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ESS Tech, Inc. (GWH)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q3 print was mixed: ESS reported $0.21M revenue vs $5.65M consensus, a large top-line miss, but EPS of $(0.73) beat consensus of $(1.01) on tighter OpEx and improving cost discipline. Management emphasized execution over revenue during the 18-month Energy Base ramp, with SRP’s 50 MWh pilot a key validation and financing steps extending liquidity . EPS/Revenue consensus from S&P Global.*
  • Operating metrics improved: Adjusted EBITDA loss narrowed to $(7.17)M from $(7.77)M in Q2 and $(14.95)M in Q1; cost of revenue trended down sequentially despite very low Q3 revenue, reflecting ongoing reset and focus on Energy Base productization .
  • Balance sheet: Post-quarter financing of $40M with Yorkville and an announced $75M ATM provide flexibility; company repaid $15M of the $30M note drawn and completed a $25M SEPA, with ~“$30M in cash on hand” at the call and an optional remaining $10M note tranche .
  • Catalyst path: 2026 manufacturing start and SRP delivery/validation are the near-term stock drivers; management plans an Investor Day in January 2026 to detail roadmap and milestones .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Energy Base commercial validation: Announced a 5 MW/50 MWh SRP pilot, the first large-scale deployment of ESS’s next-gen platform; design underway, manufacturing to begin in 2026, with delivery by Dec 2027 under a 10-year storage agreement .
  • Cost discipline and EBITDA trajectory: Adjusted EBITDA losses improved to $(7.17)M in Q3 from $(7.77)M in Q2 and $(14.95)M in Q1, as OpEx remained controlled at ~$5.1M and cost of revenue declined sequentially .
  • Liquidity optionality: Closed $40M Yorkville financing post-quarter, repaid $15M of the $30M draw, completed a $25M SEPA, and announced a $75M ATM to access capital opportunistically; CFO indicated ~“$30M” cash on hand at the time of the call and $10M remaining note capacity .

Quote: “Our focus is now squarely on execution—delivering the Energy Base platform and demonstrating the performance and reliability that customers are demanding.” — Interim CEO Kelly Goodman .

What Went Wrong

  • Revenue collapse amid pivot: Q3 revenue fell to $0.21M from $2.36M in Q2 and $0.60M in Q1, reflecting the transition away from prior products and toward Energy Base; total revenue also down YoY from $0.36M in Q3’24 .
  • Massive gross losses at minimal scale: Q3 gross loss of $(4.73)M on $0.21M revenue resulted in extremely negative gross margin; similar dynamic persisted in prior quarters, underscoring the need for scale and Energy Base cost curves to normalize unit economics .
  • Large revenue miss vs consensus: Q3 revenue of $0.21M vs $5.65M consensus; consensus depth thin but the gap is material. EPS beat was driven by cost control rather than commercial volume conversion; near-term revenues likely remain volatile through pilot phase.*

Financial Results

P&L and Profitability (USD Millions unless noted)

MetricQ1 2025Q2 2025Q3 2025
Revenue (Actual)$0.599 $2.358 $0.214
Revenue Consensus*$3.454*$2.400*$5.650*
EPS (GAAP, Actual)$(1.50) $(0.90) $(0.73)
EPS Consensus*$(1.205)*$(0.88)*$(1.005)*
Cost of Revenue$8.746 $7.459 $4.939
Gross Profit (Loss)$(8.147) $(5.101) $(4.725)
Gross Margin %(−1,360%) (−216%) (−2,208%)
Adjusted EBITDA$(14.954) $(7.774) $(7.170)

Notes: Gross margin % computed from cited Revenue and Gross Profit.

YoY Snapshot (Q3 only)

MetricQ3 2024Q3 2025
Total Revenue (USD M)$0.359 $0.214
Net Loss (USD M)$(22.493) $(10.375)
EPS (GAAP)$(1.90) $(0.73)
Adjusted EBITDA (USD M)$(18.870) $(7.170)

Balance Sheet / Liquidity Highlights

  • Cash & cash equivalents at quarter-end: $3.539M (excludes post-quarter financing) ; CFO reiterated $3.5M cash and short-term investments “at quarter-end” and ~“$30M in cash on hand” at the time of the call, plus ability to draw a remaining $10M under the note .
  • Stockholders’ equity turned negative at $(1.8)M as of 9/30/25, from $28.9M at 12/31/24, reflecting accumulated deficit and liabilities growth .

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Quantitative financial guidance (revenue, margins, OpEx)FY/Q4 2025None providedNone providedMaintained (no guidance)
Capital planNear-termSEPA up to $25MCompleted $25M SEPA; launched $75M ATMIncreased flexibility
LiquidityNear-termN/AClosed $40M Yorkville; repaid $15M of $30M drawn; ~$30M cash on hand at call; $10M remaining availableImproved optionality
Operational roadmap18–24 monthsEnergy Base launchSRP 50 MWh pilot in execution; mfg start 2026; delivery by Dec 2027Execution-focused

Management reiterated focus on execution milestones rather than near-term revenue guidance.

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicQ1 2025 (May)Q2 2025 (Aug)Q3 2025 (Nov)Trend
Energy Base commercializationAward in contracting for 50 MWh with AZ utility; proposal activity ~1.2 GWh First Energy Base sale; proposals >1.1 GWh; Made-in-USA, 98% domestic content SRP 50 MWh pilot announced; 100% of active opportunities on Energy Base Building pipeline to first large-scale deployments
Liquidity/capitalManaging runway; raising capital options Up to $31M package incl. $25M SEPA; cost burn reduced $40M Promissory Note; $15M repayment; $25M SEPA completed; $75M ATM launched Improved flexibility
Cost disciplineEarly operational reset OpEx down 35% QoQ; gross loss narrowing OpEx ~$5.1M; Adj. EBITDA improving Continued discipline
Market focus (utilities/data centers)Targeting utility-scale LDES US manufacturing advantages; policy tailwinds (45X) Emphasis on digital infrastructure need for 10+ hours; bilateral DC discussions Rising LDES recognition
Policy/tariffs/domestic contentWell positioned vs tariff volatility Notes “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” and 45X PTC benefits Made-in-America narrative continues Supportive policy backdrop
Product roadmapEnergy Base launchEnergy Base productization, vendor optimization 10-hour today; targeting 16-hour by 2029 Longer duration roadmap

Management Commentary

  • Strategic focus: “Our focus is now squarely on execution—delivering the Energy Base platform and demonstrating the performance and reliability that customers are demanding.” — Kelly Goodman, Interim CEO .
  • Pipeline quality: “Since launching the Energy Base earlier this year, 100% of our active opportunities are centered on this platform, with RFP activity and proposal volume continuing to increase.” — Kelly Goodman .
  • Liquidity posture: “We are launching a $75 million at-the-market program… an additional tool, not a requirement for accessing capital… flexibility to time any use… strategically.” — Kate Suhadolnik, Interim CFO .
  • Addressable demand: “Our technology is well-positioned to support the fast-growing digital infrastructure sector, where long-duration storage is essential to enabling a resilient, decarbonized grid.” — Kelly Goodman .

Q&A Highlights

  • Scale and duration: Near-term projects sized similarly to SRP (5 MW/50 MWh), with follow-on opportunities envisaged at 100–200 MW; Energy Base offers 10-hour duration today, with a 16-hour target by 2029 .
  • Customer mix and channels: RFPs primarily from utilities and IPPs; data center/hyperscaler engagements handled bilaterally rather than via RFPs .
  • Liquidity runway: As of the call, ~“$30M” cash on hand, with $10M undrawn capacity on the Yorkville note and a new $75M ATM providing added flexibility .

Estimates Context

  • Q3 2025 vs S&P Global consensus: Revenue $0.214M vs $5.650M consensus (miss); EPS $(0.73) vs $(1.005) consensus (beat). Consensus depth thin (2 estimates for both revenue and EPS in Q3), limiting reliability.*
  • Trajectory: Q2 revenue modestly missed ($2.358M vs $2.400M), EPS slightly worse than consensus ($(0.90) vs $(0.88)); Q1 saw larger misses on both revenue ($0.599M vs $3.454M) and EPS ($(1.50) vs $(1.205)).*
  • Implication: Street likely to reduce near-term revenue expectations and shift focus to 2026 execution milestones; EPS path remains driven by cost control until Energy Base volumes scale.*

Financial Comparisons vs Estimates (S&P Global)

MetricQ1 2025Q2 2025Q3 2025
Revenue Actual (USD M)$0.599 $2.358 $0.214
Revenue Consensus (USD M)*$3.454*$2.400*$5.650*
EPS Actual (GAAP)$(1.50) $(0.90) $(0.73)
EPS Consensus*$(1.205)*$(0.88)*$(1.005)*
EPS – # of Estimates*2*1*2*
Revenue – # of Estimates*3*1*2*

Values marked with * are retrieved from S&P Global.

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Execution, not revenue, is the 2025–2026 story: expect lumpy/low revenues until Energy Base ramps; stock likely trades on SRP milestones, manufacturing readiness, and pipeline conversion .
  • Liquidity improved but remains a focus: $40M Yorkville financing, $15M repaid, $25M SEPA completed, and a $75M ATM provide optionality; dilution risk should be weighed against execution funding needs .
  • Cost discipline is working: Sequential improvement in Adjusted EBITDA (Q1 → Q3) and declining cost of revenue despite minimal Q3 revenue indicate operating reset traction .
  • Large revenue miss vs consensus underscores pivot: Street models should de-emphasize near-term revenue and focus on 2026 delivery cadence and cost curve normalization; EPS beats may stem from OpEx control rather than commercial scale.*
  • Market receptivity rising for 10+ hour LDES: Utilities and data centers increasingly see 10+ hour storage as essential; Energy Base positioned with domestic content and safety profile .
  • Product roadmap offers upside optionality: 16-hour target by 2029 could expand TAM and competitive differentiation if execution meets reliability/cost targets .

Sources:

  • Q3 2025 8-K press release and financials
  • Q3 2025 earnings call transcript and duplicate transcript
  • Q3 2025 other press releases: SRP 50 MWh pilot , $40M financing , call scheduling
  • Prior quarters: Q2 2025 8-K and press release ; Q1 2025 8-K
  • Estimates are from S&P Global; consensus values and estimate counts marked with * were retrieved via GetEstimates (S&P Global).