Ovzon AB (publ) (OVZ.F) Q2 FY2025 Earnings Call Transcript & Summary
August 15, 2025
Earnings Call Speaker Segments
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsWelcome. In an increasingly geopolitical uncertain time where many are seeking resilience in the more complex world, secure satellite communication services are becoming a more important piece of the puzzle. Today, we will meet the company experiencing strong growth in just that field. Ovzon is the company, and I welcome CEO, Per Noren; and CFO, Andre Lofgren. Please welcome.
Per Noren
ExecutivesGood morning. Thank you.
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesThank you.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsI am sure you are very eager to get started with the presentation. I'll leave you to it and I will be back for the Q&A.
Per Noren
ExecutivesThank you, Mattias. Yes. Thank you so much for having us here, and good morning, everyone. We're very excited to start the presentation of the second quarter 2025. There are several things that are exciting today, one being that we have our new CFO, Andre Lofgren, with us today. This is his first quarter as the CFO of Ovzon and I'm very pleased to have you here.
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesThank you. Looking forward to this moment.
Per Noren
ExecutivesSecondly, I think our numbers are -- which we'll go through are very positive from our perspective. And also, of course, that the quarter included a major milestone, historic milestone in terms of business. So without further ado, let's get into the presentation. First of all, I would like to do an introduction to Ovzon as we normally do. I think it's important to put us in context of what Mattias talked about in the beginning. This is a company that's been in going business since 2006. We are very deep in technology and we're very broad in services and solutions. We are listed on NASDAQ Stockholm, obviously. Our main operations is in Sweden. We're a Swedish technology company, but also with a strong foothold in the United States and a few other European countries. We offer integrated satellite communication solutions for mission-critical customers. And our core markets are Defense, National Security and Public Safety. We have most of our revenue coming from the Defense market today. As you can see, we have our fourth consecutive quarter with positive EBITDA. It started in Q3 2004 -- Q2 2004 and are now in this quarter as well. We are on a SEK 458 million in rolling 12 months. And we have an order book of SEK 1.5 billion, indicating a very solid revenue base going forward. Let's put things in context, as was mentioned in the introduction, there is an accelerating urgency in demand for satellite communications. Obviously, we follow and track the geopolitical tensions there are. Today is a big day. Later this evening, European time in the morning, U.S. time. There is a meeting between President Trump and President Putin given Russia's invasion of Ukraine and trying to negotiate something there. But there are tensions, not only there, but in other parts of the world. That's one of the aspects of where we play. I'll come back to why. Cybersecurity is something that is also both in space and in our daily lives that is very, very driven by the adversaries. So that's another aspect of secure communications. Digitization, we -- the world is exploring in data, content, AI analytics, another aspect of communication as an infrastructure. And then obviously, the devastating news we have daily now of the wildfires currently going on in Spain and in British Columbia and Canada and in many other places with heat waves that are beyond what we've seen historically. All of these things drive one thing. You cannot rely on the traditional infrastructure. You have to have something that is mission-critical that you can rely upon. And the only way to do communications in those kinds of environments where you can't rely on the normally infrastructure is actually through satellites. That's exactly what Ovzon is about. So this drives the need for what we do. Market trends, though, 4 years ago, we started to pivot much more towards Defense, National Security and Public Safety customers. Going away somewhat from the commercial markets that we were looking at then. The overall trend with that has been very positive for us, obviously, maybe not good for the world, but positive for Ovzon in that regard, where we can protect and connect people, societies and organizations with what we do. There is a strong increase in defense investments, specifically in Europe. There is an expansion of the NATO budgets. I was personally recently at the NATO top meeting in The Hague in June and was able to participate in the industrial discussions there, where the NATO countries are actually unified around an increase in budgets and commitments to that. The U.S. administration, when it comes to decision-making executive orders, budgets, priorities and procurements are very, very much internal. It shifts and changes every day, and it creates a lot of uncertainty as well. So it's a difficult environment to navigate within. That has had an effect for Ovzon actually. We have -- one of our contracts that we've had there was current has not currently been renewed, but we are in deep conversations with our core customers, with new customers, both within the U.S. DoD and other customers. So we think the long-term aspects of this market is very important to us, and we will continue to penetrate that market. But it's a reality of what we have to live in. In Europe, sovereignty is an important thing. And specifically in satellite communication systems, to ensure independent and secure connectivity. And it also drives standardization and interoperability as things. So you can collaborate, you can use it on manned and unmanned vehicles, et cetera, et cetera. So those are also trends that play quite well into what we do as a company. And of course, governments are looking into hybrid, bringing commercial capabilities and technology into military-grade capabilities. And last but not least, I think what we've seen from specifically in Ukraine, the electronic warfare aspects of that, that also has cybersecurity components to it, are capabilities that our NATO and others are investing heavily in, in order to make sure that they stay ahead of the curve of technology and evolution for that. So all those trends are actually somewhat in the favor of what we do. So what do we do then? Well, our value proposition is unique versus other competitive solutions. We'll come to that in a few minutes here. But we deliver an integrated satellite communication solutions. We build satellite networks based on our own proprietary satellite Ovzon 3 and third-party satellites that have similar attributes to our satellite, meaning steerable antennas. We can design networks that are geared for those specific missions that drives performance, mobility and resiliency, very important aspect for our customers, always or ubiquitously connected. We deliver mobile satellite terminals that are both for On-The-Pause and On-The-Move, as we call it. On-The-Move is for vessels in the air, on the ground and on the water. And then, of course, for headquarters and other functions as base stations basically. And then we partner with secure gateway providers to get the signal. Those are the parabolic signals that is connected to fiber. And last but not least, we have a very dedicated team that delivers this integrated service 24/7 and 365 days a year with a very, very high uptime, almost up to 100%, but at least at 95% uptime to guarantee the connectivity without disruption for our customers. So very unique for Ovzon. No one is close to this integrated system. Now just to put it in context, what you want to have in a secure national -- Defense, National Security and Public Safety environment, this is military applications, but it could be emergency services and could be police, et cetera, et cetera, is you want to have your system connected. All your assets, whether they are flying, walking, driving or on water or land. And you want it all connected, so you can have the data for decision-making at your fingertips and information at your fingertips. So it's an integrated system. And it's only really possible through the advanced satellite communication capabilities that we can provide today. So this is where you see the defense investments in NATO, U.S., Sweden and Europe going today. That positions us very high in the value chain. So this is supposed to talk about the base of this triangle is the mass market. Of course, that's their traditional communication systems and infrastructure. They are very important. They are provided often by government-owned entities and so on and so forth. And as you walk up the value chain, you can become to mission-critical. So in essence, on the layer below where you can see also at the top of this triangle, are the so-called low earth orbit providers that provide connectivity to consumers and organizations in any remote place or in any part of the world. We believe that's very, very important. We believe we complement this whether they are Starlinks or OneWeb or Project Kuiper by Amazon. It's complementary to what we do, but we put our capability on top of that and drive ubiquitous connectivity for those missions that are very critical that cannot have any latency. So in essence, that's the first part of our presentation. It's to put Ovzon in context. We have done this for many years, and we are very strong at it. And I think now when we walk into the second quarter here, we can start to see that the commercial success has started to grow for the company. And it takes a long time to invest in the right technology, the right solution, right people to get to a point where you can satisfy the customers day in and day out. So over to the second quarter then and accomplishments. Now obviously, during the quarter, the base for everything we do is to have customers that become repetitive customers, meaning the evidence of that is that they renew the contracts they have. So the first thing that happened in the quarter was, we've renewed a larger European customer that we've had for a few years, again, given that they are extraordinarily satisfied with what we've done. And of course, at the end of May, we signed an historic milestone order with the Swedish Defence Materiel Administration, over SEK 1 billion. The contract is for 24 months, and we'll come into a little bit more details on that and the mix of terminals and services and networks that we have. So historic for us sets us up for the future, but we're also very humbled by it because now it's about delivery. We'll come back to that as well. And after the end of the quarter, we also got a follow-on order from the Swedish Defence Materiel Administration of more mobile satellite terminals and the order value was SEK 72 million. And as you will see when you read the report properly and Andre will talk about, we received the payment from FMV of SEK 264 million on July 1 and not June 30, which means that it actually came into the next quarter, but the money is in the bank and the cash is at hand for Ovzon. So it was more of an administrative thing that made it arrive on the 1st of July. So very strong accomplishments in the quarter, historic milestone. The historic milestone order, as we noted, SEK 1.04 billion, but SEK 1 billion in -- from the Swedish Defence Materiel Administration. It's the largest order to date and a significant milestone for the company, obviously. It includes, obviously, the whole value chain that I talked about our Ovzon network services, we call it Hero and mobile satellite terminals, and we have a broad portfolio of those, both On-The-Pause and On-The-Move terminals that we deliver, and we have delivered 1/3 of those terminals in this quarter. And of course, also our dedicated customer support that we -- that takes on a massive role of making sure that the uptime is close to 100% for the customer. The duration is longer than what we traditionally have had. It's 24 months. And as I said, the delivery started in June, 1/3 of the terminals and the networks was gradually started in June as well. It's based on mostly third-party satellite capacity, but we have the chance and we've taken the chance to also mix in some of the capabilities and networks from Ovzon 3 into that as well, which we have the right to do. We have done it because it serves the customer well, and it helps us also to utilize the satellite in an optimal way, I would say. And of course, we see this as a real significant proof point of our direction that we've had for a few years, our solutions, our technology and our way of working and delivering as a trusted partner to countries and to Defense, National Security and Public Safety units. Historic milestone, very proud on behalf of all employees and all stakeholders that have made this possible. Over to the numbers. And before I hand over to Andre, I'll talk a little bit about the order intake and the order book. Obviously, as you can see on this slide, it is a significant order book now, which gives us predictability in our numbers going forward, which we can see then in the revenue, et cetera, et cetera. But you can see we have a large order book now, and it increasingly have grown from other quarters, as you can see on this picture as well. So that sets us up well for a continued scaling up and industrialization of the company and to go to market and find more customers, added on customers and an expansion, which we are on a path to do. So with that, we'll dive a little bit deeper into the numbers, and I'll hand it over to Andre.
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesGreat. Thank you, Per. I'll dive into then the revenue. As you can see on the bar to the left here or the graph to the left and the Q2 '25 bar, it's a strong increase in revenues this quarter. And as you can see, we split it up here between services and terminals, and it's actually a record sale of terminals in this quarter. As Per said, we delivered all 1/3 of the terminals that we're supposed to deliver. But then if you look into the price mix of those terminals, it's a slightly lower price in total. So there's more to come from this terminal delivery as we go, but it will not be as a big chunk. It will be more a successive delivery going forward. And then what's also pleasing to see in this graph is that the service revenues has been now increasing for 5 quarters in a row. So it's a really strong, stable foundation that we have here and also a big step-up then in this quarter. And then to the right, you see run rate revenue, which is our revenue from services for the last quarter or this quarter and then multiplied by 4. So that's kind of an annualized version of our revenue, telling you where we're heading. And that's actually also at record levels. Now moving on then to profitability, which is very important. Here, we are very pleased to announce that we have positive numbers on EBITDA, also on EBIT level and on profit after tax. So when all costs have been included, we have a positive result, which has been a long time since we deliver that, as you can see from the graph to the right as well. And it's quite a big step-up as well in that profitability. And that comes from -- well, first of all, we have higher volumes. But in those volumes, we have higher volumes of sales. And in that volume, we have a bigger portion of Ovzon 3 being utilized. So that drives the profitability. And then we are good at keeping operational costs at bay. So that drives this profitability upwards in a strong way. Then I move over to the operating cash flow. And here, to the left, you see 2 strong quarters then in this quarter followed by an outflow of cash. And as Per mentioned, we have had a big payment coming in the 1st of July. So this bar is actually the opposite just the day after. So it's -- if you -- where we stand today, this is actually very strong cash flow. It's just where quarters are cut and when payments get into our bank account. Then moving to the middle graph, you see our investments. And from the history, you can see that we have invested significantly into Ovzon 3. It's now 4 years been in operation. So what's left now of investments is more of terminal development and then on our On-Board-Processor, which is a unique feature of our satellite. And then to the right, you see the net debt increasing slightly, but it's actually not the debt that's increasing. It's the cash that has been decreased. And again, that's connected to this payment that we received in July. So if you take that into account, it's a completely different picture, and it's a much brighter picture as well. So that's basically the financials. And if we summarize it, we -- I would say that what we're delivering in this quarter is strong growth, and it's done together with improved profitability. So we have strong bookings, which gives us a solid backlog and that has increased our revenues. And with a solid backlog, we can assume that, that growth will continue for a while. And then EBIT-wise, as Per said, very satisfying to see that we have actually 4 quarters in a row now with improving profitability and a pretty significant step-up in this quarter. And finally, cash again, it's much better than it looks like in this graph. And I'm really looking forward to present this graph in Q3. So with that, I hand it over to you, Per.
Per Noren
ExecutivesThank you. And before we wrap up, rest on this slide a little bit here as the company has been in, obviously, for years in an investment phase of building the satellites, the On-Board-Processor and new terminals in the integrated system we have. And we've had a mantra of driving profitable growth. I would say that we can call this profitable growth, and we've turned the corner, right? At the same time, you have to be smart. You have to run a healthy core business. You have to manage your cost, you have to manage your cash and you have to be out in the market, educate and drive value to customers. And we have basically 4 things that we base that on. We say customers first, we say people always. We say business ubiquitously, meaning 24/7, both in terms of service, but also in terms of understanding and being creative with customers how to utilize our technology. And then lastly, delivering value with technology. So this sets us up to continue that path that we've been on. Going forward, the 3 main targets or goals for us is to deliver financial performance. I think we have shown that with this quarter. Actually, on the EBITDA side, we started that journey -- this is the fourth quarter in a row. So we started that journey, and we continue it. I think maybe the most satisfying thing is that we are -- we have profit on the last row as well. And then Andre talked about the cash flow. We never run out of cash. So that's a very important measure for us to continue to drive. And then obviously, continue to ensure commercial success. You cannot rest on your laurels. Yes, we had a very, very significant historic milestone with the win we have. We have to deliver on that, and we have to continue to deliver value to customers and then find new customers, renew and regain customers that we have in our purview. And then lastly, industrialization and scale-up of the company. Obviously, we've been operating on a fairly small team and driving kind of the value with that. We are not going to go crazy. We're going to do a step-by-step upgrade as we see that the business is continuing to perform at the levels or better than that where we are today. So with that, we'll thank you. Maybe you want to say something about our Capital Markets Day before we hand over to Mattias again.
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesYes, sure. I mean I hope that -- this quarter announcement will give you some interest and maybe learn more about our company. And we have a Capital Markets Day on September 4 in Stockholm. So please check that out and sign up. It's going to be an inspiring day, I hope. That's the plan at least.
Per Noren
ExecutivesThank you. Back to you, Mattias.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsWe will start the Q&A by inviting -- we're joined by 2 equity analysts, and we will start off by inviting Simon Granath of ABG Sundal Collier.
Simon Granath
AnalystsAnd congrats on the strong numbers and a particular kudos to the recent contract signings. Initially, I have a question on the latest development in the U.S. I know we tend to come back to this during earnings calls, but it is a bit surprising to me that the DoD has not renewed the contract from last year. Have you received any feedback to why this is the case? Or is your assessment that this is only about budget and procurement uncertainty?
Per Noren
ExecutivesThank you. Very good question. I think, first of all, you can see that we also mentioned it in the CEO comments. So it's an important aspect for us, obviously. It's the biggest defense market -- defense spender, and it's an important customer base. Yes, we have received feedback. We have very strong feedback from the users. Remember, they have a lot of terminals out in the field, and they stay out in the field. So the need from them is there. They want to continue with the service. I think they have gotten stuck in the budget bureaucracy and prioritization changes that are happening. So we continue to work with the end users. We continue to work with the procurement people, both on that current customer base, but also with other customers within U.S. DoD and other customers in the U.S. So I think that's all I can say at this point. We know that the value is there. We know that we protect and connect those organizations that have used it, and we continue to have a positive view on the U.S. market.
Simon Granath
AnalystsAppreciate that. And the terminal sales, as Andre highlighted, were indeed strong and reached highest quarterly level ever reported. Is this the level in terms of capacity that you are able to manage? And I ask this partly in light of the current strong order backlog. So I'm trying to understand the linearity in terms of deliveries of the terminal backlog over the coming quarters.
Per Noren
ExecutivesYes, very good question. Part of our scaling up, obviously, is if you look at our value cycle networks, so we have our own satellite and we buy capacity from others. We are very good at that. And you have followed us for a while, so you know that we used to have inventory of satellite capacity that were unsold. We don't have any inventory of satellite capacity unsold. That drives our profitability up. So we're very good in mixing and matching and building that up and have good relationships with other providers, and can utilize Ovzon 3. So that's one part of that. On the terminals -- so we don't see a restrain on our business in that regard. On the terminal side, I feel very comfortable that we can deliver on this historic milestone deal that we had. I don't see -- it's strained. Well, it's tougher for the supply chain because there are more volume, obviously. But we are also placing orders and continuing to develop, so we will build up an inventory for coming business as well. So I think we're not at peak levels, but we -- obviously, with these volumes that we have never been, we're testing the waters on how to expand that supply chain and how we can actually deliver and build up a little bit more inventory ourselves. We've been quite a lot of just in time. So that's part of our industrialization going forward. So I wouldn't say that it's holding us back, but we have to continue to invest in kind of making sure that we can build up inventory and deliver on new business that is coming in. I hope that answers your question.
Simon Granath
AnalystsYes. Yes, indeed, it does. And I'm going to ask a follow-up question on capacity in general terms. And that is given that the recent FMV SATCOM order involves lease capacity, how are the discussions progressing on finding increased lease capacity? And also, will additional lease capacity fully match the FMV contract? Or could you add some extra capacity for other customers or orders from the same customers to fill?
Per Noren
ExecutivesYes. Yes. Very good question, obviously. First of all, we have relationships with many of the satellite operators, satellite providers, capacity providers. We keep that going even though we buy at different volumes at different times during the history of the company. But we don't see that we have constraints on that building up for this delivery, and we don't see that we will have constraints in actually taking on more customers either as well. And we are looking into ways of partnering revenue share models, et cetera, with some of the providers that we are closer to. So we don't see that is holding us back from delivering and growing further.
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesI maybe add to that, that what we have secured is at good levels. We are satisfied with the pricing that we have.
Per Noren
ExecutivesYes.
Simon Granath
AnalystsVery happy to hear that. And the final question for me. I think the page you showed during the presentation on market drivers relating to geopolitical tension or military, cybersecurity, climate change, et cetera, is an interesting page. And my understanding is that most of your current operations is mainly relating to military. So do you expect that to remain as a key driver for operations over the coming quarters and years? Or could call it, climate-related use cases grow in share of sales over the coming years? Is simply a broadening use case, a strategic priority is my question.
Per Noren
ExecutivesYes. Thank you for the question. We'll dive deeper into that on September 4 at the Capital Markets Day. But the general question is we see in the coming quarters that Defense will be the main driver of that. However, with what's going on kind of on the emergency side and the need for more capabilities, as you could hear on the news or -- I mean this -- as of the date of this morning with what's going on in Spain, it is a strategic initiative for us to look into how we capture that market. It has some different market consent than what the Defense market has. So we might have to be smart about how we develop the type of services for that market. But it's the same core. It's just that we might have to deliver it in a different way with a different business model, but it is a part of our Horizon 2 and Horizon 3 growth plan, yes.
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesAnd we are happy to be joined also by equity analyst, Mikael Laséen at Investment Bank, Carnegie.
Mikael Laséen
AnalystsI hope you can hear me. Yes, I have a few questions. First of all, I'm curious about the SEK 1 billion contract from FMV. How did the service part start in Q2?
Per Noren
ExecutivesYes. I'll hand it over to Andre.
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesWell, it started out well. We delivered terminals, as we said, for -- and with that, you can then apply the services and the network. So they have been established and are up and running. And we have in dialogue with the customers and what their need is, we have ramped that up during June since we got the order in late May. So it's rolling in the plan that we have set up for establishing this.
Per Noren
ExecutivesJust an addition to it. So we delivered the 1/3 of the total terminals at the end of June, right? So it's somewhat of a gradual increase in the service because you don't need to have overcapacity on the networks when you don't have all the terminals out. So I think that's what I would add to what you said.
Mikael Laséen
AnalystsOkay. So it was less than a month fully utilized then, I guess. And then it will be up and running in Q3. I mean on the right level, I mean, the service part, right?
Per Noren
ExecutivesThat's a fair way of looking at it. Yes.
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesYes.
Mikael Laséen
AnalystsI'm trying to understand the mix between Ovzon 3, which has very high margins, of course, and the leased side. Can you provide any sort of indications of the mix in this quarter, roughly how the service part is split?
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesWell, usually, we don't disclose how much of our own satellite is being utilized. But it's -- I mean, as you can see from our margins, margins are increasing and a part of that is more utilization of Ovzon 3. That's also the plan going forward to maximize that, of course.
Per Noren
ExecutivesI would say it's -- in this quarter, it's mostly third party. But we have started -- as Andre says, we have added in a part of Ovzon 3 in that mix as well. I think this is great for us actually because it's -- we have an asset and we see what we have in terms of kind of in our pipeline, and we don't want to sit on unutilized capacity. So we throw that in temporary if we can and if we want to or we keep it for something that is maybe brewing, et cetera. So it's -- we have a good, good situation today with mixing and matching own assets with procured assets.
Mikael Laséen
AnalystsOkay. Got it. So how flexible is the leased capacity side? So if you got an order for Ovzon 3 and you want to utilize more lease capacity? Can you -- how quickly can you turn that on?
Per Noren
ExecutivesIt's fairly flexible now. When you go into a 24-month contract, though, you have to actually sign up for some period of time. So we cannot fully have on a -- let's think of it as a monthly basis. So we have to actually sign up on some contracts that are let's say, on 12 months, right? So we do it with options and firsthand right of first refusal. But in the beginning here, since the terminals were delivered late, we had the opportunity to actually do it more hand-in-hand, so to speak, from that. And as we go, we have to sign up for more. But right now, we're utilizing Ovzon 3 partly in that, which means we have a very, very good mix now. If something else is taking Ovzon 3's attention, we have the chance to bring in the other third-party capacity. So I think that's how deep I can go in that answer.
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesI think we've done our homework and have now like optimized -- trying to optimize the portfolio of leased versus owned capacity.
Mikael Laséen
AnalystsOkay. And in terms of margins and costs, how should we think about gross margins on terminals when you have these high volumes, I guess that you have scale effects in production. But if you also can comment on how we should think about the operating costs below gross results going forward?
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesIf I start with your last question, the OpEx, I mean, we are a small organization, have been lean for quite some time. There are competence that we will add, but it's not a massive increase at all. I think we're going to stay, well, not flat line, but gradually increasing and do that in a disciplined and controlled way. So slight increase there. And then on cost for terminals, and we are ramping up production. And of course, there will be probably some pricing or cost increases somewhere along the line, but I think nothing that is difficult for us to handle, and we're making sure that we're securing resources and plan for larger volumes as we go ahead.
Per Noren
ExecutivesAnd with larger volumes also comes that you can order and you get better terms.
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesYes, exactly.
Per Noren
ExecutivesSo we're working this, as you can imagine, on a very strategic for us, but also securing production lines and inventory.
Mikael Laséen
AnalystsOkay. Got it. Just a clarification here on the follow-up from the first question about the U.S. situation. Should we expect that, I mean, new contracts or renewal could be delayed given the current situation? Is that what you're suggesting and maybe they can come back in late this year or early next year or -- yes, it would be great to get some clarity on this.
Per Noren
ExecutivesYes. You tell me what you think about the clarity and the certainty of what's going on in the U.S. administration, first of all. But I'm not really laughing at it. So trying to answer your question, it's really hard to predict. I think, as I said a little bit earlier, we are -- have always been very close to the end users. We have very positive demand signals from them. They stay with their -- the terminals On-The-Move and On-The-Pause terminals. They need it. Could that lead to something early? Potentially. Could it be delayed to '26? Potentially. But we're also working on other tracks with other customers within U.S. DoD that shows promise. But new customers take longer than current customers. So it's very hard for me to say whether or not it happens now, tomorrow or later. But the U.S. market and the U.S. DoD will remain an Ovzon target and will be Ovzon customers for the long term. I know it's not the answer you want, but I can't give you a better answer than that, actually.
Mikael Laséen
AnalystsI appreciate it.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsSo we will continue with some more questions then. If I start with you, Andre, given that the Ovzon's loan facility has been extended to September 30, 2026, can you elaborate a bit on your plan for refinancing or repaying this debt?
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesYes, sure. I mean looking into our loan facilities, that's something that we always do, of course, try to optimize. And we are, for the time being, very actively working on finding ways of optimizing this. So we are -- yes, really looking forward to see if we can find a good way forward here.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsThis breakthrough in the second quarter with your improved financial status, will this give you possibilities in cheaper loan financing solutions?
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesWell, we'll see. I mean it's -- we are, as we said, actively looking into this. And it's -- the impression we get is that it's a much -- it's a different world now than it was when we were sourcing financing for the satellite and a totally different situation for the company as well. So it's a new world and Ovzon in a new situation as well. So I think we just have to wait and see. And when we know, we will communicate.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsAnd Per, do you say that you have a unique package of services? How will you stay ahead of competition?
Per Noren
ExecutivesThat's a good question. Well, I think the way to stay ahead of competition is what we've always done. So staying very close to the customer, seeing what -- how they use it, what works, where we need to improve, et cetera, et cetera. And the services, I would say, is an integrated service. So that includes both the terminal side. So we can see a great need for smaller antennas, so smaller terminals because there is a drive towards unmanned solutions, a lot of unmanned solutions. So that's something we're exploring. We're looking into -- we know that the requirements we had on our own satellite, Ovzon 3 with its On-Board-Processor really works, exceeds expectations with those customers that use it. So we are also investigating to see whether or not how we could, in the future, have more of that in our portfolio as well. And then thirdly, then, as I mentioned, unmanned and other things, new applications. And I think the resiliency component, that's a popular world in society today, but resiliency for us means that you have an uninterrupted signal even in an environment which is contested. And I think we are very good at that. Our On-Board-Processor can actually do what's called single hop communication between terminals instead of going down to a ground station and getting the signal from the Fibernet. So that creates a closed-loop communication system. That's an innovation that I think has yet to fully be deployed in the market. And if you put things on unmanned vehicles, you cannot have any latency and the On-Board-Processor ensures that you don't. So this is how we're going to stay ahead of the game with our mission-critical capabilities.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsWe had a question from the side lobe. You partly answered this already. It's about that U.S. customer that has not yet prolonged the deal. But he also asked how much revenue is in play here?
Per Noren
ExecutivesSo the contract that we had was for USD 6.2 million over 12 months. That was the current contract that then expired on July 31. So for this year, maybe it's not that much financially that we get hit with, but it's a $6.2 million on a 12-month basis. But we have always had the goal to expand that as well and get back to new customers and other customers, but that's what's in play.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsHow are your plans to launch a next satellite and its financing? How is that coming along?
Per Noren
ExecutivesA very good question. That's something that is in work. We'll talk more about that at the Capital Markets Day. This is not a commercial for that, but we will lay out a little bit more context around that. We are absolutely looking into that given the feedback and the performance of Ovzon 3 and the On-Board-Processor. So we're looking into what technologies are there, new technologies on the satellite side that are available. The On-Board-Processor, obviously, is critical. So we need that on as payload on the satellite. So we have a team that is concentrated and looking into it during the autumn here. Of course, if you want to do this, you also have to have financing as the question alluded to. So I think that's a 2-step approach. One is the question you asked Andre about refinancing. So I think working on that actively, as Andre answered, is what we do. And then the second phase of that is to look how we secure smart and effective financing for new satellite capabilities. So we can probably say today, we want to build more satellites. But we also have to have financing and capital in order to do it that is not draining the company. So we are in the process of actually evaluating this.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsOkay. On your Capital Markets Day on the 4th of September, fairly soon, what else can investors look forward to in getting in that day?
Andre Lofgren
ExecutivesWell, it will be a deeper dive into Ovzon as a company, our history and where we stand today and our offers and how we view the world and competition and possibilities, opportunities. And then forward-looking as well, what's our strategy going forward. So it's going to be a bit of everything.
Per Noren
ExecutivesI would add to that. Think of it as a day in the life of Ovzon with what we came from, where we are today, as Andre says, and where we're heading, which includes a view on profitable growth, technology, customers and scale up of the company.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsGreat. There's a late question coming in here. Do you see Ovzon's satellite solution can create synergies with the Rakel Gen 2 network? And have you had discussions with MSB?
Per Noren
ExecutivesYes. Rakel Generation 2 is -- yes, is the kind of total defense communications. Absolutely. Absolutely, it can. It should be a component of Rakel 2 or Rachel 2, honestly. We have had discussions through the years with -- Rakel has been in play for a long time. We've had discussions through the years. But I also think if you look at what's happening in the world, the question were around emergency services, national security, public safety and defense. If you look at the situation in the world today, countries need sovereign capabilities and solutions. Rakel could be one of them. Ovzon is not integrated in it yet. It should be. So I think, obviously, we have to be on our toes, and we have to have open discussions. But we've started those conversations, early stage, we've started those conversations.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsAll right. That was the last question from me today. Thank you so much, Per and Andre for joining us today.
Per Noren
ExecutivesThank you, Mattias, for hosting us.
Mattias Vahlne
AnalystsAnd I want to address the audience, and thank you, everyone, that has been watching. See us again.
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