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Science Applications International Corp (SAIC) Q2 2020 Earnings Call Transcript

Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.
Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Science Applications International Corp (NYSE: SAIC)
Q2 2020 Earnings Call
Sep 5, 2019, 5:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks

  • Questions and Answers

  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day and welcome to the SAIC Fiscal Year 2020 Second Quarter Earnings Call. Today's conference is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Shane Canestra, SAIC's Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Shane Canestra -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Good afternoon. My name is Shane Canestra, SAIC's Vice President of Investor Relations. And thank you for joining our second quarter fiscal year 2020 earnings call.

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Joining me today to discuss our business and financial results are Nazzic Keene, SAIC's Chief Executive Officer; Charlie Mathis, our Chief Financial Officer and other members of our management team. This afternoon, we issued our earnings release, which can be found at investors.saic.com, where you also find supplemental financial presentation slide to be utilized in conjunction with today's call. Both of these documents, in addition to our Form 10-Q to be filed soon, should be utilized in evaluating our results and outlook, along with information provided on today's call.

Please note that we may make forward-looking statements on today's call that are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from statements made on this call. I refer you to our SEC filings for a discussion of these risks, including the Risk Factors section of our annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. In addition, the statements represent our views as of today and subsequent events may cause our views to change. We may elect to update the forward-looking statements at some point in the future, but we specifically disclaim any obligation to do so.

In addition, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures and other metrics, which we believe provide useful information for investors in both our press release and supplemental financial presentation slides, include reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP measures.

It is now my pleasure to introduce our CEO, Nazzic Keene.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Shane, and good afternoon. SAIC took another positive step forward in the second quarter of fiscal 2020, keeping our attention on operational performance, progressing on the integration of the Engility acquisition and delivering strong financial and business development results. While Charlie will discuss the financial results in greater detail, our second quarter reflects strength in a contract portfolio that is aligned to key areas of our market with strong profitability and free cash flow generation. The second quarter delivered revenues of $1.6 billion in line with our expectations and equating to a 43% total revenue growth from the prior year quarter. Strong adjusted EBITDA margins were 8.4% for the second quarter, up 90 basis points from last year. The cash generation profile of the company continues to be compelling, with second quarter and first half cash flow providing continued confidence in our full year target and enabling capital deployment for shareholder value creation.

Net bookings for the quarter were approximately $1.9 billion, excluding about $400 million of single award IDIQ vehicles, translate into a quarterly book to bill of 1.2. On a pro forma basis, SAIC's trailing 12 months book to bill is 1.1. During the quarter, SAIC was awarded contracts and task orders valued at over $1 billion of recompete and new business from U.S. National Security and Intelligence customers. These awards also demonstrate the intersection of two areas of significant opportunities for growth, space and IT modernization. It is very exciting to see the continuing build up momentum as the stronger SAIC goes to market with these important customers. Additionally, SAIC was awarded a recompete contract valued at $117 million from NASA to continue providing a variety of IT services to support the National Center for Critical Information Processing and Storage. Also in the recompete category was $93 million contract award from the U.S. Navy to support electronic warfare activities.

Awarded during the quarter, but not immediately contributing to bookings was a new business award of $106 million single award IDIQ contract with the Defense Intelligence Agency to provide media management and analysis efforts across the Science and Technology Directorate. SAIC continues to operate in a favorable market environment in the closing month of government's fiscal year '19 and looking forward into fiscal '20. As appropriations are enacted, we do not expect significant shifts in budget priorities, and SAIC is well aligned in areas of national importance and funding such as space related missions, IT modernization and readiness among others.

Although a few customers have expressed concerns around outpacing the potential continuing resolution to start the government fiscal year. For now, proposal activity remains strong as demonstrated in the momentum we see in our business development activities. Customer demand and our pipeline of qualified pursuits is expanding. Although we have also seen delays in some contract awards due to protests or new business that has not materialized.

At the end of the second quarter, SAIC's total contract backlogs stood at approximately $13.9 billion, up about 3% from the first quarter. Funded backlog was approximately $2.6 billion. The estimated value of SAIC's submitted proposals awaiting award is $13.4 billion, up from the end of the first quarter. Approximately 75% of submitted proposals are for new business, an indicator of a favorable market environment, our low level of recompetes this fiscal year and the potential for SAIC to accelerate growth over time.

Before turning the call over to Charlie, I'd like to provide you an update on the integration of Engility. As I mentioned in our June call, we have successfully achieved all of the year one cost synergies and are on track to realize year two synergy targets next year. In fact, we recently achieved another critical milestone, the successful integration of many business systems, which is key to achieving our year two cost synergies. This is a significant achievement in the integration process, and I believe one of the earliest acquisition related systems integrations in our space. I want to personally thank the team for their tremendous effort and success in achieving this important milestone.

Through the end of the year, we will focus on two additional integration milestones, harmonizing employee benefits and rationalizing our facility footprint. We have more work ahead of us, but I'm very proud of the newly combined team and what we've accomplished so far.

Charlie, over to you for our financial results.

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Nazzic. Our second quarter revenues of approximately $1.6 billion reflect total revenue growth of 43%, which were due to revenues associated with the Engility acquisition. Organic revenue, therefore, was flat year-over-year, although adjusting for about $30 million of revenue dis-synergies in the quarter, organic revenue growth increased approximately 2%. As a reminder, we have previously communicated an approximate $100 million of revenue dis-synergies for the full fiscal year due to elimination of prime sub revenue, lower revenue on costs plus contracts due to cost synergy achievement and other factors.

Second quarter adjusted EBITDA margins were again strong at 8.4% as a percentage of revenues, up 90 basis points from the prior year. Second quarter adjusted EBITDA was $134 million, a $50 million increase from the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA excludes $6 million of integration related costs in the quarter. Second quarter margins, similar to our first quarter was due to strong program performance and the favorable effect of accelerating our net cost synergies. Net income for the second quarter was $57 million, and excluding $6 million of integration costs as well as amortization of intangibles, our adjusted diluted earnings per share was a $1.35 for the second quarter, an increase of 11% from the prior year quarter. In addition, the year-to-date adjusted EPS accretion is also 11%. Diluted earnings per share was $0.96, inclusive of the $6 million of integration costs, I just mentioned.

The effective tax rate for the quarter was approximately 23%, consistent with our previously communicated and reaffirmed today expected full year rate of 22% to 24%, with a cash tax rate also unchanged at 13% to 15%, benefited by the tax assets acquired from Engility. Second quarter operating cash flow and free cash flow were very strong $95 million and $90 million, respectively due to excellent cash collections and reduced working capital. Historically, our second quarter cash flow is the seasonally lowest cash generation quarter of the year due to an additional payroll cycle as compared to the other three quarters and two income tax payments. I am very pleased with the free cash flow generation we have achieved since the close of the acquisition. Free cash flow for the quarter is $114 million increase from last year and on a year-to-date basis has increased approximately $200 million over the first half of last year. In addition, we have achieved approximately 60% of our full year target to-date. Day sales outstanding at the end of the quarter were 59 days.

During the second quarter, we deployed $156 million of capital, consisting of $133 million to repurchase approximately 1.6 million shares; $21 million in dividends and $2 million of mandatory debt repayment. With regards to share repurchases, we announced in early July, a $100 million negotiated buyback from one of our private equity shareholders, KKR, that repurchased approximately 1.2 million shares from them directly at a discount to the previous day's closing price. We believe this acceleration of our capital deployment plan in fiscal year 2020 is in the best interests of long-term shareholders. We will continue to be thoughtful and disciplined with regards to the deployment of capital for shareholder value creation.

I should note that our Board of Directors will meet in mid-September and will consider capital deployment opportunities going forward, including our next quarterly dividend that is typically payable to shareholders in October.

Now turning to our forward outlook. We exceeded our expectation for revenue in the first half of the year, but we are cautious about our revenue increase in our second half. As Nazzic mentioned, our outlook is impacted by the potential for a continuing resolution, new business and has been protested or has not materialized and higher revenue dis-synergies, partially due to accelerated cost synergy achievement. We expect second half revenues to be consistent with our first half revenues of $3.2 billion. This revenue outlook for the year does not impact our longer term outlook, as contract award opportunities and business momentum is building.

I'm very pleased with the strong margin and cash flow performance in the first half of the year, which gives us confidence in our full year outlook. As far as margins, our full year adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to increase about 80 basis points from the prior year stand-alone SAIC adjusted EBITDA margin of 7.5%, which is at the middle to upper end of our previously communicated expectations. Our more favorable outlook on margins is due to our first half performance, better than expected cost synergy achievement and continued focus on operational and program performance. Our free cash flow target remains at $425 million for the fiscal year. With our strong first half collections, working capital improvements and continued focus on achieving additional balance sheet synergies. We are confident we can meet or exceed this goal for the year.

Nazzic, back to you for concluding comments.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Charlie. I am very excited to have officially become the Chief Executive Officer at the beginning of August. With our new scale and reach, SAIC has the opportunity to be a stronger partner for our customers with an expansive portfolio of solutions. We also have a deeper bench of talent and expertise in our company, which allows us to create a differentiated experience for our employees with broader career development options. With these new opportunities, the leadership team and I are taking a fresh look at our long-term business strategy. The initiatives to execute on that plan and the key performance indicators to gauge success. As we refresh our long-term strategy to shape our priorities, there are three areas that have my immediate attention. The successful integration of Engility, driving profitable revenue growth and winning our war for talent. As you know, these three items are not mutually exclusive in the government services space. Our success will be enabled by our talented employees who are inspired by purpose and are driven to grow our company by bringing innovative solutions to solve our customer's toughest mission challenges.

We have recently announced some leadership changes that reflect intensified focus on our employees. We welcome two new Board members to SAIC, Carol Goode and Yvette Kanouff. Both Carol and Yvette are proven strategic leaders who've established their careers in high-tech companies in Silicon Valley and the San Francisco Bay Area. They bring diverse perspectives and fresh ideas and we're excited to get their counsel as we shape our talent and solution strategies. I look forward to working with these two strong leaders, and I am confident they will have an immediate impact on our organization and our ability to deliver business results. As a newly integrated organization, led by a strong leadership team, SAIC aims to leverage our new market opportunities and employ the best talent in the industry. With a strong foundation of passionate and skilled team members, we are in a position to change our growth trajectory. SAIC is focused on three tenets for success, inspire employees, accomplish customer missions and reward shareholders.

Operator. We're now ready to take questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] We'll go first to Edward Caso with Wells Fargo.

Edward Caso -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Hi. Good evening. Hoping that you have a positive answer to this question. Just curious how your operations are doing down in Charleston, South Carolina, given the Dorian hurricane?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. So at this point -- Hi Ed. It's Nazzic. At this point we've closed the facility and certainly wanted to support all the employees being able to get to a safer place. I have not heard of any catastrophic issues at this point, but it's something we pay tremendous attention to up and down the East Coast over the course of these last few days. So we appreciate you asking, it is very important to us.

Edward Caso -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Great. And what -- a different question, what bookings do you have or what awards do you have there still in protest or how big is that number, that you've won that's still in protest?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

We have a couple and about a $1 billion still in protest.

Edward Caso -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Thank you.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Ed.

Operator

And we'll go next to Jon Raviv with Citi.

Jonathan Raviv -- CitiGroup -- Analyst

Hey, guys, thank you. On the sales outlook for the year, can you just give us a little more detail around essentially what's going on. You mentioned a few things driving that revised outlook for the year. Kind of what new business is not materializing, is that SAIC stuff? Is it Engility stuff? Is it integrated opportunity stuff? Is it mostly timing where it slips? Is it things that you expected to win that you lost? So just give us more sense of why it looks like you are going to finish the year below the sales target you identified on the last call.

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Jonathan, let me just clarify and give some additional color on that. So we expect revenues to be consistent with the first half of $3.2 billion. We're cautious and increasing the revenue outlook for the second half and the factors are three. The first of which is, we're anticipating higher revenue dis-synergies for the full year, partially related to our success and accelerating the cost synergies. We're expecting revenue dis-synergies of $120 million now up 20% from our previous expectations. As you know, reducing costs lowers revenue on our cost plus contracts and we're approximately 60%. However, this is a one-time impact of our FY '20 growth. It's about a 2% headwind to the revenue growth of $120 million. With the acceleration of the cost synergies has strengthened our margin outlook for the year. And as I mentioned previously, we expect an 80 basis point increase from last year stand-alone SAIC, and this is to the middle and upper end of the margin range that we previously communicated.

Now the other two factors that are impacting the revenue outlook are items that Nazzic mentioned, which are the protests in new business not materializing. And think here of a particular Air Force contract that was awarded back in the spring. It's gone through a protest cycle and more and continues to go through that. And also a few -- and I'll emphasize the word few customer concerns around their continuing resolution to start a fiscal year. We do see this as a timing issue. We do not see this impacting the long-term revenue outlook. The pipeline proposals is very strong. We're encouraged by the strength of the company or profitability of $13.5 billion of proposals waiting to be awarded, of which 75% of these are new business. So we feel confident with the long-term outlook there.

Jonathan Raviv -- CitiGroup -- Analyst

Sorry, I missed the third factor.

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

The third factor was the -- a few, and again, emphasize a few customer concerns around the CR to start the fiscal year.

Jonathan Raviv -- CitiGroup -- Analyst

Yeah, OK. Thanks very much for that. And then just on the free cash flow, you mentioned that first half performance thus far has been quite strong. Is there any timing helping that -- the performance in the first half '20 and then also thinking more toward the approaching 522. What are some of the drivers of sustainability thereafter? We know that the tax boost in there, but what about things like working capital? Thank you.

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So thanks for that. And I can tell you I'm extremely pleased with the outstanding job that our operation and finance teams did to achieve this. They've been really focused and continued to make progress on the process improvements. And with the two companies combined, we're getting paid timely. We're looking to incorporate some of the best practices from the combination of companies. And so I'm very pleased, I know those people are probably listening to this call, so I'm going to tell them again, I'm very pleased with their achievement in the first half of the year. We achieved 60% of the goal. And we're sticking with the 425 right now. We do have a systems conversion that just was completed this month, and although it went incredibly well, we'll wait another quarter to see how the cash collections work before increasing our outlook. Our longer-term outlook remains intact as we said, and so, yes, we believe we will get to the $500 million and by year three that we outlined earlier in the year.

Jonathan Raviv -- CitiGroup -- Analyst

Thanks a lot. Back in the queue.

Operator

And we'll go next to Matthew Sharpe with Morgan Stanley.

Matthew Sharpe -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Good afternoon. I was just wondering if you guys could give us a sense of how the current quarter bookings are shaping up, being that it tends to be a higher volume period with the end of the government's fiscal year at the end of this month?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes, this is Nazzic. So, yes, historically Q3 for us is -- it tends to be a higher bookings quarter and we're seeing proof point to that as we go into the quarter with the activity over the last couple of quarters and getting things into the big states. So we feel very confident with our third quarter bookings. Again, one of the nuances that we navigate is that looking at the contract awards as well as the single award IDIQs. We still have many customers that tend to use single award IDIQ as their contracts vehicle of choice. So, yes, we do believe we're going into the quarter with a strong position from a sales perspective and anticipate to have a strong quarter.

Matthew Sharpe -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

And then on the Air Force EDIS contract, which you just alluded to a few moments ago and then the Department of Justice Asset Forfeiture Program. Do you guys have any color around those programs in terms of when they might be resolved or awarded, I know that they're probably expected last month or so and they've dragged out a little bit longer than expected?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. So the short answer is, we don't exactly know when those things are going to transpire. Certainly on the DOJ one, could happen any time. And so we're continuing to look at that. As it relates to EDIS, they are going through their process, and so that will probably take another weeks or months at this point, but it's hard to tell.

Matthew Sharpe -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Got it. And then just one last one if I could on the integration of Engility, it seems as though you guys are at this point in time well ahead of schedule on cost takeout or cost synergies. Are you seeing any opportunity at this point in time to be your initial targets or upside to where you thought you might be?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. So totally agree with your statement on where we sit today. So we're very pleased. I'm very pleased with where we are. We just did -- the systems conversion, we've done. The organization is fully integrated, as I've shared with you before. And a lot of decisions were made very, very early on in our acquisition cycle. So extremely pleased with how the companies have come together and we're seeing great proof points in going to market together as well, as we look to leverage the capabilities across the entire portfolio to drive a stronger proposal activity and drive incremental growth opportunities.

As it relates to the cost synergies, yes, we are ahead of plan. We're very, very happy about that. And we'll continue to look at every opportunity we can to drive additional cost out of the equation. That's certainly top of mind for us. But as we do that, we also want to balance the need to invest in growth. And so we're looking at the trade space that exists to drive the profitability that we aspire and drive and that we've communicated as a result of this acquisition. But also look to invest in growth to drive the long-term value creation.

Matthew Sharpe -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Great, thanks. I'll get back in the queue.

Operator

We'll go next to Cai von Rumohr with Cowen & Company.

Cai von Rumohr -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

Thanks so much and great quarter.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Cai.

Cai von Rumohr -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

So could you give us a little more color on the revenue guidance? Normally, your third quarter is stronger than your fourth. Is that kind of a pattern or is there going to be something different? And how much of the shortfall would you say is at Engility as opposed to heritage SAIC?

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Hi Cai, this is Charlie. I would just say that, we don't really give a guidance for quarterly revenue as they're fairly consistent expectations, third and fourth quarter. And we don't break out the Engility right now, it's fully integrated into the company. And so we're looking at one company and declines or revenue that goes down with SAIC.

Cai von Rumohr -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

When you say revenues consistent third and fourth quarter, you mean third quarter should be close to the fourth or consistent with prior patterns where the third was better than the fourth?

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

I would just say that they're consistent quarter-to-quarter.

Cai von Rumohr -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

Okay. And then margins in the first quarter, you had $8 million of favorable EACs and you said this is kind of above average normal, normal is $4 million. How much was it in the second quarter and what's your outlook now for the year for EACs?

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

It was $4 million EAC favorable adjustments in Q2, and that's the kind of normal run rate that we've seen and we would continue to expect that in the second half of the year.

Cai von Rumohr -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

Terrific. And last one on cash flow, I'm a little confused, I mean you talked of strong collections and yet the DSOs were 59 days in the first quarter. And you talked of the seasonal pressure of accounts payable, but it doesn't look like, excuse me, of payroll, it doesn't look like you kind of made any large payroll and it doesn't look like there were two tax payments. So maybe you can kind of explain those items, if you would.

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So the collections that we had were actually favorable from the combined company, when you look at combining Engility and SAIC, the DSOs we're actually pleased with, the 59 days there. There was also a reduction in working capital for the quarter of managing different aspects of the working capital and an inventory that also attributed to what was just an exceptional quarter, an exceptional first half in our free cash flow generation.

Cai von Rumohr -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

And just are we going to have the extra payroll because it doesn't look like it hits this quarter when it normally does. And did you have the two tax payments in this quarter?

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Yes, we did. Yes. And the additional payroll, yes, I believe that that did also hit for the quarter. So the good news on the tax payments side is that because our cash tax rate being so low due to the Engility tax assets that we acquired, there is less impact to an additional tax payment in the quarter. So it's -- I can just say, Cai that there is tremendous focus on collecting timely, ensuring that we have billings outstanding and we get the billings out on time and that they're accurate. So that the customer pays without disputes, and so that where collections are extremely good, and there's continuous focus on that. And continuing to look at the process improvements that we have. So we're very, very pleased with -- very pleased with the results so far.

Cai von Rumohr -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

Thank you very much and a nice quarter.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Cai.

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you.

Operator

And we'll go next to Sheila Kahyaoglu with Jefferies.

Sheila Kahyaoglu -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Thank you, good afternoon. Just -- Charlie thank you for sizing the items that are hitting the $150 million impact for revenues this year. I guess when you think about the protests and the delays in the contracts, does that -- how do you think about that changing, if at all, your 3% revenue growth CAGR through 2022? And how should we think about growth accelerating next year?

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So we have confidence in our longer-term revenue outlook that we've laid out. As I mentioned, we have items that are impacting FY '20 specifically, namely the $120 million of revenue dis-synergies. So again, as we look forward, we're encouraged by the strength in company, more profitable company, the $13.5 billion in proposals awaiting awards, which is up the amount of 75% related to new business. So we're confident that we can hit this long-term revenue outlook. That has not changed. And a lot of this protest, contract delays being awarded is a timing issue. So that's not impacting our longer term views.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, the other thing I would add just to give some color, Charlie touched on this. But if we look at -- as I look at what's happening in the company around the development of the pipeline, the execution of the pipeline, the opportunity to leverage the best of both companies to drive revenue synergies and revenue opportunities, we are seeing those. We are seeing those come to fruition through the pipeline and certainly at this juncture, many of them are in the early stages of submit. So we are seeing some good momentum there, and as Charlie mentioned, the majority -- vast majority of what we haven't submitted even today is renewed business. So as we continue to win our fair share of opportunities that are really in the sweet spots for SAIC, we have the confidence in growth over the course of next couple of years.

Sheila Kahyaoglu -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Thanks for that, Nazzic. And I guess just to touch on the use of $13 billion of bids and 75% on new business, can you give us an idea of where you're bidding? And just tied into margins, first half margins are 8.4% EBITDA, your target is 8.84%. So you're already at that high end. You've previously stated second half would be better. I guess if anything prohibit you from continuing to expand margins?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

No. So certainly the different programs have different margin profiles and as we have a significant portion of our portfolio on a cost plus structure, that in and of itself provides some guardrails, I would say. So but as we look at key areas, an example would be the IT modernization that is top of mind for us, something that SAIC excels at. In some cases, those proposals are submitted on a fixed price basis, gives us higher confidence in being able to generate greater profitability over the months and years to come. But we continue to drive sales across the entire portfolio, but we're very, very focused on some key areas that has -- where we are stronger because of the Engility acquisition. We've touched on those areas like space. The space domain, we're seeing good traction. And that's across from the DoD, across the Intel community, across the civilian part of the portfolio where we see great opportunities based on what we know to be the government's and certainly this administration's priorities and we believe those are enduring. So we've got some great opportunities to drive growth as we look forward kind of coming out of this year.

Sheila Kahyaoglu -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Great. Thanks. Thank you.

Operator

We'll go next to Gavin Parsons with Goldman Sachs.

Gavin Parsons -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Hey, good afternoon, everyone.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Hello.

Gavin Parsons -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Just on the customer CR concerns, some of your peers have sounded a little bit more optimistic about a two-year budget deal. I know we got a little bit of a sense of your exposure to shut down on specific agencies at the beginning of this year. But would you say that's a more recent development like in the last few weeks or so or is it just that you're inherently more or the work that you do is kind of more exposed to or sensitive to a shutdown or SCR?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

So I would say, it's a great question. And again, I think as Charlie mentioned, we're not seeing this concern across the entire portfolio by any means. We've just heard from a couple of customers that have some interesting work to start that they don't believe they can start until this particular item is resolved. So it is -- for us, it is isolated, but it is in a couple areas that, that have caused some headwinds as we go to the back half of the year. But I'm not hearing anything systemic. My sense is it's customer by customer depending on what needs to get done.

Gavin Parsons -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Okay, great. And then on book to bill, I appreciate there is a somewhat of a different definition versus some of your peers and this may be an oversimplification. But if I strip out the revenue headwinds, organic has kind of been zero percent or so for the last 12 months and the trailing 12 months, both funded and total book to bill has been about 1. So what kind of book to bill do we need to see for you to kind of accelerate growth to hit that 3% target or surpass it? I mean what do we need on a funded or a total book to bill to see growth accelerate on a reported basis rather than not stripping out all those one-time pieces?

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Gavin. This is Charlie. I think our book to bill of the way we currently reported is 1.2 in that range, gets us into that low single digit revenue growth. I would to also emphasize that we don't include in the book to bill the single award IDIQ, of which there have been over $3 billion in the last 12 months. So we think that the pipeline for business is there in order to hit the longer-term outlook that we've given.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

And the only the caution I would give and I know we've talked about this before. If book to bill is an indicator, it certainly isn't the indicator. And so we have to look at what' the submits says, how much of the submits are new business versus recompete. And obviously taking considerations, as Charlie mentioned, differences between single award IDIQs and contract vehicles and the way that we categorize those. So that's obviously something we pay a tremendous amount of attention to. It's important, but I think looking at book to bill in isolation doesn't necessarily tell the story either way, quite candidly.

Gavin Parsons -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

We'll go next to Joseph DeNardi with Stifel.

Joseph DeNardi -- Stifel -- Analyst

Yeah. Hey, good evening. Charlie, sorry to beat this horse to death, but just on $150 million, how much of that should we just kind of write-off and how much should we move into FY '21?

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

So I would -- look most of this is a timing issue that we've laid out here on these points. The one on the additional cost synergies is headwinds for this particular year that won't carry forward next year. And the remaining of those are really delays of awards or that are in protest. So I could -- I would think that these would obviously flow into next year as revenue stream.

Joseph DeNardi -- Stifel -- Analyst

So do you think $50 million goes away and $100 million shows up next year?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Well, this is Nazzic. So certainly, some of it absolutely goes away. So if you think about the Prime Cyber relationships that existed prior to closing the transaction. Those get pushed through the system and those are gone forever. Same with -- to some extent, same with the impact of the cost takeout, you take the cost out, there is a cost plus construct. It also has an impact on revenue. So I would consider those to be more isolated events that as we go into next year, certainly much of that will be behind us. So that's how I would think about it as you look at kind of mapping.

Joseph DeNardi -- Stifel -- Analyst

Okay. And then just on the customer feedback on concerns around CR, can you talk about which customers specifically that you're hearing that from, is it kind of Intel, Defense [Indecipherable], any color there?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

No I prefer not to do that. I will tell you that it's not isolated. Again it's not a vast majority. It's just a few customers that are hesitant to start anything until the final budget cycle gets -- kind of gets through the system. So but again it's not widespread. We're not hearing across the board, but I probably prefer not to attribute it to any particular customer.

Joseph DeNardi -- Stifel -- Analyst

Okay. Thank you.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

We'll go next to Tobey Sommer with SunTrust.

Jasper Bibb -- SunTrust Robinson Humphrey -- Analyst

Thanks. This is Jasper Bibb on for Tobey today. We're hoping you could share how you view the logistics and supply chain business as part of the overall portfolio. And if you could provide some color on the outlook for that segment, that'd be great. Thanks.

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So, this is Charlie. The logistics and supply chain business has actually been performing very well for this year and it's consistent. It generates a ton of cash. It's a very stable business, very well run, although the margins there are lower and it creates about a 40 to 50 basis points headwind to our overall portfolio on the margin side. But the economics of the supply chain business is quite well and it's been performing well.

Jasper Bibb -- SunTrust Robinson Humphrey -- Analyst

Okay, great. Thank you.

Operator

We'll go next to Josh Sullivan with Seaport Global.

Josh Sullivan -- Seaport Global -- Analyst

Hey, afternoon. So I understand here, you have some customers who are preparing for the CR, but what are your expectations for the CR, if it comes in the fourth quarter. Does that encompass in guidance here?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So obviously, I probably know -- everything you know about the you have with CR or not. So we all hope that the process goes through the -- of the two year budget cycle comes to a conclusion. If it doesn't, I would expect a relatively short CR, again, it will navigate us as we need to. And we don't see it as a significant impact to our business. Again, I touched on the fact that we probably have a couple of contracts and we do have a couple that are new work and they're hesitant to start until this is resolved. But we've navigated a CR many, many times over the course of the last several years. And so we don't see it as a high risk or high impact business.

Josh Sullivan -- Seaport Global -- Analyst

Okay. Great. And then can you just comment on the Polaris JV, and if that'll be -- if you're successful, a product like kind of margin profile?

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So that's the vehicle program that we're doing with Polaris, the joint venture. And this is one in which, this is very different from what we've done in the past with our vehicle platforms. And first, I would just want to clarify that aspect of it. This is one in which we are providing a similar type of work that we did with the MRAP upgrades, C4ISR type of work, things that we've done very, very well over number of years. And we're looking to do similar work there on this vehicle platform. We think we have a very good competitive vehicle, very excited about it. The margins would be similar to what we've done work previously. And I think we're going to have a couple of those on display at USA.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

I do want to just put a soft to what Charlie said that is, it is a different type of program. So we did make a pivot after we closed out last year and we kind of rethought about what made the most sense for us in these major programs of recovering and manufacturing of vehicles. And so we've elected to take a very different posture and position. And this is a great example of that, where it's a proven vehicle. It is -- and our role is really to help engineer it, to strengthen the C4ISR and work with our partner in delivering a strong vehicle versus us only the manufacturing of something along those lines. So it is very different type of work for us as it relates to the previous vehicle platforms, but very consistent, as Charlie mentioned, with the core capabilities inside of SAIC. If you think about engineering and C4ISR and I think it plays very well to those trends.

Josh Sullivan -- Seaport Global -- Analyst

Great. Thank you. Look forward to seeing these. Thanks.

Operator

We'll go next to Jon Raviv of Citi.

Jonathan Raviv -- CitiGroup -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks for the follow-up. On the $500 million target in FY '22, just following up on that topic. How sustainable is that? I mean we know there's a tax boost that rolled off at some point. But what other things are getting into that point beyond just profit. Is it working capital that rolls off, just again trying to get an idea of how sustainable the $500 million is?

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

No, that's -- it's a very sustainable number. There's nothing in there. There are tax assets that roll off in year seven. I think this is year three where they start rolling off and coming down. So it's -- we see it as sustainable. And also, I would like to mention on here the fact that we do have the $300 million optionality when you exclude the dividends and exclude the mandatory debt payments over that three-year period of optionality for capital deployment over that three-year period as well. So we see that the $500 million continuing to grow as our profits will grow beyond year three.

Jonathan Raviv -- CitiGroup -- Analyst

Thanks for that clarification. And on deployment with the acceleration of the FY '20 repo plan with the ASR couple of months ago. Should we expect minimal activity to the rest of second half or is that's something we're still going to evaluate in a couple of weeks with the Board meeting?

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

With the strong free cash flow, we expect additional deployments in the second half. But we don't communicate our detailed future capital deployment plans. We'll be discussing that with our Board of Directors in the near future and get back to you on that.

Jonathan Raviv -- CitiGroup -- Analyst

Okay, great. If I could squeeze one more and just on -- Nazzic, you talked about revisiting or taking or maybe putting your stand on the long-term business strategy today to include looking at some of the KPIs. Can you just set context for us, so what do you perceive and what's the starting point. What do you perceive to be the long-term business strategy now? What are the KPIs right now? Where is that conversation is starting, so to speak?

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Great question. So really the driving factor for stepping back and refreshing our strategy was the acquisition of Engility, a position -- gives us a very different position in the market in some key areas that we believe will drive more than average growth. And so the objective was to step back and take a look at our existing strategy, Engility closed many of the gaps, if you think about greater access to the Intel community, greater access to the space missions. And so what we're doing now is just taking a fresh look and with the intent of getting better clarity and visibility on where the growth is going to come for the next one, two, five years. And also then aligning our resources and our investments to facilitate and drive that growth. And so that's how we're thinking about it right now. Again, I don't it's not going to be a radical right turn, I think SAIC is exceptionally well-positioned in a terrific market. And the type of work that we do and the solutions that we bring to bear are very consistent with the national priorities. And so we just want to take a fresh look, step back and ensure that we absolutely are focused in the right areas. Now that we are a bit a different company with Engility joining the SAIC family, and that really is what's driving that. Does that help?

Jonathan Raviv -- CitiGroup -- Analyst

Yes. Thanks a lot, Nazzic.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Okay. Sure.

Operator

We'll go next to Joseph DeNardi with Stifel.

Joseph DeNardi -- Stifel -- Analyst

Yes. Thanks for the follow up. Nazzic, can you just talk about kind of how pleased you are thus far with talent retention at Engility? And then just more broadly from an M&A appetite standpoint, are you in a position, do you have the capacity to do more acquisitions now? Do you want to wait? What's your feeling there? Thank you.

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

You bet. So on the peoples side and the attrition side, I'm very pleased with where we sit today. And we monitor this, as you could probably imagine, our assets are our people. And so we monitor this on a very regular basis. And has been -- we've been doing that since we closed the transaction. But the decisions we made early on, the blending of the leadership teams. The full integration from a organizational standpoint of the companies happening on day one really contributed to -- I believe contributed to our ability to retain the talent that we need. And especially as we think about the cleared resources that are so critical to our business. So I'm extremely pleased with where we are, and -- but with that being said, we're not -- I'm not considering it done or considering it's finished until we get through this year, get to the next couple milestones and really begin to see the revenue opportunity that I know we'll be able to see as we go into next year. So that's that on the people side.

On the M&A side. So from a capacity standpoint, we absolutely have the capacity. The strength of SAIC now as a result of the Engility acquisition, Charlie touched on the cash profile. And so we certainly have the capacity. My first and foremost priority is to continue the successful integration of Engility, and so that comes first. But with that being said, we can't always control what comes to market when and we'll continue to look at M&A opportunities that would facilitate growth in -- either in capability sets or customer access. And so we keep our eyes open, we continue to engage in conversations when something comes across the desk to make sure that it's something that we do want to take a look at or not. But I will tell you, it's not our highest priority as we sit here today.

Joseph DeNardi -- Stifel -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

At this time, I would like to hand the call back over to our speakers for any additional or closing remarks.

Shane Canestra -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Thank you very much for your participation in SAIC's second quarter fiscal year 2020 earnings call. This concludes the call and we thank you for your continued interest in SAIC.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 50 minutes

Call participants:

Shane Canestra -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Nazzic Keene -- Chief Executive Officer

Charles Mathis -- Chief Financial Officer

Edward Caso -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Jonathan Raviv -- CitiGroup -- Analyst

Matthew Sharpe -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Cai von Rumohr -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

Sheila Kahyaoglu -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Gavin Parsons -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Joseph DeNardi -- Stifel -- Analyst

Jasper Bibb -- SunTrust Robinson Humphrey -- Analyst

Josh Sullivan -- Seaport Global -- Analyst

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