Energous Corporation
Q2 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Published:

  • Operator:
    Good day, and welcome to the Energous Second Quarter 2021 Financial Results Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mike Bishop with the company's Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
  • Mike Bishop:
    Thank you, Andrew, and welcome, everyone. Before we begin, I would like to remind participants that during today's call the company will make forward-looking statements. These statements, whether in prepared remarks or during the Q&A session are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties that are detailed in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Except as otherwise required by federal securities laws, Energous disclaims any obligation or undertaking to publicly release updates or revisions to the forward-looking statements contained herein or elsewhere to reflect changes in expectations with regard to those events, conditions and circumstances.
  • Brian Sereda:
    Thanks Mike, and good afternoon. I’m Brian Sereda, Chief Financial Officer. And before I begin, I'd like to point out two press releases that hit the Wire just after close today. The first, announcing organizational changes in Energous and the second press release announcing our Q2 operating results ended March 31, 2021. Joining me today is Cesar Johnston, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer and Acting CEO; and Bill Mannina, our VP Finance and Corporate Controller, who will assume the role as acting CFO next month, as I transitioned to an advisory role. In addition to organizational changes, the company also announced Kathy Bayless, joining our Board as an Independent Director and Member of the Audit Committee. Continuing with the discussion from last quarter, the goal of distance charging are sending meaningful and sufficient energy at distance under global regulatory constraints has been the goal of the company since it began life as a public company in 2014. Since then significant technical and regulatory progress has transpired over the last several years. And we are now seeing the potential of the intersection of distance power transfer requirements and IoT powering big data via smart sensors and tag-like devices designed to collect more relevant and monetizable data that is not feasible through NFC or RFID legacy devices constrained by distance and lack of necessary communication protocols. In addition, thanks to advancements of the technology and recent regulatory approvals, distance charging and energy harvesting is becoming a reality and will bring new benefits to other industrial, medical, defense and consumer verticals. And as we stated in our previous call, we continue to expect real examples of distance based power transfer entering the market by the end of this fiscal year. We also expect that previously announced customers incorporating our contact-based solutions should finally appear in the market by the end of this year. Just a quick recap on the operating results for the second quarter ended June 30, before we get into the details. We continue to see modest progress in terms of revenue growth, closing Q2 with $185,000 in revenue versus $145,000 in Q1. Total Q2 GAAP expenses were $11.2 million versus $8.6 million in Q1. The difference primarily result of non-cash stock compensation charges in the quarter and Bill will provide a breakdown of our financial results later in the call.
  • Cesar Johnston:
    Thank you, Brian, and good afternoon, everyone. We believe that Energous continues to be the leader in the development of next-generation wireless charging technologies, using radio frequency wireless power transfer or WPT techniques. Our vision for safe high RF transmit power at a longer range continues to expand. And it is at the core of our technology roadmap that we believe is in line with various markets such as industrial, retail and medical IoT, which will require such a solution beginning the next few quarters and far into the future. From the last quarter, our patent portfolio grew by four patents to 240 patents granted. Our patents protect our dedicated RF WPT semiconductors, and systems devices. And we believe that we have one of the strongest and most valuable RF WPT IP portfolios in the industry, which continues to make Energous, the clear technology leader in RF WPT. Also during this quarter, the FCC certified a product from American Equus, representing our fourth near-field customer to receive certification. We believe that we are the only RF-based wireless charging company to have four partner products that have been certified by the FCC. We also announced the availability of a new 5.5 watt conducted power active energy harvesting developer kit. The developer kit includes a thin SoC transmitter based on the new antenna design that has been optimized for far-field performance. This transmitter can be mounted on walls or ceilings in multiple instances to cover large areas requiring guaranteed power in a seamless manner and at a distance delivery greater than 15 feet. The evaluation kit includes previously announced receivers supporting sensors, electronic labels, or low power CPU, BLE smart data processing devices geared towards IoT market applications using our active harvesting technologies. Based on power delivery at a distance requirements, we are uniquely poised to support the accelerated growth and expanding the scope of IoT applications. The WattUp Active Energy Harvesting ecosystem, along with various partners’ devices supporting a myriad of solutions is here now. Every building block is of importance and it should be, now it’s very obvious to all of our followers that we have systematically built a group of partners over time that include Dialog, Grepow, E Ink, e-peas, Atmosic and others. We continue to identify additional companies that are actively evaluating our technology for use with their specific applications, involving IoT devices requiring reliable power at a distance, whether charging internal batteries or in most cases, harvesting transmitted energy to low power devices that do not require batteries if a reliable source of energy, such as what we supply is available.
  • Bill Mannina:
    Thanks, Cesar. As you saw at the close of the market today, we issued our Q2 earnings press release announcing the operating and financial results for our fiscal 2021 second quarter ended June 30. For the second quarter, we recognize $185,000 in revenue compared to $145,000 in the prior quarter and approximately $114,000 in the same quarter of last year. Total GAAP expense for the second quarter totaled $11.2 million, approximately $2.5 million higher than the $8.7 million of total expense last quarter, and approximately $2.9 million higher than the second quarter of last year. The bulk of the quarterly total GAAP expense increase was related to stock compensation expense recorded in the second quarter, tied to the achievement of a vesting milestone that triggered the vesting of employee performance share units or PSUs. Year-to-date our total GAAP expense was $19.9 million, approximately $2.8 million higher than the $17 million of year-to-date GAAP expense in fiscal 2020 and per my earlier comment, the increase year-over-year was primarily tied to higher stock compensation with the majority of the increase expense in the second quarter. The net loss for the second quarter on a GAAP basis was $11 million or an $0.18 loss per share on 62.1 million weighted average shares outstanding, this compares to an $8.5 million net loss in Q1 or $0.14 per share, and an $8.2 million net loss or $0.20 per share in Q2 of 2020. Also our weighted average shares were 40.6 million in Q2 2020. The year-over-year increase in the share count was mainly due to the completion of our at-the-market offering or ATM in the fourth quarter of 2020, which raised an additional net $38.8 million of cash and added 18.9 million shares. Now for a non-GAAP view of our numbers for the quarter. As we believe adjusted or non-GAAP EBITDA provides a useful comparison for investors, especially for a company at our stage, when used together with GAAP information, excluding approximately $4.2 million of stock compensation and approximately $62,000 of depreciation expense from our total Q2 GAAP expense of $11.2 million. Net non-GAAP operating expense totaled approximately $6.9 million an increase of approximately $450,000 compared to Q1 and an increase of approximately $750,000 compared to Q2 of last year. Net of revenue, our non-GAAP operating loss for Q2 was $6.7 million and approximately $400,000 higher loss compared to Q1 and an approximately $700,000 higher loss, when compared to Q2 of last year. Non-GAAP engineering expense was $3.5 million and approximately $150,000 increase versus the prior quarter and then approximately $300,000 increase compared to the same period last year, this was mainly attributable to higher chip development costs.
  • Cesar Johnston:
    Thank you, Bill. In closing, we would like to thank our investors for their ongoing support. We continue to progress in terms of partner and customer engagements, especially with regards to distance on harvesting opportunities thirties and we want to reassert our expectation of both near-field and distance-based customers entering the market before the end of this fiscal year. We also expect to announce additional, technical and regulatory achievements that we anticipate will lead to commercial opportunities in the coming quarters. Distance charging this here and we expect to share real examples of these that can only be commercially achieved through RF based power transfer. At this time, I would like to open the call for questions. Operator?
  • Operator:
    We will now begin the question-and-answer session. The first question comes from Suji Desliva with Roth Capital. Please go ahead.
  • Suji Desliva:
    Hi Caesar, and best of luck in the new role, the CEO role; and then Brian, good luck in your next role; and Bill, welcome to the call. So Cesar, I just wanted to ask – I just wanted to be clear on the label of acting CEO and what the process is next, if any. And if there is a strategy change you might want to articulate as you come into the CEO role versus the last few years, if there is anything you wanted to point out at this point, that'll be helpful as a starting point.
  • Cesar Johnston:
    Sure. The company is conducting a CEO's search, other than that there is no update we can provide.
  • Suji Desliva:
    Okay. Fair enough. So I'll save the question about then strategy until that search is concluded. So looking at some of the information in the press release the earnings, the four customers you highlight, I just want to be clear that's the four customers you've already announced then, I'd say New Sound, EarTechnic, Gokhale, Equus, but I'd just love clarification to make sure that's how I should interpret that data points.
  • Cesar Johnston:
    Yes, that is correct. Those are the three customers, yes.
  • Suji Desliva:
    And they’ve achieved…
  • Cesar Johnston:
    And pointing them out, yes.
  • Suji Desliva:
    I appreciate that. And then what I'd like to know from that list of four is kind of how many months does it take on average to get FCC approval, once the process starts, just to understand how long that cycle is? And then how does the pipeline look for additional FCC approvals among customers, perhaps future customers or additional, just to understand where the pipeline stands now?
  • Cesar Johnston:
    We have a number of customers going through the process, it's a function of where the customer is using our reference design. A lot of these customers today use the signs that have already been pre-approved and can go fairly fast. But in general, depending on whether it's a new design or not, it could take longer. And as far as at times, it's hard for me to go and pinpoint a time when this is a government office and there are always different timeframes that they provide to us, yes.
  • Suji Desliva:
    Okay. Fair enough. So understanding – perhaps it's getting easier to the reference designs, but we'll kind of watch that. And then you talked a lot about energy harvesting this quarter, you talked about the partnership with Atmosic and so forth. What – how should we watch for the rollout or success of this energy harvesting area? What milestone Cesar would you point to, for us to keep an eye on in the next few quarters that would indicate your tracking with this opportunity to what you're hoping to achieve?
  • Cesar Johnston:
    Yes. So active harvesting is happening today. We have partnerships with a number of companies that we have already pointed out. If you recall, we did announce last quarter, a reference kit design that puts together the technology with dialogue, as well as e-peas and E Ink. What you will see is that we are now ramping up and providing those kits to different potential customers. And as we do that and we move forward, we're also identifying new potential customers that can – sorry, partners that can actually add up to the whole ecosystem. And we’ll be announcing those as we have systems that show their utility.
  • Suji Desliva:
    Okay, helpful. And then last question, perhaps for Bill, the OpEx, I guess you guided 66 versus the 69. I want to understand if that for the second half of the year, I mean, is that level sustainable going forward or will there need to be an increase in investment, same to the calendar year 2022 timeframe? How should I think about the level you're at now versus what further products you need to build?
  • Brian Sereda:
    Hey, Suji. This is Brian. I can take that. I think we're in that 10% year-over-year increase range. We don't see a lot of fluctuation in the expenses other than for one-time. And again, timing of the chip tape-outs, whether they're CMOS, GaAs, GaN, there's a big difference in costs. So we're taking off a CMOS tape-out here shortly, but it could fall into Q4 based on timing, as you know, the fabs are pretty busy and backed up. As far as capital investments go. And I think that was the second part of your question. We're fully built out. We have built these labs out over the last several years. They're fully utilized. We don't see any big CapEx requirements. They mean that we may have to go out and buy some additional test equipment, but overall not really material in terms of dollar amount or investment size.
  • Suji Desliva:
    Well, Brian, the question is actually about OpEx, going ahead, after the second half of this year, this is a level you can build a business?
  • Brian Sereda:
    I do believe, as we've talked, this is a highly leverageable model, right. We're an engineering company. And once we've delivered the technology, it's a fabless semiconductor model with the usual amount of systems integration and design work upfront. But I believe and we continue to believe that this model is highly leverageable. We'll see some modest head count increases as obviously the business volume increases, but overall very, leverageable model. We don't expect an inflection point in expenses to mirror any revenue ramp.
  • Suji Desliva:
    Okay. That's all I had. Again good luck. Yes, absolutely. Again, good luck to everybody in your roles and Brian, thanks for all the help.
  • Brian Sereda:
    Thank you.
  • Cesar Johnston:
    Thank you.
  • Operator:
    This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Cesar Johnston for any closing remarks.
  • Cesar Johnston:
    Just want to thank everyone that attended this conference call. We can assure you that moving forward, this is the RF wireless power company that has the lead and we'd make it happen. So we're here to make it happen. Thank you.
  • Operator:
    The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.