Daniel Baker
Analyst · Cowen
Thanks, Curt. I’ll cover product development, trade shows and sales. We recently introduced our fourth new smart sensor in the past year, a smart TMR magnetometer called the SM225. SM stands for smart magnetometer, which is designed to be used as a proximity to your [ph] current sensor. It's faster, more accurate and smaller than alternatives. The new sensors are smart, because unlike our legacy raw sensors, they include analog to digital conversion, digital factory calibration and digital interfaces in the IC. These features provide simple, smart connectivity to the Internet of Things. TMR stands for Tunneling Magnetoresistance. Our spintronic technology such as TMR is ideal for smart sensors, because of its inherent precision, small size and low power. In addition to the new smart sensors, we continue to improve raw sensors with a new TMR magnetometer sensor designated the ALT025. TMR generally provides more signal and uses less energy than our venerable giant magnetoresistance or GMR Technology. It can be used in a variety of industrial controls. Our new smart sensors have been well received. As an example, last week, we shipped a batch of smart angle sensors to a new customer for first production of an Internet of Things design win. We first talked to that customer in April, so it took barely three months to go from concept to production, which is quite remarkable. The new product is a Bluetooth connected smart tape measure. Our smart angle sensor provided fast prototyping with simple interfacing and elegant architecture. It also offered the customer excellent accuracy and measurement speed. The revenues for this specific design win isn’t huge, but the customer plans higher volume connected devices, and it illustrates the power of the Internet of Things paradigm and the benefits of our smart sensors. With the flurry of new products, we stepped up our promotional efforts. In the past quarter, we exhibited at Sensors Expo in San Jose, which is billed as the industry’s largest event dedicated to sensors, connectivity and systems. There’s a video of three of the demos we featured at the show on our YouTube channel and in the Videos section of nve.com. Additionally, one of our program managers, Dr. Joe Davies, presented a paper on our medical device sensors at the conference. His talk generated interest from several potential customers, and we hope to broaden our medical business. New products were also on display the past quarter at shows in England and Germany in cooperation with our distributors there. Looking even farther from home, in the past quarter, we shipped Mission Screen couplers for the Europa Clipper to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The products held up well under extreme conditions. The trip from NVE to JPL in Pasadena was the first 1,500 miles of the part several hundred million mile trip to Europa, which is one of Jupiter’s moons. The journey will include a launch in four years and a three to six year spaceflight. The mission is to look for conditions for life on Europa. Europa has been well studied recently, and now there’s even more to explore. According to a recent study published in the Journal Science Advances, Europa has sodium chloride, which is the principal component of sea salt. According to NASA, this means Europa could be even more similar to the earth than previously thought. Turning to sales here on Earth, we added an exceptionally capable representative in Europe, Dimac, which is based in Northern Italy. This will add a lot of feet on the street for us in Europe. We’ve had several training sessions with Dimac’s key people throughout Europe, and we've been impressed with their sales skill and technical savvy. Our annual shareholders meeting will be August 1 here in Eden Prairie, we'll demonstrate several new products, including smart sensors, which we didn’t have last year. We’ll also celebrate NVE’s 30 year anniversary with a birthday cake, and we’ll have smart sensor based mechatronics xylophone play happy birthday. The materials for the formal meeting, our proxy statement letter to shareholders, and annual report on Form 10-K have been filed with the SEC and are available from the Investors section of our website. Shareholders can still vote their shares via mail, phone or on proxyvote.com. There are three items on the formal agenda for the meeting. First, to elect Directors; second, advisory approval of the compensation of our named executive officers; and third, to ratify the selection of an accounting firm. For good corporate practice, our entire Board of Directors stands for re-election every year, and we were fortunate to have an exceptionally experienced and accomplished board. The second meeting agenda item is approval of officer compensation. As discussed in our proxy, we don’t overpay our officers, our officers have the same fringe benefits as all other employees, and there are no executive perks or golden parachutes. The third annual meeting agenda item is the ratification of our auditors. Last year, last quarter rather, we engaged a new accounting firm, Boulay PLLP after six years with Grant Thornton. Shareholders have the opportunity to vote on Boulay as our auditors for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2020. Audit firm rotation is considered good governance and Boulay is smart, efficient and experienced working with smaller public companies. Our board unanimously recommends a ratification. Boulay representatives will be at the upcoming annual meeting and will be available to answer questions. Now, I'd like to open the call for questions. Operator?