Lantronix, Inc. (LTRX) on Q2 2022 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Good day and welcome to the Lantronix 2022 Second Quarter results conference call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance please signal conference specialist by . After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions, to ask a question, to withdraw your question Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Rob Adams, Investor Relations, please go ahead. Rob Adams: Thanks Betsy. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining the second quarter fiscal 2022 conference call. Joining us on the call today are Paul Pickle, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jeremy Whitaker, Chief Financial Officer, and Jacques Issa, Vice President of Marketing. A live and archived webcast of today's call will be available on the company's website. In addition, a phone replay will be available starting at 8:00 P.M. Eastern, 5:00 PM Pacific today through February 17th by dialing 877-344-7529, or for international callers, 412-317-008, and enter passcode 3413427. During this call, management may make forward-looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties that could cause our results to differ materially from management's current expectations. We encourage you to review the cautionary statements and risk factors contained in the earnings release, which was furnished to the SEC today, and is available on our website, and in the company's SEC filing,s such as its 10-K and 10 - Qs. Lantronix undertakes no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward-looking statements to reflect future events or circumstances. Furthermore, during the call, the company will discuss some non-GAAP financial measures. Today's earnings release, which is posted in the Investor Relations section of our website, describes the differences between our non-GAAP and GAAP report, and presents reconciliations for the non-GAAP financial measures that we use. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Jeremy Whitaker, Lantronix Chief Financial Officer. Jeremy Whitaker: Thank you Rob. And welcome to everyone joining us for this afternoon's call. I'm going to provide the financial results as well as some of the business highlights for our second quarter fiscal 2022, before I hand it over to Paul for his commentary. Please refer to the news release and the financial information in the Investor Relations section of our website for additional details that will supplement my commentary. For the second quarter of fiscal 2022, we reported record revenue of $33.7 million, an increase of a 103% when compared to $16.6 million for the second quarter of fiscal 2021. The year-on-year growth, was driven by contribution from our recent acquisition and organic growth of 57%. Sequentially, net revenue was up 22% compared to $27.7 million reported in the first quarter of Fiscal 2022. GAAP gross margin was 42.9% for the second quarter of fiscal 2022, as compared with 45% in the prior quarter. The sequential decline in GAAP gross margin was primarily due to product mix. Selling general and administrative expenses for the second quarter of Fiscal 2022 were $8.9 million compared with $4.9 million for the second quarter of Fiscal 2021. And $7.9 million for the first quarter of Fiscal 2022. Research and development expenses for the second quarter of fiscal 2022 were $4.3 million compared with $2.4 million to second quarter of fiscal 2021, and $4 million for the first quarter of fiscal 2022, the increase in SG&A and R&D was impacted by increased headcount and operating costs related to the recent acquisition. We've made good progress in implementing our synergy plan. And as a result, non-GAAP operating expenses as a percentage of revenue declined sequentially and from the year-ago quarter. GAAP net loss was $2.4 million or $0.08 per share during the second quarter of Fiscal 2022, compared to a GAAP net loss of $1.5 million or $0.05 per share during the second quarter of fiscal 2021. The increase in GAAP net loss was primarily due to costs related to our recent acquisition. non-GAAP net income was $3.3 million or $0.10 per share during the second quarter of fiscal 2022, compared to non-GAAP net income of $861 thousand, or $0.03 per share, during the second quarter of fiscal 2021. Now turning to the balance sheet, we ended the December 21 quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $36.4 million, an increase of $26 million from the prior quarter. During November of 2021, we raised $32.6 million in an offering and sale of $4.7 million common shares at a price of $7.50 per share. In January of 2022, we used $12 million of the proceeds to pay down a high interest second-lien term loan facility that we used as partial consideration for our recent acquisition. Working capital improved to $64.2 million as of December 31, 2021, as compared with $32.2 million as of the prior quarter. Net inventories were $29.4 million as of December 31, 2021, compared with $26.6 million as of September 30, 2021. Now, turning to our annual outlook, which includes approximately 11 months of contribution from our recent acquisition. We exited the December quarter with strong customer demand and backlog. We continue to believe that without supply chain constraints, we could deliver annual revenue and non-GAAP EPS above the high end of our guided range. Based upon forecasted improvements in the supply chain and our current outlook, we see -- expect to see a much stronger fourth quarter, and as a result, we are increasing our annual revenue guidance. For fiscal year 2022, we are raising our annual revenue target to a range of $112.5 million to $127.5 million, representing growth in the range of 57% to 78%. In addition, we are adjusting our annual earnings target to take into account our recent capital raise and expect non-GAAP EPS in the range of $0.32 to $0.40 per share, representing growth in a range of 68% to 111%. I will now turn the call over to Paul. Paul Pickle: Thank you, Jeremy. I am especially pleased to report record results to our shareholders here today. During the second quarter, we made progress on several fronts. Number one, we reported record revenues of $33.7 million, up 22% sequentially, and 103% year-over-year. Excluding our most recent acquisition, organic revenue grew an impressive 47% year-over-year and 21% sequentially. Number three, we continued to move high potential Edge Compute projects through the pipeline, and we currently expect that volume production on multiple projects will drive our growth well into next fiscal year. Number four, the team did a fantastic job navigating supply chain constraints and we were able to meet some of the upside demand and backlog that we experienced in the September quarter. And finally, we successfully completed a secondary equity offering, raising almost $33 million to fund our growth, pay down high interest rate debt, and potentially fund our next acquisition. With the headlines out of the way, let's get into some detail on second quarter results in our outlook. As I've pointed out, revenues of $33.7 million were a new record. Q2 benefited from a full quarter of contribution from our most recent acquisitions and incremental one more month than in Q1, removing these newly acquired revenues from the equation, organic growth was 22% on a sequential basis in an exciting 47% year-over-year, we saw broad strength in our business in the second quarter, notable contributors included our remote environment management products, Wi-Fi, cellular tracking, and device service solutions. The largest upside came from our Intelligent Edge products, where product revenues more than doubled from Q1 levels. Benefiting from our recent execution and bolstered by our strong relationship with Qualcomm demand for Intelligent Edge Compute Solutions continues to grow and the opportunity funnel is very healthy. We are in the process of expanding our capacity to meet this influx and we're selectively focusing on those programs that offer the strongest revenue potential. To capture this growth potential however we must also continue to navigate ongoing supply chain constraints and we're pleased to report we made some progress on this front and Q2. After exiting Q1 with over $6 million in customer requested products that we could not deliver on. We managed to draw down that surplus a few hundred thousand dollars sequentially to about $5.7 million. While the decrease is relatively small, this the first time in more than a year that we have been able to bring that number down. And this environment, securing components for upside in a given quarter does not necessarily translate to an ability to do it repeatedly. Each product and its related supply chain has its own set of circumstances and we feel it is prudent to temper the upside potential in our outlook, but we will continue to navigate the situation and deliver upside whenever possible. Our current belief is that the shortages will continue to linger, especially for semiconductor products built on older high-reliability processes, but we are cautiously optimistic that the supply chain constraints are beginning to ease. Finally, as Jeremy detailed earlier, we were able to successfully complete an equity offering in Q2 which increased the company's cash balance by $32.6 million. Since that time, we have used $12 million to pay down an expenses second-lien loan thus eliminating a double-digit coupon that was poised to rise with interest rates. The remainder of these funds will serve as a source of working capital to enable our growth, allowing us to procure long lead time components for crucial shipments and potentially leaving us dry-powder track positions. In summary, I'm pleased with our results in the second quarter. We navigated a supply environment that continues to be difficult and we're able to deliver another quarter of record revenues. We grew at an impressive rate organically. We improved our balance sheet and put in place the capital to fund the next leg of our growth. That completes our prepared remarks for today, so I will now turn it over to Betsy to conduct our Q&A session. Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the Question and Answer session. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question comes from Scott Searle with Roth Capital. Please go ahead. Scott Searle: Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. Nice job on the quarter, guys. Paul Pickle: Thank you. Scott Searle: Maybe just to start quickly on the financial front, I was wondering if you could quantify a little bit the supply chain impact on gross margins; in terms of expedites, incremental component costs. I know there's a mix issue in the quarter. If you could flush that out a little bit in terms of component costs maybe versus mix, and I've got a couple of follow-ups. Jeremy Whitaker: Yes Scott, this is Jeremy, so yeah, most of the sequential decline was driven by mix. We had a record quarter with our Intelligent Edge solution products. They more than doubled from the previous quarter. And even probably more than that from the year-ago quarter. In this product group is on the lower end of the scale as you look at our various products from margin standpoint. So that said, we are still feeling the pressure from component shortages and PPBs and other costs, but it was more a matter of mix this quarter than it was necessarily a change in costs, because those costs have been relatively consistent over the last several quarters. Scott Searle: And Jeremy, if I could to follow up on the OpEx front, it was up sequentially. You had a full quarter of impact from Transition Networks. So I think versus 2 months in the prior quarter. Is that the only impact in there? Is there anything else? Is this the base level that we should be thinking about extrapolating going forward into the second half of fiscal '22? Jeremy Whitaker: Yes. Because of the higher than expected revenue this quarter, we also had a higher amount of variable costs. So that was -- so as revenue tempers then we could see the variable costs come down accordingly as well. Paul Pickle: Yeah, but just -- cost as a percentage of revenue, maybe when you prove that a little bit, but I wouldn't say that on a dollar basis that this is a base level, we are in a growth mode, we definitely have some good programs that we're looking to source and fund. So I would expect on a dollar basis spending to go up over time as the revenue grows, but as a percentage of revenue, I think we'd continue to drive some additional efficiency. Scott Searle: Got you. And Paul maybe to jump in on the supply chain, it sounds like you guys have been doing a pretty good job on that front, but could you provide a little bit more color in terms of what areas are stretched still problematic from a lead time standpoint. And then maybe just from an end-market standpoint, I think last quarter you talked about some larger opportunities as related to Intelligent meters. If you flush out where some of the bigger opportunities are for you over the next couple of quarters and levers to move things up or down. Thanks. Paul Pickle: Okay. So yeah, on the -- if I reflect back on some of the comments I made last quarter, I believe I said last quarter that Qualcomm would not be the long pulling the tent. So at this point, as I reflected, doing additional upside, we've managed to secure a lot of the other components around the Qualcomm processors. And we were able to get some additional shipments in the quarter, but that does not necessarily mean it will translate to additional shipments in the March quarter timeframe. So we've got some good visibility on some upside potential, possibly in Q4 and Qualcomm in particular on processors are scrambling to try and get those deliveries to us. But at this point, it's mostly spot market buys. I have to say I did dive into the Rolodex last quarter to try and source some additional upside demand. When we go out and look for it, we're able to find it, but the tough components or the exotic substrates, as mentioned before, pop-memory in particular, even though the chips are in relatively good supply and then flash. So processors, flash, memory, and then some WiFi chipsets, and then I will say Ethernet switches is starting to creep up as a shortage here that we're able to navigate, but is definitely getting a little bit more difficult. I think it's more related to certain suppliers. So if we go outside of those suppliers, were able to get those. One other additional point, I will say that we did qualify some additional vendors on platforms this past quarter, which gave us more optionality. That will be definitely a planned shift in strategy as we kind of look forward to production in future quarters. Then in terms of end markets on opportunities, we've secured a couple of compute projects that are more in the, I'll say AR space, but still not consumer electronics as more industrial safety type applications, but HAR, it's still the same core competency in terms of camera processing, visual processing, but automotive of course, remains strong, smart utility. Some additional projects were picking up in Smart cities related to the security cameras. And then ARR is a new one, a new contract that we just picked up of late. Scott Searle: Thank you. Nice quarter. Paul Pickle: Thank you, sir. Operator: The next question comes from Christian Schwab with Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Please go ahead. Christian Schwab: Hey, great quarter guys. So do you have a record backlog or another record backlog, but a backlog number or did you leave it, did I miss that? Paul Pickle: Yes. It's a -- we gave backlog out last quarter because it was such a big jump. We had a tripling of order rates and then several pull-in requests by customers and it went from essentially $27 million to $39 million excluding the $3 million of acquired backlog. So that's why we gave it last quarter. We really thought it was relevant. It's not necessarily something we want to fixate on. Having said that, I will say it's in worth of $50 as of today. So it did grow despite being able to see some significant upside in revenue in the quarter. So it does continue to grow, but it's also not something that -- I think it's something that we want to fixate on a go-forward basis, but it does continue to grow. Christian Schwab: Great. And then do you have any update on the new smart grid energy custom when that was supposed to kind of maybe start kicking in the second half and drive more material revenue growth in Fiscal '23 timeframe is everything on track ahead of track, any update there? Paul Pickle: I'd say it's on track to our expectations of customers driving some aggressive schedules. They're still driving those schedules. There's some consigned board to come into the platform. Some consigned components that come into the platform, I should say. Our customers had some difficulty procuring those components. So we've stepped in and been able to secure them to ensure that the program continues to move forward. Happy to say we just finished a three-day workshop talking about what the next-generation looks like. Then, just for additional color, comparing the commentary from last quarter, we talked about a $10 million to $20 million contribution in the December quarter. Well, $10 million to $20 million in terms of fiscal year, starting to impact the December quarter. I'd say we're probably a bit more confident in the upper end of that range. And so far things are going pretty nicely. Christian Schwab: Okay. Great. That's -- that's good news. And then I guess, on my last question, I mean, the typical organic growth that you're seeing, is quite material, and our backlog we talked about being north of $50 million, you've got a bunch of new programs here, been there a while, and I'll Paul, I mean, what do you kind of see as like the true organic growth rate of this business minus in the acquisitions that could be later done over time. Paul Pickle: This is where I'd probably take a little bit of a more conservative position, but in terms of I think that we can continue to drive 20+%. Now, and I'll caveat that. I don't think that is on the entirety of the business. We have not really worked the due roadmaps that we acquired with the business that we closed on August 2nd, so we need to turn that around. But I think if we look at what we've done so far, 20+%'s probably conservative. I'm factoring in that we're in just an extraordinary demand growth phase that could very well continue through next year. If you look at that smart meter program that is not or I should say smart utility program, it's currently not in backlog, that would obviously add some considerable growth potential of 20+% so I think that's a good number even in a more normalized environment, I think we can manage to drive that level performance. Christian Schwab: Great, fantastic. No other questions. Thank you. Operator: The next question comes from Ryan Koontz with Needham. Please go ahead. Ryan Koontz: Thanks for taking the question. What if you contrast really your core organic business and the acquired Transition Networks business as it relates to the different market verticals you're seeing strength across the 2, and how is your progress coming along on your cross-selling strategies? Thanks. Paul Pickle: The cross-selling strategy. I'll talk about that one first. I will say that that's -- we're pleasantly surprised. We kept a good portion of the sales team that came with that Transition Networks assets. They are doing a phenomenal job. These guys are picking up the product lines from Lantronix Proper, will say, but there's natural pull-through opportunities. We thought that potential was there, but I don't know that we put a lot of emphasis on it at the beginning of the acquisition. But I have to say that team is performing quite well, so pretty happy about that. I would still say a little bit more muted from an organic growth rate, though, in terms of the rest of the business right now. The Compute business is really growing. It just the staggering rate with a couple of key customer programs, and we expect that to continue. So newly acquired business, if I contrast that, I would say 10+% is probably reasonable expectation. Maybe we'll get to a point where we can confidently drive a steady 15% but right now addressing that with 20+%, even approaching 25% on the newer, more compute oriented solutions that we have. Ryan Koontz: Okay. How about touch base on the different verticals across the two businesses and how they are different or similar. Paul Pickle: Yeah. So in the newly -- and I won't say that there's two different boards. We have two different sales teams that really can sell the entirety of the portfolio. So we've not separated the business. I think it makes sense to combine the product portfolio. We just have two distinct selling motions and there's a portion of account responsibility that went to the acquired sales team as well. So just -- I don't want to send a message that there are two different organizations, but if we look at -- go through the verticals, there's two different sales motions certainly that come about. Smart cities is one, it's a little bit more industrial. There's a Fed business on that particular sales motion as well. That one does move at a bit of a slower pace, it does have some cyclicality to it with having a stronger September and December quarter and a little bit pullback in the margin June timeframe, and then march towards that fiscal year end for government spending. So that one we could look at it from a DOT standpoint if within Smart cities, that one is definitely slower moving sale cycles are a little bit longer, but then once again, it's a bit stickier. So if we move into where we expect some of the extreme growth to come from in the next several quarters, certainly, SMART Utility would be one of those. If I contrast that with where the growth is coming from today, it's really enterprise and some municipal applications and security vertical. Ryan Koontz: Bravo Paul. Thank you very much. Paul Pickle: Thank you. Operator: This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Paul Pickle for any closing remarks. Paul Pickle: Thank you, Betsy. Thank you for joining us today, and have a great evening. Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.
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Lantronix Inc. Receives Buy Rating Upgrade from Lake Street

Lantronix Inc. (LTRX:NASDAQ) Receives Upgrade from Lake Street

On April 30, 2024, Lake Street upgraded its rating for Lantronix Inc. (LTRX:NASDAQ) to Buy, while adjusting its price target to $7 from the previous $8, as reported by TheFly. This decision came in the wake of Lantronix's impressive third-quarter financial performance for the fiscal year 2024, which was discussed in detail during their earnings conference call on April 29, 2024. The call, covered by Seeking Alpha, featured key company figures including CFO Jeremy Whitaker and CEO Saleel Awsare, alongside analysts from notable firms such as Lake Street and Canaccord Genuity. The discussion focused on the company's financial achievements, including a notable earnings surprise and revenue growth.

Lantronix reported quarterly earnings of $0.11 per share, surpassing the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $0.09 per share and marking a significant improvement from the previous year's earnings of $0.06 per share. This 22.22% earnings surprise is part of a consistent trend, with the company beating consensus EPS estimates in three of the last four quarters. Additionally, Lantronix posted revenues of $41.18 million for the quarter, exceeding expectations by 0.94% and representing a substantial increase from the year-ago revenues of $32.96 million. This performance indicates a strong financial health and operational efficiency within the competitive Zacks Computer - Networking industry.

The company's financial success is further highlighted by its record net revenue of $41.2 million for the third quarter, an 11 percent sequential increase and a 25 percent growth year-over-year. This achievement underscores Lantronix's solid market position and the growing demand for its IoT solutions. On a GAAP basis, the EPS improved to ($0.01) from ($0.08) in the previous year, showing a reduction in losses, while the non-GAAP EPS rose to $0.11 from $0.06, reflecting solid profitability.

Looking forward, Lantronix provided an optimistic business outlook for the fourth fiscal quarter of 2024, expecting revenue to be in the range of $46.5 million to $51.5 million, with non-GAAP EPS projected to be between $0.12 and $0.18 per share. This guidance suggests continued growth momentum and confidence in the company's strategic direction. Lantronix's management plans to host an investor conference call and audio webcast to discuss these results and offer more insights into the company's performance and future plans, providing stakeholders an opportunity to engage directly with the company's leadership.

The positive adjustment in Lantronix's stock rating by Lake Street, coupled with the company's strong financial performance and optimistic future outlook, reflects a growing confidence in Lantronix's market position and its potential for continued success in the IoT solutions sector. With a record revenue and improved earnings for the third quarter of fiscal 2024, Lantronix appears well-positioned for sustained growth and operational efficiency, making it an attractive option for investors.