UC
ULTRALIFE CORP (ULBI)·Q3 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 revenue and earnings decelerated on order timing and supply chain delays: sales $35.7M (down 9.6% YoY; down 17.0% QoQ), GAAP EPS $0.02 (vs $0.08 YoY; $0.18 in Q2); consolidated gross margin compressed to 24.3% (vs 26.9% in Q2) as Communications Systems revenue fell 58% YoY and mix turned unfavorable .
- Management cited “timing of expected larger purchase orders” in Comms and “muted” Battery growth due to supply chain timing and customer pushouts; a follow-on Leader Radio order expected in Q3 arrived in October, pointing to some Q4 catch-up potential .
- Balance sheet progress continued: total debt reduced to ~$8.0M at Q3-end from $12.1M at Q2-end and $25.3M at Q1-end; backlog normalized to $78M (from $93M in Q2) with management noting it rose to ~$83M a week into Q4 as POs flowed .
- Strategic catalyst: closed Electrochem acquisition (10/31) for $50M cash; seller disclosed Electrochem TTM revenue ~$34–36M and EBITDA ~$5M; integration targeted to complete 1H25, with management emphasizing scale, vertical integration, and cross-sell synergies .
- Street estimates: S&P Global consensus retrieval was unavailable at time of analysis due to API limit; estimate comparisons are therefore noted as N/A and should be updated when data access is restored.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Completed Electrochem acquisition, adding high-temp, high-reliability primary lithium capability; synergy opportunities across procurement, packs, and cross-selling highlighted by CEO; integration playbook underway with completion targeted 1H25 .
- Battery & Energy Products segment grew 1.9% YoY to $32.5M, with strong government/defense (+28.9% YoY) and oil & gas (+1.5% YoY) demand; Battery gross margin improved 50 bps YoY to 24.7% on higher Newark volume .
- Continued deleveraging: debt cut by $4.1M sequentially to ~$8.0M, aiding future interest expense; working capital $60.2M with current ratio 3.3, positioning for execution and integration .
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What Went Wrong
- Communications Systems revenue fell 58.2% YoY to $3.2M due to prior-year large program comps and Q3 timing shortfall; segment gross margin reduced to 20.1% (vs 27.0% YoY) on lower volume and mix .
- Consolidated margin compression: gross margin down to 24.3% (from 26.9% in Q2) and operating margin to 1.4% (from 9.1% in Q2), reflecting mix and $0.3M one-time acquisition costs .
- Supply chain and customer pushouts dampened Battery growth and raised inventories; management framed headwinds as roughly 50/50 between supply chain and order delays, with a broad-based impact across end-markets (medical, Comms) .
Financial Results
Headline P&L vs prior periods
Adjusted profit metrics
Note: Q3 included ~$0.3M acquisition-related costs; non-GAAP reconciliations provided in press release/8-K .
Segment revenue and margins
Balance sheet / operating KPIs
Actual vs Estimates (S&P Global)
Note: S&P Global consensus could not be retrieved due to temporary API rate limits; update pending.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Ultralife’s third quarter results were weighed down by the timing of expected larger purchase orders for our Communications Systems segment and by the muted growth for our Battery & Energy Products segment due to some supply chain timing and customers’ requests delaying orders into the fourth quarter and first half of 2025.” — Mike Manna, CEO .
- “Adjusted EBITDA…was $1.9 million, or 5.4% of sales… [TTM] $17.5 million, or 10.5% of sales.” — Philip Fain, CFO .
- “We favorably negotiated our lithium metal contracts and several of our printed circuit boards and expect to realize savings in the hundreds of thousands of dollars per year.” — CEO .
- “We’ve launched a new amplification product… the smallest, lightest, most power-efficient 20-watt man-portable amplifier in the marketplace… expected to be available for production orders by the end of the year.” — CEO .
- “Having closed [Electrochem]… we see this as a synergistic business with little customer and product overlap… vertical integration opportunities… positioned for future growth.” — CEO .
Q&A Highlights
- Headwinds split ~50/50 between supply chain issues and customer order delays; management emphasized no order losses, just timing .
- EL8000 opportunity TAM: ~$5–10M commercial and ~$20–30M military; ramp depends on server blade availability and enabling DC power supply validation .
- Size of delayed Q3 Comms order: just under $2.5M, shifted to Q4 .
- Electrochem disclosure: seller (Integer) indicated model with ~$36M revenue and ~$5M EBITDA; ULBI to file audited carve-out by Jan 16, 2025 .
- Backlog normalization: trending back toward pre-COVID $40–50M range; week into Q4 backlog increased to ~$83M as annual POs arrived .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus for Q3 2024 revenue and EPS could not be retrieved due to an API rate limit; as a result, beat/miss analysis vs. Street is N/A pending data access restoration. Management’s qualitative remarks suggest Q3 shortfalls were primarily timing-related (orders received in October and supply chain delays), with some visibility into Q4 catch-up .
- Once S&P Global data are available, we recommend updating the revenue/EPS surprise and assessing estimate revisions into Q4/FY.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q3 was a timing-driven air pocket: Comms revenue slippage and supply chain/cust. pushouts compressed margins; some orders shifted to Q4 (e.g., Leader Radio), implying potential sequential recovery .
- Underlying demand in Battery remained resilient (gov/defense +28.9% YoY) with Battery margins up YoY; lean/material deflation provide medium-term GM levers despite quarter-to-quarter lumpiness .
- Balance sheet de-risking accelerated: debt reduced from $25.3M (Q1) to ~$8.0M (Q3), lowering interest burden and increasing flexibility for integration and growth initiatives .
- Electrochem adds scale and portfolio breadth in high-reliability primary lithium; vertical integration and cross-sell should enhance growth and margins as integration completes by 1H25 .
- Product catalysts into 2025: radio-agnostic 20W amplifier launch, EL8000 vehicular DC power supply introduction, MRC 2104 airborne power ramp, and expanding thin cell/Thionyl pipeline in medical/IoT .
- Backlog normalization reduces visibility vs. post-COVID peaks but appears healthy and rising early in Q4; watch quarterly order timing to avoid over-extrapolating a single quarter .
- Near-term trading: monitor Q4 shipments (delayed orders), Comms mix, and early Electrochem contribution; medium-term thesis hinges on execution of synergy capture, gross margin improvement, and conversion of the pipeline in thin cell and high-reliability primary chemistries .