Casa Systems, Inc. (CASA) on Q1 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Greetings, and welcome to Casa Systems Q1 2021 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I will now like to turn the call over to your conference host, Jackie Marcus, Investor Relations. Jackie Marcus: Thank you, operator, and good afternoon, everyone. Casa Systems released results for the first quarter of 2021 ended March 31, 2021 this afternoon after the market close. If you did not receive a copy of our earnings press release, you may obtain it from the Investor Relations section of our website at investors.casasystems.com. Jerry Guo: Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us today as we discussed the results of our first quarter of 2021. We have continued to execute according to plan and had another great quarter. I like to share some of the highlights from it with you. We delivered our commitment to grow the business with a 25% year-over-year revenue growth while delivering significant profitability. This is one of the strongest growth increases we have experienced as a public company. 54% of the revenue in Q1 came from our wireless and fixed telco products. With the three consecutive quarters of wireless and fixed telcos making up over half of our revenue, I like to emphasize that we are a truly diversified company uniquely able to serve the needs of any broadband customer, whether it be wireless, fixed cable or enterprise. Among the market segments, wireless showed the strongest growth in Q1 with 80% year-over-year growth. The strength and resilience of our cable business are demonstrated by the steady revenue and the growing number of MSOs adopting our virtual CCAP core and DAA solutions. We again made the numerous customer advances with our strategic growth products. Here are the number for the quarter. 17 new purchase orders for our 4G and 5G wireless products including packet cores, radio access network press and the CBRS and 5G fixed wireless access devices. 5 new purchase orders for our virtual router and fiber expansion products and 6 purchase orders for our cable distributed access and virtual CCAP core products. And finally, something that I'm very excited about. We have integrated our cloud native 5G stand alone core functions with the two of the largest global hyperscale public cloud platforms, Amazon Elastic, Kubernetes Service and Google Cloud . This significantly expands the way we can deploy our 5G stand alone core to a service provider customers and now to enterprise customers as well and enables our customers that additional capability to provision and deployed services and applications in a public cloud or a combination of public and private clouds. Scott Bruckner: Thanks, Jerry. And good afternoon, everyone. Just to reiterate Jerry's remarks, we had a very strong first quarter and it was marked by year-over-year revenue growth of 25%, year-over-year wireless revenue growth of 80% and almost 11% increase in our cable revenue year-over-year and this was as our cable customers increased their investments in existing infrastructure to meet bandwidth demand, improved profitability due to higher revenue and an efficient cost structure. And this was evident in the significant improvements we saw in both our GAAP and non-GAAP operating margins and as Jerry noted the 452% increase in our EBITDA relative to the first quarter of 2020. And then finally, we saw year-over-year growth in our working capital, improvement in our liquidity position and continue to deleveraging. So all in all, this was a really great quarter. Okay, now turning to our performance. Revenue for the first quarter came in at $104.3 million. Breaking this down across our product lines first quarter wireless revenue was $40.3 million or 39% of revenue. Cable revenue was $47.5 million or 46% of total revenue in the quarter and our fixed telco revenue came in at $16.5 million or 16% of revenue. Looking further at the income statement, GAAP gross profit for the quarter came in at $56 million. That's up 31.4% year-over-year, with a GAAP gross margin of 53.7%. Total GAAP operating expenses for the quarter were $43.5 million and that's a decline of 6% relative to the first quarter of 2020. And as a percentage of revenue, GAAP operating expenses were 42% in this year's first quarter which is down from 55% in Q1 of 2020. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $20.2 million or 19.4% of revenue. GAAP operating profit was $12.6 million in Q1 as compared to an operating loss of $3.5 million in the first quarter of 2020. And on a non-GAAP basis, operating profit was $17.4 million. That's a significant increase from a non-GAAP operating profit of 314,000 in the prior comparable quarter. GAAP net income was $5.7 million, or $0.06 per share on a fully diluted basis and this is up from GAAP net income of $1.2 million or $0.01 per fully diluted share that we booked in the first quarter of 2020. Non-GAAP net income came in at $9.4 million or $0.11 per fully diluted share and this is up significantly from the non-GAAP net loss of $5.3 million or negative $0.07 per fully diluted share that we booked in Q1 of 2020. Operator: Thank you. At this time, we'll be conducting a question and answer session. And our first question is from Meta Marshall with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed. Unidentified Analyst: Hi, this is on for Meta. Thank you for the question. I just have two questions. First being how do you feel like your visibility is for your overall business a year ago? And I guess how does that differ between wireless, fixed wireless and cable? Jerry Guo: Hi this is Jerry here. Let me answer that question. We feel so much better about all the ability for the whole business mostly because the composition of the business is much different than what we had a year ago. We have now more than 50% of our business are from wireless and fixed telco instead of cable alone. And also we have a very large backlog compared to a year ago. We just wireless alone is $156 million. So that helps with the visibility as well. Cable space, we have a better visibility now and we also have backlog to help with that but still compared to wireless the book to ship time is short. Unidentified Analyst: Got it. Thank you. And I guess just a follow up on the wireless side, where are you seeing the most incremental interest in the wireless portfolio? Is it more on the software side or on the small cell side? Any call that would be helpful? Thank you. Jerry Guo: As we discussed in the past that among the three product areas, the packet core, the radio, and fixed wireless access devices, we see a lot of activities on the core side. In terms of number activities that's the number one. Unidentified Analyst: Got it. Thank you very much. Operator: And our next question is from Tim Savageaux with Northland Capital Markets. Tim Savageaux: Hi, good afternoon, and I'm hopping on a little late. So apologies if I'm repeating anything in trying to focus back in on the wireless backlog which Jerry I think you said $156 million, or also 400 or something % percent growth, we'll figure out which number that is, but obviously, that's a substantial increase. And I guess my question is your my sense is that your customer traction especially among tier 1 carriers, globally has been broadening out a bit. Is this kind of a reflection of that? How would you sort of characterize this order input an increase in backlog with regard to breadth of customers geographically in addition to product type? I don't know if your last comment was about where kind of broader interest is, or specifically regarding the backlog versus core radio access and CPE. So any color along one of those lines would be great. Jerry Guo: All right. We will see about the broad interests, in terms of number of we have going up. In terms of the backlog increase the contribution, we have two contributions, one is the broadening of that portfolio, and we continue to build backlogs in fixed wireless access, packet core and the radios small cells, as well. And we do have force that new customers adding to the backlog as well as existing customers placing long term purchase orders as well. Tim Savageaux: I guess let me come back at that another way. I mean, as you look across your base of wireless customers, it looked like you in Q4, came up with at least one new one in terms of a tier one wireless player on the 10% customer list. And one, another one that was pretty close. As you look across your business right now in your backlog on the wireless side in particular how many tier one carriers would you say there are potential very significant customers for Casa kind of capable of approaching the 10% range? Jerry Guo: I'm not ready to give a number yet, but we do have quite a few very significant deals going on at this time. Operator: And our next question is from . Please proceed. Unidentified Analyst: Hi guys, this is Vignesh on for Congratulations on the strong results and thanks for taking my question. I was just wondering why did you guys not raise the full year guidance? I know you mentioned some of the orders from Q2 materialize in Q1 that partly explains given strength. But are there any concerns about any slippage in the timing of the projects? Scott Bruckner: Why don't I take that? It's Scott. Look, it's a good question. Let me just remind you that our guidance is based on the visibility that we currently have into our business. So we had a great first quarter. In my comments I noted, I think we are on track to have a very strong second quarter and that means that we believe that we're still on track for double digit growth in 2021. So we're extremely confident about our opportunities this year. And as Jerry mentioned, the backlog grew significantly. So at this point we don't perceive that there is any slippage that gives us concern. But as we get more visibility into the second half we'll update our guidance as appropriate. But I do want to be very, very clear. We are having a very strong year. We started the year very strongly. And it as I said, we are in my comments, we are on track and this is an important two words to at least meet our guidance range. Unidentified Analyst: Okay. And then I had another question. So how do you see the opportunity around the CBRS small cells for this year? Jerry Guo: We think that CBRS is going to be a really good tailwind to our business in general. And you know that we have the three types of wireless products from the core to the radio to the fixed wireless access. We have CBRS capabilities in both our radio and access devices. Of course, the four is not spectrum specific but we do see that the core will be part of the solution to serve the CBRS customers. Unidentified Analyst: Okay. Thanks. Operator: And our next question is from Scott Fessler with Stifel. Scott Fessler: Hey guys, thank you for taking my question. Given the step up, we saw there in cable, what do you see is the right quarterly runway for the segment going forward? And then what's your outlook like there for the back half of the year? Jerry Guo: Hey, Scott, it's a good question. And in fact, we thought that given the step up that we saw in the first quarter, somebody would ask this question. And I'll remind you that we also saw a step up in the fourth quarter. In fact, we had about $48 million of revenue. For the last eight consecutive quarters, we have seen cable being a very steady range of $40 million to $50 million. And that is that continues to be our view on cable for the remainder of the year. Remember that the step up that we saw Jerry mentioned it and I mentioned in my remarks, is as a result of our customers investing in existing infrastructure to meet bandwidth demands and increased usage demands. And then on top of that, we did see new orders come in already, this is like three or four quarters in a row where we're seeing strong orders coming in for DAA and virtual CCAP and it's our view that that will be a slower ramp we probably will start seeing the benefit of that towards the end of this year. But it doesn't pick up significantly until next year in the year after. Scott Fessler: Great, thanks. And then on the millimeter wave side. The trials you're doing there is still only for the line of sight links or are there more edge focused deployments in the works? Jerry Guo: Are you referring to our fixed wireless access deployments with the millimeter wave? Scott Fessler: Yes. You had mentioned a millimeter wave trial for last quarter. So I was just wondering on the progress for that. Jerry Guo: Yes we did. And so that is going extremely well. And in fact part of what we announced in our wireless backlog is in fact takes into consideration that acceleration deployment. That is still the line of sight product that we announced. But we also, I do want to say that it's just not about one customer for the 5G millimeter wave. Scott Fessler: Got it. That's what I was looking for. All right, thanks guys appreciate it. Operator: And our next question is from Tim Long from with Barclays. Tim Long: Thank you, two questions, if I could first on the gross margin, if you could talk a little bit about that it's in pretty strong in the quarter. Talk a little bit about kind of sustainability to now that the mix is stabilizing a little bit. And then I think you guys mentioned the and government initiatives. It seems it's happening here and in other parts of the world as well. So understanding it's a tailwind any color you can give us on how you think you guys will participate from a product standpoint? Do you think it'll be across product categories? And any color you could give on what you think kind of timing or magnitude would be for some of these as drivers for Casa, thank you. Scott Bruckner: Sure. Hey, it's Scott. Let me start with the gross margin and then I'll hand over to Jerry to talk about where we see the opportunities in rural broadband and then also in the recently announced Biden infrastructure program. So the gross margin did trend up this quarter. That was largely related to more software, obviously, but in the cable mix. Remember , we noted over the last several quarters that the tailwinds that we saw from COVID with our cable business drove a significant number of chassis sales. And that was largely related to meet congestion on upstream channels in cable networks. So we saw a lot of nodes splitting. We also mentioned that every time we put a new chassis down with our customers, we not only take additional footprint, but we set up the possibility for new software sales. And there it's a little early to say that that we're benefiting from that new hardware and software. I think we need to see a few more quarters in order to say so definitively, but over time, there would be a shift away from hardware towards software. In terms of the trend that we see for the year, just remember that we are not guiding on gross margin this year. We are focused on delivering profitability further down on the P&L and also free cash flow. Jerry Guo: So let me answer that question on the side. The operators who got funding from the government, the art of fundings, usually are two types one is that the traditional fixed telco and the other one is the cable, cable companies. And we have products for both operators and on the cable of course, we have integrated CCAP plus that distributed architecture that can provide a Gig or multi Gig services and on the fixed telco side, we are providing fiber extension products as well as the virtual routers for BNG applications, for service provider edge routing applications. So those will also benefit from any rural broadband extension. Tim Long: Okay, thank you. Operator: And our next question is from Tim Savageaux with Northern Capital Markets. Tim Savageaux: Hi, sorry about that. Sideways with the phone last time, I wanted to follow up with a couple of questions. Which is had you discussed 10% customers in the quarter in terms of number, aggregate concentration, type of operator, etc? And then you kind of addressed the second one a little bit already. But I want to get a maybe a little more color on what you're seeing in terms of access across distributed access, remote and cable and it sounds like the activity levels picking up but maybe the deployments are a little bit further out. Is that a fair way to characterize it? Scott Bruckner: Sure Tim, it's Scott. Let me start with your First question, which is the 10% customers? We did not mention that on the call. But obviously, as you know, we do disclose that in the queue, which will be filed tomorrow morning. So why don't, let me get out into the market and then you and I can have a conversation about that. Tim Savageaux: Sounds good. Jerry Guo: Tim, in terms of distributed architecture and we are seeing more and more activities, we do see deployments, but the scale for the deployments are not at the level we think is significant. And also there's a new industry trend of remote MAC/PHY as well. And that's probably going to also delay things a bit. So a lot of things going on in. We are engaged with all types of solutions, not just one single type at this point. Tim Savageaux: Okay. Thanks very much. Operator: All right ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of the question and answer session. Now, I would like to turn the call back over to CEO, Jerry Guo, for closing remarks. Jerry Guo: Thank you, everyone for joining us today. Before ending the call, I want to announce that CASA Systems will be hosting an Investor Day in September 2021. Please look out for our press release with the more specific details on the event. We look forward to seeing you all there. Thank you again. Operator: This concludes tonight's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you all for your participation and have a great evening.
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