Yoav Stern
Analyst · Cantor Fitzgerald. Please go ahead
The name is Yoav, and I hope people by now, know me, but I've been twisted before. Hi everybody, thank you very much for joining us this morning. Taking off your time in the beginning of the day. Quarter is a very strong quarter, the best quarter we have ever, even though we had a strong quarter and a similar quarter last year. We are still about 2% above that and which we are proud about. We have gross margins up to 45%. The adjusted gross margins similar to last year, on a half year - on a quarterly - on half year, they are up, on the quarterly, they are bit down, but negligible. And more important than everything else to us, because we're aiming at positive cash and profits is that our cash burn was down 54% from $31 million cash burn down to 11. And this is a result of a turnaround and reduction of expense plan that we implemented in the first quarter of this year. Not because we don't have the cash to fulfill our business plan for the next four -- three, four years, but because we believe a business plan, and a business model should lead to positive cash flow as fast as possible. And we are 64% on the way there. We also have some business updates, which somewhat repeating what I've said, what we announced before, but are very important. Announced acquisition of Desktop Metal. Innovative Additive Electronics products and Integrated Inspection System and the digital printing partnership between GIS and Esko-Graphics and Fiery. We announced before and it's very, very important as we integrate all our product lines into the wider industry. If you watch now, the customer highlights slide is the next one. I kind of brought up here just couple of names from two of our product lines. The reason why we didn't bring many, many more names is we are not allowed to because many of our customers are sensitive to publishing their names. Some of them are in the space industry, some of them are in defense industry, some of them are in other industries like computer, which are major players in the computer industry's -- computer industry, but they don't want their name to appear. So I can just tell you that we, beyond these two -- new customers they are here that came this quarter, we have already close to 10 -- between six to 10 western armies, which are customer files; between five to seven three letters agencies, secret service agencies, three letters agencies as they call them, around the world, only western that are customers of ours. We have some serious -- from the largest defense contractor around the world, probably four or five of them are our customers, not just big about HENSOLDT from Europe, from Germany, which is our joint venture partner in a mutual investment. So we are slowly, slowly appearing now on the forefront of every industrial chosen group of customers. If you're looking at the slide of Creating an Efficient Industry 4.0. This is a very important slide. Not so much because of the data that appears there, which is the data of our company over the last -- between three years to last year because of the title. Efficient Industry 4.0, ladies and gentlemen, we are not in the desktop, sorry, in the additive manufacturing industry. We are aiming and we will be and we will show you that to be in an Industry 4.0, the reason is we believe additive manufacturing is not an industry, additive manufacturing is a pile of technologies. The industry we are in is an industry where we manufacture machines which are digital and converting the regular and traditional industry into a digital Industry 4.0. As an example, if you take a very advanced CNC machine, computer numerical control, it used to be numerical control before it was called computer numerical control. These are also digital machines for the industry. And it's also edge device and it's also creating an end result product, except it's going to reduction -- reductive technology, not additive technology, but in our vision, this is a part of one industry. And as we grow and expand, you will see that we will start to be a player not only in additive manufacturing technologies. That's very, very important. One of the reasons for that is the additive manufacturing industry, and again, I shouldn't call it an industry, I should call it pile of technologies, is considered to sell about $15 billion a year of products and machines. But out of the $15 billion, probably 12 to 13 are people who are using the machines and selling products by using those technologies. $3 billion to $4 billion is the people who manufacturing the machines, not only manufacturing, doing the R&D in developing the technologies and manufacturing machines. So two-thirds of the market, or 75% of the market are people who do not invest in R&D and do not build machines. They do not manufacture materials. And sure enough, look at the economy here. The people who manufacturing products using our machines are making money, and 95% of the people who manufacture and develop the machines and the materials are losing money. That's not a normal circumstance. Not a normal situation, it cannot hold whether - is in our portion of the industry, the machine developers and makers here is to consolidate. And you can get an example if you look years ago into the aviation industry when there were many manufacturers of aircrafts. I'm speaking about commercial aircraft and the people who are flying them. The analogy is the manufacturer of the aircraft are us, they're machine manufacturers. And the airlines that fly them are the users who manufacture products and the airline products before regulation was profitable. And the people who manufactured -- products actually enabled them, were losing money. And there were many of them. Who remembers the name Comet and who remembers Douglas and McDonnell and McDonnell Douglas. Today, everybody consolidated and in the commercial airline industry, you have two manufacturers, Airbus and Boeing. And that would enable them to become profitable, because they realized early in the game all the rest of the players could not survive on their own. That is what's going to happen in our industry. I'm not sure it will be reduced down to two, I think we'll be ending up more, but definitely not 350 companies manufacturing machines that everybody and every one of them, 95% at least, not making money. The next slide, which is the acquiring of Desktop Metal slide, is one of our first steps. It's not our first step because we consolidated before. We did seven acquisitions before Desktop Metal, but those were smaller acquisitions, and we waited for a long time for the big ones to come because prices were totally out of whack and totally unacceptable. Desktop Metal, if you read their proxy statement, going for a shareholders vote for this deal, describe the process that we went with them in acquisition, we gave them nine proposals over the last two years to acquire them, ladies and gentlemen, nine proposals. The last proposal, which is the one they took, is the lowest proposal of all the lines. Think about it traditionally, when you bid for a house and you don't get it, you increase your price you increase your price until you get it. Well, here's the opposite we reduced the price on every new proposal that we made because the market shrunk in valuations because the companies did not make money and were not growing at the right place. So we waited for this moment in time to start the acquisitions of the larger companies. The next slide is a map or a graph that shows you where do we believe we are positioned or will be positioned once we close this acquisition with Desktop Metal. And ladies and gentlemen, we didn't finish the acquisition trail. Even with Desktop Metal, it takes us from being $60 million, $70 million compared to being at $230 million overnight. And it positions at the high growth potential and with the broadest technology portfolio, but all these are just sub level drivers that has to drive a business model into profitability. The next slide discusses how little bit points of interest we have with developing a premium, high-margin portfolio of additive material, and additive manufacturing materials. And as I mentioned earlier, UCS venturing out into digital Industry 4.0. It's not necessarily going to be only AM. So AM is just one of the tools for digital Industry 4.0. And you see here, we believe software and AI is the major driver after materials in this industry and we are focusing on R&D efforts on that. Next slide discusses the reason, actually if you wish, that we believe that the merger with the Desktop Metal is such a good transaction for us. You see the -- in the middle, you see the overlap of distribution go to market. The verticals that we all go after are 80% overlapping and there are a little bit non-overlapping, which is our PCB and electronic business and their dental and consumer product business, otherwise it is overlapping. You see on the right side a list of impressive customers, by the way, many of them are customers of both of us. And on the left, it gives you a little bit of a taste of the kind of solution and variety of solution we apply toward the segment where we can get into mass manufacturing and mass production. I shouldn't say -- mass is a little bit misleading, it's not mass in so much as manufacturing 40 million remote controlled TV pieces a year, we're not going to get there. We're talking about high -- medium volume and high amount of designs. So any industry that needs digital industry, that needs to change a lot of their product lines, and the product lines are not manufactured in millions, but they're manufacturing in a lot of variety of designs. That's where we will play a major role. It's called high mix, low volume. Lastly, some acquisition details. We published it before. But just to remind you, it was this quarter, so it's worthwhile mentioning. Acquired 100% of Desktop Metal. It's all cash transactions. People asked us, why won't you pay with shares? The answer is two; one, our share is undervalued, by far. I'm not talking about undervalued being 2.2 to 2.8 to 3.5. We believe it's undervalued in hundreds of percent. And using the share when it's undervalued, it's obviously dilutive to our shareholders. And moreover, it is also a fact, I'm sure you remember, that we bought our shares ourselves because they were undervalued just because it made sense to have less shares and then more earnings per share when earnings come up and more value per share. And the reason why I think you don't see it yet in the share value is because the whole corner of this industry, or the whole corner that's called this industry is getting very bad attitude from the market because of the rest of the companies that reduce their values dramatically and spend all their cash. That's the reason we're buying them. But it will change. Total consideration is between $135 million to $180 million. Depends on a certain formula, it's expected to close in the end of the year. And the closing condition is mostly finishing the regulatory approval process with the American authorities and getting a shareholders vote, positive shareholders vote by Desktop Metal shareholders. And it's in process right now. This is the point where we'll try you to ask questions and hopefully we'll be able to answer them. Operator, please. Operator?