Sarcos Technology and Robotics Corporation (NASDAQ:STRC) Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript - InvestingChannel

Sarcos Technology and Robotics Corporation (NASDAQ:STRC) Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript

Sarcos Technology and Robotics Corporation (NASDAQ:STRC) Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript March 16, 2023

Operator: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Fourth Quarter 2022 Sarcos Technology and Robotics Corporation Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers’ presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Maria Shelton from Financial Profiles.

Maria Shelton: Thank you, operator. Good afternoon everyone, and welcome to the Sarcos Technology and Robotics Corporation fourth quarter and full year 2022 earnings call. Joining us on the call this afternoon are Sarcos President and Chief Executive Officer, Kiva Allgood; and Chief Financial Officer, Drew Hamer. Kiva will start the call with a discussion of business highlights from 2022 and recent events, and Drew will then talk in more detail about the financial results before management takes questions from analysts. Before we begin, we must state that today’s call will contain forward-looking statements including statements concerning future commercial production and availability of our products, product features and capabilities, target markets and market trends, size and expectations, customer demand and future financial results, condition and cash flows including revenues, costs, and liquidity.

In addition, any statements about future performance related to our acquisition of RE2, including our expectations regarding the benefits to be achieved, the financial performance of the combined company, integration plans and other statements regarding the combination of the two companies are forward-looking statements. These statements represent management’s beliefs and expectations as to future events of today, but there are many risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ from what we have projected. Among those risks and uncertainties are those described in our annual report on Form 10-K filed today with the SEC and those mentioned in today’s earnings press release. We encourage you to review the risks and uncertainties described in this press release and in our filings with the SEC for further information regarding these actual and potential risks and uncertainties.

We also encourage you to review the special notes regarding forward-looking statements including in our earnings release and 10-K for the full year 2022 filed with the SEC this afternoon in which we posted in Investors section of our website at sarcos.com and on the SEC’s website. In addition, we’ll be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures on our call today. Throughout this call, all financial measures will be GAAP, unless otherwise noted. A reconciliation of any non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures, as well as the description, limitations and rationale for such measures are included in the earnings release filed with the SEC this afternoon and which is available on our website and on the SEC’s website. A recording of this call will also be available on our website until April 16, 2023.

The information that we’re giving on this call today is as of today’s date and we undertake no obligation to update the information subsequently. At this point, I’d like to turn the call over to Kiva Allgood, President and CEO of Sarcos.

Kiva Allgood: Thanks, Maria. Good afternoon and welcome to everyone joining us on the call today. As you saw on our press release earlier, we had a strong fourth quarter and full year with revenue coming in on the high end of our guidance range. In addition, increasing revenue, it was a productive year and a giant leap forward. Sarcos is a recognized technology and software company developing the latest innovations in robotics and software technologies, and the RE2 acquisition we made in 2022 is playing a key role in that recognition. By combining our two companies, Sarcos now able to offer a much wider range of robotics systems and solutions to meet our customers’ needs and expanded even more industries. Most importantly, we gained the RE2 team and their deep expertise in robotics, machine learning and AI.

We have integrated RE2, Sapien products into our portfolio and incorporated them into our Guardian product lineup, which now encompasses the Guardian XM, intelligent robotics system, the Guardian Sea Class robotic system, and the Guardian XT Dexterous robotic system. We are commercializing these systems, first because of the expected strong demand that the products are capable of real world use, and we’re managing supply chain risks associated with these products. Although, we continue to develop the Guardian XM, we don’t believe production of the initial commercial version will be ready until sometime after 2023. We have a customer pipeline that is ready now for the XM, XT and Sea Class and we see the powering utilities, aviation, defense, maritime and construction industries as the end markets where our technologies can make the biggest fastest impact.

We’re seeing a strong customer preference to buy our systems outright rather than lease them in a robotic as a service model. We’re also seeing strong customer demand in our software solutions. Our systems include software to enable basic controls, teleoperation, semi-autonomous capabilities. We will provide additional software options such as supervised autonomy as an incremental service. Our Supervised Autonomy Framework uses multimodal sensor data to perceive, interact, and conceptualize unstructured environments. Combined with our success-based learning AI approach, the supervised autonomy framework harnesses the power of real-time and learned behavior data input. That enables our robots to execute task specific autonomy in unstructured environments.

Our advanced success-based AI enables human workers flexibility, creativity, and improvisational skills to deliver improved workflow performance and safer interactions between humans and machines for jobs and unstructured environments. Our success-based reinforcement learning functionality uses advanced AI and machine learning to improve the overall dexterity, mobility, safety, and autonomy of a robot so that it can learn new skills to enhance its abilities autonomously. Our AR approach is supervised autonomy could be leveraged not only in the Guardian line, but also in robots that aren’t our own products. By licensing our software to others, we have recurrent revenue opportunities that don’t require the capital of a RAS model. We began production of the Guardian XM and met our goal of producing 10 units in Q4, but we need to move bigger and faster.

And to do that, we recently signed an agreement with a major contract manufacturer that will allow us to scale production. We achieved technical milestones this year through several field trials, including those with the U.S. Navy for the Maritime Mine Neutralization system, which is the foundation for the Guardian Sea Class. After two years of field trials, we successfully integrated our STARFISH, an end-effector to demonstrate complex tasks requiring grafting movements and touch some of those of the human hands. A remote operator commander, the robot system to operate in real world situations, it’s a prime example of how we’re developing robotic technologies to take humans out of harm’s way and dangerous jobs. We are now commercializing the Sea Class system and providing the most value to our customers by optimizing the user experience.

As I mentioned on the Q3 call, we executed demanding field trials in the Navy’s repair technology exercise where several Sarcos robotic systems were put to the test, including the Guardian XM, the Guardian Sea Class, and the Guardian DX, which is our defense teleoperated dexterous robotic system, and the Guardian S, our remote visual inspection robotic system. These technologies can be used at height or in the case of the Sea Class at great desks that are unsafe for our workers. We conducted a demonstration of our outdoor based autonomous baggage loading system developed in conjunction with Changi Airport Group. This system automates loading and unloading bags from passenger planes, which is obviously a physically demanding job. Deploying robotic systems in this way has the potential for transport airports improving worker safety and reducing passenger delays, especially in bad weather.

software, tehnology, laptop Photo by Danial Igdery on Unsplash

Additionally, autonomy technologies are a potential solution for the growing need for labor in the aviation industry. Baggage loading is just one of those many ways our technologies could address needs in aviation, and there will be more to come in this market. And I hope you saw last week’s press release announcing that we had completed the final validation in our outdoor autonomous manipulation of photovoltaic panels known as O-AMPP, project for robotics solar field construction solutions. We worked with the industry leaders such as Mortenson, JLG Industries, Array Technologies, and Pratt Miller at a Mortenson project site to validate the solution. The solar energy is facing labor shortages and we expect our solution to significantly increase productivity, thus reducing crew sizes and greatly reducing installation costs.

This validation process was a critical step towards commercialization. And beyond the physical hardware development, we have developed AI based algorithms for semi-autonomous detection, tracking, and classification of objects, whether they are stationary or moving. We are advanced in fully immersive teleoperation technology for extended reality interactions between humans and robots that combines virtual reality and augmented reality, affordable motion capture technology to provide a greater sense of realism, increased performance, safety, and control. We launched two industry sponsored research efforts with leading universities in the field of AI-based control technologies for robotics to advance dexterity, maneuverability and robustness and dynamic and unstructured environments.

And we continue to expand our simulations and mixed reality solutions that use augmented reality, virtual reality, digital twins and AI enablement simulation techniques to create simulation environments in which we can train, optimize robot operations. Simulations are important when conditions are too expensive, risky, or time consuming to do in the physical world. As you can tell, we’ve accomplished this great deal in 2022 and years prior, and those accomplishments will serve us as the springboard for growth going forward. In 2023, we anticipate increasing both our product and product development contract sales to $23 million to $25 million as we commercialize our existing lineup while developing new technologies for the future. Customers are paying us to be first in line for the first production unit and paying us to deliver them faster than anyone else.

We’ve been working for years to be in this position. We are ready. And finally, I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention one more key event in 2022, and that’s the appointment of Drew Hamer as our Chief Financial Officer who quickly became the valued member of our strategic leadership team. And now I’ll turn it over to Drew to report on the financials.

Drew Hamer: Thank you, Kiva, to everyone on the line, it is a pleasure to be here today speaking with you. Please note that our results for this year include the financial performance of RE2 from the close of the transaction last year on April 25. The 2021 results do not include results from RE2. Also, please note what was formally called research and development services revenue is now called product development contract revenue. Product development contract revenue comes from different types of contractual research and development agreements, primarily related to the development and commercialization of our products, including cost type and fixed price agreements. Now turning to the actual results, all comparisons I will use are year-over-year.

For the fourth quarter of 2022, revenue was $6.1 million compared to $1 million during the fourth quarter of 2021. The increase was primarily due to increased revenue from product development contract revenues, cost of revenue increased by $3.3 million to $4.4 million as compared to $1.1 million in 2021, mainly due to the cost associated with the product development contracts I just mentioned. Fourth quarter 2022, total operating expenses, including cost of revenues were $101.3 million, an increase from the fourth quarter of 2021, operating expenses of $28.6 million. The increase was mainly due to a non-cash goodwill impairment charge of $70.2 million, which was primarily driven by the sustained decrease in the company’s publicly quoted share price and market capitalization during the fourth quarter.

Research and development expenses increased by $4.1 million to $10.2 million in the fourth quarter, this increase was driven primarily by increased headcount from the acquisition of RE2. Part of this increase was also related to increased third-party service provider costs focused on the development of our Guardian XT, Guardian XM, and Guardian XO products. General and administrative expenses were down $6.1 million to $12.9 million in the fourth quarter, primarily due to decreased stock-based compensation expenses. Sales and marketing expenses were $2.7 million, which was slightly up compared to $2.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2021. Fourth quarter of 2022, net loss was $92.3 million, or loss of $0.61 per share compared to a net loss of $34.1 million or a loss of $0.25 per share in the fourth quarter of the prior year.

Fourth quarter non-GAAP net loss was $18 million or loss of $0.12 per share compared to a net loss of $14.7 million or loss of $0.11 per share in 2021. Moving on to the full year 2022, revenue increased to $14.6 million from $5.1 million for the full year of 2021, primarily due to increased revenue from product development contract revenues. We also had $330,000 in sales of our legacy products in 2022 as compared to $1.5 million in such sales in the prior year. Cost of revenue increased by $7.7 million to $11.6 million in 2022 as compared to $3.9 million in 2021, mainly due to the cost associated with increase in product development contract revenues I just mentioned. 2022 total operating expenses including cost of revenues were $191.6 million, up $105.5 million from 2021 due mainly to the goodwill impairment charge that previously discussed.

Research and development expenses increased by $16.6 million as compared to the prior year due to increased labor and overhead expenses as a result of increased headcount due in part to the RE2 acquisition and third-party service provider costs as the company focused on the development and commercialization of its Guardian XT, XM, Sea Class and XO products. For the full year 2022, net loss was $157.1 million, or a loss of $1.07 per share compared to $81.5 million or a loss of $0.72 per share in the prior year, $70 million of which was due to the goodwill impairment charge, I mentioned earlier. Full year non-GAAP net loss for 2022 was $67.4 million, or loss of $0.46 per share compared to a non-GAAP net loss for 2021 of $35.5 million, or loss of $0.31 per share.

The end of the year with $114.5 million in unrestricted cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities. I’m now going to turn to our outlook. First, I’d like to discuss our production capabilities and ramp. The production of our Guardian XM and Guardian XT systems is progressing on schedule. Initial commercial versions of both systems will be ready for customer delivery in the first half of 2023. Going forward, we will be providing a weighted average ASP in giving unit accounts for total number of systems perspective. As we get closer to the ramp expected in the second half of 2023, we will begin to provide these metrics in our guidance. The initial manufacturing of our commercial products is already ramping in our facilities in Salt Lake City and Pittsburgh.

We do not anticipate high volume production by a contract manufacturing partner to be in place until at least the end of 2023. We estimate that we have the capability to manufacture between 300 and 500 units of a Guardian XT robotic system, Guardian XM robotic system, Guardian Sea Class units, and our existing commercial products depending on the mix. We continue to expect that we will not use all of the capacity in 2023. Now to our financial guidance. For the first quarter of 2023, we expect total revenue to approximate $2.3 million and all will be product development contract revenue. We estimate cash used in operating activities will average approximately $6 million per month. Now, for the full year of 2023 guidance, total revenue is expected to range between $23 million and $25 million.

Product development contract revenue is expected to be approximately 80% of the mix with product revenue, the remainder. Product sales are expected to begin to ramp up in the second half of 2023. Turning to our operating expenses, research and development expenses are expected to decrease slightly in 2023 as compared to 2022, due to our focus on product development and as the company continues to leverage third-party service providers in its development activities. With the exception of stock-based compensation expense, we expect our general and administrative expenses in 2023 to increase slightly as the company works on its commercialization pathway and maintains public company compliance requirements. Sales and marketing will increase slightly in 2023 in line with the expected revenue growth in the future.

Now looking at our balance sheet, we are satisfied with our liquidity and currently have no plans to do an equity financing in 2023. We’ll continue monitoring our liquidity, financial and business results, outlook and market conditions, and could change our plans if we determine it to be necessary or advisable. Operator, that is the end of my prepared remarks. I’d like to turn over the call to you now. Would you please repeat the instructions to ask the question?

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