Datavault AI - Q4 2022
March 16, 2023
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Welcome to the WiSA Technologies fourth quarter and full year 2022 results conference call. All participants will be in listen only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal conference host by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I'd now like to turn the call over to David Barnard, LHA Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
David Barnard (SVP of investor Relations)
Great. Thanks, Anthony. With us today on the call are Brett Moyer, CEO and President, and CFO George Oliva. Before turning to Brett, I'd like to remind everyone that today's presentation contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements.
Actual results may differ materially as indicated by these forward-looking statements as a result of risks and uncertainties impacting WiSA's business, including current macroeconomic uncertainties associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, our inability to predict or measure supply chain disruptions resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic and other drivers, our ability to predict the timing of design wins entering production and the potential future revenue associated with design wins, rate of growth, the ability to predict customer demand for existing and future products and to secure adequate manufacturing capacity, consumer demand conditions affecting consumers' end markets, and the ability to hire, retain and motivate employees, the effects of competition, including price competition, technology, regulatory and legal developments in the economy and financial markets and other risks and uncertainties detailed from time to time in the company's filings with the SEC, including those described in risk factors in our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31st, 2022, which we filed later today, as well as an updated for any material changes described in any subsequently filed quarterly reports on Form 10-Q.
The information in this presentation is as of the date hereof, and the company undertakes no obligations to update unless required to do so by law. With that, I'll turn the call over to Brett. Go ahead, Brett.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Thank you, David, and like to welcome our investors and participants to the call. We're looking forward to having a good conversation today. We've had quite an exciting quarter and year. You know, at the top of the list, we're gonna talk about WiSA E. We think it's a compelling technology advancement for the entire consumer electronics industry, right? We'll explain how WiSA E fits into the ecosystem and the TVs and the audio world, right? Next, WiSA DS. That's our low-cost five-channel solution targeted for soundbars. We have brands now starting to issue RFQs to ODMs that are specifying DS, so sales cycle is trucking along. We're gonna go over the WiSA Wave and the marketing focus of the company with Atmos and up firing speakers.
This is particularly important since one of the strengths technically that we have is a high channel count for wireless audio. If you really wanna go to immersive, you need to have more channels of audio and up-firing speakers. We'll walk through that today. On the side, the consumer electronics industry is still in a slump from overbuilding inventory and weak consumer demand. It's certainly impacted us. You know, in response to that, operation expenses will drop by $1 million+ from Q4 to Q1. Despite the slump and the impact on this continuing into the first half of the year, we still expect full year 2023 growth over full year 2022.
This will be probably the only slide, one of the few slides that some of you have seen before. For new participants, this lays out what we have been talking about for multiple years as a roadmap. The difference is everything here in one form or another was demonstrated to companies at CES. We've moved from concept goal desire to the engineering team has finished off or is in the process of finishing off all for a lot of this technology that's on this roadmap. As a brief history to refresh everybody, WiSA TE is our original module. Average cost is $10-$12. It's best in class and targeted for the audiophile speaker market. Expensive markets, generally more expensive than what I would say, a Sonos, which is a top of the consumer level market, right?
WiSA DS takes us from the audiophile market into the soundbar market, which we think is substantial. We think it's somewhere in the mid 40 million units a year worldwide, and there's a couple players in there. We think the feature set of WiSA DS and the cost of WiSA DS will let us penetrate a significant number of the designs over the next 18 months. We've, as I mentioned on the first slide, we've already started penetrating them. New at CES, but still this was on our roadmap, was WiSA E. This is the same software in WiSA DS, but enhanced 'cause it's running on a more powerful Wi-Fi chip, a 5 GHz from Realtek. Again, why a 5 GHz? It lets us do more channels. It lets us have higher performance.
It lets approximate the WiSA HT per-performance and in some cases exceed it. Finally, the embedded taking that IP from WiSA DS and WiSA E modules and using it to run with it in conjunction with an SOC on a smart device. All of this was demonstrated at CES. What did we show? At CES, we had 22 companies, which is a full schedule for three days. Up here at the top left, not in the picture, is a soundbar. On the top right-hand picture, that is WiSA HT in the Platin Monaco with up firing speakers. The little speaker to the right of the soundbar. It's not the soundbar. That's the first Atmos solution we've brought out under the Platin brand.
Again, the point is to demonstrate to consumers, to the industry, that for a small incremental amount of money, you can get that Atmos feeling in speakers, not just soundbars, right? The next product, just to the left of it, which is not on the picture, is the soundbar using WiSA DS. This had a huge impact at CES. We've been marketing the specs of WiSA DS for nine months, but not until companies and product managers and engineers sat in front of an actual soundbar using WiSA DS with Atmos speakers in the rears and Atmos speakers in the soundbar in the front, did they grasp what a significant improvement this audio experience is. It's a cheaper solution. Third demo, WiSA E. This is the first time we showed WiSA E publicly. People were simply amazed.
We only showed six channels of audio, but we ran Top Gun flawlessly in it. When we go to release it, we'll be at eight channels headed towards 10 channels. Finally, brand new, right? Nobody was aware that this was going to happen, is the bottom picture on the right. That is a simple demo of our IP running with a set-top box TV SOC, playing 3.1. Immediately following, the demand was strong enough that we had probably half our executive team in Asia going through Korea, Japan, and Taiwan, so that the companies with the most interest could share our exciting technology advancements to the rest of their peers in their companies. We had the soundbar, we took WiSA HT with us, and that continues the sales practice going forward. What's the point of DS?
Why was it so mesmerizing? Well, if you look at this chart, which some of you've seen before, you know, the blue-color audio is what normally comes out of a soundbar and rear speakers. That's a 5.1 configuration. A lot of companies have the purple coming out of a soundbar, which is up-firing Atmos for the front of the room. What DS delivers, and that's why it blew them away, is up-firing in the rear as well. Not just up-firing, it's at a lower price point, and it's the same simple implementation off of one module. If you have rear speakers, you can have Atmos rear speakers for free, essentially. If you discount the drivers, right? That's what blew them away.
This bubble of blue and purple is what truly gives you immersive audio, that's what we've demonstrated. That's what will be built into the RIO soundbar that Platin Audio will release in Q3. From a price feature viewpoint, here's a relatively simple comparison from an audio perspective. You can make a comparison chart 20 rows long, but if you just look at the fundamental audio experience, and you look at the price point of a Sonos Arc at $899. You know, Sonos Arc at $899 does not include rear speakers, does not include a sub, does not include rear up firing speakers. It does include front up firing speakers built into the soundbar.
When Platin Audio launches using WiSA DS, it'll be $899, but it'll deliver rear speakers, it'll deliver a subwoofer, it'll deliver rear up firing speakers, and it'll have the front up firing speakers in the soundbar. Launch limited quantities, both to prove to the audio companies this is a great solution, prove to consumers WiSA DS is a great solution, and deliver a great audio. Now, WiSA E is truly, we believe, ultimately the biggest opportunity here. As I mentioned, we demonstrated it. That's because you see other industry executives currently talking about trying to eliminate the HDMI cable from the TV to the soundbar. Well, that's nice. Nothing like saving $10 for the consumers. What WiSA E is about, and what we're starting to drive with the press release this morning, is changing the industry conversation.
Why would you stop there, right? With WiSA E built into an Atmos enabled TV, you save the consumer hundreds of dollars at retail pricing and deliver better experience. The soundbar, the TV duplicate a tremendous amount of electronics and hardware, which is expensive. If you think about it, there may be a small Wi-Fi chip added to a TV, but you eliminate the module around the Wi-Fi chip. You eliminate a Dolby Atmos royalty that's being paid in the soundbar. You eliminate the soundbar's SOC, which is the operating chip, right? You eliminate all HDMI connectors. You eliminate the input/output expenses around these other devices in the soundbar. You eliminate the HDMI cable, which the industry is trying to do, and duplicate streaming services. There's more things that get reduced. Fundamentally, our argument is with
with WiSA E, you can move the soundbar into a speaker, whether it's a long tube with a set of speakers in it or whether it's discrete speakers, we don't care. The channel count is there to eliminate the duplicated costs between a soundbar and TV and bring truly immersive audio into the home that's just as simple to set up as it was in a soundbar. All right. Update on the WiSA Wave and the marketing strategy. In 2022, we had more than 1 million visitors come into our websites, more than 2 million pages. Every one of those visitors was responding to an organic search, a product review, a customer spec sheet that brought them in or our ads.
If we ran ads, we pivoted the messaging mid-year in 2022 away from bringing people just to the WiSA site and bringing them to the Platin site, but bringing them with an ad that said WiSA Certified or Platin Audio model XYZ Certified by WiSA. The impact was we shortened the cycle for the consumer to make a buying decision and strengthen the branding results for WiSA Certified. We'll continue to work that. We had quite a good response on growth of pure organic searches coming into WiSA. An addition that'll occur in 2023 is linking WiSA certification to Dolby Atmos or DTS:X. Our one of our key strengths is we have the knowledge to implement more channels of audio than anybody.
That's a key feature of getting the most out of Dolby Atmos or DTS:X. When we go out and work product reviews, the industry press, this CE Pro headline that just came out in the last week or so is exactly what we're gonna be pushing and what we're striving for. To quote, "Platin's updated Monaco 5.1.2 home theater system adds Dolby Atmos to its WiSA-powered offering to create an affordable yet immersive home cinema experience." Now, that's not our quote. That's the CE Pro headline. That's what you'll see over and over again this year as we focus on the Monaco with upfiring speakers and as we focus in the fall on the Atmos launch with RIO 5.1.4 soundbar using the WiSA DS.
From the state of the industry, to touch on my earlier comments, there is a glut of inventory. You can see heavy discounting on TVs particularly, they're most visible. Right. Now, impact to us is we have seen pushback on custom installs, and we've seen some cancellations. This will continue in the first half, but we do think we are getting indications, initial indications that it should be cleaned up by the time we get to mid-year. Despite the industry's perspective, we believe we have full year growth year-over-year because we have new WiSA HT designs going into production, two in Japan and one in Korea. We have obviously completely new WiSA DS designs going into production, and we've got Platin Audio's RIO 5.1.4 soundbar being launched in Q3.
You take those three new product category of launches, add inventory and balance, and we think we end the year with growth, despite the first half. Now turning the slide over to George.
George Oliva (CFO)
Thank you, Brett. I think it's taking quite a while for the slides to flip over. On the financials for the full year of 2022, revenues were $3.4 million, down about 49% from $6.5 million in 2021. Gross margin was 11.7% compared to 28.5% in 2021. That's primarily due to decreased volumes. The fixed costs spread over less units. The operating expenses were $18.4 million, including $2.2 million of non-cash expenses, compared to $13.4 million, including $1.5 million of non-cash expenses and depreciation in 2021. That's primarily stock comp expense and depreciation. The revenue for the Q4 was $900,000 and change. That's approximately flat with the last three quarters of 2022.
We ended the year with $2.9 million of cash. That was after a financing of gross $7.6 million public offering that closed in December 1st. We had a subsequent $6.2 million registered direct offering that closed in February. In terms of guidance, we're projecting, as Brett said, a growth year-over-year from 2022 to 2023, it's mostly in the second half. We should be down early in Q1, it'll recover towards the second half of the year. With that, I'll turn it back over to Brett.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Thank you, George. If we come back to review what is in the company's portfolio, like, we've got the best technology in the industry. We've got a full product line that can reach a large market, both in the soundbar and the TV markets. We have an interoperability standard with WiSA that great partners in that partner list who's implemented will expand it. The IP is strong. We continue to add patents around it, and we had a down year with the industry. We expect to see growth return this year. With that operator, we'll open the line up for questions.
Operator (participant)
We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question will come from Jack Vander Aarde with Maxim Group. You may now go ahead.
Jack Vander Aarde (SVP and Senior Research Analyst)
Okay, great. Good morning, guys. I appreciate the quarterly update. I'll start with a question for Brett. You know, Brett, it's obviously been a challenging environment for the entire consumer electronics industry as a whole. Sounds like your new products, the WiSA E, WiSA DS are progressing along pretty well. You still expect to drive full year revenue growth in 2023, despite that slower maybe first half of the year. Just curious, can you help us understand the drivers, I guess, more split between WiSA E, WiSA DS, and then your WiSA HT modules? Is it back half loaded from the new product specifically, or do you also expect your legacy technology to also ramp as well in the back half? Thanks.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Well, if I understand the question properly, we do have new designs on our WiSA HT, AKA the legacy modules, right? That are going into production, they go into production in the second half, number one. Right? All DS designs will go into production. I mean, there's a small one out there, any material ones will start going into production in Q3 and Q4, right? WiSA E is not on the list of drivers for revenue this year. I do believe we'll have some revenue late in the year, it is not the main driver of revenue rebounding. It's HT, it's DS. Then we based on the response on the soundbar 5.1.4 solution, we think that's a strong retail product.
We're not gonna buy a lot of them, but that'll be a good Q4 consumer product driving revenue.
Jack Vander Aarde (SVP and Senior Research Analyst)
Okay, great. I appreciate the clarity there. WiSA DS, WiSA HT, and some of these other products, but WiSA E is the biggest driver, at least in your mind, of longer term revenue, it sounds like. That's not factored into your 2023 kind of expectation, but still, you still expect growth nonetheless. Then 2024, is that when you expect WiSA E to really ramp up then and become a sizable or more material driver?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
I think WiSA DS in 2024 is really strong. I think WiSA E, it's just all around design cycles, right? We're showing WiSA E at CES. The sales activity is high, but it'll take customers a while to make design decisions and then build stuff in. WiSA E starts generating revenue in 2024 for sure, and has a big leap in 2025. It's kinda like DS, but just 12 months before. 12 months lag, right? DS is gonna start delivering revenue this year. It'll have a big leap next year. WiSA will start delivering revenue next year, WiSA E, and it'll have a big leap the following year.
Jack Vander Aarde (SVP and Senior Research Analyst)
Understood. If I look at just, you know, from your success at CES, it sounds like you had 22 companies that you mentioned engaging in the demos. I also got to check out your products at CES as well, and I was impressed by them. That was great. Just wondering, of the 22 companies or demos, do you expect more inbound requests? Are you getting more inbound requests for more demos from others? Is that not the right way to think about it? Just wondering, and are you able to convert these 22 kinda demos into... Were they customers? Are you able to, do you expect any revenue to come from them, I guess, down the road?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Absolutely. Absolutely, Jack. How many do we think will convert? I think, I would expect half to convert over the next 12 months into one solution or the other.
Jack Vander Aarde (SVP and Senior Research Analyst)
is there any overlap-
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
I'm sorry.
Jack Vander Aarde (SVP and Senior Research Analyst)
With these 22 demo customers, Are any of them existing WiSA HT customers or any brands? Just wondering if there's overlap.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Absolutely. There's overlap with our existing HT people, but the majority of them, they may be the same company, but as we've talked about for, you know, call it 18 months now, the new price points lets us go to new designs. Where we may be in a high-end architecture price point system and, you know, you know, HARMAN had us in the Citation line. Well, at, you know, half price or 70% less, we can now talk to other product managers about other solutions. That's true for a lot of companies, right?
Jack Vander Aarde (SVP and Senior Research Analyst)
Yeah. Yep. Well, that'd be great. Fantastic. I will hop back in the queue. Thanks for taking my questions.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Yep.
Operator (participant)
Our next question will come from Kevin Dede with H.C. Wainwright. You may now go ahead.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Thanks. Good morning, Bret, George. Thanks for having me.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Morning, Kevin.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
So-
George Oliva (CFO)
Good morning.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Good morning, good morning. Can we look at industry inventory levels for a bit, Bret? Maybe you can just give us a little more assurances on how you see, you know, the CE market sort of bouncing back. I think it's, you made a great case for new product introduction, but I think the elephant in the room is whether or not you think consumers are gonna snap. I think a lot of that, at new stuff, a lot of that's predicated on what's available now. Maybe you could just walk us through-
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Yeah.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Your thinking there.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
We can talk about the industry, or we can talk about the risk to WiSA's performance, right? From our perspective, the bounce back is less significant than the RIO launch. It's less significant than the new product launches, from a technology perspective in terms of driving full year growth, right? From an industry perspective, we still see POs move from, you know, quarter one to quarter two, quarter two to current quarter to next quarter. Not saying Q1, Q2, right? But from our perspective, you know, the industry has known that they had excess inventory and overbuilt and undersold clearly since Q2 last year. They knew inventory was out of balance, and they missed 2021's Christmas.
All signs indicate would've told any CE brand that, you know, Q3 was terrible, Q4 was terrible, et cetera, right? You saw a lot of discounts in October, November. From my perspective, when I say I think it comes back in line, I'm forecasting that 12 months is sufficient to address inventory imbalances, whether it's cutting price or cutting production or all of the above, right? That's our basis for saying the industry should get aligned to the new demand levels by mid-year.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay. That's helpful. I like the way you prefaced your answer though, Brett, looking at it from a risk profile. I think that begs the question on the sourcing side. Given pandemic issues on component availability, maybe you could talk to your comfort level in seeing the product you need to meet demand you're hoping for.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
I believe for us supplying to our customers modules, there are no issues. We have not gotten any issues on the Rio 5.1.4 build for Q3. The feedback we are getting from our module customers is less around part shortages and more around, just don't need more product right now. Shipping times have shrunk. You know, could there be an IC that comes up short for somebody? Maybe, but that's not the message primarily that we're getting. Primarily, we're getting the message of, we don't need product right now.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Little risk on your supply and your manufacturing, your ability to deliver, but greater risk on anticipation for end customer demand in the second half. Is that a fair assessment?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
That's a fair assessment for the HT products, right?
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay. You have much more confidence in addressing a larger market, sort of in the mid-tier range or even lower tier for home theater.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Yeah, look, we're addressing a larger market. There's no question about that strategy for DS and E. From a 2023 P&L perspective, if a product is going to design this year and into production, that means people were designing it last year and/or, you know, this quarter or next quarter, right? They are not gonna design in a part. After the year the industry had the year before, they're not gonna design. My assumption is they're not designing a part they can't get into these products.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay. That. Okay, on the RIO, clearly you're confident there on the production side. You'll be what? Available at retail and on the web for the holiday selling season?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Absolutely.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
That's the objective?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Yeah.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
We expect to be at retail in September.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Oh.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
I think we are gonna get an incredible amount of product reviews on that product. Some people heard it at CES. People that had said no to the solution over and over during the prior 12 months but had never heard it, right? Said no to the spec sheet, that I had, you know, to quote one VP of engineering, said, "I have to have it." It's like, well, no shit, we've been telling you that for 9 months. That type of blow away experience will propagate through the trade press and the consumers pretty quickly.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Yeah, no, I'm with you on that. I thought you guys demoed well. Okay, couple of quick questions for George. $2.9 million in cash post-deal year end, where do you think you are now, sort of pro forma post the $6.2 raise in February?
George Oliva (CFO)
We're a little north of $4 million in cash right now, and we have quite a bit of finished goods inventory, so we hope to liquidate some of that in the second half of the year. We'll probably be needing to raise a little money in mid-year.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay. No debt.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
The piece that's missing. Hold on, Kevin.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
I'm sorry. Go ahead, Brett.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
The piece that's missing. Yeah, the piece that's missing in this conversation, if you're trying to triangulate cash, et cetera, is we did pay down a significant part of the lend debt.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Well, that's-
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
what was.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Yeah, that's where I was going. 'Cause I didn't-.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Right
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
I didn't see a balance sheet in the today's press.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Yeah, it's coming up. What, was a $3.3 million dollar note or $3.6, I think it was, is down to $1.3.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay. That's about now, Brett, or was that at year-end?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Now.
George Oliva (CFO)
It's now.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay. Do you have a revolver you can tap?
George Oliva (CFO)
No, we're not used. We don't really have a revolver.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
An ATM you're talking?
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Nope, nope, no. I'm looking for something on the debt side. I was just wondering what you had. Like, you took your... You paid off, what, $2.3 million of your debt. Do you have the flexibility to go back to that if you need it?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
I would assume so, but it's not a structured revolver.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
That fund has been a very supportive fund of the vision and the business plan and the execution.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay. amidst the brutal pandemic and product shortages and hell on earth that you faced for the past three years. give us the sort of the share count. where is that?
George Oliva (CFO)
I would say it's currently approaching $2 million.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay. Okay. All right. Roughly north of $4 million in cash, pro forma $1.3 million in debt, and 2 million shares out. Okay.
George, when do you think you'll file your K?
George Oliva (CFO)
It should be after closed market today.
Kevin Dede (Managing Director and Senior Technology Analyst)
Okay. Thank you. Thank you, gentlemen. Thanks for entertaining. Appreciate it.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Thanks for the call.
Operator (participant)
Our next question will come from Ed Woo with Ascendiant Capital. You may now go ahead.
Ed Woo (Director of Research and Senior Analyst)
Yeah. Thank you for taking my question. As there is a glut in the channel in terms of, you know, inventory, have you seen reductions in input of component costs as well as lead times?
George Oliva (CFO)
I don't. I have not seen a reduction in the cost, no, of components, no.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Yeah, I mean, we have a pretty narrow set, Ed, right? I mean, the components we buy are just around our wireless modules. We don't see pricing action across all the components or products we go into.
Ed Woo (Director of Research and Senior Analyst)
All right. Thanks for answering that question. All right. Go on.
George Oliva (CFO)
I think most of the increase in cost is related to freight cost. I think freight cost increased during the pandemic and hasn't come down yet.
Ed Woo (Director of Research and Senior Analyst)
Okay. You guys mentioned that you guys are gonna be reducing operating costs. Will you have to increase it as product revenue increases in the back half of this year?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
You know, the largest part of our operating cost is R&D and test. The more flexible piece is the marketing. There will be a bump in the marketing at Christmas, but there'll be a corresponding, you know, bump in revenue.
Ed Woo (Director of Research and Senior Analyst)
Great. Well, thanks for answering my question, and I wish you guys good luck. Thank you.
George Oliva (CFO)
Thanks, Ed.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question will come from Jim McIlree with Dawson James Securities. You may now go ahead.
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
Thank you. Good morning.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Good morning, Jim.
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
Yeah, thanks. Following up on the prior question about OpEx. You lower OpEx in Q1.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Yep.
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
That's the new base. It's not further reductions from there. That's the new baseline that you'll use for the company and grow into the expenses from there. Is that right?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
You know, at the largest part, that's right, but there's still a series of expense control items that we're working through. You know, we're not looking at the engineering resources, but from a G&A and core development, we still have some savings to achieve.
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. The... I mean, just ballpark, it kinda sounds like revenue in the first half is maybe 30%-35% of the total revenues you're expecting for the year. Do I have that kind of right?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Well, that's interesting. Of all the numbers I've looked at, Jim. All right, let me think about that.
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
Yeah.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
What was your percentage? A third?
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
Yeah. It's just I'm just trying to get a feel for how big of a ramp you're expecting in the second half, that's all.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
I don't think that's. I could refine it after the call.
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
Okay. Great. Then lastly, also on a prior question you were asked about or maybe in response to a prior question, you talked about finished goods inventory. Is there a risk of inventory write-downs? I mean, how do you feel about the valuation of that inventory if there's any technological obsolescence or price declines that you need to account for? I'm just trying to get a better understanding about the value of the inventory.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Well, George can address it from a tech, an accounting viewpoint. From a technology obsolescence, you know, some of these HD designs that have gone into production, they have a three or four-year life, right? I mean, the pro audio doesn't read as speakers every year. They do that every four years or five years or three years, right? We don't see a risk of obsolescence from a customer demand. The speaker inventory is, you know, it's just selling it. We haven't taken any write-downs. I don't think there's a big risk currently.
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
Okay. That's it for me. Thanks a lot.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
All right. Thanks, Jim.
Operator (participant)
Again, if you have a question, please press star then one. Our next question will come from Jared Merrins with Retail. You may now go ahead.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
Hello, guys. Good morning. Thank you for taking my call.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Good morning, Jared.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
Good. How you guys doing? I've been a WiSA investor for a little over a year and a half now, and over that year and a half, you started off the conference call saying it's been exciting for WiSA. Well, as a retail investor, it has not been very exciting. My investment in this company is now basically worthless. The company just continues to dilute, basically reverse split and then dilute. You've made a statement that your revenue this year is gonna be, sorry, year-over-year is better this year than last year. You gave guidance last year that basically that you're gonna have a better third and fourth quarter. What's different about this year that's different than last year? You gave the same statements last year, you had a horrible third and fourth quarter. What's different?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Yeah, there was clear industry impacts, Jared. Well, first of all, let me just say, with you know, the board, management, all the WiSA employees, we've suffered the same pain on the stock. It's been painful, right? No question about that across the entire company from the directors down to every employee, right? From a perspective, I tried to lay that out into one slide. We have new products going in place which will build revenue this year. When you look at last year, we had a terrible Q3 and Q4. We had a strong 2021. We had a decent Q1 2022.
As we talked about, the consumer, and it's not specific to just us or our products, but the consumer in May and June really moved away from outfitting the house or the COVID nest or the COVID cave, as I call it. You can see this happening in the TV industry, the stationary exercise equipment. Consumer really shifted spending to retail, travel to going out again as the COVID lockdown started to expire. That's what happened in the second half. I think we have a different issue that the consumer is struggling with now, the cost of living, but that seems to be coming under control somewhat. Primarily, the COVID cave, people stopped outfitting it. So we didn't have a strong Q3, Q4, clearly.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
You also.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Thank you.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
You also stated that you had a $1.1 million, you're going to have a reduction in cost. What makes up that $1.1 million?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
We have trimmed heads. We are trimming marketing expenses. We plan to trim some legal expenses. We don't plan to trim engineering.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
Do you have plans to trim further into next quarters, or is it just this one quarter that you're looking to just trim?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Well, we're always looking at what expenses are worth investing in, 'cause look, it's an investment, right? What doesn't need investing in. You know, we realigned Q1. We'll continue to look at expenses in Q2 and try to optimize our operations.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
Based on what you guys have said, also, you made a statement that your cash burn still is pretty high, so you're gonna have to basically do another dilution again. Is that correct?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
George mentioned that, how that dilution were to occur, as you and everybody else knows, we have engaged with AQT to work on strategic partnering. We're not saying that we will be doing just a straight-out financing.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
That's still not 100%, but it probably, like 80%-90%, you're probably gonna end up having to dilute again, correct?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Jared, we've given the guidance that we've given, right? You can build your models. We are working to do a strategic partnership, and that's plan A.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
Okay. Let's talk about the partnership. You guys came out with a press release that you had potentially four partners that would partner with WiSA. What came about that, and why hasn't there been any update on that?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Well, there will be no updates until there's a definitive agreement with a partner, Jared. That's just the way the process works.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
Okay.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
We're engaged and we have ongoing conversations. there's a back and forth and round and round that occurs every week. We, we can't update on hypotheticals.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
That
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
We can't update on possibles, right?
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
What you're saying is that process is still ongoing. It's not ended.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
No, it has not.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
Okay.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Look, we believe that product roadmap we showed at CES is a very compelling technical achievement by the best Wi-Fi team, Wi-Fi audio team in the industry. Right? We believe that it positions us to go into substantially larger markets. As I've said last year, that was our goal. That's what we achieved. That's what we're doing.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
Bret, I believe in all the products you make. That's the reason why I invested in your company. The problem.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Yeah.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
I'm seeing is that you guys make great products, but nobody seems to wanna buy them. I wanna know the reason why they're not being purchased. Your revenue continues to go down and the cash burn continues to go up. I understand your cash burn goes up because your R&D costs, I get that, but the revenue just continuously goes down, and it continues to go down. One of these times you have to look at it and say, "Are we going in the right direction?" I think you are, but I don't like the continued dilution that you keep doing. You're using shareholders to basically finance that company. When revenue's gotta kick in and start doing that.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
I don't disagree, Jared, that revenue's gotta kick in. We've addressed We expect to get revenue growth off of three new sets of products coming out this year. We had revenue growth of 180% in 2021. Last year was a bad year across the consumer electronics industry. It was a bad year for shareholders across many companies. It was a bad year for the employees who have worked really hard to get to this great presentation of functioning technology at CES. Right? I think.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
I, Brett, but when I say that I appreciate everything everybody's done, what I'm trying to say is the results, like I said, I've invested in this company, and I am basically. It's basically worthless now. It's worth nothing to me. I'm really concerned that I put my hard-earned money into this, and it's basically not worth anything anymore. I still see the direction of you guys using dilution and dilution and dilution. When I'm a shareholder and you guys should be trying to protect the share price, and you're not doing that.
I guess my last question to you is, please explain to me, I want you to explain to all the retail investors out there, why did you do a reverse split when you had the opportunity to get an extension for 180 days and didn't even look at that avenue?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Well, let's correct your statement, right? You do not know what we looked at or did not look at, right? We're pretty thorough in what we look at, and that was the assessment of the board, and that's what we did. Right? We are at $0.10, Jared.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
What do you mean $0.10?
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Minimum bid on Nasdaq is $1.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
Right.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Right? We had to address it. It's that simple. We did not want to risk getting delisted.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
there is-
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
We did address it.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
There is an option to go 180 days on an extension. You may have looked at that, but what I'm saying is it wasn't conveyed to you in anything saying that you tried or I mean, it seemed like you automatically did a reverse split. As soon as you got the okay to do it, you did it basically overnight. I just wanna know.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Well, Jared.
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
the rationale behind that, because right now, if you look at the stock price today, our stock price is at $3.30, something like that. You're gonna look at that stock price in the next quarter, I guarantee you're gonna be below $1 again. You're gonna have to basically come up with the same thing as you did before. You're just basically doing the same thing over and over again, and that's just insanity. I wanna understand why you continuously do the same things and not look at other avenues, because I think this reverse split hurts everybody other than certain people that you're involved with. It hurts people that have hard-earned money invested in your company. I mean, this.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Uh, I-
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
This stock is worth hardly anything now. I mean, It continuously gets diluted.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
Jared, look, that's gonna be the last question, and I feel the pain, trust me. Everything I have is on this company. Right? We have always considered, which is one of the reasons we hired AQT, is it better to merge, partner, sell versus finance. We work that equation every month of the year since August last year, and we'll continue to work that equation. How that plays out this year, we cannot discuss until it plays out. Okay? With that, operator-
Jared Merrins (Shareholder)
Okay.
Brett Moyer (CEO and President)
I think we'll terminate the call. I'd like to thank everybody for coming.