day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Leef Brands full year and fourth quarter 2025 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, we'll open up for questions. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You'll then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised that today's call is being recorded. I would now like to hand it over to our first speaker, Jesse Redmond, Chief Strategy and Investor Relations Officer. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Welcome to Leef Brands fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. Joining me today are Micah Anderson, our Chief Executive Officer, and Kevin Wilson, our Chief Financial Officer. Please note that today's discussion will include forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from what we discuss today. For a full discussion of these risks, please refer to our filings on SEDAR+ and on our website. Our financial results and press release for the quarter are available at leefbrands.com in the investor relations section. Today's call will begin with remarks from Micah, who will discuss the key operational highlights from the quarter and the continued progress at Salisbury Canyon Ranch. Kevin will then walk through the financial results in more detail.
After that, Micah will return to discuss what lies ahead and why we're so excited about Leef's future. With that, I'll turn the call over to Micah.
Thanks, Jesse, and good afternoon, everyone. I want to start by thanking everyone for taking the time to tune in and learn more about the Leef Brands business. 2025 was a pivotal year for our business. Today, I'm going to highlight a couple of the company's wins from 2025, as well as talk about what the future looks like for our company. We had our first successful year cultivating close to 65 acres in Santa Barbara County. We grew close to 2 million plants, which has led to largely improved economics within our core extraction business. We grew revenue by 22% year-over-year and doubled our gross margins in the last 2 quarters of the year. Today, we will get into the details that drove this improvement.
It's also worth noting we were successful in converting close to $12 million worth of debentures in an effort to strengthen our balance sheet. As many of you know, our core business centers around an extraction facility we've been running since 2018. Leef has scrapped and fought our way to becoming one of the largest concentrate providers, and I'm proud to say that we power many of the largest brands in the industry. To give you guys a sense of how large the extraction business is, we process over 200 acres worth of raw cannabis material a year through our extraction facility, which then gets turned into different types of concentrated products. We don't sell flower. We don't co-pack for other brands. We are very focused on providing medical-grade, formulated, concentrated ingredients to the largest players in the space.
We grew 65 acres in 2025, but still purchase many more acres worth of product from other farms, which obviously doesn't give us the full economic impact we will see once the farm is complete. This is why our main focus in 2026 will be to complete the build-out at our cultivation facility and bring even more of the supply chain needs in-house in 2026 and into 2027. The market rate in California for the type of material we purchase for extraction is between $20-$50 per pound. We cultivate the same material ourselves for $8 or less. With the recent financing event of up to $8 million led by Mindset Capital, our intent is to really stay focused in California by finishing the farm. This is where Leef can find the largest return on investment over the next couple of years.
Kevin will get into the numbers in a minute, but before I hand it over to him, I want to run through a few fun facts and things to think about as it relates to our business. Once fully built, we can produce around 1 million pounds on the current licensed footprint in Santa Barbara. I believe that there's an opportunity for us to increase our licensed footprint on the farm over the coming years, leading to more pounds produced. If we were to turn all 1 million pounds into distillate, which is our lowest value concentrate SKU, and sell it at today's fair market value, it would equate to close to $39 million in revenue. Vape sales recently overtook flower sales in California, and we see this trend happening all over the industry. Hemp beverage and vape sales over the past few years are clear consumer demand indicators.
Clean, high-quality oil is crucial to building a real brand in this category. We are currently cultivating pounds for $8, but I do believe that we will get this number down over time through innovation and discovered efficiencies. The material we cultivated in 2025 was completely pesticide-free. This is important and will matter more in the coming years under rescheduling and the more medical landscape we believe is coming. For this reason, I believe Leef is building the supply chain of the future. This will make Leef a potential global market provider when international export is allowed. You have all heard the rumors of the federal government rescheduling cannabis. In past years, I've been bearish on this happening, but from what I've gathered more recently, I do believe that this will happen this year.
The administration has dropped many hints around the medical aspects of the plant, and I do believe that we are going to see stricter, more medical-like guidelines over time, which is why we are building Leef the way we are. Beverages, softgels, edibles, topicals, and even vapes are the products of the future, and this is where Leef is laser-focused. To my point, we are also watching the Medicare CBD pilot program that is launching this spring. The federal government is looking at covering CBD products for seniors, which is a validation of the medical direction this industry is headed. Leef's pesticide-free supply chain is built for exactly that kind of regulated market. I'm gonna pass it over to Kevin to run through the financial performance, and then I'll jump back in to highlight a few things investors should follow over 2026.
Thank you, Micah. I wanna spend my time today not just walking through the numbers, but helping you understand what those numbers are actually telling you. Because as Micah mentioned, we think 2025 is best understood as two distinct chapters due to the addition of the Salisbury Canyon Ranch to Leef's operations. Every key financial metric improved year-over-year. Revenue was up 22%, margins grew from 27%-30%, EBITDA increased, and cash flow all moved in the right direction. The headline numbers alone don't capture the full story, and that story really is a tale of two halves. Chapter one is the first half. Revenue was $18.1 million, with gross margins of 19.7%. Negative operating cash flow. A business carrying a cost structure that simply wasn't sustainable. We knew it, and we did something about it.
Chapter two is the second half of the year, when Salisbury Canyon Ranch came online for the first harvest. Second half revenue came in at $16.7 million, modestly lower than the first half. Look at what happened to the quality of that revenue. Gross margins expanded to 41.4%. That's a 22 percentage point improvement, half over half within the same calendar year. Gross profit went from $3.6 million in the first half to $6.9 million in the second half, doubling on lower revenue. That's the impact that Salisbury Canyon Ranch has on this business. Q4 is where we wanna focus your attention because it tells the most complete version of the story. Q4 revenue was $8.3 million, up 39% year-over-year from $6 million in Q4 of 2024.
That's the strongest year-over-year revenue growth that we have delivered in any quarter this year. More importantly, we generated positive operating cash flow of $1.3 million and positive free cash flow of $1.2 million in the quarter. That is the number that matters most to us. It demonstrates that the business running on a post-Salisbury Canyon Ranch model is self-funding at the operating level. The GAAP net loss in Q4 is heavily distorted by a $10 million non-cash charge related to the accounting treatment of our December debenture conversion to equity and one-time impairment charges. This is Leef strengthening its balance sheet ahead of reform, not a cash event, and it does not change the forward operating picture. The cash flow picture tells the same story even more plainly.
In the first half of 2025, we consumed $2 million in operating cash flow and ran a free cash flow deficit of $2.4 million. In the second half, operating cash flow was a positive $1.7 million, and free cash flow turned to a positive $1.3 million. That's a $3.7 million swing in free cash flow from one half of the year to the other. We ended the year with $2.2 million in cash, which is more than double where we were at the midpoint. As I mentioned, I do wanna be direct about the net loss figures. The GAAP net loss in the second half is significantly impacted by those non-cash items, primarily the accounting treatment of the conversion of our convertible debentures in December, one-time impairment charges, and the treatment of our derivative liabilities.
These are real line items that affect the income statement, but they're non-cash, and they do not reflect the forward operating trajectory of the business. The operating and free cash flow figures are the right lens here. We're proud that we were able to strengthen our balance sheet and thank the debenture holders for their help in completing this transaction. The reason we're telling you this story in halves is 'cause we genuinely believe the second half exit rate represents a fundamentally different business than the one we were operating 12 months ago. The cost structure is different, the margin profile is different, the cash generation is different, and we believe that business is the one that shows up going forward. Lastly, today's filing is our first 10-K as a company. Filing our first 10-K establishes us as a fully compliant SEC registrant.
It reflects our commitment to transparency and governance and sets the foundation for up-listing to a higher exchange as our growth trajectory continues. I'll now turn it back to Micah before we open the line for questions.
Thank you, Kevin. As I mentioned above, the theme for Leef in 2026 is gonna be about focus. We're gonna focus on completing the farm in California and continue to earn market share in our own home state. We continue to make progress on our New York operation, but our primary capital allocation in 2026 will be completing the California farm, where we see the highest ROI. With the recent financing event led by Mindset Capital, we are going to complete the farm. This means that we will be investing into fencing, irrigation, fertigation, field prep, licensing, infrastructure, legal, lobbying, and investing into our team. We plan to add roughly 15 acres to the existing area we cultivated in 2025 in the spring and will again add more licensed acres in the fall of 2026.
We are not exactly sure how many we will add in the fall, but this will be one of the things we will be updating investors on throughout the year. The good news is that we have our local permits in hand, the capital to complete the farm, and a solid team to execute the plan. As Kevin stated, you can clearly see it in our numbers, pairing the farm with our extraction business changes our economics and sets us up well for future optionality. Our business model is unique, and you can clearly see what the business looks like with and without the farm.
As we go into Q2 of 2026, we will be running out of the material we grew in 2025, and you will see this in our numbers. We have planned for this, and in my eyes, this is evidence that our model clearly works. We will see new material coming off the farm starting in late June, and then should be flush with new material going into 2027 and onward. I also want to highlight the addition of Jamie Mendola to our board. Jamie is a proven executive in the cannabis industry and brings a strong understanding of what it takes to build and scale successful businesses. His perspective is a great addition to the team, and we are grateful to have him as we begin to scale this business.
I'd like to give a special thanks to Aaron Edelheit and the Mindset team for taking the time to come see what we were working on and really dive into understanding the business. Leef is blessed to work with an amazing team of employees who are passionate about working with the cannabis plant and driven to succeed. Thank you all again for tuning in. If you're listening to this and you believe in what we are building, I'd encourage you to take a position in Leef and hold it. We are looking for long-term shareholders who believe in our vision. We're building a real business with real assets, and the best is yet ahead of us. Follow our story, and we will keep you up to date along the way. I'll pass it back to Jesse and open it up for questions. Thank you.
Thanks, Micah. Operator, please open the line for questions.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one one on your telephone and wait for a name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. One moment for our first question. Our first question will come from the line of Brian Park as an Independent Investor. Your line is open.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the question and all the progress. A key differentiator between you guys and some of your competitors is you contract your farming labor or workforce. Could you provide some color on who they are?
We use a couple different FLCs for kind of a strategic reason, just so that we're able to, you know. I'll give you a real-world example. Last year, we dealt with a couple different fires on different sides of Santa Barbara, and we learned the hard way that you need to have multiple FLCs to pull labor from. I actually don't know the names of both the companies off the top of my head. I would have to ask the farm GM. But it's just a matter of bringing in outside labor to help us with the big days, and then the team that we have on the farm is relatively small. It's like five people or less.
Yeah, that's the strategy. We just try and outsource as much of the labor as possible.
Okay. For plans, like further expansion, you may be restricted by county ordinances. Just provide some color, like you got a lot of land and potential there. I'm curious as to, like, how much further you could possibly expand beyond the 180 acres.
The way it works in Santa Barbara County. Good question. We have a lot of land, but you can't necessarily just go plant the entire thing. It's not the way that the ordinance works. We have a 180-acre Land Use Permit. On the 1,900 acres that we have, that's our footprint. Santa Barbara County set it up originally that there's 1,500 acres of canopy. I believe that they're gonna cut that in half or dramatically cut it down. We were able to get our footprint into the cap, which means that once the cap is full, they're not awarding any more licenses. It is what it is. They're gonna reduce it.
I do think that there's an opportunity for us to apply for more and exceed, you know, go beyond the 180 acres. It's something that we're working on right now. It's not guaranteed, but I do think that we can be successful. Hopefully that answers your question. It's a 180 acres LUP, and then we put DCC licenses, which are the state licenses, on top of that.
Okay. You have 100 acres for hemp, and could you provide some color on that as well?
Yeah, sure. We had an active hemp license. We let it go dormant this past year intentionally, and they're currently keeping it alive. Right now, we're working with the county to reactivate it. It's a very simple process. Yes, we have another field on the farm. There's roughly 100+ acres that we can cultivate on. With cannabis, it's a lot more strict, or stricter. It's like you get the 180 acres, but you cannot go beyond that. With hemp, it's just a matter of working with the ag commissioner. It's a different department within the county and the state. It's a lot less restrictive. If we wanted to grow the 100 acres, we could. I don't know if we will or not.
It's just something that we're keeping active as optionality. Just with everything going on with the executive order and the hemp channel, we're just making sure that we're prepared for any sort of direction that we want to take the company, if it makes sense to do so.
Brian. Thanks for the questions. Good luck with everything.
Yeah. Thanks for the questions.
One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from the line of Aaron Edelheit from Mindset Capital. Your line is open.
Hey guys, I wanted to ask a question about when you have the farm either now or when it's fully up and running, and you combine that farm really with your lab and your manufacturing capability. Can you talk long-term, the kind of solutions or offerings that you can bring to some of the biggest brands that you already work with that you haven't been able to before? I know we've had some conversations just on, you know, having dedicated parts of the field and different genetics. Have you already started kind of those conversations? Just big picture, you know, the way I've looked at your company is almost like the way Intel used to be used in the past of, like, Intel Inside and you kind of powering brands.
Just strategically, can you talk to what you can offer your customers and these brands in terms of planning ahead of time and exclusive products?
I think big picture, you know, this will take I think over the coming years, we're gonna get better at this, and there's gonna be more opportunities for us to streamline the relationships between clients and what we do. But what we've started with is that if you're a larger brand, we believe that we can take extraction and the supply chain management side of it, the concentrated products, off of your plate and do it in a way that is better, cheaper, faster than you can yourself. Genetics, you know. If you're a larger brand, I'll give you kind of a real world example. All of these brands are trying to diversify their marketing campaigns and what they're selling versus the next guy by way of, like, terpene profiles and strains, right?
We work with them on that. Take a company like Kiva. It's like, okay, Kiva, what are the, what are the evergreens that you guys you know you wanna have these in the rotation for a long period of time. We can put those into our nursery program and then grow those for you on the farm, to give them predictability. I mean, really, it's just like it's a large enough footprint, especially once we're fully scaled out, to where we can say, "Okay, this 10-acre block is yours, and what do you want us to plant into this 10-acre block?" Then share with them data yield results, both out of the field and out of extraction, to help them with predictability on planning their business.
Like, you know, an example of that would be you want us to grow this tangerine strain because it's a very unique terpene profile, but it does not perform well out of the field, and it doesn't perform well on a, like an extracted plant through hydrocarbon. We share that with them so that they can then, you know, make decisions around where should we steer the plants that we wanna have and the types of concentrates that we wanna put into the brand to help them with their own margins. It's predictability. It's bandwidth for them. What we do is, you know, it's a lot of work. It's a big undertaking. We take that completely off their plate so that they don't have to worry about it.
I think the biggest thing is if you're a big brand, you should be really worried about making sure that your supplier has a very solid plan when it comes to pesticide mitigation and yields and all the rest, just to make sure that, you know, you don't end up with an issue to where you have supply chain issues. I think that that's really what this farm offers. It's very unique. Aaron, I know you've come and you've seen it, but it's like it's tucked up against this national forest, and so there's really no one around. It's like, it's an insurance policy. It's a way for us to protect ourselves and then pass that protection on to the client.
That's helpful. Can you also talk about just that, you know, for planning from Leef's perspective, when and maybe you're starting this year once you get, you know, this summer, once you get the supply coming back online. How do you guys think of and you alluded to this in your comments, but how do you think of vape oil being kind of a lower margin? I know you guys sell like 100, over 100 different SKUs, but some of them have very different margin profiles.
Mm-hmm.
As you build out this farm and your capability, you know, is it that we should expect over time Leef itself able to plan and achieve higher margins just because you can produce more of maybe the higher margin profile? I'm just gonna use an example, but like live resin or rosin or the different, you know, niches that maybe have much higher. How do you think of that in terms of planning the farm and turning on all this supply, and when might we be able to see, you know, just more margin and revenue optimization?
Yeah. I think this year is the year that you'll. We've already started on it. You're right. I think year one for us was like, let's keep it simple, stupid, and let's grow something that we know that we can be successful with, and let's focus on the product that we sell that has the most liquidity behind it and just you know. That has been distillate for us in years past. What's been interesting, though, is that we're definitely seeing like our hydrocarbon line is now on pace with you know meeting or surpassing our distillate sales. You're right. Distillate, it's the lowest value SKU that we sell, but it's liquid. We have a huge demand for it.
It's a bit of a balancing act of like, how much of the field should we plant to go towards the distillate side of the business, or how much should we plant that's more like frozen products? The other honest truth of it was like, anytime you plant a big field, year one, it's going to be a learning experience. We didn't want to, like, plant too much frozen in year one and then only to find out that, like, the material didn't perform or we had issues with logistics around processing and freezing the material off of the field.
Now that I feel like we've worked through those kinks, it's a matter of, like, talking with clients, working with them on their demand planning, and then backing that into the field so that way we don't, you know, go too heavy on one thing and not the other. Of course, we're trying to balance all of this stuff as we go, and we're trying to lean towards things that have more margin than not. There is a balancing act there. It's like just because live resin or a specific type of large faceted diamonds have a higher revenue profile and a higher margin doesn't mean that the liquidity is there when it comes to like sales.
You know, we're managing all of that, where you need cash to come in at a certain pace, and you need to use this product to keep yourself sticky with the client because you know that, like when they're formulating vapes, they need distillate as the main base ingredient, but then they need all these different terpene profiles to then mix with that. Very long-winded way of answering your question. It's like an ongoing thing. I think it's something that we'll get better and better at over time. Year one, we definitely tried to keep it as simple as possible. Year two, we're adding a little bit of complexity to it.
We're going to do more frozen on the field this year than we did last year, and I'm sure that that's going to be the ongoing evolution of this farm as we continue to build it out.
Okay. Thank you so much.
Yeah, no problem.
One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from the line of Josh Felker from CB1 Capital. Your line is open.
Hey, Micah. Congrats on the quarter.
Thank you.
This is actually going to be an addition to Aaron's question on margin expansion and SKU strategy. I definitely understand that there isn't infinite demand for all extraction outputs.
Mm-hmm.
You did provide what a revenue opportunity could look like for Salisbury if it was all distillate. I'm just wondering what is the pricing range on the other extract outputs? If distillate is, you know, $5 a liter, I have no idea on the pricing. You know, what are the more premium extracts, what's the revenue profile on them?
Distillate, like on average, I think over the past 12 months has been around $1.10-$1.20 a gram. You know, what is that? $1,200 a liter. Somewhere in that area. The other side of it, whether it's coming out of hydrocarbon or rosin, it's definitely between like $2 to all the way up to $8. I think that I'd say that the things that are on the higher side of that are also the things that there's not the largest demand for. It sounds sexy. It's like, oh, man, well, why would you do anything but the $8 stuff? Well, it's because the market isn't. We can't sell through that much material, so it's back to that balancing act at some.
Yeah, but everything else is definitely double, if not triple and more, valuable than the distillate line.
Got it. That helps. Might squeeze in two more if that's okay. Could you break down.
Go for it.
You know, how much of the second-half margin expansion was driven by that internal biomass versus maybe other factors like that improved product mix or pricing or other things like that?
Yeah. Kevin, you're intimately, you're always in the data. Do you want to maybe share, some of the stuff that you know is top of mind for you?
Yeah. We were very focused on the distillate side and running our SCR material, and so, you know, distillate makes up roughly 40% of the overall revenue of the year, and 100% of that was SCR material in the quarter. Like Micah said, there's a balancing act between, you know, what are you running to distillate versus what are you running to the other two lines. The other two lines performed well, even though it was roughly a 60/40 mix of SCR material to external material. We work with a couple of really good farms that have great low cost quality frozen, so we can rely on that well. We're really heavily focused on, you know, making the best margin distillate.
I don't know if that answers your question or not, but yeah, it's really focused on our own production on distillate in Q4.
No, that helps. Last one is just do you have, I know you didn't provide it in your statements, but any ballpark on remaining CapEx to complete the entire ranch?
Kevin, do you want to take that one or you want me to?
No, I got it.
Okay.
Yeah. You know, we're blessed to have Aaron and the Mindset team come in and help us expand this ranch with the capital that we announced a couple of weeks ago. You know, a good chunk of that, you know, between $3 million and $5 million is going to go towards building out the rest of the acreage in the LUP. You know, everything that comes with that. Micah rhymed off a bunch of stuff, but there's some soft costs, you know, fencing, security cameras, wells, all of that in order to get prepared for the season ahead. Yeah, it's roughly between $3million-$4 million to get all that built out, and we're going to be doing that between now and this fall. Super. I appreciate it. Congrats guys.
We're looking forward to the next year. Thank you.
Thanks. Appreciate it.
Thanks, y'all.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Morgan Paxhia from Poseidon. Your line is open.
All right, great. Thanks, guys. Congrats on securing the investment and getting Jamie on board, and you guys have been busy. So just a follow-up from that previous line of questioning around the CapEx. Obviously nice improvement on operating cash flow second half of last year. I'm just kind of extrapolating that forward, and just trying to get a picture of what the company looks like after you do this additional CapEx and operating cash flow. What, you know, can you kind of give us a sense of how this is gonna look post the additional investment?
You know, I, Mike, I did hear what you were mentioning about just even if you just sold all of it into one particular product line, but just thinking about the bigger picture for not just this year, but, you know, the next, you know, two, three years.
Yeah. Q4 to me was, like, the first quarter where I'd say that it's like there's evidence of, like, this is what the business should look like going forward. The reason why is because Q3, like, we're harvesting stuff, material's coming in, but we hadn't really started running everything. Even Q4, I'd say, has so much room for improvement because we're still sourcing from all these other farms, like Kevin said. We weren't really running our own frozen material. I think, like, there's gonna be improvements moving forward.
The problem that I see, you know, just being transparent going into, you know, the tail end of Q1 and into Q2, is that we ran out of that material that we grew ourselves, and so we're kind of back to the way that we used to run the business, which is going out and procuring from all these different farms. You're gonna see the impact of that, something that we've been discussing. We're highly aware of it and have been planning for it. Kevin, maybe I'll pass it back to you a little bit, and you can maybe go into, like, what we think Q3 and Q4 looks like once we're back on track with all of our own material.
I think the goal for us, Morgan, is like when we knew that we were gonna run out of the material, and with this latest investment, why we're like pivoting kind of, you know, a lot of the energy and focus back to California is like our goal now is to like let's expand as much as we can on the farm and get it to where like this kind of procurement hiccup that we're you know gonna experience here in the near term is no longer a factor going forward. And so we're always just like we are always running our own material, and I think it just gets better from there. Kevin, I don't know if you wanna maybe add on to what I just said, but that's the plan.
Yeah. It's the consistency of having the material and not having to pivot back to, you know, third-party sourcing. As Mike has said, you know, transparently speaking, we're running out of material here. Q1 is shaping up to be really good, but we will have a bit of a softer second quarter because of that before we get the harvest at the end of the second quarter, and feel that impact in Q3, just kind of like last year. It's gonna be the consistency of having enough material at any given time, and then having, call it 180 acres going into 2027 and beyond.
You know, you're going to be able to make the decision, to Mike's point earlier, about, okay, now I can freeze more and have more going to those other two more niche lines, while still maintaining the level of output of distillate production. I think that we'll also be able to. I don't have specific numbers to give you today for like Q3 and Q4, but we would have enough material to increase our production output because we're not running at capacity right now. Again, it's just the level of consistency.
One thing to add to that, to point out that I think is super interesting is like Q4 typically is our worst quarter. Q3 and Q4 are typically the softer quarters for us, and this past year it was kind of the opposite. Like, we had a great Q4, and we had a good Q3 too. It's absolutely because for the first time ever, we had enough material to run. That's been the flaw in our business, you know, since we started the company, really. It was just like the ebbs and flows of pricing going up and down and all the complexities that go into finding and sourcing the amount of material that we purchase, you know, on a monthly basis. It's challenging.
It's a ton of material, and it comes with a lot of challenges and headaches that really kind of dissipate and fall to the wayside once you have this footprint. Yeah, we're very lucky. You know, as Kevin said, Aaron, thank you very much for coming in and supporting business because I really do think I think Q4 is the first quarter where it's like, this is a glimpse of what the business should look like. It really should only improve from there because once we start layering on our own frozen and, like, we really start getting into, like, which genetics do work well in which fields, year one, you don't really know that yet.
We have a sense off of the data that we got out of the field, but we're just gonna get better and better with that over time. Yeah, hopefully it's just up, you know, improvement from Q4.
That's great. You know, certainly seeing those numbers in the second half is very positive directionally with the margin profile across the board. I appreciate the focus on California, you know, getting that up to the scale and margin profile to make it a, you know, nice, durable business. Is New York largely done from a CapEx need? Is it, you know, is there much more to be done there, or is it, you know, just... How are you thinking about New York at this point?
Yeah, it's a good question. I think that for the time being, it's we are going to hold off on any CapEx improvements. We're gonna, you know, keep the licenses going and active and all the rest and really focus our attention. You know, we're more like looking at, like, the opportunity or like what do we believe we can do in New York? What do we believe that we can do in California? It's a no-brainer. It's like so obvious that like, man, now that you have the money to go finish the farm, that's where we should focus our energy. Yeah, that's gonna be the focus for us in 2026. We'll have the optionality of like when to kind of restart to focus on New York later down the road.
Great. Well, thank you. Hope to come up and see the farm soon.
Anytime. I'm here today.
Thank you.
Thanks, Morgan.
One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from the line of Mariusz Skonieczny from MCE. Your line is open.
Hi. Thank you guys for taking my call. My question is for Kevin. When you guys reported your Q3 financials, the farm was only contributing part of the quarter, and you reported gross margins of 45%. Now you reported Q4, and the farm was contributing for the entire quarter, and you also reported gross margins of 45%. If you compare 45% to 45%, it seems like there is no improvement from quarter to quarter, and I was just wondering if you could explain the discrepancy.
Yeah. It's a really good question. During the close, we identified certain indirect costs, specifically around the cannabis licensing, which for the farm is a significant amount of money at our scale of cultivation, that should have been sitting in COGS rather than G&A. It equates to about $0.03 a unit or a gram, overall. When we look at our, you know, entries to redo that in the fourth quarter and we look back at some of the comparatives from the previous quarter, we would restate Q3 at about 37.4%. There is sequential improvement, 37.4% relative to the 45%. It's just because of how we're recognizing COGS going forward.
Oh, okay. With the new accounting, the Q3 gross margin was 37% and now we're at 45%, which is a significant improvement.
Yeah, exactly. We'll see that as we start, you know, putting our comparatives out in future periods, like in Q3 2026, it'll be that 37% as the comparative. We are continuing to see, you know, notwithstanding the comments we just made about going into Q2, but we are continuing to see sequential improvement quarter-over-quarter as well.
Okay.
Can I say that?
Okay.
Can I say that? Or, Kevin, can I say that a little differently in, like, my own terms?
A little less accounting?
It's a good question. The main thing, like, what you know, listeners should understand is our licensing fees at the state level are, like, very expensive. You know, round math, $1 million for the year. That was not in the accounting in Q3, and it is now in Q4. You take that out, and it's about an 8% change. Is that accurate, Kevin?
Yeah. Just to be clear, though, no net income effect in any quarter or anything. It's a classification between COGS and G&A. No, no operational impact, cash flow impact, anything to that regard.
Yeah, okay. Thank you. I don't have any further questions.
Thank you. I'm not showing any further questions in the queue at this time. I will now turn it back over to Jesse for any closing remarks.
Thanks, operator, and thank you to everyone for joining us today. A replay of today's call will be available on our website at leefbrands.com. We look forward to updating you again when we report our first quarter results. Have a great evening.
Thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.