Steve Abramson
Analyst · ROTH Capital Partners. Please proceed
Thanks, Darice, and welcome to everyone on today's call. Our third quarter revenue was $162 million, operating profit and net income were $67 million, and earnings per diluted share was $1.40. 2024 is another year of growth. Growth that positions us for record revenues and record profits. The rate of growth though is expected to be more modest than previously projected. The first half of the year started off on a strong note, but as we approached the end of the third quarter, customers lowered their forecast for Q4. Given the downward trend of forecast revisions, we are revising our 2024 revenue forecast range to $625 million to $645 million. While lower-than-expected fourth quarter sales have tempered this year's pace of growth, we continue to believe in the tremendous trajectory of the OLED market as activity across the consumer electronics landscape expands with new OLED AR/VR devices, smartwatches, smartphones, IT, automotive, and TVs. Near term, we expect the IT market to be the primary driver of growth. Omdia forecasts that [global] (ph) OLED PCs are expected to grow to 69 million units in 2028, up more than 150% from an estimated 26 million units in 2024. This growth momentum is driving a new multiyear CapEx cycle geared for the medium-sized OLED market. During the quarter, Visionox broke ground on its new $7.7 billion Gen 8.6 OLED facility in Hefei. Similar to BOE's $9 billion greenfield Gen 8.6 OLED plant, Visionox's new fab will be designed with a monthly capacity of 32,000 plates per month. Add that to Samsung Display's $3 billion 15,000 plate per month Gen 8.6 OLED IT facility, that brings the current total investments for new Gen 8.6 OLED facilities to approximately $20 billion, and we believe further investments are in the works. New OLED module factories are also on the rise. According to reports, Visionox completed the construction of its new $1.6 billion Gen 6 Flexible OLED module factory in August and Samsung Display recently decided to invest $1.8 billion to build a new OLED module production line in Vietnam, mostly to produce IT and automotive OLED modules. Speaking of OLEDs in automotive, during the quarter, myriad automotive makers, including Audi, Lotus, Zeekr, and [indiscernible] unveiled new car models with OLED screens, and some of those models were designed with both OLED displays and OLED taillights. From OLED's low-power consumption, enabled by our phosphorescent materials and technology, to OLEDs being lighter, thinner and inherently conformable, bendable and rollable, as well as numerous other benefits, OLEDs are enabling greater design flexibility and energy efficiency with brilliant picture quality and fast refresh in the automotive market. OLEDs continue to push the form factor boundaries of consumer electronics products. During the quarter, the world's first tri-fold, the Mate XT, was launched to much fanfare as the first device that transforms from a 6.4-inch smartphone sized screen into a full 10.2-inch tablet. Tri-foldables are not the only form factor broadening the definition of what a consumer product can be. According to reports, Samsung is progressing with its rollable OLED development project and plans to launch its first rollable smartphone next year. These reports note that Samsung's rollable phone when fully open will sport a large 12.4-inch display. UBI Research forecast that by 2028, foldable phones will make up almost 10% of total OLED smartphone shipments, up from 5% today. On the R&D front, we continue to collaborate closely with our customers and are developing new OLED materials and technologies to support their growing product roadmaps. We are continuously discovering, developing, and delivering next-generation reds, greens, yellows, and hosts to meet the ever-changing and ever-evolving specifications for color point, energy efficiency and lifetime. Regarding blue, we continue to make excellent progress on our ongoing development work for a commercial phosphorescent blue emissive system. We continue to believe that the additional time needed to introduce a commercial phosphorescent blue into the marketplace will be measured in months and not years. When our commercial phosphorescent blue is adopted in an OLED device, we believe that the benefits will be significant for the industry, for consumers, and for us. With OVJP, we continue to make progress. We believe that enabling red, green and blue side-by-side manufacturing of OLED TVs efficiently and with fast TAKT times can revolutionize the large area OLED landscape. On that note, let me turn the call over to Brian.