OTCMKTS:NANX Nanophase Technologies Q1 2024 Earnings Report ProfileEarnings History Nanophase Technologies EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.01Consensus EPS N/ABeat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/ANanophase Technologies Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$9.87 millionExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ANanophase Technologies Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date4/23/2024TimeN/AConference Call DateWednesday, April 24, 2024Conference Call Time11:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Nanophase Technologies Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 24, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 4 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by, and welcome to today's program entitled Nanophases First Quarter 2024 Financial Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. The words believes, expects, anticipates, plans, forecasts and similar expressions are intended to identify forward looking statements. Statements contained in this news release that are not historical facts are forward looking statements that are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Operator00:00:50These statements reflect the company's current beliefs and a number of important factors that could cause actual results for future periods to differ materially from those expressed in these news release. These important factors include, without limitation, a decision of the customer to cancel a purchase order or supply agreement, demand for and acceptance of the company's personal care ingredients, advanced materials and formulated products changes in development and distribution relationships the impact of competitive products and technologies possible disruption in commercial activities occasioned by public health issues, terrorist activities and armed conflict and other risks indicated in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Nanophase undertakes no obligation to update or revise these forward looking statements to reflect new events and or uncertainties. I'd now like to hand the call over to Jeff Jankowski, President and CEO. Speaker 100:01:57Thank you, Jonathan. Good morning to all of those listening live and thank you to those following up online after the fact. Are looking forward to discussing Q1 2024 results, our performance to KPIs which will play a huge role in ensuring our success and our outlook for the balance of 2024. Evan Cureton, our Chief Operating Officer is joining me on the call today. We have some prepared comments and will be available for some Q and A afterwards. Speaker 100:02:26We'll continue to focus on our future, which we believe to be a bright and lucrative one, reviewing the things we've done to position ourselves for this as well as covering Q1 2024 results. We had lots of news during the 1st 4 months of 2024, which while not operational in nature, we certainly expect to contribute to our success going forward. We closed 2 equity financings in Q1, which were critical for us to keep growing and supporting both our expanded working capital requirements and some modest capital projects needed to support additional Solesence volume. None of us wanted to have to walk away from profitable growth, which had been a steady pressure in 2023. Now we're able to continue to add good business with improved throughput, while also reducing our cost per unit through automation. Speaker 100:03:16We're focusing primarily on enhancing profitability via gross margins this year, but the growth keeps coming and we want to capture it. Given the nature of the Solesence business, success leads to growth within existing customers as sales grow and as they launch new product lines. Success with these customers also results in more opportunities for new business. Other brands don't want to be left behind as we all work to satisfy demand in this relatively newly defined market, a market we believe Solesence has been instrumental in creating and energizing for prestige cosmetics offering natural minerals based skin protection. Another key milestone achieved just 2 weeks ago was the successful settlement of our litigation with BASF. Speaker 100:04:02As I mentioned, our respective commercial teams have maintained a positive relationship through the entire process and we're looking forward to our full focus being available to running our API business with BASF and our Solesence business. The added management bandwidth with that added management bandwidth will be able to apply to our Nanophase and Solesence businesses will allow us to increase our focus and accelerate progress in the strengthening of our enterprise and increasing its value. Now, let's walk through the numbers. Unless identified otherwise, all numbers will be stated in approximate terms. We had good results in Q1, generating a 36% gross margin of $9,900,000 in total revenue compared to a 23% gross margin over the same period in 2023. Speaker 100:04:53We also generated almost $1,000,000 in net profit in Q1 of this year compared to a $1,200,000 net loss in Q1 of 2023, more than a $2,000,000 swing. Our margins were driven largely by a favorable Q1 product mix and a continuation of the gains we've seen in improved production efficiencies. We'll need a few more quarters under our belts to better understand all of the factors contributing to this as we've yet to develop enough history to allow for more accurate future predictions. Generally, the 35% to 40% gross margin range follows our 2024 plan. R and D expenses were down about 10% year over year, while SG and A expenses Speaker 200:05:39SG Speaker 100:05:42in SG and A related to a reduction in legal fees for the recently settled litigation. Our Q4 2023 reorganization also contributed to these savings, which we expect to continue through 2024. Last time, we addressed some of the changes we are implementing in manufacturing that we expect to deliver improved results and increased capacity in 2024. In a few minutes, Kevin is going to address our operating KPI performance, some of which will be enhanced by these investments. They will require a total of approximately $2,000,000 in capital to implement and we expect them to pay for themselves within 15 to 30 months from commissioning. Speaker 100:06:25We broke these out into 3 projects. 1st, we're building out our own microbial testing lab. This will allow us quicker turnaround times on required testing of every batch we make as well as reducing outside testing costs significantly. We expect to save approximately $300,000 per year at current volumes and have this project paid off in just over a year. 2nd, we're transitioning our wet processing lines to our Bolingbrook facility. Speaker 100:06:57This will result in at least $400,000 per year in savings and pay for itself in 30 months or less. Critically, in addition to higher dollar savings per unit, this will help us to increase throughput, helping us to support greater demand while increasing customer satisfaction. Lastly, we're further expanding our filling and assembly operation in Bolingbrook, adding more automation allowing for increased volumes to be produced in less time than it takes today. We expect this project to pay for itself in about 2 years in terms of hard cash savings. It will also create more opportunities for greater sales growth and enhanced profits. Speaker 100:07:37Combined, once these projects are completed this year, we should be able to support about $100,000,000 in Solesence finished products with what we've put in place. This will represent a solid, stable base from which to more than double the size of our existing business within our current footprint. Solesence products made up over $8,000,000 or 82 percent of our Q1 2024 sales versus $5,000,000 or 53 percent of Q1 2023 sales. The demand is here. Now I'll invite Kevin Keratin, our Chief Operating Officer, to share his thoughts on our progress to KPIs and the approach we're taking through 2024. Speaker 100:08:18Kevin? Speaker 300:08:20Thanks, Jess. As usual, I'd like to begin by thanking our teammates who every day demonstrate that we are indeed best in industry at what we do and our investors who continue to trust our leadership as we take the next steps on this journey. I would also like to thank the families of our team as we ask a lot of our team and we would not be able to do what we do without the energy and support of our loved ones. Last month, we introduced 3 key performance indicators that we will reference throughout this year to provide guidance on our performance. These KPIs are inventory availability, throughput and on time in full or OTOF. Speaker 300:09:06As we noted last month, when combined with our financial analysis, these KPIs help give us a clear assessment on how we are performing in line of sight to the actions we need to take to continue to move our company on the never ending path to our operational excellence. As a result, we refer to these as operating KPIs. In addition to operating KPIs, our company also has growth KPIs. These KPIs are important indicators on how we are performing relative to our growth goals and therefore how we are trending toward increasing our overall enterprise value. While currently providing strong indicators for growth, it is premature to talk much about these at this point in the year, except to say we will introduce and discuss them in greater detail during our Q2 conference call. Speaker 300:10:01So let's get started on reviewing our operating KPIs. We will begin with inventory availability, which last month I described as being a measurement both of the amount of materials we have on hand and the timing on when we receive those materials. During Q1, we were able to finish the work that we had started in late Q4 to bring our inventory availability to over 95%. This milestone means that we have effectively addressed virtually all materials availability issues that have been the primary drag on our performance during the second half 2023. I would like to commend our purchasing team as well as our R and D team on their collaborative effort to bring us to this point. Speaker 300:10:47Through working tirelessly together to identify and qualify alternative suppliers and producers of key raw materials, These teams brought us through several tight spots to reach this current milestone. Further good news is that over the past month, we have sustained this performance in maintaining inventory availability at or above the 95% level and we are confident in our ability going forward to continue this solid performance. To further augment our position, our team is also working hard on implementing our vendor development and management programs, which includes amongst other elements, bringing in additional qualified sources from around the world for key materials to minimize our out of stock risk and reliance on single source suppliers where it's possible. This work has already yielded some small but still impactful improvements in purchase price for these materials due both to volume growth and getting the alternative sourcing. While we still have many miles ahead of us, we are pleased with the progress we have made confident in the professional management that is being executed to continue to move us toward best in class performance in this area. Speaker 300:12:08Our next KPI is throughput. Last month I described this KPI as measuring how we perform relative to leveraging our assets to produce the goods we sell. More simply, throughput is a measure of exactly that. The output from our company as measured by the units of finished goods and the dollars of shipments we yield every week. During Q1, as inventory availability improved, it enabled us to improve our throughput, which while lagging the improvement in inventory availability increased each month during the quarter. Speaker 300:12:44More specifically, throughput measures progressed from 50% of target in January to over 90% of target in March, yielding a Q1 average of around 76 percent. To provide a little more context on this performance, consider that due to the strength of the improvement in throughput during the quarter, March alone represented 40% of our total production and revenue for Q1. An additional strong indicator of further improvement in throughput was seen in our upstream production of bulk for the finished goods we produce. At the bulk production level, we are meeting percent of planned requirements or 100 percent of throughput by the end of March. We still have some bottlenecks in fully realizing the benefits of some of our investments on the secondary packaging area and are hard at work in rectifying these issues. Speaker 300:13:43It will be important for us to address these issues so that we can achieve Q2 throughput requirements, which for guidance are greater than 30% higher than Q1. Finally, turning our attention toward OTIF, there will be no surprise for the manufacturing folks online that OTIF lagged when throughput lagged. Remember again that we define on time and full or also referring to OTIF or OTIF as a percentage of orders shipped consistent with the dates we've agreed upon with our brand partners. Relative to our standard, we were less than 50% of our OTOF target. Our goal our company goal remains to significantly improve OTEF into greater than 90% by the end of Q2, a very large and stretch goal for us I might add. Speaker 300:14:42But we are confident that as we execute Q2, we will be on target with this objective through improving the throughput performance. Finally, as we noted in our last call, our company is fully able to handle hard better. It's foundational to the journey and the massive change we have made to our company over the past few months, let alone the past few years. Through continued focus on the measures and the development of our teams and teammates, we have solidly regained our footing. Our challenge remains to continue to raise our expectations to embrace these significant opportunities ahead and raise our performance at the same time over the coming months so we turn them into profitable growth. Speaker 300:15:31Back to you, Jess. Speaker 100:15:33Thanks, Kevin. As you can see, all of this reflects progress along the strategic course we charted some years ago when we launched Solesence. We believe we put ourselves in a position to win and we intend to capitalize on that. We have more than $40,000,000 in shift and confirm sales orders through this week and we expect more to follow. Demand has not been our issue. Speaker 100:15:57Our struggle to supply that demand for our Solesence products has been our biggest limiting factor over the past few years. We expect to overcome that last hurdle this year. Now, we'd like to take any questions or hear your comments on our results. While we know that most of our investors listen to the webcast or review the transcript after the live call, we're happy to invite those of you participating live on today's call to ask any questions you may have or to share your feedback. Afterwards, I'll offer a few closing comments. Speaker 100:16:29Jonathan, would you please begin the Q and A session? Operator00:16:33Certainly. And our first question for today comes from the line of Ron Richards, individual investor. Your question please. Speaker 200:16:50Well, hi, Jess. Not such a bad quarter. I'm not sure you can answer this question, but what were the general terms of the settlement with BASF? Speaker 100:17:01Hi, Ron. Well, at a high level, we are not stopped. We've agreed between us that we will continue to develop our Solesence business and that, that won't be any sort of a violation of our agreements and that we will work that we will be sure that we keep a supply available as mandated by the contract and we've kind of cleaned that up to make that a little more clear as well as we've agreed as we had been to continue to work on new products for them And there's a specific product in the pipeline that we said we would go ahead and move forward with. So in a broad sense, those things were we codified some of the things that we had been doing and we kind of assuaged each other's concerns about some other things. And in the grand scheme, I think we're going to move forward. Speaker 100:18:02It was a successful settlement for both of us. And I'm certainly glad to be able to focus more of my attention and I know Kevin can say the same on the business at this point. Speaker 200:18:14Were there any monetary aspects to the agreement Speaker 100:18:19payments? No, no. There was nothing beyond just the agreement on those things. And we filed I mean, you can get a sense of it if you felt like you were missing the experience of a root canal. You can go through the documents we filed and get a sense of it. Speaker 100:18:35But yes, there were no monetary inducements. Speaker 200:18:40Okay. Well, good. Sounds promising. Speaker 100:18:45Thank you. Thank you. Operator00:18:56And our next question comes from the line of Tony Rubin, individual investor. Speaker 200:19:05Good morning, gentlemen. I've been waiting a long time to say this, but great quarter. Congratulations. Speaker 100:19:12Thank you. Speaker 200:19:13Good to hear that you're able to execute on the promises. So it's very exciting. So just as a follow-up to the previous caller, I did try to get that root canal and read your documents, but honestly, it was more than my mind could handle. But from your summary, it sounds like it's business as usual. It sounds like there's nothing negative in nano phase, which frankly leads me to wonder why the resolve is litigation in the first place, but just wanted you to confirm that was correct. Speaker 200:19:53Secondly, how much was litigated for Q2 through 4 in 2023, so we could see that as a saving. Then your gross margins are obviously a tremendous improvement. And I think in the opening comments you mentioned targeting 35% to 40% for full year 2024. I just wanted to confirm that. And you did mention $40,000,000 in backlog. Speaker 200:20:26So is that primarily Solesence or is that everything? So those are just really my questions. But again, really I'm very tickled with your results. Congratulations. I know there's a lot of hard work. Speaker 200:20:42I know there was a lot of negativity you had to go through probably some of that from this audience, but it's great to see that you're able to execute and again congratulate. Speaker 100:20:58Well, thank you. Thank you, Tony. Regarding the BASF, I need to get those numbers together. I know that the first quarter number of 23 was about $500,000 and it was the biggest quarter of the entire experience with the litigation. And in total, for last year, I think we were at around 1,600,000 dollars but I'm not sure if that doesn't include the Q1 of the last quarter of 2022. Speaker 100:21:32The suit was filed in August of 2022 and we started legal fees started as you would imagine about 2 minutes later. So I'll get that information together. But I mean essentially we're in the $1,000,000 range for rest of the year. Actually our controller is sitting here and is putting numbers together. So while he's doing that, I would say that in terms of business as usual, yes. Speaker 100:22:10One specific key criticism, Okay, our total for $1,300,000 was for 2023 was $1,300,000 and for 2022 was $400,000 so $1,700,000 in that period. So call it $800,000 in the last 3 quarters of 2023. And I'll get that for next time as we talk about I'll make sure I'm pulling that out calling that out as the piece of the improvement. In terms of whether it's same old, same old, I would say in the one thing, we were unable to deliver as quickly as BSF wanted in 2021 and parts of 2022. And that had to do with a lot of things including the COVID response and all the stuff that happened relative to supply chain. Speaker 100:23:10But those things were part of the things that we have made some guarantees on making sure that we will not only do better, which we would want to do anyway as part of our business, but also that we will be more transparent with each other on what our inventory is, what their need is, etcetera, which is something that we should have done a long time ago. And I think it's just bringing this whole thing to a head, pushed that in that direction. So that was one thing. Developing the new products, we've always been interested in helping them build that business. And I think codifying that probably helped them internally. Speaker 100:23:52I don't want to comment anymore on that piece. But yes, I don't think from the perspective of where we see the business going and growing, I don't think anything is going to change from where we were in 2022. And our fervent hope is that the business for APIs takes off. The demand is strong there. The business for sunscreen for non cosmetic, the non prestige business, which is a lot of the API business we do has been hit lately. Speaker 100:24:31So that's contributed probably to the angst overall of it. But the market in total is still growing and minerals are still the area that everybody wants to be in. So from that perspective, I see that as being solid. I'll let and regarding your question about the margins, part of the reason I wanted that out there also is that we're still a really small company with big things that can impact the margins in a huge way. And if you notice, for instance, we built a fair amount of inventory in Q1. Speaker 100:25:08And not to bore anybody who doesn't understand cost accounting out there, but essentially if you don't consistently hold that inventory level or on the build, when you sell it, you take a hit for the overhead absorption coming back through. And so it's I have a feeling the number is going to be fluid, but we think relative to as getting through the year that 35% to 40% range is what we've targeted. And I think we'll be able to get there barring just the biggest challenge I think has been relative to financial results, I think kind of lumpy demand. We had some issues that we've addressed in terms of getting things out the door when we can. But we also have the nature of a quickly growing business with new customers, quickly growing customers and they have their share of those challenges. Speaker 100:26:05One of their challenges that we probably discussed more in 2022 than in 2023 because 2023 challenges we had our own contribution to them is that for the business that we do that's not what we call turnkey meaning that the customer supplies the packaging and labels and all the components, there have been a lot of holdups here and there on that as well. In some cases, you've got customers that may be existing companies that are relatively new to this market in particular. So that all adds to the lumpiness of it. My greatest wish always is that our revenue grows every week and the weekly volume stays flat or grows every week, which we can't always have. But that's been I guess that's my disclaimer on whether we hit 35.1 minimum in every quarter, but I think that's the range that we expect to hit and steady volume has something to do that. Speaker 100:27:04With that, I'll hand it over to Kevin to discuss the your question on the $40,000,000 backlog and where that's at. Speaker 300:27:14Thanks, Tony for your comments. And just to try and put it in perspective. So the number that Jess mentioned, the $40,000,000 plus is a mix of what we've sold plus what is still to be sold. So it's what we would call shift and open orders. The backlog you can do the math pretty quickly and come up with as of the end of the Q1 since it was roughly $10,000,000 that means that we were looking at $30,000,000 plus in open orders as we entered into this quarter. Speaker 300:27:58That the one thing to make sure it's clear is those when we talk about backlog, it's a common term that's used in industry, but it isn't backlog as in, hey we didn't ship all the orders and therefore these folks are waiting. There are actually orders into Q3 and Q4 as part of that number. The great majority of that number is for Q2, but there are some significant orders for Q3 and Q4 that we've already have on hand. And then your last question is that Solesence or is that everything? It is everything. Speaker 300:28:45Solesence is roughly 90% of the company now in terms of revenue. So 80% maybe more correctly is what we expect for the year. So it's mostly Solesence, but it does represent all of the business. Speaker 200:29:10Thank Operator00:29:27And this does conclude the question and answer session. I'd now like to hand the program back to just Jankowski for any further remarks. Speaker 100:29:40Thank you, Jonathan. We all really appreciate your engagement. We're building something that we expect will be profitable for all of us, will make people happier and healthier and we expect will outlast all of us on this call. We're positioned to deliver and we're expecting a good year. Thanks for joining us today. Speaker 100:30:00We look forward to our next call. In the meantime, we have a lot to do, but the pieces are falling in place and our expectations are high. I hope everyone has a solid day and can take a few minutes to enjoy the good news we've shared. Thank you, everybody. Operator00:30:15Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. GoodRead morePowered by Key Takeaways Q1 2024 results: Revenue of approximately $9.9 million with a 36% gross margin and net income of about $1 million vs. a $1.2 million loss in Q1 2023, driven by favorable product mix and production efficiencies. Equity financings closed: Two Q1 capital raises bolstered working capital and funded automation projects to sustain Solesence growth and reduce unit costs. Litigation with BASF was successfully settled with no monetary exchange, freeing management to focus fully on the API and Solesence businesses. Planned ~$2 million of capital investments—including a microbial testing lab, wet-processing relocation, and automated fill/assembly—are expected to pay back within 12–30 months and enable support for up to $100 million in Solesence capacity. Operational KPIs: Inventory availability rose above 95% and throughput averaged 76% (peaking at 90% in March), while on-time-in-full shipments remain under 50% with a stretch goal of over 90% by end of Q2. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallNanophase Technologies Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Nanophase Technologies Earnings HeadlinesSolésence Announces Uplisting to NasdaqApril 7, 2025 | globenewswire.comNanophase targets record Q1 2025 revenue with 33% gross margins amid heightened demandMarch 27, 2025 | msn.comThe $7 company helping Nvidia build the world’s first trillion-dollar robot …Michael Robinson has been at the forefront of the technology market for over 40 years. Spotting some profitable trends in tech … well ahead of Wall Street. Like when he called Nvidia at a mere 80 cents a share. Or Bitcoin when it was trading for just $300. Throughout his illustrious career … Michael has given his followers almost 150 different chances to register triple-digit gains.June 15, 2025 | Weiss Ratings (Ad)Nanophase Technologies Corp. (NANX) Q4 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptMarch 27, 2025 | seekingalpha.comSolésence Reports Record Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2024 Financial ResultsMarch 26, 2025 | globenewswire.comSolésence To Report Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2024 Financial Results and Host a Conference CallMarch 20, 2025 | globenewswire.comSee More Nanophase Technologies Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Nanophase Technologies? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Nanophase Technologies and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Nanophase TechnologiesNanophase Technologies (OTCMKTS:NANX), a science-driven company, develops, manufactures, and sells integrated family of nanomaterial technologies in the United States. It engages in engineered materials, formulation development, and commercial manufacturing. The company produces engineered nanomaterial products comprising antimony, bismuth, cerium, iron, and zinc oxide for use in a various markets, including surface finishing,exterior coatings, personal care, plastics, scratch resistant coatings, and textiles. It also provides skin care formulations with mineral-based UV protection under the under the Solésence brand; and advanced material products, including architectural coatings, industrial coatings, abrasion-resistant additives, plastics additives, medical diagnostics, and surface finishing technologies applications. The company was incorporated in 1989 and is headquartered in Romeoville, Illinois.View Nanophase Technologies ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Broadcom Slides on Solid Earnings, AI Outlook Still StrongFive Below Pops on Strong Earnings, But Rally May StallRed Robin's Comeback: Q1 Earnings Spark Investor HopesOllie’s Q1 Earnings: The Good, the Bad, and What’s NextBroadcom Earnings Preview: AVGO Stock Near Record HighsUlta’s Beautiful Q1 Earnings Report Points to More Gains Aheade.l.f. 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There are 4 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by, and welcome to today's program entitled Nanophases First Quarter 2024 Financial Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. The words believes, expects, anticipates, plans, forecasts and similar expressions are intended to identify forward looking statements. Statements contained in this news release that are not historical facts are forward looking statements that are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Operator00:00:50These statements reflect the company's current beliefs and a number of important factors that could cause actual results for future periods to differ materially from those expressed in these news release. These important factors include, without limitation, a decision of the customer to cancel a purchase order or supply agreement, demand for and acceptance of the company's personal care ingredients, advanced materials and formulated products changes in development and distribution relationships the impact of competitive products and technologies possible disruption in commercial activities occasioned by public health issues, terrorist activities and armed conflict and other risks indicated in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Nanophase undertakes no obligation to update or revise these forward looking statements to reflect new events and or uncertainties. I'd now like to hand the call over to Jeff Jankowski, President and CEO. Speaker 100:01:57Thank you, Jonathan. Good morning to all of those listening live and thank you to those following up online after the fact. Are looking forward to discussing Q1 2024 results, our performance to KPIs which will play a huge role in ensuring our success and our outlook for the balance of 2024. Evan Cureton, our Chief Operating Officer is joining me on the call today. We have some prepared comments and will be available for some Q and A afterwards. Speaker 100:02:26We'll continue to focus on our future, which we believe to be a bright and lucrative one, reviewing the things we've done to position ourselves for this as well as covering Q1 2024 results. We had lots of news during the 1st 4 months of 2024, which while not operational in nature, we certainly expect to contribute to our success going forward. We closed 2 equity financings in Q1, which were critical for us to keep growing and supporting both our expanded working capital requirements and some modest capital projects needed to support additional Solesence volume. None of us wanted to have to walk away from profitable growth, which had been a steady pressure in 2023. Now we're able to continue to add good business with improved throughput, while also reducing our cost per unit through automation. Speaker 100:03:16We're focusing primarily on enhancing profitability via gross margins this year, but the growth keeps coming and we want to capture it. Given the nature of the Solesence business, success leads to growth within existing customers as sales grow and as they launch new product lines. Success with these customers also results in more opportunities for new business. Other brands don't want to be left behind as we all work to satisfy demand in this relatively newly defined market, a market we believe Solesence has been instrumental in creating and energizing for prestige cosmetics offering natural minerals based skin protection. Another key milestone achieved just 2 weeks ago was the successful settlement of our litigation with BASF. Speaker 100:04:02As I mentioned, our respective commercial teams have maintained a positive relationship through the entire process and we're looking forward to our full focus being available to running our API business with BASF and our Solesence business. The added management bandwidth with that added management bandwidth will be able to apply to our Nanophase and Solesence businesses will allow us to increase our focus and accelerate progress in the strengthening of our enterprise and increasing its value. Now, let's walk through the numbers. Unless identified otherwise, all numbers will be stated in approximate terms. We had good results in Q1, generating a 36% gross margin of $9,900,000 in total revenue compared to a 23% gross margin over the same period in 2023. Speaker 100:04:53We also generated almost $1,000,000 in net profit in Q1 of this year compared to a $1,200,000 net loss in Q1 of 2023, more than a $2,000,000 swing. Our margins were driven largely by a favorable Q1 product mix and a continuation of the gains we've seen in improved production efficiencies. We'll need a few more quarters under our belts to better understand all of the factors contributing to this as we've yet to develop enough history to allow for more accurate future predictions. Generally, the 35% to 40% gross margin range follows our 2024 plan. R and D expenses were down about 10% year over year, while SG and A expenses Speaker 200:05:39SG Speaker 100:05:42in SG and A related to a reduction in legal fees for the recently settled litigation. Our Q4 2023 reorganization also contributed to these savings, which we expect to continue through 2024. Last time, we addressed some of the changes we are implementing in manufacturing that we expect to deliver improved results and increased capacity in 2024. In a few minutes, Kevin is going to address our operating KPI performance, some of which will be enhanced by these investments. They will require a total of approximately $2,000,000 in capital to implement and we expect them to pay for themselves within 15 to 30 months from commissioning. Speaker 100:06:25We broke these out into 3 projects. 1st, we're building out our own microbial testing lab. This will allow us quicker turnaround times on required testing of every batch we make as well as reducing outside testing costs significantly. We expect to save approximately $300,000 per year at current volumes and have this project paid off in just over a year. 2nd, we're transitioning our wet processing lines to our Bolingbrook facility. Speaker 100:06:57This will result in at least $400,000 per year in savings and pay for itself in 30 months or less. Critically, in addition to higher dollar savings per unit, this will help us to increase throughput, helping us to support greater demand while increasing customer satisfaction. Lastly, we're further expanding our filling and assembly operation in Bolingbrook, adding more automation allowing for increased volumes to be produced in less time than it takes today. We expect this project to pay for itself in about 2 years in terms of hard cash savings. It will also create more opportunities for greater sales growth and enhanced profits. Speaker 100:07:37Combined, once these projects are completed this year, we should be able to support about $100,000,000 in Solesence finished products with what we've put in place. This will represent a solid, stable base from which to more than double the size of our existing business within our current footprint. Solesence products made up over $8,000,000 or 82 percent of our Q1 2024 sales versus $5,000,000 or 53 percent of Q1 2023 sales. The demand is here. Now I'll invite Kevin Keratin, our Chief Operating Officer, to share his thoughts on our progress to KPIs and the approach we're taking through 2024. Speaker 100:08:18Kevin? Speaker 300:08:20Thanks, Jess. As usual, I'd like to begin by thanking our teammates who every day demonstrate that we are indeed best in industry at what we do and our investors who continue to trust our leadership as we take the next steps on this journey. I would also like to thank the families of our team as we ask a lot of our team and we would not be able to do what we do without the energy and support of our loved ones. Last month, we introduced 3 key performance indicators that we will reference throughout this year to provide guidance on our performance. These KPIs are inventory availability, throughput and on time in full or OTOF. Speaker 300:09:06As we noted last month, when combined with our financial analysis, these KPIs help give us a clear assessment on how we are performing in line of sight to the actions we need to take to continue to move our company on the never ending path to our operational excellence. As a result, we refer to these as operating KPIs. In addition to operating KPIs, our company also has growth KPIs. These KPIs are important indicators on how we are performing relative to our growth goals and therefore how we are trending toward increasing our overall enterprise value. While currently providing strong indicators for growth, it is premature to talk much about these at this point in the year, except to say we will introduce and discuss them in greater detail during our Q2 conference call. Speaker 300:10:01So let's get started on reviewing our operating KPIs. We will begin with inventory availability, which last month I described as being a measurement both of the amount of materials we have on hand and the timing on when we receive those materials. During Q1, we were able to finish the work that we had started in late Q4 to bring our inventory availability to over 95%. This milestone means that we have effectively addressed virtually all materials availability issues that have been the primary drag on our performance during the second half 2023. I would like to commend our purchasing team as well as our R and D team on their collaborative effort to bring us to this point. Speaker 300:10:47Through working tirelessly together to identify and qualify alternative suppliers and producers of key raw materials, These teams brought us through several tight spots to reach this current milestone. Further good news is that over the past month, we have sustained this performance in maintaining inventory availability at or above the 95% level and we are confident in our ability going forward to continue this solid performance. To further augment our position, our team is also working hard on implementing our vendor development and management programs, which includes amongst other elements, bringing in additional qualified sources from around the world for key materials to minimize our out of stock risk and reliance on single source suppliers where it's possible. This work has already yielded some small but still impactful improvements in purchase price for these materials due both to volume growth and getting the alternative sourcing. While we still have many miles ahead of us, we are pleased with the progress we have made confident in the professional management that is being executed to continue to move us toward best in class performance in this area. Speaker 300:12:08Our next KPI is throughput. Last month I described this KPI as measuring how we perform relative to leveraging our assets to produce the goods we sell. More simply, throughput is a measure of exactly that. The output from our company as measured by the units of finished goods and the dollars of shipments we yield every week. During Q1, as inventory availability improved, it enabled us to improve our throughput, which while lagging the improvement in inventory availability increased each month during the quarter. Speaker 300:12:44More specifically, throughput measures progressed from 50% of target in January to over 90% of target in March, yielding a Q1 average of around 76 percent. To provide a little more context on this performance, consider that due to the strength of the improvement in throughput during the quarter, March alone represented 40% of our total production and revenue for Q1. An additional strong indicator of further improvement in throughput was seen in our upstream production of bulk for the finished goods we produce. At the bulk production level, we are meeting percent of planned requirements or 100 percent of throughput by the end of March. We still have some bottlenecks in fully realizing the benefits of some of our investments on the secondary packaging area and are hard at work in rectifying these issues. Speaker 300:13:43It will be important for us to address these issues so that we can achieve Q2 throughput requirements, which for guidance are greater than 30% higher than Q1. Finally, turning our attention toward OTIF, there will be no surprise for the manufacturing folks online that OTIF lagged when throughput lagged. Remember again that we define on time and full or also referring to OTIF or OTIF as a percentage of orders shipped consistent with the dates we've agreed upon with our brand partners. Relative to our standard, we were less than 50% of our OTOF target. Our goal our company goal remains to significantly improve OTEF into greater than 90% by the end of Q2, a very large and stretch goal for us I might add. Speaker 300:14:42But we are confident that as we execute Q2, we will be on target with this objective through improving the throughput performance. Finally, as we noted in our last call, our company is fully able to handle hard better. It's foundational to the journey and the massive change we have made to our company over the past few months, let alone the past few years. Through continued focus on the measures and the development of our teams and teammates, we have solidly regained our footing. Our challenge remains to continue to raise our expectations to embrace these significant opportunities ahead and raise our performance at the same time over the coming months so we turn them into profitable growth. Speaker 300:15:31Back to you, Jess. Speaker 100:15:33Thanks, Kevin. As you can see, all of this reflects progress along the strategic course we charted some years ago when we launched Solesence. We believe we put ourselves in a position to win and we intend to capitalize on that. We have more than $40,000,000 in shift and confirm sales orders through this week and we expect more to follow. Demand has not been our issue. Speaker 100:15:57Our struggle to supply that demand for our Solesence products has been our biggest limiting factor over the past few years. We expect to overcome that last hurdle this year. Now, we'd like to take any questions or hear your comments on our results. While we know that most of our investors listen to the webcast or review the transcript after the live call, we're happy to invite those of you participating live on today's call to ask any questions you may have or to share your feedback. Afterwards, I'll offer a few closing comments. Speaker 100:16:29Jonathan, would you please begin the Q and A session? Operator00:16:33Certainly. And our first question for today comes from the line of Ron Richards, individual investor. Your question please. Speaker 200:16:50Well, hi, Jess. Not such a bad quarter. I'm not sure you can answer this question, but what were the general terms of the settlement with BASF? Speaker 100:17:01Hi, Ron. Well, at a high level, we are not stopped. We've agreed between us that we will continue to develop our Solesence business and that, that won't be any sort of a violation of our agreements and that we will work that we will be sure that we keep a supply available as mandated by the contract and we've kind of cleaned that up to make that a little more clear as well as we've agreed as we had been to continue to work on new products for them And there's a specific product in the pipeline that we said we would go ahead and move forward with. So in a broad sense, those things were we codified some of the things that we had been doing and we kind of assuaged each other's concerns about some other things. And in the grand scheme, I think we're going to move forward. Speaker 100:18:02It was a successful settlement for both of us. And I'm certainly glad to be able to focus more of my attention and I know Kevin can say the same on the business at this point. Speaker 200:18:14Were there any monetary aspects to the agreement Speaker 100:18:19payments? No, no. There was nothing beyond just the agreement on those things. And we filed I mean, you can get a sense of it if you felt like you were missing the experience of a root canal. You can go through the documents we filed and get a sense of it. Speaker 100:18:35But yes, there were no monetary inducements. Speaker 200:18:40Okay. Well, good. Sounds promising. Speaker 100:18:45Thank you. Thank you. Operator00:18:56And our next question comes from the line of Tony Rubin, individual investor. Speaker 200:19:05Good morning, gentlemen. I've been waiting a long time to say this, but great quarter. Congratulations. Speaker 100:19:12Thank you. Speaker 200:19:13Good to hear that you're able to execute on the promises. So it's very exciting. So just as a follow-up to the previous caller, I did try to get that root canal and read your documents, but honestly, it was more than my mind could handle. But from your summary, it sounds like it's business as usual. It sounds like there's nothing negative in nano phase, which frankly leads me to wonder why the resolve is litigation in the first place, but just wanted you to confirm that was correct. Speaker 200:19:53Secondly, how much was litigated for Q2 through 4 in 2023, so we could see that as a saving. Then your gross margins are obviously a tremendous improvement. And I think in the opening comments you mentioned targeting 35% to 40% for full year 2024. I just wanted to confirm that. And you did mention $40,000,000 in backlog. Speaker 200:20:26So is that primarily Solesence or is that everything? So those are just really my questions. But again, really I'm very tickled with your results. Congratulations. I know there's a lot of hard work. Speaker 200:20:42I know there was a lot of negativity you had to go through probably some of that from this audience, but it's great to see that you're able to execute and again congratulate. Speaker 100:20:58Well, thank you. Thank you, Tony. Regarding the BASF, I need to get those numbers together. I know that the first quarter number of 23 was about $500,000 and it was the biggest quarter of the entire experience with the litigation. And in total, for last year, I think we were at around 1,600,000 dollars but I'm not sure if that doesn't include the Q1 of the last quarter of 2022. Speaker 100:21:32The suit was filed in August of 2022 and we started legal fees started as you would imagine about 2 minutes later. So I'll get that information together. But I mean essentially we're in the $1,000,000 range for rest of the year. Actually our controller is sitting here and is putting numbers together. So while he's doing that, I would say that in terms of business as usual, yes. Speaker 100:22:10One specific key criticism, Okay, our total for $1,300,000 was for 2023 was $1,300,000 and for 2022 was $400,000 so $1,700,000 in that period. So call it $800,000 in the last 3 quarters of 2023. And I'll get that for next time as we talk about I'll make sure I'm pulling that out calling that out as the piece of the improvement. In terms of whether it's same old, same old, I would say in the one thing, we were unable to deliver as quickly as BSF wanted in 2021 and parts of 2022. And that had to do with a lot of things including the COVID response and all the stuff that happened relative to supply chain. Speaker 100:23:10But those things were part of the things that we have made some guarantees on making sure that we will not only do better, which we would want to do anyway as part of our business, but also that we will be more transparent with each other on what our inventory is, what their need is, etcetera, which is something that we should have done a long time ago. And I think it's just bringing this whole thing to a head, pushed that in that direction. So that was one thing. Developing the new products, we've always been interested in helping them build that business. And I think codifying that probably helped them internally. Speaker 100:23:52I don't want to comment anymore on that piece. But yes, I don't think from the perspective of where we see the business going and growing, I don't think anything is going to change from where we were in 2022. And our fervent hope is that the business for APIs takes off. The demand is strong there. The business for sunscreen for non cosmetic, the non prestige business, which is a lot of the API business we do has been hit lately. Speaker 100:24:31So that's contributed probably to the angst overall of it. But the market in total is still growing and minerals are still the area that everybody wants to be in. So from that perspective, I see that as being solid. I'll let and regarding your question about the margins, part of the reason I wanted that out there also is that we're still a really small company with big things that can impact the margins in a huge way. And if you notice, for instance, we built a fair amount of inventory in Q1. Speaker 100:25:08And not to bore anybody who doesn't understand cost accounting out there, but essentially if you don't consistently hold that inventory level or on the build, when you sell it, you take a hit for the overhead absorption coming back through. And so it's I have a feeling the number is going to be fluid, but we think relative to as getting through the year that 35% to 40% range is what we've targeted. And I think we'll be able to get there barring just the biggest challenge I think has been relative to financial results, I think kind of lumpy demand. We had some issues that we've addressed in terms of getting things out the door when we can. But we also have the nature of a quickly growing business with new customers, quickly growing customers and they have their share of those challenges. Speaker 100:26:05One of their challenges that we probably discussed more in 2022 than in 2023 because 2023 challenges we had our own contribution to them is that for the business that we do that's not what we call turnkey meaning that the customer supplies the packaging and labels and all the components, there have been a lot of holdups here and there on that as well. In some cases, you've got customers that may be existing companies that are relatively new to this market in particular. So that all adds to the lumpiness of it. My greatest wish always is that our revenue grows every week and the weekly volume stays flat or grows every week, which we can't always have. But that's been I guess that's my disclaimer on whether we hit 35.1 minimum in every quarter, but I think that's the range that we expect to hit and steady volume has something to do that. Speaker 100:27:04With that, I'll hand it over to Kevin to discuss the your question on the $40,000,000 backlog and where that's at. Speaker 300:27:14Thanks, Tony for your comments. And just to try and put it in perspective. So the number that Jess mentioned, the $40,000,000 plus is a mix of what we've sold plus what is still to be sold. So it's what we would call shift and open orders. The backlog you can do the math pretty quickly and come up with as of the end of the Q1 since it was roughly $10,000,000 that means that we were looking at $30,000,000 plus in open orders as we entered into this quarter. Speaker 300:27:58That the one thing to make sure it's clear is those when we talk about backlog, it's a common term that's used in industry, but it isn't backlog as in, hey we didn't ship all the orders and therefore these folks are waiting. There are actually orders into Q3 and Q4 as part of that number. The great majority of that number is for Q2, but there are some significant orders for Q3 and Q4 that we've already have on hand. And then your last question is that Solesence or is that everything? It is everything. Speaker 300:28:45Solesence is roughly 90% of the company now in terms of revenue. So 80% maybe more correctly is what we expect for the year. So it's mostly Solesence, but it does represent all of the business. Speaker 200:29:10Thank Operator00:29:27And this does conclude the question and answer session. I'd now like to hand the program back to just Jankowski for any further remarks. Speaker 100:29:40Thank you, Jonathan. We all really appreciate your engagement. We're building something that we expect will be profitable for all of us, will make people happier and healthier and we expect will outlast all of us on this call. We're positioned to deliver and we're expecting a good year. Thanks for joining us today. Speaker 100:30:00We look forward to our next call. In the meantime, we have a lot to do, but the pieces are falling in place and our expectations are high. I hope everyone has a solid day and can take a few minutes to enjoy the good news we've shared. Thank you, everybody. Operator00:30:15Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. GoodRead morePowered by