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5/12/2026
Greetings. Welcome to the Transact Technologies first quarter 2026 conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. Please note this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to Ryan Gardella, Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.
Thanks, Jesse. Good afternoon. Welcome to the Transact Technologies first quarter 2026 earnings call. Today we'll be discussing the results announced in the press release issued after market close. Joining us from the company is CEO John Dillon and President and CFO Steve DiMartino. Today's call will include discussion of the company's key operating strategies, the progress on these initiatives, and details on our first quarter financial results. We'll then open the line to participants for questions. As a reminder, this conference call contains statements about future events and expectations, which are forward-looking in nature. Statements on this call may be deemed forward-looking, and actual results may differ materially. For a full list of risks inherent to the business and the company, please refer to the company's SEC filings, including its reports on Forms 10-K and 10-Q. Transact undertakes no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements to reflect advanced circumstances that occur after the call. Today's call and webcast will include non-GAAP financial measures within the meaning of SEC regulation sheets, When required, a reconciliation of all non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable financial measures calculated and presented in accordance with GAAP can be found in today's press release as well as on the company website. And with that, I will turn the call over to John.
Thanks, Ryan, and good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for joining us. It's a nice afternoon here, and I'm pleased to report today that Transact delivered a solid first quarter, 2016. Total net sales, $14.4 million, up 10% year-over-year, generating an adjusted EBITDA of $1.4 million, which is a strong start for the year. As we discussed, our focus remains on driving revenue growth in our food service technology, or FST, vertical, with software as our primary growth engine going forward, supported by targeted and disciplined investments across the business to accelerate sales. In the first quarter, we sold 1,370 BOHA terminals, driven mostly by upgrade orders from our 40,000 plus unit install base from prior sales of older products. We also continue to see strong interest from existing customer base to move from either the Accudate, which is an older system, or the T1, which is also an older system, to our newer terminal T2. We see a long runway of growth there, so that's a good sign. We ended the first quarter with 19,959 online terminals, which is an increase of a little over 1,000, actually specifically 1,062 new online terminals over the fourth quarter of 2025. Most importantly, our recurring FST revenue continues to grow. Our software revenue were up 23%. a year over year, which gives us confidence in our strategic direction. And we're very focused on generating this revenue, which is high margin, certainly higher margin than hardware, more sustainable and predictable. And it's a focus we didn't really have in the past because we didn't own the software and we own it now. So we can start selling the software in a way we couldn't do before. So with nearly... 20,000 online terminals now in the field. This is the time to begin monetizing these deployments more effectively. In the past, we didn't really do this. And in fact, software was often bundled for free to make a hardware sale. Now our focus is to ensure that our customers are paying for and receiving the fair market value of our leading software offering. And given the importance of this growing revenue stream, we will begin sharing more and more of our ANR details, recurring revenue details, each quarter to help you track that progress. ARR includes, for your reference, software, but it also includes contracted support service, which is a high margin service for us because our products are highly reliable, and the labels. So from an information standpoint, for first quarter, ARR revenue was $3.3 million. And we firmly believe that the future for Transact will come from recurring software revenue rather than one-time hardware sales. Longer term, we're aiming to get our install base up to $100 to $200 per machine per month in recurring software revenue, which could really unlock a lot of significant value given the size of our install base and the fact that it's growing. Next, let me say a few words about the update on our port of our software to the new platform. As you know, we acquired the software about a year ago last April, and we're making good progress here. We've pulled forward our go-live date from what was originally suggested to be first quarter of 2027, and now it looks to be late Q2 this quarter, late in this quarter, or early Q3 of 26. So that's really good news and good progress. And I'd like to say that our cloud partner, our public cloud partner in this has done a really terrific job helping us with this transition. And as I stated before, ownership of the source code and launching our own hosting platform is really crucial for our recurring revenue model going forward. It provides us with an increased level of operational freedom and enables us to accelerate software innovations like exploring, for example, an application store model for our own terminals where we could add additional applications which either are grown in-house or maybe sourced from outside through partners. So this model is appealing, and as we get into full production here, I think that's an interesting growth engine that we probably can explore successfully. I also want to speak briefly about AI, also known as artificial intelligence. And I know it's a hot topic in any software investment thesis right now. So I'd like to say a few words about it. Most of you probably know that AI was developed in the 50s. We're talking a long time ago, almost 75 years ago. And now it's really coming into its own because we have more data. We have cloud compute capacity, which bursts and allows you to put a lot of machines to work all at once. And we have compute power in the form of GPUs and other optimization that's happening. So the compute power is greater. So work that couldn't used to be done in a meaningful fashion or certainly couldn't eclipse human capability now is doing some stunning things, which are really important. And I believe AI will serve and continue to serve as an accelerant in our case for our business. It allows our developers to focus more time crafting existing new applications for our platform and reduces many of the mundane tasks that previously consumed an enormous amount of time from our good engineers. As well, our integrated solutions approach insulates Transact for most of the potential downsides from AI that might affect valuations for companies with simple applications and really a somewhat, again, simplistic peer SaaS model. That's not Transact. If you keep in mind that we offer SaaS applications, of course, that are software as a service, but these are integrated applications or rather solutions running on a purpose-built platform with hardware, software, communications like Bluetooth, LTE, Wi-Fi, APIs, application program interfaces that talk to other systems, IoT, which includes sensors like for temp and sense in the kitchens, things like that. And of course, a mainstay for us are our printing capabilities in the different types of food service environments. So all in all, having an integrated solution is something that isn't easily disintermediated, and we see AI as a plus for us. given that right on the threshold of a lot of advance and a lot of progress as we roll out software into the marketplace that we're already in. So for us, AI is a great accelerator, and we think it's going to serve us well. And I just thought it was worth saying a few words about that. And separately and in other calls, I'd be happy to talk a little bit more about AI. In terms of our GTM, the go-to-market, we're pleased with our strategy. It includes an emphasis on competing on competitive pricing, strategic partnerships, targeted outreach, and high potential sub-market verticals such as QSR, that's quick service restaurants, convenience stores, grab-and-go sushi, which has done really well for us, and corporate food service management from food service management companies. And at the same time, we expect to maintain a disciplined cost management regimen, target positive adjusted EBITDA, and preserve the strength of a balance sheet, things I'm sure you guys care about. Turning to our FST highlights specifically for the first quarter, total FST net sales came in at $4.7 million, driven by strong recurring revenue growth and more offset by lower hardware sales. Recurring FST revenue reached $3.3 million. The ARPU, the average revenue per unit, $709 per unit. Labels were 2.6 million in the quarter, up 26% from the prior year, driven by stronger volumes from longstanding customers, including Love's Travel Stops, Hisho Sushi, and our 2025 win at Yummy Sushi. These customers spend a lot of money with us. We have design software. We help them with their labeling systems. And frankly, it's one of the things that creates a greater degree of customer intimacy. And frankly, it also makes the customer relationship with us stickier. It means that attrition rates are low. retention is high and that's a good thing. Labels remain a margin accretive component of our P&L and they help build the stickiness that I already mentioned. And as a solutions vendor, our labeling expertise and related services add a lot of differentiated value for our clients. Near term, our labels business also holds potential for labels only deals where we might win customers based on the value, the quality, expertise and pricing advantage that we can offer. And that's another door into customers. It's a distinctive competence that we can use to ultimately get in and sell additional products to clients that might start with us for just labeling and then move into some of the other applications our BOHA suite offers. So in the first quarter, we landed 22 new logo accounts from direct sales and from our market partners. And with a potential of about 1,405, about 1,400 potential future units. We tend to use a land and expand strategy because our product performs well in situ, and it's great for us to get a small order from a potentially large client, and then we treat that as an account management opportunity to get follow-on business and expansion revenue. We also remain confident in our new pipeline logo, logo pipeline for the remainder of 2026, so we feel like we're in pretty good shape. And I also wanted to mention that When our customers win, we also win. We had a number of key customers this last quarter adding new stores to their portfolio in the quarter, and that presents an opportunity for us to sell into these new locations. So when we get revenue growth from these expansions, it comes without a huge sales investment like it takes when we want to win a net new account. So expansion business is always easier to win, and it's a really important aspect of our land and expand model. And as our customers expand, we can expand with them. I also wanted to provide a brief update. You know from prior press releases and maybe conversations that we hired a new chief marketing officer, CMO, last quarter. Her name's Dana Loof. She joined us, I think, in early January. And I'm incredibly happy with the structure and progress she's brought to our marketing function since joining us. I've had conversations with many of you about how our brand is somewhat, I guess I would say lackluster or kind of languishes out there. Our website hasn't been particularly hard hitting with calls to action and, you know, really compelling reasons why you should buy our technology, why you should buy it now. She's changing all that and I'm delighted. The progress from her so far has been excellent. Her focus has been competitive positioning, messaging and building out our lead gen engine. And we've already seen improvements in our press cadence and digital presence. She's also been hard at work to update our website, which some of you have commented on to me personally as well. In any event, we're delighted with the improvements she's already made and even more excited about the momentum she's building. And we think she can generate a lot of opportunity for us. Stay tuned. I think you'll see Transact delivering a much improved market presence and brand presence as we go forward into the future. So I think of that as actually really good news, a key individual, key executive really making a difference. Shifting over to casino and gaming, we recorded net sales of $8.3 million for the quarter, up 24% from $6.7 million in the prior year period. Both domestic and international demand was strong, with results in each segment up over 20%. And our epic TR80, which is a relatively new product, is also gaining some meaningful traction internationally in what we call role-fed gaming applications. These would be things for like kiosk betting and things like that, where it's a role printer that prints out the tickets from these machines. And although our casino and gaming business is highly cyclical, we have found there's always a significant free cash flow component generated from it. And we don't expect that to change much in 2026. I do point out that it's lumpy somewhat, but it's always bounced back and it's consistent. And I've got some recent casino statistics and slot machine statistics. And, you know, the CAGR there is respectable. It continues to grow and more casinos are opening. And at this point, as you know, it's a relatively high margin business and we're in a duopoly market. And we continue to service a significant portion of that overall market. And today we believe that our ship share now approaches parity with the other large vendors serving the same market. So that's really important. We've made great progress. We've got a great sales team there. They know the industry cold and we're very well equipped to continue to maintain our presence in this space going forward. Turning to our financial outlook for 26, I'm reaffirming our 20, Six net sales outlook. We basically suggested $55 million to $57 million for the top line. And as you'd expect, I'm raising our adjusted EBITDA outlook to between a range of $1 million to $1.75 million based on first quarter guidance and performance. We're off to a good start. $14.4 million in net sales. $1.4 million of adjusted EBITDA. 1,370 BOHA terminals. grew our online terminal base to nearly 20,000, which is a good opportunity for us going forward. Software revenue rose 23%, bolstering our confidence in that part of the market. It's high margin, recurring revenue model, which you'd expect us to try to drive. And we're making progress on monetizing the install base and look forward to giving you more updates on the ARR progress each quarter. And I'm hoping to be able to add more specific metrics so that you can dive in and get a better understanding of the business. feel good about the strategy, direction, and where we fit in the marketplace and the evolution of our business in the coming year. So that's kind of where we're at. And before handing the call over to Steve, I know you've probably seen that we did a report last week with a transition for our chief financial officer. I just wanted to thank Steve for 30 years of tirelessly Tireless, I promise you it was tireless effort, support at Transact. He's been a stalwart. He's been here from the original IPO way back in 96, which is just an incredible feat of dedication, support, loyalty, and a job well done. Steve, you're an asset to the team. You're going to be missed, but your retirement certainly well earned and deserved. So we wish you all the best. And I know you're going to be around. You're going to be helping us at least through the end of the year in various forms and fashion and support. But congratulations on this well-earned retirement. And with that, maybe this is your last call. I'd like to turn the call over to Steve DiMartino.
Thanks for the kind words, John. And thanks, everyone, for joining us today. Let's turn to our first quarter 26 results in a little more detail. Total net sales for the first quarter were $14.4 million, and that was up 10% compared to $13.1 million in the prior year period. Sales from our FST market for the first quarter were $4.7 million. That was down 4% compared to $4.9 million in the first quarter of 25, and nearly flat, declining just 2% sequentially from $4.8 million in the fourth quarter of 25. And as John said, we sold 1,370 terminals during the first quarter of 26. Our recurring FSD sales, which includes software and service subscriptions, as well as consumable label sales for the first quarter, were $3.3 million. That was up 26% compared to $2.7 million in the prior year period. Our ARPU for the first quarter of 26 was $709. That was down 7% compared to $761 in the first quarter of 25, and down 6% sequentially from $756 in the fourth quarter of 25. Our ARPU reflects our continued focus on the growing recurring revenue base, and we are making progress transitioning our large hardware-only customer towards a recurring model, and we expect this effort to begin to contribute positively to ARPU in the coming quarters. Our casino and gaming sales were 8.3 million. That was up 24% from 6.7 million in the first quarter of 25, and up 55% sequentially from 5.4 million in the fourth quarter of 25. Domestic sales were up 20% year over year on strength from several large domestic OEMs, while international printer sales grew 35% with solid contributions from both Europe and our Asia-Australia regions. The Epic TR80 is also beginning to build momentum internationally in role-fed gaming applications. While we expect fluctuations quarter to quarter in our sales, Overall, we expect casino and gaming sales to continue to contribute positively to our cash flow throughout 26. POS automation sales of our Ithaca 9000 printer for the first quarter of 26 were $620,000, essentially flat compared to $618,000 in the prior year period. Overall, Ithaca 9000 sales remain in a normalized range, and we expect results to remain similar going forward. Moving to Transact Services Group, or TSG, sales. For the first quarter, TSG sales were $764,000. That was down 5% from $808,000 in the prior year period. The decline was driven by lower spares in accessories revenue as our legacy installed base continues to naturally wind down. Legacy consumables, which consists solely of our remaining thermal POS paper roll inventory, at this point are nearly fully sold off. So we expect little to no revenue from these products going forward. Overall, we expect TSG sales to continue to slowly decline over time. Moving down the income statement, our first quarter gross margin rose to 50.3%. That compares to 48.7% in the prior year period and up sequentially from 47.6% in the fourth quarter, 25. And that was largely on the strength of casino and gaming sales in the first quarter, strong casino gaming sales in the first quarter. We continue to expect our gross margin to be in the high 40% range for the full year 26. Our total operating expenses for the first quarter were $6.5 million, and that was up 2% compared to $6.4 million in the prior year period. The modest increase was driven by higher selling and marketing expenses and G&A expenses, partially offset by a meaningful reduction in engineering expenses as we began to capitalize R&D costs related to the BOHA software in-housing effort. Breaking down our OPEX a little bit, our engineering and R&D expenses for the first quarter were $1.4 million, and that was down 16% compared to $1.6 million in the prior year period. Our selling and marketing expenses for the first quarter were $2.2 million. That was up 5% compared to $2.1 million in the prior year period. The increase reflects new hires initiated during the first quarter, as well as higher travel expenses and sales commissions tied to our stronger sales results. Lastly, our G&A expenses for the first quarter were $2.9 million. That was up 10% compared to $2.7 million in the prior year period. The increase was largely driven by higher share-based compensation and recruiting fees for new hires made during the first quarter. For the first quarter of 26, our operating income was $800,000, or 5.3% of net sales. And this compares to near break-even operating loss of $15,000, or 0.2%. 1% of net sales in the prior year period. On the bottom line, we recorded net income of $800,000 or $0.07 per diluted share for the first quarter of 26, and this compares to net income of $19,000 or break-even results per diluted share in the year-ago period. We recorded income tax expense of $23,000 and an effective tax rate of 2.9% as we continue to take a full valuation allowance on our US and Macau pre-tax earnings and record tax only on income from our UK subsidiary. Our adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was a positive 1.4 million and this compares to negative 499,000 in the fourth quarter 25 and 544,000 in the first quarter 25. This was a strong start to the year and keeps us well on track to deliver positive adjusted EBITDA for the full year 26. Lastly, turning to our balance sheet, it remains solid. We ended the first quarter with $18.8 million in cash, and that compares to $20.4 million at year-end 25. And in terms of debt, we had $3 million of outstanding borrowings under our credit facility with Sienda Lending. Finally, thank you all for your interest and trust over the years. As my 30-year career at Transact comes to a close, I want to extend my heartfelt thanks to our shareholders for your steadfast support of both Transact and me. I look forward to staying in touch. And with that, I'd like to turn the call over to the operator for questions. Operator?
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now be conducting our question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. The confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. You may press star 2 if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. Thank you. It appears we have no questions at this time, so I would like to turn the floor back over to John Dillon for closing comments.
Mr. Dillon, you may proceed with your closing remarks.
Thank you very much for joining us today. There's no questions. I'd be happy to chat with any of you offline, downstream. You can reach us through Ryan Gardella from ICR. And again, thank you and best regards. And with that, Steve and I will sign off.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we thank you for your participation. This does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and have a wonderful day.
