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Good day. And welcome to Fluence Energy's Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call [Operator Instructions]. As a reminder, this call may be recorded.
I'd now like to turn the call over to Lex May, Director of Investor Relations. You may begin.
Thank you, operator. Good morning. And welcome to Fluence Energy's Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. A copy of our earnings presentation and press release covering financial results along with supporting statements and schedules, including reconciliations and disclosures regarding non-GAAP financial measures, are posted on the Investor Relations section of our Web site at fluenceenergy.com. Joining me on this morning's call are Manuel PĂ©rez Dubuc, our Chief Executive Officer; Dennis Fehr, our Chief Financial Officer; Rebecca Boll, our Chief Product Officer; and Julian Nebreda, our incoming Chief Executive Officer.
During the course of this call, Fluence management may make certain forward-looking statements regarding various matters relating to our business and company that are not historical facts. Such statements are based upon the current expectations and certain assumptions and are, therefore, subject to certain risks and uncertainties. Many factors could cause actual results to differ materially. Please refer to our SEC filings for our forward-looking statements and for more information regarding certain risks and uncertainties that could impact our future results. You are cautioned to not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of today. Also, please note that the company undertakes no duty to update or revise forward-looking statements for new information. This call will also reference non-GAAP measures that we view as important in assessing the performance of our our business. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to the most comparable GAAP measure is available in our earnings materials on the company's Investor Relations Web site. Following our prepared comments, we will conduct a question-and-answer session with our team. During this time to give more participants an opportunity to speak on this call, please limit yourselves to one initial question and one follow up. Thank you very much.
I'll now turn the call over to Manuel.
Thank you, Lex. I would like to extend a warm welcome to our investors, analysts and employees who are participating on today's call. As we announced last week, I was stepping down from my role as a CEO effective August 31st. This is a decision that the Board and I have been discussing for a while. We both felt that now was a good time to make this change, given the stability and upward momentum of the company. The Board and I are totally aligned on this decision and it will be a smooth and seamless transition. It's been a privilege to serve as Fluence CEO. I am incredibly proud of all that we have accomplished during the past few years at this amazing company. Like so many of our dedicated employees, I decided to work at Fluence because of the company's mission, which is to transform the way we power our world for a more sustainable future. I am forever grateful for the opportunity to lead this company through its Initial Public Offering. As I pass the torch to Julian Nebreda, I am confident that I am handing it to someone I know who will take Fluence to the next level. I am pleased to introduce you to the next Fluence CEO, Julian, please go ahead.
Thank you, Manuel. It is an honor and a privilege to be here with you today. Although I do not become CEO until September 1st, I thought I would share with you a bit about my background and my initial thoughts and priorities for Fluence. I'm not new to the Fluence family as I have been involved with the company since its creation and have been on the Fluence Board for the past year. For the past 23 years, I have served around the globe in different leadership roles for AES. Most recently, I was President of AES U.S. and global business lines. I have a kin interest and experience in growing renewable businesses. And I am proud to have led AES Europe when we introduced the first battery and e-storage projects units there. I have a good understanding of the key issues for Fluence from my role as a director. Although I'm still getting up to speed on the details of Fluence day-to-day operations, at this time, I do not foresee any major changes to Fluence strategy.
I would like to share with you some high level thoughts on key priorities. My overall objective is to drive increased shareholder value by focusing on achieving profitable growth and ensuring continued strong liquidity. I will do this through three initial areas of focus. First, our supply chains, where I intend to support our efforts to relocate, secure and diversify from whom and where we buy these, to transform this from a challenge currently to a competitive advantage in the future. The recent approval of the Inflation Reduction Act provides additional incentives on this front that we will work very hard to capture. Second, product roadmap. I want to ensure we have a clear strategy that can generate strong margins as it relates to our offerings. I would like to emphasize products that meet the growing demands of our customers, while also allowing us to capture healthy gross profit. A key element of this is to ensure that we have well planned and implemented product rollouts. Third, Fluence digital. This is an area with tremendous potential, and I am committed to ensuring that it has a proper resources and structure. I've been involved in the selection process for the new Chief Digital Officer that Manuel will discuss later in the call. I am excited with my new responsibilities in Fluence. Its mission aligns with what motivates my professional life. The combination of a growing platform providing innovative solutions and value to shareholders, customers and society makes it a unique place to work. I will do my best to contribute to the great mission of this company and fulfill the trust that the Fluence Board has bestowed upon me.
I'd like to conclude by thanking my good friend, Manuel. We have been friends for more than 30 years and have worked together many times over our professional lives. Manuel's leadership has been fundamental in elevating Fluence to a strong and market leading position. Manuel, you can be confident that I will do my best to continue the company's momentum. Additionally, I would like to thank all our employees across the world. Your continued devotion to Fluence is remarkable and inspiring. You are the cornerstone of the company and enable our success. I would also like to emphasize that maintaining a strong corporate culture that is centered around our values is critical, and you can expect me to support that as we continue our journey. I would now like to turn back the call to Manuel to discuss the quarter.
Thank you, Julian. Turning to the quarter. Today, I will provide an update of our business and share our preliminary views of the Inflation Reduction Act. Our CFO, Dennis Fehr, will then review our financial performance and guidance.
Beginning with the key highlights of the quarter on Slide 4. I'm pleased to report that our team continued to make strong progress mitigating operational headwinds. As a result, we have improved our gross profit quarter-over-quarter and in line with our guidance. Additionally, we increased our cash balance for the second consecutive quarter, enhancing our balance sheet and ended the quarter with more than $760 million in cash. Looking now at our business performance. We delivered a solid quarter in line with our expectations. We generated $239 million in total revenue, and our gross profit improved from negative 4% in Q2 to negative 2% in Q3. Despite the expected challenges resulting from the COVID driven lockdowns in China, we continue to make progress in reducing COVID and shipping related impact on our margin. Our backlog now stands at $2.1 billion, providing us a strong visibility to future revenue. During the third quarter, we achieved solid order intake despite price increases, which highlights the unwavering demand for energy storage. Overall, we have now contracted more product megawatts through the first nine months of fiscal year 2022 than we did during the entire fiscal year 2021, which is evidence of the strong growth we are experiencing globally. In terms of new data contracts, Fluence IQ delivered another robust quarter, approximately 60% of the Q3 order intake was attributable to Nispera. We are pleased to have grown our market share with our recent acquisitions.
On the regulatory front, we expect the US Inflation Reduction Act should provide significant upside to Fluence in the coming years. One of the key provisions of the bill is a 30% standalone storage investment tax credit. We also see other benefits resulting from the bill, which I will discuss shortly. As a reminder, our financial plans have not assumed these tax credits or other incentives. As we announced earlier this month, we have established a contract manufacturing location in Utah, which is expected to start production in late September. This will enable us to finalize assembly of our products here in the United States, closer to our customer sites. This will also allow us to avoid some of the supply chain issues we have encountered in other locations. More importantly, we expect to be able to capitalize on some of the incentives provided under the Inflation Reduction Act for our Utah facility. I'm excited to share that we have officially signed our joint venture with ReNew Power, a world class IPP located in India. This partnership is a historic move for Fluence as it provides us with a strategic first mover advantage in this important and growing market.
Additionally, we recently opened our India Technology Centre, which will allow us to drive research, innovation and development of energy storage in India. This launch underscores our commitment to the region as we execute our global product strategy and complements our joint venture with ReNew. Shifting to our digital business. I'm excited to announce we have hired Krishna Vanka as our new Chief Digital Officer. Krishna brings a high level of energy and experience to the team and has demonstrated a history of successfully building software businesses. Krishna most recently served as the Chief Product Officer of In-Charge Energy. We are thrilled to have someone of his caliber lead our Fluence digital team. Krishna will join us in a few weeks, and we'll hit the ground running. Staying with our digital business, I'm pleased to announce we have rebranded our bidding application as Fluence Mosaic. This wholesale energy and ancillary service bidding engine provides our customers with higher revenue, thanks to its optimization powered by artificial intelligence. Currently, Mosaic is available in the [CAISO] and Australian markets.
Turning now to Slide 5. Climate change is a reality and we are encouraged by governments, including the United States, taking serious steps to address it. The Inflation Reduction Act represents one of the most significant and consequential pieces of economic policy in recent US history. There are several elements of the bill that will directly and indirectly benefit Fluence, including a 30% investment tax credit for standalone storage. The 30% tax credit will help spur investment decisions by customers and greenlight more projects, creating significantly more domestic demand for energy storage. We believe that the industry will see at least 20% growth in annual installations, thanks to the tax credit. This represents a significant opportunity for Fluence, both from a demand and profitability standpoint as a result of the boost to customer business cases. While we are pleased to see the tax credits for storage, there are other elements of the bill that provides significant upside for Fluence.
Fluence had already positioned itself to capitalize on the bill by expanding its supply chain to include domestic contract manufacturing. Let me elaborate. Section 48C of the bill discussed the extension of advanced energy project credits. This section now provides investment tax credits for projects that are equipped or expand manufacturing facilities that produce specified renewable energy equipment. This includes facilities that manufacture energy storage systems, electric grid modernization equipment and their components. The provision carries a base credit of 6% with an increased credit rate of up to 30% if prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements are met. By opening a contract manufacturing facility in Utah, we will be able to benefit from provisions of Section 48C. We are encouraged by the support for domestic contract manufacturing at a time when that is a key aspect of our supply chain strategy. It is too early for us to quantify this potential benefit as we will need to see the IRS interpretation and guidelines first. As we have said before, our financial plan did not assume benefits from any tax provisions or incentives. Therefore, the IRA is pure upside.
Now turning to Slide 6. We have made solid progress on mitigating many of the operational headwinds. I would like to provide you with an update of our improvement actions. First, looking at supply chain disruptions. I'm pleased to report we are seeing shipping rates plateau and in some cases, regress. Furthermore, we are starting to see the benefit of the relationships we have developed with multiple shipping companies. As a result, we are now seeing better terms and more optionality for our shipping partners. This is a welcome reprieve from the challenges we faced six months ago. Turning to the battery side. I'm pleased to say that we have seen increased battery production volumes from our partners. Assuming this continues, we believe the force majeure issue by our suppliers and which we, in turn, issued to certain customers to be resolved by first quarter fiscal '23. As we have mentioned previously, we have already locked up our battery supply needs for calendar '23 and are in advanced discussion for battery manufacturers regarding '24 and '25.
Turning to the compounding effect of COVID-19, which have included site closures and other site related disruptions. I'm pleased to report that this item has been effectively remediated. Turning to raw material price volatility, starting first with our legacy contracts. We are working with our customers to reprice contracts in light of the ongoing higher price environment we are now in. We have made progress so far with repricing such contracts and we'll continue to work with our customers to come to satisfactory solutions for both parties. For new contracts, I'm pleased to report that RMI is now the industry standard and will continue to be for the foreseeable future. Finally, turning to project cost overruns. This is a continued agenda item for the team. While we'll continue to roll out additional projects during the quarter, we experienced unanticipated costs associated with installations and commissioning, including balance of plan and transformer challenges on a few specific projects. Substandard components from certain suppliers also continue to be a challenge. We are dedicating significant time and resources in taking action in both areas. We are confident in our team's ability to implement these actions. In summary, I am extremely proud of our accomplishments. While there is still work to be done, I am confident in Julian's ability to continue our progress. Now I would like to turn the call over to Dennis to review our financial performance.
Thank you, Manuel. Before I begin, I would like to express my gratitude to Manuel for his leadership and commitment to Fluence. Additionally, I'd like to extend a warm welcome to Julian. Julian and I have known each other since 2018, and I'm excited to continue our working relationship on a deeper level as we together strive to increase value for our shareholders. Now moving to Slide 8 and our financial performance. We had a solid quarter in line with our expectations and previous guidance despite the challenges we faced as a result of COVID lockdowns in China in Q2 and early Q3. We further improved our margins quarter-over-quarter, increasing the GAAP gross profit margin from negative 4% in Q2 to negative 2% in Q3 and turning to positive adjusted gross profit in Q3, thus demonstrating the successful execution of our improvement actions. The margin improvement quarter-over-quarter was driven by the reduction of the adverse margin impact we have discussed on previous calls. We have been successful in reducing these by about half for each quarter with the Q2 level being 43% of Q1 and Q3 48% of Q2. We are focused on ensuring this positive trend continues into the fourth quarter. During the third quarter, we were once again cash flow positive and added nearly $40 million to our cash balance, further bolstering our liquidity to more than $760 million. Finally, we are reaffirming our fiscal year 2022 revenue guidance of approximately $1.1 billion. This is predicated on seeing on-time arrival of products which are currently in transit and timely transfer of products to our customers.
Turning to Slide 9. As Manuel mentioned earlier, we had a decent quarter for our energy storage order intake following two exceptionally strong quarters in a row. Even though we increased prices throughout fiscal year 2022, the 1,493 megawatts of new orders for the first three quarters combined already exceeds the 1,311 megawatts of new orders for the entire fiscal year 2021, demonstrating the growing demand for energy storage worldwide and the resilience of our customers' business cases. the resilience of our customers' business cases. Additionally, we have done an excellent job of diversifying our customer base. In fact, of the 1,493 megawatts that we've contracted during the first three quarters, more than 95% is from unrelated third parties. Services contracting continues to be pushed out, and therefore, the service attachment rate during Q3 was lower than we had hoped. As you may recall from last year, we experienced something similar where we closed with a very strong Q4 for service contracts. We expect a similar catch-up event will occur in either Q4 or Q1 fiscal year '23, moving our aggregate attachment rate closer to our 70% high. Looking at our digital business. We had another solid quarter for new contracts with more than 800 megawatts of order intake. This includes Nispera, which we acquired in April. I'm pleased to report that including Nispera, we now have a record of nearly 17 gigawatts contracted or under management as compared to about 4 gigawatts at this time last year. Additionally, we saw significant growth in our digital pipeline, mostly attributable to the inclusion of Nispera in our metrics this quarter.
Turning to Slide 10. We delivered a solid quarter in line with our expectations in terms of revenue, considering the recent China lockdown challenges. The $239 million generated during the quarter represents a 14% decrease year-over-year, which is mostly attributable to revenue we accelerated in Q2 fiscal year '22 and the aforementioned COVID driven lockdowns in China, which delayed shipments of our products into Q4 fiscal '22 and fiscal year '23. Turning to Slide 11. In addition to the solid revenue recognition in Q3, we made progress on our gross profit and gross margins on a GAAP basis. Our GAAP gross profit of negative $15 million in Q2 fiscal '22 improved approximately 67% to negative $5 million in Q3. On an adjusted basis, our gross profit improved from negative $11 million in Q2 to positive $2 million in Q3. Adjusted gross margin improved from negative 4% in Q2 to positive 0.7% in Q3. These gross profit improvements are driven mostly by a reduction of adverse margin impacts, which I will discuss shortly. As Julian noted, as a management team, we are keenly focused on profitable growth, improving our profit margins while growing with the market.
Slide 12 lays out the two levers we discussed on our Q2 call to achieve improved margins. Beginning with the left hand side of the slide, the first lever is to reduce adverse margin impact. You can see the progress we have made from a level of negative $53 million in Q1, which we reduced to negative $23 million in Q2 and again further reduced to negative $11 million in Q3, effectively reducing each quarter by about half the level of the previous quarter. The biggest driver of the improvement is the reduction of excess shipping costs and the reduction in compounding effects of COVID-19, which were costs related to site closures and other site related interruptions. In line with our previous statements, we expect this trend to continue in the fourth quarter assuming ongoing renegotiations of legacy contracts and related supply agreements will have a neutral impact on the fourth quarter. Our second lever is to increase as-sold margins. The chart on the right hand side indicates several drivers and the expected benefit to margins. Let me provide you an update on our efforts in these areas.
As I mentioned on our previous calls, we are pushing pricing on our products across the globe. This particular margin driver is on track as I'm pleased to report that we are seeing success in this endeavor as customers are willing to accept higher pricing given the inflationary environment. In the past, we have focused more on market share than pricing. But with bottom line profitability now our primary focus, we are laser focused on pushing pricing. In fact, because of the high level of demand we are seeing, we are able to be more selective about the projects we bid on and customers we work for. As Manuel mentioned before, we have made strong progress on our regional business model and are in the process of launching contract manufacturing here in the United States with an expected start of production in late September. We are, therefore, also on track on this margin driver. With respect to segment mix, on this margin driver, we are heading in the right direction with our focus on growing in higher margin segments, such as data centers and transmission. We are seeing traction for the transmission segment in various parts of Europe and Chile that are encouraging. We believe because of the level of complexity and challenges involved with storages transmission, we are in a strong position to be the market leader in this application, which deliver higher margins relative to other segments and looking for these segments to support our margin expansion in the future.
As for our Gen 7 product, again, we are heading in the right direction with executing our product roadmap, which will deliver a huge payload to specific markets such as the US. We expect to see this margin driver support our fiscal year '24 financials. Overall, our order intake margins for Q3 are improved relative to the order intake margins for the 12 months from Q3 fiscal '21 to Q2 fiscal '22, reflecting reflecting the progress we have made on executing our plan. We also see additional benefit to margins from the Inflation Reduction Act. We expect to see a significant amount of incremental demand and an enhancement of the overall business case for energy storage, thus enabling higher pricing for our products and services. Additionally, this increase in demand should further compound the supply demand imbalance in the market as it relates to energy storage. While it is too early to quantify the expected margin upside as we await guidance from the IRS, we've provided an illustration of the potential upside on this chart. I would note that we expect the benefits from the legislation to be reflected in our financial results beginning in fiscal year '24. This is based on the typical time it takes to convert demand for order intake and order intake to convert to revenue.
Turning to Slide 13. You can see we had a slight quarter-over-quarter improvement in our adjusted EBITDA, which was negative $53 million in Q2 and negative $49 million this quarter. As our gross profit improves, we are also turning our eye to overhead efficiency. Having scaled up our organization rapidly over the last 12 months and to maintain the current organizational size while we continue to grow revenue in fiscal year '23. We will provide more details on overhead efficiency in our next earnings call. As we have mentioned on previous calls, we expect to be breakeven from an adjusted EBITDA perspective in fiscal year '24. Now turning to our cash position on Slide 14. I am pleased to report our total cash balance increased approximately $39 million to a total of $762 million. This increase in cash was due to strong collections from our customers, coupled with customer prepayments for certain contracts, partially offset by the use of approximately $30 million for the Nispera acquisition. We continue to remain focused on our cash balance when we deploy our capital in line with our strategic framework. In line with our comments on the Q2 earnings call, we still expect that our cash balance will close around $500 million at the end of this fiscal year with the majority of the decrease due to an expected working [capital] in the fourth quarter. This working [capital] is being driven by previously announced revenue and collection shift into the first half of fiscal year 2023.
Turning now to Slide 15. We are reaffirming our revenue guidance for fiscal year 2022 of approximately $1.1 billion, which implies fourth quarter revenue of approximately $345 million. As mentioned earlier on the call, this outlook is predicated on the on-time arrival of products, which are currently in transit and the handover to our customers to recognize the related revenue in the remaining 45 days of the quarter. In line with our normal cadence, we will provide you with our fiscal year '23 guidance on our year end earnings call. In summary, we see continued progress on our gross profit by improving our product delivery operations and supported by more stability in the supply chain. We are making progress on our strategic agenda, including finalizing the JV with ReNew and opening the US contract manufacturing facility in Utah, which will enable us to capitalize on incentives from the Inflation Reduction Act. Overall, we expect this legislation to drive incremental demand and create margin upside relative to what we have assumed in our financial outlook. Our strong cash balance enables us to position ourselves for the favorable longer term outlook for energy storage. As a management team, we're intensely focused on improving the bottom line and achieving adjusted EBITDA and cash flow breakeven in fiscal year '24. We continue to be bullish on the longer term and are excited about the prospects for our business.
This concludes my prepared remarks. I will now turn the call back to Manuel.
Thank you, Dennis. It has been a pleasure working with you and the rest of the team for the past several years. I want to thank the Fluence Board for the opportunity to lead such an amazing company. I also want to thank the entire executive leadership team for their support. And most of all, I want to thank our Fluence for their dedication, passion and energy. Without you, none of this would have been possible. This concludes my prepared remarks. I will now turn the call over to Lex. Thank you very much.
Thank you, Manuel. We are about to start the Q&A session. Before we begin, I would like to note that while Julian is participating on our call, he is not yet a member of the management team. And as such, he will not answer any questions today. All questions should be directed to Manuel, Dennis and Rebecca. Operator, we are now ready to begin Q&A.
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Julien Dumoulin-Smith with Bank of America.
Maybe just to start off, first off here with Utah and just expanding a little bit on the relative economics pro forma for the IRA here. Can you elaborate a little bit more? I know in the remarks, you commented about Section 48, et cetera. But can you provide a little bit more meat on this one, if you will, around quantifying some of those benefits and sort of the the NPV, if you will, around IRA there? And then if you can follow that up with some of the commentary about just the scope and acceleration in '24. I know you said it was a little bit of a delayed impact on order book, but just quantify that a little bit more on what you expect in '24 as a consequence.
First is that, obviously, we need to get -- enter into more of the details of the new act. But certainly, this is great news. I'm very happy that we decided to go regional on the manufacturing a while ago. So we're much -- very, very ahead of many of our competitors. We already have the facility in Utah. It's going to be up and running probably in a month [Technical Difficulty]. We see the benefits not just in the demand, better pricing and opportunity for cross selling, the standalone tax rate for -- standalone energy storage on [TDC] [Technical Difficulty]. There's going to be some [Technical Difficulty] the better economics for our customers, all of those elements are very encouraging.
Got it. And I think the sound quality came through a little bit off the [Technical Difficulty] at least on our side. Just if I can, just quick follow-up here if I can. Just with respect to the commentary on the guidance and predicating on-time arrival of products, and just you commented about needing to improve some of the quality of the items. What are you doing to diversify your suppliers, et cetera, to ensure execution?
Julien, your voice got caught and…
Julien, we had trouble hearing you on that one. You were cutting in and out. Could you try repeating that?
The diversification strategy or how else do you improve your operations in the back half of the year and ensure full year '22 execution here, if you will.
So Julien, your question is primarily about supplier diversification, correct?
Again, I know there's a few different angles that you could speak to here just with respect to some of the challenges you face, but it seems like many of them are abating already, whether it's shipping or some of the Chinese considerations. But one of the other elements that you alluded to was substandard cars, et cetera. Just what are you doing to mitigate that, how much could we see that impact here or how could that manifest? And then more importantly, how do you mitigate that impact going into '23 here?
I think I'll answer it in three parts. One is supplier diversification of our major components. So as we consider our product roadmap and where we invest some of our R&D resources, it is, in fact, to ensure that we are capable of expanding that supplier diversity. So that's one way to handle it is to make sure that we have more than one choice. We would focus there mainly on batteries and inverters. Both are a target area. That is -- maybe that leads me to the second point about batteries or supplier diversity, which is a major goal for us that we've talked to you about before. And not only overall [Technical Difficulty] but geographic supplier diversity when we consider where we get our batteries. So we haven't made a focus on that. We have had a major sort of session with eight battery OEMs, most of whom we have not worked with before. So we're expanding beyond the OEMs that we currently do business with to additional OEMs. We have down selected based on technical and sort of quality features of those OEMs and we'll be pulling additional OEMs into the mix of our products moving into 2024 and 2025.
When we talk about geographic diversity, the story continues to be the same. Of course, most batteries are currently from China. When we look at where we're going with our product roadmap by the end of 2023 or so, 30% or so of our battery supply will be from outside of China, from areas such as Europe and Korea. And then the third part of the answer, Julien, is about specifically quality issues. So let's say, we have several suppliers for inverters and batteries. And we still want to and we have developed the methodology to be able to manage those supplier quality issues better. So I'll point out two things there. One is we just issued a press release about a systems test lab that we're putting in Pennsylvania right outside of Pittsburgh. And a big part of the reason for that lab is to be able to do exactly that, test our products, test their components and test their designs, both before they're launched and then when they're out in the field so we can recreate issues and solve them quickly, so best practices from product companies. That goes hand in hand, I think, with some supplier quality methodologies and processes that we've put in place over the last 12 months. So we have the processes, and we have the facility. So we can tackle these things in an ever more efficient way.
Our next question comes from Maheep Mandloi with Credit Suisse.
Just quickly on the [IRS] aspect, I mean just to dig deeper on that. How much capacity do you have planned in Utah? I mean just calculating on the 75 to 150 [ques] per week -- I calculate around 4 to 8 gigawatts, but how should -- is that correct? And how should we think about on gigawatt hours and does that $10 per kilowatt hour kind of applied to this or is there anything else on the IRA we should expect from this?
So I think we really set ourselves up that, first of all, with the initial stage of the facility size, we can basically capture higher demand, which we have contemplated for calendar year '23. That means that we are really 100% coverage out of that capacity. And we then have really a flexible setup there so that we can further increase the capacity to north of 10 gigawatt hours, maybe all the way with 14 gigawatt hours down the road. And it's actually not that much of an effort to increase the capacity over time. In that regard, really the major step is kind of making that first initiation and that really has been a work of a while. And so we really got a very good timing of being ready to launch that now as the IRA kicks in and really, that's incremental increase of capacity that's really then much easier to achieve. So we are very positive in terms of the capacity coverage we have.
And I appreciate the color there. And just looking more on to Slide 12, the margin upside from the IRA kind of talked about that coming in FY '24. Is that the right way to think about it? Just trying to understand like this facility comes on in September, how much -- when can we expect that margin upside or pricing power from IRA for you guys in '23?
So let's keep in mind, we have two items under the IRA as the 30% ITC standalone storage and then the Section 48C in there. And so in that regard, I think very clearly, we're very positive that the ITC standalone storage will create credit, tax credit there will create additional demand. And with that also creates that margin upside on the pricing side. And that's kind of what we illustrated on the chart, which would then take till fiscal year '24. On the manufacturing side, I think we're really looking at more details in terms of the IRS in terms of guidance and how this will really work will be a question hey, is that actually creating pricing power or is it creating -- which then may be reflected in the gross profit line of the P&L or will we see that benefit somewhere more down in the P&L. In that regard, I would say really much too early to right now make a quantification around the potential positive upside on the manufacturing benefits and waiting for the [IRS] to come out with more details and then we will update you accordingly.
So definitely, it seems like an upside here for '23. All right, that's all from my end. I'll follow up the rest later on.
Our next question comes from David Peters with Wolfe Research.
First question I have is just on the order intake during the quarter, down versus what you guys did the previous quarter and even year-over-year for storage and services. Wondering kind of what drove the softness this quarter particularly on the storage product side? And then just I think you said the services attach rate is kind of a timing issue, but I just wanted to clarify that.
So I think in general, we feel that this year is a little bit different than previous years, what we have seen in terms of like the quarterly progression. I mean, you may remember that typically, we would have seen very strong Q3 and Q4 in terms of contracting as well as both on the revenue side. But with everything that's going on in the market and macroeconomics and supply chain topics, I think this year is really very different in terms of how the different quarters come together. In that regard, I would say we had on the order intake side, two very strong quarters in Q1 and Q2, which we typically wouldn't have expected in that way. And now we are seeing in Q3, which is more like on average quarter. I wouldn't really put too much to it and would say, hey, is there anything kind of going differently except for like, hey, just in general, the whole way, how this year is playing out in terms of the quarter is just very different. So that's the first part.
And then to your second part of the question on the services side, so in general, we have two different set of customers. Some customers are really kind of very keen to sign a contract. The LTSA is the service contract at the same time when they also sign for the product. But then there are other customers, they may be also just from the internal organization point of view, when you have a product team -- product procurement team going out to sign their products, and you have an operations team who's more doing the service contracting. And in that regard, we sometimes see that some of the customers really just sign one or two months as they had of -- when the asset is really coming online and being handed over to the operations team that they're entering into the service contract. So that's a little bit what we have seen last year at the same time where we also had like kind of some of the attachment rates in some quarters have been rather low, and then another quarter we saw 90%, almost 100% and so on. And it's really a bit of this timing aspect. So in general, we are not really seeing a signal from our customers that they're not wanting to sign service agreements. And we see it really just as a timing issue and therefore, expect that to catch up in the fourth quarter and in the first quarter of '23.
And then just separately on the announcement of the new Chief of Digital, congrats there. Just wondering if you could share any additional details on that process. And if the vision for Fluence IQ has changed at all versus what was anticipated initially? Is there going to be a focus in one area or an acceleration of new apps or even more M&A potentially?
First is that we're very happy with Krishna Vanka coming, and he wanted to join the Fluence family. It was a process that we analyzed, and we went through some internal candidates. We went out to the market. We had a very, very good talent that was interested in coming. This is an extremely attractive area. We all know the enormous opportunity that is ahead of us and also the value that we're creating with the Fluence digital. And that has been demonstrated in the Australian market, where we already have 30% market share. So overall, very happy with that. The product -- the team is there. I mean, there's no -- that's good that we have -- we stick -- the team together, they're very, very focused on developing the new products, expand into new markets. We are very encouraged by Mosaic being expanded to the [ERCOT] market. That is going forward.
We're in very, very active conversations with one big customer there to do a test pilot. Then we see a lot of experience from Krishna developing software and bringing new products to the next level to really scaling out those products really scaling out those products. He's coming from a company named In-Charge that it's a joint venture with ABB, extremely successful with also background on having very, very talented teams and building the strong teams. So we keep going forward with our product development and expanding to new markets, and the addition of Nispera team in Europe is a great combination. So very, very much happy with Krishna. And as soon as he joins the company probably in a few weeks, he will start hitting the ground running and start working with the team and giving us what is the probability to even accelerate some of our product development.
Our next question comes from James West with Evercore ISI.
Manuel, maybe more of a philosophical question for you as you guys think about, and meaning going forward as you transition out with Fluence, the role of, I guess, revenue growth versus profitability and profitable growth. And given the early stages of the build out of energy storage, what are the priorities, what's most important here for you guys, is it a combination of both, is it a land and expand? How are you thinking about it?
Let me take that with forward-looking statement here. Just want to be very clear is to have a strong focus on profitable growth. So it's really both. It's not just one or the other. At the end, like you're also indicating as an industry, we are really in the early innings. And we are very positive about the long term outlook. And therefore, it's very clearly that it's really about continuing to grow here. But as we also said very clearly in the past years, a lot has been about a bit of a market share gain and positioning the company as like the leader in the space and I think we have clearly achieved that. And therefore, it's not just the growth side it's also the profitable side and really the focus on the bottom line. And in that regard, it's really that combination and to say let's continue to grow at attractive rates, which is just coming by the market growth itself, but at the same time, really keep a very clear focus on achieving the breakeven on adjusted EBITDA and cash flow basis in '24.
And then curious about the opportunities that you guys have highlighted several times the India and the JV sign there. Maybe if you could expand a bit on the opportunity in that market and if it kind of opens up other areas in kind of the Southeast Asia market.
This is another very, very attractive market. We see around 27 gigawatts of storage being deployed in India by 2030. We have this great first mover advantage. We have a technology team. We established a technology team in Bangalore. So that is also very good for us. The localization of the product in India, it will also help us develop a very competitive product there. We have a great partner, ReNew Power. It's an excellent developer there, very well known in the market, one of the leaders, very strong shareholders. Similar culture, also a public company, public listed in NASDAQ. So very, very common elements that is -- we feel so comfortable working with them. And again, I mean, this is another JV. We started as a JV. We are establishing now Fluence and another JV that we can repeat the tremendous success of Fluence in the India JV. Well, we're expanding ourselves and multiplying and learning from our success and try to repeat those.
Our next question comes from George Gianarikas with Canaccord Genuity.
I'd like to ask first about your gross margin targets. I mean, a lot has changed since your IPO. But I'm wondering we think about the 15, 35, 85 margin target that you laid out several months ago for three segments. Are those still viable at a steady state or has something changed structurally about the business that those can no longer be relied upon?
Absolutely, these are the targets which we are going after. I would say what structurally may have changed now is with the IRA. So that certainly hasn't been baked into any of the previous financial modeling outlook statements in that regard prior to our previous statements around the IRA. A bit early to quantify that margin upside here. But I think on the -- especially on the product side, it's there very clearly. Otherwise, in terms of kind of the more near term margin progression, I think we stay in line with our statements, especially from the last earnings call, where we said, hey, expect to see in '23 somewhere in that low to mid single digit and then fiscal year '24 in high single digits, also here is that addition that's all prior to any IRA upside. So that's the same statement there.
And as a follow-up, just on the competitive dynamic that you're seeing in the marketplace. Have there been any material changes over the last several months in terms of who you're seeing and who's more aggressive, less aggressive and general market share dynamics?
Well, in general, to be honest, at one point, we were receiving a lot of calls from customers. They didn't have any other option because some of our competitors, they decided to slow down their participation. Now some of them, they're coming back. We have been becoming more selective both in the customers with strategic customers, the markets and the segments we're participating, which also is helping us on the margin side. And the fact that we haven't had any cancellation of projects and we have been able to reprice some of the contracts, it tells us that those customers that we selected are very loyal. They want to keep working with us. They want to keep developing their portfolios with us. And it's a satisfaction to know that we are a name in the market and respected, and we keep attracting new markets. Something that I can also add is that with the ReNew -- the new situation in Europe, the demand in Europe also is becoming extremely strong. And we've seen very good opportunities there and expanding, a lot of repetitive customers in the US. Now we saw that happening with the ITC in solar. Now having the standalone storage ITC and all this push for reshoring infrastructure and manufacturing in the US, all that is -- we will see additional demand. So in general, we feel very comfortable with the prospects around the world. And Asia has still very, very strong market for us.
Our last question come from Craig Shere with Tuohy Brothers.
They're all kind of related. First kind of near term and maybe I didn't catch it in the opening comments. But I'm trying to reconcile the guidance that we could end the force majeure possibly by the first quarter of fiscal '23 with the comment that tight battery and inverter market conditions may extend into next year. And then I certainly understand that in today's remarkably tight energy markets, our customers are certainly happy to pay up for lithium battery storage project inflationary pressure. But looking in the mid decade for an eventual easing of macro inflation and ongoing lithium pressure start to change customer behavior, and then the last part of the question is, do you see tight lithium battery market conditions kind of accelerating interest in alternative technologies?
It is a very interesting question, and I will answer that in my personal view. I think that -- you remember that we entered into a strategic alliance with QuantumScape. I personally think that the solid state battery is a very, very interesting evolution of the lithium ion is, in fact, 3 times more advanced in terms of energy and so that will significantly reduce the overall cost. By nature in this design and architecture, it use much less material. So it's not just has a lower cost point but it's also more efficient and then very high density. So I think that, that will be a very interesting evolution in the actual technology. If you look at the manufacturing that is being built in Europe and in the US, that is massive and it's massive and it's based in lithium ion. There might be other technologies on maybe longer term storage like hydrogen. Probably the future will be a combination between both, some hybrid models. But the market is massively investing in researching on lithium-ion type of batteries.
Rebecca and their team has been looking for other options like sodium. And we see some opportunities also in sodium that obviously has a more [prudent] components and raw materials on that one. But it's still -- there's still some work to be done. We have been extremely innovative by testing new batteries. But again, I mean, it's a matter of economy of scale and the quantity of production because there are other options out there, yes. But if you want to ask them for 2, 3, 5, maybe even 10 gigawatts, they are not capable to do that. So it's not just the technology but it's also the manufacturing capacity in the volumes.
And nearer term, maybe you can help me understand the opportunity to end the force majeure into early next fiscal year, while still expecting tight battery and inverter market conditions. How do you see that all playing out for you in the coming two, three quarters?
I think in general, we see actually that there is still supply and demand imbalance, and that actually is a positive driver in our perspective in regards to the margin upside potentials here. At the same time, of course, what it also does, and we have been talking about that in the last earnings call, it kind of drives a bit of an elongation in the revenue cycle. And that's a bit the other kind of aspect to it. But in general, we feel that we have done the homework, that we have secured all the supply for fiscal year or calendar year '23 already. That means for that time period, we are well setup. And I think we have been making earlier statements also that we are in a very good position in regards to securing the '24, potentially the '25 supply. In that regard, overall, if you like, that things are going into the right direction, and we'll continue to do our homework in these areas.
I just would like to add, and again, this is a very personal note because my experience in the field and other technologies evolution is that I don't think that the bottleneck will be the batteries in the future. The bottleneck will be the existing infrastructure. We have seen just the effect of the ITC on solar and how many years for interconnection you need to wait in order to get the capacity. So there's a tremendous opportunity for Fluence. We are the leaders and the only company out there that is offering the transmission booster. We know that the transmission is going to be a bottleneck in this new grid, and we already won a very significant contract in Europe. We participated in Germany recently. The regulator approved the transmission booster in Chile. So it's a proof point that, that need, it was a significant market for us. And if that comes to the US in order to really accommodate the additional demand that we will see, so we will see -- we will have additional opportunity to offer some cross selling opportunities with the transmission booster.
There are no further questions. I'd like to turn the call back over to Lex May for any closing remarks.
Thank you, Michelle. And thank you, everyone, for your participation on today's call. If you have further questions, please feel free to contact me. We look forward to talking with you again when we report our fourth quarter results. Have a good day.
This concludes the program. You may now disconnect.