NYSE:OWLT Owlet Q1 2026 Earnings Report $5.77 +0.03 (+0.52%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$5.78 +0.02 (+0.26%) As of 04:10 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 Owlet EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.09Consensus EPS -$0.18Beat/MissBeat by +$0.09One Year Ago EPSN/AOwlet Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$22.46 millionExpected Revenue$20.84 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$1.61 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AOwlet Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/7/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, May 7, 2026Conference Call Time4:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsOwlet's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Thursday, August 6, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled at 4:30 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)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Owlet Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 7, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Kurt Workman has resumed the CEO role and the company is shifting to a deliberate, subscription-first strategy centered on Owlet360, telehealth, and an AI-driven pediatric data platform to drive long-term, multi-year customer relationships. Positive Sentiment: Subscription traction is strong — Owlet reports over 115,000 paying subscribers, $1M MRR, and ~34% subscription penetration among U.S. Dream Sock users, with subscription gross margin expanding to 67.4%, validating the recurring revenue strategy. Neutral Sentiment: Management lowered full-year revenue guidance to $118M–$122M (from $126M–$130M) but materially raised adjusted EBITDA to $7M–$9M, reflecting a purposeful trade-off toward profitability over near-term top-line growth. Positive Sentiment: The company is tightening operational discipline — pausing new country clearances, deferring lower-ROI projects, and eliminating planned headcount additions — to improve operating leverage and reallocate resources to higher-return initiatives. Positive Sentiment: Product and market momentum remain solid — Q1 revenue beat at $22.5M (+6.4% YoY), domestic sell-through grew 10.5% (Duo +45%), international revenue +22% YoY with strong penetration gains in key markets, and early Q2 sell-through shows >30% improvement versus prior year. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallOwlet Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Hello, everyone. Thank you for joining us and welcome to the Owlet Q1 2026 earnings conference call. After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star one again. I will now hand the conference over to Jay Gentzkow, Investor Relations. Jay, please go ahead. Jay GentzkowVP of Investor Relations at Owlet00:00:28Good afternoon, everyone, thank you for joining us. Earlier today, Owlet released financial results for the first quarter ended March 31st, 2026. I'm pleased to be joined today by Kurt Workman, Owlet's President, CEO, and Co-founder, and Amanda Twede Crawford, Owlet's CFO. Before we begin, please note that our financial results press release and presentation slides referred to on this call are available under the Events and Presentation section of our investor relations website at investors.owletcare.com. Jay GentzkowVP of Investor Relations at Owlet00:00:58This call is also being webcast live with a link at the same website. The webcast and accompanying slides will be available for replay for 12 months following this call. The content of today's call is the property of Owlet. It cannot be reproduced or transcribed without our prior consent. Before we begin today, I'd like to refer you to our safe harbor disclaimer on slide three of the presentation. Jay GentzkowVP of Investor Relations at Owlet00:01:20Today's discussion will contain forward-looking statements based on the company's current views and expectations as of today's date. These statements are only predictions and are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such statements. Jay GentzkowVP of Investor Relations at Owlet00:01:36These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, those described in our most recent filings with the SEC and in the Risk Factors section of our annual report on Form 10-K, as updated in the company's quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and other filings with the SEC. Please note that the company assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by law. With that, it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Kurt. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:02:06Thanks, Jay. Good afternoon, everyone, thank you for joining. Before we dive into the business results, I want to address a recent leadership transition and a renewed path forward for Owlet. On behalf of the board and the entire Owlet team, I'd like to share our deep gratitude for Jonathan Harris. Jonathan was instrumental in navigating Owlet's breakthrough growth following FDA clearances. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:02:26Owlet is in a better position as a result of his contributions, and we wish him well. As Owlet enters this next stage of our growth and evolution, I'm stepping back into the CEO role as announced in April. I'm back to build on the mission I started in a garage 12 years ago with a clear long-term mandate to lead Owlet through this next phase of scale and development in pediatric health. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:02:48While our core mission hasn't changed, we are sharpening our focus on execution and concentrating resources on our highest valued opportunities. I want to highlight three strategic priorities where we see the greatest opportunity to improve performance. First, we're prioritizing the Owlet360 subscription and telehealth opportunity more deliberately than we have in the past. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:03:09With well over 500,000 parents purchasing a new Owlet device every year, we already have an established user base to support subscription conversion. We believe the structure of the modern parenting journey creates a meaningful opportunity. Among parents, the average family grows to just over two children, with siblings typically arriving within a few years of each other. Owlet is uniquely positioned to secure a four-year subscription window. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:03:31By extending high-value subscription features that span a child's first two years, we aim to increase engagement and retention over time, evolving the customer relationship from a one-time user into a four-year subscriber. This evolution from a hardware-centric sale to a multi-year subscription model fundamentally shifts our growth trajectory, compounding our recurring subscriber base into the millions. Owlet is increasingly operating with a subscription-first approach across the business. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:03:58That means the product roadmap, marketing, and channel partnerships are aligned toward increasing subscription penetration across our entire customer base. Here are three-key Owlet360 subscription priorities to execute this year. Number one, launch new features and AI integrations for Dream Sock to enhance the subscription value proposition and support continued increases in our attach rate. Number two, launch compelling new camera subscription features that deliver value to hundreds of thousands of nightly active Cam users. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:04:26The Dream Sight subscription feature set is critical toward extending LTV as many families use their cameras throughout the toddler years. Number three, expand subscription access to our large and growing customer base outside of the U.S. Our objective is to establish Owlet360 subscription as a foundational value add for a family's first two years of parenthood. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:04:47For families with a single child, this can significantly extend LTV. For those families that grow to a second child, it can extend the subscription life cycle to multiple years, supporting a longer-term, high-margin subscription relationship. This evolution from a hardware-centric sale to a multi-year subscription model has the potential to fundamentally transform our business profile and strengthen Owlet's role as a long-term partner in the parenting journey. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:05:10Owlet is building a generational opportunity on AI, anchored by what we believe is the most scaled pediatric health data set in the world. By combining our data moat, FDA-cleared hardware, and trusted parent relationships, we believe we can deliver the kind of personalized, proactive infant care that has never before been possible in the home and establish Owlet as the defining pediatric health platform of this AI era. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:05:35Turning to our second strategic priority, we are sharpening focus on the high-value opportunities within our existing core markets, where we continue to see meaningful growth potential. In the geographies we're currently in, we still have large, under-penetrated markets of just under 20 million children under 24 months of age. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:05:52With market penetration sitting at just over 11% in the U.S. and low single digits in Europe, we believe there is substantial room for expansion within our existing footprint. We continue to see significant runway for growth in the U.S. with penetration rates approaching at or above 20% in key states like Utah, Nebraska, Wyoming, and Kentucky. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:06:11We view these markets as potential benchmarks for what we can accomplish nationwide and in Europe. We believe the business has the potential to scale toward over one million new customers annually over time. Combined with our efforts to extend LTV, we believe this can support a four-year family subscription lifecycle, a recurring subscriber base that can scale meaningfully over time. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:06:32To capitalize on what we see as a significant opportunity ahead in our core markets, we are consolidating our focus and resources to capture the significant white space available in our current high-value geographies where we have established category leadership. As part of this targeted approach, we have deferred our planned entries into India, Hong Kong, and Singapore for the current year and redirected investments to core markets with higher near-term return potential. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:06:58This leads into our final strategic priority, a heightened focus on operational efficiency and financial discipline to drive profitable growth. While we continue to invest in operating expenses year-over-year, we've optimized our spending plans to support operating at a higher level of efficiency. Our goal is to drive meaningful operating leverage by prioritizing a disciplined strategy where we align our cost structure to scale efficiently. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:07:21Specifically, we're pausing new global clearances and delaying country launches that carry upfront regulatory app development quality and marketing costs. We've eliminated previously planned headcount additions through leveraging internal technology and AI-driven efficiencies, allowing us to grow efficiently with fewer resource constraints. We are deferring lower ROI projects outside of our core zero to 24-month segment. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:07:46This disciplined financial profile prioritizing growing profitability is intended to provide flexibility to reinvest strategically, which we believe will support our long-term growth and strengthen our market position. To fully align with these three priorities and a more focused profitable growth strategy, we are proactively updating our full-year 2026 outlook. For the full year, we are adjusting our revenue guidance to a range of $118 million-$122 million, representing 12%-15% year-over-year growth, compared to our previous guidance of $126 million-$130 million. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:08:18This revised range accounts for our deliberate decision to exit lower-margin, high-burden revenue streams in non-core geographies and new channels. Additionally, this outlook incorporates a more conservative view on sell-through for the remainder of the year. I will provide more specific color on these category trends and our consumer data in a few moments. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:08:37By concentrating our resources only on high-impact priorities and eliminating the overhead associated with non-core channels, we've created a much more efficient engine. Consequently, we are raising full-year 2026 adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $7 million-$9 million, or 250%-350% growth year-over-year, compared to our previous guidance of $3 million-$5 million. While this disciplined approach may result in lower near-term revenue, it is a purposeful trade-off designed to improve operating leverage and profitability. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:09:04We believe this approach will provide greater flexibility to invest in our highest-value opportunities and support stronger, more sustainable long-term growth. I'll now turn to our first quarter business update. I want to give more clarity on where we're gaining momentum and identify specific areas where we need to sharpen our execution. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:09:23To align with the strategic priorities I just outlined, going forward, we will focus our quarterly updates on the following core growth drivers. First, driving adoption of Dream Sock and Duo in core global markets. Second, expanding the subscription platform with Owlet360 and Owlet OnCall. In the U.S., our Q1 domestic sell-through units for Sock and Duo grew 10.5% year-over-year, led by a 45% increase in Duo and a 3% increase in Dream Sock. One item of note, Owlet was the only brand in the category to grow during a period of general decline. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:09:57Excluding Owlet, the baby monitoring category was down 19% in dollars versus prior year Q1, while Owlet's dollars grew 11%. Q1 inherently has low promotional activity following the holidays. We believe customers are delaying purchases in anticipation of key promotional events like Mother's Day and Prime Day, which drive significant volumes at a lower selling price. We've started Q2 optimizing marketing and retail placements to accelerate momentum and take share from our competitors. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:10:27These efforts are already yielding results. Quarter-to-date in Q2, sell-through has increased to over 30% for both Duo and Dream Sock versus prior year. This performance validates our strategy and is a positive indicator for the rest of the year. However, we have not yet factored this Q2 performance into our full-year outlook, preferring to see additional sell-through data before adjusting our projections. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:10:49Brand health remains exceptional, evidenced by a Dream Sock NPS of 77% and a blended product NPS of 71% to end Q1. Also, importantly for our Dream Sight camera, customer service contact volumes have decreased by 74% versus our second-generation camera as Dream Sight is clearly removing friction points with our customers, including solving core setup and connectivity issues. Owlet products are maintaining their position as a registry priority. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:11:16In Q1, year-over-year registry additions increased 31% for Dream Sock and 44% for Duo. Finally, momentum in our current global markets remains robust. In Q1, international revenue grew 22% year-over-year. Sell-through continues to show strength internationally, ending Q1 with 37% year-over-year growth. We're excited about the progress we're seeing in our current international markets. For example, the Czech Republic already has nearly 9% of all babies born using an Owlet. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:11:45Other markets like the U.K., Germany, France, and Australia are all on a similar trajectory for market penetration as the U.S. on a year-by-year basis. Given there are more babies born in Europe than the U.S., our current growth opportunity in Europe is massive if we focus and continue to execute at a high level. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:12:00Shifting to our second focus area, expansion of Owlet360 and Owlet OnCall, our subscription engine is thriving. Having surpassed the one-year mark since launch, we've validated the value proposition of our subscription model, scaling to over 115,000 paying subscribers since Q1. As a note, we'll begin reporting subscriber count at quarter end to align with the subscription revenue metric we will begin disclosing in our quarterly filings. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:12:26The underlying subscriber momentum is translating into durable top-line growth as monthly recurring revenue, or MRR, was $1 million to end Q1, highlighting the compounding value of our subscriber base. Furthermore, subscription achieved a 34% penetration rate for Dream Sock users in the U.S. in the first quarter. This high conversion rate validates our bundled value proposition and demonstrates that parents increasingly view Owlet360's pediatric health insights as an important extension of Dream Sock. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:12:56As discussed, we're prioritizing the launch of camera-specific Owlet360 features to enhance the subscription value proposition and extend LTV across multiple children. In April, we launched camera extended clips. The extended clips feature for Dream Sight enhances the user experience by offering AI-assisted event detection, while Owlet360 subscribers gain expanded benefits like a 14-day cloud archive and longer 60-second recordings. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:13:22In addition, in the coming weeks, we are launching built-in white noise, a Dream Sight subscription feature that transforms the camera into a daily sleep essential, eliminating the need for extra hardware. By integrating the product into nightly sleep routines, we can foster consistent platform engagement and support long-term Owlet360 subscription retention. Subscription is the cornerstone for our evolution into a data-driven pediatric health platform. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:13:48The rapid adoption we've seen over the last year validates our decision to prioritize the growth and expansion of our recurring platform features. Finally, ending on Owlet OnCall telehealth opportunity. We're excited to report that this week Owlet OnCall telehealth is officially going live in our app for select participants. That means that for the first time, Owlet parents can communicate directly with a pediatrician in our app. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:14:10We will begin scaling access to more and more users over the coming weeks and months to test and learn. As we further integrate our wellness data with professional pediatric access and oversight, we see an opportunity to provide deeper value to parents, potentially reduce healthcare costs, and extend the customer relationship. Our telehealth launch this year is a pivotal step in this evolution, and we expect the insights gained from this initiative to inform our long-term platform expansion and future revenue opportunities. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:14:37We believe that combining insights from our platform with access to pediatric consultation will provide greater value to parents, simplify access to care, and lengthen the customer relationship. We believe the learnings from this year's telehealth launch will fuel a significant new revenue stream for the business as we move into next year. I'll now turn the call over to Amanda to go over Q1 financial highlights. Amanda, take it away. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:14:59Thanks, Kurt. Turning to our first quarter 2026 financial performance on slide 11. Unless noted otherwise, I will be comparing first quarter 2026 results to the first quarter of 2025. Q1 total revenue was $22.5 million, up 6.4% year-over-year, coming in above our Q1 guidance range of $20 million-$21 million. Q1 results reflect a one-time inventory right sizing at a large retail partner where they reduced their weeks of supply from 8-10 weeks to 4-6 weeks, which negatively impacted sell-in revenue. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:15:39This partner ended Q1 with approximately five weeks of inventory. The first quarter is consistently our seasonally lowest revenue quarter due to the lack of promotions, so a meaningful amount of revenue quickly dropping out created a short-term headwind. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:15:58Subscription revenue grew sequentially for another quarter to a record of $2.7 million in Q1. Subscription gross margin also expanded to 67.4% in Q1. Q1 overall gross margin was 54.5% above our Q1 guidance range of 50%-52%. Overall, gross margin was up 80 basis points versus prior year, including a 480 basis point impact from the cost of tariffs. Total operating expenses for the first quarter were $17.7 million compared to $14 million in the prior period. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:16:38This increase was primarily driven by higher compensation costs, including stock-based compensation. The rise in personnel expenses reflect full period impacts of headcount additions made throughout 2025, supplemented by strategic new hires in the current quarter. Additionally, stock-based compensation increased due to expanded headcount and the timing of long-term incentive plan grants. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:17:03As a percentage of revenue, Q1 operating expenses were 79% compared to 66% in Q1 2025. As Kurt referenced, we are committed to raising our level of operational efficiency and financial discipline for the balance of this year and beyond. Q1 operating loss is $5.5 million compared to $2.7 million in the same period last year. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:17:29Net loss in the current quarter was $3.3 million. Q1 adjusted EBITDA was -$1.5 million at the high end of our Q1 guidance range of -$2.5 million to -$1.5 million. Adjusted EBITDA was down versus prior year, primarily a result of tariff cost impacts. Turning to our balance sheet, overall financial health remains strong. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:17:54Cash and cash equivalents, excluding restricted cash as of quarter end March 31st, 2026, were $35.5 million, in line with fourth quarter 2025. We had $3.9 million of undrawn availability on the line of credit at the end of Q1, increasing our total liquidity to $39.4 million as of March 31st, 2026. The principal balance on our term loan was $6.3 million at the end of Q1 versus $7 million at the end of Q4. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:18:27Turning to our guidance, detailing what Kurt outlined for the full year 2026, we expect revenue in the range of $118 million-$122 million, representing growth of 12%-15% over 2025. Revenue is expected to trend upward in Q2 following our historical seasonal patterns. We project Q3 to have a slight sequential decline versus Q2 before reaching an annual high in Q4. For the full year 2026, we expect gross margins in the range of 50%-52%. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:19:05The tariff situation remains dynamic. At this time, we're estimating a 15% tariff rate as a current baseline for the remainder of the year, down from the previous 19% and 20% attributed to Thailand and Vietnam, respectively. We continue to monitor the dynamic trade environment closely. Finally, we expect adjusted EBITDA in the range of $7 million-$9 million, representing growth of 250%-350% over 2025 as we prioritize operational efficiency and profitable growth. With that, we will now take your questions. Operator00:19:48We will now begin the question and answer session. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star one again. We ask that you pick up your handset when asking a question to allow for optimum sound quality. Operator00:20:10If you're muted locally, please remember to unmute your device. Again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Owen Rickert with Northland Capital Markets. Owen, your line is open. Please go ahead. Owen RickertVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at Northland Capital Markets00:20:42Hey, thanks, guys. Thanks for taking my question here. You know, gross margin expanded pretty healthily year-over-year despite those continued tariff headwinds. I guess, can you just discuss the operational improvements and mixed benefits that helped offset those pressures? Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:20:59Yeah. Primarily what impacted the quarter was a higher relative proportion of subscription revenue, which was at about 67% for the quarter. We did see favorable product mix in the current year of Sock versus Cam in the prior year. Owen RickertVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at Northland Capital Markets00:21:21Got it. Got it. Secondly for me, you know, OpEx did increase a bit year-over-year, largely tied to that G&A line. just as you sharpen the focus on that operating efficiency, I think that was the third strategic focus, where do you see the biggest opportunities to improve leverage going forward? Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:21:42Yeah. It's multifaceted when it comes to operating leverage. The first priority is we had, in the previous guide, a pretty significant amount of headcount investment across the board. As we looked at our plans and with how fast AI is changing and transforming, we just determined that we would not be adding as many headcount as initially planned. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:22:10We believe that we're gonna be able to achieve more with less. Those have been removed from the plan. In addition, we are reprioritizing our focus. We have deprioritized entering new geographies, which come with upfront costs in regulatory quality engineering, marketing. It's a multi-departmental cost that we've taken out of the plan. Finally, this year we're prioritizing 0-24 months. Really what the core market that we are in, and deferring any other projects that are outside of that scope. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:22:53Yeah. I would just add that by focusing on these higher ROI initiatives that will provide longer, higher long-term growth, it allows us to actually increase investments in those initiatives while decreasing the overall OpEx throughout the rest of the year. Owen RickertVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at Northland Capital Markets00:23:12Got it. Super helpful. Then maybe lastly for me, how are you thinking about monetization for OnCall initially? Is the near term focus more around engagement and retention within Owlet360, or do you expect it to become more of a direct revenue contributor sooner rather than later? Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:23:33Yeah. I mean, it's very similar to kind of how we framed up subscription last year, where we didn't include it in our guide. We were really focused on testing and learning and improving the experience for the customer. That's the same focus for this year for us. You know, this is a transformational opportunity where for the first time, our customers are going to be able to chat with a doctor inside of our app. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:23:53That doctor's going to be able to use the Owlet data to empower parents at home to give care to their children without needing to go into the ER or the pediatrician in some instances. We're going to really leverage the opportunity this year to learn and to nail that model. We expect it to be a meaningful contributor in future years. Owen RickertVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at Northland Capital Markets00:24:16Got it. Thanks, guys. Operator00:24:39Your next question comes from the line of Jonna Kim with TD Cowen. Jonna, your line is open. Please go ahead. Jonna KimVP and Equity Research Analyst at TD Cowen00:24:49Thank you for taking my question. Would love to get additional color just around what changed in your latest guidance versus your prior guide on the top line. Would love to get just additional color there. What is assumed in your guidance in terms of the ramp in the subscription growth? That color will be helpful. Just lastly, as you think about activating more opportunities in the U.S., does your marketing strategy change at all? How are you sort of envisioning your marketing strategy for the year? Thank you. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:25:25Thanks, Jonna. Keep me honest on making sure I answer all three of those questions as I go through this. Feel free to ask a follow-up if I don't cover it all. You know, the 2026 revenue outlook is a reflection of our sharpened focus and strategy toward profitable growth. We've intentionally removed lower margin, high burden revenue previously tied to the non-core geographies and some of the new channels resulting in that lower top-line revenue. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:25:52You know, it also takes a more conservative outlook for the remainder of the year. You know, when we look at the new guidance, it also raises our EBITDA outlook to $7 million-$9 million versus the prior year. It's a purposeful trade-off. Really the goal is to focus on these bigger opportunities. If we can take our subscriber base to the millions, if we can get to a million new customers per year and we hold them for two years, this business is transformationally different. It's really reflecting of that focus and a little bit more conservative outlook on remainder of the year. Jonna KimVP and Equity Research Analyst at TD Cowen00:26:31Got it. Yeah, any perspective on subscription growth, how you're thinking about that for the year, and then the marketing piece will be helpful. Thank you. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:26:43Yeah. Yeah, thanks for following up. Look, when you bring your baby home for the first time, life stops. Like, you're taking time off work. Everything is focused on that for that first year on this new member of your family. It's the biggest change we go through in spending, in habits, in sleep. It's no surprise to us that Owlet360 is resonating. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:27:04We beat all of our internal goals on Owlet360. The fact that we're already close to 35% of our Dream Sock customer base in the U.S. is incredible, and we know that that number can go much higher. It's just not a normal kind of premium consumer app model. It's a critical health and sleep, you know, data set that empowers parents to better care for their children. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:27:28Who wouldn't want that? The re-guide, we're still very optimistic on Owlet360. It's growing well. We expect it to continue to grow well for the business. It just makes life better for baby, better for parent. We think AI is gonna unlock massive growth here over the next few years. We're very bullish on Owlet360. It's why it's one of our primary focus areas for the next few years. Jonna KimVP and Equity Research Analyst at TD Cowen00:27:52Got it. Thank you. Operator00:27:57As a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. Your next question comes from the line of Ian Arnt with Lake Street Capital Markets. Ian, your line is open. Please go ahead. Ian ArntEquity Research Associate at Lake Street Capital Markets00:28:13Hey, guys. Filling in for Ben Haynor here. You noted on the last call that you would share some more cohort data going forward. Now that we're kinda just past a year here on the original cohort, retention data, I was wondering if you could give us a sense of where annual retention is shaking out and kinda how that compares to your initial assumptions when you launched the service. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:28:47Yeah, that's a great, that's a great question. We're actually, we're very optimistic on this. When you think about churn and retention, we've had meaningful improvement sequentially since we launched last year. The increase in value in the subscription, I think has been a big part of that. Also just the value in the device and the performance of the device is increasing. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:29:09Usage and retention has been fantastic. From a churn perspective, we're in kind of that monthly single-digit range, which has improved sequentially. You know, having surpassed that one-year mark, you know, I would say that subscriptions exceeded our internal benchmarks, and we're gonna drive continued efficiency there. Our goal is that, you know, parents use subscription across multiple years, across multiple children, so this can become a four-year LTV opportunity. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:29:40Our whole product roadmap is designed to continue to reinforce that for the next several years, including telehealth. You know, the highest rate of healthcare utilization is in the first few years of life. Parents can now, with contextualized data, chat with a pediatrician in our app. You know, that should unlock significant continued engagement past the first year, especially for Sock users. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:30:02Cam is another big unlock for us. You know, parents use Cam for multiple years. It, you know, they anchor it to the wall, and it becomes part of that daily routine. We're launching a bunch of new camera features as well. We expect that this will continue to go down, and we're really pleased with the performance so far. Ian ArntEquity Research Associate at Lake Street Capital Markets00:30:21Okay, that's super helpful. Thank you. Then just one more for me. On the Q4 call, you guys mentioned four new hospital partnerships had engaged following the CHKD launch. Could you give us an update on where those stand and the timing of announcements and maybe what the average ramp looks like once hospitals go live in terms of monitors deployed per month? Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:30:50Yeah. I think what I wanna share is that, you know, BabySat was up meaningfully in Q1. Over last year, it was nearly 100% in terms of revenue growth. It's still a very small number for the business, the hospital partnerships are growing. You know, it takes a little bit more time to get into those partnerships. We're gonna let that continue to progress inside of the business. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:31:08It creates incredible partnerships and brand opportunities. It helps us address the babies with the most vulnerable needs of our population, as a long-term, you know, big opportunity for Owlet. You know, we'll proactively report out on it when it reaches a level of scale that kinda, I think, makes sense for earnings calls. We continue to see good progress in BabySat, and you know, it's just a really important part of making sure we're addressing the entire population of children. Ian ArntEquity Research Associate at Lake Street Capital Markets00:31:43Got it. Thanks, guys. Operator00:31:46There are no further questions at this time. We have reached the end of the Q&A session. I will now turn the call back to Kurt for closing remarks. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:31:57Yeah. Thank you. Thanks again, everyone, for joining us and for the continued support. I just wanna state again that Owlet's generational AI opportunity is massive. We have a large, unique pediatric dataset, we're contextualizing that data right now. That's why we're so focused on the Owlet360 and telehealth opportunities. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:32:16They alone represent massive growth potential, and we're excited about our current progress and the long-term opportunity for this platform. Look forward to updating you on this on coming calls, and I've just never been more confident in Owlet's path. I started this company in a garage. You know, been with the company for 12 years, and this is the most exciting period for Owlet. Thank you for your continued support as we build the standard of at-home care for babies. Operator00:32:41This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAmanda Twede CrawfordCFOJay GentzkowVP of Investor RelationsKurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-FounderAnalystsIan ArntEquity Research Associate at Lake Street Capital MarketsJonna KimVP and Equity Research Analyst at TD CowenOwen RickertVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at Northland Capital MarketsPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Owlet Earnings HeadlinesOwlet: Telehealth And Subscriptions Could Drive The Next Leg Of GrowthMay 18, 2026 | seekingalpha.comOwlet Earnings Call Highlights Subscription-Led TurnaroundMay 17, 2026 | theglobeandmail.comYour $29.97 book is free todayWhy Some Traders Skip Stocks Entirely You don't need a big account to trade options. In fact, options can give you up to 12 times the leverage of stocks — with a fraction of the capital tied up. This free guide lays it all out in plain English — from A to Z, with step-by-step examples you can follow in your own account.May 22 at 1:00 AM | Profits Run (Ad)Owlet, Inc. (NYSE:OWLT) Given Average Recommendation of "Hold" by BrokeragesMay 15, 2026 | americanbankingnews.comOwlet Expands ANZ Product Suite with Launch of Dream Sight™ and Dream Duo™ 3, Bringing the World's Most Comprehensive Baby Monitoring System to More FamiliesMay 11, 2026 | tmcnet.comAnalyst Estimates: Here's What Brokers Think Of Owlet, Inc. (NYSE:OWLT) After Its First-Quarter ReportMay 11, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comSee More Owlet Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Owlet? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Owlet and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About OwletOwlet (NYSE:OWLT) Baby Care, Inc. is a consumer health technology company specializing in the design and manufacture of smart baby monitoring products. The company’s flagship device, the Owlet Smart Sock, is a wearable monitor that tracks a newborn’s heart rate and oxygen saturation levels and transmits real-time data to a mobile app. Owlet has since expanded its product suite to include the Owlet Cam, an HD video monitor with audio and motion alerts, and the Dream Sock, a non-wearable device that collects sleep metrics to help parents understand and improve their baby’s rest patterns. Founded in 2013 by engineer and father Kurt Workman, Owlet is headquartered in Lehi, Utah. The company was created in response to the personal loss Workman experienced, with a mission to provide parents greater visibility into their child’s well-being. Since its inception, Owlet has pursued product innovation and safety certifications, including partnerships with pediatric specialists, and completed a public listing in 2021. Owlet’s solutions are available directly online and through select retail partners across the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and parts of Europe. In addition to its hardware offerings, Owlet provides a subscription-based membership service that delivers enhanced analytics, personalized insights and cloud storage of historical data. The company’s integrated ecosystem of devices and digital services is aimed at building a comprehensive infant wellness platform. Leadership includes founder Kurt Workman and a management team with backgrounds spanning medical device development, software engineering and consumer electronics. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Hello, everyone. Thank you for joining us and welcome to the Owlet Q1 2026 earnings conference call. After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star one again. I will now hand the conference over to Jay Gentzkow, Investor Relations. Jay, please go ahead. Jay GentzkowVP of Investor Relations at Owlet00:00:28Good afternoon, everyone, thank you for joining us. Earlier today, Owlet released financial results for the first quarter ended March 31st, 2026. I'm pleased to be joined today by Kurt Workman, Owlet's President, CEO, and Co-founder, and Amanda Twede Crawford, Owlet's CFO. Before we begin, please note that our financial results press release and presentation slides referred to on this call are available under the Events and Presentation section of our investor relations website at investors.owletcare.com. Jay GentzkowVP of Investor Relations at Owlet00:00:58This call is also being webcast live with a link at the same website. The webcast and accompanying slides will be available for replay for 12 months following this call. The content of today's call is the property of Owlet. It cannot be reproduced or transcribed without our prior consent. Before we begin today, I'd like to refer you to our safe harbor disclaimer on slide three of the presentation. Jay GentzkowVP of Investor Relations at Owlet00:01:20Today's discussion will contain forward-looking statements based on the company's current views and expectations as of today's date. These statements are only predictions and are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such statements. Jay GentzkowVP of Investor Relations at Owlet00:01:36These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, those described in our most recent filings with the SEC and in the Risk Factors section of our annual report on Form 10-K, as updated in the company's quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and other filings with the SEC. Please note that the company assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by law. With that, it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Kurt. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:02:06Thanks, Jay. Good afternoon, everyone, thank you for joining. Before we dive into the business results, I want to address a recent leadership transition and a renewed path forward for Owlet. On behalf of the board and the entire Owlet team, I'd like to share our deep gratitude for Jonathan Harris. Jonathan was instrumental in navigating Owlet's breakthrough growth following FDA clearances. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:02:26Owlet is in a better position as a result of his contributions, and we wish him well. As Owlet enters this next stage of our growth and evolution, I'm stepping back into the CEO role as announced in April. I'm back to build on the mission I started in a garage 12 years ago with a clear long-term mandate to lead Owlet through this next phase of scale and development in pediatric health. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:02:48While our core mission hasn't changed, we are sharpening our focus on execution and concentrating resources on our highest valued opportunities. I want to highlight three strategic priorities where we see the greatest opportunity to improve performance. First, we're prioritizing the Owlet360 subscription and telehealth opportunity more deliberately than we have in the past. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:03:09With well over 500,000 parents purchasing a new Owlet device every year, we already have an established user base to support subscription conversion. We believe the structure of the modern parenting journey creates a meaningful opportunity. Among parents, the average family grows to just over two children, with siblings typically arriving within a few years of each other. Owlet is uniquely positioned to secure a four-year subscription window. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:03:31By extending high-value subscription features that span a child's first two years, we aim to increase engagement and retention over time, evolving the customer relationship from a one-time user into a four-year subscriber. This evolution from a hardware-centric sale to a multi-year subscription model fundamentally shifts our growth trajectory, compounding our recurring subscriber base into the millions. Owlet is increasingly operating with a subscription-first approach across the business. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:03:58That means the product roadmap, marketing, and channel partnerships are aligned toward increasing subscription penetration across our entire customer base. Here are three-key Owlet360 subscription priorities to execute this year. Number one, launch new features and AI integrations for Dream Sock to enhance the subscription value proposition and support continued increases in our attach rate. Number two, launch compelling new camera subscription features that deliver value to hundreds of thousands of nightly active Cam users. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:04:26The Dream Sight subscription feature set is critical toward extending LTV as many families use their cameras throughout the toddler years. Number three, expand subscription access to our large and growing customer base outside of the U.S. Our objective is to establish Owlet360 subscription as a foundational value add for a family's first two years of parenthood. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:04:47For families with a single child, this can significantly extend LTV. For those families that grow to a second child, it can extend the subscription life cycle to multiple years, supporting a longer-term, high-margin subscription relationship. This evolution from a hardware-centric sale to a multi-year subscription model has the potential to fundamentally transform our business profile and strengthen Owlet's role as a long-term partner in the parenting journey. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:05:10Owlet is building a generational opportunity on AI, anchored by what we believe is the most scaled pediatric health data set in the world. By combining our data moat, FDA-cleared hardware, and trusted parent relationships, we believe we can deliver the kind of personalized, proactive infant care that has never before been possible in the home and establish Owlet as the defining pediatric health platform of this AI era. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:05:35Turning to our second strategic priority, we are sharpening focus on the high-value opportunities within our existing core markets, where we continue to see meaningful growth potential. In the geographies we're currently in, we still have large, under-penetrated markets of just under 20 million children under 24 months of age. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:05:52With market penetration sitting at just over 11% in the U.S. and low single digits in Europe, we believe there is substantial room for expansion within our existing footprint. We continue to see significant runway for growth in the U.S. with penetration rates approaching at or above 20% in key states like Utah, Nebraska, Wyoming, and Kentucky. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:06:11We view these markets as potential benchmarks for what we can accomplish nationwide and in Europe. We believe the business has the potential to scale toward over one million new customers annually over time. Combined with our efforts to extend LTV, we believe this can support a four-year family subscription lifecycle, a recurring subscriber base that can scale meaningfully over time. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:06:32To capitalize on what we see as a significant opportunity ahead in our core markets, we are consolidating our focus and resources to capture the significant white space available in our current high-value geographies where we have established category leadership. As part of this targeted approach, we have deferred our planned entries into India, Hong Kong, and Singapore for the current year and redirected investments to core markets with higher near-term return potential. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:06:58This leads into our final strategic priority, a heightened focus on operational efficiency and financial discipline to drive profitable growth. While we continue to invest in operating expenses year-over-year, we've optimized our spending plans to support operating at a higher level of efficiency. Our goal is to drive meaningful operating leverage by prioritizing a disciplined strategy where we align our cost structure to scale efficiently. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:07:21Specifically, we're pausing new global clearances and delaying country launches that carry upfront regulatory app development quality and marketing costs. We've eliminated previously planned headcount additions through leveraging internal technology and AI-driven efficiencies, allowing us to grow efficiently with fewer resource constraints. We are deferring lower ROI projects outside of our core zero to 24-month segment. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:07:46This disciplined financial profile prioritizing growing profitability is intended to provide flexibility to reinvest strategically, which we believe will support our long-term growth and strengthen our market position. To fully align with these three priorities and a more focused profitable growth strategy, we are proactively updating our full-year 2026 outlook. For the full year, we are adjusting our revenue guidance to a range of $118 million-$122 million, representing 12%-15% year-over-year growth, compared to our previous guidance of $126 million-$130 million. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:08:18This revised range accounts for our deliberate decision to exit lower-margin, high-burden revenue streams in non-core geographies and new channels. Additionally, this outlook incorporates a more conservative view on sell-through for the remainder of the year. I will provide more specific color on these category trends and our consumer data in a few moments. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:08:37By concentrating our resources only on high-impact priorities and eliminating the overhead associated with non-core channels, we've created a much more efficient engine. Consequently, we are raising full-year 2026 adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $7 million-$9 million, or 250%-350% growth year-over-year, compared to our previous guidance of $3 million-$5 million. While this disciplined approach may result in lower near-term revenue, it is a purposeful trade-off designed to improve operating leverage and profitability. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:09:04We believe this approach will provide greater flexibility to invest in our highest-value opportunities and support stronger, more sustainable long-term growth. I'll now turn to our first quarter business update. I want to give more clarity on where we're gaining momentum and identify specific areas where we need to sharpen our execution. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:09:23To align with the strategic priorities I just outlined, going forward, we will focus our quarterly updates on the following core growth drivers. First, driving adoption of Dream Sock and Duo in core global markets. Second, expanding the subscription platform with Owlet360 and Owlet OnCall. In the U.S., our Q1 domestic sell-through units for Sock and Duo grew 10.5% year-over-year, led by a 45% increase in Duo and a 3% increase in Dream Sock. One item of note, Owlet was the only brand in the category to grow during a period of general decline. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:09:57Excluding Owlet, the baby monitoring category was down 19% in dollars versus prior year Q1, while Owlet's dollars grew 11%. Q1 inherently has low promotional activity following the holidays. We believe customers are delaying purchases in anticipation of key promotional events like Mother's Day and Prime Day, which drive significant volumes at a lower selling price. We've started Q2 optimizing marketing and retail placements to accelerate momentum and take share from our competitors. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:10:27These efforts are already yielding results. Quarter-to-date in Q2, sell-through has increased to over 30% for both Duo and Dream Sock versus prior year. This performance validates our strategy and is a positive indicator for the rest of the year. However, we have not yet factored this Q2 performance into our full-year outlook, preferring to see additional sell-through data before adjusting our projections. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:10:49Brand health remains exceptional, evidenced by a Dream Sock NPS of 77% and a blended product NPS of 71% to end Q1. Also, importantly for our Dream Sight camera, customer service contact volumes have decreased by 74% versus our second-generation camera as Dream Sight is clearly removing friction points with our customers, including solving core setup and connectivity issues. Owlet products are maintaining their position as a registry priority. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:11:16In Q1, year-over-year registry additions increased 31% for Dream Sock and 44% for Duo. Finally, momentum in our current global markets remains robust. In Q1, international revenue grew 22% year-over-year. Sell-through continues to show strength internationally, ending Q1 with 37% year-over-year growth. We're excited about the progress we're seeing in our current international markets. For example, the Czech Republic already has nearly 9% of all babies born using an Owlet. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:11:45Other markets like the U.K., Germany, France, and Australia are all on a similar trajectory for market penetration as the U.S. on a year-by-year basis. Given there are more babies born in Europe than the U.S., our current growth opportunity in Europe is massive if we focus and continue to execute at a high level. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:12:00Shifting to our second focus area, expansion of Owlet360 and Owlet OnCall, our subscription engine is thriving. Having surpassed the one-year mark since launch, we've validated the value proposition of our subscription model, scaling to over 115,000 paying subscribers since Q1. As a note, we'll begin reporting subscriber count at quarter end to align with the subscription revenue metric we will begin disclosing in our quarterly filings. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:12:26The underlying subscriber momentum is translating into durable top-line growth as monthly recurring revenue, or MRR, was $1 million to end Q1, highlighting the compounding value of our subscriber base. Furthermore, subscription achieved a 34% penetration rate for Dream Sock users in the U.S. in the first quarter. This high conversion rate validates our bundled value proposition and demonstrates that parents increasingly view Owlet360's pediatric health insights as an important extension of Dream Sock. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:12:56As discussed, we're prioritizing the launch of camera-specific Owlet360 features to enhance the subscription value proposition and extend LTV across multiple children. In April, we launched camera extended clips. The extended clips feature for Dream Sight enhances the user experience by offering AI-assisted event detection, while Owlet360 subscribers gain expanded benefits like a 14-day cloud archive and longer 60-second recordings. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:13:22In addition, in the coming weeks, we are launching built-in white noise, a Dream Sight subscription feature that transforms the camera into a daily sleep essential, eliminating the need for extra hardware. By integrating the product into nightly sleep routines, we can foster consistent platform engagement and support long-term Owlet360 subscription retention. Subscription is the cornerstone for our evolution into a data-driven pediatric health platform. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:13:48The rapid adoption we've seen over the last year validates our decision to prioritize the growth and expansion of our recurring platform features. Finally, ending on Owlet OnCall telehealth opportunity. We're excited to report that this week Owlet OnCall telehealth is officially going live in our app for select participants. That means that for the first time, Owlet parents can communicate directly with a pediatrician in our app. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:14:10We will begin scaling access to more and more users over the coming weeks and months to test and learn. As we further integrate our wellness data with professional pediatric access and oversight, we see an opportunity to provide deeper value to parents, potentially reduce healthcare costs, and extend the customer relationship. Our telehealth launch this year is a pivotal step in this evolution, and we expect the insights gained from this initiative to inform our long-term platform expansion and future revenue opportunities. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:14:37We believe that combining insights from our platform with access to pediatric consultation will provide greater value to parents, simplify access to care, and lengthen the customer relationship. We believe the learnings from this year's telehealth launch will fuel a significant new revenue stream for the business as we move into next year. I'll now turn the call over to Amanda to go over Q1 financial highlights. Amanda, take it away. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:14:59Thanks, Kurt. Turning to our first quarter 2026 financial performance on slide 11. Unless noted otherwise, I will be comparing first quarter 2026 results to the first quarter of 2025. Q1 total revenue was $22.5 million, up 6.4% year-over-year, coming in above our Q1 guidance range of $20 million-$21 million. Q1 results reflect a one-time inventory right sizing at a large retail partner where they reduced their weeks of supply from 8-10 weeks to 4-6 weeks, which negatively impacted sell-in revenue. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:15:39This partner ended Q1 with approximately five weeks of inventory. The first quarter is consistently our seasonally lowest revenue quarter due to the lack of promotions, so a meaningful amount of revenue quickly dropping out created a short-term headwind. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:15:58Subscription revenue grew sequentially for another quarter to a record of $2.7 million in Q1. Subscription gross margin also expanded to 67.4% in Q1. Q1 overall gross margin was 54.5% above our Q1 guidance range of 50%-52%. Overall, gross margin was up 80 basis points versus prior year, including a 480 basis point impact from the cost of tariffs. Total operating expenses for the first quarter were $17.7 million compared to $14 million in the prior period. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:16:38This increase was primarily driven by higher compensation costs, including stock-based compensation. The rise in personnel expenses reflect full period impacts of headcount additions made throughout 2025, supplemented by strategic new hires in the current quarter. Additionally, stock-based compensation increased due to expanded headcount and the timing of long-term incentive plan grants. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:17:03As a percentage of revenue, Q1 operating expenses were 79% compared to 66% in Q1 2025. As Kurt referenced, we are committed to raising our level of operational efficiency and financial discipline for the balance of this year and beyond. Q1 operating loss is $5.5 million compared to $2.7 million in the same period last year. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:17:29Net loss in the current quarter was $3.3 million. Q1 adjusted EBITDA was -$1.5 million at the high end of our Q1 guidance range of -$2.5 million to -$1.5 million. Adjusted EBITDA was down versus prior year, primarily a result of tariff cost impacts. Turning to our balance sheet, overall financial health remains strong. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:17:54Cash and cash equivalents, excluding restricted cash as of quarter end March 31st, 2026, were $35.5 million, in line with fourth quarter 2025. We had $3.9 million of undrawn availability on the line of credit at the end of Q1, increasing our total liquidity to $39.4 million as of March 31st, 2026. The principal balance on our term loan was $6.3 million at the end of Q1 versus $7 million at the end of Q4. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:18:27Turning to our guidance, detailing what Kurt outlined for the full year 2026, we expect revenue in the range of $118 million-$122 million, representing growth of 12%-15% over 2025. Revenue is expected to trend upward in Q2 following our historical seasonal patterns. We project Q3 to have a slight sequential decline versus Q2 before reaching an annual high in Q4. For the full year 2026, we expect gross margins in the range of 50%-52%. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:19:05The tariff situation remains dynamic. At this time, we're estimating a 15% tariff rate as a current baseline for the remainder of the year, down from the previous 19% and 20% attributed to Thailand and Vietnam, respectively. We continue to monitor the dynamic trade environment closely. Finally, we expect adjusted EBITDA in the range of $7 million-$9 million, representing growth of 250%-350% over 2025 as we prioritize operational efficiency and profitable growth. With that, we will now take your questions. Operator00:19:48We will now begin the question and answer session. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star one again. We ask that you pick up your handset when asking a question to allow for optimum sound quality. Operator00:20:10If you're muted locally, please remember to unmute your device. Again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Owen Rickert with Northland Capital Markets. Owen, your line is open. Please go ahead. Owen RickertVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at Northland Capital Markets00:20:42Hey, thanks, guys. Thanks for taking my question here. You know, gross margin expanded pretty healthily year-over-year despite those continued tariff headwinds. I guess, can you just discuss the operational improvements and mixed benefits that helped offset those pressures? Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:20:59Yeah. Primarily what impacted the quarter was a higher relative proportion of subscription revenue, which was at about 67% for the quarter. We did see favorable product mix in the current year of Sock versus Cam in the prior year. Owen RickertVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at Northland Capital Markets00:21:21Got it. Got it. Secondly for me, you know, OpEx did increase a bit year-over-year, largely tied to that G&A line. just as you sharpen the focus on that operating efficiency, I think that was the third strategic focus, where do you see the biggest opportunities to improve leverage going forward? Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:21:42Yeah. It's multifaceted when it comes to operating leverage. The first priority is we had, in the previous guide, a pretty significant amount of headcount investment across the board. As we looked at our plans and with how fast AI is changing and transforming, we just determined that we would not be adding as many headcount as initially planned. Amanda Twede CrawfordCFO at Owlet00:22:10We believe that we're gonna be able to achieve more with less. Those have been removed from the plan. In addition, we are reprioritizing our focus. We have deprioritized entering new geographies, which come with upfront costs in regulatory quality engineering, marketing. It's a multi-departmental cost that we've taken out of the plan. Finally, this year we're prioritizing 0-24 months. Really what the core market that we are in, and deferring any other projects that are outside of that scope. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:22:53Yeah. I would just add that by focusing on these higher ROI initiatives that will provide longer, higher long-term growth, it allows us to actually increase investments in those initiatives while decreasing the overall OpEx throughout the rest of the year. Owen RickertVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at Northland Capital Markets00:23:12Got it. Super helpful. Then maybe lastly for me, how are you thinking about monetization for OnCall initially? Is the near term focus more around engagement and retention within Owlet360, or do you expect it to become more of a direct revenue contributor sooner rather than later? Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:23:33Yeah. I mean, it's very similar to kind of how we framed up subscription last year, where we didn't include it in our guide. We were really focused on testing and learning and improving the experience for the customer. That's the same focus for this year for us. You know, this is a transformational opportunity where for the first time, our customers are going to be able to chat with a doctor inside of our app. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:23:53That doctor's going to be able to use the Owlet data to empower parents at home to give care to their children without needing to go into the ER or the pediatrician in some instances. We're going to really leverage the opportunity this year to learn and to nail that model. We expect it to be a meaningful contributor in future years. Owen RickertVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at Northland Capital Markets00:24:16Got it. Thanks, guys. Operator00:24:39Your next question comes from the line of Jonna Kim with TD Cowen. Jonna, your line is open. Please go ahead. Jonna KimVP and Equity Research Analyst at TD Cowen00:24:49Thank you for taking my question. Would love to get additional color just around what changed in your latest guidance versus your prior guide on the top line. Would love to get just additional color there. What is assumed in your guidance in terms of the ramp in the subscription growth? That color will be helpful. Just lastly, as you think about activating more opportunities in the U.S., does your marketing strategy change at all? How are you sort of envisioning your marketing strategy for the year? Thank you. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:25:25Thanks, Jonna. Keep me honest on making sure I answer all three of those questions as I go through this. Feel free to ask a follow-up if I don't cover it all. You know, the 2026 revenue outlook is a reflection of our sharpened focus and strategy toward profitable growth. We've intentionally removed lower margin, high burden revenue previously tied to the non-core geographies and some of the new channels resulting in that lower top-line revenue. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:25:52You know, it also takes a more conservative outlook for the remainder of the year. You know, when we look at the new guidance, it also raises our EBITDA outlook to $7 million-$9 million versus the prior year. It's a purposeful trade-off. Really the goal is to focus on these bigger opportunities. If we can take our subscriber base to the millions, if we can get to a million new customers per year and we hold them for two years, this business is transformationally different. It's really reflecting of that focus and a little bit more conservative outlook on remainder of the year. Jonna KimVP and Equity Research Analyst at TD Cowen00:26:31Got it. Yeah, any perspective on subscription growth, how you're thinking about that for the year, and then the marketing piece will be helpful. Thank you. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:26:43Yeah. Yeah, thanks for following up. Look, when you bring your baby home for the first time, life stops. Like, you're taking time off work. Everything is focused on that for that first year on this new member of your family. It's the biggest change we go through in spending, in habits, in sleep. It's no surprise to us that Owlet360 is resonating. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:27:04We beat all of our internal goals on Owlet360. The fact that we're already close to 35% of our Dream Sock customer base in the U.S. is incredible, and we know that that number can go much higher. It's just not a normal kind of premium consumer app model. It's a critical health and sleep, you know, data set that empowers parents to better care for their children. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:27:28Who wouldn't want that? The re-guide, we're still very optimistic on Owlet360. It's growing well. We expect it to continue to grow well for the business. It just makes life better for baby, better for parent. We think AI is gonna unlock massive growth here over the next few years. We're very bullish on Owlet360. It's why it's one of our primary focus areas for the next few years. Jonna KimVP and Equity Research Analyst at TD Cowen00:27:52Got it. Thank you. Operator00:27:57As a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. Your next question comes from the line of Ian Arnt with Lake Street Capital Markets. Ian, your line is open. Please go ahead. Ian ArntEquity Research Associate at Lake Street Capital Markets00:28:13Hey, guys. Filling in for Ben Haynor here. You noted on the last call that you would share some more cohort data going forward. Now that we're kinda just past a year here on the original cohort, retention data, I was wondering if you could give us a sense of where annual retention is shaking out and kinda how that compares to your initial assumptions when you launched the service. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:28:47Yeah, that's a great, that's a great question. We're actually, we're very optimistic on this. When you think about churn and retention, we've had meaningful improvement sequentially since we launched last year. The increase in value in the subscription, I think has been a big part of that. Also just the value in the device and the performance of the device is increasing. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:29:09Usage and retention has been fantastic. From a churn perspective, we're in kind of that monthly single-digit range, which has improved sequentially. You know, having surpassed that one-year mark, you know, I would say that subscriptions exceeded our internal benchmarks, and we're gonna drive continued efficiency there. Our goal is that, you know, parents use subscription across multiple years, across multiple children, so this can become a four-year LTV opportunity. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:29:40Our whole product roadmap is designed to continue to reinforce that for the next several years, including telehealth. You know, the highest rate of healthcare utilization is in the first few years of life. Parents can now, with contextualized data, chat with a pediatrician in our app. You know, that should unlock significant continued engagement past the first year, especially for Sock users. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:30:02Cam is another big unlock for us. You know, parents use Cam for multiple years. It, you know, they anchor it to the wall, and it becomes part of that daily routine. We're launching a bunch of new camera features as well. We expect that this will continue to go down, and we're really pleased with the performance so far. Ian ArntEquity Research Associate at Lake Street Capital Markets00:30:21Okay, that's super helpful. Thank you. Then just one more for me. On the Q4 call, you guys mentioned four new hospital partnerships had engaged following the CHKD launch. Could you give us an update on where those stand and the timing of announcements and maybe what the average ramp looks like once hospitals go live in terms of monitors deployed per month? Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:30:50Yeah. I think what I wanna share is that, you know, BabySat was up meaningfully in Q1. Over last year, it was nearly 100% in terms of revenue growth. It's still a very small number for the business, the hospital partnerships are growing. You know, it takes a little bit more time to get into those partnerships. We're gonna let that continue to progress inside of the business. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:31:08It creates incredible partnerships and brand opportunities. It helps us address the babies with the most vulnerable needs of our population, as a long-term, you know, big opportunity for Owlet. You know, we'll proactively report out on it when it reaches a level of scale that kinda, I think, makes sense for earnings calls. We continue to see good progress in BabySat, and you know, it's just a really important part of making sure we're addressing the entire population of children. Ian ArntEquity Research Associate at Lake Street Capital Markets00:31:43Got it. Thanks, guys. Operator00:31:46There are no further questions at this time. We have reached the end of the Q&A session. I will now turn the call back to Kurt for closing remarks. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:31:57Yeah. Thank you. Thanks again, everyone, for joining us and for the continued support. I just wanna state again that Owlet's generational AI opportunity is massive. We have a large, unique pediatric dataset, we're contextualizing that data right now. That's why we're so focused on the Owlet360 and telehealth opportunities. Kurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-Founder at Owlet00:32:16They alone represent massive growth potential, and we're excited about our current progress and the long-term opportunity for this platform. Look forward to updating you on this on coming calls, and I've just never been more confident in Owlet's path. I started this company in a garage. You know, been with the company for 12 years, and this is the most exciting period for Owlet. Thank you for your continued support as we build the standard of at-home care for babies. Operator00:32:41This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAmanda Twede CrawfordCFOJay GentzkowVP of Investor RelationsKurt WorkmanPresident, CEO, and Co-FounderAnalystsIan ArntEquity Research Associate at Lake Street Capital MarketsJonna KimVP and Equity Research Analyst at TD CowenOwen RickertVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at Northland Capital MarketsPowered by