KULR Technology Group, Inc.
Q4 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Published:

  • Operator:
    All right, everybody. Thanks so much for your patience and waiting on the line. We will now begin the KULR Technology Group Fourth quarter and Full Year 2021 Earnings Call for today, Thursday, March 17 2022. Let me give you an overview of the phone call. The call is going to consist of opening statements from Michael Mo, CEO, Keith Cochran, President and COO, and Simon Westbrook, CFO. The company will then answer questions from a group of analysts that have joined us today. But before we get this call started, I'm going to read the Safe Harbor statements. Many of you know the Safe Harbor statements can be found at the bottom of every press release, as well as on the filings for the company. Now statements on this call do not constitute an offer to sell or solicitation of offers to buy any securities of any entity. This call may contain certain forward-looking statements based on the company's current expectations, forecasts and assumptions that involve risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking statements made on this call are based on the information available to the company as of the date hereof. Actual results may differ materially from those stated or implied on this call. Now, if you want to learn more again, find the filings for the company on the SEC, as well as at the bottom of the press releases for the company. At this time. I would like to introduce Michael Moe to the call. Michael, the call is yours.
  • Michael Mo:
    Yeah. Hey, thank you, Stuart. I appreciate all of you for joining us today on our Q4 and Full Year 2021 earnings press release call. I'm happy to report that 2021 was a pivotal and significant year for KULR in our growth path. We continued our strong expansion in the fourth quarter, revenue increased by 267% year-over-year to $766,000. For the whole year of 2021, we achieved a total revenue of over $2.4 million, which is 287% growth over 2020. We also had approximately $14.9 million of cash on the balance sheet at the end of 2021 compared to approximately $8.9 million of 2020. These financial results have put KULR in its strongest financial position in its history, and has build a solid foundation to continue our growth in 2022 and beyond. During 2021, we made significant investments in our people, our infrastructure and product development. We expanded our executive management team. We grew our workforce by over four fold. And we moved into a new facility that's three times larger. Additionally, we launched a number of new product development efforts, including KULR-Tech Safe Case, CellCheck, cell screening, automation system, and a new battery architecture development. All these product launches and developments are progressing well. The Safe Case product is gaining significant traction in the marketplace through our partnership with retrieve technologies. With the recent acquisition of Battery Solutions, they're the largest end-to-end battery recycler in the United States. We believe Safe Case would drive significant business growth for KULR in 2022, supporting the battery recycling, battery storage and transportation markets. We're very excited about the growth opportunities in 2022. We see energy storage and battery recycling as the key growth drivers for us in the commercial market segments. Our partnership with Volta Energy Products positions us to deliver significant growth in the commercial energy storage market. Continue that theme KULR will support products and services in support of Lockheed Martin Advanced Energy Systems for the DoD customers. In addition, we expect to see customer launches which incorporate KULRs proprietary PPR design in electric aviation and micro mobility. In the battery recycling and transportation market, we're expanding our Safe Case product line to facilitate the storage and transportation of new and used batteries for e-mobility, power tools, micro mobility, such as e-bikes and consumer electronics, as companies and governments around the world pledged to meet net zero emissions over the next few decades. KULR products and technologies are uniquely positioned to accelerate the adoption of clean, and sustainable energy products that propelled the migration to a global circular economy. In 2022, we expect to see continued growth in our thermal management business with government agencies and DoD customers. Our long-term strategy has been to co-develop cutting-edge thermal management technologies alongside NASA, the US Department of Energy, the US DoD, and while working in close collaboration with regulatory agencies, and international testing organizations. Our goal is to incorporate these technologies into regulatory roadmaps that can serve multiple mass market applications. As we deploy these technologies into markets, such as energy storage, and electric transportation, we look to leverage our IP across multiple verticals and capitalize on multiple revenue streams to accelerate revenue our growth. We expect this flywheel effect to continue and possibly accelerate in 2022. All in all, we are very excited about this year and expect our growth to continue into 2023. Next, KULR, President, CEO, Keith Cochran will give an update on our business operations. Keith, please.
  • Keith Cochran:
    Thanks, Michael. And thanks all for attending today's call. We appreciate that. As Michael said, we relocated in October of 2021 to a new facility located at 4863 Shawline Street, San Diego, California. The facility is three times larger than our previous facility, with adequate room to support our forecasts and personal growth, and new automated battery cell testing capabilities that we'll launch in Q3 of '22. Additionally, we installed independently enclosed areas to support the machine shop, testing lab, battery lab, and FTI flocking lab. We have implemented a standard for the entire facility and will seek ISO 9001 Certification in June of '22. With regards to the automated battery cell testing mentioned earlier, KULR began working in Q2 of '21 to support the stringent requirements of battery cell testing for NASA and the Department of Defense. This platform has been designed to meet the entire specification of NASA work instruction O37 battery testing requirements. Automated equipment is modular, and the initial processing capability is 500,000 cells annually. Based on the current commitments for the equipment, we intend to have the system installed and validated in Q3 of 22. I also mentioned earlier about employee growth. In January of 21, KULR had 10 full time employees as of March 1, '22, the organization has grown to 55 permanent employees, with an additional 44 people working on core projects via contract. KULR many open requisitions today to support our growth outlook, primarily in sales, engineering and technicians. We are pleased that we have been able to hire top talent to continue accelerating the growth of KULR platforms. Some of our recent hires include Dr. William - Will Walker, as Director of Engineering, and Peter Hughes, as Technical Marketing Engineer, Battery Applications. Both individuals have already had distinguished careers with NASA, and now bring their collective knowledge to KULR to support our renewable energy platforms. KULR will continue to add additional permanent employees as needed by using outsource leverage where it's appropriate. An example of outsource leverage for KULR is cybersecurity. In Q1 of '21, KULR engaged with management solutions to enhance our IT infrastructure and improve all aspects of cybersecurity. As a subcontractor for Department of Defense programs, it is vital that KULR has state-of the art IT systems and controls. We believe the best path based on our current scale is to outsource this activity to a professional IP services organization. The result of this activity has been an estimated improvement of our net score of over 140 points. This critical improvement opens additional opportunities for KULR in support of those DoD programs. Next, KULR CFO, Simon Westbrook will give an update on our financial highlights. Simon?
  • Simon Westbrook:
    Yeah. Thanks, Keith. Well, we invested heavily in strengthening our team and building out our infrastructure this year, as we prepare for a ramp up in growth of our future business. This was reflected in our results for both the fourth quarter of 2021 and the whole year ended December 31, 2021. For the quarter, our revenue increased from $208,000 to $766,000 in the comparable quarters. Our gross margin increased from $166,000 to $536,000. Operating expenses increased from$845 million to $4.5 million, which included a $1.4 million non-cash stock compensation charge. And net loss increased from $859,000 to $4.1 million. And our net loss per share went from $0.01 to $0.04 per share. For the whole year ended December 31, revenue increased from $624,000 to $2.4 million. Our gross margin increased from $436,000 to $1.5 million. Our operating expenses increased from $2.8 million to $12.9 million, which included $4.2 million of non-cash stock compensation expense. Our net loss increased from $2.9 million to $11.8 million. And our net loss per share increased from $0.03 to $0.15 per share. At the end of the year, we have $14.9 million in cash compared with $8.9 million at December 31 last year, which leaves us well positioned to expand operations, support new business and fund ongoing product investment and development in 2022. Thank you. Back to Stuart.
  • Operator:
    All right. Thank you, Simon. At this time, we are going to welcome to this call. We've got Jake Sekelsky, he's from Alliance Global Partners. He's a Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst. Jake, you're on the call. You have a couple of questions. Please read out your first question for us.
  • Jake Sekelsky:
    Yeah. Hey, Michael, Keith, and Simon, thanks for taking my questions. Just looking at margins here, we've seen some cost inflation across the board in various industries over the last quarter or two. Can you maybe just walk us through some of the inputs you're most sensitive to from a cost standpoint and maybe touch on any steps that you think you can take to mitigate further margin pressure, really more general cost inflation?
  • Michael Mo:
    Yeah…
  • Simon Westbrook:
    Okay…
  • Michael Mo:
    Go ahead, Simon.
  • Simon Westbrook:
    Yeah, no problem. So, obviously, you know, we do have a global supply chain, transportation costs are sensitive for us. Materials, pricing is also sensitive for us. As such, we've taken some mitigating factors. Now, we have begun the process of relocating some of our outsource manufacturing, down into Mexico, we found very good supply chain partners there. And we're rapidly making the move to bring those partners up to improve our - not only logistics cost, but also the lead time flexibility for our customers in the end. Hope that helps.
  • Jake Sekelsky:
    Yes. That's helpful. And then just looking at SG&A. I mean, you guys have obviously done quite a bit of hiring as you've been in growth mode over the last year or so. Do you expect these levels to remain somewhat constant throughout 2022? It sounds like you guys are obviously focused on growth this year, as well, as revenue can continues to ramp?
  • Simon Westbrook:
    You know, Jake, as I mentioned in my prepared comments, we – we'll definitely continue to grow our organization. But we're going to do that in a combination of internal hires, as well as outsource leverage. In order that makes sense, we choose to do some of that outsource leverage. So I think this past year for us has been about building the bones of the company. You know, we've added VP of Sales and entire HR program, and management system in place, brought in a lot of senior engineering talent. All of this has created a really outstanding portfolio of platforms that now are being realized, primarily starting in the second half of the year for us, we're really see the fruits of all of that labor. So I think we've done a lot of the heavy lifting as far as the senior infrastructure personnel-wise for the company. And so we'll see probably a little bit of tailing off there, but we'll definitely see growth there in sales personnel, and you know, technicians and also some of our engineering, especially on the automation side.
  • Operator:
    All right, so next we have Litchfield we've got, Theodore O'Neill from Litchfield Hills Research. He is a research analyst. Theodore, welcome to the call. You have a couple of questions for the management team.
  • Theodore O'Neill:
    Thanks. So my first question, I think you just about covered it, previous question here. But you've been doing a lot of hiring and I was wondering, do you expect 2022 expenses to go up as much as they did in 2021? And how do you see your business growth to catching up with these cost increases?
  • Michael Mo:
    Yeah. So, hey, Theodore, great to hear from you. So as Keith was saying, 2021 was a lot of heavy lifting, you know, hire of a lot of engineering talent, build the foundation. We really make very significant investment in our people, infrastructure, manufacturing process and product development. There's a very high percentage of, you know, year-over-year growth or increase on the expense side. We don't - at this moment, we don't expect to see percentage growth or increase the cost size, because a lot of heavy lifting, the foundation has been built. And then we expect the revenue growth to continue in 2022, and 2023. And the sooner versus later, the two will catch up, and then, you know, we'll put us in a better or really good financial position.
  • Theodore O'Neill:
    Okay. And on the automated battery testing market, can you give us a look into how you differentiate - differentiate your products, versus current ones be used to test cells currently in production?
  • Michael Mo:
    Yeah, sure, I can certainly do that. You know, I think there's a lot of automotive manufacturers out there today, that do have internal testing for cells. You know, they test a somewhat limited parameter for those cells before they put those into packs for or the EV markets. You know, with that said, the KULR solution and specifications are designed to ensure that every cell has been tested and proven to meet very, very rigid standards of operation for mission-critical applications. And I think that's a big differentiator. The three battery cells go into applications whereby they, they just simply can't sell or the mission becomes a great risk. That's one thing you know, to have your car break down on the side of the road. It's all different problems when you're in flight space or underwater, for example, in the submersible. Also, the KULR solution is able to be programmed customized to support the various testing needs of a wide variety of OEMs and government agencies, as a service operating versus the in house solutions use, you know, by automotive manufacturers. So I would say, you know, KULR, you know, it's kind of a little different as well, because we track all of the testing information at a cell-by-cell level. So our customers at any time can dial into our system, and see the performance of the cells that they've sent through our process. If they ever do have some type of an event, they're able to go back and see exactly what all the parameters were of that particular so and then we can bring in the OEM manufacturer that sell for deeper dive discussions with data.
  • Operator:
    All right. Well, now we're going to be joined by principal equity analyst at Tablets Brothers. That's Juan Noble, he's got a few questions. John, the floor is yours. The call is yours.
  • Juan Noble:
    Hi, and thanks for taking the questions in this call. Congratulations on fourth quarter and year results. Obviously, commercialization looks like it's ramping up nicely. And just a few questions, Michael, or whoever could answer this. As far as you know, does Volta's still planned to bring between 750 to 1000 battery storage units to market in 2022. And are they looking still to increase that up to 50,000 units in 2023?
  • Michael Mo:
    Yeah, hi. Yeah, the answer is yes. They're very bullish on the ramp up plan for 2022 and 2023. As a matter of fact, I think we announced in January, that they received $100 million in equity financing, which include a couple of our strategic investors, National Grid and Sunbelt Rentals. National Grid is one of the largest utility companies and Sunbelt Rentals is like $11 billion equipment rental company. And now as these companies as are, you know, shareholders and strategic customers, we're actually more confident in their point of views energy storage product by incorporating the KULRs, you know, PPR design, the product has the highest safety rating in the industry, and we believe it will be a leader in the market. So they're very bullish on the product.
  • Juan Noble:
    Great, that's good to hear. And what potential do you believe your acquisition of the IP rights from Centropy could have on future sales via products and high power computing applications. Obviously, with Bitcoin and crypto mining, that's a very big area. Just wanted to grasp, you know, what type of market this could be. And where do you see yourselves with this and say, a few years from now?
  • Michael Mo:
    Yeah, no, that's a great question. You know, the acquisition like this, this kind of IP acquisition is really kind of the sweet spot for KULR. We really want to acquire core high performance IPs, into incorporating touring existing platform to kind of enhance the performance across multiple applications, not just on the, you know, high performance power computing in the Bitcoin mining space, but you can incorporate into our existing aerospace and defense applications as well. So we see that there is a lot of applications for that. And we start to actually acquire more IPs along that line to go both horizontal and vertically in the stack. And the goal is really to build the end-to-end, the best of the breed products solution to the market, you know. So that's you - you'll see us continue to execute on that strategy.
  • Juan Noble:
    Okay, great. And just one final question, could you talk a little about the market potential you believe is possible from the US Department of Transportation's permit authorizing your KULR Tech Safe case for battery transport?
  • Keith Cochran:
    Yeah. Hey, Michael, I'll take that one. Yeah. Hi, Juan, thank you for your question. I think I've hit on this a little bit in the past, but let me expand a little further. Right now, the total market for lithium ion battery recycling, say in 2021 was about $5 billion. But it's growing at a 22% CAGR. So, you know, we expect that market to grow to $24 billion by 2030. With a lot of government incentives, you know, behind that. And the recycling industry provides a wide range of services, including facilitating the reclaim of damage, defective and recall batteries, which is what our Safe Tech cases provide protection against. So our DoT special permits make the KULR solution perfect for these types of applications. And this is where we are seeing really solid gains in our business and outlook.
  • Operator:
    Well, All right, that wraps up our questions for the call today. I do want to point out once again, an entire recording of this call will be archived on the KULR Technology website. And again, you can reach out to the company directly at that website, as well with your investor questions. You've been listening to the KULLR Technology Group fourth quarter and full year 2021 earnings call. Thank you so much for joining us. Thank you to the management team, Keith, Michael and Simon, as well as our analysts that joined us here today. And most of all, thank you to the investors and shareholders for your belief and support in our company. Have a wonderful rest of your week.