ACM Research - Earnings Call - Q4 2024
February 26, 2025
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 revenue was $223.47M, up 31.2% year over year and up 9.6% sequentially; GAAP diluted EPS was $0.46 (non-GAAP $0.56). Gross margin was 49.6% vs 46.4% a year ago but down sequentially from 51.4% in Q3.
- Management maintained FY2025 revenue guidance at $850–$950M and raised the long-term gross margin target to 42–48% (from 40–45%), signaling confidence in mix and cost structure improvements.
- Shipments surged to $264M in Q4 (vs $140M in Q4’23), implying a strong pipeline of tools under customer evaluation that can convert to revenue in future periods; cash, equivalents and time deposits rose to $441.9M at year-end.
- Regulatory overhang: ACM Shanghai and ACM Korea were added to the U.S. Entity List in December; management emphasized localized supply chain and described production impact as manageable, with continued support for global customers.
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q4 were unavailable at the time of this analysis; estimate comparisons are therefore omitted (attempted retrieval but API limit reached).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
- What Went Well
- Strong top-line and profitability: revenue +31% YoY to $223.5M; operating income +88% YoY to $44.0M; gross margin expanded 320 bps YoY to 49.6%.
- Product momentum: process qualification achieved for Thermal and PEALD furnace tools at two China customers; shipments up 88% YoY to $264M, highlighting traction in furnace and plating platforms.
- Confidence in model: FY2025 revenue guide held at $850–$950M; long-term gross margin target raised to 42–48% from 40–45%.
- What Went Wrong
- Sequential margin compression: gross margin declined to 49.6% in Q4 from 51.4% in Q3; operating margin dipped to 19.7% from 21.7% sequentially, reflecting mix/volume/currency factors.
- Revenue concentration: Q4 revenue was almost entirely Mainland China ($223.11M vs $0.36M other regions), exposing ACM to regional and policy risks.
- Regulatory uncertainty: addition of ACM Shanghai and ACM Korea to the U.S. Entity List creates ongoing risk; management asserted impacts are manageable but visibility for Q4 2025 remains less clear vs earlier quarters.
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good day, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the ACM Research Fiscal Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Currently, all participants are on a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. Instructions will follow at that time. As a reminder, we are recording today's call. If you have any objections, you may disconnect at this time. Now, I will turn the call to Mr. Steven Pelayo, Managing Director of The Blueshirt Group. Steven, please go ahead.
Steven Pelayo (Managing Director)
Great. Good day, everyone. Thank you for joining us to discuss Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2024 results, which we released before the U.S. market opened today. The release is available on our website as well as from Newswire Services. There's also a supplemental slide deck posted to the Investor section of our website that we will reference during our prepared remarks. On the call with me today are our CEO, David Wang, our CFO, Mark McKechnie, and Lisa Feng, our CFO of our operating subsidiary, ACM Shanghai. Before we continue, please turn to slide two. Let me remind you that remarks made during this call may include predictions, estimates, or other information that might be considered forward-looking. These forward-looking statements represent ACM's current judgment of the risks that may be associated with the results materially.
Those risks are described under risk factors and elsewhere in ACM's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Please do not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which reflect ACM's opinions only as of the date of this call. ACM is not obliged to update you on any revisions to these forward-looking statements. Certain of the financial results that we provide on this call will be on a non-GAAP basis, which excludes stock-based compensation and an unrealized gain and loss on short-term investments.
For our GAAP results and reconciliations between GAAP and non-GAAP amounts, you should refer to our earnings release, which is posted on the IR section of our website and the Slides 14 and 15. Also, unless otherwise noted, the following figures refer to the Fourth Quarter and Full Year of 2024, and comparisons are with the Fourth Quarter and Full Year of 2023. With that, I'll now turn the call over to David Wang. David?
David Wang (CEO)
Thanks, Steven. Hello, everyone, and welcome to ACM Research Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Before I reveal the results, I will address recent regulatory updates from the U.S. government. On December 2nd, the U.S. Department of Commerce added 140 companies to its Entity List. Two of our subsidiaries, ACM Shanghai and ACM Korea, and other entities under their structure were added to the Entity List. As we have noted, we are one of many that were added, and we are not notified of any specific wrongdoing. To be clear, ACM Research Inc. is a U.S. company. We were founded in California in 1998. It is our subsidiary that we added to the Entity List and not ACM Research Inc. Move on.
Regarding the operation of ACM Shanghai in mainland China, the new regulation will make it difficult, if not impossible, for ACM Shanghai to obtain components from the U.S. On that note, we have been working to localize our supply chain for some time. Events of the past few years, including the U.S. restriction of 2022, have made it even more important for ACM Shanghai to localize its supply chain. Thus, we have reduced our U.S.-sourced components to just a small subset.
And with our status on the Entity List, we are working quickly to complete the transition. Bottom line, we remain committed to support our customers and comply with all global regulations. We think the impact to our production is manageable, and we do not expect a significant interruption of our business. Regarding our global customers outside of mainland China, the new Department of Commerce rule mainly restricts U.S. exports to ACM Shanghai and ACM Korea. It does not directly affect U.S. companies buying tools from us.
We are therefore confident we can continue our effort to expand our business to global customers. Now, on to our business results. Please turn to Slide 3. I'm pleased with our Fourth Quarter results, which capped with a strong year. For the Fourth Quarter of 2024, we delivered $223 million in revenue, up 31%. For the 2024 Fiscal Year, we delivered $782 million in revenue, up 40%. Gross margin was 49.8% for the Fourth Quarter and 50.4% for the full year. Operating profit increased 46% in the Fourth Quarter and 63% for the full year. We ended the year with $259 million of net cash and time deposits, compared to the $212 million at the end of 2023. For shipments, shipments for the Fourth Quarter was $264 million, up 88%.
Shipments for the full year were $973 million, up 63%. We believe this strong growth reflects ACM's expanding market presence and the momentum gained from the new product cycle. Now, I will discuss the key growth drivers, both for the market and specific to ACM Research. Turn to Slide 4 for our product SAM. We now estimate our product portfolio addresses an $18 billion global market opportunity. Our current business is primarily driven by three major product groups: cleaning, plating, and advanced packaging. We anticipate continued growth in this category and look to incremental revenue contributions from our newer products, starting with Tahoe, SPM, Furnace, followed by Track and PECVD. Third-party sources estimate that global semiconductor WFE grows by 4% in 2024 to $107 billion. Based on this global WFE, we now estimate that our products address a served available market, or SAM, of about $18 billion in total.
For Mainland China, WFE industry analysts estimate the market growth by 12% to $38 billion. Our growth rate, 40% revenue and 63% shipments, was much higher than China's WFE growth. We attribute our strength to market share gained from the current product, new product cycle, and new customers. We also had a good execution from our production and service teams. Our success started with our customers. Please turn to Slide 6 . For 2024, we had four customers that individually accounted for 10% or more of our revenue. The Hua Hong Group was our top customer at 15% of the sales. SMIC was second at 14%, and YMTC and PXW were third and fourth at 12%. Now, I will provide detail on products. Please turn to slide seven. Revenue from single-wafer cleaning, Tahoe, and semi-critical cleaning products grew 43% in 2024 and represents 74% of total revenue.
Our growth was driven by a significant increase in Ultra C b backside cleaning tools and good growth from our SAPS TEBO tools. We also had a contribution from our Tahoe and Bevel Etch tools. Looking ahead in cleaning, we expect to see several significant product cycles, including high-temperature SPM, Tahoe, and other tools, from continued growth in mainland China. We offer a comprehensive top-to-bottom cleaning portfolio. We estimate the global total available market, or TAM, for the cleaning is close to $6.5 billion. And our products support more than 90% of all cleaning process steps. If we take $6.5 billion TAM and ACM $579 million in cleaning revenue for 2024, it puts ACM's global market share of cleaning at about 9%.
We believe that our complete portfolio of cleaning tools, including SAPS, TEBO, Tahoe, semi-critical SPM, Bevel Etcher, and others, put us in a strong position to take more share in China and the global market. Revenue from ECP, furnace, and other technology grew 46% in 2024 and represented 90% of the total revenue. In the Fourth Quarter, the segment achieved a record quarterly revenue of more than $50 million, which contributed to more than $150 million for the year. We continue to see momentum for our plating tool for both front-end and back-end applications. We are excited about the initial response to our new horizontal plating tool for panel-level packaging, where we believe our unique approach is opening doors to more global customers. In Q4, we announced that our thermal and plasma enhanced ALD furnace tool has achieved product certification at two mainland China semiconductor customers.
Chip makers are increasingly relying on the supply of high-quality ultra-thin film with excellent step coverage. We believe ACM's proprietary ALD furnace designs differentiate from their other suppliers and enable us to address challenges faced in advanced 3D structure manufacturing. Our furnace product cycle is also gaining traction with both memory and logic customers. Overall, we had 17 furnace customers in 2024, up from nine at the end of 2023. We expect the revenue contribution from furnace to accelerate in 2025 versus a small amount for 2024. Revenue from advanced packaging, which excludes ECP but includes service and spare parts, grew 3% in 2024 and represents 7% of revenue. This category includes a range of packaging tools, including coater, developer, scrubber, PR stripper, and wet etcher, and also service and spare parts.
We believe ACM is one of the only companies that offers a full set of wet tools, copper plating tools, and polishing tools for advanced packaging. We had a new notable development for this category in 2024, including orders for the four wafer-level packaging tools, which are on track to ship to the U.S. in the first half of 2025, and we announced three panel-level packaging tools, including vacuum flux cleaning tools for chiplets, horizontal plating tools, and Bevel Etch tools, which we see as especially relevant for packaging of GPU and high-bandwidth memory HBM. We are making good progress with our new Track and PECVD platforms. Both of these products come with ACM's innovative and differentiated platform design and allow for process flexibility and high throughput. We have a solid list of ongoing demonstrations and evaluations for both Track and PECVD.
For Track, we plan to deliver our 30 WPH inline coater beta tool in the middle of 2025. We expect some initial revenue contribution in later 2025, with more in 2026 and beyond. Next, let me provide an update on our production facility. First, on Lingang, please turn to Slide 8. In the Fourth Quarter of 2024, we had a grand opening ceremony for our Lingang production and R&D center. I'm pleased to report that we have begun initial operations and expect the site to play a key role in production development and efficient high-volume manufacturing. We expect most of our production to shift from our Changsha leased facility to our company-owned Lingang facility by the end of Q2. We are proud of our 2,300 square meter Class 100 clean room, which we expect will accelerate our product development speed and in-house demonstration capability. Next, our Oregon facility.
Please turn to slide nine. In October 2024, we completed the purchasing of our new 40,000 sq ft Oregon facility. It includes a 5,200 sq ft clean room, which will support advanced tool demonstration and R&D. The rest of this space will be for manufacturing for our global customers. We see this as a great opportunity to further expand our customer base in the U.S. Before I reveal our outlook, I want to share some thoughts regarding our ownership in ACM Shanghai's stock. We are very pleased by the success of the ACM Shanghai team, which has now become a key supplier to the Asian semiconductor industry. ACM Shanghai has also proven to be a great source of capital to us in the form of dividends. In 2023 and 2024, as a major shareholder of ACM Shanghai, we received dividend net of tax of $19.2 million and $28.5 million, respectively.
We expect the dividend to continue. In fact, ACM Shanghai has formally announced its intention to pay a dividend of 25%-30% of net earnings over the next three years, subject to normal shareholder approval. We are using dividends to accelerate our global business development. ACM Shanghai stock, which now trades at a $6.3 billion market cap on the Shanghai stock market, is also a key strategic asset for us and our global shareholders. In fact, our 81.5% ownership is now worth about $5.2 billion, which is more than three times ACM's current market cap of $1.5 billion. This gives us some unique advantage. In 2021, ACM Shanghai raised $575 million in IPO, enabling us to scale our business and expand our product portfolio. ACM Shanghai is now in the process of another raising of up to $600 million to make the company to the next level.
I will clarify a few points that might be helpful for the market to evaluate our options. Our three-year lock-up on our ACM Shanghai stock expired last quarter, and we now have additional flexibility to sell shares. We are very comfortable that ACM can sell some share of ACM Shanghai stock and repatriate the cash back to the U.S. The timing of any sale, of course, will depend on pricing, market conditions, our own cash needs, and other factors. We believe the combination of ACM's world-class technology and customer supporting and access to the substantial capital markets makes us uniquely positioned to become a world-class global WFE supplier. Now, I will provide our outlook for the full year 2025. Please turn to slide 10. In early January, we introduced our 2025 revenue outlook in the range of $850 million-$950 million. This implies 15% of year-over-year growth at the midpoint.
We are reiterating this outlook today. I'm pleased to announce today that we have adjusted our gross margin target upward. We now target a range of 42%-48% versus the prior range of 40%-45%. I'm proud of the strong growth our company has achieved since our founding in California in 1998 and the establishment of ACM Shanghai in 2005. We have built a globally competitive business. Our success has been built on innovation and differentiated technology, particularly in cleaning and electrochemical plating, addressing evolving needs of semiconductor manufacturing. From this foundation, we have expanded our market reach and gained international traction. We are building strong partnerships with key industrial players. In China, ACM is recognized as a leader in advanced wafer cleaning and front-end electrochemical plating solutions and is preparing for new products: ramp in the furnace, track, and PECVD.
Outside China, we are engaging with multiple customers with operations in the U.S., Europe, Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore. The global interest is a broader base across our entire product portfolio, from the front-end wafer fab to the back-end advanced packaging, including our innovative cleaning and plating offering for next-generation panel-level packaging. Now, let me turn the call over to the CFO, Mark, who will reveal details of our Fourth Quarter results. Mark, please.
Mark McKechnie (CFO)
Thank you, David. Good day, everyone. Please turn to Slide 11. Unless I note otherwise, I'll refer to non-GAAP financial measures, which exclude stock-based compensation, unrealized gain, and loss on short-term investments. Reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to comparable GAAP measures is included in our earnings release. Also, unless otherwise noted, the following figures refer to the Fourth Quarter and full year of 2024. Comparisons are with the Fourth Quarter and Full Year of 2023.
I'll now provide financial highlights. Revenue was $223.5 million for the Fourth Quarter, up 31.2%. For the full year 2024, revenue was $782.1 million, up 40.2%. Revenue for single wafer cleaning, Tahoe, and semi-critical cleaning was $155.2 million, up 26.9%. For the full year 2024, this category grew by 43.3%. Revenue for ECP front-end packaging, furnace, and other technologies was $51.7 million, up 60.9%. For the full year 2024, this category grew by 46.2%. And revenue for advanced packaging, excluding ECP, services, and spares, was $16.6 million, up 4.2%. For the full year 2024, this category grew by 3.3%. Total shipments were $264 million for the Fourth Quarter versus $140 million in Q4 of 2023. For the full year 2024, shipments were $973 million, up 63.1%. Gross margin was 49.8% for the Fourth Quarter versus 46.8%. For the full year 2024, gross margin was 50.4% versus 49.8% in 2023.
We have updated our long-term business model to a gross margin target range of 42%-48% versus the prior range of 40%-45%. We do expect our gross margin to vary from period to period due to a variety of factors such as sales volume, product mix, and currency impacts. Operating expenses were $58.4 million for the fourth quarter, up 34%. For the full year 2024, operating expenses were $193.4 million, up 25.2%. Revenue grew faster than OpEx for the year, demonstrating a solid operating leverage in our model. We invested in research and development to expand our product line, and we invested in sales and marketing to reach new customers around the world. For 2025, we plan for research and development in the 12%-13% range, sales and marketing in the 7%-8% range, and G&A in the 5%-6% range.
Operating income was $52.8 million for the Fourth Quarter, up 46.4%. Operating margin increased to 23.6% from 21.2%. For the full year 2024, operating margin increased to 25.6% from 22.1%. Income tax expense was $17.3 million for the Fourth Quarter versus $8.1 million. For the full year 2024, income tax expense was $35 million versus $19.4 million in 2023. For 2025, we expect our effective tax rate in the 12%-15% range. Net income attributable to ACM Research was $37.7 million for the Fourth Quarter versus $28.7 million. For the full year 2024, net income attributable to ACM Research was $152.2 million versus $107.4 million in 2023. Net income for diluted share was $0.56 for the Fourth Quarter versus $0.43. For the full year 2024, net income for diluted share was $2.26 versus $1.63.
Our non-GAAP net income excluded $8.8 million in stock-based compensation expense for the Fourth Quarter and $49.6 million for the full year. For the Full Year 2025, we expect stock-based compensation to be in the $35 million range. I will now review selected balance sheet and cash flow items. Cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash, and time deposits were $441.9 million at year-end versus $369.1 million at the end of the Third Quarter of 2024. Net cash, which excludes the short-term and long-term debt, was $259.1 million versus $198.5 million at the end of the Third Quarter of 2024. Total inventory at year-end was $598.0 million versus $628.7 million at the end of the Third Quarter of 2024. This included raw materials and work in process, $304.9 million, and finished goods inventory of $293.1 million.
Finished goods inventory primarily consists of our tools under evaluation at our customer sites, together with finished goods located at ACM's facilities. Cash flow from operations was $88 million for the Fourth Quarter and $152 million for the full year 2024. Capital expenditures were $12.3 million for the Fourth Quarter, $85.3 million for the full year 2024. For the full year 2025, we expect to spend about $65 million to $75 million in capital expenditures. That does conclude our prepared remarks. Now, let's open up the call for any questions that you may have. Operator, please open up the floor for questions.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, to ask a question at this time, you will need to press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, simply press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Now, first question coming from the line of Charles with Needham & Company. Your line is now open.
Mark McKechnie (CFO)
Hello. Yes, just wanted to.
David Wang (CEO)
Hey, Charles. Good morning.
Charles Shi (Research Analyst)
Morning. Yeah, morning. The line cut off a little bit. Just wanted to make sure it's my turn. So maybe the first question that you guys reiterated, the Fiscal 2025 revenue outlook, it's the same outlook you provided in January, at the low end of 9% year-on-year growth, at the high end, 21% year-on-year growth. Can you provide a little bit of color on what goes into the assumptions to the low end versus the high end, and what are the scenarios? I think the press release you did mention that the various spending scenarios by your customers this year are baked into the range of the guidance. I want to get a little bit more color on that. Thanks.
David Wang (CEO)
Okay, Charles. Actually, this prediction of the revenue is really based on the last year of shipment, which is some of them were record revenue this year. Obviously, we can see their customer, PO customer, their expansion plan. Probably at this moment, I can say about Q2, Q3. And there's still some Q4 we cannot say that, right? So that's why really from the early time of the year, we give this low-end and high-end projection, right? So a couple of the detailed assumptions there. I cannot elaborate too much detail, but anyway, there's a range we put there. So maybe the time goes to Q2. We're looking for Q4. In that moment, maybe more clear in Q4, we can readjust to our revenue projection. So that's our typical process we did every year.
Charles Shi (Research Analyst)
Got it. Maybe a quick follow-up. Sounds like you're saying you have good visibility at least through the third quarter. This year, it's only like Q4 a little bit unclear at this point. Is that correct?
David Wang (CEO)
Yeah. As you say, some Q3 was still maybe a bit more, right? At this moment, it's still early in the year. But definitely, we see the PO Q3. But Q4 was still, as I said, not clear, right? So that will be waiting, say, maybe Q2 timeline or end of the Q2, we can see that more clear in the Q4 timeline.
Mark McKechnie (CFO)
Yeah, Charles. That's pretty normal visibility at this time of the year. We go through our year-end planning process and then come back early in the year and kind of test that. Of course, we took a look at it before we reported here on the quarter. It's pretty standard visibility going into the year. As David noted, it's based on the POs that we have in hand. It's based on also kind of the forecast of POs that we still would probably get as we move through the year. And then the timing of some of the customer acceptances from first tools last year.
David Wang (CEO)
Yeah. Based on our average, our manufacturing time is about six months right now, right? Five to six. So that will be the right part of their projection for looking their Q4, right?
Charles Shi (Research Analyst)
Yeah. Got it. The other question, I think, usually before Chinese New Year, there's a little bit of, I would call, information black hole about the outlook for the new year. But now we are coming out of that, and especially in light of the recent export control by the U.S., and obviously, a few of your customers were added to Entity List. And it's getting a little bit hard to predict what would be the impact of export control because we did see YMTC, which was added in 2022, came back to your 10% customer list.
But there's another customer, in 2024, 10% customer list that got recently added. So maybe we can get a little bit sense based on what you're seeing right now, the export control rules, do they have an impact, positive or negative, on your customers' spending plan in 2025? And any sort of movement you're seeing at a little bit micro level, customer-to-customer level? If anything, you can provide that would be great. Thank you.
David Wang (CEO)
Well, I mean, this is a very broad question. Real customer to customer is different, right? And I want to say definitely some customers get an impact, right, because they put on Entity List. And some customers, we still see their expansion. So it's really hard to give you the general description, right? At this moment, we're also working with the customer to figure out how much impact. We're still on the process to assess and evaluate this kind of impact.
Charles Shi (Research Analyst)
Got it. So maybe the last question looks like the plating, furnace, product line. You have three segments in your reporting. That particular segment has done pretty well and probably growing even faster than the wet clean product line. I think you just mentioned plating. You become a leading supplier in China, and especially for the front end. I was kind of curious, what do you see the market share of plating, and especially in the front end versus packaging? Can you give a little bit of color on that, front end versus back end for plating, and where the share is, and where do you think the trend is going for ACM? Thank you.
David Wang (CEO)
Yeah. I think our market share is about 30%, right? 30%-35%. And it's actually both in the front end and back end, right? It's almost like the same. So we're still in the one-third, 35%, 30%, 35% of the market share in China.
Charles Shi (Research Analyst)
Got it. Thank you.
David Wang (CEO)
Okay. Thank you, Charles.
Mark McKechnie (CFO)
Thanks, Charles.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. And as a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star one one and wait for your name to be announced. Our next question coming from the line of Mark Miller with The Benchmark Company. Your line is now open.
Mark Miller (Equity Research Analyst)
Once again, congratulations on a very nice quarter. I was just wondering, a number of equipment firms, semi-equipment firms, are projecting strong growth in their AP-related sales for 2025. What are you thinking about in terms of the AP sales you're expecting this year?
Mark McKechnie (CFO)
Oh, the advanced packaging. You're talking about the advanced packaging, right?
Mark Miller (Equity Research Analyst)
Yes. Yes. I see.
David Wang (CEO)
Okay. Well, yes. I think we do see the advanced packaging growing. And obviously, all this kind of 2.5D and 3D in the proposal as a one-thing. And there are certain other, I want to say, advanced packaging going on here. So we see that expansion, basically. And I think this year probably will be better than last year in terms of advanced packaging.
Mark McKechnie (CFO)
Yeah. Mark, one thing I'd point out. It's a little tricky because some of our ECP group includes both the front end and the back end packaging, right? And then our advanced packaging group is everything but the ECP. So at some point, we can give some more detail when that becomes a bigger percentage of our overall revenue. But at this point, it's hard to kind of see our back end packaging group.
David Wang (CEO)
Also, I want to add to that is Mark is also the panel packaging start to play, right? So we do have three products in the market. We see that will start contributing to our revenue in 2025 too. So that's another new field or new part of the technology we'll work on.
Mark Miller (Equity Research Analyst)
I was just wondering if you could give us some sort of estimate how your sales breakdown related to, say, memory, logic, and electric vehicles. What % of your sales are related to each of those three areas?
Mark McKechnie (CFO)
Yeah, Mark, it's tough. We don't generally break that out. I think you can look at our 10% customers and kind of take a guess, right? So we've got four of them that were a little over 50% of our business. And so, yeah, we generally don't look at it by those end markets like that, and we haven't broken them out. We get that request, though, so we could look into perhaps updating on that in the future. But at this point, we don't have the detailed breakdown.
Mark Miller (Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. You said that four customers accounted for roughly 50% of your or over 50% of your business. Is that correct?
Mark McKechnie (CFO)
I think that's right. Yeah, it was over 52% for the four customers. Yeah.
Mark Miller (Equity Research Analyst)
Thank you.
Mark McKechnie (CFO)
Yep.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Again, if you have a question, please press star one one, and I see there are no further questions in the queue at this time. I will now turn it back to Mr. David Wang for any closing remarks.
David Wang (CEO)
Okay. Thank you, Operator, and thank you all for participating on today's call and for your support. Before we close, Steven is going to mention our upcoming investor relation event. Steven, please.
Steven Pelayo (Managing Director)
Great. Thanks, David. Before we conclude, I just want to give everyone a quick reminder on our upcoming investor conferences. On March 17th, we will present at the 37th Annual Roth Conference in Dana Point, California. Attendance at the conference is by invitation only. For interested investors, please contact your respective sales representative to register and schedule one-on-one meetings with the management team. With that, this concludes the call, and you may now disconnect. Take care.