.

Then also in that executive order, there was a focus on national defense and foreign supply risks. We are Build America, Buy America compliant. We’re the only microwave company headquartered in North America. Our utility business is approaching slightly under 10%. So we think that this national focus is going to pay dividends for us going forward.

Operator: I would now like to turn the conference back to Pete Smith for closing remarks. Sir?

Peter Smith: Okay, yes. I’d like to thank everybody for joining. The Middle East conflict was certainly a drag on demand and margins. We are very excited about our growth programs. We feel like they’re on the brink of making meaningful impacts, and we look forward to seeing that particularly in FY ’27. And then finally, we see — we’re coming up to our fiscal year-end, and we look forward to giving you an update on the full year and the path forward for FY ’27 with MDU, with BEAD, with the utility and other Aprisa platforms. Thank you, everyone.

Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.