Jan Loeb
Analyst · Artko Capital. Please go ahead
Thank you, Tracy, and good morning. In our second quarter, Acorn achieved 7% year-over-year revenue growth, a gross margin of 70% and we approach breakeven on a consolidated net income basis with a net loss attributable to Acorn shareholders of $33,000 or $0.00 per share. This is the best bottom line operating performance that we have achieved in many years and it was achieved during the pandemic. But these results I am optimistic about for the future of our business and proud of our OmniMetrix team. I would like to take this opportunity to publicly thank our entire OmniMetrix team for their individual and collective efforts over the past several months as we work through the challenges of COVID-19 both personally and professionally. As a company, the health and safety of our employees and customers is paramount as we continue to adhere to CDC guidelines in our daily operations in our 21,000 square foot facility and a client site. Our business, which provides remote monitoring control services for equipment and infrastructure support, for government, healthcare and other critical services is classified as essential by the state of Georgia. As such, we have remained fully operational throughout the pandemic without any employee furloughs. We started the year with a bullish outlook for growth but by the end of Q1 and into early Q2, we were seeing lower sales volumes mainly due to reduced hardware sales activity as businesses were either closed or focused on other aspects of their operations and attempting to function successfully through the pandemic. As many of you know cash basis sales, is a performance tracking measure we use to supplement our GAAP reported revenue and revenue growth spread. Cash basis sales are different from GAAP revenue because we deferred and recognized revenue from hardware sales over a 3-year period and we defer and recognize revenue from margin contracts over the period of service, which typically is 1 year. We invoiced upon hardware shipments and monitoring renewal periods, which create the difference between cash sales and GAAP recorded revenue. Cash sales gives insights on the volume of business closed in a period. In Q2, 2020 cash basis sales was essentially flat at $1.47 million as compared to $1.468 million in Q2 2019. We are satisfied with this result, because we are able to maintain our sales volume level despite very challenging business development conditions caused by COVID-19 and related shutdowns and delays. In our bigger segment, power generation, which focuses on the margin of standby generators for commercial and residential accounts, our cash basis sales increased $77,000 or 6% in Q2 2020 over Q2 2019. In our small Cathodic Protection or CP segment focused on the monitoring and control of the electric current running in gas pipelines, cash basis sales declined by $75,000 or 31% due to restrictions on travel and sales interactions. In the CP segment, our clients have generated larger corporations, where in many cases sales meetings have been postponed due to social distancing and other restrictive policies currently in place. Additionally, CapEx budgets in the CP segment are also being impacted by energy price volatility and supply and demand disparities that continued to negatively impact this business. Prior to the COVID disruptions, our expanded sales team was making considerable progress building a solid pipeline of customer trials. The sales cycle in the CP segment is typically 12 to 18 months, but it’s likely to lengthen in many cases due to meeting and travel restrictions. However, we remain focused on converting these customer trials into deployments over time. Now more than ever, remote monitoring control has a very compelling value proposition as our technology and services enable our customers to manage mission-critical industrial equipment, much more cost effectively and safely as we can substantially reduce the number of people and travel required to manage disparate assets over wide areas. These benefits are gaining even greater appreciation with mandated personal safety requirements, travel limitations, social distancing mandates related to the pandemic. In addition to the increasing frequency of severe weather events, we believe this equips us with even more fact based justification to the need and benefits of our products and provides a substantive platform to support our expanding sales and marketing efforts, particularly given the very low penetration of remote monitoring and control solutions in our target markets. Now, let’s turn back to a few financial highlights after which Tracy will provide more specifics to our financial performance and position and then we will open the call to your questions. I mentioned that we have achieved same-store revenue growth over Q2 2019 in the gross margin of 70%. Most significantly, our gross profit grew 15% in Q2 2020, outpacing revenue growth due to the strength in our high margin recurring monitoring services revenue, which grew 19% in the quarter. This performance underscores the attractiveness and resilience of our monitoring service business and the strategy we have been executing for the past few years to refocus Acorn’s resources on building this compelling business. Turning to business development initiatives in the second quarter, we launched our new Smart Annunciator product, which provides customers with status updates on critical electric systems and last month, we forged our first distribution relationship outside of North America, targeting Continental Europe with the Italian company, Mel Systems, which will market our AirGuard monitoring solution in Italy as well as other countries in Europe. It will take some time to build out this distribution relationship and to customize our solution for the European market, but we believe this is an exciting new growth opportunity for our company. We also hope to launch a new OmniMetrix software product upgrade later this year, which will offer more features and value to our customers solidifying our leadership position in the remote monitoring and control market and we will have more to say after the launch. In the meantime, despite the COVID-related business development challenges in the near-term, we see an abundance of market opportunities. Historically, new standby generator monitoring sales have been positively impacted by natural disasters and emergencies such as hurricanes and storms that disrupt power system and highlight the importance and value of standby power and remote monitoring to ensure generators can be relied upon record to be called into service without delay and to operate for as long as necessary without interruption. Similarly, we believe the pandemic can also stimulate generator and remote monitoring demand as reliable electrical access for home offices has become more important. Many of you may have been impacted by the tropical storm that went up the East Coast last week. Although not a hurricane, this storm let millions of people without power, some for upwards of a week. We expect the aging of the U.S. power grid infrastructure will continue to be an issue and the driver of backup power generation and monitoring for many years. This is one of the many underlying trends that support our confidence in achieving our long-term annual average growth rate of 20%. For several years, we have stressed our goal to advance Acorn to achieve cash flow breakeven and then profitability on a consolidated basis. I am very proud to report that we came very close to achieving that goal in the second quarter despite COVID-related challenges and we are optimistic that we will be able to continue to build on the financial performance of the business to achieve positive cash flow and profitability over the next few quarters. Of critical value as we approach profitability is the fact that Acorn has a very large net operating loss carry-forward, which would shield future income from income taxes benefiting both net income and cash flow. We believe we are on solid footing for next year, with an expectation that the economy will be more fully reopened and business activity will be – will at least begin to normalize. It’s too early to establish specific goals for 2021, but we certainly hope to be in the black from a consolidated earnings and cash flow standpoint in 2021. We believe we have the resources to endure the current COVID induced downturn and we remain confident in the value of our remote monitoring services and the long-term growth potential within a still largely untapped market. Given the opportunities we see, our healthy cash position and my confidence in the OmniMetrix team, I am very enthusiastic about our business and what we can do going forward. Now, I will turn the call back to Tracy Clifford, our CFO to go over more Q2 financials in more detail. Tracy?