Transcript
Good afternoon, and welcome to Aware’s Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. Joining us today is the company’s CEO and President, Robert Eckel, and CFO, David Barcelo. Following their remarks, we will open the call for questions. Before we begin today’s call, I’d like to remind everyone that the presentation today contains forward-looking statements based on the current expectations of Aware’s management and involve inherent risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described. Listeners should please take note of the Safe Harbor paragraph included at the end of today’s press release, which emphasizes the major uncertainties and risks associated with forward-looking statements that management will be making today. Aware wishes to caution you that there are factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the results indicated by such statements. These risks and uncertainties are also outlined in the company’s SEC filings, including its Annual Report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. Any forward-looking statements should be considered in light of these factors. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date made. Although Aware may voluntarily update or revise the forward-looking statements from time to time, the company undertakes no commitment to do so, except as required by applicable securities laws. Additionally, this call contains certain non-GAAP financial measures, as defined by the SEC and Regulation G. Non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered in isolation from, or as a substitute for, financial information presented in compliance with GAAP. Accordingly, Aware has provided a reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most direct comparable GAAP measures in the company’s earnings release issued today. I’d like to remind everyone that this presentation will be recorded and made available for replay via a link in the Investor Relations section of the company’s website. Now, I’d like to turn the call over to Aware’s CEO and President, Bob Eckel. Bob?
Thanks, Matt. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. After the market close, we issued a press release, announcing our results for the second quarter ending June 30, 2021. A copy of the press release is available in the Investor Relations section of our website. On our third earnings call together, I am proud to report that we are continuing to see the initial impacts of the restructuring that we began just over 18 months ago. I am thankful for the opportunity to address all of you and reiterate why we believe Aware is poised for rapid growth in the coming years. Today, I plan to discuss the progress we’ve made throughout the second quarter. And why we are looking forward to what lies ahead. On this call, I will provide you with a high-level overview of this quarter’s operational results. I will then turn it over to our CFO, Dave Barcelo, to review more details on the financial results for the quarter. And then take some time to discuss what we have on the near and long-term horizons. After that, we will open the call for your questions. In the second quarter of 2021, we made several key advancements on ongoing initiatives that have and will prepare us well for our future. One of the most notable is the successful integration of the AFIX product line, which we acquired in November of last year. Financially, we are seeing an immediate top-line uplift, which will pay for itself in a relatively short time span. This quarter also marks the fourth consecutive quarter of record Knomi transactions with more than 18 million transactions in the first half compared to 11 million in all of 2020. We are already at five times the number of transactions in the first half of 2020. As our transformation continues and subscription customers begin to record transactions beyond contract minimums, we expect these to convert to a stable growing revenue stream. More and more government agencies and subject matter experts are paying attention to our unique value proposition. This is evidenced by a considerable, large and growing pipeline in the base. Unlike some others in the biometric space who offer point solutions or a single modality for specific applications, we can provide multi-modal multi-function applications that interface with all kinds of devices, systems, and hardware via our biometric middleware. This advantage enables us to compete and effectively beat entry-level and single offering players in the market. On the other end of the spectrum, there are identity leaders competing for complex programs and deliveries that require a full suite of hardware and an integrated software solution. While we are not a systems integrator and therefore did not directly bid for these large-scale projects, we can and do partner with many of these leaders and others to provide our hardened proven software as requested. Our unique approach to biometrically accessibility complemented by our core offerings provides us exposure to customers of all sizes in all geographies. I’m looking forward to talking about what lies ahead on the horizon in a little bit, but for now I’ll turn it over to Dave Barcelo who will walk us through our financial results for the quarter. Dave, over to you.
Thank you, Bob. Good afternoon to everyone on the call. Let’s turn our attention to the financial results for the second quarter ended June 30, 2021. Our total revenue in the second quarter was up 2.3 times the same year-ago period, from $1.9 million in 2020 to $4.3 million. This compares to revenue of $4.4 million in the first quarter. Year-to-date, for the six months ended June 30, 2021, our total revenue increased 61% to $8.7 million, up from $5.4 million in the same year-ago period. The increase in revenue was primarily due to increased subscription-based revenue from growing transaction volume with existing customers and the upfront recognition of fixed minimum transaction amounts from two new international wins. With regards to our operating expenses for the second quarter of 2021, our operating expenses increased 4% to $5.8 million from $5.6 million in Q2 of last year. For the six months ended June 30, 2021, our operating expenses increased 12% to $11.7 million from $10.5 million in the same year-ago period. The quarterly and six-month period increases are due primarily to sales and marketing resources acquired through our AFIX acquisition. The corresponding operating loss from the second quarter of 2021 was negative $1.5 million compared to an operating loss of negative $3.7 million in the same year-ago period; an improvement of 58% over last year. The year-over-year decrease in operating loss resulted primarily from the increased revenue. Operating loss for the six months ended June 30, 2021 was negative $3 million compared to an operating loss of negative $5 million in the prior year period. The decrease in operating loss was primarily the result of increased revenues. For the second quarter of 2021, GAAP net loss totaled negative $1.5 million or negative $0.07 per diluted share compared to a GAAP net loss of negative $3.1 million or negative $0.15 per diluted share in the same year-ago period. GAAP net loss for the six months ended June 30, 2021 totaled negative $3 million or negative $0.14 per diluted share compared to a GAAP net loss of negative $4.2 million or negative $0.20 per diluted share in the prior year period. Our adjusted EBITDA loss for the quarter, which we reconcile in our earnings release totaled negative $900,000, which compares to an adjusted EBITDA loss of negative $3.3 million in the same year-ago period. For the six months ended June 30, 2021, adjusted EBITDA loss totaled negative $2 million compared to an adjusted EBITDA loss of negative $4.5 million in the prior year period. On the balance sheet, we had $35.2 million in cash and cash equivalents at the end of the quarter, compared to $38.6 million as of December 31, 2020. For the six-month period, the use of cash was primarily from operations, and we maintain a strong and strategic cash position that enables us to allocate capital to high ROI opportunities as they present themselves. We’re actively evaluating opportunities to ensure that we’re making strategic investments to realize growth and scale as an organization. Organically, we’ve seen significant growth from our Knomi subscription accounts. We recorded more than 18 million transactions in the first half, which is five times the number of recorded transactions in the first half of 2020. This is compared to 11 million in all of 2020. The growing volumes are testing the strength and scalability of this product line, and the success is paving the way for future growth as new customers onboard based on the recommendations of our current customer base. This completes my financial summary. Now I’d like to turn the call back to Bob for additional insights on our operational progress, our key initiatives and our priorities in 2021 and beyond. Bob?
Thanks, Dave. Last year, when we began ramping up our diligence on acquisition targets, we were particularly looking for opportunities that would be both immediately accretive and synergistic with our business transformation. AFIX, which provides turnkey face and fingerprint biometric matching and forensic analysis software for small to medium-sized law enforcement and government agencies, fit those criteria. In addition to accelerating and securing our future expansion in law enforcement and civil ID, the introduction of Aware’s facial recognition software in the AFIX products provides an extra layer of validation and authority that is essential for bringing new accounts into the sales funnel and converting them into customers. Simply put, our purchase of AFIX gives us the ability to grow and serve a much more diverse customer base. Whether they’re looking for smaller solutions or larger enterprise solution implementations that can scale to millions of identities and records, we have jointly recognized operational cost savings, development savings, and most importantly, an even better AFIX product to help law enforcement serve and protect their communities. Now that we’ve fully integrated AFIX’s products, people, and culture into ours, we are already making traction in business development. And once Aware’s facial recognition software powers the AFIX system, we all achieve higher performance at a lower cost with a comprehensive service. We’re happy to report post-integration that the customer retention rate remains upward of 90%, mirroring our core retention profile. In fact, customers are doubling down on previous commitments, contemplating the addition of Aware’s facial recognition and additional modalities that are now available to them. The connectivity and compatibility of AFIX with our ABIS offering will allow counties or municipalities to scale and connect with other agencies. They would be able to use all the same tools they’ve been using as existing customers, but now with premium service and unprecedented interconnectedness made possible by our middleware. This type of investigative ability will allow agencies to be more self-reliant while at the same time providing assistance to other law enforcement departments in the area. With AFIX under our wing and part of our portfolio, we have also experienced remarkably positive second-order effects that will ultimately play a transformational role in bolstering our top line. By acquiring the AFIX customer book of business, we have developed a strong lever through which we are able to address bids for much larger projects. Our association with AFIX has provided us with references based on more than 500 sites across the U.S. and in more than 25 countries. Some prospects looking to solve problems that our core offerings address would not entertain our bids without the credibility that these references provide. Now, we have increased our access to a larger set of opportunities that are much higher value. With each new connection via AFIX, we increase the likelihood of winning these adjacent opportunities. At just over halfway through the year, we have a line of sight into a number of these deals and are working diligently to secure them. For these reasons, the AFIX acquisition is exemplary of how we want integrations to go. The team is ready and skilled in this area. It’s also an excellent case study that speaks to the effectiveness of a hybrid organic and inorganic growth strategy. As Dave said earlier, we are in a strong financial position and are looking to deploy capital to the highest value inorganic opportunities. To that end, we’ve identified additional opportunities that we believe meet our criteria. Though we do not have any updates to report at this time, we are continuing to actively monitor and review the space and ramp up our diligence. Turning to our financial performance, we are encouraged by the more than doubling of our Q2 top line from last year. Though we are still in the early stage of removing the lumpiness associated with term and the legacy perpetual license model, it’s clear that we are on a longer-term trajectory that’s trending upwards. As we continue to ramp up the subscription side of our business, our model tells us that some of those lumpiness will more or less fade away as the lump sum minimal contract recognitions represent a smaller proportion of total revenues than the recurring revenue base. We’ve also begun to see initial expansion in our installed base with existing customers leveraging our product portfolio for more use cases and/or adding modalities to address additional applications of our technology. In the prior two calls, I described the importance of working with partners to provide us exposure to new verticals and expand our reach in existing verticals. Last month, we successfully leveraged a technology partnership with Imprivata to enter the healthcare space, which at this time is red hot. While the global facial recognition technology market at large is anticipated to grow at a CAGR of 23%, the healthcare biometric market exceeds that at a CAGR of 24.2%. It’s an exciting place to be and with a record number of revolutionary health tech firms working on disruptive technology, there’s room for us to grow. We see a fit for biometrics in any use case where trusted transactions are important, and healthcare is no exception. With biometric enablement quickly becoming the future of business, travel, healthcare, and our general livelihoods, we recognize the added pressure on software providers like us to protect data and maintain the privacy of our users. That responsibility to our users has always been a core pillar of our business. As we navigate our ramp-up, we’re taking actionable steps to continue addressing these issues directly so our users can own their identities. We took one of these steps back in February when we announced the appointment of Gary Evee to the Board of Directors. With more than 25 years of IT experience, he brings deep domain knowledge and directly applicable cybersecurity expertise to Aware. Internally, we’re also onboarding critical leadership and support staff to identify areas of focus as we work to build a proactive plan to mitigate risk and deliver high-quality assurance to our customers. This is a pivotal moment for Aware. With firsthand validation of our organic and inorganic hybrid growth strategy alongside a growing pipeline, we have a great deal of optimism for our future and outlook. We are looking forward to the rest of the year and believe that a multi-pronged transformation strategy and implementation that we rolled out during our first call in February has begun to materialize and is in full swing. All of us at Aware are excited about what lies ahead and we are grateful for your support as we navigate it together. With that, we are ready to open the call for questions. Matt, please provide the appropriate instructions.
Thank you, Bob. Can you elaborate on the scope of business opportunities resulting from the AFIX acquisition? You mentioned bids being reviewed that wouldn’t have been without the credibility of AFIX. What do you mean by that? Bob?
Thanks, Matt. Well, the global law enforcement software market is over $10 billion, and the acquisition of AFIX provided Aware with a strong customer base of over 180 agencies to enable us to grow our market share and sell both AFIX and our ABIS products. By combining both product families and leveraging the expertise of the AFIX team, we’re able to serve the ABIS needs in both large, small, and medium addressable markets, which is estimated to be around a couple hundred million. But prior to the AFIX acquisition, we wouldn’t get a shot at presenting our solution because of the basic reference requirements of the tenders. We had to describe active deployments, customer references, and with the AFIX fully integrated into the ABIS family, we’re able to lean on those deployments and we call them 'street cred' to continue and use the same word. It passes the initial gatekeeping round of reviews. So once we’re passed the gatekeeper, we’ve been able to highlight how valuable Aware ABIS is, and we are in active discussions around potential deployments of the offering. So it’s helped us a lot to get in the door and expand in that area as well.
Great. Thanks, Bob. Venture capital dollars have poured into biometrics. How does Aware intend to compete with these new competitors?
Okay. That’s a great question. Thanks for asking, Matt. Let me step back a little bit and put it into the competitors that we’re really looking at. The bigger players and the end-to-end identity providers, like the large well-established companies that have established solutions and market share—that’s category one. Then you have point solution or the use case providers, and then the new entrants and small companies. What we’re seeing is a lot of private equity and venture investing in the last two areas. As we monitor the market, we’re seeing new entrants or small companies falling into one of three areas. This is where we compete differently: the use case-specific entrants, which are companies that identify a particular problem, focus, and develop a specific purpose using biometric technology; then you’ve got a couple of other companies entering that focus on vertical markets, picking a specific vertical and addressing as many use cases as they can for biometrics in that vertical; and lastly, innovators or inventors, whose entrants have breakthrough or core new technologies that are very feature-focused and look for ways to commercialize their new technologies. Interestingly enough, these entrants are critical to the growth of the industry and bring useful and new perspectives to it. But they also need time to mature and validate their business models and address risk. It’s not easy to take market share from well-established players who are already in production. We have deep production roots along with deep references and credentials as well. We look at the competitive pressure of the new entrants to give us some emphasis for continuous breakthrough innovation along with introducing monetization of that. We acknowledge the resource backing by the VCs which are a force to be reckoned with, but they also help validate the market and our credibility within the market that we’re in. There’s a long road to viability when monetizing an idea. New entrants will face the challenge of finding the right business model. At Aware, we have tested our markets and established a good understanding of these challenges. We also manage and evaluate new entrant technology relative to performance and we have resources dedicated to research to retain our leadership, while also having access to the voice of the customer through our installed base and through other market research to provide thought leadership. We focus on an adaptive competitive model, remaining as nimble as possible to compete by adapting to the needs of the marketplace. We can see different modalities and single modalities emerging and this is helping us to secure and expand our customer base this quarter and in the future.
Thanks, Bob. A number of questions were submitted around the potential sale of the building in Bedford. Instead of reading them all individually, Dave, can you provide more color around the potential sale of the building in Bedford and the status to date?
Yes, of course, Matt. For some time, we have been evaluating our office space and looking to optimize because we’ve been underutilizing the space in our building, which is about 72,000 square feet. Earlier this year, back in January and February, we received two unsolicited offers to purchase the building. At that point in time, we worked with a broker and conducted due diligence on both companies, as well as on the surrounding area and comparable buildings. We also talked to several companies about sale-leaseback offers. In the end, we opted to sell to FDS Bedford, and in April, we signed the purchase and sale agreement that we posted last quarter. FDS Bedford then submitted our building as part of a proposal, and that procurement is still ongoing and we await the outcome. The closing of our purchase and sale agreement will depend on an award to FDS Bedford. If we achieve a successful sale of the building, eventually Aware will move to nearby leased space. We’re currently looking at options in the neighborhood. We do not plan to move far with the expectation that we will maintain cost neutrality with our operating costs in the new lease space. That term should be roughly similar, but we will benefit from mitigating any significant capital expenditures that we see coming down the pipe in our aging office building. However, there's no guarantee that we will close on this purchase and sale agreement, as FDS Bedford still needs to win the bid. Hope that helps.
Thanks, Dave. Our next question: what was subscription revenue this quarter versus Q2 2020, and how much of that subscription revenue was the upfront recognition of annual minimums?
Yes, great question, Matt. We are now disclosing our subscription revenue in the footnotes as NQ, so you can find the numbers there. In Q2 of 2020, we had just over $300,000 in subscription revenue and year-to-date we are at $1.1 million. In the same year-ago period, we were just over $100,000 in Q2 2020, and for the six-month period of 2020, it was just under $300,000. Each quarter, we will likely have some amount of our minimum prepayment recognized, but in Q2 of 2021, we were under $50,000.
Thanks, Dave. Our next question: you mentioned inorganic opportunities in the press release. Can you provide more color on the inorganic opportunities you are seeing?
Yes, Matt. I mean, the only thing I’m willing to say or talk about at this time is that we’re exploring all the options that advance us in the market. So overall, we are looking in areas that keep us current and advancing. Without getting specific, that’s the best I can say at this point.
Got it. Thanks, Bob. Next question: will the company ever consider providing long-term forward guidance?
Sure. At this point in time, we don’t anticipate providing long-term guidance. Anything is possible, but yes, right now it’s not the case.
Great. Thanks, Dave. At this time, this concludes our question-and-answer session. If your question wasn’t answered, please email Aware’s IR team at [email protected]. I’d now like to turn the call back over to Bob for closing remarks.
Well, I want to thank everyone for joining us on today’s call. I also want to remind you that you can learn more about our strategy on the investor presentation that’s available on our website. And as always, I want to thank our employees, partners, and investors for their continued support. We look forward to updating you on our next call. And with that, over to Matt.
Thanks, Bob. We’d like to remind everyone that a recording of today’s call will be available for replay via link available in the Investors section of the company’s website. Thank you for joining us today for Aware’s second quarter 2021 earnings conference call. You may now disconnect.