Chris Allexandre
Analyst · Baird
Good afternoon, and welcome to everyone on the call and webcast. We appreciate you joining us on today's call. I'm pleased to report that Q1 is reflecting another quarter of solid progress and growing momentum on our transformation to Navitas 2.0, highlighted by the company's return to top line sequential growth. For those of you that may be new or still coming up to speed on our story, I want to begin with a brief high-level summary of our ongoing strategic transformation and Navitas 2.0 vision. Over the past 2 quarters, we have meaningfully reaccelerated our pivot away from the company's historical mobile and low-end consumer business to focus the entire organization on high-power markets, where Navitas GaN and high-voltage SiC products can deliver long-term differentiation and value. Today, we are singularly focused on 4 high-growth, high-value market segments, AI data center, energy and grid infrastructure, performance computing and industrial electrification. Our go-forward objectives are to rapidly achieve scale in these higher-value markets in support of driving sustainable and profitable growth. Turning to an overview of the quarter. Our Q1 financial results demonstrated solid quarter-over-quarter improvement, and we observed growing momentum across our high-power markets and expanded customer engagement. Highlighting the quarter, we achieved the expected return to growth in Q1 with revenue increasing 18% sequentially. The renewed growth was driven by our high-power markets, which also represented a growing and larger majority of total revenue as we continue to reduce reliance on the company's historical mobile and consumer business. Although far too early to declare victory, we effectively completed our realignment of the entire organization, and Navitas is back to growth, driven by our high-power markets. In fact, revenue from our high-power business grew 25% year-over-year with all 4 of our high-power end markets increasing sequentially in Q1. The increased contribution from high-power market also drove a favorable mix in our overall revenue mix, resulting in improved Q1 gross margin. Consistent with our previously communicated expectation, we anticipate continued sequential top line growth and gradual gross margin expansion throughout '26. The ultimate success of our strategic transformation continues to be grounded in 4 pillars: market focus, technology leadership, operational efficiency and financial discipline. With respect to market focus, we continue to see new technology adoption accelerating across multiple end markets and customers, both of which are increasingly driving towards GaN and high-voltage SiC solutions. Without question, AI is the primary catalyst driving this momentum and leading to the broadening adoption of high-power solutions across all 4 of our target end markets. Collectively, this market represents a serviceable addressable market of $3.5 billion by 2030, split roughly 50-50 between GaN and high-voltage SiC with combined CAGR exceeding 60%. We are definitely focused on the largest portion of the TAM, which I'd like to refer as the AI infrastructure comprised of unique but related growth opportunity across the AI data center and the grid and energy infrastructure, each of which are fundamental to enabling the AI evolution. Today, the aggressive increase in compute power density is accelerating GaN and SiC adoption in data centers, while the required modernization of the energy green infrastructure to support these data centers is driving increased need for high-voltage SiC. It is uniquely positioned as one of the very few companies that can claim deep long-term experience in both GaN and high-voltage SiC technologies. We're also agnostic and readily offer customers the ability to choose the optimal solution for their application architecture. As a result of our proven capability in both SiC and GaN, we believe it allows us to address more of the power chain and ultimately capture with content per system. Briefly providing the trends and opportunities specific to each of our 4 targeted end markets, starting with AI data centers. As a technology leader in both GaN and SiC power delivery, we support all major AI data center architectures with industry-leading power density and efficiency. Again, having both technology is a strategic differentiator and our ability to fully support a given customers' chosen approach translate into more opportunities across more applications and greater potential lower content for Navitas. As conveyed at the recent NVIDIA GTC event in March, AI data center is rapidly evolving towards a HVDC architectures, leading to expanding content opportunity driven by the need for exponential power levels, increased density and top-tier efficiency. Our immediate focus remains on expanding sampling of our newest GaN and SiC product, enabling qualifications, preparing for scale ramp and supporting hyperscalers and OEM customers in their ongoing design and development efforts, spanning from AC-DC PSUs and DC-DC PSUs and affordable HVDC brick designs at higher power level capacity. In grid infrastructure, we continue to advance active engagement across a series of new and existing customers with notable acceleration in design activity in the United States. AI remains a prominent underlying catalyst as all industry participants increasingly acknowledge the existing energy grid is not capable of supporting the projected future rollout of AI deployment. This market where technology and scale are equally important, represent a large and long-term secular growth opportunity for our current and future high-voltage SiC products. Navitas GeneSiC technology position us as a leading enabler of the grid and energy infrastructure modernization efforts, providing customers with more reliable and higher density power through our recently introduced 2.3 kV and 3.3 kV modules and a road map to even higher voltage. In performance computing, we are seeing sustained healthy adoption of GaN in higher power chargers solution for high-end laptops and mobile workstations used for gaming and AI development. Our opportunity in this market continues to be driven by the dramatic increase in power requirements with CPU moving from 15 to 30 watt to 45 to 80 watts in ultra-end AI notebooks with the integration of GPU requiring up to 120, 175 watts. As a result, we expect to benefit from growing demand and momentum in performance computing market application throughout '26 and beyond. Finally, in industrial electrification, we are continuing to see customer traction in both GaN and ultra-high voltage SiC in high-performance applications such as DC-DC converter and megawatt chargers, industrial pump, motor control and heavy equipment electrification. With respect to our second pillar, technology leadership, we remain fully committed to ongoing innovation in GaN and high-voltage SiC driven by focused R&D investments and demonstrated by expanding customer engagement and co-development projects. On GaN, we have continued to accelerate sampling of our 100-volt and 650-volt devices to more OEMs and ODMs. Customers pursuing the 80-volt HVDC architect today are testing GaN, and we believe most are doing testing with magnetized devices. We are focused on enabling and supporting customers in this transition from silicon to GaN like we have always successfully done in our past. More recently, we have seen some customer internal reality, system-level testing on our newest GaN devices. During the first quarter, we continue to deepen our collaboration with OEM, ODM and hyperscalers, including demonstration of enabling new GaN architecture that feature high power efficiency and reability, which is leveraging Navitas's more than 10 years of GaN experience and expertise. One of those highlights was our recent release of a 20-kilowatt 800-volt to 6-volt DC-DC platform using our latest 8x8 60-volt GaNFast test aiming at 97.5% efficiency. This platform solution was formally unveiled in March at GDC and showcased at NVIDIA MGX. As a reminder, we also previously released an industry-leading 800-volt to 50-volt AI DC-DC power fully GaN, 60 Volt and 100 Volt, delivering best-in-class efficiency and density. This respective platform are generating strong interest and prospective customer engagement due to their demonstrated ability to deliver the highest power density, efficiency and performance for next-generation AI data center architecture. Today, our team remain focused on execution, including product delivery, qualification and preparation of targeting growth for GaN-based 800-volt HVDC architecture in 2027. On high-voltage stitch, we continue to strengthen our technology with a focus on high power density and ability, which represent both the primary market drivers and our key differentiators in terms of silicon and packaging. Following the introduction earlier this year of our new industry-leading Gen 5 GeneSiC technology based on our patented French-assisted planer architecture. In March, we released our 1.2 kV Gen 5 SiC product tailored in packages to address the higher power density DCDC and ACDC unit in PSU application. We have since delivered samples to OEM and ODF, and they are currently being evaluated by most PSU vendors. Initial customer feedback has been excellent with report up to 50% increase in power density and greater than 98% system efficiency and improved cool. Turning to operational efficiency. The prior restructuring action initiated late last year, which I discussed in detail last quarter, have been substantially complete. As previously mentioned, today, the entire organization and its resource are fully aligned to focus on the high-power market. This represents a substantial strategic repositioning from where the company was just 9 months ago. Our team is moving fast and working very hard and their collective mitigation is impressive. Recognizing the tremendous opportunities ahead, we plan to continue adding selective engineering skills and competencies to accelerate customer support over the coming quarters. Also during the quarter, we completed our leadership transformation with the appointment of our new CFO, Tonya Stevens, who formally joined the team in late March. We now have the full leadership team in place, including new leaders in operations, engineering execution, sales and marketing, business units and finance, all of whom joined the company in recent weeks and months from larger companies with strong track record in execution and scale. Importantly, this new appointed team and our employees have demonstrated strong buying and excitement for Navitas 2.0, and it's a privilege to lead this transformation alongside each other. We also continue to make progress on our strategic technology and foundry partnership with GlobalFoundries non-GaN. We are confident this will enable our planned 8-inch pivot in 2027 for GaN manufacturing in the United States. At the same time, we are starting to build appropriate buffers with TSMC to ensure a smooth transition for all existing customers. Additionally, we have begun actively scaling our supply chain to support upcoming growth and demand, and we are leveraging AI internally across design and most of the functions to allow us to scale even faster. Our fourth pillar is financial discipline, which we are committed to as we execute our scale-up plan and transformation to Navitas 2.0, a consistently growing and profitable high-power company. This includes remaining diligent with respect to prioritizing our investment in high-power program, maintaining leverage OpEx and focusing on high-margin, long-term engagement that build multinational customer relationships. We made significant progress in Q1 with our previous restructuring effort and full mine towards high power market now substantially complete. Going forward, we'll continue to drive efficiency across the organization and are committed to disciplined investments in the business, even as we target a much larger market opportunity. Our focus remains on top line growth and margin expansion, driven by improving scale and mix of our high-power business in support of achieving long-term profitability. In summary, I am very pleased with the continuous progress and great momentum we have achieved in such a short period of time. We're taking further steps towards positioning Navitas as a high-power company. We anticipate continued sequential revenue growth in the second quarter and throughout the rest of '26. Q1 was the first clear proof point and the growth in high-power market demonstrate the momentum of our Navitas 2.0 strategy. We also anticipate gross margin to steadily improve as volume growth drive better fixed cost absorption and our revenue mix increasingly favors the high-power business. Mobile contribution will continue to diminish this quarter and become insignificant by year-end. At that time, we expect our business and revenue will be defined almost entirely by high-power market, a transformation that positions us well for sustainable long-term growth and profitability. Before I turn the call over to review our financials, I'd like to take this moment to welcome Tonya Stevens, our newly appointed CFO. I'm thrilled to have her join our executive team. She brings over 30 years of exceptional track record of financial leadership in the semiconductor industry, most recently at Lattice Semiconductor. I look forward to her valuable contribution as we grow the business and scale our operations to a larger, financially disciplined and profitable company. With that, I'll pass the call to Tonya to introduce herself and review our first quarter financials and second quarter outlook.