Earnings Labs

Vuzix Corporation (VUZI)

Q3 2022 Earnings Call· Wed, Nov 9, 2022

$2.42

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Greetings, and welcome to the Vuzix’s Third Quarter Ending September 30, 2022 Financial Results and Business Update Conference Call. At this time all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions]. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. It's now my pleasure to turn the call over to Ed McGregor, Director of Investor Relations of Vuzix. Mr. McGregor, you may begin.

Ed McGregor

Analyst

Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to the Vuzix’s third quarter 2022 ending September 30th, financial results and business update conference call. With us today, our Vuzix’s CEO, Paul Travers and our CFO Grant Russell. Before I turn the call over to Paul, I would like to remind you that on this call management's prepared remarks may contain forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties and management may make additional forward-looking statements during the question-and-answer session. Therefore, the company claims the protection of the Safe Harbor for forward-looking statements that are contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results could differ materially from those contemplated by any forward-looking statements as a result of certain factors including, but not limited to general economic and business conditions, competitive factors, changes in business strategy or development plans. The ability to attract and retain qualified personnel, as well as changes in legal and regulatory requirements. In addition, any projections as to the company's future performance represent management's estimates as of today November 9, 2022. Vuzix assumes no obligation to update these projections in the future, as market conditions change. Today's call may include certain non-GAAP financial measures, when required reconciliation to the most directly comparable financial measure calculated and presented in accordance with GAAP can be found in the company's Form 10-Q filing at sec.gov, which is also available at www.vuzix.com. I'll now turn the call over to Vuzix’s CEO, Paul Travers who will give an overview of the company's operating results and business outlook. Paul will then turn the call over to Grant Russell, Vuzix’s CFO who will provide an overview of the company's third quarter financial results. Paul will return to provide some closing remarks after, which we will move on to the Q&A session. Paul?

Paul Travers

Analyst

Thank you, Ed. Hello, everyone and welcome to the Vuzix Q3 2022 conference call. On this call, we're going to review our operating results and recent developments and then give you some perspective on where we see things headed. During the third quarter, we achieved both sequential and year-over-year double-digit revenue growth. We made strong progress in terms of product development, technology advancement, and new business engagements. On the OEM side of our business, we are now engaged with many new potential defense, consumer electronics, and enterprise customers that are interested in our waveguide and display engine solutions. At the same time, larger deployment opportunities for our smart glasses among key enterprise customers continue to expand both in number and visibility within warehousing and logistics, automotive, pharma and healthcare verticals. Let me elaborate. From a customer engagement perspective, the third quarter continued to be very encouraging across our core Smart Glasses business despite numerous headwinds. Most notably at the end of Q3, we expanded our international sales channel with the addition of Hongke Tech to support our business development in China. We also bolstered our local sales and support team in Europe with additional personnel that came online during Q3 to support our key accounts and drive additional sales growth in the EMEA region. As always, we continue to work closely with our key independent software vendors to support the needs of our collective customers as they work through their optimizations in support of a growing number of enterprise wide rollouts. On the OEM side of the business, there is growing momentum with both existing and new customers, sales of waveguides and display engines as well as engineering services were both at record levels in our third quarter and we expect our OEM business activities will continue to grow. After…

Grant Russell

Analyst

Thank you, Paul. As Ed mentioned, the 10-Q we filed this afternoon with the SEC offers a detailed explanation of our quarterly financials. So I'm just going to provide you with a bit of color on some of the numbers now. Our third quarter total revenues for the three months ended September 30 2022 with $3.4 million as compared to $3 million for the prior 2021 period, an overall increase of 14%. Sales of waveguides and display engines for the quarter rose to approximately $0.25 million, a new quarterly record for us. Revenues from engineering services were also a record at $0.9 million versus none in the prior-year's period. Offsetting some of these revenue gains were decreases in sales, glass revenues, which as mentioned by Paul was due to higher sales discounts for larger volume orders, and by a smaller extent negative foreign exchange impacts and lower unit sales. There was an overall gross profit of $0.9 million or 25% for the three months ended September 30 2022 as compared to a gross profit of $0.4 million or 13% for the same period in 2021. The improvement in gross profit percentage in the quarter was largely attributable to increased amount of engineering services revenues, which typically earn us a higher gross margin. R&D expense was $3.4 million for the three months ended September 30 2022, an increase of only 1% against the comparable period in 2021. Selling and marketing expense for the three months ended September 30 2022 was $2 million as compared to $1.7 million in the 2021 period, an increase of 20% largely due to increases in staff compensation due to headcount increases. General and administrative expense for the three months ended September 30 2022 was $4.9 million, a decrease of 11% versus $5.5 million in the prior…

Paul Travers

Analyst

Thanks, Grant. As you can see, it is incredibly busy at Vuzix these days, and in the New Year, Vuzix will be attending the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas as we excite the world with our newest fleet of industry leading smart glasses. We would like to invite everyone to stop by our booth to see them firsthand. I will say it should be an exciting show this year as we are also planning to unveil the proverbial one more thing. Our biggest smart glasses leap forward yet and pointed directly at the broader markets. With that, I would like to turn the call back over to the operator for Q&A.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question is coming from Matt VanVliet from BTIG. Your line is now live.

Matt VanVliet

Analyst

Hey, good afternoon, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. I guess first, just curious on how you're thinking about the distribution and warehousing channel in light of some of the macro headwinds and some of the struggles we're seeing across kind of e-commerce and retail more holistically. And just kind of what's baked into your forward expectations on kind of the overall macro trends?

Paul Travers

Analyst

Sure, Matt. This is the really cool bit about what Vuzix does in that space, when you're in a distribution channel, and you can make it more efficient and deal with high turnover rates, because it's so easy to use our products, they pay for themselves so fast, and it helps deal with the fact that, it's hard to even get good employees to do those jobs. And so we see 2023 being a fantastic year for us, as deployments we believe we're going to happen all over the place. And some of these companies that we've been working with for quite some time now. So we're a device that helps make workers more efficient. It's that simple. It's going to be deployed in quite a few places because of it.

Matt VanVliet

Analyst

All right, very helpful. And then on the aerospace and defense side, obviously a bunch of engineering services opportunities, but maybe within that mix, and even beyond the consumer electronics side, how should we think about the mix of the OEM business, maybe over the next call it four or five years or something that more longer-term versus smart glasses sales and kind of what you're thinking about the ultimate revenue mix between those two might be?

Paul Travers

Analyst

Well, some of these accounts that we're working with are, they're selling devices for like 60 grand a pop, to Vuzix, it could be $5,000 to $7,000 a pop, and it could be as many as 60,000 pieces over a program. So that event side of our business could be pretty significant. And it could represent well, first of all, it is great margin for Vuzix 1 and number two, it should represent some significant top line. On the broader market side, when you're in multiple programs, knock on wood. These are companies that are expecting to shelf millions of these things, and it's part of the reasons why we've done this upgrade to our facility. And we've set it up so we could expand it even further and grow into it. As the demand grows, I mean these guys are going to be talking millions of units. To add that all up, Matt, it could run over the top of the enterprise side of our business. I mean there's hundreds of 1000s of headsets that can be sold, maybe millions, even in enterprise, no doubt about it, and it's a higher number. But the unit volumes are just going to be impressive in the broader market side of it.

Matt VanVliet

Analyst

All right, great. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Next question today is coming from Tyler Burmeister from Craig-Hallum Capital, your line is now live.

Tyler Burmeister

Analyst

Hey, guys, thanks for letting us ask a couple questions. So first, I guess as a point of clarification, the OEM revenue is the $900,000 in Q3 the engineering services. And when you say you expect OEM to grow in Q4, is that a quarter-over-quarter sequential comment or is that a year-over-year comment, and then, as we look into next year, are these quarterly levels kind of getting close to $1 million is that the type of run rate we could expect in the next year, is there maybe some one-time project startup or completion, that positively kind of impacted in the near-term?

Paul Travers

Analyst

There's no doubt that these things are a bit lumpy, right? Because sometimes you've got two or three guys in the queue maybe more that you're developing for and delivering against, but there's so many of them, Tyler, that look like they're coming to us, like I said, there's upwards of a dozen defense companies now. So it should start to get more consistent next year, but it still will be lumpy as we deliver and programs come in and out until they're going into production. On the defense side for production next year, there should be at least one, and maybe a couple of them that we're producing in production oriented quantities. The sequential growth again, this is a lumpy kind of business right now. I mean, we feel pretty good about what's going to happen here in our Q4. It should match it, it's little rough plus or minus. But it should be a reasonably good quarter, the fourth quarter in the next year, these numbers should be significant jumps over what they're doing in this year. There's just so many programs coming on board.

Tyler Burmeister

Analyst

That sounds great. Thanks for that clarification color. And then as we talk about waveguides and the opportunity to sell those into third parties. How should we think about that the timing of the opportunity, obviously pretty excited with some of the long-term opportunities that we are thinking a material step up and revenue next year, is this kind of looking out more three, five years?

Paul Travers

Analyst

It's not three to five, it's in fact, we'll see some revenue from a product perspective, I believe in 2023. Some of the broader market guys were talking to, they want products by the end of next year. So it won't be -- it won't be massive next year. It'll really crank up in 2024, though.

Tyler Burmeister

Analyst

That sounds great. Sorry just go ahead.

Paul Travers

Analyst

I was just going to say it takes time to get through the development phase of some of this stuff. I will tell you though, that some of these companies are already well into their product development, they just haven't been able to solve this side of it.

Tyler Burmeister

Analyst

That sounds good. Thanks.

Paul Travers

Analyst

You're welcome.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. The next question today is coming from Jack Vander Aarde from Maxim Group. Your line is now live.

Jack Codera

Analyst

Hi, guys, this is actually Jack Codera calling in for Jack Vander Aarde. Thanks for taking my questions. I was actually just wondering if you could give possibly any more color on the OEM opportunity. I was wondering if you could explain it all, the timeline for those opportunities from like early conversations to point-of-sale, can you give any color, how long that whole process takes?

Paul Travers

Analyst

It really depends a lot, Jack on which programs that we're talking, first of all, some of these programs. A smaller number of them, of course, because this is something that's only been six or seven months that we've really hung our shingle out. But there's a couple of these that we've been working on for the last two or three years. And those projects, programs, we believe are going to be rolling into production in 2023, at least for sure one of them. A brand new project that's based upon what it is can take 12 to 18 months before it might be in volume production. Some of them are even longer-term, they're taking two to three years out based upon what the program is. So it really does depend. Now, that said the size of the engineering, the longer the ones, the ones that are longer, the engineering services part of it, the part where you do to develop the much bigger numbers in this regard. So and of course we make good margin on that side of our business at the same time. So you're going to see in 2023, a reasonably large number of new programs and that baseline of engineering services fees to get these things developed in the multiple millions of dollars.

Jack Codera

Analyst

Awesome, that's wonderful color. I'll hop back in the queue. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. We reached the end of our question-and-answer session. I'd like to turn the floor back over for any closing or further comment.

Paul Travers

Analyst

Thank you very much, everybody for joining the call again. And now yes, like I said [indiscernible] would be a lot of fun. We look forward to seeing everybody there and we look forward to reporting in March. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. That does conclude today's teleconference and webcast. You may disconnect your line at this time and have a wonderful day. We thank you for your participation.