On Thursday, Haivision Systems (TSX:HAI) discussed second-quarter financial results during its earnings call. The full transcript is provided below.
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Summary
Haivision Systems reported second-quarter revenue of $32.5 million, a 5.1% decrease year-over-year, attributed to geopolitical tensions and supply chain disruptions.
The company is investing heavily in modernizing its technology portfolio, focusing on AI-enabled solutions and integrated technologies to support long-term growth.
Gross margins were 68.9%, down 410 basis points from last year, mainly due to a shift in revenue mix and supply chain constraints.
Despite short-term challenges, Haivision maintains a positive long-term outlook, expecting double-digit revenue growth and targeting 20% EBITDA margins by fiscal 2028.
The company extended its credit facility to August 2028, with a strong balance sheet and $18.1 million in cash, positioning itself for strategic growth and potential acquisitions.
Full Transcript
OPERATOR
Thank you all for standing by. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the HiVision second quarter 2026 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press Star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press Star one again. I would now like to turn the call over to Mirko Wicka, President, CEO and Chairman. You may now begin.
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
Thank you. Tracy Good morning everyone and thank you for joining us of our earnings call to discuss the second quarter of fiscal 2026 which ended in April 30th. Our second quarter unfolded against one of the most complex global operating environments we've seen in recent years. Heightened geopolitical tensions, including the conflict in the Middle East, ongoing supply chain volatility, component availability challenges and customer procurement delays have created uncertainty across many of the markets we serve.
As a result, some customer programs and capital spending decisions have shifted to the right impacting the timing of some revenue recognition. Now, while these short term headwinds have affected our near term performance, they have not altered the underlying fundamentals of our business or the long term demand drivers for our technology. In fact, we believe the secular trends supporting our company are stronger than ever. The increasing need for defense and intelligence capabilities, public safety modernization, critical infrastructure protection, cybersecurity, resilience, enterprise security and government digital transformation continues to create significant opportunities for our solutions worldwide. Our customers missions have not changed, their priorities have not changed. In many respects they have become even more critical in today's geopolitical environment. Therefore, we remain focused on executing our long term strategy rather than reacting to temporary market volatility. We are making substantial investments to modernize and strengthen our technology portfolio across both our mission systems and broadcast and media businesses.
This includes a comprehensive refresh of our product roadmaps, next generation platforms, software capabilities, AI-enabled solutions and integrated technologies designed to meet evolving customer requirements. We've been very, very busy with this transformation the past 18 months and will continue to do so throughout fiscal 2027. Now, these investments are intentional. They position the company not simply for the next quarter or the next fiscal year, but for a new cycle of growth that we expect to accelerate through fiscal 28 and 29 and beyond.
We have successfully navigated challenging market environments before our balance sheet remains solid, our customer relationships are deep and our markets are strategically important and supported by long term structural demand. Now, while we expect some near term volatility as customers work through procurement cycles and global supply chains continue to normalize. We remain highly confident in our long term outlook. We believe the actions we are taking today will strengthen our competitive position, expand our addressable markets and create meaningful shareholder value over the coming years.
Our strategy is clear. Maintain operational discipline, continue investing in innovation, support our customers critical missions and position the company to capitalize on the significant growth opportunities ahead. I appreciate the continued support of our customers, employees, shareholders and partners and we look forward to updating you on our progress as we execute against our strategic objectives. Dan Rabinowitz, can you please continue with the detailed financials?
Dan Rabinowitz (CFO)
Thank you. Mirko revenue for the second quarter of fiscal 2026 was 32 and a half million, representing a decrease of 1.8 million or 5.1% compared with the prior year period. Since our last earnings call on March 13, the operating environment has become meaningfully more complex. Several external factors affected customer decision making, procurement timing and near term purchasing patterns during the quarter. First, the conflict in the Middle East created additional uncertainty across several end markets.
At the time of our last call, the U.S. bombing campaign had begun less than two weeks earlier and market expectations around the duration and scope of the engagement were still evolving. The subsequent announcement of the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz a month after the earnings call added another layer of macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty, particularly around energy markets and broader customer planning. Within the defense sector, we have not seen evidence of a structural demand issue.
Rather, the pressure we experience related primarily to procurement timing. Defense spending is being directed towards urgent readiness priorities, including air defense, counter drone capabilities and replenishment needs. At the same time, broader modernization programs remain subject to normal budget cycles, approval processes and program gates. One large defense program in particular is expected to contribute to lower purchasing levels in the near and medium term as assets associated with that program are currently deployed and there's no defined timetable for their return.
This has affected the timing of expected purchases, though we continue to believe the underlying requirement requires remains intact. Second, artificial intelligence has become a major investment priority across many customer segments. We are seeing significant investment in AI infrastructure projects, and customers are increasingly evaluating how AI will affect their own businesses, technology roadmaps and capital allocation decisions in the enterprise market.
This has contributed to longer IT approval cycles. Buyers are prioritizing AI infrastructure, cybersecurity, cloud optimization and cost reduction initiatives, ahead of more discretionary communications and video refresh projects. In the broadcast space, we continue to see constrained media technology budgets, discIPlined capital spending, and heightened scrutiny of return on investments for cloud, IP, remote production and infrastructure upgrades.
Related to this, we noted on our last earnings call that the global memory semiconductor market has entered a tight supply cycle driven largely by demand from AI data centers and high performance computing applications. That trend has continued, memory prices are increasing and memory and server manufacturers are prioritizing AI optimized products, which is further constraining supply for other server configurations. In response, we are monitoring supply chain conditions closely, making incremental investments when deemed necessary.
We've also changed how we quote server based solutions. Servers are now offered as a separate line item rather than bundled with software into a and appliance like offering this gives customers greater purchasing flexibility. They may purchase software only or virtual machine options, purchase servers through Haivision or source servers through their own supply channels. This approach is intended to protect Haivision from volatility in server input cost and preserve margin discIPline.
At the same time, it may reduce reported top line revenue by as much as $2 million, depending on the extent to which customers elect to source server hardware independently. Despite the second quarter revenue decline, our year to date performance remains positive. For the first half of fiscal 2026, total revenue was 76.8 million, an increase of 5.3 million, or 8.5%, compared with the same period in the prior year. Our recurring revenue from maintenance support contracts and cloud services continues to be sound.
Recurring revenue in the first quarter was 7.1 million, or about 22% of total revenue on a year to date basis. Recurring revenues 14.4 million, or 21.3% of total revenue. Gross margins for the second quarter, fiscal 2026 was 68.9%. That's a decline of 410 basis points compared with the prior year period. And on a year to date basis, gross margins were 69.7%, representing a decline of 200 basis points compared with the same period in the prior year.
As we discussed in our last earnings call, gross margin performance continues to be affected by product and revenue mix. In particular, we highlighted three increased transmitter sales, higher sales of HMS solutions installed on servers and sold as an appliance like offering, and the timing of deliveries to a large defense customer, which reflects legacy activities from our systems integrator business. Those product sets carried lower gross margins than our corporate average and affected both first quarter results and year to date performance.
Although all three factors affected year to date performance in the second quarter, the gross margin decline was driven primarily by the magnitude and composition of deliveries to a large defense customer. This quarter, in fact represented the highest level of deliveries to that customer under the existing agreement, with revenue from those deliveries increasing approximately threefold compared with the same period last year. However, the mix of those deliveries was weighted heavily towards lower margin third party components rather than the higher margin proprietary hivision products.
As a result, while the volume of deliveries was strong, deliveries was strong, the margin contribution was below our typical profile. Perhaps as a consolation, approximately 3 million of proprietary products deliveries shifted from the second quarter into the third quarter due to supply chain constraints. Those deliveries are expected to carry a more favorable margin profile and would have improved the second quarter mix had they shipped as originally planned.
Overall, the second quarter margin decline was primarily a function of revenue mix and delivery timing. That said, we are facing gross margin pressure reflecting higher component costs and constrained availability across memory and compute related inputs. Technology manufacturers using memory GPUs, CPUs, SSDs, NICs or FPGAs are facing increasing purchases through brokers, higher bond costs, longer lead times, allocation risk and expedite fees. This is creating allocation dynamics and upward pricing pressure.
To illustrate the point, the number of component end of life events affecting our active production has accelerated and has doubled in the last six months compared to the previous six months and equally important, the number of component end of life events received with no opportunity for last time buy windows has climbed sharply. We are taking pricing sources and design actions including incremental investments in inventory. Cost increases are flowing through faster than customer price adjustments creating near termination midterm margin compression.
Total expenses this quarter were 25.6 million, down 2.6 million from the prior year comparative period. Although still a favorable comparison, the prior year period did include a non recurring expense of 1.5 million related to legal settlements and related fees. To further frame our total expense levels, last quarter, which is our first quarter of fiscal 2026 total expenses were 25 million and total expenses for the quarter before that our fourth quarter of fiscal 2025 were 25.54 million.
In fact, total expenses for the last five quarters have averaged about 25.2 million. As we have stated on previous calls, our objective this year is to maintain the current level of expenses. I think it's fair to say that thus far we are meeting that objective on a year to date basis. Total expenses are 50.6 million flat with prior year. The non recurring expenses incurred in fiscal 2025 were 1.7 million, but they were offset this year by incremental investments made in research and development to support our product realization calendar share based compensation which varies based on the timing, the magnitude and the nature of the long term.
Incentive grants and compensation, travel and promotional expenses incurred in the GNA line item Looking forward, there is some positive news. This August represents the five year anniversary of the HIVISION MCS acquisition. Thus, technology purchased as part of that acquisition will have been fully amortized, reducing total expenses by about 600,000 per quarter. The following April will be our five year anniversary of the HIVISION France acquisition, also known as Abbey West.
Thus, technology purchases part of that acquisition will have been fully amortized, reducing total expenses by another 350,000 per quarter. Thus, we should expect to see our operating profits increasing at an even faster rate than EBITDA as the business scales. The result of the quarterly decline in year over year revenue and the decline in year over year total expenses is that the operating loss for this quarter was 3.1 million flat at the same quarterly period Last year, the 1.7 million decrease in revenue and decline in margins resulted in a $2.6 million decline in gross profit when compared to the prior year.
However, that was offset by a commensurate 2.6 million decrease in total expenses. The year to date comparisons fared even better on a year to date basis. The increase in year over year revenue and flattish expenses resulted in year to date operating loss of only 3.3 million compared to an operating loss of 5.4 million for the comparable prior year period. That's a $2.1 million improvement. Our focus continues to be adjusted EBITDA as we believe it gives a clearer view of our performance by stripping out non cash accounting related expense items like depreciation, amortization and share based payments.
For the second quarter, adjusted EBITDA was 300,000 compared to 1.7 million last year and our adjusted EBITDA margin was 1% compared to 4.9% last year. On a year to date basis, adjusted EBITDA was 2.9 million which exceeded the prior year by about 700,000 or 31%. We ended the quarter with 18.1 million in cash. That's an increase of 1.1 million from the end of last quarter and the amount outstanding on the line of credit decreased by 400,000. Further, our credit facility remains strong at 35 million with only 5.1 million outstanding.
In fact, we recently extended the credit facility until August 2028. The line of credit is still expandable to as much as 65 million in the event we identify an acquisition target and BMO even doubled the level of permitted share buybacks under the facility. Note we did renew our NCIB in January 2026 and we purchased that NCIB renewal allows us to purchase as much as 1.8 million shares. The NCIB was active in the month of May and we acquired over 200,000 shares for 1.2 million.
Total assets at quarter end were 140.5 million, an increase of 1.8 million from the prior quarter end. Our balance sheet remains very strong. I do want to mention that on our last earning calls we suggested that we will likely have to make incremental investments in inventory to support our new product introductions and to support our sales forecast for the remainder of the year after having declined by as much as 9 and a half million since peaking in the second quarter of 2023.
Inventory balances at quarter end were 15.1 million, that is an increase of 3.2 million under during this quarter. Unfortunately, we anticipate further investments in inventory to be necessary as we've entered into this tight supply cycle driven by the demand from AI data centers and high performance computing and prices are surging and we need to invest incrementally to maintain margins. Total liabilities of the quarter end were 46.2 million. That's an increase of 1.8 million from the prior quarter end.
We did see the value of trade Payables increase by 3.1 million from the end of fiscal 2025, but that's largely related to the recent inventory purchases. On the other hand, lease liabilities decreased by 400,000 as we continue to make rent payments. Term loans decreased by 300,000 as we continue to make principal payments, and I should mention that we expect the term loans related to the High Vision France acquisition to be largely paid off by the middle of fiscal 2027.
As Mirko suggested, the company continues to experience robust underlying demand across its key markets. The timing of certain delivery deliverables has shifted to later periods as a result of procurement delays, customer approval cycles and supply chain constraints. Recent geopolitical developments and evolving government priorities have contributed to a reprioritization of spending across certain defense and government customers. There are still experience procurement bottlenecks limiting the ability of the Department of War to initiate new programs, increase production rates and commit to larger, longer term purchases.
We continue to monitor funding of government agencies like delays in the Home Department of Homeland Security funding as an example, which have also impacted the timing of deliveries. Meanwhile, enterprise and broadcast customers are dealing with competing priorities of AI infrastructure, cloud optimization and cost reduction initiatives. Despite these near term midterm timing pressures, the company remains confident in its long term growth prospects and continues to target consistent double digit revenue growth over time.
Unfortunately, growth may vary from quarter to quarter based on procurement timing. Customer delivery schedules and the macroeconomic conditions. Thus, we are lowering our expectations for the full fiscal year. We are now anticipating revenue between 140 and $142 million for fiscal 2026. And although we are monitoring supply chains closely, we expect margin compression resulting in margins closer to 70% in the near term. That concludes my prepared remarks.
I'm passing the microphone back to you, Mirko, and then we'll open the floor to questions.
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
Yep, thanks, Dan. I think we can open up to questions. Tracy.
Tracy
We will now begin the question and answer session. At this time I would like to remind everyone, if you would like to ask a question, please press Star one now to raise your hand. We do ask that you pick up your handset when asking a question to allow for optimum sound quality if you are muted locally. Please remember to unmute your device. Please stand by now while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Robert Young with Canaccord Genuity.
Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Robert Young (Analyst at Canaccord Genuity)
Hi, good morning. You highlighted in the prepared comments that you weren't seeing a change in long term demand. So I was curious if you could state whether there's program cancellations or any descoping, is there any change in the long term outlook for any of your customers? Maybe, just maybe go deeper into the demand environment?
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
Yeah, sorry Robert, I. You were kind of breaking up there. I think the question is, are we seeing any, any changes to our long term outlook for our key markets and customers? Is that the question? I apologize. I guess it's a bad connection here.
Robert Young (Analyst at Canaccord Genuity)
What I was looking for is just trying to get a sense if there's any program cancellations or if there's any descoping of programs as opposed to the delays that you're talking about.
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
Good question, Robert. We haven't seen any cancellations at all. The only thing that we've seen, obviously we have one very large program that, that we're working with over multi years and we know that that is being a little bit delayed due to what's going on in the world. But I don't expect that to change dramatically. It's just going to be shifting to the right a bit. But right now we have not seen any other programs or projects cancelled. But we are just seeing some enterprise delay, move to the right, some hesitation due to supply chain issues.
But besides that, very, very optimistic on our longer term prospect.
Robert Young (Analyst at Canaccord Genuity)
Okay, and then the longer term guidance that you'd given, or rough guidance I should say, over the next two to three years where you suggest that you could see double digit growth with a path to 20% EBITDA margins. I understand, very difficult to understand, you know, where, where the macro grows from here. But just curious, your level of confidence just seeing the long term pipeline.
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, we'll probably be better positioned, I would say later in the year to, to go further. But right now, which, I mean in our view and our plans, what we're seeing, our double digit revenue growth is definitely going to be there. 20% EBITDA is absolutely targeted, but we're looking probably closer, you know, the end of 27 into 28 and 29. Right. So that's when I say long term, it's. We're going to, we're going. Once the large defense program kicks into gear, which should be planned for our fiscal 28 together with, you know, the supply chain changes and with all of our next generation technology, all of our new products that we're announcing, because we're announcing at an accelerated pace of products throughout the next 12 to 18 months, those are all going to be kicking in. So I would expect 12, 12 to 18 months.
We're going to be on the road to what we said before.
Robert Young (Analyst at Canaccord Genuity)
Okay. And you had some comments around large program where there, I'm assuming it's a Navy program, they're boats out at sea and they haven't been coming back. And there was another, you know, program which had some impact on the, on the margin structure. Is that, can you comment whether that's the same program and can we expect margin pressure from that program going forward or will that alleviate just because it's slowing in the near term?
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
Yeah, I mean obviously we can't talk about specifically, but I think you're, you're kind of on track. But no, I don't see any margin compression there whatsoever. You know, it's only a shift to the right of the actual revenue. That's, that's what we're seeing. There is no. Sorry.
Dan Rabinowitz (CFO)
Let me, let me suggest this, Robert, if I could. Had we, had we not had the supply chain constraints and we had we delivered everything that we expect to deliver in the second quarter, we would not have seen as profound a margin compression as we, as you saw in fiscal. In the second quarter. We are seeing margin compression as it relates to the supply chain issues going forward here. But candidly that's to come. It's not part of the second quarter story as much as the second quarter.
Deliveries were predominantly third party components concentrated into a single quarter okay, thanks for that clarification. Last question for me. I'll pass the line. You suggested GPUs were a function of the margin compression potential of the supply chain issue. I'm trying to understand what the driver, what, what product is, is using GPUs. I think it's only the KX1. And can I assume that you're starting to see some good volume delivery on that?
And then I'll pass the line. Some of the components that we're looking at are related to products that are in development right now. Now let me, let me be very clear about it. We've been able to secure our needs for the near term midterm going forward here but it hasn't been without certain challenges. I think that there's been sort of like a huge volatility in what our suppliers are telling us and then when we sort of digest it and start speaking with them we're able to sort of rationalize, rationalize and figure out where we are.
And it's thus far we've been able to serve all of our customers needs. But we're seeing this happening quite a bit. We're seeing a lot of components suddenly go end of life. We're seeing a lot of components that are, the costs are going up and we're just, you know, we're making, we're, we're weaving and bobbing and bobbing to make sure that we are in a sound position much like we did a couple of years ago when we had the worldwide component shortage.
You might remember then we incrementally invested in inventory, we had to spend incrementally to be able to secure our sources supply and we ended up having to spend about 2 million more in those supply said components that we realized over a two year period. We're beginning to see that same kind of experience right now.
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
And again Robert, I would add to that as well. I think Dan already mentioned it in his prepared remarks. But we are taking serious action about some price changing, increasing of price of our products. We've already done that for the server price spikes, memory drams a lot and we've actually changed our business model on, on selling hardware like the Dell servers. So we're putting a lot of processes because we can't, we cannot continue absorbing these new changes.
And by the way now we're seeing it in other components and suppliers are just raising prices arbitrarily. So we, you know, we will be changing or updating some of our pricing as, as, as early about this month. We did it last month and we're going to continue to do that if, if this continues. And I think right now what I'm hearing, seeing customers understand that they're seeing it everywhere and they're, they're totally fine with it and it's just something we have to do going forward.
Robert Young (Analyst at Canaccord Genuity)
Thanks for taking the questions. Sorry about the background noise in the connection. Congratulations to your son.
Tracy
As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Now. Your next question comes from the line of Daniel Rosenberg with Paradigm. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Daniel Rosenberg (Analyst at Paradigm)
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. My first one just comes around the margin profile and the pricing initiatives that you're taking. So how do you think about that flowing through into your actual margin profile? When do those changes kind of flow through and help you get to back to a more normalized gross margin level?
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
Well, the price and server pricing that we just announced last month, I mean again, we have to give people, you know, usually a 30 day notice period. So we haven't seen that funneled through yet. We expect it to start this quarter. We're in Q3 and of course into Q4 and beyond. So that's the first changes that we've done. We're about to do new changes to other products starting this month which will probably really affect us more in Q4 because again, we have to give our customers it's always a standard 30 day quote protection mechanism when we announce that. So I think you'll see most of those effect hopefully positively into Q4 and obviously the following year.
Daniel Rosenberg (Analyst at Paradigm)
Okay, thanks for that. And I understand you explained the kind of revenue that's been pushed out a bit based on the Middle east conflict, but specific to large contracts. I was wondering if just you could maybe speak to broadly opportunities out there, understanding that, you know, these are larger ones but are still potentials to hit just any initiatives you're taking or anything you're seeing just more broadly around defense. You know, I'm thinking of NATO initiatives and things of that nature.
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
Yeah, good question. I mean we've got, I think I mentioned last quarter earnings call that we've, we've seen an unprecedented, a number of very large opportunities. So that's continuing. I mean we've got, we've got quite a significant number of multimillion dollar deals in the, in the pipeline. This is our long term forecast and these are large opportunities, large deals. So we're very, very positive on that. We haven't seen any being canceled that we've been working on. But These things take time. Right. So right now what we're seeing is there, there is, there's a lot of interest in the NATO five eyes for sure as they're starting to beef up a lot of their militaries looking at technology. But you know, these things don't happen overnight and they just take, they take several years sometimes. So it's increasing.
The long term pipeline is looking good, the forecasts are building. And so we don't see anything from our core business being affected from the need of the technology. It's just this temporary headwinds that we're kind of seeing where some people are shifting things to the right, some people are waiting to see what happens. But overall we're pretty bullish on the long term prospects of what we're doing.
Daniel Rosenberg (Analyst at Paradigm)
Okay, thanks for that. And then you mentioned some, the pricing pressures and you know, I think everybody globally is seeing the headlines and you know, we've certainly seen some comfort in customers coping with that. But I'm just wondering, you know, how far do you think this can go and then anything in terms of the customer saying well, you know, how much can they absorb? How much, you know, price and elasticity is there in the customer profile?
Obviously you're delivering high value things but you know, how much wiggle room do you think you have there?
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
It's a great question. You know, I mean the good thing is that we are in mission critical operations and not, not to say that price is not an issue, but customers that do need our, at one point, you know, we're not in such a price sensitive situation where, you know, they can wait. So we're seeing within our operations people do need the equipment. Yes, there's always pressure on price and pressure on budgets, no question. So I think in the pure defense ISR security space we see that pretty positive. In the enterprise space and you know, in the banking sector and the enterprise or even the government, we have both, you know, commercial and government enterprise.
Their projects, you know, can be deferred because they are concerned with budgets and they're using technology, even a previous generation technology and they might decide to wait a year and instead of doing a tech refresh. So I think there we might see some, some, some pressure where if I was going to do a, my typical three to five year tech refresh, things work, you know, why not wait a year until the supply chain subsides and you know, and the prices come down? That could be happening. We haven't seen that happening to a great extent, but that would, that's, that's the thing that we're watching right now.
Daniel Rosenberg (Analyst at Paradigm)
Okay, thanks for that. And then lastly for me just I was curious about the product side on the broadcasting segment. So there's a number of hardware initiatives that you're putting out there. I'm curious on the software platforms that they're using. Like you know, how tightly integrated are the kind of distribution softwares to the actual hardware products? Just any color you could provide on how you think about where the value lies on that side of the equation.
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
Well, there's, well there's two areas. I mean we have the broadcast side and the mission side. I mean in the, the broadcast side we, you know, we've actually just changed all of our pricing because they depend on you know like the Super Micro type or Dell platforms where they, where our software, like for example the Stream Hub is highly integrated on those platforms and they need, and they need high powered platforms to operate. And so there, that's a pricing issue.
We've changed our pricing. We've actually decoupled our system pricing for the first time ever. And we're selling separately the hardware and separately the software and we've already put in conditions that for example the hardware is absolutely non discountable. We're not in the hardware business of self servers and the price will keep increasing based on the suppliers and people have a choice by the way to buy their own service. I mean these are off the shelf standard high performance service.
We're giving all customers their option to buy them. If they want to buy them from us they have to pay a small premium but there's no discounts. And I think what might happen is people might end up buying their own. Our revenue, we might give up a million or two in revenue but margins will improve so that's, that could be a good thing. And if they do buy the systems like that, well at least we're not going to be losing money, you know, and funding the price increase.
So that's affecting that Stream Hub broadcast business. I mean from an encoder perspective I think we're fine there and we're actually going to be increasing all of our, all of our prices there as well. The servers also play a very big part in our mission system. The video distribution. Right. Like our HMP high vision media platform. I mean those are very, very high end servers. I mean these things are going up 3 to 400% in price from the suppliers.
It's crazy. And we did the same thing. We're decoupling the system pricing to hardware and software and we're allowing our customers to either run them on VMs, which will be for us, 100% margins, or they can buy their own servers if they want to. So it's kind of playing that. So that's from a server perspective. Right? But if you look at the product announcements that we've been going through in the last 12 months and continuing for the next 18 months, you know, remember we did the Kula X1, I mean that's a proprietary platform using the Nvidia chipset with the AI transcoding system.
And that's starting to get legs now. It's, we'll be demoing it for a while now. We're starting to talk to people, our programs. That's really going to be affecting revenue sometime next year going forward. And we just launched the Cobra, which is one of the most exciting products we ever launched in the Mission side, which is really the video operation platform, very, very compact platform again with margins that we can control. These are proprietary programs.
And then we also just launched the PLAY ISR Premium, which is something new, which is our mobile app where we're going to start licensing streams based on the ISR mission requirements to start building a pipeline for the audience into 27, 28. So these are all revenue generation, margin generation activities in the Mission side. And remember, we just also refreshed the entire transmitter side, right. The Falcon X2, we just launched the Ultra version, We just launched the Falcon X4, which, which is the really ultra low latency 4 integrated 5G modems, next generation technology, 4K UHD.
And that's just coming out of the oven. We just showed it at NAB and we'll be shipping that by near the end of the year or end of fiscal year. So that's really going to be affecting. Q Sorry, Q1 of 2027 going forward. So there's a lot of, lot of players and I'm not even talking about the Makito X1, which is probably the most significant platform that we launched, NAB, which is really the, the first of its kind, a single board, compact blade architecture, just like a regular Makito.
But this is, this is going to be the only, the only technology that will have encoding, decoding, H264, H265JPEG XS and 2110 on the board. No one is going to be able to do that. So we're really excited about the Makita1 platform which will be coming out of the oven really the end of this year. So as you can see, like it's been almost every Couple months we're doing massive overhaul of next gen technology and there's more to come, by the way, in the next six months that are pretty exciting, especially in the mission side.
So that's kind of what we've been working on all last year into this year and we're going to be continuing next year. Sorry, that's a long winded answer to that question.
Dan Rabinowitz (CFO)
And if I could just sort of finish the thought. One of the other concepts that should be conveyed is that we are in the process of creating ecosystems. We have a broadcast ecosystem and we have a mission ecosystem that are supported by our software properties, both our server properties, but equally important our cloud properties. So our Hub 360 initiative is a means for all of our technology to be managed by a single portal to enable the operators who have a lot of our equipment to feed their entire fleet of equipment and be able to manage that entire fleet of equipment. It creates stickiness and allegiance to our properties as we continue to build on it.
Daniel Rosenberg (Analyst at Paradigm)
Great. I appreciate all the color on the product sets. I'll pass the line.
Tracy
Your next question comes from the line of Sebastian Charland with Agave Capital. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Sebastian Charland (Analyst at Agave Capital)
Good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. My first one will be on the sell side. I noticed in the MDA that the sales team I think is the only one department that really had an increase year over year or a significant one. I was wondering in which verticals or geographies are these salespeople? I think it's about 15 people or a little less focused on.
Dan Rabinowitz (CFO)
Dan, do you? Yeah, my work collection. Is that raised? Yeah, we made a significant investment internationally, particularly in internationally, because we saw a huge opportunity not only on the broadcast side but on the mission side as well. And so, you know, we wanted, we kind of retooled our sales sales organizations to focus on these two areas of sorts. And this was where we believed that we had the best opportunity. Low hanging fruit by investing internationally.
Got it. Yeah. It's also for both markets. Right. It's not just the one market because we have increased our mission sales team internationally as well as our broadcast team internationally.
Sebastian Charland (Analyst at Agave Capital)
Okay, that's helpful. And we discussed it briefly on Last Call. And let's say we look nationally, in Canada on the defense side, there's been new orderings of Bombardier planes. There's the large order for submarines, for F35s and maybe Gripen jet fighters. There's also those new Navy ships and icebreakers coming in. I'm guessing those will all need low Latency, hey vision sort of kind of equipment going forward. Have you seen any uptick in Canadian interest on the defense procurement aside?
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
I hate to say it but we're still pretty small in Canada in that market. We, we do work with the, with DND quite a bit obviously because they do follow the US a lot. They are using our equipment and, and traditionally when like give you an example whether it's a, the navies have been working together for many, many years and not just with Canada but also Australia, the five eyes. So whatever is deployed traditionally within the US system is always fitted into the NATO and partners systems. So there's, that's already built into it. So my, my, my assumption is whenever the ships get built and whenever, and these are very long term projects and unfortunately are getting all the attention with the government because they need to get to their 3 to 5% of GDP. You're not going to get it by buying a few encoders, right?
You're going to get it by buying planes and ships. So we are monitoring it but in essence it's still extremely small. In fact we're getting much higher inputs and requirements from the European partners. They've got much more money to spend on this and they seem to be moving much quicker in our type of product. So yeah, no, we're on it, we're there. But I just wish, as a Canadian, I wish it was higher but it's just, it's not a significant amount of business yet.
Sebastian Charland (Analyst at Agave Capital)
Okay, thank you for the clarification. That's it for me.
Tracy
We have now reached the end of the Q and A section session. I would like to hand the call back over to Mirko Wicka for closing remarks.
Mirko Wicka (President, CEO and Chairman)
Thank you, Tracy. So I guess in closing just want to reaffirm that we are very committed to maximizing our long term value for all of our shareholders and we're confident in our ability to execute on our strategic growth plan. And I just want to thank all our shareholders and analysts online today for the continued support of Haivision and look forward to speaking with you in mid September when we'll discuss our third quarter performance and result.
Thank you everybody.
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