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GSI TECHNOLOGY INC (GSIT)·Q2 2026 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 FY2026 revenue was $6.44M, up 3% sequentially and 41.6–42% YoY; gross margin fell to 54.8% from 58.1% in Q1 on product mix; diluted EPS was $(0.11) versus $(0.08) in Q1 and $(0.21) YoY .
- Management guided Q3 FY2026 net revenues to $6.0–$6.8M and gross margin to 54–56%, implying a similar revenue range but a lower GM midpoint versus Q2 guidance issued last quarter (56–58%) .
- Strategically, GSIT closed a $50M registered direct financing to accelerate Gemini‑II software and commence the Plato chip design; cash ended Q2 at $25.3M before the financing’s October close, with equity at $38.6M .
- Cornell research validated Gemini‑I APU’s GPU‑class performance with >98% lower energy on RAG workloads, strengthening the edge‑AI positioning; an SDA SBIR extension of ~$752K supports radiation tolerance work on Gemini‑II .
- Near‑term stock catalysts include continued defense POCs (SAR, multimodal LLM edge benchmarks by year‑end), Q3 results against tightened GM guidance, and progress on Plato IP acquisition and partner engagement .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong top‑line momentum: net revenue +3% QoQ and +41.6–42% YoY as SRAM demand improved; SigmaQuad mix rose YoY (50.1% vs. 38.6%) .
- Third‑party validation: “Cornell…validated our Gemini‑I APU's ability to match NVIDIA's A6000 GPU performance…while consuming over 98% less energy,” reinforcing GSIT’s compute‑in‑memory architecture advantage .
- Capital secured for roadmap: “closed a $50 million registered direct offering to fund continued development of our APU product line…support…Gemini‑II software and…Plato chip design” .
What Went Wrong
- Margin compression vs. Q1: GM fell to 54.8% from 58.1% due to product mix, pressuring profitability (operating loss widened to $(3.19)M; net loss $(3.19)M) .
- Opex increased QoQ: total operating expenses rose to $6.7M (R&D $3.8M; SG&A $3.0M), reflecting higher stock‑based comp and variable SBIR offsets vs. Q1 .
- Customer concentration and Nokia softness: Cadence represented 21.6% of revenue; Nokia fell to 3.1% (from 17.8% YoY), raising sustainability questions for mix and repeatability .
Financial Results
Segment/customer and mix detail:
Operating metrics and KPIs:
Estimates comparison (S&P Global):
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “The research paper validated our Gemini‑I Associative Processing Unit's ability to match NVIDIA's A6000 GPU performance…while consuming over 98% less energy…With 8× memory and 10× performance…Gemini‑II is poised to deliver even greater processing power at dramatically lower energy” — Lee‑Lean Shu, CEO .
- “We closed a $50 million registered direct offering to fund continued development of our APU product line…support…the progression of Gemini‑II software and the initiation of the Plato chip design” — Lee‑Lean Shu .
- “Gross margin…was primarily due to a change in the product mix” — Douglas Schirle, CFO .
- “Gemini‑II has been approved for prototyping…for SAR…Our solution delivers the required performance while maintaining ~15 watts” — Didier Lasserre, VP Sales .
Q&A Highlights
- Strategic focus: Management reiterated prioritization of edge applications over data centers given resource constraints; data‑center efforts (Gemini‑3) would require strategic partner/funding; licensing or co‑development remains possible but not active now .
- Validation plans: Discussed providing Gemini‑II boards to Cornell and other researchers for third‑party validation following Gemini‑I paper .
- Commercialization milestones: Pilot shipments underway with more in CY2026; POCs could drive more substantial revenue in H2 CY2026; Plato tape‑out targeted for early CY2027; ~$15–$17M in fixed IP/mask costs, with remaining funds split between Gemini‑II and Plato engineering .
- TAM/pricing/margins: Edge AI drone TAM sizable per Needham; boards priced in the low thousands to $10K; chips ~$1K+; target gross margins 60–80% by market/use case (above current corporate GM) .
- Break‑even framing: CFO suggested 65–70% gross margin could support breakeven depending on hiring/plans; specifics TBD .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus for Q2 FY2026 EPS and revenue appeared unavailable for GSIT this quarter; actuals were Revenue $6.44M and diluted EPS $(0.11) .
- Given Q3 guidance implies similar revenue range but a lower GM midpoint, Street models (where covered) may need to adjust gross margin assumptions downward for near‑term quarters while keeping revenue broadly stable.*
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Revenue trajectory is improving with two consecutive quarters above $6M and ~42% YoY growth, but near‑term margins are sensitive to mix; expect GM volatility around the 54–56% guided band .
- The $50M financing materially de‑risks execution of Gemini‑II software stack and Plato IP acquisition/tape‑out, extending runway and enabling parallel hardware/software development .
- Third‑party validation (Cornell) and defense POCs (SAR, multimodal LLM) bolster the edge‑AI thesis; watch for year‑end benchmark disclosures and additional defense program traction as potential catalysts .
- Customer concentration (Cadence >20% of revenue) and Nokia softness warrant monitoring; diversification and scaling defense/commercial customers are key to sustaining growth and margin mix .
- Short‑term trading: Q3 gross margin guide is lower vs prior; print in line on revenue with stable mix could be neutral; upside hinges on favorable product/customer mix lifting GM toward high end of the 54–56% range .
- Medium‑term thesis: If GSIT converts POCs to production and executes Plato on timeline, structural margins could expand toward targeted 60–80% in select board/software bundles, shifting earnings power materially .
- Risk management: Execution on compiler/SDK/tooling and expanding an ecosystem are critical; management acknowledged staged tooling development with partners/customers in progress .