Earlier this week Ocean Power Technologies (OPTT: NYSE-AMEX) reported financial results for the fourth quarter and fiscal year ending April 2022. Shareholders did not have much to celebrate in terms of revenue growth. Fourth quarter sales increased to $756,000 compared to the same period in the previous year and this only through the company’s consulting work. The net loss in the quarter was $5.2 million, the same as in the previous year. The fate of the top- and bottom-lines was easy enough for shareholders to accept.
Really tough to swallow in the quarter report was the increase in cash usage
to support operations. The company
dipped into the cash kitty for $21.3 million to keep the lights on during the
full fiscal year 2022. This compares to
a cash burn of $11.7 million in the previous fiscal year.
It is worthwhile looking beyond the headline numbers. Indeed, understanding the elements that went into spending during the year provides insight into the company’s future.
First, the company increased engineering and product development
activities, primarily to complete work on its proprietary Maritime Domain
Awareness (MDA) platform. The MDA system
includes radar, optical and thermal imaging camera capabilities and automatic
identification system detection. The company
has strategic partners in the program, including Greensea and Fathom5, to develop
the software and robotics components.
The objective is a system sufficiently sophisticated to achieve superior
analytics and military-grade cybersecurity.
The company completed testing of its MDA system just off-shore from New
Jersey.
Additionally, the company acquired Marine Advanced Robotics (MAR) in November 2021, boosting operating expenses related to the transaction. Net of cash acquired the company used $4.4 million in cash to close the deal. For its investment Ocean Power boosts its commercial line with autonomous vehicles for maritime data services. Importantly, MAR has established a market position and could contribute as much as $2.0 million in revenue in fiscal year 2023.
Ocean Power also added to its management team, appointing a new chief
executive officer and a new chief financial officer. There is also new blood in sales, marketing,
engineering and operations. More mouths
to feed undoubtedly put pressure on operating expenses.
The change-up in leadership may be behind a clarified corporate mission
that has become evident of late. The company
is now characterized as a provider of maritime solutions for several verticals,
not the least of which is oil and gas. It
was the oil and gas concerns that were among the first to see applications for
the company’s PowerBuoy system. How well autonomous service vessels and marine
robotics services fit in with the company’s proprietary PowerBuoy system
is yet to be demonstrated.
Perhaps more important than a burnished public image, is the difference
the new corporate self-identity can make for revenue streams. The company’s growth strategy is focused on
building data-as-a-service and power-as-a-service offerings. The approach means the company will see
recurring revenue streams from service subscribers rather than simply one-time
sales of equipment.
Investors have yet to see the merits in the changes at Ocean Power
Technologies. As a consequence, the
stock price remains depressed. For
investors with a long-term investment horizon and the tolerance for volatility,
the current price level provides a compelling entry point for a company showing
new promise. The company ended the fiscal
fourth quarter with $57.5 million in total cash on its balance sheet, providing
more than two years runtime at the recent cash usage rate. The cash hoard may be just enough to see
Ocean Power through to a time of higher revenue and maybe even the achievement of breakeven operating results.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
1 comment:
Your analysis doesn’t include the over 300 million dollars of losses and a top line of barely 2 million dollars.
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