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Good morning. My name is Jack, and I'll be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Organigram Holdings Inc.'s Third Quarter 2019 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded and a replay will be available on Organigram's website.At this time, I'd like to introduce Amy Schwalm, Vice President, Investor Relations. Ms. Schwalm?
Thank you, operator. Joining me today are Organigram's Chief Executive Officer, Greg Engel; and Chief Financial Officer, Paolo De Luca.Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that today's call will include estimates and other forward-looking information from which our actual results could differ. Please review the cautionary language in today's earnings report regarding various factors, assumptions and risks that could cause our actual results to differ. Further, during this call, we will refer to certain non-IFRS financial measures. These measures do not have any standardized meaning under IFRS and our approach in calculating these measures may differ from that of our other issuers, and so these measures may not be directly comparable. Please see today's earnings report for more information about these measures.I will now hand the call over to Greg.
Thanks, Amy. Good morning, and thank you for joining today's call. This morning we reported results for our third quarter ended May 2019. I'll begin with some comments on Q3 as well as some macro views on the space and a discussion on our outlook, and why we're extremely excited about Organigram's prospects and those of the industry. Paolo will discuss the results in more detail as well as our balance sheet strength, then the operator will open up the call for your questions.In Q3, we delivered another quarter of strong sales, and just as importantly, we delivered positive adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter in a row. With our strong top line and market share translating to positive adjusted EBITDA, we believe we have continued to differentiate ourselves from our peers. Our focus remains on building a sustainable business that generates attractive return on investment for shareholders in the short term as well as the long term. We made progress on a number of other fronts worth highlighting on Slide 3. We are now selling our products coast-to-coast as one of only 4 Canadian LPs with distribution in all 10 provinces. Our Phase 4 expansion is coming on very well and the last phase of Phase 4, which is 4c, is expected to be completed in December. We received Health Canada approval for all Phase 4a grow rooms, which currently puts us that 61,000 kilograms per year of licensed capacity, almost double the licensed capacity we had last quarter. We anticipate harvesting from the first grow rooms in Phase 4a before the end of July. We have also already submitted the initial 17 of our 33 Phase 4b rooms in June. Phase 4b in total will add approximately 28,000 kilograms per year and the remaining 16 4b rooms are expected to be submitted for licensing in September. With Phase 4c, 24,000 kilograms per year, we are targeting total production capacity of 113,000 kilograms per year. Our Phase 5 refurbishment for an edibles and derivatives facility as well as the additional extraction capacity is on track. The entire team is excited about the next growth opportunity coming from the edibles and derivatives market. We have the expertise and we have been derisking our strategy by securing strategic partnerships, increasing capacity and planning for automation to deliver innovative products, which we expect to be ready and in the market when the regulations allow.We also strengthened our balance sheet with a traditional debt financing at attractive rates. And while it seems like old news now, but it is a true milestone, we started trading on the NASDAQ Global Select Exchange on May 21. This exchange obviously offers more exposure to U.S. and global investors, increased liquidity and puts us on a level playing field with our larger peers. Turning to the quarter. We grew sales significantly in many of the provinces, particularly in Alberta and each of the Atlantic provinces. Ontario has the highest population of all the provinces, representing approximately 37% of the Canadian population and is currently underserved by retail stores. We have seen recreational cannabis sales highly correlated to the presence of physical retail stores based on the comparison of the provinces in Canada. The Canadian market is positioned to grow significantly with more retail stores opening, particularly in the 2 most populous provinces of Ontario and Québec. Toward the end of the quarter, we began to fill a large supply gap with our first shipments of pure CBD oil to markets across Canada. There is a significant unmet consumer demand for CBD products, and we attribute our ability to respond to this demand in part to discuss the strategic arrangements with both 1812 Hemp and Valens GroWorks.Our medical business is very important to us, and we remain committed to ensuring there is a consistent product supply for our patients. From a medical sales standpoint, Q3 continued to be a strong one for Organigram as our revenue increased and our patient count was up approximately 14% from last quarter. Increased Q3 cultivation costs and lower adjusted gross margin reflected a temporary decrease in yield, as previously disclosed in last quarter's earnings report, as a result of changes in growing protocols, which have been resolved. Before the end of Q3, we saw our yields return to historical levels, and we have seen a meaningful increase in average cannabinoid levels in Q4 to date. We consistently implement continuous improvement programs with the goal of increasing yields and cannabinoid content and we'll continue to evaluate the different strains from our genetic bank to offer new products. With certification received from ProCert during the quarter for organic product sales in the recreational marketplace, we've determined which strains from our genetic bank to launch into our ANKR Organics brand this fall, which will be cultivated in our organic growing environment. Not all programs lead to successful improvements. However, we have the benefit of our own in-house proprietary software, OrganiGrow; our software program and database which tracks the impact of changes we make and allows us to work to identify and deploy optimal methods. From the time we've completed our Phase 4 expansion, we expect to have a significant amount of additional proprietary knowledge that we can leverage across our expanded cultivation platform.Now turning to Slide 4. As I mentioned, Phase 4 is on track and in line with the estimated CapEx cost of approximately $125 million. You can see some of our progress in the photos in the appendices of today's slide package. The expansion will have state-of-the-art mechanical system to capture, treat and reuse the water from dehumidification, which is central to the cultivation process. Our fully customized irrigation system that will serve all of Phase 4 is being installed and expected to be commissioned in the fall this year. Once operational, the system is expected to be among the most sophisticated indoor cannabis cultivation irrigation systems in North America. Construction of Phase 4a, which includes 30 grow rooms, was completed on schedule, and we received licensing approval in 2 stages. As our Moncton campus is one continuous facility and all our new rooms are essentially replicas of those approved in our previous submission, our licensing process is relatively streamlined and predictable, which has proven to be a competitive advantage for us. At the end of April, the first 13 rooms of Phase 4a, representing about 11,000 kilos per year of increased production capacity, were approved. We expect to begin harvesting the first of these rooms by the end of July 2019. The last 17 grow rooms of Phase 4a received approval toward the end of June, representing about 14,000 kilos of incremental capacity, and we expect to harvest the first of these rooms by the end of September 2019.Phase 4b has 33 additional grow rooms and is expected to be completed in September 2019, which will increase total target production capacity to 89,000 kilos per year for the Moncton campus once fully licensed and operational.During the quarter, much of the electrical and control infrastructure for the Phase 4b grow rooms was installed. The initial 17 grow rooms have already been completed and the Health Canada licensing amendment for these was submitted in June 2019. In anticipation of receiving licensing, we've already begun cloning for these additional 17 rooms. The remaining 16 rooms are on schedule to be submitted for Health Canada approval in September 2019. Our final Phase 4c, with 29 grow rooms, is expected to be completed in December 2019. All the foundation, footings and underground services are completed with structural steel installation ongoing in July. The team has done a fantastic job keeping the expansion on track, while continuing to deliver high-quality product to our customers and patients. We have generated strong operational and financial results fiscal year to date and emerged as a national leader in Rec 1.0. We have a relentless focus on automation and innovation to deliver diverse number of high-quality products, but to also ensure availability of supply in order to build brand equity. We believe we have earned considerable goodwill and brand loyalty with our customers and our partners. We are well underway in preparing for Rec 2.0 strategy with these principles at the forefront. Customers will demand choices in vaporizable products and edible offerings as well as quality, innovation and a consistent availability of product supply. Retailers and provincial distributors are likely to become increasingly dependent on the licensed producers with a strong reputation and track record of meeting supply commitments. We have always chosen depth versus breadth to ensure that we can keep our products on the shelves for customers. As such, it made sense for us to choose the most popular cannabis products in the edibles and derivatives market and partner with leading suppliers and reputable brands. We did just that. We have an exclusive consulting agreement with TGS in Colorado and benefit from their insights on market trends and products. On Slide 6, you can see that based on U.S. state sales history, vape pens are the largest segment, at about 23% of total cannabis sales, followed by edibles, which includes beverages at around 13%. We plan to launch a variety of vaporizable products in December as soon as authorized for sale, followed by chocolates and a range of powdered beverage products in early calendar 2020. In terms of vape pens, we're proud to have been selected as one of the 4 Canadian launch partners of PAX Era, the premium closed-loop vaporizer system created by PAX, an undisputed leader in the design and development of premium vaporizers for dry flower and concentrates. We have also partnered with the Feather Company for an exclusive license in Canada to their proprietary disposal vape pen technology and form factors. In choosing which edible products to launch, we decided to initially focus on chocolates because we believe we can differentiate and innovate around our product offerings with chocolates. This is much harder to do with chewable products like gummies. We have the in-house expertise for chocolate production as our product development teams have more than 25 years of experience and expertise among them. In the fall, we expect to take delivery of a high-speed fully automated production line with capacity of up to 4 million kilograms of chocolate per year. The $15 million investment commitment for this line includes a state-of-the-art chocolate molding line and a fully integrated packaging line that includes advanced engineering, robotics, high-speed labeling and automated carton packaging.In addition to chocolates, we plan to launch a variety of powdered beverages. Our skilled research and development team believe they have developed a proprietary nano-emulsification technology that is anticipated to provide an initial onset of the effects of cannabinoids within 10 to 15 minutes. The emulsion process generates very small nano form micro-particles, 20 nanometers in size, which means rapid, reliable and controlled onset. With traditional edibles and beverages, the body spends a significant amount of time breaking down fat soluble cannabinoid particles which are then absorbed and metabolized in the body before any effects are felt. This results in a slow onset and extended effect, which is likely the reason why the beverage product form represents a very small percentage of edible sales based on the U.S. state data. Our nano-emulsion technology appears to stable to different temperatures, mechanical disturbances, salt, pH and sweeteners. Our researchers have also developed a solid form of the nano formulation, turning it into dissolvable powder for beverages. This shelf-stable, heat-stable, water-soluble and palatable cannabinoid formulation is also expected to provide an initial onset of effect within 10 to 15 minutes. It is expected to be discrete, portable and customers can add it to any drink they chose.Without having to secure bottling or canning equipment and incurring significant costs associated with transfer required for liquid beverages and subject to further testing and commercialization, we expect to launch a variety of powdered beverages as early as January 2020.Slide 10 shows Phase 5. We are refurbishing 56,000 square feet within our existing facility designed under our European GMP standards for additional extraction capacity and a derivatives and edibles production and packaging facility as well as additional office space. Primary construction is expected to compete in October 2019, and we expect additional in-house extraction capacity to be completed by the end of calendar 2019. However, we have the capacity to fill vaporizer pens in our existing facility ahead of the licensing of Phase 5 in order to be ready to sell these products as soon as they are authorized for sale in December 2019. We're also leveraging our agreement with Valens GroWorks, and to date, we have strategically built up significant concentrate and extraction material for edibles and derivatives. So the bottom line, we have a fulsome strategy for a range of differentiated products, and we intend to leverage our strength such that we expect to capture further significant growth when the market expands to include derivatives and edibles before the end of the calendar year. In fact, we believe the Canadian market is positioned to grow significantly with the upcoming legalization of edibles and derivatives, and importantly, with more retail stores opening, particularly in the key provinces of Ontario and Québec.Our fiscal 2020, starting in August, presents tremendous opportunity for us to materially grow sales and profit. As I mentioned, our yield per plant has returned to historical levels at the end of Q3 and into Q4, coupled with some of the highest cannabinoid levels we have seen as a company. As a result, we expect cultivation costs to decrease in Q4 and Q1 fiscal 2020 as we expect to realize economies of scale from our expansion. The sales of derivatives and edibles are expected to be launched in a more mature Canadian market from a distribution and retail perspective. Ontario has announced tripling its stores to 75 in October; Québec is planning to more than double its retail presence with plans to expand from 16 stores to 40 by next March; and while Alberta has not provided a specific target, the number of retail outlets has continued to grow to about 176 stores to date. We believe edibles and derivatives will be highly appealing to consumers and through our exclusive consulting agreement with TGS, we have great insight into anticipated market trends and consumer preferences based on experience in other mature markets. We know that the margin on these products is often considerably higher due to lower cannabinoid content.Ultimately, the margins on these products come down to the efficiency in the production of the consumer packaged goods products. We have ensured we have the expertise and experience supported by state-of-the-art technology in automation. Again, the same tenets that have allowed us to be successful in producing high-quality flower pre-rolls and oil at one of, if not, the lowest cost of cultivation in the industry. You can see some photos of our existing automation at our facility in the appendices, which I know some of you have seen at our facility in person. I will now turn the call over to Paolo.
Thanks, Greg. Q3 net revenue was $24.8 million from approximately 3,926 kilograms of dried flower and approximately 5,090 liters of oil sold. It was comprised of $21.8 million in Rec sales and $2.8 million in medical sales with a negligible amount coming from other items. Q3 contributed $64.1 million in net revenue year-to-date for the 9 months ending May 31, 2019. Q3 net revenue declined slightly from Q2, mainly due to the timing of initial shipments to Québec that occurred subsequent to Q3 quarter end and a large pipeline fill to Ontario in Q2 of fiscal 2019, which was not matched by recurring orders in Q3 of fiscal 2019 and fewer reorders from British Columbia on account of its unique market conditions. As Greg mentioned, we expect Ontario to do another pipeline fill in August or September ahead of the next 50 store openings slated for early October. Most of our Québec sales that started in Q4 are directly to the retail stores themselves, and there is no pipeline sale that is as experienced like there is for a province like Ontario, which uses a centralized wholesale distribution model. Ontario, where the majority of sales are now being conducted in physical retail stores, will, in the infancy stages of the rec market, have more "lumpiness" in terms of sales patterns as it prefers large warehouse pipeline fill orders and has placed caps on retail store drawdowns to ensure ongoing availability of supply to the stores. We understand why Ontario has taken this approach and are working with the province and the stores to help the business flourish in the long run. We expect that as the retail distribution points increase, not only in Ontario but nationally, that smoother and more predictable sales patterns will emerge.On the cost side, our Q3 cash and all-in cost of cultivation, which brings in -- and the noncash items are depreciation and share-based compensation, were $0.95 and $1.29 per gram, respectively. The increase from Q2 was almost exclusively due to the temporary decrease in yield per plant as a result of a temporary change in growing protocol that Greg alluded to earlier. Since yield per harvest returned to previous levels toward the end of Q3 and into Q4 and because we anticipate increased efficiencies and harvested yield amounts with grow rooms scaling from 52 to 82 with our Phase 4a rooms coming online, we believe that our cultivation cost should decrease in our Q4 fiscal 2019 and Q1 fiscal 2020. Cost of sales on a dried flower equivalency equaled approximately $2.70 per gram in the quarter. Included in that figure is the cost of cultivation, which I just alluded to, packaging costs, both material and labor, and shipping as well as any waste and packaging material write-downs. We believe that the all-in cost can decrease over time as we bring the cost of cultivation back to historical lows and as we bring significant efficiencies to our labor per unit. While our harvest and production capacity are increasing exponentially, our staffing is not expected to increase anywhere near that much as we move from approximately 700 employees now to an expected amount of 850 employees by calendar year-end. As a company, we focus more on adjusted gross margin and adjusted EBITDA, which exclude fair value changes to biological assets and inventory as key measures of our underlying performance and find this to be what analysts and investors tend to track. As noted at the beginning of the call, these measures are non-IFRS financial measures, and we encourage you to review our Q3 report for more information, including a reconciliation to comparable measures under IFRS. Q3 adjusted gross margin was $12.3 million or 50% as a percentage of net revenue and year-to-date adjusted gross margin was $37.1 million or 58% as a percentage of net revenue. Compared to last quarter, Q3 adjusted gross margin reflected higher production cost, the temporary decrease in yield and write-downs on legacy packaging materials that were replaced with new, more consumer-friendly packaging. Q3 IFRS gross margin was negative $0.2 million, largely due to fair value changes to biological assets and inventory. Adjusted EBITDA of $7.7 million or adjusted EBITDA margin of 31% as a percentage of net revenue was positive for the fourth consecutive quarter. Year-to-date, adjusted EBITDA was $27.8 million or 43% as a percentage of net revenue. We continue to be disciplined in our approach to spending this quarter. Q3 sales and marketing and general and administrative expenses, or SG&A, were $9.1 million or 37% of net revenue, and year-to-date SG&A was $19.3 million or 30% of net revenue, which starkly contrasts with many of our peers. I'd like to take a moment to highlight what we believe to be a significant differentiator between us and our peers. We are obviously aware of the massive market opportunity that exists with the legalization of cannabis in Canada and the wave of medical legalization that is being seen in other countries around the world, and we understand that significant investment in those opportunities is needed. However, we aim to approach our business activities with a level of discipline that hopefully sets us apart in this space. Not only have our margins been good, but we've kept our SG&A in check. Our executive compensation is modest compared to our peers. Our sales and marketing spend is also modest compared to our peers. We are not operating out of multiple facilities with disaggregated management teams and different SOPs, but from one centralized facility where we can drive economies of scale more easily. Based on current expectations, our cultivation and harvesting capacity will increase by over 3x from the early part of calendar 2019 to the same point in 2020. As we scale our number of employees, per unit of production is expected to decline as we optimize production practices and introduce efficiencies. We believe that many other industry participants have assumed that access to capital is never-ending and have been funding operating losses with continued dilution to shareholders. What we are trying to do at Organigram is build a company with the sustainable business model, which is capable of doing more with less. We have tried to be profitable right out of the gate of Rec 1.0 and have largely achieved that and plan for more of the same for Rec 2.0. We highly encourage investors to pay attention to operational and efficiency metrics. Our Q3 net loss from continuing operations of $10.2 million or $0.07 per share on a fully diluted basis was largely due to noncash fair value changes to biological assets and inventories. Year-to-date, net income from continuing operations was positive $12.9 million or $0.09 per share on a diluted basis. Again, we do not focus on net income or loss to assess our underlying performance due to the impact of fair value changes from period-to-period on biological assets and inventories. Moving to the balance sheet. We have build liquidity with approximately $88 million in cash and short-term investments at the end of Q3. During the quarter, we converted the remaining balance of debentures and this eliminated approximately $49 million in current liabilities from our balance sheet. We also closed a $140 million traditional debt financing at attractive rates, which includes both the term loan to finance our expansion plans and revolving debt for general working capital and corporate purposes. Included in the facility is an uncommitted option to increase the term loan and/or revolving debt by an incremental $35 million to a total of $175 million, subject to agreement by the lenders and satisfaction of certain legal and business conditions. To date, we've drawn down only $50 million of the credit facility, leaving at least another $90 million eligible to be drawn.I will now give the floor back to Greg for his closing remarks.
Thanks, Paolo. There is no question we're excited about the future. We -- and we often get asked about our plans once the time when supply meets demand in the Canadian market. First, we believe the U.S. and international markets represent tremendous opportunities, particularly the CBD market. And we absolutely plan to further participate in these markets subject to compliance with applicable laws. We're hard at work on this opportunity. Again, our priority is to deploy disciplined capital allocation with a focus on achieving sustainable and attractive return on investment for our shareholders. Over the next while, the Canadian market represents significant growth opportunity. Supply will meet demand one day, but we're confident our strategy is designed to not only maintain but grow value for shareholders. Our indoor facility means we produce high-quality dried flower, which has seen very little price compression in mature U.S. markets, and our investment in biosynthesis is expected in the future to offer us access to the input materials for derivatives and edibles at a fraction of the cost of traditional cultivation. In fact, biosynthesis has many advantages over traditional cultivation, particularly that of outdoor cultivation and greenhouses. These include reduced operating and capital costs, scalable, consistent, superior purity and quality of product, a smaller environmental footprint and the ability to meet even more rigorous standards of CPG and pharma. In closing, I'd like to thank the Organigram team for their significant efforts in delivery to date and preparations for the next exciting chapter in our industry. That concludes my formal remarks. Operator, if you could go ahead and open up the line for questions.
[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Oliver Rowe with Scotiabank.
On the operational side, sales pulled back despite overall industry sales increasing, so that's sort of implying a decline in market share. Could you help us separate the temporary impact in the quarter in terms of from Québec and BC from a general increase in market competitiveness? And I guess, if you expect to regain that market share in the coming quarters?
Yes. Thanks for the question, Oliver. So I think you have to look at kind of in totality across the Canadian market. We were seeing significant growth as alluded to in both Alberta and Atlantic Canada. And Ontario, as a significant part of the market, while sales into Ontario were lower in Q3 versus Q2 because of the pipeline fill, it doesn't necessarily mean there was a shift in market share because they have been and continue to be working through. As you know, they have a cap of 25 kilos per store per week. And so they're working through part of that pipeline build. So we don't have necessarily a market share number kind of nationally, but I wouldn't look at kind of in-bound pipeline fill, and then uptake. You have to consider what's happening as that product gets worked through. So in the majority of markets and then again, Québec will be in Québec after the quarter, so again, that's a new market for us going forward.
Right. That makes sense. You mentioned an interest in U.S. and international CBD markets. Could you maybe just update us on your serving in hemp play, and if we should expect to see some more M&A or developments in Europe to facilitate that market? And then maybe just high-level thoughts on what your U.S. CBD road map might look like?
Yes. So our investment in Indiana continues to progress. So certainly, as we've made aware before, they've been harvesting hemp -- high CBD content hemp in both Croatia and Serbia the last 3 years. They have had a pinch point in extraction, building out their own internal extraction. So they are looking to outsource some of that. They don't have current capacity to use all the hemp that they produce. So we're looking to assist them in that process by finding another third party to help get through that. And then we're looking to access that CBD to further expand our efforts. We do also have an investment now for cannabis in Germany, which has a synthetic CBD on the market in Germany right now, through up to 5,000 pharmacies based on their distribution agreement. But we are looking at other opportunities. We see the kind of nutraceutical health and wellness side of CBD in Europe as a significant market opportunity. In the U.S., we're very actively looking at what the opportunities presents from a CBD perspective. We are not necessarily looking to be a cultivator. We're seeing kind of already pricing compression happening on the hemp side in the U.S. where we want to play at some point in the value chain. And it really comes down to what the regulations are going to look like. I mean we certainly have been following the activity of the FDA. We have seen recently some restrictions like in New York State to clamp down on the use of kind of oral consumption products, and that certainly was one of the key aspects that the FDA highlighted in their public hearings back at the end of May. And so we're very much focused on looking at what other -- how can we participate as the regulations evolve there. So nothing in place today, but we're certainly looking at a number of different opportunities.
Graeme Kreindler with Eight Capital.
I just wanted to get some more color. I appreciate the commentary around the Québec shipments and the Ontario pipeline fill. I was just wondering, considering the harvest for OGI declined quarter-over-quarter, I know there's a significant amount of inventory on the balance sheet right now. But will this have any knock-on effects in terms of product available-for-sale or volumes available-for-sale in the fourth quarter?
No. I mean, what we -- again, it did have -- and maybe I'll add a bit more color to the MD&A. So we did -- the change that we did make in terms of our processes was we did a small scale pilot study to look at taking clones from flower -- plants in flower versus plants that we have specifically designated for vegetative growth. We're unlike other companies where we don't clone from other plants; we actually clone from veg. The pilot scale study was very promising. So as we expanded to larger scale, we didn't see that play out in a positive manner, so we reverted back. So certainly, as we alluded to, before the end of Q3 and certainly, in all of Q4 to date, we're seeing back to our historical levels of production. So as you said, with the inventory level that we have, certainly, it should not have an impact on our ability to kind of meet the market demand. We expect Ontario, for example, to do another pipeline fill at some point in August or September, and certainly, as they prepare for the additional 50 stores to come online.
Okay. Greg, and as a follow-up there, I know the press release mentioned having some lower cannabinoid content in the product that was harvested. So could there be any knock-on effects? I know your pricing was relative flat quarter-over-quarter. But could that potentially impact pricing moving forward for some of that inventory?
No. I mean so we -- what we commented on was the fact that our actual cannabinoid levels are increasing. So we feel that we've come to kind of a great balance now of cultivation and yields in conjunction with higher cannabinoid levels, right? So that's kind of been the shift. So it wasn't that in the past quarter we had lower cannabinoid levels; it was that in the current -- in Q4 and the end of Q3, we were going to higher than historical cannabinoid levels, which should have a positive impact too.
Okay.
Yes, Graeme. It's Paolo here. In fact, if you -- we keep track -- we're always keeping track of all of these particulars. Where we are right now in terms of our harvest, we're getting probably the best yields and cannabinoid levels that we've ever had at the same time. Like we've had instances where we've had higher yields, and we've had instances of higher cannabinoid levels, but this is -- at this point in time, the harvest that we're getting off our facility now are the best of both worlds that we've ever had, kind of hitting on both cylinders.
David Kideckel with AltaCorp Capital.
Congratulations on the quarter, everybody. Just have a couple questions here. I want to kick it off first with your -- the potential U.S. and international strategy here. So first, just understanding the U.S. and CBD and hemp in particular, that the U.S. is going to be of strategic importance to OGI. Would you be considering using the CBD from hemp? Or would this be CBD from cannabis, altogether, just to remain compliant with U.S. law?
Yes. So again, our focus, as I said, we're not looking at this point to be a hemp cultivator or producer. We've seen some other companies make that decision in the U.S. So we would be very much focused on CBD from hemp for the United States market because that's what the farm act and what we're seeing the regulations allow. I think, David, you and I have spoken about this before, where we see future opportunity is certainly biosynthesis as an input material for many products there, and even to the point where as Hyasynth continues to kind of build out their expertise, this actually potentially put a biosynthesis facility somewhere in the United States to produce within that jurisdiction for use of product or to export from Canada into the U.S. from biosynthetic CBD. So it's a combination of both.
Okay. That's actually very helpful. So that actually was going to lead me into my next question, Greg, with respect to Hyasynth. So U.S. is on Hyasynth's radar then just from a distribution and R&D standpoint? Should we be thinking about -- of Hyasynth now as more of an international play, not just solely Canadian?
Yes. I think Hyasynth presents a tremendous number of opportunities, right? If you think of biosynthetic production of CBD or THC or other minor cannabinoids, they've already synthesized THCB and CBDV, that lends itself very well to a more traditional CPG or beverage-alcohol company looking for a kind of pure ongoing input material. It also lends itself to potential opportunities from pharmaceutical companies. We know that there has been interest in pharma companies at looking at cannabinoids in general, but one of the challenges they face to date is accessing them from plant-derived material, and biosynthesis is really kind of in the bailiwick of what pharma companies do and many companies are producing products today through biosynthesis, so they're familiar from it. And I think this would present in a unique way to produce potentially pharmaceutical, unique pharmaceutical products with a combination of major and minor cannabinoids in the future.
Okay. That's great color. My last question, and then I'll get back in the queue. Is there any -- so how should we be thinking about -- I guess, Paolo, as you were mentioning earlier on the call, about gross margins for the next quarter. Should we be thinking that gross margins will stay in this range? Or due to the sort of temporary, I guess, protocol changes and other changes that occurred in the quarter, you expect margins to improve for the next Q4?
So for Q4, I wouldn't make a call either up or down just because Q4, the visibility on export duty dependent on the pharma sales perspective of whether we get the pipeline fills and so forth. I think certainly for fiscal 2020, the first couple of quarters there where we're still selling dried flower and oil and potentially also vape pen, I would expect our efficiencies to definitely improve because our cost of cultivation is going to be back to where it was before. And certainly, our staffing, I think I made mention to this on the call, I think this is an important metric that people should be looking at peers as well is what's your revenue per full-time employee going to be in a more mature market? We have enough staffing now to handle almost all our growth, and so we have the benefit of even improving upon that with automation and so forth. But right now, we're really -- we're staffed up to be responsive to purchase orders -- the large purchase orders that come in, and so we made the sacrifice to capture sales, which -- we're one of the leaders in sales since Rec has been launched and those efficiencies will definitely come I think starting in Q1 and Q2 of next year.
Yes. Maybe just add a little more color to that, Paolo, is because previously in the past, we had mentioned that if you kind of asked this question about 6 months ago, what our staffing needs would be when we're fully built out, and we were talking of a number of around 1,000 employees. So based on the continuous improvement projects and the amount of automation we've brought in, we certainly believe that we're now only going to need 850, which only would be an additional just over 150 employees from our current base, even though our production capacity is still going to more than double where it is today and we've got new forms. We'd just continue to add to automation systems and improve kind of what we're doing on a day-to-day operation basis, so -- which again, should contribute to us from a costing basis.
Yes. I mean from our perspective, we realize we still haven't hit our peak efficiency and we still haven't hit our peak economies of scale, and yet, we're still showing positive EBITDA margin. And we're in a market -- we're delivering in a market right now that's not matured from a retail perspective, like we haven't been in Québec, Ontario's the largest province, it needs more retail stores. I think everybody realizes that, and we haven't even done Rec 2.0, which represents 50% of the market. So we're excited that we're able to generate margin now, positive EBITDA margin now, and I think that bodes well for us in the future with these opportunities and both on -- from our perspective on the efficiencies and from the market that will organically grow because of the utilization of Rec 2.0, and obviously, the increase in retail end points.
Tamy Chen with BMO Capital Markets.
My first question is, just wanted to get an update on Ontario. So are they still implementing that retail allocation? Have they ordered a bit more ahead of the August pipeline fill? Or is it still just you are not expecting much until that big August pipeline fill comes in again?
Yes. So what they've been doing, Tamy, and thanks for the question, is so they do have this 25-kilo max on a weekly basis. They did expand and put 3 products outside of that max. We have one of those SKUs, so that are included outside of that, so our Trailblazer product is not under the 25-kilo cap. So that does give us an opportunity to sell product in. Depending on the SKUs, they have been refilling some, but what they're looking for, again, is, they've got sufficient inventory. When you actually look at kind of their warehouse and inventory numbers, they are concerned about not running out of inventory, but they certainly have many, many weeks of inventory right now with the exception of a few SKUs across a few companies. So they will be placing. They tend to want to kind of in advance of stores coming online to get that large pipeline fill to expand their warehouse capacity. So we expect to see that in August or September, which again, could have something that impacts our quarter based on our Q4 ending at the end of August, right? So as the order goes in August, we're preparing hopefully and optimistically to get it out before the end of August, but it's dependent upon them.
Okay. And my second question is I was wondering if you could give more insights to the Alberta market. They're the only province really have been more aggressive on retail store openings. And it looks like for this quarter, your volume sold was basically flat from the prior quarter. I would have thought that notwithstanding the issues in Ontario and the timing in Québec, that just given where Alberta has been doing with their store rollout, that it should still -- it still should have contributed to some level of sequential growth. So can you talk a bit about that market?
Yes. So I mean certainly for us, Alberta is a significant growth. Quarter-over-quarter, we almost doubled our sales in Alberta to the Alberta kind of to the AGLC. So certainly, Alberta and the Atlantic Canada provinces, we've seen consistent growth kind of quarter-over-quarter. But again, Ontario with such a large pipeline fill had such an impact of not -- in Q2, not having that replenishment in Q3 had an impact. So while Alberta, Atlantic Canada grew, Manitoba grew for us as well. And we see that right now Alberta's adding -- originally, they were going to add 10 stores per week. The last couple of weeks, they've added 20 per week. I think the one thing we didn't highlight in any detail here is British Columbia. BC market has been more challenging. They are just now adding some additional stores. But what we're seeing in British Columbia is that -- so for unique form factors, good success there, but for dried flower, that is a market that's challenging to penetrate. So BC sales for dried flower are limited due to the kind of unique nature of the marketplace, and this is consistent across every company, right? I mean people are selling -- we're selling certainly pre-rolls into their companies and oils, but certainly, companies that have capsules as well, those are doing well, but dried flower is still very limited in BC through the retail source.
Okay. And just to confirm in Alberta, you mentioned -- so for example, in Ontario, you've got the centralized buy and so it causes some of the lumpiness. Does Alberta function like that at all?
They do but because their throughput is so high, they're ordering on a more consistent basis. So because now, with over 150 stores, what we're seeing is weekly orders out of Alberta, right? So they've got a bigger store population to fill, whereas, Ontario made a decision to build a big inventory in their warehouse and then slowly work through that. Alberta is replenishing on an ongoing basis.
Okay.
So Tamy, we view Alberta as where Ontario will be, and that gives a lot of optimism obviously because it's a more smoothly functioning market at this point in time, and so that because -- even though it's a smaller market, we're actually getting more growth in Alberta. Therefore, when Ontario kind of starts to match the retail endpoints, we'll see the same type of growth in Ontario.
Got it. Okay. And my last question is just back on the gross margin, it sounded like in your prior answer to the prior question that in fiscal Q4, that some of these headwinds may not be fully through. Am I hearing that correctly?
Yes. So and it has -- a lot of it has to do with like our cash cost or cultivation costs are just one component of the mix, right? So we're running right now what I'll call -- and we're doing this for strategic reasons. We're running with a suboptimally inefficient labor pool because we want to be ready for the increased volumes that come out. So by the end of July, in a couple weeks here, we're harvesting from Phase 4a. We've gone from 36,000 kilos to 51,000 kilos above annual targeted production. So we can't just displace the labor pool and then bring them back. So we have that labor pool. And once that apparatus is working on a larger volume of product, which is going to be shortly, we're going to see those cost come down again. So I think our quarter end or year-end is August 31. I think it would be reasonable to assume that we have these kind of -- these margin kind of -- slight compression in margin for Q4, but I would expect Q1 and Q2 definitely for it to go back to very attractive levels.
Matt Bottomley with Canaccord.
A lot of mine have been answered. Just wanted to stay on the cultivation side, and apologies if you did go into some details the last earnings call. But when it comes to the -- what you call, the change in growing protocols, can you just give a little further color? Is that something that which changed wholesale in the facility where the cost -- or where the margin pressure was felt this quarter? Or is it something more transient and just part of your facility that you had to change?
Yes. So as I alluded to earlier about, we made a -- we did a pilot study on a small number of rooms where we -- if you recall, our technique is very different than other companies. We don't clone from others. We actually overproduce vegetative plants specifically to clone from them, so that we get a much healthier and vibrant clone. So we did a trial to see when we go through and trim on flower plants on the early part of their flowering cycle, whether or not we could use that for cloning, it would improve efficiency, it would reduce the number of vegetative plants we have to produce. So the early trials were very positive and directionally gave us comfort to say we could go -- we could do this on a broader scale. So we did move to that change. And what we saw is that, that trial may have been very unique to a couple of strains there we could successfully do that with. So when we did roll it out, and we picked up kind of the challenge within a number of weeks, but as you can imagine, we had already planted a significant number of rooms with that revised technique and then for us to revert back to cloning from veg took some time to do. So certainly what we saw is, well before the end of Q3 and certainly, all of Q4, we are back at historical yield levels that we kind of pride ourselves on, and with some of the other changes we've made, we're also seeing really high and positive cannabinoid levels for us. So it was a test we did. The early trial looked promising. When we used it kind of broadly across more strains, it didn't give us the results we wanted. It had a pretty significant impact on kind of the vibrancy and the yields from those plants. But you have to make a decision 4 weeks into the life cycle of a plant, do you destroy it and start from scratch? Or do you see it through its growth cycle? It still had good -- decent results, but certainly, not what we historically expected. So that was why you saw a big impact on cost of cultivation and also that did impact our biological assets as well.
Matt -- and yes, we keep -- we obviously keep track of the harvest very carefully, and I should tell you that the last 30 harvests, not only are they back to normal levels, the cannabinoid profile is excellent. And what I take a lot of comfort in is the range of distribution on the yields we get for harvest is very narrow, which tells me that we really locked in the predictability of the yield, so we're very confident on the yields going forward and excited to have new rooms coming on, getting harvested in a couple of weeks.
Great. Just wanted to move to sort of the cannabis 2.0 side of things. So given your commentary over really trying to get -- hit the ground running here with vape pens and chocolate edibles. In both of those categories, are you able to tell us what you're able to inventory in advance of -- let's say, assuming everything goes out the door or some sales start in mid-December, that might presume that you have to ship at the end of November. What are you able to do today? I imagine you've got empty vape pens but in both of those categories, in order to get ahead and potentially start with a leading share in those categories?
Yes. So I mean we can't specifically say what amount product internally we'll have. So certainly between the PAX there and Feather as well as the traditional value 5/10 cartridge, we have or will have shortly kind of significant inventory of all the equipment and filling and all the kind of pods and/or pens. We do have, however, significant inventory concentrate, right? So one of the key things when you look at our MD&A, one of the things we highlight is a very big shift from material for extraction. We already have at the end of the quarter, and this trend has continued, 312 kilos of 70% concentrate cannabinoid, so -- and again, we're working through additional material, both internally and with Valens. So we've got a lot of concentrate material that will help us kind of be prepared. So we will definitely be in a position to have a range of vaporizable products for the December launch. What's still to be determined, as you said, Matt is, whether or not we'll be able to ship those in November into the retail chain or we have to wait until December. We really don't know yet from Health Canada, even though we know, there is a 60-day notice. One comment I would make is we actually today submitted all of our product forms for Rec 2.0. We wanted to be in the queue for the review cycle, so today was the first day as companies could do that, so we've already made those submissions this morning. And then for chocolates and the powdered beverages, so we want to have sufficient inventory before we launch those products. So I don't expect us to launch chocolates until January at the earliest, and I think that is going to be very much dependent on how much inventory we have. One of the things we've talked a lot about before is it doesn't do any good to kind of have intermittent supply in the market. So -- but I mean, the good news is our equipment is capable of producing very high large volume throughput. This is the same type of equipment you would see in some of the largest chocolate facilities in the world. And as we're building up extract material, so we expect to build through all of our backlog in the material before the end of the year between both internal resources and external resources.
Greg, just some color on the concentrate. Obviously, I think you're probably aware, but just for some of listeners, 312 kilograms may not sound like much, but when you're putting 10-milligrams into a chocolate, you can produce millions of units, right? And even for vape pens where you're putting, call it, 250-milligrams or 500-milligrams of cannabinoid concentrate, those are big numbers we can drive off by concentrate, and we have more of that coming.
Understood. And then lastly, just staying on this topic though, in terms of the infused beverage or potential infused beverage market, do you have a -- where on your priority list is potentially securing a big alcohol partner, if at all, if that's sort of on your radar right now?
Yes. So we're -- we've been very public and we're actively seeking, so either a CPG partner that's looking to do CBD beverages or a big alcohol company that's looking to THC infused beverages, which is why we've done the work on our liquid formulation as well as our partnership with biosynthesis. So definitely, high on our list. Certainly something management is spending significant amount of time on. What it is really dependent upon is the status of those potential partners, right? What we have seen in discussions with potential partners is kind of varying levels of commitments where they seem to move close to making a decision and then kind of go back as they're looking because you have to consider these are global companies and they have to look at global implications. These types of decisions have to go to the -- through their boards and have to be reviewed by legal and compliance and a lot of areas like that. So definitely a key aspect we're focused on, but certainly, nothing to announce at this point.And just make one additional comment. The reason we're excited about our powdered beverage, I think, the powdered beverage formulation is one that in our discussions for those of you on the call that are aware of this, the provinces over the last few weeks have been doing product calls. They've been asking for companies for a full broad range of the products and commitments and pricing. As far as we have seen in any of those discussions, we're the only company and we've got this feedback to have a powdered beverage option. And I think what the uniqueness of that option is, is you're creating an input material that people could choose to make the beverage of their choice and to consume at the time that they want to. Certainly big savings for us in terms of shipping costs, production, labeling cost, but also for the retail stores. I think one of the challenges some of the other beverage companies are going to have is securing sufficient space within a retail environment. Many of these locations were not built out with the consideration to have refrigeration and/or large storage for kind of the volume that beverage products are going to take. I mean edibles in and of themselves are going to be a whole new SKU range and a lot of products, but -- so having that kind of discretionary package and small-volume package that people can create any beverage they want, that's going to be fast acting as a big advantage.
Yes. We're going to fill the rum, not the rum and coke.
Greg McLeish with Mackie Research Capital.
Just a couple of questions. Given CannTrust issues that they had last week, do you think that there's an ability for you to gain market share from the fact that they have had product pulled from OCS, and also the ability to potentially poach some of their large patient base of medical clients?
Yes. It's a great question, Greg. So I think, certainly, we've already seen some inbounds from provincial authorities asking us about additional product availability with what we've seen with CannTrust decisions that are being made. I think, certainly, from a patient perspective, the last report I saw is that they have 72,000 patients. We have been seeing as a company a pretty ongoing, steady shift of patients converting over to us from other licensed producers. And I think this goes back to the Rec launch in the fall. We were one of the companies that made a very firm commitment to supplying our medical patient population base and have always consistently had product available for them, whereas other companies had issues and had infrequent available of product. But that being said, we would not necessarily be in a position to take on an additional couple -- tens of thousands of new patients at this time, just in terms of product allocation. We can certainly gradually take on new patients, and we already are starting to see some as the company [Technical Difficulty]
Right. And on a -- just on a macro basis, do you think that Health Canada will do a disservice to the industry if they don't permanently revoke CannTrust's licenses?
It's an interesting question. I can't necessarily comment on their decision-making. I think what we have seen in the past with Beleave was a decision that was made there with product that was brought in from the black market may be indicative of what we may or may not see here, but I can't comment on what Health Canada is going to do. I think one of the things that I would highlight though is we're seeing a transition in the industry right now. I think one of the key things that we have seen with -- over the years and I guess I look back and it started with when I joined Organigram is, a transition from kind of founders as leaders and CEOs of companies to bringing in kind of different people that have experience in building and growing companies or running and operating successful companies. And that transition continues right now. Certainly we saw that with Canopy, with the recent change and -- but I think that what is hearkens to is it's really important that companies have independent governance, and that the governance is -- we're really proud of the fact that we have an Independent Chair and a fully independent Board with the exception of myself sitting on the Board. That's not necessarily the case of many of the other companies. And I think it's -- or historically was not the case and it did lead to some challenge at those companies. So...
Right. And just to clarify, that was -- you mentioned Beleave, but wasn't it BONiFY?
Sorry, BONiFY, sorry, I apologize. Thank you for clarifying, Greg. I appreciate that.
Justin Keywood with GMP Securities.
Given there's been a detailed discussion on the different cost items so far, just more broadly on the key performance indicators of adjusted gross margins and EBITDA, any expected ranges or goals for those metrics in Q4 and going into 2020?
Yes. So for Q4, it's like I would say, Q4 more of the same as Q3, but really the eye on the prize for us is 2020 because it's just a bigger market opportunity obviously with Rec 2.0 and obviously, with significantly more harvested production coming online for us and obviously, the expansion of the retail endpoints across the country. So we would expect our margins actually to revert back to our previous -- or some of the previous numbers that we've achieved. So I think -- I don't think that we -- I think we could beat what we did this quarter, certainly in Q1 and Q2 of next year, and ultimately, longer term is going to be dependent on obviously the way that the Rec 2.0 market develops, what kind of pricing power is available there and the costing and so forth. So like we think we have all the tools to be a leader in terms of capturing margin because we have the lowest cost of cultivation and because we have also in terms of biosynthesis an ability to even get better on that as well as to be able to drive efficiencies out of one large facility as opposed to having scattered facilities across the country. And again, we're -- because of our indoor quality -- indoor grown high-quality product, we think we can also keep the margin on the flower point of it. There's very few -- a very small percentage of the production in Canada that's being grown indoor, and we think that offers a level of consistency and quality that some of the greenhouses can't achieve.
That's helpful. And I realize it's early for the Rec 2.0, but any indication on what the gross margins could be for these derivative products?
Yes. I think we -- and I mentioned this, Justin, in the call, I think you have to look at the products very differently between the categories. So for vaporizer pens and that technology, the cannabinoid content is quite high, so then it is dependent upon your cost of cultivation and your extraction throughput and efficiency as well as your ability to fill those products. So that is very much out -- indicative of the margin will be related to your production cost and your conversion cost. When you move into edible products and beverages, the cannabinoid content is a very small fraction of the ending product, so it really comes down to your throughput efficiency. So that's why on chocolates, for example, that we've gone to leading manufacturing equipment that we believe will be able to produce product at a very low cost. We become then a consumer packaged goods company and the cost of producing that consumer packaged goods is critical. And so we do know it's one of the aspects of our partnership of the -- with the Green Solution or TGS in Colorado, we do see what their margins are and we know at a lower production level, where they're one of the leading providers in Colorado, I believe they have around a 9% share in Colorado in total, but they still do things semiautomated versus the automation at a very strong margin. So I think we don't have numbers yet, but we certainly have expectations that certainly our ability to produce those products is going to be a big driver in the margins that we'll receive on those products. But in general, the margins on those products are higher than on dried flower.
Alec Patterson with Allianz Global.
Yes. So I just was hoping to get a little more color on the PAX relationship in terms of would you be the seller of the finished goods or will they be? How does the sort of accounting of the relationship play out in the sales and production and the costing of all that?
Sure. No, it's a great question, Alec. So the structure with PAX is that they are going to be selling the devices across Canada. They actually have set up an organization here in Canada and they hired a key person from Nova Scotia Liquor Corp to head up as president of the Canadian organization. So what we will be doing is getting the pods from them and filling them, and we will be then selling them to the retail stores. So part of the agreement is the royalty structure based on us filling and supplying those to the marketplace. And so again, they'll position to make sure that there's broad distribution of the PAX Era device and then we'll be selling the pods into the marketplace.
So you're saying the razorblade part of the equation?
Exactly, if you use the disposable razor analogy, certainly.
And in terms of the size of the market, just wondering if there's anything about the Canadian market that differentiates it from the templates being laid out in Colorado and Nevada and California, in terms of the percent of the market that the vape market has taken, which I assume your call is around 20% or 30%. Is there anything unique about Canada that's going to impact that scalability?
I think the only thing we're possibly going to see, Alec, is that at the early stages of the launch of Rec 2.0 in Canada is that vaporizer products, I think, will be one of the dominant forces in terms of what's available. Even ourselves, we've indicated that we won't be launched -- we won't be launching our chocolates and our powdered beverages until kind of early part of 2020 Q1. So I think you'll see a more dominant position at the time of launch the vaporizable product's here. When you look at data from any U.S. state, you're looking at a more mature market with a broad product offering, right? So I think it's going to be a -- it's part of the critical aspect of why we've got a multipronged approach with PAX Era, with Feather and then with also another 5, 10 disposable cartridges. We want to go aggressively into that market because those are going to be the really dominant products that are available because the other ones are more complex to produce at scale for companies.
And just lastly, how do we think about the mix effect of the gross margin structure of value-added products like the vape pens? And is there a better way to track the profitability or the turn on the business as you migrate more into these derivative products?
It's an excellent question and it's one that we struggle with internally because the market in Canada, obviously, is unique, in the sense that it's the first kind of market that's legal on this scale. And so what we can only really do is look to what's been done in the U.S. and the information that we can get from our partner there, TGS. And we've seen -- certainly, as we mentioned before, we've seen margins on these derivative products, in many cases, to be higher, but having said that, until we actually produce the product and establish pricing with our buyers, the provinces and the retail stores, it's going to be hard to be conclusive on that. So from our perspective, it's very important to derisk the strategy to make sure that you can execute and get listings, that's very, very important to make sure we can capture market share, and also to produce, obviously, a high-quality product and that's why we've invested in the machinery that we have and the team that we have and made the partnership with someone like PAX. But also on the cost side, it's important that we have -- we drive economies of scale and that we are focused on a couple of product lines and not try to be in every single product line out there. Vape pens is obviously the biggest component of the Rec 2.0 market and edibles, the second. And that's why we're not really chasing beverages. We're not in a hurry to rush to capture what in the U.S. is a very small market. And admittedly, it will be a bigger market probably in Canada once it's done a bit better, but -- so for us, it's really focused on execution of both the quality of the product and also the cost in making sure that we can produce at large scale and also be efficient in what we're doing.
David Kideckel with AltaCorp Capital.
My second question, just wanted to go back to the international strategy that we were talking about at the outside of the call. Can you provide any sort of -- I know you mentioned, I think, Greg, Germany and its synthetic CBD play. But for the international market, should we be thinking OGI with European partners or LatAm or what part of the world does international mean for OGI?
I mean, as you've seen today, David, we are -- we've been focused on Europe. I think that's what presents the greatest near-term opportunities for us. We see the European market and why we keep saying CBD is a huge unmet need there is every time I'm in Europe, what you see is kind of an expansion of CBD products across the retail footprint, whether or not that's pharmacy or health and wellness stores and kind of a growing consumer demand there, as we're seeing in the U.S. as well. So that's our primary focus. I mean, we do -- we have exported and are continuing to export product to Australia, but really, our kind of market that we're spending the most time evaluating because of the near-term opportunity is Europe, so…
Okay. And my last question, back to one of the earlier statements made. I think you have about 700 employees now and by calendar year-end, going to 850. Given your vast automation capabilities, I'm just wondering what type of labor are you looking for at OGI to grow the space. Are you looking at R&D type talent, scientific talent or will this be operational in nature? Just any color you can provide with respect to employee and labor as you go forward to the year-end?
Yes. I mean, certainly, what we'd expect, I mean, so our labor force needs are not that significant in terms of that group building out as what still needs to grow for us are some of the key supporting areas, like quality that are involved in the testing and quality compliance side of things. And then R&D, as you said, I mean, that group is growing and building for us. And we've expanded out the project teams for products like chocolate. I mean, we have 2 individuals that have world-class experience and worked in markets like Belgium and other markets on chocolates. And so we've been expanding those teams as well, so it's a mix of people. But I think our automation continues to kind of reduce our requirement for labor. So we're able to have -- even just last week, I was in Moncton and we had an internal job fair, so people were looking to move to other departments as kind of we evolve as a company, and it's great because it's created some new opportunities for internal people to move around as well, so it's a real positive from a workforce environment.
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