ATS reported a 17% revenue increase to C$760.7 million, outperforming its projected range of C$700 million to C$740 million. The company attributed the gains to robust organic growth in nearly all markets, bolstered by favorable foreign exchange movements. While the transportation sector lagged, the decline aligned with previous management forecasts.
Sector Growth and Market Resilience
Order bookings reached C$821 million, a figure that beat Wall Street expectations by 15% despite being lower than the previous year’s record-setting performance. TD Cowen analyst Cherilyn Radbourne characterized the result as a "reacceleration," noting particular strength in consumer products and the energy sector, specifically nuclear reactor refurbishment projects. The company’s total order backlog remained stable at C$2.05 billion.
Profitability saw a significant jump, with net income rising to C$30 million, or C$0.31 per share, compared to C$6.5 million a year earlier. For the upcoming fourth quarter, the company expects revenue between C$710 million and C$750 million. Management stated that the substantial backlog should help cushion the impact of short-term fluctuations in order volume.
The results come as ATS navigates a shift in its executive suite. Doug Wright assumed the role of CEO in mid-January, shortly before CFO Ryan McLeod announced his resignation to join aviation-training firm CAE.
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