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Lantronix Inc. reported its Q4 2025 earnings, revealing a complex financial landscape marked by slight revenue growth and a downturn in earnings per share. The company, currently valued at $146.23 million in market capitalization, posted a quarterly revenue of $28.8 million, reflecting a 4% year-over-year increase excluding Gridspertise, but the non-GAAP EPS fell short at $0.01. Following the earnings release, Lantronix’s stock experienced a modest uptick in aftermarket trading, rising 1.36% to $3.73. According to InvestingPro, the company has shown significant momentum with a 16.41% return over the past week.
Key Takeaways
- Quarterly revenue increased by 4% year-over-year, excluding Gridspertise.
- Non-GAAP EPS of $0.01 missed the forecast of $0.012.
- Gross margin decreased to 40.6% due to inventory charges and tariffs.
- The stock price rose 1.36% in aftermarket trading.
Company Performance
Lantronix’s performance in Q4 2025 showed resilience in revenue growth amidst a challenging market environment. The company strategically focused on expanding its presence in the drone market, securing significant contracts with the U.S. Army and partnerships with Aurora and Teledyne FLIR. Despite these gains, Lantronix faced margin pressures from inventory charges and tariffs, which impacted overall profitability.
Financial Highlights
- Revenue: $28.8 million, up 4% year-over-year excluding Gridspertise.
- Non-GAAP EPS: $0.01, below the forecast of $0.012.
- Gross Margin: 40.6%, down from the previous quarter.
- Operating cash flow: $7.3 million.
- Cash and cash equivalents: $20.1 million at quarter-end.
Earnings vs. Forecast
Lantronix reported a non-GAAP EPS of $0.01, falling short of the $0.012 forecast. This miss is relatively minor but reflects ongoing challenges in managing costs. The revenue forecast was $28.53 million, and the actual revenue of $28.8 million slightly exceeded expectations, indicating robust sales performance despite broader economic pressures.
Market Reaction
Following the earnings announcement, Lantronix’s stock price rose by 1.36% in aftermarket trading, reaching $3.73. This movement suggests a cautiously optimistic investor sentiment, likely driven by the company’s strategic focus on the drone market and potential future growth opportunities. InvestingPro analysis indicates the stock is currently undervalued, with analyst price targets ranging from $4 to $8. The stock remains within its 52-week range of $1.91 to $4.55, with impressive momentum shown by a 44.62% return over the past six months. For deeper insights into Lantronix’s valuation and growth potential, check out the comprehensive Pro Research Report, available exclusively to InvestingPro subscribers.
Outlook & Guidance
Looking ahead, Lantronix projects FY 2026 revenue between $28.5 million and $30.5 million, with non-GAAP EPS expected to range from $0.02 to $0.04. The company anticipates gross margins to rebound to 44-45%, improving from the current trailing twelve-month margin of 41.13%. With a healthy current ratio of 2.68 and moderate debt levels, Lantronix maintains strong financial flexibility to pursue growth opportunities. The drone market is expected to contribute significantly to revenue, potentially representing 10-15% by FY 2027. InvestingPro subscribers have access to 12 additional key insights about Lantronix’s financial health and growth prospects.
Executive Commentary
CEO Saleo Alsare highlighted the transformative year for Lantronix, stating, "Fiscal twenty twenty-five marked a turning point for Lantronix, a year of disciplined execution, meaningful transformation, and building the foundation for sustainable long-term growth." He emphasized the favorable industry trends and the company’s strategic shift towards higher-margin business opportunities.
Risks and Challenges
- Supply chain disruptions could impact manufacturing and delivery timelines.
- Competitive pressures in the drone and IoT markets may affect market share.
- Macroeconomic uncertainties, including tariffs, could continue to pressure margins.
- Dependence on key contracts with government entities poses concentration risks.
Q&A
During the earnings call, analysts inquired about the drone market opportunity, with Lantronix estimating a potential $500 per device. The company also discussed its expansion into robotics and other camera-dependent markets, highlighting the strategic importance of its carrier partnership, which could significantly increase deployment volumes.
Full transcript - Lantronix Inc (LTRX) Q4 2025:
Conference Operator: Good day, and welcome to the Lantronix Fourth Quarter and Full Year twenty twenty five Results Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen only mode. Please note that this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Brent Stringham, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.
Brent Stringham, Chief Financial Officer, Lantronix: Good afternoon, and thank you for joining our fiscal fourth quarter and full year twenty twenty five earnings call. Joining me today is our President and Chief Executive Officer, Saleo Alsare. A live archived webcast of today’s call will be available on the company’s website. In addition, you can find the call in details for the phone replay in today’s earnings release. During this call, management may make forward looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties that could cause our results to differ materially from management’s current expectations.
We encourage you to review the cautionary statements and risk factors contained in the earnings release, which was furnished to the SEC today and is available on our website and in the company’s SEC filings, such as its 10 ks and 10 Qs. Lantronix undertakes no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward looking statements to reflect future events or circumstances. Please refer to the news release and the financial information in the Investor Relations section of our website for additional details that will supplement management’s commentary. Furthermore, during the call, the company will discuss non GAAP financial measures. Today’s earnings release, which is posted in the Investor Relations section of our website, describes the differences between our non GAAP and GAAP reporting and presents reconciliations for the non GAAP financial measures that we use.
With that, I will now turn the call over to Saleel.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Thanks, Brent, and thank you, everyone, for joining today’s call. Fiscal twenty twenty five marked a turning point for Lantronix, a year of disciplined execution, meaningful transformation and building the foundation for sustainable long term growth. The progress was evident in our fourth quarter results with revenue of $28,800,000 and a non GAAP EPS of zero one dollars both well within our quarterly guidance range. These results reflect a return to growth in our core revenue base, excluding the impact of Gridspertise, our EMEA smart grid customer. As we enter the new fiscal year, we see powerful industry dynamics creating significant opportunities for Lantronix.
We believe we are entering a multi year growth cycle for unmanned aerial systems supported by record defense funding and favorable regulatory momentum. According to the U. S. Department of Defense more than $13,000,000,000 is earmarked for unmanned platforms in 2026 that increased focus on secure U. S.
Made technologies. We believe the demand environment for our solutions has never been stronger. Against this backdrop of growing demand, we are beginning to see meaningful traction in the market, highlighted by our most recent win with Redcat’s Teal drones, which we formally announced last week. We’ve been collaborating with their team for some time and our TAA and NDA compliant solution now powers TEAL’s Black Widow drones for the U. S.
Army’s short range reconnaissance program. As a blue UAS approved platform, this program highlights both the rigor of qualification process and the mission critical role of our technology. We began shipments in the June, generating initial revenue and strengthening visibility into fiscal twenty twenty six. We believe our competitive edge lies in our deep camera expertise, military and other high performance drone requirements include advanced camera tuning, sensor fusion and complex software integration, capabilities we have refined over many years. Equally important being North America based and fully compliant with NDAA and TAA regulations further positions us as a trusted supplier to OEMs and defense contractors engaged in U.
S. Government programs. RedCap’s steel drones exemplifies our secure edge compute solutions, drive long term growth opportunities in the drone market. Beyond defense, our partnership with Aurora highlights our ability to deliver high performance HII solutions for commercial drone applications. By combining our compute module with Teledyne FLIR’s thermal camera and Prism AI software, we enable more intelligent real time decision making for applications like autonomous flight, surveillance and industrial inspection.
Early market feedback has been very positive and we expect revenue contribution from these solutions to begin in fiscal twenty twenty six. Looking ahead, we see broader industry trends, including government investment and rising demand for U. S.-based suppliers creating a strong runway for both defense and commercial growth. Moving to our next win, we recently signed a multi year agreement with a major U. S.
Mobile carrier to provide devices and services as they modernize over 50,000 backup power systems at wireless cell sites nationwide. This win is a strong validation of our edge infrastructure strategy, enabling resilient network uptime, improved lifecycle management and real time operational visibility across thousands of distributed locations. So far, we booked nearly all the initial units and have begun shipping in the June. With additional orders expected as the rollout continues, we believe this is a long term opportunity with this customer and expect additional volume beyond this initial deployment reflecting the depth of our relationship and the strategic nature of the program. In addition to the sizable hardware deployment, this design win also incorporates our perception platform enabling remote monitoring and ongoing management of connected assets.
As these devices are brought online, we expect they will contribute our growing base of high margin annual recurring revenue. This win also opens the door to broader collaboration with the carrier over time, including additional software enabled services and potential expansion across their larger network footprint. These types of win highlight our transition from a traditional hardware supplier to a strategic platform partner helping customers accelerate intelligence at the edge. This evolution positions us to capture a larger share of customer wallet, deepen long term relationships and embed our solution more directly in their critical operations. By moving up the value chain, we are not only expanding revenue opportunities, but also creating stickier high margin business over time.
Turning to our growth outlook. As we turn the corner into a new fiscal year, we are seeing growing momentum fueled by recent design wins that are expanding our customer base and enhancing the predictability of our business. This diversification marks an important step forward as as we move past the impact of Grizzpertise and underscores the underlying strength of our core platform. Q1 is off to a strong start with healthy engagement from both new and existing customers across multiple verticals. Our core business has stabilized and is now positioned to deliver growth over the longer term.
At the same time, we are beginning to see encouraging traction in our Edge AI strategy. Looking ahead, our visibility in fiscal twenty twenty six has improved supported by momentum across these two strategic pillars of our platform. Edge IoT spanning compute and connectivity and network infrastructure encompassing out of band management and networking solution. The momentum is driven by recent design wins in edge IoT and out of band,
Brent Stringham, Chief Financial Officer, Lantronix: continued investment in product innovation and expanding relationships across our distribution and technology partner ecosystems. Together, these initiatives reinforce our ability to scale profitably and capture long term opportunities at the intelligent edge. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Brent to provide more detail on our financial performance. Brent? Thanks, Saleel.
Building on that strategic context, I will now walk through our fourth quarter and fiscal twenty twenty five financial results, highlight the key drivers behind our performance and provide our outlook for the 2026. Looking back on fiscal twenty twenty five, we delivered revenue of $123,000,000 reflecting the transition from a record fiscal twenty twenty four to a more normalized revenue base. As we have noted before, fiscal twenty twenty four included a significant contribution from Gridsfertise, which accounted for roughly 25% of revenue that year. In fiscal twenty twenty five, we recognized just over $11,000,000 from Gridsfertise in the first half, with minimal revenue contribution in the second half of the year as the customer continued to work through its prior deployments. Excluding this customer, our core revenue base stabilized in the second half of the year and the operational discipline we’ve driven over the last twelve months positions us for more sustainable and diversified growth in fiscal twenty twenty six.
In the 2025, we delivered revenue of $28,800,000 a sequential increase from $28,500,000 in the prior quarter and approximately 4% higher than fiscal Q4 twenty twenty four when excluding the impact of GridSportees. This growth, driven by continued momentum in our Edge IoT products, underscores the strength of our core platform and the benefits of a more diversified revenue base. Turning to margins. In the fourth quarter, GAAP gross margin was 40% compared to 43.5% in the prior quarter and 38.1% in the year ago period. On a non GAAP basis, gross margin was 40.6% versus 44.1% last quarter and 38.8 in the year ago quarter.
The sequential decline primarily reflects inventory charges for aged inventory and higher duties and tariffs incurred in the quarter. Despite these temporary impacts, margins remain above the year ago period, reflecting benefits from our ongoing cost and supply chain initiatives as well as a favorable product mix. As we continue to carefully manage our inventories and the impact of tariffs, we expect gross margins to recover to the levels we achieved in the 2025. We have made strong progress on our ninety day plan to further improve our cost structure and supply chain efficiency. As of today, the vast majority of U.
S.-bound products are now manufactured outside of China, reducing costs and minimizing potential tariff exposure going forward. Turning to expenses and profitability. GAAP operating expenses in the 2025 were $14,700,000 down from $16,000,000 in the prior quarter and $18,200,000 in the year ago period. GAAP net loss for the 2025 was $2,600,000 or $07 per share compared to GAAP net income of $400,000 or $01 per share in the year ago quarter. GAAP results for both the fiscal fourth quarter and full year include restructuring charges of $900,000 and $3,500,000 respectively, related to the cost reduction initiatives we executed during the year.
On a non GAAP basis, we reported net income of just under $400,000 or $01 per share compared to non GAAP net income of $1,100,000 or $03 per share in the prior quarter. Cost reductions that we have discussed in recent quarters continue to benefit our P and L with non GAAP operating expenses down by just under $200,000 from the prior quarter and approximately $1,900,000 compared to the year ago quarter. Importantly, the proactive steps we took have reduced just over $4,000,000 of costs relative to fiscal twenty twenty four, and the implemented efficiency measures have created a leaner operating structure and meaningful leverage in our model. We streamlined our operations, optimized our supply chain and reduced operating expenses while continuing to invest into strategic growth initiatives. These actions allowed us to maintain profitability on a non GAAP basis despite the year over year revenue decline.
Turning to the balance sheet. Net inventories decreased to $26,400,000 as of 06/30/2025, compared to $28,200,000 in the prior quarter and $27,700,000 at the end of fiscal twenty twenty four. We ended the June with cash and cash equivalents of $20,100,000 up from the prior quarter. For the quarter, we generated positive operating cash flow, bringing our full year fiscal twenty twenty five operating cash flow to $7,300,000 During the year, we paid down approximately $4,500,000 of term debt or 28% of our outstanding balance. As of 06/30/2025, our remaining debt was approximately $11,800,000 resulting in a net cash position of $8,300,000 providing us with a stronger balance sheet entering fiscal twenty twenty six.
We also recently refinanced this term debt into an asset backed line of credit with the same lending partner. This refinancing reduces interest expense, provides greater flexibility on principal repayments and extends the maturity to August 2028. Together with our debt reduction efforts, these actions strengthen liquidity and improve the efficiency of our capital structure. Now turning to our outlook for the 2026, which ends 09/30/2025. We expect revenue to be in the range of $28,500,000 to $30,500,000 Non GAAP EPS is expected to be in the range of $02 to $04 per share.
With that, I’ll turn the call back to Saleel for closing remarks.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Thanks, Brent. To close, fiscal twenty twenty five was a year of transformation for Lantronix, one in which we built a strong foundation for profitable growth and positioned the company to capitalize on high value opportunities and edge AI and infrastructure modernization. We reshaped our global operations, established four centers of excellence, streamlined our cost structure and strengthened our balance sheet. We successfully integrated the Netcomm IoT acquisition and deepened our strategic partnership with Qualcomm, expanding our capabilities in edge IoT and AI driven innovation. On top of this, we proactively mitigated tariff exposure and realigned our supply chain, actions that reduce risk and support improved gross margin performance going forward.
Collectively, these initiatives have focused our resources on the highest impact opportunities, embedded meaningful operating leverage into our model and strategically reposition Nantronix to scale with sustained profitability as we enter fiscal twenty twenty six. With that, we now open the call for your questions.
Conference Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session.
: Question will
Conference Operator: And your first question today will come from Jason Schmidt with Lake Street. Please go ahead.
Jason Schmidt, Analyst, Lake Street: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Just want to start with the drone opportunity. Obviously, a massive market and you guys are seeing some really nice traction here out of the gate. How should we think about the potential for you guys here in the near term, both with Redcat and what you potentially have in the pipeline?
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Jason, Saleel, thank you for that question. We are extremely excited about the drone market and the drone opportunity. Just to give you a frame reference, we announced Red CAT about a week ago, but as of this quarter, we have over 10 different drone makers that we’re working on, mainly military or industrial applications. We see this market growing really nicely into fiscal twenty twenty six, representing a meaningful portion of our business longer term. And again, it’s fueled by programs like the SRR with Redcat and as more funding comes, we are well suited there.
And I think the key is our competitive edge is our expertise in cameras. We’ve been working around cameras for a long time and that’s really what a road requires. The camera tuning, the fusion, the software integration and then us being North American based NDA and TA certified really allows us to win these contracts. So we have shipped as I said last quarter, I mean in the June, we have visibility into fiscal twenty twenty six with a few of the 10 drone makers and as we get into early twenty twenty six calendar, we’ll be seeing more of these companies going into production. So we are feeling really good as I sit here today.
Jason Schmidt, Analyst, Lake Street: Okay, that’s really helpful. And then just as a follow-up, if you could comment on sort of what you’re seeing from a bookings or order perspective so far here in September. If I look back at the past few years, usually September is sequentially down, but obviously the midpoint of your guidance for September here is for growth sequentially. Just curious if you could provide some additional color around the dynamics driving that growth?
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Yes, Jason, another great question. You’re right, in the past maybe last year or the year before we might have, we were down sequentially. We are seeing momentum in our business. We are seeing new customers that we’ve acquired and the momentum is really broad based throughout our core business, including our Edge IoT, which is some of it is new and then even our networking business and out of band also is growing nicely into this quarter. So, build a lot of confidence as you think about fiscal twenty twenty six.
Jason Schmidt, Analyst, Lake Street: Perfect. Thanks a lot guys.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Thank you, Jason.
Conference Operator: And your next question today will come from Ryan Koontz with Needham and Company. Please go ahead.
Ryan Koontz, Analyst, Needham and Company: Great. Thanks. You had some real interesting comments there on gross margin. I just want to make sure I’m not losing the forest through the trees here, so to speak. Can you maybe unpack that, Saleel, in terms of how you think about gross margins evolving over the next twelve months?
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Yes, Ryan, great question. I think, not I think, I know in the June, we had some one off gross margin related items like tariffs and some inventory. But moving forward, it’s going to be closer to 44%, 45% for the fiscal year. But I’ll pass the mic to Brent to add a little bit more color to that.
Brent Stringham, Chief Financial Officer, Lantronix: Yes, think Ryan as we talked about in the prepared remarks, we’re seeing gross margins for the upcoming quarters here in fiscal ’twenty six returning to what we saw a year ago in the Silvio mentioned 44%. We’re trending in that direction going forward.
Ryan Koontz, Analyst, Needham and Company: Great. Super. Thanks for that clarification. And then maybe all these opportunities in the drone market around defense and unmanned vehicles. Can you talk a little bit about how is that a new channel for you?
Are you working direct? Are you working through integrators? I mean, maybe walk through some of the commercial side of these drone opportunities. Are they very similar to your business of the past or is it or somewhat new kind of market motion? Thanks.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Yes, Ryan, another great question. And you and I have spoken before, we kind of started on this journey of unmanned UAS or drones in calendar twenty four and into that we’ve kind of worked with Teledyne FLIR which was a very important announcement that we did. They are the leader in thermal imaging cameras, is this market is all about. They gave us, hey, we are a great partner for them. So that helped us and we worked with them on major designs.
And then just having this camera expertise working with some of the integrators that are out there and we’ve increased our understanding of the market, what we can do for the market and that’s how we’ve really gotten to winning somebody like Redcat on one of their big programs. And this one we pretty much got done in eight months from beginning to end. So it was really all systems go, all hands on deck to get them ready. So we are very proud of what we’ve done there.
Ryan Koontz, Analyst, Needham and Company: That’s great. So Teledyne sounds like somebody they’re pulling you into some of these deals in a kind of a partner ecosystem?
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Yes. Teledyne first is pulling us into quite a few and they’re a big company with a
Brent Stringham, Chief Financial Officer, Lantronix: lot of access. So it’s been very helpful.
Ryan Koontz, Analyst, Needham and Company: Yes. That’s great. Maybe one last one, if I can squeeze it in. You talked about this backup generator for sell side opportunities, great to finally get that deal closed. Any more you can tell us about that?
And are there other opportunities similar to that in the pipeline that you can address? Thank you.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Yes. Thanks, Ryan. Another great question, right. We announced a big Tier one mobile win with about 50,000 of our gateways, our FOX gateways in that and we anticipate longer term this should be at least three times what it is, as we progress over the next couple of years. So the good news is we booked most of the order.
We started to ship in the June, which we did and we’ll continue to ship throughout this fiscal year. I do want to make one point of clarification Ryan, which is I think very important. Not only are we selling a hardware, but we are also incorporating our perception platform, enabling remote monitoring and device management. And as these devices come online, we are starting to get our first real ARR or annual recurring revenue. So that’s another great thing.
So that’s going to start at this is not starting at a big number, but as they move more and more devices come online, it’s going to do that. So it shows the investments that we were making in the last eighteen months in these areas where giving a platform, giving a solution has enabled us to be successful. So I’m optimistic just with this vendor, it could get bigger and there are more that we’re working on.
Ryan Koontz, Analyst, Needham and Company: Great. That’s all I’ve got. Thanks so much, Lou.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Thank you, Ryan.
Conference Operator: And your next question today will come from Christian Schwab with Craig Hallum Capital Group. Please go ahead.
Christian Schwab, Analyst, Craig Hallum Capital Group: Great. Thanks for taking my question. Just as it relates to the drone opportunity, can you give us an idea of what your average dollar content would be per device, not specifically to Redcat itself, but the entire 10 customers you’re dealing with just kind of to give us either an idea of what your dollar content is, please?
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Yes, great question, Christian. It’s approximately around $500 So it’s pretty very good from an ASP perspective. So as the volumes get into the many thousands or tens of thousands, this is meaningful revenue for the company as you think about moving forward.
Christian Schwab, Analyst, Craig Hallum Capital Group: Great. And then in your prepared comments, you talked about a meaningful revenue opportunity. I assume some customers, of course, have different volumes that they would be planning on shipping over a multiyear time frame. When you think of that market, could you give us a broad range of revenue? Is this a $5,000,000 business in two years?
Is this a $20,000,000 business that some guidepost for us to be thinking about?
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Yes, great question again, Christian. I would say the opportunity per customer, and again, some are going to be bigger, some are going to be smaller. The customer size could be four million to five million dollars annualized each customer. Again, as I said, the ones that we’re working with today, if they are a bit smaller ones, could be smaller. But again, they’re going to come online and as they win their sockets.
So could this be a 10% to 15% of Lantronix revenue in fiscal twenty twenty seven? There’s a probability it could get there. But we’re working through all that and working through all the customers. But the opportunity size on some of the early ones are 3,000,000 to $5,000,000 each.
Christian Schwab, Analyst, Craig Hallum Capital Group: Great. No other questions. Thank you, guys. Good quarter.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Thank you.
Conference Operator: Your next question today will come from Scott Searle with ROTH Capital. Please go ahead.
: Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. Looks like I’ll back clean up. Maybe just a quick clarification, Brent, on the inventory write down. I’m wondering if you could quantify that.
I’m not sure if I missed that. And then a couple of the segments there. I just want to clarify, what are you seeing in terms of out of band management in terms of in the June and as we’re going into the back half of the calendar year here? And I just want to clarify in terms of the September guidance that there’s no grid expertise in those numbers. And then I had a couple of follow ups.
Brent Stringham, Chief Financial Officer, Lantronix: Yes. Thanks, Scott. On the inventory, one way to maybe look at it is based on the margins that we disclosed here in the quarter, we said that tariffs were a part of that. Probably made tariffs probably made up about 100 basis points of the decline in margin quarter over quarter with a large part of difference being some of the inventory charges that we took in the quarter. Could you repeat the second part of your question?
: Out of band management contribution in the quarter, what kind of growth were you seeing in June? What are you guys seeing in terms of the book and the build of business as we’re looking into the second half?
Brent Stringham, Chief Financial Officer, Lantronix: Yes. Out of band, quarter over quarter, obviously, we don’t break out the details at that level, but out of band is was up quarter over quarter from our third quarter and we’re seeing pretty solid momentum in that business with some of the resources and other things we have going on in that product line. And then you had asked about was the Yes, third part of your
: just in terms
Brent Stringham, Chief Financial Officer, Lantronix: Yes, we don’t currently have any grid expertise estimates in our guidance.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Scott, just to put it right, we’ve had no grids for tees since January 1, right. So we’ve taken it out. As I said, the core business is growing nicely.
: Great. Now just wanted to clarify. Now, Talil, the drone opportunity really starting to perk up for you. It seems like there’s an incredible backlog of opportunities. Is there a number that you’re comfortable with in fiscal ’twenty six?
You talked about fiscal twenty twenty seven maybe being 10% to 15% of revenues. Kind of what is that what do you think that looks like in fiscal twenty twenty six? And when does it start to become meaningful in terms of contribution on a quarterly basis in fiscal twenty twenty six?
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: We don’t specifically call out the details, but it’s definitely going to be meaningful in this year and it’s in the millions of dollars for the fiscal year, Brian. It’s not tens of millions this year, but since in the millions of dollars. And as I said, these guys are just starting to launch and our ASP is pretty good at around $400 it’s $500 approximately give or take. So we’re feeling good about that. Does that kind of give you a goalpost for this Absolutely
: does. Just trying to calibrate where we are in the ramp and maybe Saleel to follow-up on that front. I want to make sure I understand in terms of your software content versus what Slur brings to the equation. And then as you look at the characteristics of why you’re being adopted in drones being at low power, right, I think you’re leveraging off of Qualcomm processors as well as your computer vision and AI capabilities. There are other markets related to security, surveillance, etcetera, that fit into that as well.
So I’m wondering if there are, I’ll call them, tethered opportunities as opposed to drones and UAV that are starting to perk up in your backlog or opportunity pipeline?
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Yes. So a bunch of questions there, right. So FLIR is a partner, but it’s not for everyone. I want to be clear about that, right. FLIR is with some of the customers that we’re working with.
The recent announced win we did does not use Flur. So we had to provide some camera tuning, some of the software that we had and they also had some software. So it was kind of a combination of both teams. Remember, we did some services work for them. So it was kind of getting together on this.
So FLIR is great. It’s doing well for us, but we also are doing independent programs, Scott, on that. The other area that this is going to go into is robotics as you think about it, because robotics needs cameras. Those are very on the early days. I think you’ll see opportunities percolating probably calendar Q1, calendar Q2 that we are looking at.
But right now, we are laser focused on the drone area. As you know, the U. S. Government is making a big push. The Secretary of Defense, HEXA talked about two drones per platoon, the smaller ones.
And you hit the key point. We have worked with our customer to make sure that they have enough range. And there’s a whole and you and I can talk offline of what the range means and how that needs to be. So right now, it’s all hands on deck to get these guys, multiple guys over the hub.
: Got you. And lastly, if I could, I’ll just slip one in on the carrier opportunity. There’s a nice recurring revenue component that goes along with it. I’m not sure if you quantify that. I’d love to get your thoughts.
And then just in terms of RFP pipeline, it sounds like you think that could be three exercise of where it is today. I’m just kind of wondering if you’re actually those opportunities are currently percolating or with a formal RFP or if you guys are just continuing to knock on other doors? Thanks.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: So two questions. We do call out software and services, so the ARR will be a part of that. But we also have service portion of that. So it’s going to be shown in that line as you think about the future. As for the carrier one, there is one RFP that we are bidding on and we believe we were at a good high probability of getting that.
But this carrier company has now sent us to the Generacs and these other guys who make these backup power generators and they’ve kind of told us we are the approved vendor for So that also is in motion as you think about it. So therefore, we believe in the next few years, next couple of years, this should be a larger portion. As I said, could be as high as three times of what we announced already.
: Perfect. Thanks so much.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: Thank you, Scott. This
Conference Operator: will conclude our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Saleel Assaray for any closing remarks.
Saleo Alsare, President and Chief Executive Officer, Lantronix: I want to thank everyone for you joining us. I know it’s Labor Day coming up. So please enjoy the weekend and Lantronix will be at the Gateway Conference next week in San Francisco. Please hopefully you can join us there. Thank you so much.
Conference Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.
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