Earnings Labs

Globalstar, Inc. (GSAT)

Q3 2025 Earnings Call· Fri, Nov 7, 2025

$81.31

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Globalstar Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference call is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Rebecca Clary, CFO. Please go ahead.

Rebecca Clary

Analyst

Thank you, operator, and good afternoon, everyone. Before we begin, please note that today's call contains forward-looking statements intended to fall within the safe harbor provided under the securities laws. Factors that could cause the results to differ materially are described in the Risk Factors section of Globalstar's SEC filings, including its annual report on Form 10-K for the financial year ending 2024 and its other SEC filings as well as today's earnings release. Also note that management may reference EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA, free cash flow or adjusted free cash flow on this call, which are financial measures not recognized under U.S. GAAP. As required by SEC rules and regulations, these non-GAAP financial measures are reconciled to their most comparable GAAP financial measures in the earnings release, which is available on our website. Today, I will walk you through our third quarter and year-to-date financial results, discuss our liquidity position and touch briefly on outlook. We delivered solid top line performance in the third quarter with total revenue of $73.8 million. This represents growth over the prior year's third quarter, reaching a record quarterly amount. This improvement was driven by two key areas: wholesale capacity services, and continued strength in Commercial IoT. Our wholesale capacity services revenue increased primarily due to the timing of service fees associated with the reimbursement of network-related costs as we continue to expand and upgrade our global ground infrastructure. Commercial IoT also continues to be a growth driver for us. IoT service revenue increased on the back of subscriber growth with average subscribers reaching 543,000, a 6% increase from the prior year's third quarter. This growth was again propelled by a record number of gross activations over the last 12 months. We also saw particularly strong equipment sales performance. Equipment revenue from Commercial IoT device…

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Thanks, Rebecca, and good afternoon, everyone. I'm pleased to be with you today and to discuss what has been a robust quarter for Globalstar. Across every major part of our business, we're executing our strategy and delivering measurable progress that strengthens our position in the market. It's really never been a more exciting time to be in the connectivity industry and for Globalstar in particular. My team and I have spent our careers driving many of the hottest trends in mobile communications and computing. And well, here we are again. On the satellite side, we couldn't be more proud to have helped pioneer direct-to-device services and witnessed the life-saving impact of our network. There are now over 0.5 billion devices capable of utilizing our network, and we continue to invest and innovate to maintain our leading position. And on the mobile wireless network side, our XCOM RAN technology is proving its benefits both in performance for mission-critical applications and its cost effectiveness and ease of deployment. As I've said previously, what drew us to Globalstar is the strength and differentiation of our globally harmonized spectrum, 3 decades of LEO constellation operations and deep engineering capability to deliver secure, reliable connectivity worldwide with the quality of service demanded by some of the world's most innovative technology leaders, something few others, if anyone, can claim. Recent activity in the market underscores that value as a wide variety of players now better understand the need for dedicated mobile satellite service or MSS spectrum. Other participants in the direct-to-device solution space have spent tens of billions to acquire L- and S-band assets that, while useful, lack the global coverage, priority rights and harmonization with an established hardware ecosystem that defines our portfolio, one that has been deployed for decades by our Globalstar customers. We…

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first call comes from the line of Mike Crawford at B. Riley Securities.

Michael Crawford

Analyst

Regarding your C-3 constellation, correct me if I'm wrong, if this is not completely synonymous with your extended MSS network. But can the ground segment improvements that you're putting in at these gateways be used by your existing constellation that's being refreshed?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Yes. So we put in antennas that are specific for the [indiscernible] system -- or sorry, the C-3 system. And yes, so we have the existing satellite antennas for the existing constellation already.

Michael Crawford

Analyst

Okay. And I believe it's going to be two batch launches for -- to replenish that constellation. Is there any update on when the first of those might occur?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

We have not given any new indications on when the launches are going to occur.

Rebecca Clary

Analyst

And just to add to that, Mike, for the Extended MSS network, as you know, we haven't provided timing. For the replacement satellites, which you might be referring to that are being launched in two batches, we're working with SpaceX to confirm an updated launch window in the first half of 2026.

Michael Crawford

Analyst

Okay. And then maybe just stepping back, Paul, to Globalstar's global harmonized spectrum holdings. Can you just maybe define those again in terms of megahertz POPs or some related measurements or what you have in the U.S. as well as where you have landing rights internationally?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

I mean it's essentially global coverage. So on the S-band, we have 16.5 megahertz. On the L-band, we have almost 9. On the C-band, we have over 300 megahertz. So let's see there are 7 billion people on earth. So...

Michael Crawford

Analyst

Okay. I can do that math. And then on the C-band, I believe there remains 59 megahertz slot that might not necessarily be required to operate your satellite networks given improvements in technology over the past 20 years?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

No. It's -- there's actually -- so if you look at the C-band spectrum, it's a large percentage of it is covered by Wi-Fi, so unlicensed band use. And then there's a chunk at the lower end that is not covered by that. And all of the spectrum is being used as feeder link because the way the existing satellites work is that chunks of the feeder spectrum are allocated to reproducing the entire spectrum band on the L&S band side. per beam on the satellite. So it is actually all used for the satellite system. It's a question of if we look at it for terrestrial use, there's a chunk that hasn't been allocated for Wi-Fi use. Now with that said, even in Wi-Fi bands, the team that came along from XCOM Labs is the same team that built the unlicensed band cellular technologies. And so it is possible that we can look at those bands for hosting unlicensed band NR, for example, 5G.

Michael Crawford

Analyst

Okay. And then final question for me just goes back to XCOM RAN. So in the test applications that you've been doing for quite some time now. What is the latest data that you're seeing in terms of increased performance and reliability versus industrial Wi-Fi?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Yes. So it works much better than industrial Wi-Fi because we don't have handoff regions and Wi-Fi wasn't really built for handoffs anyways. We also have ease of deployment. We have this clustering where if the robots cluster under one of the radios, you don't just depend on the capacity of that radio, actually depend -- you actually get the capacity of the entire system. So in terms of performance benefits, it's dramatically better. It's more reliable, more mission-critical. But what we've also been finding is that in these large area deployments, we're also economically better. So the economics of rolling out our system relative to an industrial Wi-Fi is much better. And part of that comes from the fact that we have now built our own radio units and significantly cost reduce those as well as being able to provide more frequency bands on a faster basis when those are requested by our customers.

Operator

Operator

Our next call comes from the line of Greg Pendy at Clear Street.

Gregory R. Pendy

Analyst

Just on the accelerating IoT, can you just add any color on what the acceleration is? Do you think you're gaining share in the space? Or do you think the market was just seeing outsized healthy growth? And how should we think about pricing with the two-way capabilities on a forward basis?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Okay. So we -- there are definitely new applications that we're able to address. I think that there is also the fact that when we look at some of the competitors in the area who have been in this area for a long time, there's definitely interest of our customer base to have diversity of supply or change suppliers. So that's definitely driving part of it. So some of it's taking share, some of it's new, it's growing the pie. And then the other -- on the two-way pricing, yes, I mean, it's a new set of capabilities, and there is market pricing out there for two-way systems. Of course, we expect to be aggressive and take share with the two-way system. And the growth so far, though -- if I just want to reiterate, the growth so far is not on the two-way system yet. The two-way system is still -- we brought out the module. We betted it with people. They then started building it into their products, and that takes a little bit of time for them to get up to speed and get their products rolled out. So the growth that you're seeing is actually the existing -- of the existing systems, which is really quite impressive.

Gregory R. Pendy

Analyst

Got it. That's very helpful. And then just wholesale looks pretty strong relative to what we were thinking. Just wondering, you mentioned there's 0.5 billion devices. So just trying to understand the underlying growth. Is it just a growing number of enabled devices? Are you seeing usage? Is it -- can you just kind of -- higher usage from those who are already enabled? Just trying to understand why that...

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Right. So I can't really comment on the customers of our customer. So let me not do that. But it's -- the number of devices that are out there is just talking about the growth of the number of devices that actually have the satellite modem and radio capabilities in it. So that -- those set of devices continues to grow quite rapidly.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from the line of George Sutton of Craig-Hallum Capital Group.

Logan W Lillehaug

Analyst

This is Logan on for George. You guys have been kind of talking about the XCOM RAN investment throughout the year, and I think you've been expanding the sales force a bit. And it certainly feels like you have a lot of opportunities in front of that asset. I was wondering if you could just talk a little bit about sort of how should investors think about the return profile or even the profitability of those assets over the next few years?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Okay. So I mean, the margins are good in that business. We're right at the beginning of the sort of the commercial adoption cycle. And so we expect to see growth not just from the existing customer that we had been focused on in the past, but from a new set of customers and also into a new set of areas. And we've put up various numbers on sort of total addressable market. And so there's a significant addressable market going forward. And what we're seeing also is that companies that have been in the 5G private network space that didn't have any differentiated technology are starting to feel a lot of pressure. We've seen layoffs and things like that. And we have not just differentiated technology, we have better economics. And of course, we have the dedicated spectrum for mission-critical applications, which, by the way, that hasn't even really started to come into play yet because we were focused on CBRS. So a lot of areas of growth. We don't expect to see a lot of revenue in this fiscal year. But as we look forward into the next year, we expect to see growth there. And then like I said, the margins are good. So we should be in a good place to build both revenues and profitability off of that business.

Logan W Lillehaug

Analyst

Got it. And then next one for me. I was kind of hoping you could talk a little bit about early traction with the two-way module, just sort of the feedback you're getting, any use cases that you want to call out that are kind of standing out and just sort of maybe your sense on adoption here over the next few years.

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Yes. I can't really give you a lot on the customers because they're all in the process of building their products and want to make their own announcements. But it is a lot of the similar industries that we've been in the past, but with new applications and new sets of customers. And there was a set of customers that weren't very interested in talking to us when we were only one way, and now we are able to -- I think we'll take share in a number of markets with the two-way system. And then as we look forward to making the system also multimode with cellular capability as well, that will also satisfy demands of a certain customer base. So yes, it's not like there is some brand-new area that I'd say, okay, this we can address now that we didn't, but we certainly have a set of customers that are talking to us that wouldn't have talked to us in the past with a one-way-only system.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next call comes from the line of Michael Ridgeway.

Michael Ridgeway

Analyst

Paul, a question first on the XCOM RAN warehouse implementation. Is this related to the early work that you have been doing and has been ongoing since you alluded to a large retail testing implementation?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Yes. So we are now in a position where I think we can address a larger customer set and also not just the original application that we were looking at of the sort of micro fulfillment concept, but larger scale operations as well. And then we're going beyond just the warehouse automation space. We're talking to companies that do things like build out high-density environments, convention centers, airports, stadiums, that kind of hotspots, that kind of stuff. And so as time has gone on and we've been able to invest in the system, it's got a more horizontal feature set as opposed to just super focused on the warehouse automation space. So all these things provide us with growth opportunities.

Michael Ridgeway

Analyst

So is that to say then that ultimately, there's more of a unified connectivity outside the warehouse as well using that as an example?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Yes, for sure. Yes, that's where we're...

Michael Ridgeway

Analyst

And then can you help us understand the revenue model behind this? Obviously, you've got an equipment side and then there's the spectrum side of this. Is there any ongoing service associated with those implementations? And how should we think about the profitability over time as clients grow, as new customers grow in that space?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Yes. So there is those things that you said, but also there is an annuity component of software license because the main computation is done on commercial off-the-shelf servers. And so we license the software into those servers as well. And then the other thing that's happened is that over time, we've been able to build out the entire stack. So we look forward to the ability to provide Network as a Service. And that obviously is very much a nice annuity kind of business. So that hasn't happened yet. That's the thing that we're sort of looking to in the medium term, but we get the idea that we don't want to just sell something and then walk away.

Michael Ridgeway

Analyst

All right. So from a margin perspective, we could expect a delay on margin accretion as installs happen over the last several quarters?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Margin accretion to the overall company?

Michael Ridgeway

Analyst

To the overall business. From that business...

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Yes, yes. Well, this business right now is still in an investment phase, so for sure. But on a gross margin basis, gross margins are solid here, and we have differentiated technology, and we put the effort into driving the cost -- driving down the cost curve. So yes, so margins should be good. And then to the extent that you get an embedded base, I think this might be where you were going, embedded base of kind of annuity revenue, then obviously, that's very high margin.

Michael Ridgeway

Analyst

That's super helpful. Just last question, talking about this. We've come through 10 years where we haven't seen any market transactions in MSS and now we've gotten a few and another one announced this morning. Can you maybe spend a little bit more time, you did at the beginning of the call, but just differentiate what Globalstar has and the utility and the global harmonization from a relative value perspective from what we've seen in the market, if you could?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Yes. So I don't want to talk about transactions or speculation, but I will talk about our competitive positioning, which is we have spectrum, which is globally harmonized, meaning that it is not just for a small number of markets. You don't have to worry as a satellite operator, whether you're crossing boundaries, whether there are country boundaries or just inter system, interoperator boundaries. The spectrum covers the entire earth. And yes, there might be a few countries here and there, we didn't get landing rights. But for the most part, the world is covered by our spectrum and system. So that is differentiated. Some of the transactions that have been seen in the market have been focused on particular geographies. And in some cases, I would say there's questions about whether some of the spectrum that -- whether it will continue to be available post license reauthorization processes of some of the spectrum that's transacted. So that -- we're watching that. We've put our hat in the ring for some of these spectrum assets in case they are reallocated, and we certainly can put them to good use, and they are also covered by our HIBLEO XL-1 filing.

Michael Ridgeway

Analyst

Great. That's helpful. One last question on the C-3 ground station build-out. You've mentioned 90 new tracking antennas. Does that -- where does that put you in terms of the total build-out plan in percentage terms?

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

That's the build-out. I mean the 90-plus is the new set of antennas for the...

Michael Ridgeway

Analyst

Okay. And how many of those are actually deployed...

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Some not -- I mean, we're in the process of rolling out. I don't think we've given an exact number to date. But you Rebecca, if we have said anything more precise than that, please speak up.

Rebecca Clary

Analyst

No, we haven't. We've talked about the sites where we're currently in construction, which is around now close to 30. So making really good progress and definitely on track with those milestone dates in the various agreements, both regulatory ground infrastructure build-out and satellite construction.

Operator

Operator

At this time, I'm showing no further questions. I would like to turn the call back over to Paul Jacobs for closing remarks.

Paul Jacobs

Analyst

Well, I think it has been a great quarter, and we're really firing on all cylinders, and we're excited by, as I said, the fact that we focused on building a global company and a global spectrum position, global set of customers, global infrastructure from the very beginning. And that is showing to be a particularly valuable place to be in this change in the industry. And I do, as I said earlier, see this as a strategic inflection point. And so being in that part of the industry again and with the ability to play in a new inflection point, it's extremely exciting and should be -- we expect it should be good for all of us and our supporters and investors. So thank you very much for being there for us, and we look forward to updating you more into the future.

Operator

Operator

Thank you very much. This concludes today's conference. You may now disconnect.