K. Guru Gowrappan
Great. Thanks, Mark. I will cover three topics. Financial performance, near term priorities and update on our outlook. Viasat generated good financial performance during FY'24. We earned combined revenue growth of 9% year-over-year and combined adjusted EBITDA growth of 6% year-over-year, driven by mobility and government, excluding the onetime catch-up benefits of the litigation settlement in Q2 FY'24. The pressure on operating leverage reflects incremental R&D investments to deliver mobility growth, including new in-flight entertainment and connectivity functionality, next-generation encryption offerings and ramp up for the ViaSat-3 satellites entering service in FY'25. For Q4 FY'24, we grew combined revenue by 5% while combined adjusted EBITDA declined 3% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA in Q4 was favorable to guidance last quarter due to accelerated cost savings from synergies alongside slightly improved top line performance in government and commercial segments. The Q4 cost savings were previously slated to begin in Q1 FY'25. Some of the key highlights from the quarter include. We completed the ViaSat-3 F1 handover from Boeing, our satellite control center is now operating the spacecraft. In March, we demonstrated speeds over 200 Mbps to an aircraft and we continue to expect to place ViaSat-3 F1 into commercial service later this Q1 FY'25. Government systems had another quarter of strong demand for information assurance, high-speed network encryption products increasing just over 40% year-over-year. We also had a strong quarter in tactical SATCOM networks, driven by growth in Blue Force Tracking L-band services revenue. We were awarded a contract from Northrop Grumman to support the US Air Force Research Laboratory initiative called The Defense Experimentation using commercial space, Internet program and our ViaSat-3 satellite network will enable users to access high-bandwidth satellite internet connectivity from existing aircraft or ground vehicles. Our Satellite Services segment benefited from strong growth in aviation. Commercial IFC ended the year with 3,650 aircraft in service, up about 17% year-over-year on a combined basis with over 1,350 aircraft in backlog. US fixed broadband revenue declined as expected, fewer residential subscribers were partially offset by higher ARPU. We continue to deprioritize US fixed broadband to support our rapid and higher margin IFC growth. We developed a hybrid multi-orbit managed service for maritime called NexusWave. It's expected to launch this Q1 FY 2025 and is a scalable solution with global coverage, speed, capacity, security and resilience to meet enterprise class operational lease and crew welfare. NexusWave will seamlessly integrate ViaSat-3 capacity as they enter service. And finally, Mark described the full year impact, but in Q4, we extended the maturity of $1.3 billion out of $1.68 billion of term Loan B debt and paid down $84 million with cash. We also extended the Inmarsat revolver for three years in an amount of $550 million. We continue to optimize our balance sheet while retaining ample liquidity to act opportunistically. Now some color on the financial results. Q4 FY 2024 revenue was $1.2 billion, up 73% compared to $666 million in Q3 FY 2023. Combined revenue was up 5% year-over-year, driven by growth in government systems products and aviation services and products. In maritime, our Ka and L-band hybrid offering, Fleet Xpress continued to grow with some ARPU pressures slowing the overall trend and while expected declines in L-band only fleet broadband continued. Given the recurring nature of the business shifts up or down in revenue trajectory tend to be gradual. That said, we expect improvement later in the year with new multi-orbit, NexusWave installations, which also lay a foundation for maritime customers on to ViaSat-3. Net loss from continuing operations was $85 million for Q4, up from $23 million net loss in the year-ago period primarily due to increased interest expense associated with the Inmarsat acquisition. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $358 million, an increase of 188% year-over-year. Combined adjusted EBITDA decreased 3% year-over-year, reflecting an expected decline in fixed broadband service revenue, lower product revenue which tends to be lumpy and higher R&D expenditures in the quarter, largely offset by approximately 30% growth in aviation. Sequentially, net leverage declined 0.2 times to approximately 3.6 times estimated combined LTM adjusted EBITDA as of Q4 FY 2024, which is substantially favorable to plan at the time the Inmarsat acquisition was announced. We ended the quarter and year with $3 billion of liquidity, including $1.9 billion cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments at quarter end and no near-term maturities and a fully funded path to positive free cash flow by end of Q1 FY'26. Finally, insurance recovery claims are proceeding well. The first claim submitted was for the I-6 F2 satellite and we have received 100% of the insurance proceeds or $348 million. We are in the process of collecting ViaSat-3 F1 insurance proceeds, and to-date, we have collected about 55% of $421 million expected. Overall, it was a good quarter for Viasat, and we delivered above the high end of previous adjusted EBITDA guidance. Now I'll touch on the three priorities we discussed in our letter. First, build operational momentum and financial performance of our core businesses. FY'24 was a good year achieved through focused execution, continued strength in awards, and we extended a meaningful portion of our debt maturities. Our second priority was executing the Inmarsat integration to achieve operating, capital and revenue synergies to reduce costs and expand the scale and scope of our products and services. We accelerated delivery of the $100 million in annualized cash operating savings, bringing forward about $25 million of the savings into Q4 FY 2024. Capital synergies and disciplined allocation reduced FY 2024 CapEx to $1.5 billion or about $175 million below our previous $1.7 billion outlook as we drive towards positive free cash flow. In Q3 of FY'24, we announced operating expense synergies, as I just mentioned, alongside the rationalization of our satellite road maps, which is yielding $100 million of CapEx synergies for a total of $200 million, as Mark said earlier. Today, we're announcing an additional $100 million of CapEx synergies related to network and platform integration. You also noticed $75 million of CapEx shifting from FY'24 into FY'25 due to the ebbs and flows of satellite milestone payments. Third, sustain and improve mobility business growth while advancing the inflection point to positive free cash flow. We are proud of the businesses and trusted customer reputation we've built, our portfolio enjoys a strong right to win, good margin profile and long-term attractive growth in mobility focused markets. We are progressing on putting $3.3 billion of satellites under construction into service, that positions us for profitable growth through higher performing satellites and partnerships with other operators. We are making steady progress and have line of sight to positive free cash flow by end of Q1 FY 2026. Now to outlook. We are initiating our FY 2025 outlook and a preliminary view of FY 2026. We exclude satellite impairment charges and the catch-up benefit from the litigation settlement announced in Q2 FY 2024 from our guidance. As Mark said, FY 2025 is about setting a foundation. For FY 2025, we expect roughly flat year-over-year revenue with low to mid-single-digit year-over-year adjusted EBITDA growth. We've also provided additional segment level detail in the outlook section of our Shareholder Letter. While we are getting positive operating leverage, we are remaining prudent with our top line guide given uncertainties with delayed OEM commercial aircraft deliveries. Given these pressure points, we've taken targeted measures to resume top line growth in FY '26, building on our strong backlog and anticipated awards growth. We may have opportunities to resume growth earlier and we'll provide additional updates as warranted. In FY 2025, we expect capital expenditures to decline to a range of $1.4 billion to $1.5 billion. The FY 2025 range excludes the benefit from insurance recoveries as capitalized software and network synergies offset a portion of the FY 2024 expenditures that moved into FY 2025. We include capitalized interest in our CapEx guidance, which is approximately $200 million per year, but it will decline in future years as we place satellites into service. In FY 2024, our investments in our satellite network projects and success-based CapEx where over two-thirds of our total capital spend that's less than one-thirds associated with other maintenance and general CapEx activities. A preliminary view of FY 2026 indicates we expect to grow revenue and adjusted EBITDA gain in FY 2026 relative to FY 2025 as a majority of our $3.3 billion assets under construction go into commercial service. Capital expenditures for FY 2026 are expected to continue to decline to a range of $1.1 billion to $1.2 billion. Again, FY'25 is foundational to multiyear accelerated sales growth, adjusted EBITDA growth and continued step down in CapEx in FY 2026. In an effort to communicate our outlook more consistently, we will be providing all outlook comments based on fiscal years rather than a mix with calendar years. So let me just be clear. Our target has not changed. We continue to expect an inflection point to positive free cash flow by end of Q1 FY 2026, our path to positive free cash flow is expected to be driven by double-digit operating cash flow growth and continued declines in capital expenditures as we normalized capital expenditure in line with satellites going into commercial service. Before wrapping up, I have two important updates to share. As Mark referenced, in May, we initiated a new segment reporting structure to give additional insights into our portfolio and drivers of value. Going forward, we will have two reportable segments. Communication Services and Defense and Advanced Technologies. We listened to our investor feedback and we will include revenue data for each major business unit within segment. We plan to provide recasted historical financials ahead of our first quarter call so that you have time to update your models. Secondly, we are continuing to gather feedback both from our direct outreach and the perception study that is wrapping up as we enhance communications and planning for an Investor Day and or other opportunities to highlight market potential, competitive strategy, growth runway and our playbook for improved returns and sustainable cash generation. We will come back with future updates. Despite some challenges, our operational performance in FY'24 and Q4 was good, and we are capturing substantial operational and capital synergy. In FY'25, we expect to make significant progress on our satellite road map and towards positive free cash flow with good increases in operating cash flow and moderated CapEx. With that I'll pass it back to Mark.