Acorn Energy : Q1 2026 Earnings Conference Call

ACFN

Published on 05/08/2026 at 10:25 am EDT

Tracy Clifford - Chief Financial Officer & COO Jan Loeb - President, CEO & Director William (Bill) Jones, Investor Relations

Joel Sklar, Private Investor Richard Sosa, Private Investor

James Kahn, Crown Financial Partners

Good morning, and welcome to Acorn Energy's First Quarter 2026 Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. I'll now turn the call over to Tracy Clifford, CFO of Acorn Energy and COO of its OmniMetrix subsidiary.

Thank you, Regina, and thank you all for joining us today. First, I'd like to remind everyone that today's remarks, including responses to questions, contain forward-looking statements. These statements involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected.

Factors that may impact our future operating results and financial performance include general risks such as potential disruptions to business operations or changes in consumer or customer demand, as well as specific risks related to our ability to execute our operating plan, maintain strong customer renewal rates and expand our customer base. Additional risks may arise from changes in technology, competition or shifts in the macroeconomic or financial environment.

These forward-looking statements are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and are based on management's current beliefs, assumptions and information that is available as of today. There can be no assurances that the company will meet its growth targets or other strategic goals and objectives. The company undertakes no obligation to update or revise such forward-looking statements to reflect future events or specific circumstances that may occur after today.

For a more detailed discussion of risks and uncertainties that may affect our business, please refer to the Risk Factors section of our most recent Form 10-K and our Form 10-Q for the first quarter of 2026, which are available online at https://www.sec.gov or on our own website. Now I'll turn the call over to Jan Loeb, CEO of Acorn and OmniMetrix. Jan?

Thank you, Tracy, and to everyone for your interest in our company. Our Q1 2026 results reflect continued expansion of our base of monitoring endpoints, offset by an anticipated decrease in year-over-year hardware revenue related to our material cell phone provider contract.

We recognized $93,000 of hardware revenue from this customer in Q1 2026 related to our original contract and now hardware shipments for our initial contract are largely complete. This compares to $876,000 of hardware revenue from this customer in Q1 2025. Our Q1 2026 results also reflected $167,000 of monitoring revenue from this customer compared to $69,000 in Q1 2025 related to first year monitoring revenues on the original contract.

Based on our ongoing dialogue with this customer, we are optimistic about securing further hardware deployments and related revenue that will build on our initial contract starting in Q2 2026. It has always been our goal to build on this customer opportunity, so this initial follow-on activity is a good indication of the strength of our relationship and the customer satisfaction with our solutions and the services we have been providing for over a year. We currently expect incremental hardware revenue from this customer in the range of $350,000 to $500,000 in 2026. Tracy will review our financial highlights but I would like to address on issue upfront regarding noncash management and Board compensation in Q1. Based on our record financial performance in 2025, accomplishing our NASDAQ uplisting and the completion of the AIO partnership agreement on January 1, the Board approved an increase in our 2026 stock option awards to compensate management and the Board in lieu of additional cash compensation or board fees.

These options were issued at a market price of $19.02, so their potential value is tied directly to value creation for all shareholders. The 50,000 options issued to management vest over 12 quarters. So higher stock comp expense will have an impact on financial results through the third quarter of 2028. If you exclude the impact of noncash compensation, Acorn's consolidated results would have been profitable in Q1.

And the company continues to generate cash as reflected by $53,000 of cash provided by operating activities in the quarter and a stable cash balance of $4.3 million at quarter end. In past communications, including our year-end news announcement, we have reviewed our 5 complementary growth initiatives, one of which is our ongoing pursuit of accretive M&A opportunities to expand our monitoring product offerings, market reach, and revenue and customer base.

Through this process, we identified the AIO opportunity, which we decided to pursue as an acquisition of commercialization and distribution rights through a technology partnership. We are now actively working to bring their industry-leading multifaceted suite of products for cell towers, data centers and utility substations in North America for the first time. These infrastructure solutions protect against theft, power issues, environmental and other risks and maximize energy utilization.

We believe the acquisition of these rights is an ideal way to leverage our 20-plus year reputation and established base of customers and substantially expand our capabilities and reach within the North American infrastructure market in a focused and highly capital-efficient way. We are currently working to finalize sales and marketing materials for the OmniMetrix branded solutions.

We are initially targeting cell tower operations where we have a good base of existing customer relationships. Utilizing that experience, we will then pursue opportunities in fast-growing markets for data-driven and utility scale infrastructure management. Relative to our

focus on backup generators at cell towers, this new suite of solutions provide remote oversight for the full cell tower campus.

Our solutions provide actionable insights through advanced analytics, machine learning and comprehensive real-time monitoring that significantly reduce downtime, improve maintenance processes and extend asset lives, lowering cost and delivering measurable ROI. Based on our initial assessments and customer discussions, we view theft as perhaps the most pressing issue facing cell tower operators today.

Theft alone can potentially cost cell tower operators hundreds of millions of dollars annually and it is a growing and largely unaddressed problem in the United States. As copper, fuel and assets costs rise, it's widely expected that theft could become an even bigger risk management issue in North America as it already is on other continents.

To combat this risk, we are bringing to market the strongest available solution backed by years of proven performance. We are still working through final hardware and services pricing models, but given the expanded scope of the AIO solutions, we currently expect our average AIO sale to be 5x to 6x the average sale of existing OmniMetrix products.

Given expected pricing and the scale of the opportunity, it provides a very meaningful growth potential for our company. We currently have our first 2 AIO-based tower sites live and running for customer demonstrations. For those of you who may or may not be familiar, cell towers are typically managed by independent tower companies who own and operate the physical structure and lease space to multiple wireless carriers.

The 2 sites we are running are both in the Atlanta area with an existing telecom customer, where we are monitoring their shelter or hut within the cell tower as well as the front gate. Our dashboard shows everything, including stats on power systems, fuel levels, battery voltage, operating equipment, temperature, humidity, HVAC run time, flood detection, et cetera, along with live feeds from security cameras that monitor physical access.

We have secured permission to take prospective customers to these sites and expect to begin these efforts in the coming weeks. As I mentioned, we are in the process of advancing our program to launch these products in the U.S., including fine-tuning features and alerts, the sales approach, installation protocols, customer materials, as well as sales and training collateral that our team will need to scale this offering.

The AIO team has been to Atlanta for several weeks to train and work with our engineering, tech support and sales and marketing teams to set us up for success in this product launch. In terms of our financial reporting, we have set up a separate reporting segment called Infrastructure Solutions, or IS, to track this line of business, which you will note in our 10-Q. We do not expect revenues from this segment in the first half of 2026. We continue to believe that attractive secular tailwinds should support our value propositions and growth potential for years to come. Companies are increasingly focused on ensuring reliable access to energy infrastructure and the compliance support they need.

At the same time, broader demand drivers such as AI, data centers, electrification, EV adoption and reshoring continue to strain an aging U.S. grid, compounded by severe weather trends, all of which underscore the importance of energy resilience. In March, we saw severe

storms across the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic leave more than 1 million customers without power in the PJM and MISO territories.

Even with significant investment, it will take years, if not decades, to address these challenges, and we believe this positions us well, both for the near term and longer term. Given substantial unmet needs in our current markets plus opportunities in adjacent addressable markets, we believe 20% average annual revenue growth over a 3- to 5-year period remains achievable.

Further, our capital-light, cost-efficient and scalable business model positions us to bring roughly 50% of each incremental revenue dollar from our existing business to operating income line. As a small company, large hardware shipments will make our quarterly results down, but our high-margin recurring revenue model supported by strong secular trends positions us well to continue to deliver growth and value to our shareholders. With that, I'll turn the call over to Tracy for financial and operational insights. Tracy?

Thank you, Jan. The headline takeaway from our Q1 2026 results is the continued strength of our recurring monitoring revenue stream and the improved gross margin profile of the business set against a challenging year-over-year hardware comparison driven by the timing of our largest contract.

I'll also point out that our OmniMetrix operating subsidiary remained solidly profitable in the quarter, delivering operating income of $395,000. We provided a fair amount of detail in today's news release and in our Form 10-Q, so I'll just touch on a few of the key highlights.

Focusing on Q1 '26 versus Q1 '25. Total revenue was $2.227 million, down 28.1% from $3.098 million in Q1 '25. The decrease was driven by a $1.019 million or a 55.7% decline in hardware revenue. Primarily attributable to the timing of deliveries under our material cell phone provider contract partially offset by $148,000 or 11.7% increase in monitoring revenue. Monitoring revenue grew $1.417 million, reflecting continued expansion of our installed base of monitored endpoints. Hardware revenue was $810,000, which included $556,000 of new hardware sales and $110,000 from the amortization of deferred hardware revenue. The latter compared to

$315,000 in the prior-year period as we approach the final recognition of the remaining deferred hardware balance later this year.

Gross margin improved 510 basis points to 80.2% from 75.1% in Q1 2025, reflecting both the higher mix of monitoring revenue, which carried a 94% gross margin in the quarter and a lower contribution from material contract hardware. Operating expenses rose 11.2% to $1.914 million, driven by a $228,000 increase in SG&A, partially offset by a $36,000 reduction in R&D following completion of the new Omni and OmniPro development programs.

The SG&A increase was primarily due to $136,000 increase in noncash stock-based compensation expense related to stock option grants to officers and directors plus $111,000 in higher OmniMetrix SG&A, reflecting incremental personnel and technology investments, partially offset by lower commissions.

OmniMetrix segment operating income, the combined operating results of our PG, CP and IS segments was $395,000, demonstrating the continued profitability of our core operating subsidiary even in our seasonally lowest revenue quarter and even after absorbing

approximately $50,000 of operating expense in our pre-revenue Infrastructure Solutions segment, which included the hiring of a new sales manager in February for the IS segment.

On a consolidated basis, including unallocated corporate headquarters costs, we reported a net loss of $77,000 or $0.03 per basic and diluted share compared to net income of $464,000 or $0.19 per basic and diluted share in Q1 '25. The Q1 '26 results include $197,000 in noncash-based stock compensation expense versus $61,000 in the prior year period.

We recognized an income tax benefit of $25,000 in Q1 '26 compared to income tax expense of

$154,000 in Q1 '25. We did not record any change to our deferred tax asset valuation allowance in the quarter. We continue to maintain a partial valuation allowance of $10.3 million, leaving a meaningful base of NOL and capital loss carryforwards to support future growth and potential M&A initiatives.

Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow. We ended the quarter with cash of $4.257 million compared to $4.454 million at year-end 2025. Excluding deferred revenue and deferred cost of goods sold, net working capital was $6.024 million at March 31, '26, versus $6.184 million at year-end, and I remind you all, we remain debt-free.

Q1 cash flow from operations was $53,000. We also used $260,000 in investing activities, of which $250,000 represented the upfront payment for the acquisition of the exclusive commercialization and distribution rights under the AIO technology partnership agreement executed January 1 with the remainder of the other capital items. Stock option exercises generated $10,000 of financing cash inflow.

OmniMetrix's deferred revenue or what we refer to as our backlog was $3.269 million at quarter end, of which $2.934 million is expected to be recognized as revenue in the next 12 months. Operationally, our next-generation Omni and OmniPro generator monitors and our RAD Ex cathodic protection product are all built on our new OCOM proprietary communication core are now being deployed in the field.

These platforms reduce installation time, lower service costs and enhance reliability, which strengthens our value proposition on our competitive position as we move further into 2026. Within the Infrastructure Solutions segment, as Jan mentioned, we now have 2 telecommunications tower sites live for customer demonstrations.

We're really excited about this opportunity to bring AIO solutions to North America under the Omni brand and the broader set of growth opportunities ahead of us. I very much look forward to updating you as we progress in the coming quarters. Operator, at this time, please prepare the lines for questions. Thank you very much.

[Operator Instructions] We take our first question from the line of Joel Sklar.

Let me start off by saying I'm suffering with a bad head cold, so if I'm at any point I'm inaudible or cough, please let me know and bear with me. First, just a comment in that your option package. I'm an investor in a lot of other public companies, and I don't think it's in any way unreasonable given the success that OmniMetrix and Acorn has had. I think it's wonderful that

Disclaimer

Acorn Energy Inc. published this content on May 07, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on May 08, 2026 at 14:24 UTC.