Joe Mastrangelo
Analyst · TD Cowan. Thomas, please go ahead with your question
Thanks Liz. Welcome everyone. Thanks for taking the time this morning to listen in let me start off on our page with operating highlights. I just want to start off with the tremendous progress that we're making commercially. And I think that's shown by the announcement that we made this morning on a $73 million order with the city utilities of Springfield, Missouri. Really a phenomenal job by the commercial team. Getting our first large order in the municipal market. This is the largest order that City Utilities has ever placed for an energy storage system. We're proud that they selected EOS and technology for this project. Looking forward to start delivering this project throughout 2025. Really, really an exciting time for us, I think, showing the power of the V3 and what it can do out in the marketplace; at the same time, we also what people would think is a small order with Watmore. Watmore is a repeat customer and just shows the relationships that the team is building out in the marketplace and the fact that the technology also really works in a microgrid application. So two really strong examples of the commercial offering and the performance of the product out in the field. At the same time. Two big things that we also have announced recently regarding finance. Nathan has been working on creating the financing capacity for us to scale the company. Last week we announced achieving the milestones and getting the $65 million funding from Cerberus, that cash balance you see on the lower right-hand side of the page does not reflect that $65 million. It's a great job, not only in partnership with Cerberus, but also the team in delivering and bringing that funding in. At the same time, we've submitted our paperwork for final US Government approval for a loan with the loan programs with the Elite Loan Programs Office for a Title 17 loan. Very exciting to bring that to closure here by year end. Been a process of going through that as the company has evolved and changed. We feel really good about the partnership we built and ability to allow us to scale the company further. On the lower left-hand side of the page, this technology continues to prove itself out in the field. We're now at 4.4 gigawatt hours. Over 4 gigawatt hours discharge out in the field. You know that discharge out in the field is very important because it shows customers using the product that incremental 400-megawatt hours that you have to get. 4.4 is also very important because that's the energy that we're generating when we test and prove out the resiliency, performance and operating characteristics of the product. Every battery is tested before it gets out in the field. We're really Excited about the performance that we see. The middle of this page, the bottom of the middle of this page is the area where we're disappointed in our performance, executing our supply chain strategies, doing a million things correctly. If one of those things don't go well, you have a problem. And that's what happened to us here in the third quarter. And when you look at what we talked about last year, about developing a new cube design that allows us to improve the performance of our product out in the field and get better footprint density, we had some challenges in opening and bringing that supply chain online, which we're working through with key supplier to be able to bring that product online. Now we're going to work through that. We're going to work through with the supplier. They were going to continue to develop and grow. The good news is this hasn't had any impact on our backlog. We continue to work with customers on timing of deliveries and continue to work on supply chain diversification. We can and expect to do better than this in the future. What's important here is we've brought in some new leadership around the operational team and some new talent that I've experienced across the industry, both in other battery technologies and other competitors and integrators. So we're bringing in experienced people that have done this before to help us scale the company as we move forward. While we're not happy with where we are, I feel very confident with the team's ability to execute and deliver as we look to the future. Going to the next page, I talked about some of these on the prior page. We just want to hit on a couple things around the Sanders milestones. The line continues to perform and we're really happy with our ability to build a good battery. You know, cycle times are less than 10 seconds and the first pass yields is greater than 97%; continue to see the performance of that line and what it means to us as far as being able to scale and deliver on large projects being really the foundation for everything we're going to do going forward. We're also the team that's also ahead of target on its concept milestones. I'll talk a little bit more about that as we get into the presentation here on the next page. Really like I think the foundation, the thesis of the investment from Cerberus, we're proving that out to be true every day and we're just going to continue noticeably grindstone execute and deliver for customers and shareholders. Commercial momentum, I talked about the two new orders that we won. Very exciting. But at the same time, working with Cerberus, we've been able to pull together a full bankability offering out in the marketplace. You know, some of the things we've talked about in the past when Nathan gets to our pipeline page is how do you move things down through that pipeline. We're now bringing. I'll talk about more details. The ability for customers to look at us and say, this is a bankable technology and I have the backstops that I need to take the risk to move with a new technology. We see, because of that, we see the large utility pipeline strengthening. Nathan will talk about the numbers that we have underlying this. But what I can tell you is that more and more people are coming to us, more and more customers are coming to us to really look at the inherent benefits of the technology. What we learned from the standpoint of operating the business through the due diligence that we've gone through both with the DOE and with Cerberus is that we have a technology with differentiated performance. We probably haven't done the best job historically in presenting that technology and what it means to deliver benefits to the customers. That's becoming very clear to us. And that's why you see things like City Utilities becoming a bookable order in less than six months from when we first got the request for quotation into the order. So we moved now to operational scale and capacity. You know, we are delivering on our cost out roadmap and we are optimizing our production supply. On the left-hand side of this page, as far as cost out progress, very critical for us as we really look to switch our mindset from having a path to profitability to delivering profitable growth. Our goal as a company is to grow but deliver profits while doing so. The left-hand side of this page allows us to do that. On the direct material side, from the launch, we're down 42% of our cost. That's ahead of our plan. 80% of our direct material target is achieved and locked in will be cut in over the next few months to deliver on that initial strategy that we talked about almost a year ago. Now those two pieces there really are achieved because what we have is a battery with readily available commodities that you can go out and get great scale on. And as we've gone out and done this and look at doing things, we're also finding ways and suppliers to partner with us to find ways to take costs out of the overall system. On the direct labor side, we've seen 77% improvement since we launched the Z3. A lot of that has to do with the implementation of the moving plan. You know, our direct labor was 41% lower than Q1. Now, while we only had 8% higher battery output, we with that 41% we deliver 24% more energy out to the field to our customers. Now what's critical to think about here is we could have done more if we had the cues to be able to deliver. We timed kind of the way we were manufacturing to what we had to be able to put into cues to deliver out to the field to customers. But when you look at this and you think about this, the line is using less hours to operate to deliver more power and batteries to the field. And as we increase that, we're going to see more and more of the benefits. Which brings me to the third bucket on the left-hand side, which is our overhead. The overhead has seen an improvement 25% since we launched the product. And that 25% now that the line is up and running includes higher depreciation costs for the moving line. So we still see overall operating costs on our overhead costs coming down even with this incremental cost for the line coming in and produce more batteries. That gets better and better over time. And that's one of the things that we've always talked about as being one of the drivers for future performance on our cost out roadmap. We feel very confident being able to deliver on this. And Brian Miller, who is our new supply chain, our supply chain manufacturing leader, has really brought a fresh set of eyes to this with a lot of experience across different companies to help us really streamline how we operate and improve the throughput that we on the assets that we have. The three areas that we're focused on there is on our subassembly process. So what goes into the moving line, it's still semi-automated. We talked about this on the last call. We've actually yielded more parts out of that process than we ever have before. We've increased the throughput out of that line. And implementing automation as we get into the beginning of next year allows us to take the moving line up to around 2-gigawatt hours of output annually. You know, we see 57% lower direct labor cost with this incremental automation that those direct labor costs are really avoiding having to hire labor to do the work that we're going to do on battery manufacturing. You know, as I said before, we achieved 10 second cycle times. We exceeded 97% first pass yield. We continue to look at ways to make this line better. You know, as we've been Operating the line, we get feedback from our operators on the factory floor. We said look, if the screens that we're using to control the equipment were simplified, we can make better decisions faster and allow better throughput. We're going through and adjusting those to allow us to control the availability of the line better. At the same time, you learn as you build and every day we run that line and then we stop and we look at what we learned and then we go back and we fix and update and improve. So two of the areas that we've really looked at and are improving is the conveyor traffic management. So how batteries throw flow station to station on the line while at the same time how we program the robots to get better reliability and performance out of them as volume increases. As I said before, that manufacturing overhead that I talked about earlier will actually improve and that number will get better and better. The cost comes down and that's how we will deliver profitable growth. On containerization. This is the area where we stubbed our toe here in the quarter. We had a slower ramp-up. We've got to work through that and diversify that supply base while continuing to invest with our existing supplier. You know, we are implementing a cube automation in our, in our factory here in Turtle Creek that will increase the output of cubes by 5x once implemented. That's already started and beyond the initial stations are in place and that will continue here over the next, the next few months. You know, the cubes, the third quarter enclosure constraint impact will impact our second half revenue again. You don't like disappointing versus our expectations, but we feel as though we'll be able to work through here through the end of the year and get into 2025 and deliver the wine that we have committed to our customers. We're going to get better, we're going to continue to refine, we're going to continue to learn, we're going to continue to improve and continue to become a reliable partner for our customers and someone who reliably delivers for our shareholders as we mature. As we look to the commercial growth section for Homo and Nathan, just want to spend a moment looking at how we're strengthening the value proposition. A lot of what we've talked about with our batteries is that we have lower round trip efficiency than other technologies, particularly lithium ion. What the chart on the left shows is various round-trip efficiencies across a full depth of discharge. So zero to 100 back down to zero. And what the round-trip efficiencies are, the lines that we see are a 4-hour, 6-hour, 10 hour and a 16 hour. So we've now taken the Z3 to the point of discharging at 16 hours. What we've done is we've gone and we looked at how the industry quotes its round-trip efficiency. We were quoting and discussing zero to 100. Now every battery that's out in the marketplace has a tail off outside of that 20 to 80 discharge window. What happens to other technologies is they degrade their performance faster or they have problems being able to secure the life of their battery. Leos that doesn't have that, we just have a lower round trip efficiency and the customer can benefit from it if you can. But what we've learned is as you are comparing us to other technologies, you need to compare us on the same basis. So at a 16 hour discharge, we're above 90% brown charge. You know, that's the same size system that you would have for a four hour discharge. That would be an 80% discharge rate. So as the durations get longer, the battery is more efficient. As we've always said. And as you think about us in the standard window, we're competitive with what's out in the market today. And at the same time we can offer that wider range as the customer requires. And that's why you're starting to see more and more interest in the product. On the right-hand side of the page, we're building this full bankability offering. First one is extending our warranty and launching a suite of insurance products. These are the products where customers question, you know, what's the viability of EOS? How do we move forward, you know, how do we know that the product's going to work? And we're going out and now putting that into our business model and now finding financial instruments that will help give the customer the assurance that they have to take that first order to be the first of first instead of the first to second. Next is we've done some critical third-party validation both with the due diligences with the DOE and Cerberus adding in there being a BNEF tier one supplier and then refreshing our DNV bankability and our UL certification. All those things give the customers the comfort of knowing that they have the warranty and the guarantee that they're going to get the product that they contracted for. They've got third parties that will validate that the technology will work. And then the last one is proving out this ability to deliver large scale projects. We continue to work on and improve our supply chain. As I talked about we continue to ramp as we look at the moving line. I feel really good about a lot of the things that happened in this last quarter. I feel disappointed in the revenue, but know that we have the team, the resources and the knowledge to fix and get better as we move forward. So with that I'll turn it over to Nathan.