November 13, 2024 4:30 PM ET
Company Participants:
Stuart Smith – Moderator /Investor Relations
Michael Mo – CEO
Shawn Canter – CFO
Stuart Smith:
Good afternoon everyone, and welcome to the KULR Technology Group, third quarter, 2024 earnings call. I’m your moderator for the call, Stuart Smith and I will be joined on the call today by the CEO of KULR Technology Group, Michael Mo and the CFO of the company, Shawn Canter. The call will consist of opening statements from both Michael Mo and Shawn Canter, followed by a Q&A session that covers the questions that have been sent in prior to today’s call from shareholders via email and on social media. But before the call can begin, please listen to the following safe harbor statement.
This call does not constitute an offer to sell or solicitations of offers to buy any securities of any entity. This call contains certain forward-looking statements based on the company’s current expectations, forecasts and assumptions that involve risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking statements made on this call are based on information available to management as of the date hereof. The company’s actual results may differ materially from those stated or implied in such forward-looking statements due to risks and uncertainties associated with their business, which include risk factors disclosed in the company’s form 10K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 12th, 2024, as it may be amended or supplemented by other results, the company files with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time.
Forward-looking statements include statements regarding the company’s expectations, beliefs, intentions or strategies regarding the future, and can be identified by forward-looking words such as anticipate, believe, could, estimate, expect, intend, may, should and would, or similar words. All forecasts are provided by management on this call are based on the information available at this time, and management expects that internal projections and expectations may change over time.
In addition, the forecasts are entirely on management’s best estimate of their future financial performance given the company’s current contracts, current backlog of opportunities, and conversations with new and existing customers about their products and services. The company assumes no obligation to update the information included on this call, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.
Now, with that, I will turn the call over to the chief executive officer of the company, Michael Mo. Michael, the call is yours.
Michael Mo:
Thank you, Stuart. This is Michael Mo. Thanks for everyone for joining us today. I’d like to go over some of the financial and operational highlights. In Q3 2024, we achieved record revenue of approximately $3.19 million. Total paying customers for the quarter increased 83%. Engineering service revenue increased 22%. Engineering service revenue customers increased 143%. Product revenue customers increased 54%. We’re able to achieve all these growth numbers while reducing the operating expenses by 38% year over year. We’re achieving more with less by streaming our operations, building out technology platforms that can scale quickly and increase in productivity with automation and AI-enhanced tools. Our team members are working very hard to achieve these goals.
In August, we officially designated our facility in Webster, Texas as our new headquarter. We hosted our first open house at this facility a couple of weeks ago and achieved overwhelming support from our customers, partners, and local government officials. We’re committed to continue our investment in the talent and capabilities in our headquarter in Texas. These investments are important to drive revenue growth by providing comprehensive in-house product and service solutions that span the entire life cycle of battery design, testing, prototyping, and volume production all under one roof.
We’re living in exciting times because we’re now at the cross-section of three multi-generational mega trends in technology. First, the privatization of the space economy and NASA’s mission to go back to the moon is feeling tremendous growth in the space economy for the next 10 years. It’s expected to grow to $1.8 trillion. We believe that quarter one, space battery will participate in a $6 billion space battery market and be a big growth driver for us.
AI is driving insatiable appetite for energy. A ChatGPT search costs 10 times more energy than a Google search. AI data center power consumption is expected to grow over 160% over the next few years. Now you’re hearing that we’re going to nuclear to power these AI data centers from Microsoft, Google, Oracle and others. 40% of data center power consumption is for cooling of the chips and equipment. We expect to lower this energy consumption with our KULR Xero Vibe technology. By removing vibration in the cooling fans, KULR Xero Vibe enables the fans to consume less power, make less noise, and last longer. There are over a billion fans sold in the world every year. Our mission is to make every fan a perfectly balanced fan to save energy.
The transition to electrification is powered by battery and renewable energy. We believe our KULR-1 platform and the SafeX platforms are going to contribute to this transition and be big growth drivers for us. Space battery market is expected to reach 6.35 billion by 2030, up from 3.67 billion in 2022. The acceleration of new space companies and the sustained growth of established players are contributing to a space economy project to surpass $1.8 trillion by 2030. A big part of this growth growing market is its reliance on small satellites, CubeSats, satellite constellations, and private space stations, and these products demand commercial off-the-shelf lithium-ion batteries that are cost-effective and can be customized quickly and ready for flight applications.
At KULR, we’re well positioned to serve that market with our KULR-1 space battery products available at 100, 200, and 400 watt hours. They’re ready to be configured to meet the customer needs quickly and they’re ready to meet the new NASA JSC-20793 safety certification requirement for crew space missions. We’re very excited about starting volume production for customers in 2025.
In Q3, we expanded our development contract, or Army DEVCOM, to over $2.4 million. Building on the momentum of this ongoing partnership, the Army will expand the development of additional prototypes and comprehensive environmental qualification testing in accordance to MIL-STD-810E. This expanded contract underscores KULR’s commitment to advancing the performance and reliability of silicon-anode lithium-ion battery cells under the most demanding conditions. These prototypes will undergo rigorous testing to ensure that the increased energy density does not compromise safety and reliability in active-duty environments. This country also aligns with KULR’s long-term strategy of forming strong partnerships to develop technologies that enhance the energy efficiency and resiliency in mission-critical military applications. Success in these efforts only reinforces KULR’s role as a key contributor to mission readiness in defense and aerospace sectors. As many of our longtime shareholders know, we come from a long heritage of providing thermal technologies to defense and space applications. In many cases, we’re the sole source provider for critical components for missile programs. For example, our phase-change material heat sink is designed to manage extreme thermal loads generated during mission-critical maneuvers, helping maintain optimum performance and reliability within the missile’s electronic systems.
At KULR, we’ll commit to continuing the advancement of our thermal management product platforms to serve our DoD customers. KULR ONE Air is going to be another revenue driver for us next year. President-elect just announced his Advanced Air Mobility policy push that will accelerate the development and adoption of eVTOL and electric air mobility in the United States. We already work with some of the largest eVTOL electric plane companies, as well as some of the key battery cell providers in this market. H55, for example, is already in production with KULR’s Thermal Runaway Shield technology inside the battery pack, which is the first one to receive European IASA certification. We have strong partnerships with cell makers such as Amprius and Molicel on their new high-energy battery cells, and to work with FAA to create an ecosystem of partners and customer to speed up the development, testing, and certification process. Our goal is to make KULR ONE Air the industry standard platform for electric aviation.
Speaking of industry standards, we’re working hard to establish KULR SafeX platform to be the industry standard for safe battery storage and transportation. To create that ecosystem, we’re working with OEM customers, regulators, firefighters, and insurance companies to serve all stakeholders. During our open house, we hosted many firefighters and first responders. We had a life test of a 3.4 kilowatt-hour battery pack in our safe case for the fire department of New York. For their demo, the safe case performed flawlessly. In addition, we hosted an insurance industry panel for the safe case with insurance experts, customers, and firefighter to discuss the risk and solutions. We’re very excited to work with insurance companies to make safe case available to their customers and lower the insurance premium for the customers by reducing the battery fire risk for all parties.
As AI demand expand exponentially more computing power in energy consumption, so does the need for cooling of these systems. For air cooling, fan performance is critical to drive enough airflow to cool the latest AI GPUs. Fan performance is limited by vibration and rotor speed, so we develop KULR Xero Vibe to virtually eliminate all vibrations in the cooling fan to make them run smoother, consume less energy, produce less noise, and last longer. We believe this is a game changer technology as cooling fans are critical to run the modern data center and crypto mining server farms. We announced a multi-million dollar licensing deal for KULR Xero Vibe technology in Q3. It is the first IP licensing deal of its kind for KULR, highlighting a pivotal expansion in our business model to be more scalable and achieve higher margins. We’ll explore more licensing deals for different applications across geographic regions.
Research firm Gartner predict that the spending on data center systems will reach 318 billion this year, up 34% from year earlier. In 2025, Gartner sees data center spending going 15.5% to $367 billion. We’re excited about this growth as well as our KULR Xero Vibe business to explore other new applications such as electric aviation and wind-powered turbine to make them more energy efficient and last longer. When we put all these products and services together, we’re building a new energy management platform for space electrification and AI economy. We’ve been on this technology development and business model path for many years, and now we’re starting to see the pieces fitting together and achieve the flywheel effect.
It’s taking a long time because these things are hard to do by themselves, and when you do it all together as a small company like KULR, it gets harder, but we’re making great progress thanks to our very talented engineering team and the market’s getting to know us better thanks to our sales and marketing team. We have a multipronged business model to our customers. As we continue to grow our customer base and provide them with more design and testing services all in-house, we’re advancing these customers towards production base where we’ll see their revenue growth accelerate. Combine that with IP licensing business, we can achieve a scalable business model with high gross margin profile.
I’m a believer of AI and I think it’s going to fundamentally change everything we do much faster than we realize, so we must think about it and plan for it so that the future of KULR can benefit from it. We’re looking at AI to streamline our operations and increase productivity on all fronts of our business. Software development is definitely an area where we benefit from AI. Platforms such as Google’s Gemini-powered Alpha Code 2 can dramatically lower the cost of software development and speed up development time. We’ll also integrate more AI and machine learning capabilities into KULR ONE battery platform and the KULR Xero Vibe system to power the next generation AI data centers. Personally, I’m a believer of the new AI agent powered Industrial Revolution 4.0. We’re building our products and services to be ready to power the physical to digital world interface layer of AI agents. More to come on that in 2025. Next, Shawn Canter will discuss financial highlights. Shawn?
Shawn Canter:
Thanks Mike. You can see the financial results from our third quarter in our Form 10-Q, which is now online. Let’s cover some key highlights. Topics worth noting include a record revenue quarter, gross margins up meaningfully, operating expenses down, continued trend of expanding our paying customer base, which contributes to a shrinking customer concentration, and KULR’s balance
Shawn Canter:
Balance sheet continues to get stronger. Let’s start with our income statement and revenue. In the third quarter, KULR set a new revenue record. Revenue was approximately 3.2 million. This is about 5% higher than the same last year, which was itself then a record revenue quarter. Product revenue was approximately $765,000, which was down 60% from the same period last year. Some of this decline can be attributed to the nature of the timing of how the end markets we serve place orders, some is the impact of previously mentioned, delayed yet expected orders in 2024 from a significant customer from 2023. Currently, our sales team expects orders from that customer to resume in 2025.
Service revenue was approximately 1.4 million in the third quarter, up 22% from the same period last year. As we have mentioned in the past, as our service business grows, management believes the product business should follow. And of course, KULR signed its first revenue generating license agreement in the third quarter for over $1 million in revenue. We are excited about this business model and hope to be able to announce similar type of deals in the coming quarters. Gross margin for the third quarter was 71% versus 44% in the same period last year. Even without the positive impact on gross margin from the KULR Xero Vibe license deal that we signed in the third quarter, gross margin would’ve been 57%
Comparing the third quarter with the same quarter last year, R&D costs came down 32%. SG&A costs came down 41% and total operating expenses down by about 38%. Earnings per share for the third quarter was a one penny loss. This is an improvement of about 80% from the same period last year. Now let’s spend a moment on customers. KULR had 33 total paying customers for the third quarter, up 83% from the same period last year. Total paying product customers number 20, up about 54% from the same quarter last year. And KULR had 17 total paying service customers, up 143% from the same period last year. As we broaden our customer base, reliance on any one customer should be mitigated. A few points on our balance sheet now.
Compared to the end of 2023, our balance sheet has improved materially. Cash plus accounts receivable are up 71%. Total assets are up 14% and total liabilities are down 45%. While the cash used in operating plus investing activities did go up a little about 7% in the nine months ending third quarter this year versus last year. This is largely due to increased accounts receivable, which we anticipate becoming cash upon collection and a significant decrease in accounts payable, which enhances vendor relations, reduces debt and indicates a stronger, less risky balance sheet. Back to you, Stuart.
Stuart Smith:
Well, thank you for that Shawn. And now as previously mentioned, we will begin the question and answer portion of today’s call. And here’s our first question. KULR’s business is focused on high performance thermal management for batteries and electronics. Can you provide updates on any upcoming product launches or significant innovations we should expect in 2025?
Michael Mo:
Yes, Stuart, I’ll take that. I think we’ve given quite a bit of a good updates on all the significant product developments and innovations coming in 2025 from KULR ONE Space, KULR ONE Guardian to KULR ONE Air, as well as our KULR Xero Vibe platform for servers and potentially wind farm turbine. These are all products and technology developments that are going to drive our growth in 2025. And equally exciting to me is how to explore new business models with customers with these products that will be looking for more licensing deals around different applications and also geographic regions. For the SafeX products as we work closer with insurance companies, maybe there’s a subscription model to explore for our products. We will have to see in 2025.
Stuart Smith:
All right, thank you for that Michael. Next question. Operating expenses, particularly research and development and general administrative expenses remain high, what steps are you taking to optimize these costs without compromising product development?
Shawn Canter:
Thanks, Stuart. It’s Shawn. I’ll take that one. Focusing on our investments continues to be important to us. You’ll note our operating expenses are down 38% than they were in the third quarter last year. We’ve reduced R&D down 32% and SG&A down 42%. We remain diligent in looking for areas to streamline our processes to take our costs down. We’re vigilant looking for large or small cost savings wherever we can find them because over the course of time, even small savings will add up to larger savings.
Stuart Smith:
All right, thank you for that Shawn. Next question, given the global supply chain disruptions, how is KULR ensuring the continued supply of key materials and managing vendor relationships to avoid future shortages or delays?
Shawn Canter:
Stuart, it’s Shawn, I think I’ll take that one too. This is an important topic given the current state of affairs in the world. One, we definitely are thinking about. It’s important to note our vendor concentration has gone down with respect to vendors that represent 10% or more of inventory. For the third quarter of this year versus last year, we went down from 25% to 0% this quarter. So we are diversifying and reducing our risk. Our great supply chain team is always thinking about this topic and tries to qualify multiple sources and to date we haven’t encountered any material issues, but we’ll keep staying focused on it.
Stuart Smith:
All right, again, next question. With a few customers accounting for a large portion of revenue, how is KULR planning to diversify its customer base to mitigate risks associated with customer concentration?
Shawn Canter:
It’s a good question, Stuart. Let me offer some insight here. This is something we are definitely paying attention to and I’ll share some actual figures with you. With respect to customers who represent 10% or more of our business, for the third quarter of this year compared to last year, our customer concentration is down 38%. For the nine months ended the third quarter of this year versus the same period last year, our customer concentration is down 46%. As we continue the ongoing trend of growing our customer base, customer concentration should continue to improve.
Stuart Smith:
All right, thank you Shawn. Next question then. With lithium, battery, transportation
Stuart Smith:
…. and storage likely to be more regulated by governments in the future, which could require batteries to be transported and stored in products similar to what KULR is currently producing. How is KULR positioning themselves to be able to quickly meet a large demand for their products in the future, if it arises?
Michael Mo:
Yeah, Stuart, I’ll take that. And first of all, certainly hope and expect such large demand to pick up and, if it were to happen to our SafeCASE product, in our products as well. So for the SafeX products we have a contract manufacturing partner who can scale up production very quickly with their existing factories and operations. These are partners that we’ve worked with for a while now, and they are both in North America and also in Asia. So we can scale up the production very quickly without much capital expenditure from KULR.
Stuart Smith:
Very good. Well, let’s move on to the next question, then. When do you feel like the stock price will reach $1? And what are the strategies to get there?
Shawn Canter:
Stuart, it’s Shawn. Maybe I’ll try to take a crack at that. Certainly this is the multi-million dollar question, so to speak. KULR continues to grow and diversify its revenue. Our balance sheet and concentrations continue to improve, as I referenced earlier. KULR’s efforts to streamline are showing up in lower expenses, and while we cannot predict when a stock will reach a certain price, we can continue to work on the factors that would traditionally be likely to increase demand for KULR’s stock which, all else equal, should cause an upward trend in the stock.
Stuart Smith:
Okay. Thank you for that, Shawn. Question about our current state, politically that is. And here’s the question: now that Trump has won the presidential election, has there been any talk amongst the associates of Elon Musk about major investments coming in 2025, noting that Tesla and SpaceX is a customer of KULR
Michael Mo:
Stuart, I’ll take that one. Yeah. Now the election is complete. We’re certainly seeing more certainty in the marketplace, which is usually good for business. As I talked about earlier, we are already seeing some policy direction pushes from the administration having a big impact on electric aviation and the eVTOL market. We are already working with all these customers and we’re building a platform to accelerate the design, the testing, and also the certification of these batteries with the FAA, and that’s really exciting for us. For the other product markets such as the EV, in a space customers mentioned in the question, we will see how the new policy changes can impact those industries and how that can drive a KULR’s business.
Stuart Smith:
All right. Thank you for that, Michael. Now, this will be our final question for the call today. When can we expect to start hearing about huge orders to where KULR profits would show advanced signs of growth
Michael Mo:
Stuart, I’ll take that. We’ll obviously continue to update our shareholders on the new customers and engagements. History has shown that our customer base is growing quickly, our order sizes are bigger, and our gross margin is improving. And so these are all the positive trends in our business model and how we’re executing on our business model, and we’ll continue to execute on that and keep our shareholders updated.
Stuart Smith:
Well, very good. As I mentioned, that is our final question of the day. I would like to thank once again the CEO of the company, Michael Mo, as well as the CFO for the company, Shawn Canter, for their participation in the call today, and of course to all the shareholders that provided their questions via social media or email. We appreciate your questions. We hope we got to everyone. As I always say, a lot of the same questions get asked different ways but we consolidate them into what we feel like represents the vast majority of the questions that are sent in over the last couple of weeks. But of course you send them in over the past quarter as well. So for Shawn, Michael, and myself, I’d like to thank you. And I will now turn the call over to the operator.
Operator:
This concludes our call for today. Thank you.