NASDAQ:NN NextNav Q1 2026 Earnings Report $22.30 +0.81 (+3.77%) Closing price 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$22.25 -0.05 (-0.22%) As of 04:35 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast NextNav EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.12Consensus EPS -$0.15Beat/MissBeat by +$0.03One Year Ago EPSN/ANextNav Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.00 millionExpected Revenue$0.94 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$51.00 thousandYoY Revenue GrowthN/ANextNav Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/14/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, May 14, 2026Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsNextNav's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Wednesday, August 5, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled at 5:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by NextNav Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 14, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: NextNav said the FCC has formally advanced a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on resilient PNT technologies, which management called a critical milestone for a GPS backup/complement strategy. Positive Sentiment: The company highlighted continued progress on network and coexistence testing, including FCC-granted experimental authorizations in Santa Clara and Pueblo and a live RFID coexistence demo that it says showed no operational impact. Neutral Sentiment: Management acknowledged rising opposition and political scrutiny around the proceeding, but said it remains engaged with the FCC, other agencies, and stakeholders as interagency review continues. Positive Sentiment: NextNav emphasized expanding strategic opportunities around drones, sensing, and AI-related spectrum demand, including its OCUDU Ecosystem Foundation membership and discussions with carriers, satellite operators, and big tech. Neutral Sentiment: Financially, the company ended Q1 2026 with about $143 million in cash and short-term investments and reported a $10.6 million net loss, partially offset by a $12.6 million non-cash gain tied to warrant and derivative revaluation. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallNextNav Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Jared Pollack. Please go ahead. Jared PollackSVP of Investor Relations at Sloane & Company00:00:06Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to NextNav's First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. Participating on today's call are Mariam Sorond, NextNav's Chief Executive Officer, and Tim Gray, NextNav's Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, let me remind everyone that this call will include certain statements that constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements may be identified by the use of the words may, anticipate, believe, expect, intend, should, could, and similar expressions. Such forward-looking statements, which may relate to NextNav's forecast of future results, future prospects, developments, and business strategies are subject to known, and unknown risks, uncertainties, and assumptions, many of which are outside of NextNav's control and could cause actual results to differ. Jared PollackSVP of Investor Relations at Sloane & Company00:01:02In particular, such forward-looking statements include the achievement of certain FCC-related milestones and FCC approvals, NextNav's projections, plans, objectives, and expectations, and NextNav's future business strategies and competitive position. These statements are based on management's current expectations and beliefs as well as a number of assumptions concerning future events. Jared PollackSVP of Investor Relations at Sloane & Company00:01:26You are cautioned not to place undue reliance upon the forward-looking statements which speak only as of the date made, and NextNav undertakes no commitment to update or revise the forward-looking statements except as required by law. For additional information regarding risks and uncertainties, please refer to the risk factors and other disclosures contained in the company's filings with the SEC. Following prepared remarks, the company will host an operator-led question and answer session. In addition, a replay of our discussion will be posted to the company's investor relations website. I'd now like to turn the call over to Ms. Sorond. Please go ahead, Mariam. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:02:04Thank you, Jared. Good afternoon, and thank you all for joining us today. As we have discussed previously, the FCC moved forward to formally send a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, or NPRM, focused on promoting the development of PNT technologies and solutions through a standard interagency review process. We believe this represents a critical step that underscores the FCC's focus on addressing the National Security urgency of identifying resilient backups and complements to GPS. This positive milestone was achieved in rapid time and with extraordinary momentum under this administration. We know the draft NPRM continues to proceed through the interagency review processes, including review by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs or OIRA. These processes are designed to incorporate perspectives from all stakeholders, we are actively supporting that work. While OIRA reviews are relatively new for FCC Rulemakings, review across executive branch agencies has been a longstanding process. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:03:20Importantly, we continue to work constructively with the FCC and other government agencies to support these processes. The timing remains subject to these ongoing reviews. The FCC has a long history of evaluating technically complex and nationally important issues and finding pathways to successful resolution. Its process has worked for decades, time, and time again, including in spectrum matters more complex than ours. What we believe has been particularly constructive about this proceeding is how the public comment process that followed the FCC's March 2025 Notice of Inquiry, or NOI, accelerated the discussion. The NOI generated a depth and volume of responses typically seen following an NPRM, surfacing various matters earlier than usual. As a result, NextNav has been addressing what are often post-NPRM matters earlier on, which we believe has made this proceeding more advanced at this stage than comparable proceedings. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:04:32This is in part why activities such as joint testing with the railroads are occurring today. We believe this approach is constructive as bringing later-stage considerations into the record earlier may improve the efficiency of a post-NPRM phase moving towards report and order. In addition to the ongoing interagency review of the draft NPRM, as we have discussed previously, the FCC has granted experimental authorizations to NextNav to support both our 5G PNT network testing in Santa Clara County, California, and joint testing with railroads at their testing facility in Pueblo, Colorado. Our 5G PNT network testing marks an important step towards commercialization. I will reiterate that our ongoing network testing is moving in parallel to the NPRM process, and while railroad testing is relevant to the broader record with the FCC, neither of these efforts are a prerequisite to the FCC issuing an NPRM. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:05:43In addition to our ongoing collaboration with railroad stakeholders, we continue to engage with the tolling industry. Last week, we attended the IBTTA Technology Summit in Orlando, Florida, where we spoke with tolling technology vendors, operators, and IBTTA executives to express our interest in pursuing a collaborative approach to coexistence considerations and validation efforts. Based on our intention to work with the vendors and operators to ensure protection of tolling operations. With our progress, it is not surprising that we've recently seen a significant increase in opposition activity. This increased activity has included a recent attempt to stall the NPRM through the House of Appropriations Committee. This attempt to circumvent the FCC has concerned government and industry, as it is widely viewed as a dangerous precedent for U.S. spectrum policy. Former Energy and Commerce Committee Chair, Greg Walden described the attempt as interfering with the FCC's process. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:06:51As Walden specifically noted, it's really early in the process to drop a bunker buster bomb on the FCC technology review process. We agree, and further view these attempts as simply underscoring the strength of the existing record in the NOI proceeding, a record that led the FCC to advance an NPRM. We fully trust the FCC and interagency processes and firmly believe concerns can be addressed during an NPRM process. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:07:22Chairman Carr shared at an event in April that one of the biggest priorities for us at the FCC is to help support alternatives to GPS, and further said, we want everyone that has a technology that could potentially be a complement to GPS to get a fair shot at any regulatory changes they might need. While we've seen increased opposition activity, we stand by our engineering and are proactively seeking to address concerns raised by stakeholders within industry and the Hill. In addition to our long history and continued constructive engagement with various federal agencies, we are continuing to build a highly targeted coalition of third-party supporters and actively engaging with both supporters and opponents on the Hill. We're also placing emphasis on sharing real-world evidence that supports our engineering analysis in the record. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:08:16Just last week, we conducted a real-world coexistence demonstration using our 5G PNT network and a standard RFID reader with multiple RFID tags. This put recent claims about RFID interference to the test through a live demonstration at 20 ft between the 5G transmitter and the RFID reader, a setup that is far more extreme than seen in real-world circumstances. That test showed that RFID technologies are resilient by design and can continue to operate alongside 5G signals in the lower 900 MHz band without operational impact. Outside of our regulatory development, NextNav continues to build momentum across the broader policy and industry ecosystem. We are actively participating in high-level dialogues, including at the Milken Global Conference last week and through my role on the CTIA Board of Directors, where discussions increasingly focused on AI and the critical need for additional spectrum to support AI in the immediate future. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:09:34At NextNav, we understand that wireless networks and reliable PNT are the underlying invisible infrastructure powering successful expansion of the AI systems that will define the next decade of the autonomous economy. Further, NextNav filed comments in the FCC's proceeding in support of President Trump's Unleashing American Drone Dominance. We're excited to move into the next phase of sensing technologies and have joined the OCUDU Ecosystem Foundation. The Department of Wars Future Generation Wireless Technology Office launched the OCUDU initiative and leads its ongoing development. Finally, as market dynamics evolve, we remain in active dialogue with potential partners across not only wireless carriers, but also satellite operators and big tech, among others, to help realize our strategic goal of enabling a 5G-based backup and complement to GPS. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:10:40From our perspective, what was already a constructive commercial environment has only improved as interest continues to expand for access to low-band spectrum. Taken together, we believe these developments reflect steady, disciplined progress across regulatory, technical, and strategic fronts. From our perspective, the engineering case for a viable GPS backup is well-supported by our technical study. We are equally confident in our position as a one of a one within a system of systems requiring capabilities that only NextNav can provide, a unique combination of wide-scale Positioning, Timing, and 3D geolocation services which are commercially viable and we believe can be made available during the current administration with swift action from the FCC. Moreover, our solution is future-proof and does not require taxpayer funding. Our conviction remains unchanged. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:11:46We see a path to resolving technical and policy questions within the time-tested FCC and interagency decision-making process as we continue to engage constructively with both supporters and our opponents. Our confidence is based in part on the knowledge that the FCC is historically renowned for getting the process right. With that, I will turn things over to Tim for a review of our financials. Tim? Tim GrayCFO at NextNav00:12:16Thank you, Mariam, and good afternoon, everyone. NextNav continues to be in a position of financial strength with a strong cash position and low band spectrum assets, with the potential to have a much more Robust Balance Sheet in the near term. On liquidity, we finished the first quarter of 2026 with approximately $143 million in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments. We are continuing to manage our use of capital and balance our approach to liquidity as we continue to move forward on our ambitious goals. It is important to note that we have a significant number of warrants expiring in October of this year that have the potential to deliver over $200 million in additional capital, depending on stock price performance. The redemption of these warrants would provide NextNav with significant additional resources and balance sheet strength going forward. Tim GrayCFO at NextNav00:13:17For our first quarter, a financial item of note. As a reminder, the gains or losses related to our outstanding private warrants and derivative liability fluctuate based on movements in our stock price. In the first quarter, we recognized gains of approximately $12.6 million associated with the change in the fair value of the derivative and warrants liability. These non-cash gains partially offset the company's net loss for the quarter, resulting in a net loss of approximately $10.6 million. These accounting adjustments are primarily related to the financing transactions completed earlier in 2025, which strengthened the company's balance sheet. With that, I'll turn the call back over to the operator for questions. Operator? Operator00:14:05Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. As we enter Q&A, we ask that you please limit your input to one question and one follow-up. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press the star button followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star one again. One moment please for your first question. Your first question comes from the line of Mike Crawford of B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead. Mike CrawfordAnalyst at B. Riley Securities00:14:34Thank you. Would you mind just summarizing how much 900 MHz spectrum NextNav currently owns and how this was acquired over time? And then, what PNT precision gains would be enabled by a full 10 by 5 5G signal? Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:14:56Hi, Mike. Thanks for the question. NextNav currently has rights to up 4 billion MHz POP across the 900 MHz, the lower 900 MHz band. And our PNT simulations currently, which will be tested through our field efforts over in Santa Clara, show comparable to GPS performance, which is single-digit accuracy and timing synchronization to meet Critical Infrastructure needs. Mike CrawfordAnalyst at B. Riley Securities00:15:33Well, okay. Thank you. Then for my follow-up question, just relates to how a drone, a physical AI instance would access the PRS reference signal embedded in 5G. Is there any other additional steps that would be required for these systems to access that signal? Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:15:55Yeah, I mean, first of all, let's say we're super excited about this new capability that we're stepping into, which is sensing of drones as it becomes a really important issue for our National Security. We really like the Department of Wars and the FutureG Office's efforts for making sure that we have a solid technology and solution to this. What we basically are working with is the ability, and what's really nice about it is that it's the PRS signal in a 5G setting, not only provides positioning and timing capability. We really don't have to do anything else with that signal to be able to then extract drone detection and sensing, which makes this a very attractive solution. I just want to emphasize solution, not just the technology. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:16:48One of the strengths of NextNav is that we provide solutions. That solution means that we not only are developing the tech, but we also have the spectrum and the licenses to be able to deploy that technology. That's a very powerful statement that working across federal agencies and our National Security interests and equities, they find it extremely compelling, and therefore, we're excited to be joining OCUDU and start this journey. Mike CrawfordAnalyst at B. Riley Securities00:17:16Thank you. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:17:18Thank you. Operator00:17:20Again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Your next question comes from the line of Tim Horan of Oppenheimer. Please go ahead. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:17:33Thanks, guys. On the sensing technology, is there something, does that tie into the PNT or is that, you know, unique to what you guys are doing from a PNT and technology perspective? Does, you know, does anyone else have that capability? Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:17:48Thank you, Tim, for the question. It is the same PRS signal that you extract positioning and timing from that actually gets used to sense drones and objects at a certain elevation. The signal's the same, the underlying 5G is the same, what we extract is through a technology that is spearheaded by the OCUDU Department of War Office, it's called ISAC, which is Integrated Sensing Technologies that is also standards-based. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:18:23What nice thing about having an underlying 5G that evolves to 6G and 7G network is that you use standards-based technologies to not only get positioning and timing, but you're also able to use that same signal within the same radio for being able to sense and detect drones. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:18:44How unique is that capability? Does anyone else have that to your knowledge? Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:18:48There's a lot of companies. One thing about ISAC is it's standards-based, and there's a lot of vendors and, you know, it could be publicly about them. They're developing the ISAC technology, which is 5G-based. What we provide is not just the tech and the underlying network, but we provide the solution. One of the problems is that, you know, you also need the spectrum to be able to deploy all of this on, which is a great, you know, sort of fit for us where we bring the spectrum and the tech to the table. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:19:19Oh, that's what I meant. I mean, the spectrum and the PNT as long as- Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:19:23Yep. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:19:23The technology is that's fairly unique. Does anyone, I mean, it doesn't sound like anyone else can replicate that type of sensing technology easily? Correct me if I'm wrong. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:19:32Right. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:19:33That don't serve the same service yet. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:19:35Exactly. That's a really good point, right? You have Ericsson and among other RAN vendors are developing this technology. At the end of the day, they need a partner. They need someone to bring the spectrum to the table. We already have both. We're working with a wide industry on this. It's a very, I would say, very interesting technology and very interesting development that's happening within the 5G network right now. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:20:05And, are you working with the FAA is looking for, you know, they're massively upgrading the systems and looking for ways to incorporate, you know, drones and other things. Are you working with that process at all? Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:20:17What we started out is filing in the Drone Dominance proceeding to the FCC, which we're super excited about, and what we've announced publicly is also separate than that, our OCUDU membership. That is what we've stated publicly. Of course, we're talking to all the stakeholders on the vendor and also agency space about this. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:20:39Very helpful. Thank you. Operator00:20:45There are no further questions at this time. With that, I will now turn the call back over to Mariam Sorond, CEO, for final closing remarks. Please go ahead. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:20:54Thank you. In closing, we continue to engage constructively with key stakeholders as anticipated. Interagency review and FCC processes continue as it has in matters more complex than ours. At the same time, we're building momentum towards commercialization and seeing expanding interest across the broader ecosystem. We continue to focus on our strategy and execution to achieve our goals. We are very proud of the progress we are making to deliver a resilient, future-proof, Terrestrial Complement and Backup to GPS, strengthening U.S. Economic and National Security at a critical moment in time. Thank you, everyone. Operator00:21:36Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's call. We thank you for participating. You may now disconnect your lines.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesMariam SorondCEOTim GrayCFOAnalystsJared PollackSVP of Investor Relations at Sloane & CompanyMike CrawfordAnalyst at B. Riley SecuritiesTim HoranAnalyst at OppenheimerPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) NextNav Earnings HeadlinesNextNav Shareholders Back Board Slate and Auditor RetentionMay 27 at 4:50 PM | tipranks.comNextNav Announces Redemption of Public WarrantsMay 27 at 1:31 PM | finance.yahoo.comA 25,000% opportunityAngel investor Jason Calacanis - who made a fortune on an early Uber stake - says Elon Musk's latest project could be worth a billion dollars after seeing it firsthand. Bryan Bottarelli of Monument Traders Alliance has identified three overlooked small-cap partners tied to this technology, with an estimated 25,000% potential by 2036 - and expects them to move once details go public as soon as June 15.May 28 at 1:00 AM | The Oxford Club (Ad)NextNav (NN) Q3 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 21, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comNextNav Demonstrates Exceptional First-Ever Wireless Indoor Timing Solution for Critical InfrastructureMay 19, 2026 | businesswire.comNextNav Inc. 2026 Q1 - Results - Earnings Call PresentationMay 17, 2026 | seekingalpha.comSee More NextNav Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like NextNav? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on NextNav and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About NextNavNextNav (NASDAQ:NN), Inc. is a provider of advanced 3D geolocation infrastructure and positioning services in the United States. The company operates a nationwide network designed to deliver real-time horizontal and vertical location data for consumer, enterprise and public safety applications. By leveraging spectrum holdings in the 900 MHz band, NextNav’s network offers precise altitude and position information that complements GPS and other satellite systems, particularly in urban canyons, indoors or underground environments where traditional signals struggle. At the core of NextNav’s offering is its TerraPoiNT platform, which enables developers, carriers and emergency response centers to integrate high-accuracy vertical location into their applications and workflows. Service tiers range from basic device-location APIs to advanced precision layers that support indoor/outdoor transition detection and sub-meter altitude determination. In addition to location services, NextNav provides managed network solutions—marketed under the Pinnacle vertical network brand—that allow enterprises and wireless operators to deploy local or regional positioning services using NextNav’s infrastructure technology. NextNav’s network covers all 48 contiguous states, offering continuous service to public safety agencies, wireless carriers, IoT solution providers and verticals such as utilities, logistics and facility management. The company has pursued regulatory approvals and commercial partnerships to integrate its vertical location data into emergency call centers (E911), asset-tracking platforms and smart-building systems. Headquartered in Santa Clara, California, NextNav continues to expand its infrastructure footprint and develop enhanced location products to meet evolving precision-geolocation requirements.View NextNav 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 Latest Articles Snowflake and the Snowballing Impact of its AI FlywheelThis Quantum Computing Stock May Be Closer to a Breakout Than You ThinkMicrosoft Is Spending Billions on AI, But Investors Aren’t Buying ItSemtech’s Explosive Rally May Only Be Getting StartedBath & Body Works Stock Surged Despite Falling Sales—Here’s WhyAbercrombie Rallies as Strong Q1 Earnings Extend Winning StreakDick’s Sporting Goods Isn’t Done Winning Yet Upcoming Earnings Palo Alto Networks (6/2/2026)Broadcom (6/3/2026)CrowdStrike (6/3/2026)Medtronic (6/3/2026)Ciena (6/4/2026)Oracle (6/10/2026)Adobe (6/11/2026)Accenture (6/18/2026)FedEx (6/23/2026)Micron Technology (6/24/2026) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In Email Me a Login Link or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Jared Pollack. Please go ahead. Jared PollackSVP of Investor Relations at Sloane & Company00:00:06Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to NextNav's First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. Participating on today's call are Mariam Sorond, NextNav's Chief Executive Officer, and Tim Gray, NextNav's Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, let me remind everyone that this call will include certain statements that constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements may be identified by the use of the words may, anticipate, believe, expect, intend, should, could, and similar expressions. Such forward-looking statements, which may relate to NextNav's forecast of future results, future prospects, developments, and business strategies are subject to known, and unknown risks, uncertainties, and assumptions, many of which are outside of NextNav's control and could cause actual results to differ. Jared PollackSVP of Investor Relations at Sloane & Company00:01:02In particular, such forward-looking statements include the achievement of certain FCC-related milestones and FCC approvals, NextNav's projections, plans, objectives, and expectations, and NextNav's future business strategies and competitive position. These statements are based on management's current expectations and beliefs as well as a number of assumptions concerning future events. Jared PollackSVP of Investor Relations at Sloane & Company00:01:26You are cautioned not to place undue reliance upon the forward-looking statements which speak only as of the date made, and NextNav undertakes no commitment to update or revise the forward-looking statements except as required by law. For additional information regarding risks and uncertainties, please refer to the risk factors and other disclosures contained in the company's filings with the SEC. Following prepared remarks, the company will host an operator-led question and answer session. In addition, a replay of our discussion will be posted to the company's investor relations website. I'd now like to turn the call over to Ms. Sorond. Please go ahead, Mariam. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:02:04Thank you, Jared. Good afternoon, and thank you all for joining us today. As we have discussed previously, the FCC moved forward to formally send a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, or NPRM, focused on promoting the development of PNT technologies and solutions through a standard interagency review process. We believe this represents a critical step that underscores the FCC's focus on addressing the National Security urgency of identifying resilient backups and complements to GPS. This positive milestone was achieved in rapid time and with extraordinary momentum under this administration. We know the draft NPRM continues to proceed through the interagency review processes, including review by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs or OIRA. These processes are designed to incorporate perspectives from all stakeholders, we are actively supporting that work. While OIRA reviews are relatively new for FCC Rulemakings, review across executive branch agencies has been a longstanding process. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:03:20Importantly, we continue to work constructively with the FCC and other government agencies to support these processes. The timing remains subject to these ongoing reviews. The FCC has a long history of evaluating technically complex and nationally important issues and finding pathways to successful resolution. Its process has worked for decades, time, and time again, including in spectrum matters more complex than ours. What we believe has been particularly constructive about this proceeding is how the public comment process that followed the FCC's March 2025 Notice of Inquiry, or NOI, accelerated the discussion. The NOI generated a depth and volume of responses typically seen following an NPRM, surfacing various matters earlier than usual. As a result, NextNav has been addressing what are often post-NPRM matters earlier on, which we believe has made this proceeding more advanced at this stage than comparable proceedings. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:04:32This is in part why activities such as joint testing with the railroads are occurring today. We believe this approach is constructive as bringing later-stage considerations into the record earlier may improve the efficiency of a post-NPRM phase moving towards report and order. In addition to the ongoing interagency review of the draft NPRM, as we have discussed previously, the FCC has granted experimental authorizations to NextNav to support both our 5G PNT network testing in Santa Clara County, California, and joint testing with railroads at their testing facility in Pueblo, Colorado. Our 5G PNT network testing marks an important step towards commercialization. I will reiterate that our ongoing network testing is moving in parallel to the NPRM process, and while railroad testing is relevant to the broader record with the FCC, neither of these efforts are a prerequisite to the FCC issuing an NPRM. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:05:43In addition to our ongoing collaboration with railroad stakeholders, we continue to engage with the tolling industry. Last week, we attended the IBTTA Technology Summit in Orlando, Florida, where we spoke with tolling technology vendors, operators, and IBTTA executives to express our interest in pursuing a collaborative approach to coexistence considerations and validation efforts. Based on our intention to work with the vendors and operators to ensure protection of tolling operations. With our progress, it is not surprising that we've recently seen a significant increase in opposition activity. This increased activity has included a recent attempt to stall the NPRM through the House of Appropriations Committee. This attempt to circumvent the FCC has concerned government and industry, as it is widely viewed as a dangerous precedent for U.S. spectrum policy. Former Energy and Commerce Committee Chair, Greg Walden described the attempt as interfering with the FCC's process. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:06:51As Walden specifically noted, it's really early in the process to drop a bunker buster bomb on the FCC technology review process. We agree, and further view these attempts as simply underscoring the strength of the existing record in the NOI proceeding, a record that led the FCC to advance an NPRM. We fully trust the FCC and interagency processes and firmly believe concerns can be addressed during an NPRM process. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:07:22Chairman Carr shared at an event in April that one of the biggest priorities for us at the FCC is to help support alternatives to GPS, and further said, we want everyone that has a technology that could potentially be a complement to GPS to get a fair shot at any regulatory changes they might need. While we've seen increased opposition activity, we stand by our engineering and are proactively seeking to address concerns raised by stakeholders within industry and the Hill. In addition to our long history and continued constructive engagement with various federal agencies, we are continuing to build a highly targeted coalition of third-party supporters and actively engaging with both supporters and opponents on the Hill. We're also placing emphasis on sharing real-world evidence that supports our engineering analysis in the record. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:08:16Just last week, we conducted a real-world coexistence demonstration using our 5G PNT network and a standard RFID reader with multiple RFID tags. This put recent claims about RFID interference to the test through a live demonstration at 20 ft between the 5G transmitter and the RFID reader, a setup that is far more extreme than seen in real-world circumstances. That test showed that RFID technologies are resilient by design and can continue to operate alongside 5G signals in the lower 900 MHz band without operational impact. Outside of our regulatory development, NextNav continues to build momentum across the broader policy and industry ecosystem. We are actively participating in high-level dialogues, including at the Milken Global Conference last week and through my role on the CTIA Board of Directors, where discussions increasingly focused on AI and the critical need for additional spectrum to support AI in the immediate future. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:09:34At NextNav, we understand that wireless networks and reliable PNT are the underlying invisible infrastructure powering successful expansion of the AI systems that will define the next decade of the autonomous economy. Further, NextNav filed comments in the FCC's proceeding in support of President Trump's Unleashing American Drone Dominance. We're excited to move into the next phase of sensing technologies and have joined the OCUDU Ecosystem Foundation. The Department of Wars Future Generation Wireless Technology Office launched the OCUDU initiative and leads its ongoing development. Finally, as market dynamics evolve, we remain in active dialogue with potential partners across not only wireless carriers, but also satellite operators and big tech, among others, to help realize our strategic goal of enabling a 5G-based backup and complement to GPS. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:10:40From our perspective, what was already a constructive commercial environment has only improved as interest continues to expand for access to low-band spectrum. Taken together, we believe these developments reflect steady, disciplined progress across regulatory, technical, and strategic fronts. From our perspective, the engineering case for a viable GPS backup is well-supported by our technical study. We are equally confident in our position as a one of a one within a system of systems requiring capabilities that only NextNav can provide, a unique combination of wide-scale Positioning, Timing, and 3D geolocation services which are commercially viable and we believe can be made available during the current administration with swift action from the FCC. Moreover, our solution is future-proof and does not require taxpayer funding. Our conviction remains unchanged. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:11:46We see a path to resolving technical and policy questions within the time-tested FCC and interagency decision-making process as we continue to engage constructively with both supporters and our opponents. Our confidence is based in part on the knowledge that the FCC is historically renowned for getting the process right. With that, I will turn things over to Tim for a review of our financials. Tim? Tim GrayCFO at NextNav00:12:16Thank you, Mariam, and good afternoon, everyone. NextNav continues to be in a position of financial strength with a strong cash position and low band spectrum assets, with the potential to have a much more Robust Balance Sheet in the near term. On liquidity, we finished the first quarter of 2026 with approximately $143 million in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments. We are continuing to manage our use of capital and balance our approach to liquidity as we continue to move forward on our ambitious goals. It is important to note that we have a significant number of warrants expiring in October of this year that have the potential to deliver over $200 million in additional capital, depending on stock price performance. The redemption of these warrants would provide NextNav with significant additional resources and balance sheet strength going forward. Tim GrayCFO at NextNav00:13:17For our first quarter, a financial item of note. As a reminder, the gains or losses related to our outstanding private warrants and derivative liability fluctuate based on movements in our stock price. In the first quarter, we recognized gains of approximately $12.6 million associated with the change in the fair value of the derivative and warrants liability. These non-cash gains partially offset the company's net loss for the quarter, resulting in a net loss of approximately $10.6 million. These accounting adjustments are primarily related to the financing transactions completed earlier in 2025, which strengthened the company's balance sheet. With that, I'll turn the call back over to the operator for questions. Operator? Operator00:14:05Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. As we enter Q&A, we ask that you please limit your input to one question and one follow-up. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press the star button followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star one again. One moment please for your first question. Your first question comes from the line of Mike Crawford of B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead. Mike CrawfordAnalyst at B. Riley Securities00:14:34Thank you. Would you mind just summarizing how much 900 MHz spectrum NextNav currently owns and how this was acquired over time? And then, what PNT precision gains would be enabled by a full 10 by 5 5G signal? Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:14:56Hi, Mike. Thanks for the question. NextNav currently has rights to up 4 billion MHz POP across the 900 MHz, the lower 900 MHz band. And our PNT simulations currently, which will be tested through our field efforts over in Santa Clara, show comparable to GPS performance, which is single-digit accuracy and timing synchronization to meet Critical Infrastructure needs. Mike CrawfordAnalyst at B. Riley Securities00:15:33Well, okay. Thank you. Then for my follow-up question, just relates to how a drone, a physical AI instance would access the PRS reference signal embedded in 5G. Is there any other additional steps that would be required for these systems to access that signal? Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:15:55Yeah, I mean, first of all, let's say we're super excited about this new capability that we're stepping into, which is sensing of drones as it becomes a really important issue for our National Security. We really like the Department of Wars and the FutureG Office's efforts for making sure that we have a solid technology and solution to this. What we basically are working with is the ability, and what's really nice about it is that it's the PRS signal in a 5G setting, not only provides positioning and timing capability. We really don't have to do anything else with that signal to be able to then extract drone detection and sensing, which makes this a very attractive solution. I just want to emphasize solution, not just the technology. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:16:48One of the strengths of NextNav is that we provide solutions. That solution means that we not only are developing the tech, but we also have the spectrum and the licenses to be able to deploy that technology. That's a very powerful statement that working across federal agencies and our National Security interests and equities, they find it extremely compelling, and therefore, we're excited to be joining OCUDU and start this journey. Mike CrawfordAnalyst at B. Riley Securities00:17:16Thank you. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:17:18Thank you. Operator00:17:20Again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Your next question comes from the line of Tim Horan of Oppenheimer. Please go ahead. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:17:33Thanks, guys. On the sensing technology, is there something, does that tie into the PNT or is that, you know, unique to what you guys are doing from a PNT and technology perspective? Does, you know, does anyone else have that capability? Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:17:48Thank you, Tim, for the question. It is the same PRS signal that you extract positioning and timing from that actually gets used to sense drones and objects at a certain elevation. The signal's the same, the underlying 5G is the same, what we extract is through a technology that is spearheaded by the OCUDU Department of War Office, it's called ISAC, which is Integrated Sensing Technologies that is also standards-based. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:18:23What nice thing about having an underlying 5G that evolves to 6G and 7G network is that you use standards-based technologies to not only get positioning and timing, but you're also able to use that same signal within the same radio for being able to sense and detect drones. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:18:44How unique is that capability? Does anyone else have that to your knowledge? Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:18:48There's a lot of companies. One thing about ISAC is it's standards-based, and there's a lot of vendors and, you know, it could be publicly about them. They're developing the ISAC technology, which is 5G-based. What we provide is not just the tech and the underlying network, but we provide the solution. One of the problems is that, you know, you also need the spectrum to be able to deploy all of this on, which is a great, you know, sort of fit for us where we bring the spectrum and the tech to the table. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:19:19Oh, that's what I meant. I mean, the spectrum and the PNT as long as- Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:19:23Yep. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:19:23The technology is that's fairly unique. Does anyone, I mean, it doesn't sound like anyone else can replicate that type of sensing technology easily? Correct me if I'm wrong. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:19:32Right. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:19:33That don't serve the same service yet. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:19:35Exactly. That's a really good point, right? You have Ericsson and among other RAN vendors are developing this technology. At the end of the day, they need a partner. They need someone to bring the spectrum to the table. We already have both. We're working with a wide industry on this. It's a very, I would say, very interesting technology and very interesting development that's happening within the 5G network right now. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:20:05And, are you working with the FAA is looking for, you know, they're massively upgrading the systems and looking for ways to incorporate, you know, drones and other things. Are you working with that process at all? Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:20:17What we started out is filing in the Drone Dominance proceeding to the FCC, which we're super excited about, and what we've announced publicly is also separate than that, our OCUDU membership. That is what we've stated publicly. Of course, we're talking to all the stakeholders on the vendor and also agency space about this. Tim HoranAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:20:39Very helpful. Thank you. Operator00:20:45There are no further questions at this time. With that, I will now turn the call back over to Mariam Sorond, CEO, for final closing remarks. Please go ahead. Mariam SorondCEO at NextNav00:20:54Thank you. In closing, we continue to engage constructively with key stakeholders as anticipated. Interagency review and FCC processes continue as it has in matters more complex than ours. At the same time, we're building momentum towards commercialization and seeing expanding interest across the broader ecosystem. We continue to focus on our strategy and execution to achieve our goals. We are very proud of the progress we are making to deliver a resilient, future-proof, Terrestrial Complement and Backup to GPS, strengthening U.S. Economic and National Security at a critical moment in time. Thank you, everyone. Operator00:21:36Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's call. We thank you for participating. You may now disconnect your lines.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesMariam SorondCEOTim GrayCFOAnalystsJared PollackSVP of Investor Relations at Sloane & CompanyMike CrawfordAnalyst at B. Riley SecuritiesTim HoranAnalyst at OppenheimerPowered by