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Greenland Technologies Holding Corp. (GTEC)·Q2 2021 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Record quarter: revenue $28.2M (+70.1% YoY), gross margin 20.2% (+280 bps YoY), net income $3.2M (+114.2% YoY), EPS $0.26; units sold 42,046 (+43.6% YoY). Management attributed strength to robust end-market demand, supply chain resilience, and higher-value product mix .
- FY2021 revenue guidance raised to $90–$100M (from $80–$90M in May), implying ~35%–49% YoY growth versus 2020; key catalyst into the second half as North America GEF-series lithium forklifts begin deliveries in September .
- Operational execution: cost discipline and economies of scale lifted gross margin despite raw material inflation; company chose to absorb short-term steel spikes to deepen Tier-1 OEM relationships instead of passing through pricing .
- Strategic expansion: first industrial EVs (GEL-1800 loader, GEX-8000 excavator) slated to arrive in the U.S. in Q4; direct sales and modest U.S. assembly sites planned; $7M capital raise supports rollout .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “We have once again achieved a record quarter with revenue generated of $28.2 million … and 42,046 transmissions sold” (CEO), showcasing demand strength and operational throughput .
- Gross margin improved to 20.2% (+280 bps YoY) on economies of scale and shift to more sophisticated hydraulic transmission products; production efficiency at the 650k sq ft facility supported margin expansion (CEO/CFO) .
- Strengthened balance sheet and growth funding: completed $7M underwritten offering to support U.S. EV strategy; formed strategic partnership with Shandong Zhongcha to co-develop lithium forklifts .
What Went Wrong
- Cost pressure: cost of goods sold rose 64.3% YoY to $22.5M on higher sales volume and raw material inflation; company cited steel price spikes, which it absorbed rather than pass-through, compressing near-term pricing power .
- OpEx increased 84.1% YoY to $2.3M, with higher sales and labor costs; R&D up 111.4% to $1.0M as EV investments ramp (near-term margin headwind) .
- Early EV pre-bookings: initial commitments were “low” ahead of U.S. vehicle arrivals; management expects conversion post demos and hands-on experience (Q&A) .
Financial Results
Notes:
- YoY performance benefited from demand and product mix; QoQ progression reflected continued volume ramp and margin resilience despite input inflation .
KPIs
Segment Breakdown
- Not disclosed; management cited mix shift to higher-value hydraulic transmission products supporting margin .
Estimates vs Actuals
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q2 2021 EPS and revenue was unavailable at time of analysis due to data access limits; thus beat/miss versus estimates cannot be determined. S&P Global consensus comparison unavailable [GetEstimates error].
Guidance Changes
- No guidance provided on margins, OpEx, OI&E, tax rate, segment-specific targets, or dividends in Q2 materials .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “We have once again achieved a record quarter with revenue generated of $28.2 million … and 42,046 transmissions sold … We are benefitting from strong demand … Our latest electric GEF-series lithium powered forklifts … With deliveries starting by September in the North America market we expect this to be additive to second half of 2021 revenue” .
- CFO: “In the first half of 2021, we generated a total revenue of $52.8 million and net income of $5.6 million … Our gross margin was 20.2% … These strong financial results demonstrate our market leading position … In June, we successfully raised $7 million for the strategic execution of new electric vehicle products launched in the U.S.” .
- CEO (call): Margin gains reflect economies of scale and adoption of integrated drivetrains; supply chain resilience allowed Greenland to deliver while peers struggled .
- CEO (call on pricing): Company absorbed short-term steel cost spikes to support Tier-1 OEM relationships; prices normalizing .
Q&A Highlights
- Market share vs market growth: Outperformance driven by supply chain execution and higher-margin integrated drivetrains adopted by existing Tier-1 customers; manufacturing efficiencies lifted gross margin .
- Raw material inflation: Steel spikes seen as short-term; company did not pass increases to customers, prioritizing long-term relationships; normalization underway .
- U.S. market entry and timeline: EV forklifts available in September; loader in October; excavator in December; “reasonable” sales for construction EVs expected Q2–Q3 2022 post assembly site launch .
- Distribution model: Direct sales and modest assembly sites (40k–60k sq ft), not traditional dealers; working capital per site $3M–$5M plus $1M–$2M OpEx; exploring domestic sourcing to mitigate tariffs .
- Pricing strategy and demand: Lithium forklift pricing targeted at ~$24k–$25k for 1.8–3.5T models—comparable to lead-acid—addressing market gap where incumbents price lithium near ~$70k; ROI/maintenance advantages expected to drive adoption .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus for Q2 2021 EPS and revenue was unavailable due to data access limitations at the time of analysis; we cannot determine beat/miss versus Street for the quarter [GetEstimates error].
- Given the guidance raise to $90–$100M, consensus revenue and margin models may need upward revisions for FY2021; forklift deliveries in September and U.S. EV rollout could influence 2H volume/mix assumptions .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Momentum intact: Strong QoQ/YoY progression in revenue, operating income, and EPS with margin resilience despite input cost headwinds .
- Guidance upgrade is a tangible catalyst for 2H: FY2021 raised to $90–$100M as North American forklift deliveries begin; watch order conversion and backlog updates .
- Strategic pivot to EVs broadens TAM: GEL-1800 and GEX-8000 expand beyond transmissions; direct-sales model seeks to capture EV economics and avoid dealer disincentives .
- Near-term watch items: Raw material normalization, EV pre-booking traction post demos, progress on first U.S. assembly site and domestic component sourcing (tariff mitigation) .
- Execution edge: Supply chain reliability vs peers and economies of scale underpin margin; continued R&D investment supports differentiated product roadmap .
- Risk considerations: Elevated OpEx/R&D as EV program scales; early U.S. demand validation needed; absence of pass-through pricing may pressure margins if input inflation persists .
- Data gap: Street consensus unavailable; monitor upcoming disclosures for sell-side revisions and potential estimate momentum following guidance raise .