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Operator
And good day, and welcome to the third quarter fiscal 2024 Key Tronic Corporation conference call.
Today's conference is being recorded.
At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Brett Larsen.
Please go.
Brett Larsen - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President - Administration, Treasurer
Good afternoon, everyone.
I am Brett Larsen, Chief Financial Officer of Key Tronic.
So I'd like to thank everyone for joining us today for our investor conference call.
Joining me here in our Spokane Valley headquarters is Craig Gates, our President and Chief Executive Officer, Tony Ward.
He's our Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller.
As always, I would like to remind you that during the course of this call, we may make projections or other forward-looking statements regarding future events or the Company's future financial performance.
Please remember that such statements are only predictions and actual events or results may differ materially.
From more information.
You may review the risk factors outlined in the documents the company has filed with the SEC, specifically our latest 10 K, quarterly 10 Qs and eight Ks.
Please note that on this call, we will discuss historical financial and other statistical information regarding our business and operations.
Some of this information is included in today's press release and a recorded version of this call will be available on our website.
Today, we released our results for the three months ended March 30, 2024.
For the third quarter of fiscal 2024.
We reported total revenue of $140.5 million compared to $164.6 million in the same period of fiscal year 2023.
Revenue for the third quarter of fiscal 2024 was constrained by approximately $5 million due to severe winter weather events that took electronics facilities in Mississippi and Arkansas off-line for approximately two weeks.
In addition, we saw softening demand for a number of different programs produced in Mexico.
For the first nine months of fiscal 2024, our total revenue was $433.7 million compared to $425.5 million in the same period of fiscal 2023.
For the third quarter of fiscal 2024, and our margins and profitability were significantly impacted by an unusual combination of events.
First, we incurred severance costs of approximately $3.7 million or $0.27 per diluted share as we've reduced our workforce by over 450 employees in Mexico.
Severance costs were incurred late in the third quarter, which limited the payroll expense reduction that could be recognized for the quarter.
We also continued to be adversely impacted by higher labor costs and interest expense and by the continued strengthening of the Mexican peso, Mexican peso.
Relative to the U.S. dollar, the peso rose by approximately 5%, increasing our expenses by approximately $1.5 million or $0.11 per diluted share.
Furthermore, the temporary facility closures in the U.S. due to severe weather resulted a loss of contribution margin of approximately $1 million or $0.07 per diluted share as a result of these factors, our gross margin was 5.8% and operating and operating margin was a loss of 0.4% for the third quarter of fiscal 2024 compared to gross margin of 8.7% and an operating margin of 3.1% in the same period of fiscal year 2023.
Our net loss was $2.2 million or $0.21 per share for the third quarter of fiscal 2024 compared to net income of $2 million or $0.18 per share for the same period of fiscal 2023.
For the first nine months of fiscal 2024 the net loss was $802,000 or $0.07 per share compared to net income of $4.1 million or $0.38 per share for the same period of fiscal year 2023.
As we also noted in today's earnings release, we secured a breach of our fixed charge coverage ratio covenant in our asset based revolving credit credit facility as of the end of the third quarter by executing a new amendment to the agreement with our lender today.
This amendment will provide relief on financial covenants for the next 12 months increased their interest rate by 100 basis points and advance the maturity date of the agreement to September of 2025.
Turning to the balance sheet, we ended the third quarter of fiscal 2024 by reducing inventory by approximately $39 million or roughly 22% from the same time a year ago.
These improvements in inventory levels primarily reflect increased component availability and our concerted effort to drive inventory reductions, we're pleased to see our inventory levels continue to become more in line with our current revenue.
At the same time, the state of the worldwide supply chain still requires that we drive demand for parts differently than in historical periods.
Our customers have revamped their forecasting methodologies, and we have significantly modified and improved our material sourcing materials, resource planning algorithms.
As a result, we should be better equipped for future disruptions in the supply chain, even as we continue to manage inventory more cost effectively during the third quarter, we also reduced our accounts payable leasing obligations and overall debt by a combined amount of $57.1 million from a year ago.
Our current ratio was 2.8 times compared to 2.2 a year ago.
At the same time, Accounts Receivable DSOs was at 83 days compared to 79 days a year ago, which we believe reflects some increased delays in collections from certain customers despite continuing improvement of most customers with respect to disruptions from supply chain issues, total capital expenditures were $0.7 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2024, and we expect total CapEx for the year to be around $5 million.
While we're keeping a careful eye on capital expenditures, we plan to continue to invest selectively in our production equipment, SMT equipment and plastic molding capabilities, utilizing leasing facilities as well as make efficiency improvements to prepare for growth and add capacity, particularly in our U.S. in Vietnam locations for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024.
We're seeing a rebound from among our legacy customers relative to our third quarter and a strong backlog of new customer program opportunities.
For the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024, we expect to report revenue in the range of $135 million to $145 million.
While new programs continue to ramp in our Mexico facilities and efficiency improvements, a muted rebound to pre-COVID production levels amongst existing Mexico customers and the continued pressure of a strengthening peso combined prompted us to reduce our overhead in our walk in our warehouse facilities.
In the fourth quarter, we expect to incur additional severance expense of approximately $500,000 to $1 million from additional headcount reductions in our Mexico-based operations late in the fourth quarter.
The payback period for this decision is expected to be under half of the year, taking all these consideration, these factors into consideration, we expect net income to be in the range of $0.03 just two $0.1 per diluted share in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024 and moving into fiscal 2025, we expect continued sales growth in the U.S. and Vietnam, and we have a strong pipeline of potential new business over the longer term, we believe that we are increasingly well-positioned to win new programs and to continue to profitably expand our business.
That's it for me, Craig.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Okay.
Thanks, Brett.
During the latter half of fiscal 2024, we were taking necessary steps to reduce our workforce in Mexico due to the softening demand for a number of different programs with high support labor content with an expected to save us more than $10 million annually in the coming quarters.
We expect sales from Mexico based production to recover due to recently won programs and we do not anticipate needing to increase our headcount in coming periods, reflecting the significant improvements to our operating efficiencies.
At the same time, our work site is being restructured to focus on higher volume manufacturing, while lower volume products with higher service loan requirements will migrate to our other sites.
We're also pleased to see overall improvements in our operating efficiencies and inventory levels and other improvements made on the balance sheet.
During the quarter, we continued to expand our customer base, winning new programs involving up to $20 million in energy management account around $5 million in the telecommunications account, around $3 billion in consumer audio account and around $5 billion in industrial manufacturing account for the strong pipeline of new business underscores that continued trend towards onshoring and dual sourcing or contract manufacturing global logistics problems in China, U.S. geopolitical tensions continue to drive OEMs to examine their traditional outsourcing strategies.
We believe these customers increasingly realize that they have become overly dependent.
Are there China-based contract manufacturers for that only product, but also for design and logistics services over time, the decision to onshore nearshore production is becoming more widely accepted as a smart long-term strategy.
As a result, we see opportunities for growth and those opportunities are becoming more clearly defined.
At the same time, we are seeing a sustained trend of strong Mexican peso and continued increases in Mexican wages, particularly along the U.S. Mexican border.
And it has become clear that these changes in base cost of Mexican production are long-standing.
It has also become clear that customers have a different calculus for selecting a geographic location businesses that they are bringing back from China for those customers who struggles with China production due to the flexibility needs of the decreasing cost differential between our US and Mexico plants means that they will probably choose one of our US sites.
They are we believe they can enjoy the ultimate flexibility, engineering support and ease of communications.
Meanwhile, for those customers whose requirements had adapted to the China model of limited flexibility, challenging communications, slow-motion engineering support our Mexican facilities remain the answer.
Therefore, we are reconfiguring our Mexico sites to endeavor to be a lower cost, high quality, but more commodity level service provider over the past 12 months, revenue from our US production facilities has increased approximately 15% in Q3 of 2024.
Production in the US represented about 30% of our total revenue, while our Vietnam facility continues to be a modest contributor to our overall revenue.
A growing number of potential customers are actively evaluating a migration of their China-based manufacturing to our facility in Vietnam in coming years.
We expect our Vietnam facility to play a major role in our growth.
While China growth has slowed and many companies have decided to take risk mitigation steps with their Chinese manufacturers.
The fact remains that many components must be sourced from China.
Our procurement group and Shanghai, which serves the entire corporation, remains important for managing the China component supply chain on an ongoing basis.
The combination of our global footprint and our expansive design capabilities is proving to be extremely effective in capturing new business.
Many of our large and medium-sized manufacturing program wins are predicated on Key Tronic, deep and broad design services.
And once we have completed the design and ramping into production, we believe our knowledge of the specific design challenges makes that business extremely sticking.
We also continue to invest in vertical integration and manufacturing process knowledge, including a wide range of plastic molding injection, glow gases, multi shot as well as PCB assembly, metal forming, painting and coating complex, high-volume automated assembly and the design construction and operation of complicated test equipment.
We believe this expertise will increasingly set us apart from our competitors of similar size.
As a result, a customer looking to leave their contract manufacturer will find a one-stop shop and Key Tronic, which is expected to make the transition to our facilities, much less risky and cobbling together a group of providers each limited to a portion of the value chain.
In fact, most of the new customers we have onboarded take advantage of the one-stop shop capabilities we provide.
We believe global logistics problems, China US political tensions and heightened concerns about supply chains will continue to drive the favorable trend of contract manufacturing returning to North America as well as to our expanding the announced facilities.
We continue to see improvement across the metrics associated with business development, including a significant increase in the number of active quotes with prospective customers.
While the unfortunate combinations of factors temporarily disrupted our growth and profitability in the third quarter, we moved into the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024 with a strong pipeline of potential new business.
While we're seeing improvement in our operating efficiencies, recent wage increases, higher interest rates and a strong peso will dampen our growth and profitability in the fourth quarter or over.
We will continue to rebalance our manufacturing across our facilities in Mexico, the U.S. and Vietnam.
We remain very encouraged by our progress and potential for profitable growth over the long term.
As we previously discussed, Brett will succeed me as President and Chief Executive Officer at the end of June.
While I expect to remain a member of the Board.
Additionally, Tony will become our Chief Financial Officer.
Since this will be my 60th and last quarterly investor conference call.
I want to express my deep gratitude to our shareholders, customers and vendors.
I want to express my Express.
My sincere thanks to our outstanding employees for their dedication and commitment to our success.
It has been a great honor to lead this team and I have full confidence that Brett, Tony and her outstanding team will continue to take key trying to new heights.
This concludes the formal portion of our presentation.
Brett, Tony and I will now be pleased to answer your questions.
Operator
(Operator Instructions) Bill Dezellem with Tieton Capital.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Thank you, Craig, you preempted my first question, but I did miss the energy management.
What was the size of that one?
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
You know, it was my parting gift to you.
That was up to $20 million.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Okay, excellent.
Thank you.
Would you please walk through each of these and highlight may be important to them important aspects to them, whether they're existing customers or whether they are new customers, what was what, if anything was unique about these wins that are the highlights, the competitive advantage that you all have or something else.
Interesting.
And I do appreciate the parting gift.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thank you.
Welcome to the first one is an interesting one because this percentage a new customer this customer came to us almost two years ago and had a it needed that they needed to significantly increase their outsourcing in Mexico, and they played a significant role in helping us upgrade our metal coating capability because they have a very high end requirement for withstanding salt spray test.
So after a number of changes to our chemistry.
And in our painting process, we were able to pass that long term salt spray test.
And since then, the Flint, the floodgates have opened and they have been giving us more quotes and awards than we can handle.
So that's been a two year success story.
We were never sure was really the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, the customer was telling us, but our technical folks hung in there in the end, it's going to be a very nice long-standing program and so.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Is this a single program or is this up to $20 million?
One of the many programs that they are that they are giving you, it's already more than one program and there are many more to come.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
That's that's helpful.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
And the other three.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
The other three are pretty much run-of-the-mill in terms of standard reasons why they chose Key Tronic on the consumer audio is it is a customer in house today.
This was just a new program, right?
The other two are our new customers and new programs for Key Tronic Thank you.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
That's helpful.
And then if I may jump into the softening demand that's referenced in the press release and then possibly, Brett, in your opening remarks, you referenced that that has maybe even turned to a rebound.
Would you pull all of that together for us, please?
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
The Yum.
This is somewhat of a COVID hangover for a lot of people.
You and I have discussed this.
We're concerned a year ago that there was a massive COVID hangover.
And what we found is that it's scattered and spotty for a couple of our large customers.
It have too much inventory that they had built or had us build for them as parts became available.
And we're really COVID driven false demand signals, tempted them to continue building at a high rate, but it was a wide spread.
And as we've seen just in the last two or three months, those customers have drawn their inventory down of the products we make for them to the point that their forecast and orders are rebounding to the normal throughput levels that we would expect.
And that's really that's the overall set of circumstances, it's governing what we talked about as a softening and then slight return or muted return.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
I think we use or so from your standpoint, if you were to look out just from a an overall economic view?
Is it your sense that demand continues reasonably strong?
I'll call it end demand and now you've worked through some inventory excess inventory and and so we that volatility if we were to exclude that, we're just continuing with more of the same of decent demand.
Is that a fair way to look at what you're experiencing.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yes.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Great.
Thank you.
And then let me jump to the severance, if I may.
A severance came late in the quarter, as you pointed out, why was that because this is something if I recall that we talked about on the last on the last call.
And so I would have expected it maybe to happen sooner.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Well, when you affect people's lives and many these people have been with us for quite some time.
You want to be absolutely sure you're doing the right thing and you're doing it with the right people so it took us a little longer than we thought we get it done, but we are confident that we have done it in a caring and professional manner.
Then what needs to be done.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
And Craig, this sounds a little bit different than layoffs that you have had in the past where demand falls off and line workers are are laid off.
I'm just getting a different vibe than then than historical layoffs in my over reading into this?
Or is there something something more to be discussed here?
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
There's a lot more to be discussed because these layoffs represent a significant strategic change in how we view Mexico versus America versus China versus Vietnam.
We tried to get at it in my prepared remarks, but actually the way I think about it is a little bit more simpler crude.
I think the Flowers way we put it that is in the past year, six months to the year there's been a sea change in the average makeup of the customers who are interested in Mexico.
So take this as clear as this is the average.
It's not every customer, but what's happened is that the people who wanted to be in China but are not being allowed to do so by management.
Edix are now making up a significant portion of the folks that are interested in warheads.
So those people were either in China or were headed to China, and they were going China driven mainly by costs, and we're willing to accept a lack of flexibility in moving orders in and out lack of ability to send their engineers into the factory of short term, lack of ability to get their parts here and a week rather than a month and a half back of ability to do business in English versus the mix.
So they had companies had become used to all that or were ready to endure all that in return for the lowest possible price they could get because a lot of those people are being told it's too risky.
You're not going to go to China and figure something else out.
So they end up knocking on our door, but they had sticker shock when they saw the cost that we were proposing out of rewards plan because there were as planned, was configured for a different set of people.
And those set of people were the ones who didn't want to go to China, knew that they couldn't live with all the disadvantages I just listed and were willing to pay a little more to be in Mexico and enjoy all the near shore advantages.
Mexico have to offer so those people used to make up the majority of our available market share.
Now the majority of our available market share on average is made up by the people on the other side of the fence we want to be in China or are not being allowed to go there.
So that means that all the overhead in our factory in Mexico, people overhead, the quality technicians, the engineers, the folks who worked in scheduling and on the plant for material handlers program managers, all those people that we had built up over the years to provide U.S. based service levels when added costs were not willing to be paid for by this new set of customers.
And so those are the folks that made up the majority of this layoff, which has never happened before in our history.
So those folks are long-term employees of Key Tronic.
The wage structure and the laws of Mexico requires significant severance pay off for folks in that category.
And you're exactly right.
This is nowhere near the normal type of layoff, but it's strategically positioned.
The Mexican facility can compete and win as we've seen in the last six months a new breed of customer that represents a very big available market.
So that's why it took longer than normal.
That's why the severance was much higher than normal, and that's why you're sensing that it was different than no, that's a really insightful.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Thank you, Craig.
And so these peak, because these are not your standard line workers that you'll bring back with higher production rates, your cost structure is permanently being lower than is what you're saying?
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yes.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Does it somehow also affect the capacity of the facility.
And I'm not not necessarily the layoffs, Craig, but but the restructuring to have essentially less flexibility.
That sounds to me like you'll have more hours of lines up and running and fewer and less time down with the customer noodling over whether they ought to do something a little different or whatever.
Is that correct interpretation or not?
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
It is.
And in fact, we have groomed a very small number of customers who no longer fit into the model that you just described.
So it will result in more product being made with less line workers because every time you have to shut a line down and change it over, not only did you have to have a bunch engineers and quality folks and material handlers it.
They're swapping line over inevitably, you couldn't time it perfectly.
So you had line workers who were milling around waiting for some part or some process to come up the way it should.
So it's going to turn much more into a bang bang what happened parts together, and I don't want to say that in the low quality news, but it's going to be a last or have just run something at high volume than it is switch over every 10 minutes because a customer called Open is freaking out and at Lord And then I'm sorry, but we have had that type of work is migrating back to the States because people are willing to pay even more to get that level of service than they have been in the past, fascinating.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Okay, thank you.
And then lastly, if we exclude the severance and the winter weather shut down, then we're looking at $0.13 of earnings just what would have happened had you not had to of the one intended event and then the weather that surprise you?
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yes.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Okay.
Great.
Well, thank you.
And I'll let others ask additional questions, but thank you for all the time you have given me on these conference calls to ask questions over over the last two, maybe even 60 calls.
So thank you appreciate it.
And Brett, we look forward to working more with you in the future.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thank you, Bill.
You're more than welcome and we've appreciated your insightful questions also.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Again, if you would like to ask an audio question, please press star one cancel this request, please press star two.
Your next question comes from the line of Bob Poole with particular capital.
Robert Poole - Analyst
Hi, guys.
So I'd like to apologize in advance because I'm going to ask some tough questions and make some tough comments.
And and I hope you'll I think they need to be asked and they need to be made.
So but I do apologize in advance because it's usually a pretty friendly forum.
So first of all, I want to sort of wage.
I protest that the way you present your financial result is totally out of line with I follow hundreds of companies and you're the only one who presents your results the way you do without making adjustments for things like severance and so forth and presenting your results and your and your guidance after things like severance, nobody else does that and I don't think that there's any special path to financial heaven for being so pure tactical in that presentation.
Brett, you and I've discussed this a little bit.
How do you feel about this going forward.
Your comments are noted next decade or so, BIG-IQ is very hard to understand.
And I'll tell you why you had you're basically projecting flat revenues from the third quarter to the fourth quarter and on $140 million of revenue.
If you had a $575,000 loss in Q3, that included $3.7 million of Mexican severance.
So that should not exist in the fourth quarter.
You're taking out $10 million a year or $2.5 million of per quarter in Mexican labor that it should not be there fourth quarter, I think the impact of the peso is likely to be.
You've probably taken out half of your expenses in Mexico.
The impact of the peso, assuming it stays around the same level?
Yes, there hasn't been a significant.
It seems to be pretty flat so far this quarter now that that should be [$750] better in the fourth quarter, which should bring if something else wasn't going on, that would bring operating income to $6.4 million to $375,000.
No, taking not taking into account the the 1% increase in your bank spread, that's probably about $1 million two year or $300,000 a quarter.
So that takes your interest from two week to three one, but that brings pretax income to three two seven five, a 20% tax rate brings you to roughly $2.6 million in after-tax income on 10.8 million shares.
That's $0.24 a share.
You're talking about three to $0.1 a share.
If I if I make the adjustment for the new information that Brett gave about $500,000 to $1 million more in severance in the fourth quarter.
If I take that out, that gets you to $0.19 a share.
So what am I missing?
What haven't you told us that is a negative in the fourth quarter that accounts for the difference between three to $0.1 and $0.19?
Brett Larsen - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President - Administration, Treasurer
No, that's a lot of moving pieces.
I will let you know that I don't know that I agree with all of your adjustments.
I expect to take a moment and we rated it does help me where I'm wrong knowledge.
I'm not going to get into an argument here.
It's not worth it, but I will let you know that the pace of recovery of $750,000 is not accurate home.
And I'm I'm also ensuring that, you know, the cost structure of the year anticipating of the $10 million.
That's not immediate that, that that is ramping over four.
So both of those, I think, are likely incorrectly calculated and no additional material events are included in that projection of fourth quarter results.
Robert Poole - Analyst
So can you explain why if you've terminated all of these people, why you're not and the and the savings in a year's $10 million, why is it not $2.5 million a quarter because it's not we're not done with severances.
Brett Larsen - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President - Administration, Treasurer
We mentioned that we still have $500,000 to $1 million of severance to occur in the fourth quarter.
Those have not been fully done even as of today.
And we also mentioned that that would take up to six months to fully recover that severance amount.
So to be able to say that that we're recovering $2.5 million of expenses in the fourth quarter, net of what we're paying in severance, that this is not accurate.
Robert Poole - Analyst
So actually, Brad, if you go back, you've paid $3.7 million severance so far and let's say you pay another million.
That's $4.7 million that if you're going to get that back in six months?
That's about $2.5 million a quarter, Brett,
again, if I'm running working with, you know, the rest.
Brett Larsen - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President - Administration, Treasurer
So it's not like I'm making this stuff up, you know, Bob, we are talking a few $100,000, $0.19 in our $0.1.
Robert Poole - Analyst
You know, we are, you know, that's about a that's over $1 million.
Brett Larsen - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President - Administration, Treasurer
That fourth quarter severance is still in process, right?
Robert Poole - Analyst
So yes, so I've taken that out to get to the $0.19.
Brett Larsen - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President - Administration, Treasurer
I don't I disagree as well with your effective tax rate, I think you need to go back and recalculate that particularly coming off of a loss in third quarter, you told us back in your guide ratable type fees, 25%.
Robert Poole - Analyst
Is that what the is that with the?
Yes.
So you need to update your your business outlook because it's at 20% credit?
Brett Larsen - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President - Administration, Treasurer
Correct.
Robert Poole - Analyst
So I'm working with your numbers.
I mean, you guys kind of get this together and it's it's really bad.
Okay.
Next question.
You're sort of talking about a strong backlog business coming back yet revenues really if you account for the fact that you lost $5 million of revenues last quarter, that should have been $145 for the quarter and now you're projecting, you know, sort of $140 at the midpoint and Bill kind of asked this question, but it's hard to reconcile, you know, your comments about business getting better and having a strong backlog and, you know, another 3% to 4% decline in revenues.
How do you reconcile those?
Brett Larsen - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President - Administration, Treasurer
I think the words I use were muted well, that kind of that that's net negative.
Robert Poole - Analyst
That's not muted benefit.
That's that muted decline?
Brett Larsen - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President - Administration, Treasurer
Well, as you said, Bob, this is becoming unpleasant and I don't intend to argue with you semantics of what we said, we're giving you a true representation of our belief of the revenue going forward.
We're giving you a true representation of the backlog we have and we're giving you a true representation of the new customer pipeline we have as well with new quotes sold.
That's that.
Operator
Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of George Melas with MKH Management.
George Melas - Analyst
Maybe just a question about the layoffs in this February and Craig, you mentioned $10 million per day or when, but when do you expect to get and $10 million in three months and how much you expect that in the June quarter ending the quarter supplemental after that?
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
So the quarter we're in right now, we're going to get a portion of it.
And as we get into July, August, September, we should be see most of it per quarter.
Okay.
So does that mean that by September.
George Melas - Analyst
This to you at the full run rate of $10 million.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
So yes, that's correct.
Yes.
George Melas - Analyst
Okay, great.
That's helpful.
What do you how much are you gaining in the tumor microenvironment?
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
It is roughly between $1.5 million and $2 million.
George Melas - Analyst
Okay.
And why why you do that?
Is that because more and more, we reestablish the nuance, but 11 of our butane and they'd go everybody as of March 31st is I've already days.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
So that is correct.
George Melas - Analyst
Okay.
Very good for then.
A question that relates to relate to what Bill was asking.
Do you actually have some customers migrating from on a comparative of units of.
We just have a look at if you why we do see your app capability on our own niche people, having it.
It shows you our people to handle the hydrogen, the customers that you still have there that have these expectations.
How do you manage that?
I mean, are we going to have like a bifurcated service almost in Mexico, the legacy customers have a certain kind of expectations.
And for the new customers, it's a different set of expectations.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yes, that's a very perceptive question.
What we're moving from is a factory that was loaded with the overall ability to handle anything that happens at any customer at any time.
And we're moving to a factory that is specifically loaded by customer to provide whatever services the customer decides that they would like to pay for.
So it's almost impossible.
At least we found it to be so to control costs when you're peanut butter doing it over the entire facility are nine facilities.
When you have specifically talked with existing and new customers about what is it you're looking for and this is your base price.
And if you want to be able to call us and switch back and forth in the day, we're going to have to add this much support labor.
And if you're not willing to pay for in Mexico, but you want it, then you probably ought to go somewhere else.
And if you do want to pay for it.
Maybe it makes more sense at the levels you think you're going to need to move to the states.
And so we have seen some customers who have decided to move their production two, our one of our facilities in the States.
George Melas - Analyst
Some inquiries to Mexico or to whereas in the U.S. or.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yes, not a large amount, but.
George Melas - Analyst
Okay, yes, I was confused about how you run a plant like this or nine facilities always wrong, a different set of expectations among different customers.
And in a way, I I sort of love the fact that we were sort of like a real differentiation and design the handling difficult job that then were sticky.
But it seems that these new customers is not really that they're pretty commodity oriented guy, well, maybe not running the Amazon pretty much in Palo Alto.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
I know it's a really good question, and I want to make sure we're perfectly clear on it because it's a very key strategic portion of our thinking through.
Okay.
So we talk about design capabilities with difficult designs and difficult products that make those products sticky from those designs and those processes come out of the engineering staff in Spokane, the ability to manage a poorly designed or dodgy product that Key Tronic didn't design that we just transferred that has to come out of the folks in orange.
So when we cut our ability to provide service on a peanut butter level, that means that if a customer wants to transfer to us of a product that has a dodgy process.
We know upfront say, yes, we don't we don't want to call your baby ugly, but your baby's kind of ugly and realize that you have quotes from other suppliers that are lower than our quote and we are happy to give you a quote that would be dirt floor levels of engineering support, but you're not going to succeed building this product with this design in a factory without engineering services.
So we're either going to have to agree that our price is going to be higher than what you're hoping for or we're going to have to help you change the design or you're going to have to go somewhere else with this product so that's I don't know if that helps you, but that is a little bit of insight to how we're doing it.
And then secondly, with customers that have said, yes, we want we want this level of service.
It's much easier to control the costs since we already have a lot of practice in creating miniature factories within factories.
So we have a little factory inside a big factory that we can say, all right?
We're going to put one or two people on the support for this department and they're not they're not just on the overall salary supporting the whole company.
Whenever a problem comes up, they're only going to be full-time on this department building this product for this customer because this customer is paying for it.
It's much easier to control the cost and much easier to calculate the cost.
When you've got it, basically laser pointed on to a product and a customer rather than Sameer to cross an overall strategic intent of being high service for everybody.
So we haven't lost the ability to market ourselves and the high service supplier out of orders.
What we've changed is our ability to provide a low service cost for those people who want it.
So it's kind of like one of the few things I took away from business school was if you can't be niche, you have to be low cost.
We now have the ability if we are not niche by virtue of design or service levels being low cost out of war is by clearly defining to the customer upfront that you're going to want this.
It's going to cost this.
Does that make sense?
George Melas - Analyst
It does make sense.
It's an interesting thing to manage, but let me ask a question there that's related to that or so.
Does that mean that the conversation there have we lost customers or it is meaningfully different than it was before.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yes, it's almost like you pull leading alternatives for them and they can choose from or that you didn't do that only of all of them we didn't we didn't have the opportunity to say if you want to come to work and be a low cost, low service customer, here's your new price because we didn't have the capability of removing all of that peanut buttered overhead, the up required from our cost structure on a given quote.
Okay.
And even if you could do that, it takes a while to figure out on a given product what that car should be.
If you're trying to come up with a new formula, anything you can't do that quickly?
It's hard to convince a customer that you actually are going to have that ability to give them what they want in very, very low cost, low service.
So we have we have right now almost 80 active quotes and people want two to three weeks of response time when I quote and if you're trying to recalculate your cost structure, every time you get a weird product, you can't do it quick enough.
It's much easier to add, then it is trying to find a way to subtract.
Yes.
George Melas - Analyst
Okay.
And if you look at your customers now inquires.
They are mostly in the mostly the high service customers.
The low cost is still a very small group of everything.
That's where the growth will come.
No, that's not true it's a mix.
And part of the part of the regulation is that on this is that as we were being forced by the wage rates in the peso as we're being forced to raise prices across the board on customers.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
We realized that the low service customers were going to bolt.
And as we struggled to figure out how we could keep those customers in the face of these wage in pesos problems.
It was part of our revelation on.
Okay.
Wait a minute or in a different market now.
George Melas - Analyst
Got it.
Okay.
Super interesting.
And one more question are missing on.
But in a way, if we look back two years ago, this would have come to you guys.
I love it as a sort of well, I guess it was forced upon you, as you said, put on by the wage rates in the peso and then accelerate by the demand similar to the people who were upgrading in China.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
It's actually goes back four years to the beginning of COVID and the gradual and accelerating.
And to the answer, every piece, every every single procurement agent we spoke with to the question of where should I be the answer was China.
And as COVID and Trump and China and states and tariffs and supply chain and all of that added together.
And I'm not I'm not sure the general public knows this, but it used to be 100% in fashion call.
If you got a bunch of OE. and CEO.s together five years ago, it would be almost embarrassing for them to say they were building anywhere.
But China, they would be asked what do you think and their board would be asking them.
What do you think and why are you why are you not in China that has changed dramatically now as a result of all those economic and political and physical events that have happened in the last four years.
So that the market we are operating in is dramatically different than the one we are in five years ago.
Four years ago.
And that's why we were doing what we were doing five years ago, and that's why we're changing what we're doing now.
George Melas - Analyst
Okay, great.
And then maybe a couple more questions from a gross margin perspective is and I think the idea is to try to get back to a 9% gross margin maybe even higher.
Is that still a possibility or does that no sort of new strategy actually, you know, it appears that I think it's still a possibility.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
I don't think the strategy impairs that and I think I think the ability to build more build more faster with less people has helped is a help rather than a hindrance to that.
George Melas - Analyst
Okay.
Okay, great.
Greg, thank you very much for everything for your time and for your answers, and I'm not going away.
So I'm happy about that.
And Brad and Tony, best of luck with everything.
We'll have many more positive feature of it.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks, George has been good though, and yes.
Thank you.
Operator
Yes.
And your next question comes from the line of Bill Dezellem with Tieton Capital.
Please go ahead, sir.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
I actually have a follow up relative to something that I believe, Craig, you said in one of your remarks that by structuring war is to be lower cost, you're opening yourselves up to a much larger market.
It number one, did I hear that correctly?
And then secondarily, by or by default, also structuring the US maybe to be more of that high touch anymore, maybe a more obvious way.
I know it's been that all along, but maybe a more obvious way.
Is that in any way, expanding your potential markets?
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
I don't think the changes to the U.S. based facilities are a more obvious than they have been in the past.
They were structured to be high service at a price.
The changes Torres that flow through and result in bids and quoting being lower than what they used to be.
Is it changed it results in a bigger available market to us?
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Do you have a quantification on that?
No.
And then one at one additional question, please.
You mentioned you have 80 quotes today.
How does that compare to what we would have seen over the course of the last couple of years.
It's much higher.
It's a factor of 2% or 3% or 5%.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
All in all, it's probably a factor of hope there times where we had quotes, maybe 20 or 30 in the funnel.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
So this is at least at least double, if not quadruple, maybe what to what you were accustomed to running at before?
Yes.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Great.
Bill Dezellem - Analyst
Congratulations.
And we look forward to a few more of those at to say up to $20 million mark as to Andrei retirement.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks.
Operator
Concludes today's question and answer session.
I will now turn the call back to Craig Gates for any additional or closing remarks.
Craig Gates - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
But thank you, everyone, for participating in today's conference call.
I speak for Brett and Tony, you and I say look forward to speaking with you next quarter.
Adeel?
Operator
Concludes today's call.
Thank you for your participation.
You may now disconnect.