Earnings Call Transcript

Techprecision Corp (TPCS)

Earnings Call Transcript 2023-12-31 For: 2023-12-31
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Added on April 17, 2026

Earnings Call Transcript - TPCS Q3 2024

Operator, Operator

Greetings. Welcome to the TechPrecision Corporation Third Quarter 2024 Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer will follow the formal presentation. Please note this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to your host, Brett Maas, Managing Partner of Hayden IR. You may begin.

Brett Maas, Managing Partner, Hayden IR

Thank you. On the call today is Alex Shen, Chief Executive Officer; and Bobbie Lilley, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I'd like to remind our listeners that management's remarks may contain forward-looking statements which are subject to risks and uncertainties, and management may make additional forward-looking statements in response to your questions. Therefore, the company claims the protection of the safe harbor for forward-looking statements as contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ from those discussed today, and therefore, we refer you to a more detailed discussion of risks and uncertainties in the company's financial filings with the SEC. In addition, projections as to the company's future performance represents management's estimates as of today, February 29, 2024. TechPrecision assumes no obligation to revise or update these forward-looking statements. With that out of the way, I'd like to turn the call over to Alex Shen, Chief Executive Officer, to provide opening remarks. Alex, the floor is yours.

Alex Shen, CEO

Thank you, Brett. Good afternoon to everyone, and thank you for joining us. I'm happy to report that customer confidence remains high as our consolidated backlog further strengthened to $50.8 million at December 31, 2023 from $44.6 million at September 30, 2023. We have since captured new bookings over $6 million in January and February of 2024. For Ranor, the backlog increased and featured both new penetration as well as recapture of significant sole-source content in the defense sector, namely the Virginia class and the Columbia class submarine programs. For Stadco, the backlog increased and featured significant recapture of military aerospace sole-source content combined with new penetration into military space launch and aerospace-related tooling. For the third quarter, consolidated net sales were $7.7 million or 8% lower when compared to $8.3 million for the same period one year ago. For the nine months of fiscal 2024, consolidated net sales were $23 million or 4% lower when compared to $23.9 million for the same period a year ago. For the third quarter of fiscal 2024, consolidated gross profit was $1.2 million, operating loss was $1 million, and SG&A expense increased by $1 million, primarily due to outside advisory costs in connection with a potential acquisition. For the third quarter of fiscal 2024, Stadco gross profit was essentially breakeven at negative 3% of net sales, a loss of $216,000, in a quarter with a lower number of labor hours available during the November and December holiday calendar. Ranor gross profit was $1.4 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2024. We do expect to deliver our strong backlog over the course of the next one to three fiscal years with both revenue growth and better gross margin. The Stadco turnaround continues. I would like to share one specific success story, which revolves around our customers' requirements for Electron Beam Welding technology. Stadco operates one of the largest electron beam vacuum welding chambers in the United States. We have methodically overhauled and upgraded key components of our Stadco chamber with good results, improving on-time delivery from 25% at the start of acquisition to 100% on time today. We have improved throughput by 800%. In other words, we can put out eight times as much work today compared to August 2021 at the close of the Stadco acquisition. As a result, we have been able to recapture customer confidence and have secured new purchase orders that feed this specific work center as well as other machining supports to work centers. We continue to focus on tactical execution and risk mitigation, driving both subsidiaries to fully and successfully meet customer expectations while enabling continuous recapture and retention of customer confidence. We all clearly see the positive results of this focus, evidenced by the continued high customer confidence which has enabled us to grow an already strong backlog. We remain highly focused on cash management – a critical piece of risk mitigation – and continue to manage and control expenses, capital expenditures, customer advances, progress billings, and final invoicing at shipment. I will now turn over the call to our CFO, Bobby Lilley, to continue with the review of our quarter results.

Bobby Lilley, CFO

Thank you, Alex. Net sales for the third quarter of fiscal year 2024 were $7.7 million or 8% lower when compared to the same quarter a year ago. Direct labor hours charged to projects were lower at both segments. Consolidated cost of sales were $6.5 million or 5% lower than the prior year period, due primarily to the lower revenue recognized during the third quarter. Consolidated gross profit was $1.2 million or 23% lower compared to the same quarter a year ago. SG&A expense increased by $1 million, primarily due to outside advisory costs in connection with a potential acquisition. Operating loss was $1 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2024. Interest expense increased due to more borrowing under our revolver loan and higher interest rates. There was $2.6 million of outstanding debt under the revolver loan at December 31, 2023. Net loss for the third quarter was $865,000 compared to net income of $134,000 a year ago. For the nine months of fiscal year 2024, net sales were $23 million or 4% lower when compared to the same period a year ago with $13 million for Ranor and $10 million for Stadco. Cost of sales were $20.1 million, or 1% higher than the prior year period, due primarily to a decline in absorption rates resulting from a lower number of labor hours utilized during the period. Gross profit was $2.9 million or 29% lower, due primarily to the decrease in net sales. SG&A expense increased by $636,000 or 14%, primarily due to an increase in outside advisory costs in connection with a potential acquisition. Operating loss was $2.2 million due to lower net sales and increased SG&A expenses. Interest expense increased by $76,000 due to more borrowing under our revolver loan and higher interest rates. Net loss for the nine months of fiscal 2024 was $1.9 million compared to net income of $24,000 a year ago. The prior year period included a one-time gain of $624,000 from the ERC tax credit refund. Moving on to our financial position for the nine months ended December 31, 2023. Cash provided by operating activities was $1.2 million. Cash used for capital expenditures was $2.8 million. Financing activities provided net cash of $1.4 million, primarily from borrowings under the revolver loan. Our total debt was $7.6 million on December 31, 2023 compared to $6.1 million at the end of March 31, 2023 as we borrowed an additional $1.9 million under the revolver loan in fiscal 2024. Cash balance at December 31, 2023 was $0.4 million compared to $0.5 million at March 31, 2023. Working capital was negative at December 31, 2023 as we reclassified all of our long-term debt to current due to certain debt covenant violations. With that, I will now turn the call back over to Alex.

Alex Shen, CEO

Bobby, thank you. For those on the call today who may not be very familiar with our company, TechPrecision is a custom manufacturer of precision large-scale fabricated and welded components and precision large-scale machined metal structural components. The components that we manufacture are customer-designed. We sell to customers in two main industry sectors: Defense and Precision Industrial, predominantly Defense. We do most of our work in industries that are highly sensitive to confidentiality, which preclude us from speaking publicly about many things that a company not operating in these fields might discuss. As such, there are real limits as to what I can discuss and sometimes those limits change. Please understand that my saying I am not allowed to discuss that is based on customer requirements and the environment in which we conduct business. Even though I have read the last statement at every conference call for the past several years, we continue to get questions both written and oral or hear about individuals making statements that what I am saying is not accurate, that it is the board silencing me or that I alone am making these decisions. As I have said repeatedly, we are not the ones making these rules – not me, not the board. The decision as to what we can say is based solely on rules from our clients. These are not my rules. These are not the board's rules. There are many things we would love to speak about, but we are restricted. It is the same for all of our direct competitors. As a final point, I do not see these clients changing these restrictions any time in the near or even distant future. So please do not expect anything to change. Where we can speak about it, we will, but we will not jeopardize our relationships with our clients, and we will not jeopardize the future orders we expect to receive from them. TechPrecision is proud and honored to serve the United States defense industry, specifically naval submarine manufacturing through our Ranor subsidiary and military aircraft manufacturing through our Stadco subsidiary. We aim to secure and maintain enduring partnerships with our customers. Overall, in both the Ranor and Stadco subsidiaries, we continue to see meaningful opportunities in the defense sector as evidenced by the strength and continuing growth of our backlog. We are encouraged by these prospects for growing our revenue and increasing profitability in future quarters. Operator, we can open the line for questions.

Operator, Operator

Thank you. At this time, we will be conducting a question-and-answer session. The first question comes from Mark Gomes with Pipeline. Please proceed.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

Hey, Alex. Congrats on the rebound in order and backlog consistent with what we're seeing in the industry. So that's nice to see. How do you feel about your cash and access to capital right now for operations? You're not looking for a forward-looking statement, but obviously, you have an idea of what you need going forward. Do you feel safe about what you've got there?

Alex Shen, CEO

Well, I think let me answer the question about whether we feel safe about what we have. We do feel safe about what we have. I'm going to turn the rest of the more technical stuff over to our CFO, Bobby.

Bobby Lilley, CFO

We still have a facility that we've had for the last year in place with our bank, and we did go up at the end of Q3, but we're in the process of renegotiating that facility and borrowed in anticipation that the negotiations might not be done at the end of Q3. The borrowing is back down and we still have that facility.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

Yeah. That's great to hear. Thank you for that. And then with anticipated increases throughout the industry, I know you guys spent quite a bit of money on CapEx in recent quarters, which as you stated on the last call, would it be safe to say that that's for capacity expansion? How do you feel about your human capital expansion as well? Are you having any luck on the hiring front?

Alex Shen, CEO

We are. In conjunction with CapEx, you bring up a very good point. A human machine interface needs a human to interface with the machine to make it work. So as we increase our capacity as well as capability, we have – for example, I go back to the success story I shared with – sticking with Stadco's welding chamber. The electron beam welding chamber that we have has been upgraded with several key components, but also the manpower that's driving it is a very critical piece of driving that 800% throughput increase. So yes, we have had – I wouldn't say luck. I think we have been methodically grinding away to make sure that whatever gains we make with our humans and machines, we do not drop back. We have been able to maintain that throughput. So it's good news. Thank you for the question.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

Thank you. And then final question. In consulting with some investment banking professionals, they indicated an amount of borrowing that one could expect you to be able to attract in order to close this pending acquisition. The range they provided leaves quite a bit left over that would presumably have to come through equity, but your equity is obviously depressed at this point in time. How do you feel about your ability to pay for this acquisition? And how optimistic are you about your ability to even close it?

Alex Shen, CEO

Mark, I don't mean to sound negative or closed, but I've been instructed that we cannot legally speak about the acquisition, the potential acquisition, at this time.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

I understand. Was there any part of that question that you are able to speak on?

Alex Shen, CEO

I think I need to err on the side of caution and just obey my instructions.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

Fair enough. I'll back into the queue. Thank you very much.

Alex Shen, CEO

Mark, one more thing before we leave you, I think one thing we can say is the potential acquisition activities continue.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

Yeah, that's very clear from the forecast that you provided, which were pretty optimistic. I think you did a pretty good job explaining the methodology by which you think that you can hit those numbers. That's consistent with what we're seeing in the industry. So that was nice to see, as well as the order flow coming through, which I think a lot of folks are waiting on bated breath to figure out is not so much whether the deal is going to close, but can it even be closed, given your situation. And so that's a big part of the frustration out there, which is why I asked the questions.

Alex Shen, CEO

Understood.

Operator, Operator

The next question comes from Greg Schlatter, Private Investor. Please proceed.

Unidentified Analyst, Analyst

Yes. I've got just a couple of questions. Since you managed to be consistent on losing money this quarter, am I reading this right that you are having to borrow money to pay legal fees to find out if you can acquire this company? I mean that's what's going on? You're borrowing money to pay the legal fees. Do you even see if you can purchase the company?

Alex Shen, CEO

I think – go ahead, Bobby.

Bobby Lilley, CFO

There has been some borrowings. There's also been inflow of cash from operations. But yes, there have been some borrowings for some of the expenses.

Unidentified Analyst, Analyst

So my question, you can't even pay the attorneys out of cash to acquire a company that size. How on earth do you expect to be able to pull a deal off, one; and two, once it is pulled off how do you even manage the cash flow within that company when you have what do you have $400,000 in the bank and that's it?

Alex Shen, CEO

I believe that you are mischaracterizing our report. Thank you.

Operator, Operator

Thank you. The next question comes from Ross Taylor with ARS Investment Partners. Please proceed.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Thank you. A couple of questions. Alex, what level of capacity do you think you're running at in Ranor and also in Stadco? It would strike me that the revenues you're running at are a fraction of what you're capable of running at. I'm trying to get a handle on how much unused capacity you're sitting on in those two facilities?

Alex Shen, CEO

Quite a bit. I think it varies with the ebb and flow of the business, but we have open capacity. We have also ups and downs of the PO flow and the material flow coming in. It's a question of timing and product mix that sometimes is going to help us and sometimes does not. Our order flow is good. Our capacity is available, and we have more open capacity.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Okay. Why have you not stepped away from DoD business in an effort to utilize more of your capacity even on a temporary basis? I could see what it would allow you to add to your workforce to volume to get them worked up so that when you get these important opportunities from the DoD, you'd be ready not only to execute but execute at a very high level if you were bringing on more outside business. The company used to do a lot of industrial. It seems you have abandoned that segment. Why was that decision made?

Alex Shen, CEO

Well, if you remember back then, the company used to do a lot of business with potentially over 1,000 customers. Much of the time when we do that much business that is so fragmented, the losses continue to mount. Instead of concentrating our forces on one set of specifications and one business sector, we decided to focus on fewer clients that offer stability in demand.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Okay. In the recent information that you published with regard to the acquisition, I'm not going to ask you about that. But what struck me as you're offering the three-year forward view on expected revenues, expected EBITDA, and the like. You don't give us a quarter out. Why is it that you're able to give us three years of information on Votaw, and you're not able to give us about three months on TechPrecision?

Alex Shen, CEO

Sorry, Ross, I must clarify. The numbers include all three – well, two current subsidiaries as well as the acquisition of Votaw. It combines all three.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Yeah. As you're giving – so you actually have pretty long visibility, not only on Votaw but also on your two businesses. I think it would be very helpful to your investors if you were – if it didn't take this acquisition, which by the way I'm strongly in favor of, I think the acquisition when it's done will be a homerun. I think that those who don't quite understand what's going on or where the money is coming from. I think it's quite clear. This is a deal that you're financing on Votaw. This is likely to deal with a strategic investor or investors involved on Votaw who are likely to be providing perhaps taking the equity and providing the debt. I'm just guessing on that, but that's my experience. And when the company is taking over someone much larger than they are usually done in this type of fashion, and they're also proven to be profitable. It strikes me as they would actually be – you can do it. So it would be helpful if you did do it. You talk about the fact you can't give us insight. No one's asking you about specific programs. So the idea of being able to talk about the combined company, you've got four – at least four major programs possibly others and the like. So that would be helpful. Also, have you been finding in here that you're picking up business from – are you primes or those who are employing you bringing new business from others who are not able to execute?

Alex Shen, CEO

Some of this information is in the public arena as far as what you just alluded to in the second part of your question. Those of us that cannot execute are out there.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Are you winning business that others had that they were not able to execute on? It's a simple yes or no question. I'm not asking program specific, but I don't know why you wouldn't be able to answer it.

Alex Shen, CEO

Well, the reason I'm not able to answer is because somebody has told me that we shouldn't talk negatively about competitors who have lost their business. But I think you're on the right track there with your question. Is that good enough?

Ross Taylor, Analyst

No, not really. I believe this reflects part of the challenge we face with investors—that's a question that can be addressed. There's no need to avoid it. What you need to do is establish a connection with us. Honestly, if you were to do that, I believe the stock could be valued between $6 and $8 a share, not just $4, because when you examine the economics and the details of this acquisition, I’ve referred to this as your Graham moment. You have the opportunity to achieve for this company what happened to Graham over the past year, where its stock saw significant growth, even without an increase in backlog, revenues, or EBITDA. If you consider the upcoming seasons in the following years, you're looking at a remarkable opportunity.

Alex Shen, CEO

Let me try to rephrase myself then, Ross, if you give me a chance.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Certainly.

Alex Shen, CEO

So I think the holistic way to approach this is that we have – new orders come from several different places. One is the offload from our clients. One is new part numbers that become designed and released with the new capabilities of the nuclear submarines. And certainly, when there is a competitive bid, we are winning those. So perhaps that's a much better and more comprehensive way to answer your question.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

So you're winning new orders, new part numbers, and you're picking up business implied from others who have struggled to execute on their end. That's basically where I'm getting to. Is that correct?

Alex Shen, CEO

Yes, inclusively, yes.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Okay. Now you've lost money in eight of the last 11 quarters. You've made money in two and broken even in one. What is it going to take, short of the closure of this acquisition which will I think change that? But short of that, what's it going to take? And why can't we get this company to where it's making money?

Alex Shen, CEO

If I can perhaps characterize this. Ranor by itself is in a much better place. It's had 10 years of good recovery, whereas Stadco was a very damaged suffering turnaround that we acquired. We acquired it and closed it in 2021. There have been certain success stories, but much of the deferred maintenance has been a big drag on earnings and profits. We're not over the hump yet. It continues to be a turnaround, but we do have success stories and we continue to methodically tackle these problems. You'll recall that a few months ago, we had a number of different machines suffering at the same time and drastically impacting performance at Stadco. So, put together, yes, we are suffering. Separated, the focus really needs to be twofold: One is to preserve the gains that we have made at Ranor and continue to be profitable and increase that profitability. We are at an inflection point now, especially with Ranor. We are not at that inflection point completely with Stadco. So sharing the success stories is showing progress, and while the success is not good enough to reverse the flow completely for both subsidiaries and TechPrecision at the same time, we are also spending money on the potential acquisition because that's a necessary step. So there is a combination of three things that are contributing to the recent numbers. I expect this to get better.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

And did you indicate that Stadco was breakeven operationally this or close to it this quarter?

Alex Shen, CEO

Yes.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Okay. So you are getting quite close to this.

Alex Shen, CEO

Yes, the operational loss is negative 3% of sales basically. We're almost there. Not there yet. I remember back in the day; we were outlining all the details. We were still red even when we reported slight profits. So we'd like to cross that line soon with Stadco.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Okay. Well, it appears that you are working in that direction. It also strikes me that if my read is right, this deal will not only be a home run for the company, but I think it – and this is I think the frustration investors have is if indeed everyone is waiting on the financing. I think a lot of people are waiting and expecting there to be a public equity offering or something that you hire someone to go out and try to shop millions of shares in the public market. If my read and experience is right, you don't do that. And I think it's imperative therefore you get this deal closed and you prove me right or wrong. Because if you prove me right, the stock is going to be back where it was and better, because the numbers you put out the other day are absolutely fantastic. If you can get that in this company then even with a significantly larger shareholder base, if you double your shareholder base, that's still a home run deal. And I would like to see that deal close. And I'd like to see us get therefore where we can get the profitability, because patience is not a virtue I was born with. And while I have supported you, I am losing my patience. And I'm losing my patience because I think that this deal was communicated poorly, and I don't think we should be sitting here with a $4 stock looking at this deal. I think we should be looking at the stock that actually is probably higher than it was when you announced the deal, if these numbers are correct or even close to right. So thank you. I'll let someone else queue on here.

Alex Shen, CEO

Thank you.

Operator, Operator

Up next is Mark Gomes with Pipeline. Mark, please proceed.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

Yes. First, I'd like to agree with everything Ross said – that was kind of a command performance. I do commend your response to him, Alex. When you asked about stealing business, I understand not talking bad about competitors, but you found a way to answer that question without talking badly specifically about any competitors. So that's the sort of thing where it's best done proactively as opposed to shutting a question down. I think that's where a little frustration comes in. That being said, are you going to provide any kind of color commentary whatsoever regarding what gives you confidence in the Votaw forecast numbers? In other words, without telling us of course what businesses they’re in, what programs they’re working on, can you tell us a little bit about the confidence you have that you’re not buying a business that’s at its peak, but is going to continue to be robust?

Alex Shen, CEO

I'm going to answer this question, Mark, and not going to avoid this. The numbers that we published reflect part of the answer to your question, which is do we expect this to fall flat? Do we expect it to already be peaked? The numbers do show that. The numbers show an increase.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

I understand that.

Alex Shen, CEO

I apologize, Mark, but there was another aspect to address. I take pride in sharing information that I truly believe in, and I'm not certain how much that resonates with everyone, but that is my approach.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

Yes, that adds a little bit of color to it. We deal with forecasts every day and the forecast you put out was clearly the best forecast that you believe that you have at your disposal. My question is more around the confidence in that I can put together a forecast and tell you, well this is my best guess, but I don't know how much confidence I have in it or this is my best guess and I'm 100% confident in it. So that's where the cost of that question was.

Alex Shen, CEO

Understood. And I think also the forecast, as we had pointed out in an answer to an earlier question, is a combined forecast.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

Right. That was clear from your commentary on the methodology. It was very good what you put there. And then...

Alex Shen, CEO

Okay.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

I guess last question. Your deferred maintenance issues that you're working through Stadco. What inning are we in? Is this the eighth inning? Are we one or two quarters away from being out of the woods there? How do you want to kind of characterize it qualitatively, not something that we're going to hold you in a new solver, but when you say we're almost there, what does almost mean?

Alex Shen, CEO

I think there's a two-part answer to that question. As we implement and execute some of the deferred maintenance, we are winning. So we illustrated one win. The other piece of it that is not so apparent is the ability to hold the line and not let it backslide is the other piece that's hidden and not so apparent to any of us that are not in the execution and operational role of running these machines. That piece is going pretty well, meaning if you compare our performance to a quarter – quarter-by-quarter comparison to a year ago. A year ago we were negative 2% of net sales and we’re able to hold that despite the mishaps that happened this fiscal year from last – from the quarter a year ago. I'm not sure I'm coming across very articulately right now. But the point is, this quarter negative 3%, essentially breakeven. The quarter a year ago was also negative 2%, essentially breakeven. We are attempting to not only fix and implement deferred maintenance, but whatever gains we have, our job is to hold the line and not let it backslide. And that piece of it seems to be going well. We just need to continue to repair what we can to make sure that it doesn't backslide. How does that translate into what inning we are in? I'm not able to quite tell yet to be honest. But we're more ahead than behind. With the recovery of Ranor, it took a number of years. We are in the third year now with the Stadco acquisition. So I think there should be more good things to come. We need, timing-wise, to have customers support us by giving us business that dovetails into the high throughput machines that we've recovered. So if we can highly populate the electron beam welding team, that would help quite a bit. But the good part is, we now have equipment and people that are ready to take on much more than we ever have before in the history of Stadco in certain pieces and certain work centers. I'm sorry for the long explanation, but I'm trying to give color and trying to build a bridge.

Mark Gomes, Analyst

Don't ever apologize for giving a long-winded answer. I think the communication that you're providing on this call is reminiscent of a few quarters ago when you started to move in that direction. Trust me, the feedback from the substantial number of folks that own the stock due to my coverage waxes and wanes with your communication, and on this call it's greatly improved and I appreciate that and I'm sure they will as well. Thank you.

Alex Shen, CEO

Thank you.

Operator, Operator

The next question comes from Richard Greulich with REG Capital Advisors. Please proceed.

Richard Greulich, Analyst

Good afternoon. First of all, I apologize. I was only able to get on the call about five minutes ago. So I may be covering something that was covered. The first thing I heard was when Ross was saying even if you double your shares that's great whatever. Have you discussed at all shares or debt financing?

Alex Shen, CEO

Again, as I alluded to earlier, I've been instructed to not speak about the potential acquisition.

Richard Greulich, Analyst

Okay. Who is the firm or the firms that are you working with you on the financing?

Bobby Lilley, CFO

I think for anything that you have regarding the potential acquisition, you need to refer to the press release that just went out. And it states in there what we can say and are saying at this time.

Richard Greulich, Analyst

This is the first time I've heard someone looking to make an acquisition without naming the brokerage firm or the adviser assisting them with financing. Could you share who that is?

Alex Shen, CEO

I cannot at this time.

Operator, Operator

The next question comes from Ross Taylor with ARS Investment Partners. Please proceed.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

I wanted to touch on a couple of things quickly. I'm not sure I should come back and ask the questions after I got the way of reviews. But Alex, the V-22 tiltrotor Osprey has been grounded for some time. The program is deeply troubled at this point. The Navy and Marines are flying their CH-53Es at a much higher rate. It was my understanding that those airplanes have been hours-limited before. I know the Israelis hour-limited theirs. Are you seeing business coming back into Stadco for the CH-53E?

Alex Shen, CEO

I can tell you that we see business for D, E, and K.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Okay. I actually know a K flew over my house on Saturday rather I thought that was interesting – big and surprisingly quiet. So that is a real positive situation developing there. Second is, we've seen some of your peers talk about the availability of funding, whether it be from the Federal Government. The government is working very hard to build out its Defense Industrial Base infrastructure. Talking to people in your industry, there are a lot of small companies, sub-$100 million dollar companies many of which are in positions like you are. Is the Federal Government or are your customers legitimate sources of financing should you need it for work or not for financing the acquisition, but for actual operational work?

Alex Shen, CEO

I think I'm allowed to say this: I would recharacterize that as customer-funded CapEx.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Okay. And that is available to you. And you've made it...

Alex Shen, CEO

That has been made available and partially executed.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Okay.

Alex Shen, CEO

I'm sorry Ross by Ranor.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

By Ranor. And when you do that, does that come with backlog? Or does that come with a promise of future backlog?

Alex Shen, CEO

Well, I think it would be foolish to fund CapEx in our company and not give them anything to do.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Well, technically backlog is – there's a technical definition of backlog. You have your definition and the like. So they might well basically – obviously they're giving it to you to do something but it might be – is it something that actually shows up in your $50 million plus backlog which by the way it's nice to see you finally get to that number? Or is it something that…

Alex Shen, CEO

I can answer that question very clearly. It does not show up as backlog because our definition of backlog is actual purchase orders for components that we manufacture.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Yeah. And that's what I was getting at. So you have that, but it's likely that you have more – that you have a – and it is clear from what you laid out earlier this month on the three years that you have visibility well beyond this year and that is why you're confident. And that is why this deal in the end, when it gets done, a year or two years, three years out will actually not appear to be a step over the line and a moment of insanity but actually a rather smart transaction that changes the fate in the future of this company in a favorable fashion?

Alex Shen, CEO

Yes, sir.

Ross Taylor, Analyst

Okay. I'll give it back to someone else. Thank you, sir.

Alex Shen, CEO

Thank you.

Operator, Operator

We have reached the end of the question-and-answer session. I'd now like to turn the floor back to Alex Shen for closing remarks.

Alex Shen, CEO

Thank you everyone. Have a great day.

Operator, Operator

This concludes today's conference. And you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.