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ADDVANTAGE TECHNOLOGIES GROUP INC (AEY)·Q2 2023 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2023 revenue fell 57% year over year to $12.1M with gross margin at 27%; the quarter swung to a net loss of $(2.8)M and $(0.20) EPS from $0.9M and $0.07 EPS a year ago, driven by Telco destocking and a late-quarter 5G build slowdown in Wireless .
- Management emphasized cost reductions and inventory drawdown with SG&A down 21% YoY and inventories down versus year-end; liquidity was bolstered by $2.8M net proceeds from 13% senior secured convertible notes, but the company flagged going concern language in its unaudited financials .
- Strategic positioning highlighted BEAD/RDOF rural broadband funding tailwinds and a new CRO (Brian Davidson) to expand wireless opportunities and carrier projects; a strategic WTS partnership targets a multi-year wireless program .
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus estimates were unavailable for AEY; comparisons to Street estimates could not be performed (attempted retrieval failed; data unavailable via S&P Global). Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Management reduced operating and SG&A expenses, helping to partially offset revenue declines: operating expenses down 23% YoY to $2.0M and SG&A down 21% YoY to $3.3M in Q2 .
- Strategic initiatives: “Our efforts to expand our addressable market in the wireless segment are accelerating, and under the leadership of Brian Davidson, our new Chief Revenue Officer, we are optimistic that we can secure additional projects from wireless carriers over the next few quarters” — Joe Hart, CEO .
- Policy tailwinds: “We are also very encouraged by the Federal Government’s funding of the Rural Broadband Program (BEAD) and the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF)…We are aggressively pursuing opportunities to design and build fiber networks across multiple regions” — Joe Hart, CEO .
What Went Wrong
- Telco segment demand drop: Orders for used/refurbished equipment were “drastically reduced” due to 2022 overstocking; Telco revenue declined $14.8M YoY (−72%) in Q2 .
- Wireless segment slowdown: “a sudden downturn in 5G-related build activity by two major industry customers” late in Q2 and broader carrier slowdown, cutting Wireless revenue by $0.9M YoY (−13%) .
- Liquidity and going concern: Debt rose to $3.8M; company raised $2.8M via 13% senior secured notes and disclosed an explanatory paragraph regarding ability to continue as a going concern in unaudited financial statements .
Financial Results
Consolidated P&L and EPS (oldest → newest)
Notes: Adjusted EBITDA is non-GAAP; see company reconciliations .
Segment Adjusted EBITDA (oldest → newest)
KPIs and Balance Sheet Snapshot (oldest → newest)
Additional liquidity actions: $2.8M net proceeds from issuance of 13% senior secured convertible notes with warrants/commitment shares .
Segment revenue context (YoY changes, Q2 2023)
- Telco: −$14.8M YoY (−72%); Wireless: −$0.9M YoY (−13%); total sales $12.1M vs $27.8M in Q2 2022 .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Both segments of our business were impacted by macro-headwinds during the quarter...Orders for used and refurbished equipment in our Telco segment have been drastically reduced due to the overstocking done in 2022...Our Wireless segment was hit late in the second quarter by a sudden downturn in 5G-related build activity by two major industry customers” — Joe Hart, CEO .
- “Our efforts to expand our addressable market in the wireless segment are accelerating, and under the leadership of Brian Davidson, our new Chief Revenue Officer, we are optimistic that we can secure additional projects from wireless carriers over the next few quarters” — Joe Hart, CEO .
- “We are also very encouraged by the Federal Government’s funding of the Rural Broadband Program (BEAD) and the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF)...We are aggressively pursuing opportunities to design and build fiber networks across multiple regions” — Joe Hart, CEO .
- Q1 context: “Weather-related delays impacted [Wireless] results…[Telco] rapid normalization of the supply chain had a significant and abrupt impact” — Joe Hart, CEO .
- Q4 2022 context: “This was a milestone year…Wireless segment grew 49% year-over-year…[December quarter] typically slow due to weather and holidays” — Joe Hart, CEO .
Q&A Highlights
- The Q2 2023 earnings call was scheduled for August 14, 2023 at 5 p.m. Eastern; transcript retrieval was unavailable due to a database inconsistency, so detailed Q&A themes, analyst questions, and clarifications could not be synthesized from the call record .
- Replay information and webcast archive were provided in the press release and 8-K filings .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus estimates for AEY Q2 2023 and Q1 2023 were unavailable (attempted retrieval failed due to missing CIQ mapping for AEY). As a result, comparisons to consensus on revenue and EPS could not be performed. Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Revenue contraction and margin pressure were sharp in Q2, driven by Telco overstocking/destocking and a late-quarter Wireless 5G slowdown; monitor evidence of Telco inventory “burn-off” and resumption of carrier build activity as the key near-term recovery catalysts .
- Cost control is tangible (OpEx and SG&A reductions); sustaining these savings while volumes recover is critical to restoring profitability and cash generation (Adjusted EBITDA improved sequentially vs Q1) .
- Liquidity enhanced via high-cost convertible notes; debt rose to $3.8M and unaudited financials included a going concern explanatory paragraph—watch financing terms, covenants, and working capital management closely for risk mitigation .
- Policy tailwinds (BEAD/RDOF) and WTS partnership could drive multi-year Wireless opportunities; the new CRO may accelerate pipeline conversion—track contract wins and backlog formation across H2’23–2024 .
- Absent formal guidance and with estimates unavailable, trading will be driven by tangible inflections in segment activity (new awards, resumption of 5G builds) and liquidity updates (funding, inventory turns); volatility may persist near-term until operational momentum returns .
- For medium-term thesis, operating leverage from volume recovery plus cost cuts can swing profitability if Wireless activity normalizes and Telco demand stabilizes; execution against BEAD/RDOF opportunities could become a structural growth driver .
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