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BSQUARE Corporation [BSQR] Conference call transcript for 2022 q3


2022-11-10 19:06:01

Fiscal: 2022 q3

Operator: Good day, and welcome to the Bsquare Corporation Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. Today's conference is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Ralph Derrickson, President and CEO. Please go ahead.

Ralph Derrickson: Thank you. Good afternoon, investors and welcome to the Q3 2022 Bsquare quarterly earnings call. Joining me on today's call is Bsquare's CFO and COO, Chris Wheaton. Chris and I appreciate your interest in Bsquare, and thank you for taking the time to be with us this afternoon. Before we begin, we'd like to remind you that this call is being webcast and the recording of the call and the text of our prepared remarks will be available on the Bsquare website. During the call, we'll be making forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current expectations and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. In our commentary, we may also refer to GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to the cautionary text regarding forward-looking statements contained in Bsquare's earnings release issued today and on our website at www.bsquare.com under Investors. All per share amounts discussed today are fully diluted numbers where applicable. We will be taking questions after our prepared remarks. For anyone who would like to arrange a follow-up conversation with us, please send an e-mail to investorrelations@bsquare.com. The mailbox is monitored regularly and you will get a response within one business day. Okay. With that out of the way, let's get started. There are four items on the agenda for our call today. The first item is the Q3 results. Chris will take us through what was a tough revenue quarter for us. After that, I'll discuss the rationale for our planning priorities for 2023 and our shift from growing revenue to achieving breakeven business operations. I'll also cover a question that several shareholders have asked me to address, and that is what we intend to do with our cash reserves. Finally, we will close with a couple of governance and administrative matters. And of course, we'll have time for questions at the end. Chris, let's get into the Q3 results.

Chris Wheaton: Thank you, Ralph, and good afternoon, investors. I'm going to take you relatively quickly to the most relevant financial highlights of the quarter. While these results are not what we'd anticipated, they provide an important backdrop for the change in operating priorities that Ralph just mentioned. Most of my financial comparisons on the call today will be to the second quarter of this year. And if not, I'll indicate where I'm comparing to other periods. I'll start with a review of our income statement and then move to a discussion of our balance sheet, specifically changes in our cash balance and recent short-term investments. Total revenue for the third quarter of 2022 decreased $2 million or 19%. Partner Solutions decreased $1.8 million and Edge to Cloud decreased $200,000. We'll first take a closer look at the results in Partner Solutions. Revenue in that segment decreased 19% quarter-over-quarter, few large orders in each of the first two quarters bolstered our first half results, but we didn't close similarly large orders in the third quarter. Our OS licensing customers continue to site struggles with their supply chains, causing delays in product launches and purchasing decisions. Further, the threat of recession and increasing interest rates seem to have affected ordering patterns as our customers have become exceptionally cautious about inventories and near-term demand for their products. In the Edge to Cloud segment, total revenue in the quarter was $800,000, down $200,000 or 20%. The second quarter included onetime revenue stemming from a contract amendment that renewed the relationship with one of our largest customers. As we noted last quarter, this contract amendment both extended our relationship and stabilized revenue recognition with this customer, albeit at a quarterly rate lower than was recorded in the second quarter. Overall, we have strong relationships with the customers in this segment and have clear visibility to their needs and plans. Turning now to gross profit. Commensurate with the quarterly revenue decline, total gross profit decreased $500,000 driven again by the Partner Solutions segment. Gross margin rate for that segment was 13%, roughly in line with the second quarter, indicating that the $300,000 decrease in gross profit dollars was fundamentally driven by the 19% revenue decline rather than by pricing or mix changes. As we've discussed previously, cost of revenue in the Edge to Cloud segment tends to be fairly stable, resulting in gross profit dollars moving in correlation with revenue. This remained true for the third quarter of 2022 as both segment revenue and gross profit decreased to $200, 000 compared to the prior quarter. In better news, operating expense controls remain a relative bright spot in our financial picture. Total operating expenses in the third quarter were $2.3 million, which was essentially flat to the second quarter. Both of the expense categories on our income statement were flat quarter-over-quarter. Overall, loss from operations for the quarter was $1.2 million compared to the second quarter loss from operations of $700,000. Net loss for the quarter was $1.1 million or $0.05 per diluted share, which was more than the second quarter net loss of $600, 000 or $0.03 per diluted share. The increased loss was directly attributable to the decrease in revenue. Turning now to the balance sheet. I want to call your attention to an investment strategy we implemented during the quarter. We purchased $22.1 million in treasury bills to take advantage of rising interest rates while maintaining a focus on liquidity. Approximately $11.4 million was invested in T-bills with a maturity of less than 90 days and is classified as a cash equivalent on the balance sheet. The remaining investment of $10.7 million had a maturity of just over 90 days and is classified as a short-term investment. This laddered investment strategy will continue into the foreseeable future. The true liquidity of the business and our ability to deploy cash as needed and warranted has not changed. In total, cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash and short-term investments totaled $37.1 million on September 30, 2022. While this reflects a net cash use of $3 million since December 31, 2021, our liquidity position remains healthy, as is the rest of our balance sheet with mostly current receivables and no debt. I'll turn it back to Ralph now to discuss how these financial results have influenced our plans and priorities for 2023.

Ralph Derrickson: Thank you, Chris. There are no two ways about it. Q3 was a difficult quarter. But as I like to say to my team, facts are friendly. So let's talk about those facts and what we're going to do about them. Partner Solutions remains our primary cash-generating business segment. And as such, it will continue to be a focus. This segment has been significantly impacted by supply chain issues and economic conditions that we expect will continue into Q4 and 2023. Earlier this year, we invested in strengthening our customer account management team. For reasons we've covered, these investments haven't yet paid off in top line revenue, but they have allowed us to deepen our customer relationships, giving us better visibility into customers' issues, future product development plans and their requirements. Bsquare has a reputation as the premier provider of technical support and customer service, and we will continue to build on that reputation in 2023. Our Edge to Cloud business provides an important validation of our IoT operating abilities. We have continued to work closely with our large customers this year to build a profitable, sustainable business. In addition to ongoing consulting work, we provide critical IoT operation services for these customers. The segment is also an important source of revenue and cash for us. On our last call in August, Chris took you through an in-depth discussion of our Square One offering, and I reviewed our plans for investing in marketing Square One. Unfortunately, sales pipeline development has been slower than we modeled in our plan for 2022. We believe that there are a combination of factors at play. First, there were delays in our marketing, which we have now resolved, including launching a new website that reflects our enhanced branding and product messaging. Second, we've encountered challenges unseating internally developed, but less robust solutions. And lastly, we are finding that prospective customers require longer evaluation cycles for a product that will become a part of their critical operating infrastructure. We are addressing these issues on a case-by-case basis, but the net result is that sales are taking longer than we assumed in our 2022 planning. Based on early selling experience, we continue to refine our sales and marketing strategy. With our existing OS licensing customers, we are shifting to a partnership selling model. We believe Square One creates a new revenue opportunity for our OS licensing customers and in turn, improves their offering to their customers who are the ones operating and managing systems of devices. For customers new to Bsquare, those who are not running Windows IoT or those who are not -- or those who are operating devices themselves, we will sell Square One directly, emphasizing our multi-OS capabilities as a key differentiator. Given this set of facts, our plans need to change, and so we are shifting our priorities for next year. Our planning priority for 2023 is to achieve breakeven business operations. This shift doesn't mean we'll stop investing in marketing or revenue growth in 2023, but it does mean that the timing and amount of the investment will be subject to both the business opportunity and our financial results. Establishing a breakeven posture will require changes both in the way we acquire new revenue and how we manage our costs. We are working on those changes now as a leadership team to prepare ourselves for the more challenging economic environment we expect in 2023. I'm a pilot, I fly private airplanes. And as a pilot, I'd like to have a plan for the worst case scenario so I'm ready for any eventuality. Fortunately, we don't have a cash problem. Our challenge is being ready to operate successfully with potentially lower and slower growing revenue than we had previously planned. Emerging as a company that can operate within our means will put us in control of our own destiny and position us to exploit opportunities at the intersection of preparation and discipline. Turning our attention now to another question that I know is on shareholders' minds and that is what we intend to do with our large cash reserves. We believe cash and liquidity will be an increasingly scarce commodity as the economic uncertainty continues into 2023. Adopting breakeven as a planning requirement will allow us to preserve cash for investing in organic growth as it is merited. It will also allow us to consider other opportunities for building value. Earlier in 2022, the Board formed a Mergers and Acquisitions Committee to consider strategic alternatives on a case-by-case basis. That effort will continue in Q4 and in 2023, running in parallel with our efforts to grow the business organically. Several shareholders have asked me -- several shareholders have asked me, have we considered a stock repurchase or special dividend. I want to assure you that the Board has been and will continue to consider carefully all options for capital allocation. Decisions regarding capital allocation will be informed by our 2023 plan that is in development now, and I have no decisions to report today. Before we close the call, there are a couple of governance administrative matters that I would like to cover. Our 2022 Annual Shareholder Meeting will take place later this month on Tuesday, November 29. We will return to a June meeting cadence next year with the 2023 Annual Shareholder Meeting scheduled for Thursday, June 15, 2023, as was announced in our press release and 8-K filed today. On October 18, we announced that we had entered into a cooperation agreement with Richard Karp, a large shareholder. As a part of that, we agreed to put forth a plan to declassify the Board of Directors. Plan will seek to eliminate board classes in a phased manner over three years, resulting in one year terms for all directors. We will present that plan at the 2023 Annual Meeting of Shareholders. It is not being presented at and has no effect on the Annual Meeting of Shareholders scheduled to occur later this month. Also as a part of the agreement, Mr. Karp has withdrawn his director nominees for the 2022 Annual Meeting. The declassification of the Board will bring us in line with governance best practices, and I'm optimistic we will succeed where prior efforts fail to get sufficient shareholder support. Okay. With that, operator, please open the line for questions because we don't often get many questions on our calls, I'll remind you that if you would like to arrange a follow-up conversation, please send an e-mail to investorrelations@bquare.com. Operator, please open the line.

Operator: Our first question comes from Steve Billy, Private Investor. Please go ahead.

Unidentified Analyst : Tough quarter for you guys and quite frankly, what I can tell pretty much everyone else. So on that note, I really have two questions. What -- I saw you guys kind of started to market to square one more so than you have in the past. What's intriguing is your partnership plan to meet potentially in I guess what I really want to know is what is the competitive advantage that, that product has over something else that they or you would be selling?

Ralph Derrickson: Yes. Steve, great question. So what we're finding in our selling is that most of our OS licensing customers, not all, but most build the devices, and then they sell them to their customers who, in turn, then operate the systems of devices. We thought that they would be wanting to offer Square One as an extension of their brand. But what, in fact, we're finding is that they're interested in introducing us and selling in partnership to sell that service to their customer. So we see an opportunity to create revenue for them and stickiness for their customers and improve their product offering. But instead of selling to our existing OS customers, we're selling to their customers. The big advantage I think that this gives us is that these are relationships that are pre-existing. We know our OS licensing customers and they know their customers. So we're building on a relations of trust with people that have been working together for some period of time. I think the other big differentiators we're finding is many of our customers are considering moving from not just Windows IoT, but other operating systems and multi-OS environments. And in some cases, customers have come to us specifically about being able to run in a multi-OS configuration.

Unidentified Analyst : Okay. Second question, it really has to do more with market awareness. I mean, you guys have been around for over 25 years. You've worked with over 600 customers in the last two years alone, you've managed millions of devices. You have what, 40-something employees. You're still doing 30-something to 40 in revenue. I can buy your company and you'd have to write me a check for $15 million based on current valuation. To me, that's absurd, but that's -- the market is going to go it at once, obviously. With that being said, when you guys -- if or when you guys do get traction on what you're selling, do you have any plans on some marketing awareness, investor relations, hitting the road, pounding the pavement to tell your story.

Ralph Derrickson: Yes. Great question, Steve. And you know how -- you and I have spoken in the past and I feel about how we're valued. I mean, obviously, you can do the math, given our cash position and our number of shares we seem to be trading below our value. I think, most importantly, and I think -- I want to reiterate something. We think we have something that will work. We're not going to pound our chest too much until it is working. And so I've been -- and perhaps too conservative in that. But my tendency is I'd rather get some things done, some wins under my belt and then talk about those wins as opposed to talking to features. I think Bsquare in recent history, certainly before I arrived, there was a lot of discussion about futures. And I like the present to speak loudly, and then I'll amplify that as it starts to grow. So yes, I would love to hit the road, but I'm going to probably hold fire until I got more customers that I can talk about and more good news to talk about. And then I think that's absolutely appropriate. But I'm open to suggestions, and I'm always willing to listen to what shareholders think about, how quickly I should do that.

Unidentified Analyst : No, no, I think you're playing the right as far as that's concerned. We have a story. You do need to tell it at some point, though. Hopefully, at some point, you will have a story. That's it. Thank you for the question. I appreciate it.

Ralph Derrickson: Thanks, Steve.

Operator: It appears there are no further questions at this time. And I'll turn the conference back for any additional or closing remarks.

Ralph Derrickson: Thank you, and thank you investors, for taking the time to participate in our call. We appreciate your interest in Bsquare, and we look forward to seeing you at the shareholder meeting on November 29. Thank you.

Operator: This concludes today's call. Thank you for your participation, and you may now disconnect.