LightPath Technologies, Inc. (LPTH) Q4 2020 Earnings Call Transcript
Published at 2020-09-10 22:02:04
Good afternoon, and welcome to the LightPath Technologies Fiscal Fourth Quarter and Year-End 2020 Financial Results Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] Please also note today’s event is being recorded. I will now pass the call off to Donald Retreage, Chief Financial Officer of LigthPath Technologies. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon. Before we get started, I would like to remind you that during the course of this conference call, the company will be making a number of forward-looking statements that are based on current expectations and involve various risks and uncertainties that are discussed in this periodic SEC filings. Although the company believes that the assumptions underlying these statements are reasonable, any of them can prove to be inaccurate and there can be no assurance that the results will be realized. In addition, references may be made to certain non-generally accepted accounting principles or non-GAAP measures, for which you should refer to the appropriate disclaimers and reconciliations in the company's SEC filings and press releases. Following management discussions, there will be a formal Q&A session open to participants on the call. I now would like to turn the conference over to Sam Rubin, LightPath's President and Chief Executive Officer. Sam, please go ahead.
Thank you and good afternoon. Welcome to LightPath Technologies fiscal 2020 fourth quarter financial results conference call. Our financial results press release was issued after market closed today and posted to our corporate website. Following my remarks, our CFO, Donald Retreage will further review our financial results and provide more perspective on key areas. We will then conduct a Q&A session. Now, onto my remarks. Our fiscal 2020 fourth quarter and full year fiscal – full year results reflect a consistent and continuing improvement and growth of our business, while at the same time navigating the dynamic and changing conditions, caused by the effects of COVID-19 trial of business, our customers and our supply chain. Classified as an essential business, we remained open and operating to the extent possible. We continued to take all precautions to ensure that our employees remain safe and that our business operations continue. Through the fall, we are very encouraged to have ended the year by delivering growth in revenue, backlog, gross margin, gross profit, net income EBITDA and the cash balance. While reducing our total debt and financial lease balance and improving our cost structure with a reduction in operating expenses. All of this was achieved despite nearly six months of the fiscal year being impacted by COVID-19. Similar to our results in the previous quarters, our fourth quarter results continued to show consistent improvement year-over-year and consistent results throughout our fiscal year. The gross margin for the quarter ended at 39% up from 32% in Q4, 2019 while the EBITDA margin grew to 19% up from negative 3% the same period the previous year. These results reflect savings from the integration of the ISP acquisition and other efficiency related activities, as well as the favorable product mix in our PMO business. Additionally, our backlog grew to $19.1 million up from $17.1 million at the end of fiscal 2019, but down from $20 million the previous quarter. The sequential decline and backlog is attributed primarily to the annual blanket order from our largest customer which typically is renewed in our fiscal second quarter ended December 31. While the 4% growth in revenue year-over-year is definitely a positive outcome, our actual shipments during the quarter [Indiscernible] compared to plan due to unexpected rescheduling requests by some customers as a consequence of the impact of COVID-19. As we have mentioned in earlier communications over the last few months, we have been capacity constraint in some parts of our business since February primarily due to the demand from 5G infrastructure development deployment, a trend that we see continuing. We have been addressing those capacity constraints through the use of overtime through acceleration of investments in production equipment and through careful scheduling and planning of our production capacity to address all sales order, all sales orders requiring a very focused effort on both our internal and external supply chain. However, due to COVID-19, some customers have experienced either fluctuating demand or some unexpected impact to the operation or other parts of the supply chain. Given the nature of the manufacturing process, and added complexity of being capacity constraint, our manufacturing schedule cannot always adjust fast enough to such unexpected changes, leading to temporary increase in our inventory as seen in our inventory levels growing to $8.9 million. While we strive to be agile and adjust quickly to changes in demand, we expect for some of these variations to continue in the coming months along until demand and supply chain return to a steady state. In parallel to navigating the COVID-19 impacted economy and supply chain, our team has worked on developing a new strategic direction for LightPath that was initiated following my appointment as CEO in March 2020. This strategy has now been developed and this is one based on our strengths and our core capabilities to address the largest and fastest growing trend in our industry for visible and infrared optics. I’d now like to discuss some key elements of this strategy. First, interesting support diversified photonics market. We're going to lead the efforts to capitalize on optics as an enabling technology. We recognize that the opportunity for optics and optical assemblies has changed over the past several years. Now, optics or more generally photonics and optical technologies are increasingly pervasive across industries and market. Optics is not an industry vertical in itself, but the enabling technology which spans industries, well beyond telecommunication, for which we are seemingly known. Optics are the key technology in industries from automotive, defense, medical, surveillance industrial equipment, telecommunication and consumer products, just to name a few, all of which are industries we already serve. As such, the market opportunity for what we do at LightPath is enormous and global, and is constantly expanding as other industries and companies find applications for Optics in their products and industry. Second, we're going to be focusing on our competitive anchors, including our differentiated design capabilities, moulding IP, the loyalty of manufacturing technologies, and low cost vertically integrated global manufacturing. We will prioritize our efforts around the differentiation we bring to the markets and our customers and others that others cannot offer. And we will constantly seek to add to those capabilities as needed. Third, we will be centered around continuous improvement through operational excellence leading to margin and possibility optimization and strengthening of our overall financial position. This will encompass both short term and long term initiatives throughout the organization, and be supported by a culture which values results and accountability. Fourth, we will make investments that improve capacity and factory floor efficiency, engineering expertise and leverage our human capital. We will make the necessary investments in our people to enable our strategy with world class optical design and engineering talent, including a salesforce that can focus and prioritize customer opportunities, which supports our strategic goals. Finally, and perhaps most important strategic directive is to mobilize around the integrated solutions orientation for high value customers. In doing so, we will leverage our expertise to focus on client's opportunities that are in line with our new strategic direction and ultimately improve our financial performance. We will leverage our unique capability using our expertise in optical design and manufacturing to create solutions for customers rather than components. Overtime, this will promote a richer business model supported by longer term partnership with our customers. In the coming weeks, we will begin a comprehensive alignment of the organization to our new strategic direction, including a review of our capabilities, structure, processes, and all other aspects required by our team to be positioned to execute on this direction. Some of those opportunities for improvement and operational excellence have already been identified shortly after I joined the company and we began executing upon them immediately. One such area for example, includes our cash management, where food implementation of lesser processes and controls, we have been able to increase our cash position to $5.4 million, while at the same time continuing to invest in capacity expansion, while utilizing our line of credit for financial flexibility and reducing our total debt and operating lease obligations. Strategic priorities evolve, and this is the beginning of the process. LifePath will change the operations and execution culture to be best-in-class and we will choose the highest value over young customers, and business opportunities to invest in. The enhanced approach will provide even more value to our customers, great opportunities to our employees and better financial returns to our shareholders. As we continue to implement operational improvements, throughout our organization and fully execute on the outcomes of our comprehensive strategic review, we expect both near term and long term impact towards further improving upon our growth and key financial indicators beyond what we have achieved to date. Now, I'll pass the call over to our CFO Donald Retreage to provide more detail on some of the other aspects, to our fourth quarter and full year 2020 financial results. Donald?
Thank you, Sam. First, I would like to mention and remind all that much about the information we're discussing during this call is also included in press release issued earlier today and in our 10-K filed with the SEC. I encourage you to visit our website at lightpath.com on specifically the section titled “Investor Relations”. Now on to my remarks pertaining to the fourth quarter and year-end fiscal 2020. Sam's remark covered some of our financial performance along with key elements of our strategic direction. So I will be specifically discussing key financial areas. Revenue for the first quarter of fiscal 2020 was approximately $9.1 million, up from $8.7 million in both third quarter and fourth quarter 2019 -- third quarter 2020 sorry and fourth quarter 2019. For the year, revenues were $35 million, up from $33.7 million in fiscal 2019. IR product revenue was $4.8 million in Q4 2020 or 53% of total revenue, up from $4.3 million or 50% in the third quarter 2020 and $4.7 million, or 54% of the total and the prior period. Visual precision -- visible precision molded optics or PMO products revenue in fourth quarter 2020 was $3.9 million or 43% of the total same as third quarter 2020 or 44% of the total in third quarter 2020 and $3.5 million or 40% of the total in the fourth quarter 2019. For the year, IR product revenues were $18.1 million or 52% of the total of 5%, up 5% from about $17.2 million, or 51% of the total in the fiscal 2019. PMO revenues were $14.6 million or 42% of the total in fiscal 2020 and up 4% from about $14 million or 42% of the total prior year. Demands of our revenue for the fourth quarter and full year in respective periods were from speciality products, specialty products and non-recurring engineering products, which varied greatly from quarter-to-quarter, were substantially smaller contributors to the consolidated revenue. With respect to our margin profile, generally speaking, PMO products are small and almost entirely molded. So we have faster turnaround times, higher volume applications, and more automated processing. These products are also generally low in price. We historically have had margins averaging in the 40% to 50% range. This group represents about 42% of our total revenue in fiscal 2020. You can see that of the two primary segments, PMO is a small group with the higher margin. The IR product group represents a larger and faster growing market opportunity. IR margins have historically been in the 20% to 35% range with a new molded IR lenses which use our proprietary internally developed BD6 material on the top side is not able to go higher with efficiencies. As part of our gross margin improvement strategies, we have been aggressively working on marketing new products and targeting new customers using line of innovative BD6 while attempting to convert existing customers to the extent possible from using our germanium lenses to our BD6 lenses. Moving on, gross margin in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020 was $3.5 million, an increase of 24% as compared to approximately $2.8 million in the same quarter of prior fiscal year. Total cost of sales was $5.6 million for the fourth quarter 2020 down from $5.9 million in the prior year. The lower total cost of sales is meaningful when you consider that the total sales increased 4%. Gross margin under the percentage of revenue was 39% for the fourth quarter 2020 as compared to 32% in the fourth quarter 2019. The increase in gross margin and now as a percentage of revenues is primarily driven by an increase in sales and an improved cost structure, along with elimination of elevated costs, including labor, manufacturing, in efficiencies, and increased overhead expenses associated with the relocation of our New York facility in the prior year period. For the year, gross margin for fiscal 2020 was $13.8 million, an increase of 11% from $12.5 million in fiscal 2019. The total cost to sales was approximately $21.1 million in fiscal 2020, slightly lower than $21.2 million in the prior year. Gross Margin as a percentage of revenue was 40% for the 2020 compared to 37% for fiscal 2019. The increase in gross margin reflects the changes to our cost structure, as well as improvements made in the second, third and fourth quarters of fiscal 2020 after several factors negatively impacted the first quarter of fiscal 2020. As in the fiscal third quarter, demand in aggregate have been strong. Although there are pockets of weakness that emerges followed from COVID-19, which includes, as Sam mentioned, the delivery and processing challenges. We continue to enjoy strong demand from secular or long term market applications including 5G. For this product, we believe, we could have had large order flow if we had not been capacity constrained. Additional capacity has been added, and we're accelerating certain build-ups. Our production volumes are growing. In the fourth quarter 2020, we produced 1.2 million lenses up from 904,000 lenses in Q3 of 2020, 868,000 lenses made in second quarter 2020. Unit volume sold in the fourth quarter of 2020 was up 62% as compared to the fourth quarter of fiscal 2019 and up 41% year-on-year. The total units sold in 2013 was $3.6 million, up from $2.6 million last year. During the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020, total operating expenses was approximately $2.9 million, a decrease of $1 million, or nearly 26% as compared to $3.9 million in the same period of the prior fiscal year. The largest reduction came from SG&A which decreased from about 900,000 and new product developments which decreased by about 117,000. The change from the prior year reflects the elimination of non-recurring expenses from last year, which are related to the relocation of the New York facility, as well as other reduced personnel and overhead costs from synergies, and to a lesser extent limited travel and marketing expenses from COVID-19 restrictions. The product development expense variation reflects shifting and personnel of the newly created product management function, which is also in our selling, general and administrative expenses. For the full year, total operating expenses in 2020 was $11.7 million, down $2 million or about 15% from $13.7 million in 2019. SG&A was down $1.5 million and product development were down 300,000 for reasons similar to the changes in the fourth quarter. It should also be noted that expenses in the third quarter was reduced by gains on disposal of equipment of approximately 136,000, which is masking some of the savings when compared to total 2020 expenses. Our consolidated corporate income tax in the U.S. is shielded by our net operating loss carry forward benefits of approximately $74 million at June 30, 2020. But we do have to pay income tax to the countries of certain foreign subsidiaries. Income tax expense for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2019 included the reversal of 406,000 of income tax benefits recorded in the first half of fiscal 2019 due to the change in company's estimated utilization of U.S. net operating loss carry forward benefits for 2019. During the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020, the company recorded income tax expense of 90,000 as compared to 496,000 in the same period of the prior fiscal year. During the fiscal 2020, the company recorded income tax expenses of $764,000, primarily related to the income tax from operations in China and Chinese withholding tax associated with the intercompany dividend. With higher revenues, strong margin, management of expenses and lower income tax, net income for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020 was $657,000 compared to a net loss of $1.8 million for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2019, which was negatively impacted by elevated costs, including labor costs, manufacturing inefficiencies, and increased overhead expenses associated with the relocation of the company's New York facilities. We’re operating far more efficiently and profitably having completed that transition, improve our cost structure and increased revenue margins. Net income for the year was $867,000, up from a net loss of $2.7 million. Moving to the balance sheet and cash flow related items, capital expenditures, including equipment financed through leases was $938,000 in the fourth quarter 2020 and $2.4 million for the year, up from $326,000 and $2.5 million respectively in the prior periods. Given that we have been running at near capacity, we intend to continue to invest similarly in 2021. Meanwhile, net cash provided by operation was $3.7 million for fiscal 2020, up from $411,000 in prior year, with fourth quarter 2020 contributing $1.8 million or about 49% of full year amounts. Total debt, including finance leases was reduced by approximately $650,000 or 10% in fiscal 2020 from June 30 2019. While cash balance June 30 2020, was $5.4 million, up from $4.6 million at June 30 2019. As of June 30 2020, LightPaths 12-month backlog was $19.1 million, an increase of 11% from $17.1 million as of June 30 2019. It should be noted that this is natural for -- that it is natural for backlog to fluctuate during the year as a result of the timing of such bookings of large orders and annual renewals. The company has also undisclosed backlog of beyond 12 months. On a final note, through the increase of our share price and market value, we're pleased to have been added to the resell of microcap index effect with the annual reconstitution on June 29 2020. With this review of our financial highlights and recent developments concluded, I will turn the call over to the operator so that we may begin with question and answer session.
Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Marc Wiesenberger with B. Riley FBR. Please go ahead.
Yes, thank you. Good afternoon. Very nice execution in the quarter. Currently, I think you have capacity to produce around 3 million molded lenses per year. Can you talk about the growth trajectory around the molding capacity and where you'd expect to deploy that capacity from a geographic perspective?
Yes, our capacity has definitely been growing in the last few months as we've been investing in accelerating some of the office investments in our manufacturing equipment. That reminds me in the previous quarter -- stated that we're going to expedite some of those investments which we have and which have come into effect during the last quarter and towards the end of the quarter. That's evident in the growth of our molded lenses, where we produced 1.2 million in the last quarter, which is a 33% growth compared to the quarter before that first quarter. Some of the investment of those molding machines and equipment are in our China facility. Some of them are in a U.S. facility, other parts of the investment as the targets of where we make the investments and where we need to expand capacity changes over time. Some of those investments are going to be in our facility in Riga, as well as additional investments in the U.S.
Great, thank you. Can you talk a little bit more about the progress of BD6 adoption from new customers, substitution from existing customers? Your goals for BD6 and from your product portfolio and then the resulting financial implications we should see in FY 2021?
Definitely. The results from this transition to BD6 are very encouraging as we stand right now. By nature, as the type of orders for BD6 versus germanium or altogether for thermal imaging, such that they take a long time to mature and to go from design to prototyping to actual production. One example is a large contracts that we announced a few months ago. And that only in the near future, we're going to start shipping on that contract. And that contract alone has still taken quite a while to, to reach. We have a strong pipeline of opportunities. Some of them the quoting process, many of them in the design process in which we work very closely with the customer, and some of them in the prototyping process. We believe that we have some significant winds coming down the road. Most of them will start shipping within six months or so after we get the orders. Some of them might be shorter, some of them might be longer.
Sure. You talked about solid 5G demand from China. What other geographies are you seeing that are maybe starting to accelerate and have deployments, and can you talk about these other markets outside of China?
Yes, we provide our 5G lenses into the transceiver manufacturers and transponder manufacturers. Most of them are in Asia, and by the nature of it, and by the structure of the supply chain, except for a Chinese manufacturers where we know that they are vertically integrated and when we sell them the lenses to them, we know that they mix the end equipment. With other customers we do not always know where the transceivers and in terms of geographical distribution. We do know that we supply the lenses into multiple manufacturers of 5G equipment and optical transceivers in such a varieties that we know that we're definitely not concentrated at one country or another in terms of the deployment of 5G, as we do not have the full information as to the geographical deployment.
Sure, understood. And then last one from me. I think you've talked about the emerging use cases for optics and photonics role requires supplementary technologies. Can you talk about how LightPath is positioned to meet those additional demands? Thank you.
Absolutely. And part of the organization alignment that we're going to do. First of all, now, this really is an on-going effort that will happen over the next few years. It's going to – going to be that continuously look at such opportunities and see what supplemental products or technologies or capabilities we need in order to support them. This could be a situation where a customers buying our lens and or a customer’s working [Indiscernible] complete solution. That solution also includes say a scanning mirror, which is the electronic component that moves the beam around. And we could be integrated, it could be much something much closer to home, which we've already done a couple of times, integrating the detector and actively aligning the entire optical system to deliver really a complete, closed and hermetically sealed even optical system to the customer. By nature of it, optics being going into so many different applications in so many places, the type of other components, other technology that are needed would vary drastically from one customer to another. And as we go along, we're going to see which ones makes sense for us, where can we create real value to customers?
Great, thank you very much.
The next question is from Gene Inger with ingerletter.com. Please go ahead.
Hi, Sam and Don, congratulations on navigating through the pandemic so far, and keeping the company constantly operating and forgive my sore throat. But I'll try to ask a couple questions that Riley didn't touch on. You basically covered as Sam by discussing or expanding beyond what some believe are relatively low margin commodity lenses, although you've already increased the margins on those. So good job with that. You just mentioned a moment ago, you just mentioned integrated optics, which caused me to think of your colleagues and neighbors over at Luminar. I don't know that they're going public affects you directly. But as they expand, do you, do you foresee expanded relationship or would you rather not talk about potential colleagues or customers?
Thank you, Gene. It's good to hear your voice. And thank you for the questions. First of all, I'll start by congratulating our neighbors Luminar for going public and joining us from that circuit like it's always nice to have neighbors in the neighborhood. Share with us the stock exchange. We have a good relationship with many customers and with many customers, we explore whatever value can we create to them? Where is it that we can do more for them and what are their needs? We do not comment on specific customers for the most parts. But we definitely look closely at the LIDAR marketplace and work with multiple companies developing different light of solutions at many different levels. Some of them we discuss assemblies, some of them we discussed individual components with. It's obvious that LIDAR is going to become a major application for optics in the future. We cannot know until which company will win the LIDAR rate [ph] so the best thing we can do is work with as many components as we can and support them by creating some value for them either through our knowledge of optical engineering, or by creating individual components or assemblies that will enhance their products.
That is what I assumed you meant by integrated optics. And I was really a little bit excited to look forward to many of these things that are that are that are forthcoming.
I also wanted to thank you. I wanted to enquire with regard to China. Your subsidiaries there are wholly owned, where I think in the past there was a large fund out of Shanghai at Pudong that was an investor. I'm assuming that is now retired and the Chinese government does not have a problem with you operating as a wholly owned operation.
That's correct. We have -- we both companies are wholly owned by us 100%. We have 100% control of ours. We do not -- we're not limited by any regulatory requirements related to our Chinese subsidiary by any of the countries or any of the sites related to that. And this is very similar to the experience I had in the six years I spent in China setting up and building from scratch in large companies there. A Wolfie as it's called a wholly owned foreign entity is completely owned and controlled by the foreign -- another company. And that's exactly the case, LightPath with our two subsidiaries.
I'm glad to hear that. Could you also expand lately there is more tension between China and India. And companies like Paragon which is Israeli with wireless backhaul is benefited and because they do a lot of business in India with Vodafone, and I'm just wondering whether India barring Huawei, because of the tensions between them actually works to your benefit, with vertical integration in China so if I assume much of what you make in China is sold to Huawei or other networking companies in the country?
Yes, we don't have much direct sales into India. And as I mentioned in our previous comment, we often do not know the end use of our product, since we're sometimes two or three layers removed from the end product. So in this case, the only insight I might have is really no insight in the sense of none of our business has been affected by any of that to our knowledge, and we don't see an impact from that.
Glad to hear that. And my last question would just be Ciena’s CEO a couple of weeks back when they made their numbers for the second quarter, but he gave pretty sloppy guidance going forward and he talked about many of their customers in photonic, Lumentum is one. I think you deal with some of those customers. And that may be what you're reflecting when you're saying, your customers rescheduling delivery. But it sounds like there's a lot of orders that aren't cancelled, but they're simply pushed into the future. So isn't that giving an impression, I hope that things are looking favorable as we adjust to the new normal and migrate into the third and fourth quarters?
Yes, we definitely meant exactly that orders are being pushed out due to most of the time logistical constraints. And if I would give one example, we have one customer that has production line in three different facilities, and one facility had to close down. Those other two facilities cannot pick up the entire capacity, and hence one third of the deliveries to them would get delayed until that facility re-opens. And that’s one example. So most of those are similar to that in that sense, that other unexpected factors are affecting the supply chain or the operations and we're being asked to delay or hold off on the shipment. If it's with enough notice we can halt production and move that capacity to use something else. If it's not, we hold it in inventory.
Well, it sounds promising. And if anything, you had a good quarter, the EBITDA was great. And you did this despite these impediments with the pandemic. So I'm looking forward to good growth and welcome your leadership and hope things go well.
Thank you. I appreciate that Gene. Have a good day.
[Operator Instructions] Our next question is from Chris Witkowski [ph], a private investor. Please go ahead.
Hello, good afternoon. Congratulations on a great quarter.
So, regarding the 5G visible optics molded lenses. I'm not sure if I parsed your statements correctly. But it seems like you're saying that there's pending demand even outside of your backlog. That is if you tell your customers that they're holding back some orders and if you tell them that you have more capacity, you'll get more orders. Is that correct?
Yes. You understood it correctly.
All right, that's, that's good to hear. And about, about those lenses, again, the 5G lenses. Now as data rates increase, the optics have to be more precise, and are you getting certain price increases on your lenses? And does that cause a bit of the increase in the gross margin? How is the pricing going?
About the prices. In general, yes. However, our formula in the past has been to give discounts on high volume because we had different reasons. Obviously now at full capacity, those levels are leveled out, so there won't be any great price decreases aside from what the market is demanding. So we do not foresee erosion of the price in the PMO lenses to affect us, far more in the next two or three quarters.
All right. That's great to hear. And regarding your strategic realignment, should we be looking forward to noticeably higher SG&A costs because of that in the future?
Yes, that's a great question. And we've been very disciplined and both our growth and expenses on new capabilities and new -- manpower, as well as our capital investments where we need discipline to finance all of that, so our own cash flow generated and being aware of profit margins or total EBITDA margins as we grow the business. And we intend to continue that and be as much as possible in line with what we've been doing until now. That said that might be required here and there some individual expenses on adding one or two specific skills by form of people or some unique equipment that might be a bit different than take a somewhat longer to see the return. But we do not expect that to be significantly different.
Alright, that's good to hear. And it's, it's about time we started making some real profits here. And another question. So about those temporary push outs. Can you just give us a few as to what you're experiencing now in August and September? And is that -- are you less affected now than you were in the past quarter?
I'd say it's, it's still on-going as I noted in my remarks. And we continue, we believe it will continue to be somewhat on-going until things stabilize. In most cases, it moved I'd say sort of between one customer and the another. It’s not specific customer that keeps pushing out and so on, except for maybe one or two cases. But for the most part, it's -- we see it sort of the transitioning between different geographical areas where it happens, different customers in different industries and different periods. We try as I mentioned, to be as agile as possible and to be on top of it. But given that we're running at capacity or capacity constraints, at least in in the molding part of the business. And sometimes the supply chain and the time to turn around orders is long. There's sometimes not much we can do about it, and we just end up with having a bit more inventory than we care for.
Okay, I understand that. Well, that's it for me. Thanks again and good luck.
We show no additional questions at this time, so I'd like to turn the conference back over to Mr Rubin for any closing remarks.
Thank you for participating in today's call. Before we conclude, I wanted to thank Jim Gaynor, my predecessor for the 13 years of service as the CEO of LigthPath and extend our best wishes to Jim and his family on his retirement. We look forward to speaking with you next quarter. Until then, we will be participating at the Sidoti & Company Fall -- Virtual Investor Conference on September 23. And have been invited to speak at the MicroCap Club’s Virtual Leadership Summit on September 25. Thank you again, and goodbye.
The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.