NR
Nauticus Robotics, Inc. (KITT)·Q4 2022 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2022 revenue was $3.23M, beating internal expectations, with GAAP EPS of -$0.21 and adjusted EPS of -$0.19; total costs and expenses rose to $10.35M as public-company G&A and cost of revenue increased .
- Versus prior year, revenue fell from $5.35M and GAAP EPS improved from -$1.17; versus Q3, revenue grew slightly from $2.98M, while operating loss widened to -$7.12M .
- Supply-chain resolution enabled updated delivery timing (Aquanaut/Hydronaut in Q2–Q3 2023) and commissioning to follow; each Nauticus Fleet pair is expected to generate $6–$10M annual revenue as commercial services launch progresses in 2023 .
- Strategic catalysts include continued progress on DIU programs, successful Shell in‑water demos, and North Sea expansion (Stavanger, Aberdeen), positioning defense and commercial traction into 2023–2024 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
-
What Went Well
- Revenue met and exceeded internal expectations for Q4, reflecting execution despite supply-chain constraints .
- Defense programs advanced (DIU mine countermeasures), supporting future dual-use monetization and licensing pathways .
- International expansion initiated with operating bases in Stavanger and Aberdeen to target North Sea offshore opportunities .
- CEO: “Our continued progress with the DIU and Shell are testimonials of what’s to come as we deploy the most advanced and capable ocean robotic systems in the world.” .
-
What Went Wrong
- Revenue declined YoY (Q4: $3.23M vs $5.35M prior year) due to timing of revenue recognized on the largest 2021 contract in the prior-year period .
- Costs elevated: total costs and expenses rose to $10.35M (+$3.59M YoY) on cost of revenue and public-company G&A, compressing profitability .
- Supply-chain delays pushed fleet deliveries and commercialization ramp; management flagged slides of commercial service revenue into 2024 in prior commentary .
Financial Results
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our mission is to improve the way industries operate in the ocean through the use of artificial intelligence.” (CEO Nic Radford) .
- “We… expect each of its Nauticus Fleet pairs… to have the potential to generate $6–$10 million of revenue per year.” .
- On commercialization timing: supply-chain delays “push back our entire program… material commercial service revenue in 2024 versus anticipated second half of 2023 previously” .
- On Shell pilot: “test remote operations using supervised autonomy and tool control… leveraging acoustic communications technology” with mid‑2023 ocean pilot .
Q&A Highlights
- Revenue productivity of initial Aquanauts: Q1 commissioning and Q2 qualification, with some customer-supported qualification (e.g., Shell), before full revenue contribution .
- Non-GAAP and adjustments: discussion of warrant liability valuation, earnout share valuation, and one-time merger expenses impacting GAAP loss vs adjusted loss .
- Inventory vs capex classification: Olympic Arm and fleet build drove inventory in Q3; future fleet units expected to roll into capex as RaaS scales .
- DIU opportunity set: ToolKITT licensing in “hundreds to mid‑hundreds” of ROVs; dual-use platforms create high-margin recurring software revenue .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q4 2022 EPS and revenue was unavailable at time of request due to S&P Global rate limits. As a result, estimate-based beat/miss analysis cannot be provided. Management noted Q4 revenue “exceeding expectations,” indicating an internal beat versus company expectations .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q4 2022 met internal expectations on revenue ($3.23M) while profitability remained pressured by higher cost of revenue and public-company G&A; watch for operating leverage as fleet deployments commence .
- Supply-chain normalization and clarified delivery timeline (Q2–Q3 2023) are near-term catalysts; commissioning is slated to start soon after delivery .
- DIU contracts and ToolKITT licensing pathway provide non-dilutive validation and potential high-margin software revenue streams alongside hardware RaaS .
- Commercial traction with Shell progressed from feasibility to in‑water demonstrations; next phase scoping underway—monitor mid‑2023 pilot milestones .
- Expanded footprint in the North Sea (Stavanger/Aberdeen) aligns with targeted offshore wind and O&G IRM opportunities; supports utilization ramp once fleet is commissioned .
- Fleet economics strengthened: revenue potential raised to $6–$10M per fleet pair; as fleet scales, revenue mix should tilt toward RaaS with improved margins .
- Near-term trading implications: stock likely sensitive to delivery/commissioning updates and defense milestones; medium-term thesis hinges on converting pipeline into RaaS utilization with cost discipline and execution on software monetization .