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Lantronix [LTRX] Conference call transcript for 2022 q1


2022-05-04 19:48:08

Fiscal: 2022 q3

Operator: Good afternoon and welcome to the Lantronix Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions, to ask your question . Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Rob Adams, head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead

Rob Adams: Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. And thanks for joining the third quarter of fiscal 2022 conference call. Joining us on the call today are Paul Pickle, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Jeremy Whitaker, our Chief Financial Officer. A live and archived webcast of today's call will be available on the company's website. In addition, you can find the call in details for the phone replay in today's earnings release. 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 filings, such as the 10-K and 10-Q. Lantronix undertakes no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward-looking statements to reflect future events or circumstances. Please refer to the news release and the financial information in the Investor Relations section of our website for additional details that will supplement management commentary. 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 reporting, and presents reconciliations for the non-GAAP financial measures that we use. With that, I'll turn the call over to Jeremy Whitaker, our Chief Financial Officer. Jeremy.

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 third quarter of fiscal 2022 before I hand it over to Paul for his commentary. For the third quarter of fiscal 2022, we reported revenue of $32.3 million, an increase of 89%, when compared to $17.1 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2021, and down 4% sequentially as compared to $33.7 million reported in the second quarter of fiscal 2022. The year-on-year increase was driven by organic growth of 32%, in addition to contribution from our recent acquisition of the TN companies. GAAP gross margin. It was 42.1% for the third quarter of fiscal 2022 as compared with 42.9% in the prior quarter. The sequential decline in gross margin was primarily due to increased supply chain costs, in addition to product mix. While logistics and supply chain costs were higher than our initial expectations, due to significant disruptions and the Asia-Pacific region experienced during the quarter, we navigated these issues, delivered revenue above our initial expectations, and largely met customer needs. Selling general and administrative expenses for the third quarter of Fiscal 2022, were $8.3 million, compared with $5 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2021, and $8.9 million for the second quarter of fiscal 2022. Research and development expenses for the third quarter of fiscal 2022 were $4.5 million compared with $2.5 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2021, and $4.3 million for the second quarter of fiscal 2022. The year-on-year increases in SG&A and R&D were largely driven by the acquisition of the TN companies at the beginning of this fiscal year. GAAP net loss was $3.2 million, or $0.09 per share, during the third quarter of fiscal 2022, compared to a GAAP net loss of 1.2 million, or $0.04 per share, during the third quarter of fiscal 2021. The increase in GAAP net loss was primarily due to earn-out consideration and non-cash charges related to our most recent acquisition. non-GAAP net income was $2.8 million, or $0.08 per share, during the third quarter of fiscal 2022, compared to non-GAAP net income of $1.5 million, or $0.05 per share, during the third quarter of fiscal 2021. After adjusting for our recent capital raise, which impacted non-GAAP EPS by approximately $0.02 per share, this quarter, we are meeting our post-acquisition quarterly target of $0.10 per share. Now, turning to the balance sheet. We ended the March 2022 quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $22.8 million, a decrease of $13.6 million from the prior quarter. Working capital decreased to $51.8 million as of March 31st, 2022, as compared with $62 million in the prior quarter. The decrease in cash and working capital was primarily due to the use of cash to pay down a high interest loan in January 2022. Net inventories were $33.2 million as of March 31st, 2022, compared with $29.4 million as of December 31st 2021. Now, turning to our annual outlook, which includes approximately 11 months of contribution from our most recent acquisition. Once again, we exited the quarter with record backlog and strong customer demand. Based upon our current outlook, we expect to see a much stronger fourth quarter. And as a result, we are narrowing the range and increasing our annual revenue guidance. For the full fiscal year 2022, we are now targeting annual revenue of a $125 million to a $129 million, representing growth in the range of 75% to 80%. In addition, we are adjusting our annual earnings target, which includes the full share impact of our recent capital raise, and expect non-GAAP EPS in the range of $0.31 to $0.37 per share, representing growth of 64% to 95%. We continue to believe that without supply chain constraints, we could deliver annual revenue and non-GAAP EPS above the high end of our updated guidance. I'll now turn the call over to Paul.

Paul Pickle: Thank you, Jeremy. I'm pleased to report another solid quarter to our shareholders here today. While our view of component commitment early in the March quarter coupled with expectations for typical governments customer, seasonality pointed so soft in Q3. Thanks to the hard work of our operations team here at Lantronix, we managed to deliver over $32 million in revenue, down only 4% sequentially, and we booked well above that rate. Borrowing supply chain constraints, demand in the March quarter would've been sequential growth. To that point, shipments late to customer expectations in Q3 totaled just over $7 million, up from $5.7 million as compared to the second quarter. Q3 was uniquely challenging in this regard with the large regional disruptions in Asia-Pacific region. And even where direct factory dependencies did not exist, we still experienced challenges in, both secured components import, export, logistics routes. These disruptions created both significant operational challenges and costs, but I am pleased to say that we were able to largely mitigate the disruption and deliver. We view these costs as transitory in a more normalized environment. I am especially pleased to report March results because they were driven by strong organic growth on the the order of 32% year-over-year. This is happening for a number of reasons. First of all, we're now three years into the transformation of Lantronix and many of the basic blocking and tackling assumptions we set forth to improve upon three-years ago are beginning to show results. We're going to market better. We are more in tune with our customer and our customers ' needs, and we're doing a better job in closing those sales. Secondly, in transforming Lantronix through acquisition, we have acquired pieces of the puzzle necessary to deliver our customers the technologies they need in order to better capitalize on the promise of IoT, and accelerate our growth as we look toward our future. And finally, we're fortunate in that the age of IoT is being realized, where the spurred were accelerated by COVID and the resulting remote work environment, many of us have come to know and enjoy were necessitated by supply chain disruptions which have forced companies to rest every bit of efficiency possible out of their operations, or perhaps even the roll out of 5G networks are design activity is such that we see continued growth opportunity on the horizon for Lantronix. With that, let's look at our quarter with a little more granularity. While we expected the March quarter to be down sequentially, some product lines did grow in Q3, including our industrial switching products, which grew almost 10% sequentially, and what is normally in more seasonal quarter. We also saw good growth in the quarter from network interface products and optical communication interfaces. Compute modules, after posting strong results in Q2 were down as expected in March due to component availability, but importantly, professional services were up almost 30% from the prior quarter, and development kit sales almost doubled from the prior quarter. These two items are leading indicators for our Intelligent Edge Compute business and point to strong future revenue growth. Conversely, our remote environment management solutions were down sequentially after several strong sequential quarters growth. And as has been the case historically, some quarter-to-quarter volatility in this product lines is expected. All in, we expect a return to growth and anticipate delivering a strong double-digit growth year. Looking at our Intelligent Edge Compute module business, we expect a return to growth in our fourth quarter, and we look for Edge Compute to be an important growth driver of Lantronix as we look to FY2023 and beyond. We continue to gain traction in this technology area, adding to the design-ins we've spoken to in the past. And looking to fiscal 2023, we continue to expect -- we will begin shipping the now Quantum Edge device as we have stated in the past, this large design win, which we have conservatively estimated contribution at $10 million to $20 million in revenue for fiscal '23 alone. Takes us a long way towards achieving our 20% plus annual organic growth target. In addition, we have received an award for an additional 20,000 units for this platform, more than doubling the previous award. We continue to believe in additional upside potential for Intelligent Edge applications at Lantronix in the years to come. While the near-term has its challenges in the form of supply chain disruptions, and related component pricing variations, we continue to view these as transitory. We will navigate these issues as we deliver on the promise of IoT for the benefit of the shareholders. I'll now turn it over to the operator for Q&A.

Operator: We will now begin the question-and-answer session. . The first question comes from Michael Walkley of Canaccord Genuity. Please go ahead.

Michael Walkley: Great. Congratulations on a strong quarter, and thanks for taking my question.

Paul Pickle: Thank you, Mike.

Michael Walkley: Paul, just starting with the now with the 20,000 additional units ordered, how does that impact that $10 million to $20 million outlooks? Does that put the higher than the range or those 20,000 units more follow-on into future years?

Paul Pickle: Yes, that's a great question. I would say, at this point, we would say it's probably at the higher end of that range. The details are really associated with customers roll out. There is one additional vendor dependency that we have. One of vendors has to deliver some boards. They're experiencing some difficulty and. So this production is expected to go forward in stages. So at this point, we understand what it is the customer would like. There are schedules a lot more aggressive than what we belief that they can execute on. So we're still being a little bit cautious in terms of the roll-out, how we see that revenue rolling out over the next fiscal '23. But it could be towards the high end of that range.

Michael Walkley: Great. That's great to hear. Follow-up question. Can you update us on your strong relationship with Qualcomm? You made some comments about good demand for Intelligent Edge going forward. Can you just update us on that pipeline and your ability to procure supply to support your opportunity funnel.

Paul Pickle: Sure. The relationship's going really well with Qualcomm. We had several meetings with different geographies within Qualcomm to talk about expanding the relationship and chasing more opportunity. And I think they've seen in us a unique ability to make customer applications come alive with the software that we developed that runs on their platform in addition to the hardware that we put together for our customers. So it's going really well. I think this is the area that we really want build -- to continue to build a core expertise, computing platforms and the architectures that Qualcomm is pushing will define what Edge hardware looks like in the future. And we definitely want to be a part of that process on a go-forward basis. So it's going really well at this point.

Michael Walkley: Okay. Thanks. Last question for me and I will jump back in the queue. Just, you mentioned 7 million that you weren't able to ship up, but sounds like you did a good job working through tough supply chain issues that are well-known out there. Can you just give us a little more color of what are the areas that are still stretched for problematic from a lead time standpoint and how you see it, maybe improving over year June quarter and the second half of the calendar year?

Paul Pickle: Yeah. So this quarter we had some significant upside to component availability in the December quarter. March, we didn't have the commitments at the time of the earnings call, but we were able to get some additional supply from Qualcomm. They were very supportive on that front, which did get us some additional revenue. Having said that, some of the additional upside, we should have been able to shift. We weren't able to shift because we don't necessarily have a manufacturer that was necessarily isolated. Then it is a major import, export hub. We actually saw a cargo carrier set up a new route. But the 747 going from Shenzhen to Hong Kong, if you know anything about geography, that's a ludicrous proposition, but this past quarter, we just had extreme difficulty moving items. So lot of high-touch that made components a bit harder to get a hold of. Specifically to your question, where we see difficulty, I think we see a little bit of easing on the digital side. Processors, Qualcomm has always been supportive, but into this quarter we didn't have as many as we would like. Memory is coming in line, both Flash, CDR. Mixed signals, still a bit tough. Some of the ethernet switches, still a bit tough. But as it relates to light at the end of the tunnel, we're starting to even see some RTCs that are in very, very short supply. We're starting to get committed scheduling for manufacturers in the January time frame. So it does feel like we're turning that corner. However, Q3 was bit unique in terms of its challenges.

Michael Walkley: Great. Well, congrats again on the strong results. And I'll jump back in the queue.

Paul Pickle: Thank you.

Operator: The next question comes from Christian Schwab of Craig Hallum Capital Group. Please go ahead.

Christian Schwab: Great. Great execution of this environment. A couple of quick questions. I'm sorry, I jumped on a little bit late. Did we say we now have a 20,000-unit order in hand from Did I hear that correctly?

Paul Pickle: It's an additional award. So the previous award was 15,000 units, 1,000 prototypes, 15,000 preliminary, or I should say, preliminary production runs, 1,000 units of pilot build. And so that 15,000 has now been taken to 35,000. So we got to an additional 20,000 unit award for production in the quarters to come.

Christian Schwab: Okay. And is that roughly at the same dollar content as you guys have talked about before? I think roughly at about $1,500 plus or minus.

Paul Pickle: Yes, I think that's what we're anticipating. The pilot run is a bit higher at $1,900 content, but we would expect as we entered more volume production to be able to reduce some of that. We're spot buying for some of the early builds, and we're trying to stage as many orders as we can for the production run. And we would anticipate to start that preliminary production run, to start recognize revenue in the December quarter, and then ramp up to target volumes after that.

Christian Schwab: Great. And I know we're all hoping for lead times on components of logistics to eventually normalize, but did you guys disclose exactly what your backlog was at the end of the quarter?

Paul Pickle: We did not. I can say that we did have record starting backlog for Q4. We had a record in terms of quarter-ending total backlog. We had -- we stated we added a significant or a book-to-bill -- bookings number that was considerably higher than our current quarters revenue. So -- But if you wanted to total backlog, it's -- at this point in time, it's on the order of where we were last quarter, but the late to CRD number bid tick up a little bit. We should've had -- last quarter, we had a late customer request data, $5.7 million. It went just above $7 million this time around. So we should've had about another $1.4 million, $1.3 million of revenue in the quarter that we weren't able to get out the door. So that late to CRD did move up a little bit.

Christian Schwab: Great. And then, my last question, as it relates to future growth, you've talked about before it being very confident in 20% CAGR outlook, which you would hope would be conservative dependent a public rollout of some of these big awards. Now, given potential bit more clarity on those awards, I understand supply chain logistics. I think everybody listening does. But that being said, is that still the baseline number that you feel very confident in? Or could that be starting to prove a little bit too conservative?

Paul Pickle: That's a tough question, Christian. If I do the roll-up today, I'm too conservative, but if I factor in a little bit of moderation in terms of some of the older products. And I think that's prudent. I think I'm probably on the conservative side, but we are talking about 15 months outlook at this point. And so we'll give updated fiscal year guidance at the next quarter, but we do feel pretty good about that 20% number at this point in time. And as my old boss used to say, you have to shoot above the hoop in order to get the ball in the basket. So we're definitely shooting above that, but we're still putting together an outlook that we think is prudent.

Christian Schwab: Great. Congratulations to get on a solid quarter. Thanks.

Paul Pickle: Thank you.

Operator: . The next question comes from Chad TiVo of Needham. Please go ahead.

Chad Tivo: Hey, it's Chad on for Ryan Koontz, just on margins in the quarter, I think last quarter their down sequentially primarily due to a strong, Intelligent Edge quarter. It sound like supply chain they have take a better a bigger impact this quarter. Is there any way to quantify that impact?

Paul Pickle: Yeah, I think if you -- if we look at our -- we gave a PPV number for last fiscal year. So on the order of 2. -- I think the number I gave previously was about $2.1 million and $71 million in revenue. The reality is, it was probably more on the order of $2.4. I think if you think in terms of we're shipping a lot more revenue, but in terms of percentage of revenue, it's uptick slightly. It would be easily the impact this quarter that we had was,, I guess just above 200 basis points. If you look at the total costs is substantially higher, and I think on a positive, we're managing the OpEx in order to compensate for that. And we've been doing slightly better than we had originally projected on the integration of the two companies. If we go back to our August 2nd close and the performance that we said we get out of the two P&L's, we're still delivering that a number ahead of expectation, and we still have around the July time frame to do a couple of additional integration maneuvers, the last pieces of it to get some additional costs out. So I think we're running a bit ahead of leverage in the P&L where we expect to be, so that's a positive. We're managing the OpEx to compensate for some of the pricing pressure that we're experiencing from having to go up to the stalk market. But if you said it was a couple a 100 basis points, you wouldn't be that far off.

Chad Tivo: Awesome. That's very helpful. Thanks, guys.

Operator: This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Paul Pickle for closing remarks.

Paul Pickle: Thank you, Danielle. Thank you for joining us today and have a great week.

Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.