Q4 2023 Nanophase Technologies Corp Earnings Call

In This Article:

Participants

Jess Jankowsi; President, CEO, CFO, & Director; Nanophase Technologies Corp

Kevin Cureton; COO; Nanophase Technologies Corp

Wayne Ron

James Lieberman; Analyst; Revere Securities LLC

Ron Richards

Presentation

Operator

Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Nanophase fourth quarter 2023 financial conference call. (Operator Instructions) Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded.
The words believes, expects, anticipates, plans, forecast, and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements contained in this news release that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements that are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements reflect the Company's current beliefs, and a number of important factors could cause actual results for future periods to differ materially from those expressed in this news release.
These important factors include, without limitation, a decision of the customer to cancel a purchase order or supply agreement demand for and acceptance of the Company's personal care ingredients, advanced materials and formulated products, changes in development and distribution relationships, the impact of competitive products and technologies, possible disruption in commercial activities, occasioned by public health issues, terrorist activity and armed conflict, and other risks indicated in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Nanophase undertakes no obligation to update or revise these forward-looking statements to reflect new events or uncertainties.
I would now like to hand the conference over to the President and CEO, Jess Jankowski. Please proceed.

Jess Jankowsi

Thanks for that introduction, Carmen, and good morning to all of those listening live and welcome to those who choose to listen later online. Thanks for joining us today for a discussion of our full year 2023 results and more importantly, an update of the state of the business and our outlook for 2024. We've seen many changes over the past year, and we believe we're beginning to see some of them pay off. Kevin Pearson, our Chief Operating Officer is joining me on the call today. We have prepared comments, then Kevin and I will be available for some Q&A afterwards.
Today, we plan on covering 2023 results, the ongoing litigation between Nanophase and BASF and critically how we position ourselves to turn the corner to sustainability and profitability. Going forward. We'll spend the bulk of our time today talking about the future as it reflects why we're all here in discussing this, we'll also share some of the major efforts we've made to measure and manage to our 2024 plans for KPI.s in a high degree of focus on critical areas that have presented chronic problems in the past.
In Q4, we added an experienced purchasing manager followed by an experienced buyer in Q1 of this year, we've seen the impact of our new VP of Operations supported further by our purchasing adds yield a higher degree of control and greater efficiencies in our operations. We've also just concluded an additional financing, which will give us some breathing room in terms of supporting the rapidly expanding expanded working capital demands that our incredible growth has placed on our companies. We expect the degree to which this will, I hope to enhance our operations this year to become obvious to everybody in the coming months before we continue, let's walk through the numbers unless identified otherwise. All numbers will be stated in approximate terms.
Performance in Q4 2023 was similar to Q4 2020 two's both falling short of our plan and our expectations. We saw $8 million in 2023's fourth quarter versus $8.3 million in revenue for the same period in 2022 and losses of $2.1 million and $2 million, respectively. A marked difference between the two periods was a Q4 of 2023 represented a period of conscious investment in restructuring the business for greater efficiency. We were also able to lock down our inventory for 2023, which had historically been difficult. We invested a great deal of time in working through raw material shortage shortages helped substantially by the addition of our new purchasing resources. This hurt us in Q4 in the first part of this quarter, but we believe we now have it under control and have adopted a systematic approach to our blood supply chain management backed by experienced professionals that have already paid for themselves.
Looking at the full year comparable numbers, we had $37.3 million in revenue for both full years 2023 and 2022.
In terms of revenue mix, Solesence revenue was up 9% to $25.2 million in 2023, while personal care ingredients and Advanced Materials were down by 17% and 9% respectively. Some of our struggles with working capital along with material shortages, kept our Solesence growth lower than it should have been and lower than it will be in 2024. We were unable to satisfy all of the demand that we've had for Solesence finished products and demand continues to grow. We see the light at the end of the tunnel here and expect these shortfalls to be much more manageable as we get further into 2020 for the Solesence growth was largely offset by the 17% reduction in year-over-year BSF. revenue. I mentioned, amounting to $1.8 million. While we expect the SAF revenue, which, as you may recall, relates to sunscreen active ingredients to stabilize, it is something over which we have less control than in the finished products business. We felt for Solesence analyzing the dynamics in each market ingredients versus finished products. It's easy for us to draw the conclusion that our development of Solesence was the right strategy to maximize the value of our companies. For the full year of 2023, we had a net loss of $4.4 million versus a net loss of $2.6 million for the same period in 2022. This trend was certainly a disturbing one and one that we believe we've addressed effectively for 2024.
I'll cover operating expenses first, then discuss our vision for improving gross margins and throughput materially in 2024. R&d expenses, which include engineering, were up by about 26% year over year. This was due to increases in staffing, product testing and intellectual property intellectual property development. These things are necessary to allow us to remain in further prestige cosmetics market as well as to support new technologies, which we expect will keep us in the rapid growth curve we've enjoyed with Solesence to this point, we expect to see these expenses flatten in 2024.
In terms of SG&A expenses, they appear to be relatively flat year over year, but they included some items that we don't expect to repeat. The greatest of these are legal fees relating to the BASF litigation. They amounted to $1.3 million in 2023 versus $400,000 in 2022, almost 90% of the $1.3 million in fees were incurred during the first nine months of 2023 related fees for Q4 of 23 amounted to $130,000 or 10% of the total showing a market. Clay legal fees have gone down as we continue to work with BSF toward a mutually beneficial solution, focusing on business issues more than legal issues. While it's not over till it's over, we're optimistic that we'll resolve this litigation soon and be able to focus all of our attention and energy in building the value of the business, not reflected in any of our 2023 SG&A numbers is the reduction in force and rationalization of operating expenses we implemented during mid Q4, we expect to see people related expenses go down, which will contribute further to what we expect will be a reduction in overall SG&A for 2024. We also had an additional 500,000 in interest expense due to increases in interest rates and our need to finance our expanded working capital demand, mainly through debt our recent financing will help us to reduce our dependence on debt in this regard, along with expected interest expenses, in addition to manufacturing efficiencies, which we'll touch on in a minute all of the things we just discussed will contribute materially to 2024 profitability.
Now I'd like to address the changes we're implementing in manufacturing that we expect to yield material improvements, a function of having to wrestle with their working capital needs to such a great extent in 2023 was that we were forced to delay a series of relatively modest modest capital equipment enhancements that have hard cash payback periods ranging from 15 to 30 months, not to mention the advantages of higher throughput and helping us to capture our growing demand. I have three projects in mind that given our recent financing and the stability it has added, we're currently completing. The first is the installation of a lab that will allow us to complete more of our microbial testing in-house. Every run of Solesence products that we produce currently get sampled and sent to an outside lab from microbial testing. This is a time-consuming and expensive process. Our QC costs have climbed as we've grown and more and more batches of good thing have resulted in higher and higher testing costs as well as the associated delays with sending samples to outside labs were required to run tests that take more than a week and must be completed.
And final packaging. We've had our microbiologist working to build our own lab beginning in 2022. We started the equipment investment in 2023 and had to hold off due to cash pressures. This was a double-edged sword costing more money and outside testing, which is a direct hit to our gross margin as volumes increased, causing more tests. And we were unable to capitalize on our on our investment to that point, we'll invest less than 400,000 in 2024. To finish this project, we will have a hard dollar payback of less than two years saving approximately $300,000 per year at current volumes and will take a week or more out of our cash cycle. This will also lead to happier customers.
Second project involves the transition of our wet processing lines from Romeoville to our Bowling Brook facility. When we found extra time in Q4 as production was held up, we invested some of that time and beginning to transition our wet processing to our Bowling Brook facility. Given that we now do 100% of our filling in assembly and Bowling Brook, this is a logical next step. This project has a 2.5 year payback, and we expect it to yield more than $400,000 per year in hard cash savings or even more as volume increases.
Third project involves the further expansion and automation of our filling in assembly processes. In Bowling Brook, we have five clean rooms running or rentable and Bowling Brook, two of which are fully utilizing a high degree of automation for a relatively small investment, will add automated capacity to two of the remaining three rooms, which will increase throughput while reducing costs per unit as our business volume and product suite has expanded. We found that it's much more efficient to have different rooms dedicated to different types of filling and assembly, be it for tubes, titles, sticks, bottles or whatever configuration the market desires. Some equipment is currently serving double duty and needs to be reconfigured as we switch between product types more often than it makes sense. Given our growing volumes, we expect this project to have a roughly 15 month payback period. These three projects in total will cost just over $2 million with some of this total expenditure having already been made in 2023, we expect payback for the combined projects to be less than two years. We also expect that these three projects will allow us to produce up to $100 million in Solesence finished products. This additional capacity will become available by late summer, but we're not nearly satisfied with our 2023 results. We are doing the things we must to capitalize on the fantastic products we continue to develop and sell.
Now I'd like to ask Kevin Cureton, our Chief Operating Officer, to share his comments and as optimism around the progress we're making and the approach we're taking through 2024. Kevin.