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spk00: Good day and welcome to the WISA Technologies first quarter 2024 results conference call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal conference specialists by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. And to withdraw your question, please press star then two. This event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. David Bernard. Please go ahead, sir.
spk01: Greetings and welcome to WISA Technologies conference call to review its first quarter 2024 results and provide a business update. At this time, all participants are in list-only mode. A brief Q&A. Again, we'll follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, the conference is being recorded. With us today is Brett Moyer, CEO and President. Before turning the call over to Brett, I'd like to remind everyone that today's conference call will include forward-looking statements. which are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause their actual results to differ materially from these statements. Any such forward-looking statements should be considered in conjunction with the cautionary statements in our earnings release and risk factors discussed in our filings with the SEC. WISA assumes no obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements except as required by law. With that, I'll turn the call over to Brett. Please go ahead.
spk04: Thank you, David, and good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for joining us on WISA Technologies Q1 investor update. Now, today we'll go over a quick overview of WISA for any new investors or listeners. We'll cover WISA E's competitive advantage and how we architect it and we're going to market. We'll discuss licensing deals and financial highlights. And finally, we'll talk a little bit about the shareholder vote on May 31st, designed to encourage everybody to get out and vote. For the highlights, when we launched WISA-E late last year and started licensing it in Q4, we think that's a major inflection point for the company that'll start demonstrating itself in revenue in the second half of this year and for the industry. Because as we'll talk about later in this presentation, it's a very powerful platform, this software that we've developed for transmission. And in October, we announced we would start licensing it to TV and set-top box companies for the transmission piece of it, not the piece in the speaker. And to date, in the first six months, we've signed five licenses, which we think is a terrific start to a new technology. We continue to have a strong portfolio of patents in the wireless space for multi-channel high-resolution audio. And uniquely to us, we have the WISA Association, referred to as WISA LLC, which is designed to make sure there's interoperability between products that have the source of content with a WISA-E transmitter and have a WISA-E receiver. And that organization works with both sides of the fence for interoperability testing, works with retailers to make sure they understand what WISA-E does, and with make sure the branding is properly displayed so that consumers know which products work with which. This is modeled after how HDMI started and went to market, and we're continuing to build that out. And finally, fortunately for us, while this is a powerful innovative new technology, WISA-E, we have the great advantage of launching it into a premier customer base, and we'll go through a few of those today. We've been selling the highest performance wireless multi-channel audio for 11 years, and that customer base is very supportive of us, albeit they understand that we had a very expensive solution that we've now addressed. All right, so what's immersive audio, spatial audio? You think about what the innovation that's going on in video recording and mixing, and the audio industry, we're all trying to create that environment, whether it's a bedroom, a family room, a patio, a garage, but create that environment so that the audio sounds like you would experience it if you were there in the concert, in the symphony, at the NFL game, in the movie theater, right? That's what spatial audio or immersive audio is trying to do, create that three-dimensional audio for the consumer. And this picture in the shaded green is demonstrating what they're trying to get to. So, Dolby has Atmos, which is their immersive technology. Google has IAMF, which is their solution. And Xperia has DTSX. All of them are trying to make it easy for you to understand and hear all the audio that occurs when you're at that event or at that movie theater or in the NFL stadium. Above you, behind you, on the side of you. When you go wireless and not make those speakers wired, then it becomes easy for the consumer to set up and enjoy that immersive audio. And that's where we come in. We're not the publishers, we're not YouTube creating content or Hollywood. We're not the Wi-Fi network, and we're not one of the technology companies that have the decoders, audio decoders for immersive audio. What we are is we believe the best solution to get that audio from the source device, whether it's a TV, phone, projector, set-top box, to the audio devices in that room flawlessly, right, with the best sync, the tightest latency, and the most reliable signal. So we are the transport. Second, we are the association that makes sure that consumers know what products works with who and manufacturers build products that work with each other. I mentioned earlier we have a strong customer base that have used us over the last 10 years. This is a summary of some of the bigger ones. But it's important when you're launching a new technology to not be a new company with a new technology. We're a well-established company with a killer new technology, which we'll talk more about. All right, so the power of YCE. So you would have heard a lot about home theater five years ago, 10 years ago, but that's really not the focus, right? The focus is to get that immersive audio in any in any platform or any room or any area in your house that you want to enjoy audio at and get it from any source. So when you look at the sources that we had at CES, you had two TV companies playing YSAE. You had two set-top boxes playing YSAE in our suite and a third set-top box in a private suite. You had a Google phone. You had a Samsung tablet. All of these sources were able to play YCE from them to the same speakers in the room. And we think that's important, right? You don't want to have Bluetooth, like with Bluetooth, fine. That will work with any Bluetooth, but it won't work with other stuff. We want any Wi-Fi enabled device to be able to play with the same speakers in that room, regardless of how it is. So that's what we demonstrated at CES. And that's what, when you look at what we're trying to do, that's how we're going forward. Now, Why do we think YCE is so powerful? Well, historically, we have always had the high-performance audio transmission. So we have not given that up. But now, with a software solution, we cross into the world of universality for technology vendors. So we can implement YCE across all the major SOCs. We demonstrated it on MediaTek, on an Amlogic, and a Qualcomm SOC at CES. We can use different operating systems. Currently it's Google, but there's no reason that can't be – we won't expand in the future into WebOS or the other operating systems. But for now, all resources are going for the Android operating system by Google. Finally, we're agnostic to Wi-Fi. We've shown that software can be loaded onto a Realtek and an expressive chip. One is 2.4, one is 5 gigahertz. We can do it on the other ones. So when the industry looks at us, they know that they have a broad line of TVs with different SOCs in it and different Wi-Fi chips. The same audio products that they design will work with any other TVs regardless of the SOC and the Wi-Fi chip. So that's powerful to them because they only have to design one set of audio products and they're not constrained going forward on which SOC they choose or which Wi-Fi they choose as they design future generations of TVs, right? So you've got universality across the components, and you've got we're agnostic to device. So for us, again, consumer needs to be able to have it everywhere, the TV, the mobile, the set-top box, the projector. We've shown it working on all those. And we think, and so we're agnostic to whatever device the consumer wants, we'll roll it out. That's all great technical challenges. But in our first five months, what we've seen is being able to go in and talk to TV and set-top box companies and say, look, this is not going to change your bill of material costs. That's a game changer. Nobody else can go in and say that and be agnostic to device and cross different SOC platforms. That lets the TV guy or a set-top box build in the feature for the consumer and only incur the cost if the consumer wants to buy the audio and trigger the use. For example, the fifth license we talked about, there's an activation fee. If the consumer buys the audio speakers, then a royalty is paid back to us. For the product that isn't attached to audio, there's no bomb cost, which is a big factor for TV and set-top box and phone guys. And finally, not unique to us, but to our strategy, but it has to work in all products, whether it's smartphones, smart speakers, sound bars, subwoofers, that is fundamental. So when we did that press release on universality, that's what we're talking about. We're not giving up. our audio performance but however you want to architect your product whatever product you want to architect on we're going to deliver the software to run it and we're going to make sure that your bomb isn't burdened with costs unless the consumer is using the audio around it all right so in those five licenses that are signed the new information on this slide is there is at least one TV, one set-top box, and one projector in those five licenses. So we've already penetrated three of the market segments, in some case more than once. And we have guidance later in this presentation that we expect to get at least three more this year to end the year with eight licenses. And all these licenses are with multinational companies. So we got a great strategy on technology. We got some licenses going. What's the strategy? Go to market and make revenue, right? So we see the TV as the beachhead and license to them, start getting speakers around it. But as we demonstrated at CES, it's a quick port into set-top box or phones or tablets, right? So start with the TVs, but we've already moved on into some of the other sectors. Now, once the license is in a source device, what's our royalty stream or what's our revenue stream? It's multifaceted. It can be royalties upon activation or a straight license. Any audio product connecting to it will receive a module from us, an RX module with WISA-E on it. So we make that revenue. Any customization is engineering services fees, and there will be the capability to have annual support contracts. So there's multiple ways to make revenue off of licensing into the TVs and other source devices, in addition to selling the RX modules that go into the speakers and soundbars. So what the consumer sees is none of the stuff we just talked about. What the consumer sees is a TV. But that TV, if it has YCE on it, gives them a lot of flexibility based on their budget, their use case, the size of the room, and the functionality that the TV implemented. So if they want to just do a subwoofer, because TVs really have no bass, okay, that's a quick step. If they want to add a couple rear speakers or front speakers, open up the sound field, you can still do that. All of these architectures can be done from YCE if the consumer wants to do it and if the TV supports it. So headphones, sure. Ultimately, there's no reason we shouldn't be able to do that. You know, combinations of sound bars and Atmos speakers where you have both forward firing and up firing audio to get that dome effect of the audio. That works. From an industry configuration side, we are seeing a tremendous amount of innovation with TVs in audio. I think this is the first time in years 20 or 25 years that I can say that. But we even see TVs that are experimenting with prototyping up-firing speakers for Atmos in the front of the room, which means what's the consumer going to want? They're going to want rear-firing Atmos speakers and subwoofers to complement that great TV. So we think from all the technology we talked about, the consumer has delivered an easy way to expand and enhance their audio experience around their display device, whether it's held in the hand or on the wall, with WISA-E. All right. We've signed five licenses. We think we're going to sign at least three more this year. What does that mean to you, the investor? No multinational is going to sign a WISA-E license unless they've gone through and done their technical tests. So that's the first thing it tells you. So in this case, it tells us point in time today, five licenses, so five multinationals have signed off on WISA-E's performance, right? Then we go to the license negotiation. These are lists of any of the, some or all of these could show up in that license agreement, a royalty rate, an activation pricing, engineering services, and even a speaker module pricing, right? From there, the brands will generally start laying out what their roadmap is. Do they do a high-end product, a low-end product, start with a small or big or medium rollout? All that has to get decided between the demo of the technology and the final licensing and beyond, right? So sometimes we'll announce a license, and that's the beginning of the process of a brand deciding what to do after they've tested it. Sometimes we'll announce a license, as was the case with the fifth license. We've been working with them and designing with them since middle of Q4, I believe. But we only got the license finalized in April. But at a minimum, you know, we've gone through another multinational's testing and passed when we say we have a signed license. For those trying to build out a model, you can think about a TV having anywhere from single digit attach rates of audio to 20 or 25%. And if they are attaching audio, minimum is one RX speaker, which would be a subwoofer, but more likely is two to three modules that would be around that TV. Under our financial guidance, So from a 24 perspective, as I mentioned earlier, we do expect revenue in the second half from our licensees. We expect to sign three more licensees this year. And we are actually starting to see this quarter our traditional customer, our audiophile customer using WISA-HT start to reorder, which is a good sign. It means their excess inventory from the COVID cycle of buying and busts is now in line and they're beginning to drop orders on us. Anybody following the company has seen a series of financings, fundamental for us in a couple of regards. First of all, that $8 million is on the balance sheet as of today. That will ensure that we have the cash to properly launch YCE and roll out the new products. Second, building up our shareholders' equity through issuing shares strengthens our application to remain and stay on the NASDAQ listing. We have met the minimum bid. Now we just have to comply with net shareholder equity, which we think we've gone a long way towards complying with, right? And finally, the shareholder meeting, right? Look. If you don't know how to vote your shares and you're a shareholder of record back in March, you can send an email to info at lionessconsultingllc.com and the proxy solicitor will look you up and tell you how to vote your shares. It's important we get to 50.1% and have a quorum. So vote yes, vote no, abstain, but vote so we can get to the quorum and do the company's business on your behalf, number one. Proposal number two, I think, is misunderstood. We're asking to drop the quorum threshold from 50% to, I believe, 30% or 33%. So that is easier to execute our business. When you think about most micro-cap stocks or small-cap stocks have a broad base of small shareholders. We are no different. And I am no different than all of you shareholders that look, when you have 1,000 shares and you get the proxy statements, first thing you do is toss it. So the reason to drop the quorum threshold is so that we can execute the company's business and not spend as much money trying to get to 50.1%. Every time we adjourn, every time we do new mailers, every time we do new call downs, new emails and press, hard copy press, That's a lot of money we've spent over the last six months trying to get stuff approved by the shareholders. And this is for you. The reverse proposal one, the boards asked for it, is to support our application with NASDAQ to make sure that we never come back out of compliance with the minimum bid of $1. There's no plan whatsoever to use it right now, but it's to have on the back burner in case we need it. Finally, proposals three and four. These are ones that were issued to the investors. They financed a company during a really tough time between the COVID bust and rolling out YCE and having licenses done. And this is per their contract. So we're asking you to approve those as well. So from that, I'd like to ask the shareholder to open up the call to questions.
spk00: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then 1 on your touchtone phone. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then 2. And at this time, we'll pause momentarily to assemble our roster. And the first question will come from Jack Vandarotti with Maxim Group. Please go ahead.
spk02: Okay, great. Good morning, Brett. Thanks for the update. Good morning. Thanks for taking the time, and it's encouraging to hear about the YCE updates, and it sounds like you're making progress on the continued NASDAQ listings. So I'll get started with some questions. In terms of the five signed YCE agreements, and I know you're on track for eight by the end of this year, but it just seems that these existing YCE agreements will be transformative. And I just think it's important to note for investors, for the income statement, your revenue scale, your margins, really transformative all around based on what I'm hearing. Can you just help us understand maybe realistic expectations in the cadence of the, maybe the expected revenue ramp, uh, based on these existing agreements in 2024? Um, just relatively keeping in mind, you just did about, you know, under 500,000, I think of revenue in this, this recent first quarter. So just juxtapose maybe what these agreements mean, uh, for the income statement. Thanks.
spk04: So. We haven't put that guidance out yet. What I think I can say is, and the only reason we're hedging is, look, all of these are off of new projects. So we have start dates, production dates, all that stuff behind some of the five licenses. The engineering team is heavily involved with three of the five already. But mass production dates can move around by a month or two. So we said second half. We should see a couple go out in Q3 to start at least initial shipments on first production runs, and some more come into Q4.
spk02: Okay, great. No, that's a very helpful color. I appreciate that. And maybe if I can dig a little bit further. I'm looking at slide, I believe it's 14, where you outline the base license agreement and potential revenue streams that are associated with it. Royalty rates, activation pricing, engineering services, and speaker module pricing. Which of these licensing revenue streams do you expect to commence or begin in the back half of 2024 from your existing agreements? Do they all kind of turn on at the same time, or is there variation across your agreements? Just help us understand these revenue streams.
spk04: Thanks. Yeah, right now each one's fairly different, but engineering services, we had a small amount of that in Q1 already, and the results we reported out should be significantly more in Q2 and Q3. As they prepare to go to market, I think they'll be the first high volume one that goes to market. So yeah, there is some engineering services that are already in Q1 and should be more in Q2 and Q3 based on the license we have with them. From a royalty perspective, the royalty is baked into the fifth contract, and that one likewise should kick in in late Q3 or early Q4. With the other ones, they do not have a royalty. They have a module. And so when we pick up revenue from them, it'll be based on their launches.
spk02: Got it. That's helpful color, Brett. And then in terms of maybe just the three, I don't know what you can say at this point, but I appreciate you did mention the three additional YCE agreements or target agreements. Just wondering, just relative to these existing five agreements, similar scale, smaller, and maybe royalty? Are you still working out the terms of those agreements?
spk04: Yeah, we're still in the process of working out those terms. They're going to be similar to the ones we have. I would expect them to be primarily in the TV and set-top box market segments.
spk02: Okay. And then maybe just one more for me. On the balance sheet, you mentioned you strengthened the cash balance. So as of yesterday, it sounds like you had about $8 million of cash. Can we just talk about maybe your expected quarterly OPEX and kind of burn rate for the next couple quarters?
spk04: Yeah. So we've talked in the past about the marketing expenses coming down dramatically. I still think we're in that $900,000 a month range until an OpEx. Now, when you look at our revenue, to the extent that we're selling, you know, $100,000, $200,000 of WISA HT, most of that is all cash. So if you're trying to get to a cash flow, we're selling off a lot of inventory around that revenue.
spk02: Got it. Okay. Makes sense. Well, good. I'm encouraged to see the latest developments here, Brett, and look forward to tracking the story. I'll hop back in the queue. Thanks. All right. Thanks.
spk00: Again, if you have a question, please press star, then one. Our next question will come from Ed Wu with Ascendant Capital. Please go ahead.
spk03: Yeah. Congratulations on all the progress. I was wondering, is the YCE an international launch or would you be focused mainly on the U.S. market?
spk04: It's an international launch. There are no, I mean, there may be ultimately some US licenses. I would expect one or two as we roll this out. But look, all your TV brands, most of your set-top box brands and manufacturers are international, right?
spk03: Great. And is your marketing strategy in Europe different than in the U.S. in terms of reaching out to consumers?
spk04: It's a little different in that we have very different penetration between the two markets. So the consumers in the U.S. know WISA certified because of the Platinum Audio brands that we sell, right? more than the Europeans, but the Europeans know more brands because there's quite a few high-end audio brands when you go back to that customer list that have used WISA HT.
spk03: Great. Well, thanks for answering my questions. I wish you guys good luck.
spk04: Thanks, Ed.
spk00: This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Brett Moyer for any closing remarks. Please go ahead, sir.
spk04: Yeah, so I'd like to thank everybody for joining the call. The team is extremely excited about the progress, both technically and with customers, in terms of licensing and implementing designs. And we look forward to talking to you in another 90 days. And with that, we'll end the call.
spk00: The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.
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