AS
AMERIGUARD SECURITY SERVICES, INC. (AGSS)·Q3 2022 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2022 reporting was via a comprehensive 8‑K (Item 2.02) that included AmeriGuard’s nine-month results: revenue rose 13% to $18.84M, gross margin expanded to 13.81% (up 440 bps), and operating income more than doubled to $0.44M; net income before tax swung to $0.18M from a loss in the prior year-to-date .
- Management outlined an aggressive post‑merger growth plan: pursue “two or three” new federal guard contracts in 18 months, acquire guard and transportation/cybersecurity companies, and target $100M annual sales with $10M of acquired revenue per quarter starting Q1 2023 .
- No formal earnings call transcript or separate press release was found for Q3; results were furnished in the 8‑K and audited/unaudited financials appended therein .
- Wall Street consensus estimates were unavailable for AGSS during this period (no analyst coverage on S&P Global). Estimates comparisons are therefore not provided.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Revenue growth and pricing: Nine-month revenue increased by $2.10M (+13%), driven by service fee increases on commercial contracts, pass-through payroll cost increases to federal contracts, and added patrol service revenue (~$240k) .
- Margin expansion: Gross margin dollars rose 67% and gross margin percentage improved to 13.81% (+440 bps), reflecting pricing actions and mix .
- Strategic confidence on contract wins: “We are confident of being awarded two or three new contracts in the next eighteen months,” with expected sales impact of ~$10–$15M .
What Went Wrong
- Staffing/COVID policies raised overtime and execution risk: Federal vaccination and quarantine policies made staffing “very difficult,” increasing overtime “to levels never before seen” .
- Inflationary pressures: Higher fuel and supplies lifted operating costs; vehicle expenses rose ~$117k over prior year YTD .
- One-time merger-related costs: Other expenses of ~$259k YTD were tied to merger preparation; interest accrued on a shareholder buyout note also began to hit P&L .
Financial Results
Consolidated Performance (Nine Months Ended September 30)
Notes: Management attributes growth to commercial pricing, contract payroll pass-throughs, and added patrol services; OpEx rose partly due to accounting changes allocating admin salaries and higher fuel/travel costs .
Full-Year Comparison
Notes: 2020 benefited from PPP loan forgiveness (~$1.9M) while 2021 absorbed the $450k shell purchase cost and related initial expenses, compressing margins to more normal levels post‑COVID staffing reductions .
Revenue Mix (Selected Periods)
KPIs and Balance Sheet Items
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
No Q3 2022 earnings call transcript was available; themes reflect filings narrative.
Management Commentary
- “We are confident of being awarded two or three new contracts in the next eighteen months. This activity will impact our total annual sales volume by approximately $10–$15 million.”
- “Our strategy is to acquire commercial guard companies in the states where we have federal contracts… allowing us to establish a kind of farm system for guards.”
- “We also will be pressing hard to find a cybersecurity company to acquire… Executive Management is confident that we will… close a deal before the end of the 1st quarter 2023.”
- “We anticipate the Company will be able to implement one new guard contract with annual revenues over $10 million.”
- Industry outlook emphasizes tech-enabled guarding and consolidation; expected aggregate growth ≥4% with EBITDA potential “four to six percent and higher” for companies investing in technology .
Q&A Highlights
A formal Q3 earnings call transcript was not found; no Q&A content available in filings for this period.
Estimates Context
- No S&P Global Wall Street consensus estimates were available for AGSS for Q3 2022 or FY 2022. As a result, we cannot present “vs. estimates” comparisons for revenue/EPS this quarter.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Revenue and gross margin improved meaningfully YTD through Q3 2022, with operating income up 116%; execution is strengthening despite staffing and inflation headwinds .
- The post‑merger strategy is an explicit catalyst path: targeted federal contract wins plus acquisitions in guard, transportation, and cybersecurity with stated pacing (≥$10M per quarter) beginning Q1 2023 .
- Balance sheet shows adequate liquidity ($1.66M cash; ~$1.24M working capital surplus), but startup costs for large contracts require substantial capital (e.g., ~$3M for a $15M annual contract), implying financing needs and potential dilution/leveraging .
- Revenue concentration (~92% in four federal contracts) is both a stability source and a key risk; contract renewals/extensions must be monitored closely .
- Near-term trading catalysts: confirmation of new federal awards, announced acquisitions (particularly cybersecurity), and updates on staffing normalization as COVID-era policies ease .
- Medium-term thesis: scaling above the small business threshold, leveraging economies of scale to lift EBITDA margins to 8–10% in guard and ~12%+ in transportation while integrating technology .
- Absence of analyst coverage and penny stock status may limit sponsorship and liquidity, but successful execution against stated milestones could reset investor perception .