Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Tetra Tech Inc (TTEK 0.18%)
Q3 2021 Earnings Call
Jul 29, 2021, 11:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning and thank you for joining the Tetra Tech Earnings Call. By now, you should have received a copy of the press release. If you have not, please contact the Company's corporate office at 626-351-4664. As a reminder, Tetra Tech is also simulcasting this presentation with slides in the Investors section of its website at www.tetratech.com. This call is being recorded at the request of Tetra Tech and this broadcast is the copyrighted property of Tetra Tech. Any rebroadcast of this information in whole or part without the prior written permission of Tetra Tech is prohibited. With us today from management are Dan Batrack, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Steve Burdick, Chief Financial Officer. They will provide a brief overview of the results and we'll open up the call for questions.

I'd like to direct your attention to the safe harbor statement in today's presentation. Today's discussion contains forward-looking statements about future growth and financial expectations. Actual results may differ significantly from those projected in today's forward-looking statements, due to various risks and uncertainties, including the risks described in Tetra Tech's periodic reports filed with the SEC. Except as required by law, Tetra Tech takes no obligation to update its forward-looking statements. In addition, since Management will be presenting some non-GAAP financial measures as references, the appropriate GAAP financial reconciliations are posted in the Investors section of Tetra Tech's website.

At this time, I would like to inform you that all participants are in a listen-only mode. At the request of the company, we will open up the conference for questions and answers after the presentation.

With that, I would like to turn the call over to Dan Batrack. Please go ahead, Mr. Batrack.

10 stocks we like better than Tetra Tech
When our award-winning analyst team has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the newsletter they have run for over a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor, has tripled the market.* 

They just revealed what they believe are the ten best stocks for investors to buy right now... and Tetra Tech wasn't one of them! That's right -- they think these 10 stocks are even better buys.

See the 10 stocks

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 7, 2021

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Great, thank you. Thank you very much, Hilary and good morning and welcome to our fiscal year 2021 third quarter earnings conference call.

We had an excellent third quarter with record results for net revenue, operating income, and earnings per share and at the very end of this quarter, we had an all-time high backlog. Just after the close of the third quarter, we also welcomed Hoare Lea to Tetra Tech, adding a stellar team of over 900 staff in the United Kingdom that significantly advances our strategy to build a global $500 million per year, High Performance Buildings practice. Across our markets, we're seeing increasing demand for our leading with science approach focused on water, environment, sustainable infrastructure, and renewable energy. Overall, I see Tetra Tech is extraordinarily well aligned to today's highest priority programs that address climate change, secure water supplies, and facilitate digital transformation and cyber-security.

I'll now begin with an overview of our performance and customers followed by Steve Burdick, our Chief Financial Officer, who will provide more detailed review of our financials and capital allocation. I'll then address our customer outlook and earnings guidance for the fourth quarter and for all of fiscal year 2021. We had a very strong third quarter, with record results for net revenue, operating income, and earnings per share. Our net revenue was an all-time high for any quarter at Tetra Tech at $638 million, up 14% from last year. Our operations generated a third quarter earnings per share of $0.95, which was up 22% from the prior year and our backlog set a new all-time record for the company, ending the quarter at $3 billion, approximately $3.25 billion, up almost $200 million from the prior year.

I'd now like to provide an overview of our performance by our end customer. State and local revenues for us were up organically 31% year-over-year, driven by continued growth across our municipal water and our Disaster Response Programs. When adjusted for episodic disaster response work that we had in the quarter, we still had a very strong 19% year-over-year growth rate for our municipal infrastructure work.

For our US Federal clients was 29% of our net revenues in the quarter, it was up 7% year-over-year. This broad-based growth included an increase in all of our major sectors including international development work, civilian agencies and the Department of Defense. Our international net revenue was 34% of our business in the quarter, up 26% from last year. We saw a strengthening revenue in Canada, the United Kingdom, and in our Australian operations driven by broad-based orders for water, environment, and sustainable infrastructure services. Our US commercial net revenue was 21% of our business in the quarter and it was down slightly about 2% from the prior year, while our regulatory driven programs and a renewable energy revenues continue to grow, we had a somewhat slower recovery in our discretionary environmental work for our industrial clients.

I'd now like to present our performance by segment, our two business segments. In the third quarter, both of our segments grew revenue by double digits while also expanding their operation margins. The Government Services Group or the GSG segment's revenue was up 12% and margins increased by 30 basis points year-over-year, resulting in a 13.8% margin for the quarter. The strong margin was driven by high end, high value data analytics and design services that and significant municipal growth that drove higher utilization across the GSG operations.

The Commercial International Group or the CIG segment's revenue was $282 million, up 17% from the prior year. Their margin increased by a much higher number at 130 basis points year over year, resulting in an 11.4% margin for the quarter, which was right in line with our plan for the segment. Revenue growth and margin performance were driven by a resurgence of work across multiple international end markets that had been impacted by the pandemic in the associated economic downturn that we saw in fiscal year 2020. One of the best metrics that we had in the quarter was our backlog. Our backlog reached $3.25 billion dollars at the end of the quarter, which is a new all-time high for the company. In the quarter, we booked new orders across our Federal, commercial, state and local and international markets, demonstrating the broad-based strength of our book of business.

Orders for the quarter included significant international development programs that advance ESG priorities globally in the areas of women empowerment, climate change, and sustainable fisheries management. Even in this record quarter, we had a book-to-bill, a record revenue quarter. We had a book-to-bill of 1.12 giving us excellent visibility into the remainder of the year. We also added over $1 billion in new contract capacity to support the US government's priorities and sustainable infrastructure and environmental programs with the US Army Corps of Engineers.

Now, I'd like to turn the presentation over to Steve Burdick, our Chief Financial Officer, to present the details of our financials in the quarter.

Steve?

Steven Burdick -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President & Treasurer

Thank you, Dan. I'd like to now review the GAAP financial results for the third quarter of fiscal 2021 as well as our financial condition, as of the first nine months of the year. Overall, our revenue and net revenue came in much better when compared to our third quarter from last year. Fiscal 2021 third quarter revenue was $802 million. The net revenue amounted to $638 million and was toward the upper end of our guidance range of $600 million to $650 million.

Our revenue was up 13% over last year and net revenue was up 14% over last year. And when compared to last year, our revenue and net revenue was positively impacted by a strong demand for water, environmental services, advanced analytics for our US Federal clients, disaster response for state and local clients and improve economic conditions for international operations resulting from the loosening restrictions due to the COVID global pandemic. Similarly, our operating profit margin and earnings per share improved. Our earnings per share of $0.95 came in better than the top end of our Q3 guidance range of $0.85 to $0.90 and better than the third quarter of last year by 14% and by 22% when we compared the prior year's adjusted result. The higher EPS was due to the improvement in our operating income, which came in at $70 million this quarter, which was up 10% from last year and up 17% when compared to the prior year's adjusted result.

Our improved operating income was driven by an increase in our segment margins over the last year as Dan described, as we continue to focus on providing hiring consulting and technical engineering services through our client. As Dan talked about before, the CIG segment realized a higher margin of 11.4%, which was up 130 basis points and GSG realized an even better margin of 13.8%, which was up 30 basis. In the quarter, we also remained focused on generating positive cash flows in excess of our net income. Cash flows generated from operations for the third quarter totaled $69 million. We continue to improve our working capital management and also benefited from a decrease in days sales outstanding or DSO. Year-to-date for fiscal '21, we generated $227 million in cash flow from operations, which is ahead of last year by 16%. Our focus on working capital and cash flows has resulted in our DSO, decreasing to 65 days as of the third quarter and this is an improvement of five days from last year at this time. Our net debt amounts to $16 million. This is an improvement of $120 million compared to last year, even as we use our cash for strategic acquisitions as well as stock buybacks and dividends in the last 12 months, which amounted to over $100 million.

Our long-term capital allocation strategy calls for balance of investing in the growth of our business, managing the balance sheet and providing returns to our shareholders. Over the trailing 12 months, cash generated from operations was $294 million, we're over $5 per share. During the 3rd quarter, we continued to benefit from this cash position by providing significant returns for our shareholders through dividends and share buybacks. Regarding our dividend program, during the past quarter, we paid out $10.8 million in dividends and I want to announce that our Board of Directors approved our 29th consecutive dividend, which will be paid in the month of August at a rate of $0.20 per share, which is an 18% increase over last year. Furthermore, we utilized $15 million in the third quarter for our stock buyback program and we have $163 million remaining under our previously approved stock buyback program. So all told, year-to-date, we've returned $74 million to our shareholders through both our dividends and our share buybacks. But just as important as implementing our capital allocation strategy is ensuring that we have a strong balance sheet and ample liquidity. We have both in terms of our balance sheet at the end of Q3, which has a current leverage of 0.1 times and available liquidity of over $800 million in the form of cash on hand and funds available under our current credit agreement.

As a result, Tetra Tech is in a financial position such that we continue to invest in technical capabilities and strategic growth areas, both organically and through acquisitions with top tier firms this quarter's such as IBRA-RMAC and Kaizen. And most recently, and in fact just this week, we added Hoare Lea, a leader in sustainable engineering design, which Dan will discuss later in his presentation.

I'm pleased to share these financial results for the third quarter. I want to thank you for your support and I'll hand the presentation back over to Dan.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Great. Thanks very much, Steve. I'd now like to provide our outlook and growth projections for our four client sectors that we see over the next several quarters. We see strong growth rates across the board for our United States and our international market sectors. In the US, our state and local markets are expected to grow at a 15% to 20% rate, driven by high demand for our differentiated services. We expect growth to be led by critical need for sustainable water supplies, long-term disaster planning programs, and coastal zone protection for our local clients.

Our long-term experience with more than 500 municipalities is key so our ability to maintain strong growth rates in this significant market. Our US Federal work is expected to grow at a 10% to 15% rate, leveraging our more than $20 billion and Federal contract capacity to address the administration's priorities and climate change, environmental protection and the digital transformation across both the civilian and defense agencies. We expect to grow our US Commercial work at a 5% to 10% year-over-year rate driven by our differentiated services in Renewable Energy and Environmental Programs support. We expect our renewable energy revenues to grow at a double-digit rate with the leading area focused on emerging offshore wind programs.

And finally, our international work is expected to grow at a 10% to 15% rate year-over-year, with broad-based growth across Canada, the United Kingdom, and Australia for both our commercial and our government clients in those areas. All three regions have strengthened the economic conditions and we see work continuing to increase, as new programs and infrastructure initiatives are put in place in these geographies.

I'd now like to give you an update on our High Performance Buildings growth strategy. Over the past few years, we've been focusing on expanding this service line in a significant market that is highly synergistic with our focus on water, environment and renewable energy. Buildings, collectively, around the world are estimated to account for 28% of the world's carbon emissions and higher efficiency and greener building design is increasingly important to our clients.

Our leading with science approach can significantly address our clients' goal to reduce emissions and increase efficiency by decarbonizing buildings and reducing energy and water usage. Our high-end building designs use advanced simulations to optimize airflow and create more efficient and healthier buildings. We're designing systems that recycle water and generate their own energy, effectively creating net zero water and energy solutions for our clients. This market is now just over $220 million a year in revenue for us and it's tripled in size since we initiated our growth strategy. Although, we saw some contraction during the pandemic, we now expect this market to grow rapidly for us with our objective to build an over $500 million year business by the year 2024.

And I'm very pleased to announce that just this week, we took a significant step in our High Performance Building strategy with the addition of Hoare Lea in the United Kingdom. Hoare Lea adds to our team an entity that's a pioneer in mechanical, electrical, and hydraulic design of building systems. Now, Hoare Lea actually was the very first designer of the first air conditioning system in the world and they're very well aligned to Tetra Tech's leading with science culture. As leaders in sustainable design innovation, they are going to work with us to address the future challenges of building decarbonization. Hoare Lea brings over 900 staff that will join our global practice and work on some of the most advanced designs for buildings across our commercial and government client base. And including myself, our management team, and all of our operations, our entire team is very excited to have them on board and we're looking forward to their successful contribution to our global operations.

I would now like to update you on one of our other key growth strategies and that's in the area of advanced analytics. Across our US Federal client base, the drive for digital transformation and advanced analytics continues to build. Our advanced analytics teams work with our federal clients to apply artificial intelligence, machine learning, and cyber-security analysis to their programs. By combining our domain expertise and knowledge with advanced analytics, we can help our clients visualize environmental data, better communicate with their stakeholders and perform high-end modeling and forecasting for all of their programs.

Since 2016, for the last 5 years, we focused on expanding our team through both organic and strategic acquisitions, a leading firms focused primarily on US federal market. We've added five firms, each bringing another dimension of specialized expertise and client relationships. Now this strategy has really been working for us and has resulted in a $300 million per year revenue for us today, a six-fold increase since we began this back in 2016. We're focused on achieving a 2023 target of $500 million per year in revenue and we'll continue to target acquisitions that can further expand our services for the US Federal government, primarily with civilian agency.

Now, both our buildings growth strategy, our high performance advanced data analytics programs that we have with the Federal government and many others are actually contributing to us increasing our guidance today for the remainder of the year and I would now like to present our guidance for the fourth quarter and for all of fiscal year 2021. For the fourth quarter, our guidance is for a range of $650 million to $700 million of net revenue with an associated earnings per share of $0.95 to $1 for the quarter. For the entire year, the increased net revenue guidance range is for net revenue $2.5 billion to $2.55 billion with an associated annual earnings per share for fiscal year 2021 of $3.69 cents to $3.74. This new updated annual guidance does include an increased amount of intangible amortization that's associated with the acquisition of Hoare Lea. It does -- it does estimate a tax rate of 25% for the fourth quarter. We have 54.6 million diluted shares outstanding and does excludes contributions from any additional acquisitions that we may complete between now and the end of this fiscal year.

In summary, we had an absolutely excellent third quarter, setting new records for net revenue, operating income, earnings per share, backlog and many other financial metrics. Our high-end Water Environment, Sustainable Infrastructure, and Renewable Energy services and our leading with science approach is in high demand and well aligned with the United States and international priorities. We significantly advanced our High Performance Building strategy with the addition of Hoare Lea and as a result of our Q3 performance and outlook for the remainder of the year, raising our annual guidance for both revenue and earnings per share.

And with that Hilary, I'd now like to open the call up for question.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. The question-and-answer session will begin now. [Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Sean Eastman of KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please state your question.

Unidentified Participant

Hi, this is Alex [Phonetic] on for Sean this morning. Congrats on the strong quarter.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Unidentified Participant

So, yes, so my first one is -- so the condition of the state and local budgets has completely flipped compared to this time last year. So is Tetra Tech starting to do that funding starting to be utilized and our projects starting to be advance and if so, what are the priority areas for state and local clients, have they changed at all with the pandemic shake up and the Federal -- the Federal government advancing sustainability agenda.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

So, it's a really good question and it's one that we actually receive somewhat frequently is have we seen the positive impact from Federal funding at the state and local level. For us, we've actually not seen it, with the exception of just a few specialized instances, the color of the money being demarked either for their existing general fund, coming from certain bonds or whether or not it's from the Federal government, but what we have seen is the initial funding that came out to address the pandemic that had very, very broad applications of what it could be applied for be used for many different items, whether or not the dollars have come from targeting it from funds they've initially received from pandemic funding or whether or not it's from the general strength of their own budgets at the state. We have seen the programs that were in place that we've been following for years continue to go forward. It does seem to us that the increased confidence and the funding that's coming from the federal government now has allowed the water programs such as coastal protection, water supply. We're headquartered out here in Southern California priority with respect to water reuse, desalination, storm water capture, and other water sourcing programs that have been a priority for many years have continue to go forward.

And I think it's a combination both of strengthening state budgets or a lack of having a financial hole and then having additional funds come from the Federal government and we really have seen it not speciated to just federal funding has caused certain projects to go forward, but to give an overall confidence for the projects that have been slated for years that we're focused on water programs, coastal protection, environmental programs to move forward. So, we've not seen it divided into specific buckets as to where it's coming from, but just an overall strengthening of funding of the programs that they've had scheduled for years.

Unidentified Participant

That's very helpful and then next one Tetra Tech -- Tetra Tech now has a portfolio of advanced analytics capabilities built up through acquisitions and we have heard a lot about the margin opportunity there, but could you refresh us on the revenue synergy potential around the portfolio and the legacy business, and then relative to the growth targets that you guys outlined in the investor deck, is that the rate of growth in the market or is this a trajectory specific to Tetra Tech?

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Well, from last to first, I think that's what we're seeing it within Tetra Tech, we've certainly seen the general markets being up, but I do believe that the areas that we focused on that have actually been fully aligned with the administration's priorities has given growth rates for Tetra Tech a bit higher than what we've seen in the -- in the overall general market. With respect to the advanced analytics, the synergies are very, very high and in fact our federal IT business is embedded in work that we do for International Development, USAID, US State Department, our civilian agencies and Department of Defense and it is carrying higher margins. It is higher in demand, it's a more specialized services and it has carried a few percentage points, higher margin, which has helped increase our overall GSG margin outlook, as we've been going forward. So we do see additional acquisitions in this area to strengthen it and it supports the management consulting not only by giving us the technical differentiation by bringing new tools that don't exist in the market, the one area that we've been beginning to grow, and actually see more promising areas is in recurring revenue and portions of subscription services for some of the software packages that we put together, we've actually seen beginning to take hold, and while it hasn't been a big priority for us, it's actually been requested by our clients more and more, so as to see it as an emerging area that will drive margins even more quickly in this part of our business.

Unidentified Participant

Got it. Last one from me. And since we're hearing more and more about the High Performance Building strategy, we were wondering if it is a bit -- if it's a distraction since there is already such a great story on the Water and Environment side and if you can just create value up by doubling down there. Some color on why deploying resources here makes sense strategically in the broader context would be helpful.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

That's a great question. And we actually see that they are hand in glove. And what I mean by that is, if you have a water programs such as water treatment program or water recycling, they do have facilities in buildings and how we got into this business originally was by designing the physical structures in addition to the pumps in the pipes and the chemical processing, in addition to that, the physical structures and to now design physical structures that our net carbon zero that actually can decrease the amount of their carbon footprint, it has been requested by our clients. And so we rarely see projects that have an environmental or a water program or climate change that have no structure associated with them and so to be focused on the high buildings component of it, it's actually just a natural move for us, in fact was requested by our clients as part of their environmental stewardship of the programs that we were performing in water environment and sustainability in earlier years. So, this is just a natural outgrowth and in fact to not have this building would actually create more of a discontinuity with respect to distraction as to how are we going to address this and why would we not actually address our clients' request in an area that has complete synergies with the core services of the company.

Unidentified Participant

Thank you.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Great. Thanks, Alex.

Operator

Our next question is from Sam England of Berenberg. Please state your question.

Samuel England -- Berenberg -- Analyst

Hi guys, thanks for taking the questions. Just a follow-up on the sustainable buildings point. I was just wondering if you've now got the platform that you need to grow to target scale that you're targeting in that space or you think you're going to need to do further M&A going forward perhaps in some of the other geographies that you operate in.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Good question. We really do think that Hoare Lea in the UK was the last major piece that we needed to add. We have a significant presence in the United States, primarily on the East and West Coast, we really do have one of the most elite high-end design practices and consulting practices and buildings, we've had in the company for about four years now, a large practice in Australia that services both the Australia, the New Zealand, and the Asia-Pacific region for us, but the area that we been significantly underrepresented was in the United Kingdom and Hoare Lea fills that in. We do think there are specialty niche areas that can be added with respect to some advance work on communications and low level lighting that we're a market leader, but we'll still be looking to add niche components, but we think that Hoare Lea fills out the geographic coverage that we're looking for as a corporation.

Samuel England -- Berenberg -- Analyst

Great. Thanks so much. And then on the margin side, I was just wondering, with the improvement you're making and with the work you're doing around analytics, whether your long-term view on the margins that you can achieve is changing or whether there is a point, where you have to hand back any margin improvements to decline through lower pricing?

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I don't think so. Our goal -- one goal we have here at Tetra Tech has to really been to work at the very we talked about at the very highest end of the technical offerings and not to be commoditized, typically what we've seen is dollars that we have to hand back is commoditization of the services and that would include components of IT. What we're looking to do is to advance the very highest valued services that we're providing to the clients. We are getting more of the work on a fixed price for other value proposition in the case of the government, it could be cost plus a fixed fee with an award fee component. And so, we've actually put more of our margin even in areas that have typically been range bound onto an award fee basis, in addition to the base fee such that the value being contributed can actually be identified and rewarded back to the company, based on the value that the client receives, not just the price.

And so -- no, I don't see the margin actually hitting the inflection point that would come down, because it's been commoditized, we're actually looking at adding new services and new capabilities that in fact aren't being offered in the marketplace today at all and we expect that that will not only achieve these higher margins that we've spoken of, but actually raised that bar and that includes from the Government Services area, which is typically more range bound because of the nature of the costing models with state, local, and federal clients.

Samuel England -- Berenberg -- Analyst

Great. Thanks very much. I'll pass.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Sam.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question is from Tate Sullivan of Maxim Group. Please state your question.

Tate Sullivan -- Maxim Group -- Analyst

Hi, thank you -- hi, all. Thank you for the detail on the High Performance Building strategy as well. And Dan, sorry if I missed it, but can you talk about, is the catalyst for that business different regulations forcing buildings to go net zero or is it mostly new build opportunities for that business please.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Well, it's -- I would -- I would say that one, there's a growing regulatory requirement for new builds to meet certain energy efficiency, water recovery, and self-sufficiency, so that is one component of it, but I would say that the bigger drive forward is more what I call grassroots and that is, especially with this pandemic as individuals are returning to their office, whether or not it's workers or whether it's an industrial buildings, they are looking for safer buildings, healthier buildings in the real estate market in order to attract new tenants or to keep the tenants they have are looking for buildings that are more efficient, are healthier, are more allow for higher productivity of their workers, are providing a safer environment and under the axioms that our staff has within the design is you're safer and healthier at your work office location for the buildings that we design and the facilities that we design than you are at your home.

So, the fact is the drive is actually coming from the building owners for renovation to sort of two up their game and to go through renovation to address health concerns and so that you would more than be familiar with the pandemic and other pathogens that have the potential to be present and so, we're leading in that area, so yes, there is a regulatory portion, but it's a little bit like sustainability and climate change. Was it -- did it come from the top down from regulations or is it from the grassroots up that we actually want to address and protect the planet and the occupants of our buildings and we see that the grassroots are driving up this to drive demand is actually a precursor to the regulations and in fact has lots more legs to it than just a regulation that would be passed in a given geography.

Tate Sullivan -- Maxim Group -- Analyst

And the most recent acquisition, in that -- in the High Performance Building, is the UK ahead of the US in terms of percent of adoption of the buildings or is it about the same in terms of the business and is it mostly a UK opportunity in terms of the current practice?

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Well, I think it's actually going to be ahead, in fact come out with specific targets with respect to building energy usage reduction, new requirements to meet certain lead standards that would put them in a new category that haven't fully been adopted here in the US. So we do think some of the practices that we've developed in the US that are best in class in the world can be taken and lessons learned and capability exported to the UK and some of the expertise they have there to meet regulatory requirements will then be retransferred over to the US as a precursor to meet requirements that are just emerging here and I was coming out certainly in the US certain states, our communities have very, very high building requirements. And so the collaboration from both our Australian, US, and UK operations we believe will be best-in-class meet or exceed the regulatory requirements and actually be used as not just a marketing, but as a true differentiator for the building owners in order to attract new occupants while decarbonizing and reducing the overall footprint of buildings around the world. So, UK is ahead a bit on the regulatory. There are a number of financial estimates as to how large that is and it's enormous with respect to the dollars to be spent, both for renovation and for compliance and new buildings. So, we see an awful lot of synergies through the collaboration across our High Performance Buildings practices.

Tate Sullivan -- Maxim Group -- Analyst

Great. And then just a separate question, I have not heard you mentioned recurring revenue from software and certainly that makes sense that it's part of the data, growing data analytics business -- how is it less -- can you, is it a very small piece right now or do you have growth targets or I mean how -- how big is that opportunity?

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yes. It's pretty small right now. It's very small. We have had and I've spoken of this in the past. We do have subscriptions for environmental assessments and projections for airport like corridors in cities around the world for software that we put in place, which is part of their ongoing monitoring and evaluation of environmental impacts from new air corridors and other items. And what we're looking at carefully is how we can utilize that approach for the Tetra Tech Delta tools that we have that actually consists of more than 100 different proprietary software analytic tools and other methods that we use for our clients. The goal is that we can not only do the work, but put something in place that can continue the consulting and engineering evaluation on a more automated approach by the embedded software and tools that we have with our clients. It will save them money, it will keep them up at state of the art and it allows us to monetize the, in some instances, 50 years' worth of investments we've made in these software and these analytic packages.

Tate Sullivan -- Maxim Group -- Analyst

All right. Thank you for the follow-up detail. Thank you.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Tate.

Operator

Our next question is from Andrew Wittmann of Robert W. Baird. Please state your question.

Andrew Wittmann -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Dan, I wanted to talk about utilization a little bit. Certainly over the past 12 months with the pandemic, I have to imagine there were points for the utilization kind of ebbed and flowed. Can you give us a sense of the trajectory through that time in the quarter and then maybe more importantly even with the outlook that you've portrayed here on Slide 10, double-digit type growth for the next few quarters. Does this put Tetra Tech into hiring mode or do you feel like you kind of have enough, flag of the word, but is there enough team available to accomplish this and push utilization higher. Obviously, the implications to margins on this is what I'm ultimately trying to get at, but we could do it through the lens of utilization.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yes, it's a good question, Andy, and there has been a little bit of ebbing and flowing of utilization. I would say that overall, we did see utilization actually go up when the pandemic first came on, when there was the onset. Part of it was less traveling to conferences and other items like that. So there was a bit of increase, but I wouldn't say that recently in the last few quarters, our utilization has gone up and particularly in the Government Services, it's been the primary contributor to margin expansion on the Government Services and in fact to parse that out, if you looked over the past 12 to 24 months or 4 to 8 quarters, I'd say about half of the expansion in our Government Services has been from utilization and the other half has been from advanced data analytics and actually a higher demand and higher margin.

Now the one thing you would note this last quarter, we had exceptional growth in our state and local revenues, so just over 30%. You saw our international work, it was exceptional for the quarter at over 25%, it's 26%, but we did see a very slow recovery in our commercial work, our US commercial work. Now, the one thing that we have accomplished and I'm glad we started this many years before the pandemic is to move the company to a cloud, to a common platform, so the staff that we have in one area that may be slower, and in this case, at least this current. this last quarter, third quarter, was state and local, they're quite fungible with respect to water treatment engineers, scientists that could then be utilized on state and local work or federal government work to grow well or international and if you would wonder, can you really use an American civil engineer on an Australian project, the answer is being on a common platform, yes. The physics of so compaction or the issues with respect to hydraulics and hydrology that don't change, whether or not you're down under or in some other geography.

And so we have been able to use our staff across the board, increasing utilization for the company. It has translated into increased margin, you saw over 100 basis points again in our Commercial International Group this last quarter. With respect to do we have enough capacity to handle the growth rates that we have forecasted for the next few quarters, yes, I do believe we have embedded sufficient resource capacity to handle a 10% to 15% growth without adding any additional staff and yes we are inactive hiring mode and we are adding staff, but we don't see the ability to recruit and add staff as they -- as anything that would restrict our ability to respond to work that we have today with our increased backlog or even work that could come out from a US stimulus program. It's just a bipartisan infrastructure deal that has just been coined here in the last, just over 24 hours that we've seen some numbers, but we think we're more than a position with resources and contract capacity, because just because you have staff doesn't mean you can't get the work and put your staff to work on it. You still have to have the contracts, the clients, and the ability to move forward on a contracted basis, so I think we're in a good -- good position and all of the above, we have the resources we have the client long-term relationships and the standing contracts in place.

Andrew Wittmann -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Got it, thanks. I guess just kind of another question focused trying to get at the margins. Could you comment please on the impact that I guess reopening could have, maybe in the form of people now being able to go on vacation or perhaps people are taking elective surgeries again that they deferred maybe the last year or even the fact that people might be traveling more now than they did, could you just comment on some of those kind of reopening factors and if there is any factor we should be considering as we think into your fiscal '22 that these may or may not have on your margins?

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

That's a really good question. One thing I've heard across the board from our operations both in the US and internationally is opening up of the economy and traveling and reducing travel restrictions and opening up restaurants and all the rest of this have put an additional priority for folks that haven't been on vacations either themselves or with their families for the past year-and-a-half put a priority. So I do think that here in the fourth quarter, we will have more vacations, utilization will actually be impacted a little bit. It's obviously completely embedded in our guidance already, and in fact the midpoints of our guidance for Q4, just to put this in the proper context do represent a record high and while we had a great third quarter and just set records across the board, the midpoints of our guidance for the fourth quarter actually clips what we just did this last third quarter, but we do think that there are more vacation that's going to take place. It's not a cost per se, because we've already accrued for the vacation. So it's already embedded in our balance sheet. So it's not an additional expense, but it does mean that utilization will drop, because they're not on projects during those times.

I don't see it as a fiscal year '22 impact, because I think that the vacations are going to be done at least in the Northern Hemisphere in the late summer, which is now summer or the fall, but I do believe as we move into '22, this is a very sort of temporal impact with let me get vacation, let me actually go see family members, we haven't seen, let's get out and do something, but then let's get back to work. So I don't see this as a fiscal year '22 impact. I actually see utilization remaining high, because Tetra Tech is -- has gone and is going to a hybrid work schedule, where we allow some individuals to work on a dedicated basis remotely, many are both in the office and remote and some are in the office completely. And so it has helped us with respect to recruiting, you can come to Tetra Tech and work on a project that is in Southern California, but very well you may live in Kansas or some other geography.

And so, the flexibility that we offer as a corporation is I think second to none. But what we're looking for is the best, the brightest, the most innovative and the number one technical staff to solve our client's problems. We're not looking just to bring more people on to get bigger, we're looking to get better, smarter and to be continue to be a market leader in the areas of water environment and sustainable infrastructure. So, yes, there'll be some more vacations, it's embedded in our guidance and our guidance reflects record performance in the fourth quarter and I don't see it continuing into fiscal year '22.

Andrew Wittmann -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Okay, great. I'll leave it there. Have a good day.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

All right. Thank you very much, Andy.

Operator

Our next question is from Noelle Dilts of Stifel. Please state your question.

Noelle Dilts -- Stifel -- Analyst

Hi guys and congratulations on another good quarter. I just had one question, it's relatively detailed as a lot of my questions have been answered, but you talked about double-digit growth in renewables with particular strength in offshore wind. So kind of curious how you're thinking about the growth opportunity around offshore wind in particular my understanding is we're pretty early innings there. But then also, there is still a lot of activity going on with terrestrial wind and solar, so also how you're thinking about -- also how you're thinking about the outlook of those markets?

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

So offshore wind has large promise. Some of the offshore wind leases by the Federal government have required certain developers to pay very, very large sums in order to -- to obtain lease rates and actually development rights offshore. So when obviously any entity puts that amount at an investment upfront, they prioritize moving it forward and the items that are required to do the upfront valuation line up very well Tetra Tech with respective offshore impacts for water quality, offshore impacts for sedimentation, green mammals, fisheries, all the rest of it. So that's why it fits well for us. We also like offshore wind a lot, because it fits the long-term monitoring, that's not recurring. But it's reoccurring revenue, because we'll continue to do the monitoring long after a wind turbine has gone up offshore and that will be from water quality from the stability of the foundations if you're on the East Coast, it's just in the very, very nascent phase on the West Coast, where it would actually be tethering and anchoring, because the waters are so much deeper and those are areas that work with some of our further offshore, not nearshore but offshore oceanographic capability that we have that really goes all the way back to the founding of the company.

So those are the reasons we really like offshore wind and that's why we see that it has a higher priority, because of the investments. It also has less citizen opposition in most instances, because if it's out of sight, it's out of complaints to certain extent, so that's why we're interested in that, but I would also say, we are not -- we are not de-emphasizing solar or terrestrial wind, onshore wind, or even geothermal and I certainly wouldn't minimize hydro and whether or not that's just a simple as repowering with the new turbines that are much more efficient, which is the more conventional method of increasing output on a given hydro facility or whether or not it's actually raising it or adding additional penstock tubes that actually drive that addition of new chambers that have fish bypass requirements and yes there has been a big -- with respect to hydro being one of the largest renewable energy generation methods certainly in Canada and the US, one thing that's been very interesting, the conservation of the environment has largely revolved around fisheries and it's fish by passage and there has been some call for removal of dams, but there has been an equal and offsetting call for fish by passage, so it allows both flood control, allows power generation, and addresses fisheries and environmental impacts.

In that scenario, Tetra Tech is one of the leaders, not only in the US but around the world, with respect to making a fisheries and habitat, where there are dams sustainable for a biodiversity and for the environment. So, so yes, we are very constructive and positive on offshore win for the reasons I just mentioned, but the services that we offer and the others line up very well and I would say here internally, when I do mentioned offshore wind, I typically get four or five emails a minute from the folks internal, what about -- what about the great work we're doing in these other renewable areas.

Noelle Dilts -- Stifel -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks very much, I appreciate it.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Noelle.

Operator

This concludes the Q&A session. I will now turn the conference back over to Dan Batrack to conclude.

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Great. Thank you very much, Hilary. And thank you all for being on the call today. Thank you for the questions and I would -- I would be a remiss not to thank all of the Tetra Tech associates, including those that have been with us now for four days with Hoare Lea in the UK. It's really the phenomenal performance of the more than 21,000 employees at Tetra Tech that have given us this record performance and it's very easy to sometimes for us to say, we had another good quarter and that is definitely true, but sometimes it's not front of mind to realize this performance is being done in the light of ongoing pandemic, additional restrictions in places like LA County, where we are or complete shutdowns in places like Sydney. And so when you really put the performance of the company in light of the overall impact globally, I just am very thankful for the phenomenal performance of the Tetra Tech associates and the clients that we serve every day.

And with that, I look forward to speaking with you next quarter to give you the results for our fourth quarter, all of fiscal year 2021 and perhaps most importantly what are our specific guidance is for fiscal year 2022. And I hope you have a safe day and a great rest of the week. Thank you. Goodbye.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 53 minutes

Call participants:

Dan Batrack -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Steven Burdick -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President & Treasurer

Unidentified Participant

Samuel England -- Berenberg -- Analyst

Tate Sullivan -- Maxim Group -- Analyst

Andrew Wittmann -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Noelle Dilts -- Stifel -- Analyst

More TTEK analysis

All earnings call transcripts

AlphaStreet Logo