Good day, everyone, and welcome to Crown Electrokinetics Fiscal 2022 second quarter earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow management's remarks. This conference call is being recorded. A replay of today's call will be available on the investor relations section of Crown's website and will remain posted there for the next 30 days. I will now hand the call over to Allison Soss in investor relations for introductions and the reading of the Safe Harbor statement. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Crown's fiscal 2022 Q2 conference call. With us on today's call are Doug Croxall, Crown's Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, and Joel Krutz, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that today's call contains certain forward-looking statements from our management made within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Words such as may, should, projects, expects, intends, plans, believes, anticipates, hopes, estimates, and variations of such words and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements.
These statements are subject to numerous conditions, many of which are beyond the control of the company, including those set forth in the Risk Factors section of the company's annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ending March 31st, 2021, filed with the SEC. Copies of these documents are available on the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. The company undertakes no obligation to update these statements or revisions or changes after the date of this call, except as required by law. Now, at this time, it is my pleasure to introduce Doug Croxall, CEO. Doug, please go ahead.
Thanks, Allison. Thanks everybody for joining us this morning. I'm gonna start and give my report on the operational performance of the quarter, and then I'm gonna hand it over to Joel, who's gonna go through his report on our financial results. I'd like to start because we have a lot of new shareholders. For those of you who are new to the Crown story, I like to start with our mission. Our mission is to provide an affordable smart glass solution to the commercial real estate market that will enable its customers to reduce energy expenses and in turn, lower carbon emissions. Our first product is called the Smart Window Insert, powered by DynamicTint. It's an affordable solar-powered insert, which does not require hardwiring and can be easily installed in the interior side of the existing window in commercial office.
Crown's DynamicTint, which is our pigment-based thin film, was initially developed by HP and is based on our proprietary and patent-protected electrokinetic technology. At Crown, we recognize that windows in commercial buildings are inefficient insulators, causing HVAC systems to use unnecessary amounts of energy, leading to increased energy spend and excessive carbon emissions. Crown's Smart Window Insert easily installs into a building's existing window frame, leaving the existing window intact. This transforms a building's single-pane window into an energy-efficient double-pane smart window. Once installed, the insert is powered by a solar strip, eliminating the need to have each insert hardwired into the existing electrical system of the building. Our insert absorbs sunlight, thereby reducing the amount of HVAC usage, leading to lower electricity costs, and more importantly, a smaller carbon footprint.
The commercial building sector is under increased pressure from shareholders, tenants, regulators, to reduce their HVAC energy consumption and reduce their carbon emissions. We are the only retrofit product in the marketplace. Crown's Smart Window Insert is priced comparably to window blinds, which leads to a very competitive ROI and payback period. Our initial target market are the 5.6 million commercial buildings in the United States. Crown's target customers are REITs or real estate investment trusts. At this time, Crown is engaged with over 24 REITs through an iterative customer discovery process. While previous technologies focused on the smart glass market have been around for over 2 decades, these technologies have frankly fallen short of what the market demands and what the market can afford.
With legislative support and growing social awareness, building owners and tenants today are more aware of their surroundings and becoming more environmentally conscious in their decisions. Our Smart Window Insert has potential to be the dominant smart glass solution. We're the only company in the world that manufactures electro kinetic film and are the only company that offers a Smart Window Insert targeted at the retrofit market. We're continuously refining our Smart Window Insert with guidance from customers and prospective customers to become a better solution. Earlier this year, we launched our initial field test in May, June of the summer, from the 22nd floor of the Los Angeles building, where our patented ink technology was partially rendered into a window insert and then placed over single pane windows.
In August, we announced the preliminary results that suggest that Smart Window Insert can reduce the HVAC energy costs of buildings by approximately 26%. Such a reduction in HVAC utilization can also help lower carbon emissions. Additionally, the inserts are intended to reduce glare, improve tenant comfort, and eliminate the need for window blinds. Recently, we started a second field test to test a new design of our framing system. We expect to have those results analyzed and published in about 3-4 weeks. About 2 years ago, we had our first meeting with Hudson Pacific Properties. Immediately, they recognized the potential value of our technology in their buildings. In June 2020, Hudson became a strategic investor.
We've continued to work closely with their executive, their ESG, and their engineering teams to identify the most efficient and meaningful way in which to migrate our DynamicTint technology into a product offering. Our Smart Window Insert has been designed and developed with feedback from prospective customers, but none more active than Hudson. With Hudson's lead, we are identifying 2 buildings in California to roll out our Smart Window Inserts with the potential third building in the Northwest. We are very excited to start this next chapter of our relationship with Hudson and expect to have other REITs follow their lead soon. As you're also aware, we announced our first commercial agreement with MetroSpaces, a proptech-focused real estate holding company, as our first customer. We'll install our Smart Window Inserts in their 70,000 square feet Houston office building.
This rollout will help MetroSpaces enhance the efficiency of their existing windows, eliminating the need to replace their windows by easily installing our Smart Window Insert into the existing window frames. Our inserts are powered by solar energy, which means we do not have to hardwire anything into their electrical building. We're pleased with our strong pipeline of other prospective customers, and we'll update the market with additional customer wins in the future. With our growing customer base, we also continue our preparation for in-house manufacturing. We look forward to keeping you apprised of our development and manufacturing progress as we target next quarter for deployment of our first Smart Window Insert. Now let me talk about the talented team that we've built at Crown. Since our last call, we've made key new hires, rapidly expanding our engineering, manufacturing, and marketing teams.
These new hires come from backgrounds in thin film development, manufacturing, and operations from companies like Tesla, Intel, Saint-Gobain, and Kodak. Their unique backgrounds are a perfect fit for Crown as we ramp up production for our smart window insert. Most notably, to help this growing team, we've welcomed Mindy Hamlin as Vice President of Engineering. Mindy is a tremendously talented individual with extensive experience in leading and building teams throughout a product's life cycle. Prior to joining Crown, Mindy served as the Director of Technology Development Infrastructure and Operations at HP. Looking ahead, we'll continue to add talent as part of our rollout for our commercialization strategy. Now I'll pass the call on to Joel, who will review our financial results. Joel?
Thank you, Doug, and good morning, everyone. I'll review our fiscal 2022 second quarter financial results. Crown's net loss for the quarter ended September 30, 2021, was $5.7 million, which included $3.1 million of non-cash stock-based compensation expense. This net loss was $0.1 million lower than the same quarter last year, with a $2.1 million increase in non-cash stock-based compensation and a $1.4 million increase in operating expenses being offset by a $3.6 million decrease in other expense. Total operating expenses for the quarter were $5.7 million, which included $3.1 million of non-cash stock-based compensation. Excluding the impact of stock-based compensation, operating expenses were $1.4 million higher than the same quarter last year.
This was driven by a $0.4 million increase in both the R&D and SG&A payrolls, a $0.4 million increase in consulting and professional fees, and a $0.3 million increase in operating overhead. Our other expenses were nominal for the quarter as compared to $3.7 million incurred for the same quarter last year. This decrease is primarily due to reductions in our interest expense following the conversion of all debt notes in the last fiscal. Net cash used for the second quarter was $2.8 million, and this was consistent with the first quarter of this year. $2.5 million was deployed against operating activities, and $0.5 million was invested in patents and equipment while we had financing inflows of $0.2 million.
As of September 30, 2021, our cash and cash equivalents were $9.7 million. We've also recently agreed terms with a financial institution for a $10 million standing letter of credit. This facility would potentially provide Crown with access to additional financing for our operations if required during the company's production ramp-up phase for the next 2 years. Finally, to better align Crown's operational and financial calendars, we will be changing our fiscal year-end from March 31st- December 31st, effective this year. This will mean we close out the current fiscal with a 9-month sub-year, and we'll begin our new fiscal year reporting from January 1st, 2022. That concludes our prepared remarks. Now we'd like to open the call for questions. Operator, you can please go ahead.
Thank you. At this time, we will be conducting our Q&A session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. You may press the star key followed by the number 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. 1 moment, please, while we poll for questions. Our first question comes from Gerard Sweeney with Roth Capital. Please state your question.
Hey, good morning, Doug and Joel. Thanks for taking my call.
Sure, Gerard.
I was wondering if you could give a little bit more details on the Hudson Pacific rollouts. Doesn't sound exactly if the agreement is entirely formalized, but curious on that front. 2, you know, 2-3 buildings, you know, what Hudson may be looking for. Obviously they have 110 other buildings, you know, how do we go from this sort of trial to a longer established maybe relationship, contract, et cetera?
Yeah. I'll take that question. We know that we're moving forward with Hudson. What we're trying to do is identify the first couple of buildings that would make the most sense for us to roll out and for Hudson. A lot of their buildings are owned with other partners. 1 of those buildings that we're targeting, you know, we want to get as much exposure as we can, not just to Hudson, but some of their other financial backing. It's looking like it'll be a building in the L.A. area, a building in the Bay Area, and a building in either Seattle or Vancouver. It's not a trial.
I mean, this is a real customer contract where they're actually buying the product and we're building it and installing it. It's more of a phased rollout than, certainly than a trial. There's a lot of decision-making that goes into which buildings when you have 110. You know, our expectation is that we'll start with the first couple, and then we'll start to roll out across the rest of the portfolio throughout 2022.
Got it. I suspect, I mean, in the press release, you highlighted 2 buildings and then potentially a third, but it sounds as though there's also discussions for additional buildings behind these as well.
Yes, of course.
Got it. I know you've been speaking and meeting with a bunch of REITs, and you mentioned the 24 REITs that you're in customer discovery process with. You know, what does this process entail? And maybe could you provide some qualitative background as to, you know, what you're discussing, what the feedback is? And, you know, this is obviously a customer funnel, you know, how does it sort of narrow down to, you know, what everybody's looking for, you know, additional contracts or opportunities?
Yeah. You know, quite frankly, the first few meetings typically are making sure you get to the right decision-maker. Because this is our product, kind of straddles operations, engineering, ESG, tenant relations, leasing, there's a lot of different parties that, you know, are interested in what we're doing within the REIT. You know, the first few meetings are literally explaining what a Smart Window Insert is because 1 doesn't exist anywhere other than what we've made. Then it's making sure that we get to the right party. A lot of these REITs have, you know, they have office buildings, they have warehouse, they have hospitality, you know, they have medical facilities. We're trying to be very focused on U.S. office buildings.
It's really part of the first, you know, set of meetings are really identifying the right person to speak with, and then really understanding what the problems are that they have and making sure that their problem, which are windows that are inefficient, are in alignment with what our solution is. We've been, you know, I don't want to say batting a thousand, but we've not had any REITs say, "We're not interested in moving forward." It's actually quite the opposite. Most of what we hear is, "When can we get a demo? When can we get a prototype sent to our facility?" That's what we're quickly building and getting out to the market.
It's a bit of a process, but that process has been ongoing, and so we're kind of coming towards, you know, towards the end of the funnel, if you will. We should have a lot more announcements coming at the market, you know, over the next 2-4 months, I would say.
Gotcha. Final question that's obvious, you know, has to deal with manufacturing capacity. That's, you know, obviously the next step in the process. How's that coming along? Maybe address the, you know, the build-up, positioning, and if you're having, you know, supply chain issues that you're hearing like ad nauseam across a lot of conference calls, if you're having any issues on that front as well.
Yeah. We're not having supply chain issues yet. I know that a lot of companies are. We have not. Doesn't mean that we won't in the future, but we haven't. If we do, that's obviously a risk that we would publish in our Qs and Ks and let the market know. But so far, we haven't seen anything, but that does not mean that we won't. As a matter of fact, my office overlooks Santa Monica Bay, and every day there's more and more cargo ships that are lining up on the horizon. I know it's a problem, but it hasn't reached us yet. As far as manufacturing capabilities, you know, we're able to make our own film right now.
We are gearing up to be able to assemble as many inserts as we can. We're also looking at how to expand and when to expand so that we can meet what we think is a growing demand from our current and prospective customers.
Got it. Thanks, Doug.
Sure.
Our next question comes from Jeffrey Campbell with Alliance Global Partners. Please, state your question.
Good morning, Doug. The first thing I'd ask you is just to pick up on something you mentioned today. What's behind this new framing design that you referenced?
The old framing design was more of a just a gasket. No real insulative properties to it. Our insert fit within the mullion, so it didn't cover the mullion. The mullion is the frame. When we were doing that test over the summer, we noticed that a lot of heat was still radiating through the frame or the mullion and the sill. Frankly, the gasket didn't look like it fit in the building. It looked like it was an add-on. We redesigned our framing system so that it looked more like the exact framing system of the building.
The second go-around with the new framing design is more insulative because it's covering the mullion, and therefore protecting a lot of that heat from radiating into the office, and it looks exactly like the existing framing system when the building was built. The prospective customers that we've demonstrated the new framing system for, you know, frankly couldn't tell the difference. As a matter of fact, many of them said, "This looks exactly like it was a part of the building when the building was built, you know, 30 years ago." The system was meant to do 2 things. One, aesthetically, the look of the smart window insert, and from an ROI perspective, improve the performance of the insert.
How that relates to their field test, Jeffrey, is that, you know, we're trying to get a number of days where the weather now matches the weather pattern that we used, you know, that we experienced, I should say, over the summer for the first field test, so that we can draw a comparison and say, "Oh, this new design has increased the energy savings by an additional X%." Our challenge right now is to get Mother Nature to coincide now with what we experienced in the summer. We have a pretty good data set, but we want to have a pretty robust data set 'cause it's an important number. You know, we're continuing to test.
Hopefully, in another 3 or 4 weeks, we have enough meaningful data in our data set to draw that comparison.
You know, I certainly wouldn't recommend Manhattan for that data capture right now, so I'd stick to where you are. Just wondering if you could provide us some colour on the economics and the strategy underlying the recent IBM patent acquisitions, you know, what your thinking was there.
Our Q is gonna be published at the end of the trading day, 4:00 P.M. your time. The details will be with you. Joel, what was the purchase price? $200?
225.
$225,000. The assets are. I get this question a lot, are the assets offensive or defensive? The way I would categorize it is that they're very good assets for Crown to own because there are some claims in the portfolio that cover areas of technology that we very well may see our product and technology move towards. We want to have ownership in that area so that we can you know make, use, or sell a product without worrying about infringing somebody else's patents. Frankly, there were some claims in the patents that we think other competitors will need a license to. It's nice to hold those cards as well.
Yeah. That sounds great. My last question is sort of thinking about the rollout in 2022, but maybe just from a different perspective. I've been really quite impressed by Crown's comprehensive preparation for product rollout, such as, you know, the proper packaging for transport that you showed me when we did a virtual visit. I'm just curious, are there any remaining gating items within Crown that you feel like need to be solved before you really start to accelerate installations over time?
We know the path that we need to go down, and we're moving down that path. There's nothing that's unknown to us at this point. Now, I say that and, you know, in 2 hours I'll get a phone call from Corvallis and they'll say, "Oh, there's something we don't know." Right now we know what direction we need to go, and we know what steps we need to take. We're pretty confident in that regard. It's really just a process of getting the tools built, getting the lines assembled, and, you know, getting the lines running. You know, we think we're pretty well prepared. Moving from R&D or prototype to actual production is challenging for all companies, us included.
Right now we feel we have a very strong handle. Frankly, when you look at the roster of employees that we have working on this, you know, I'm blown away by the quality and integrity of our workforce. They come from, you know, proven winners, and they've got a great set of experience and expertise that they bring to bear, and it's comforting to know that they're working side by side with us.
Okay, great. Thank you for answering my questions today.
Sure.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Shawn Severson with Water Tower Research. Please state your question.
Hey, thanks. Doug, can you talk a little bit about the process the REIT goes through and what do they need to understand in order to figure out if your product is a good solution for them? When you go through the sales process and you say they're evaluating it, what does that mean?
Well, it can mean a lot of different things. It can mean, I mean, not every REIT is the same, so, oftentimes it's can we see the demo and, you know, I have been a little hampered with the travel recently, but we're gonna be back at it, I mean. It's really getting out and demonstrating the product. That's the stage that we're at right now. We were able to do that with some of the REITs on the West Coast and that are a little easier for us to get to. Right now it's really just getting in front of them. We've done a lot of Zoom calls and meetings. They've seen the product over Zoom. I want them to see it in person.
The nice thing about this insert, it's not the same as buying a window. If you're buying a window for a building, that means you're removing a window. It's a much more complicated and inconvenient process than a window insert, where I'll buy, you know, 1,000 inserts and put them in a building and see how it goes. I mean, if they don't like it, they can always remove it. Right now the demand that we're getting from the REITs is pretty impressive. Timing is everything. It's not like 3 years ago we sat down and we decided, okay, when we get this technology working, let's productize it into an insert because in late 2021 there's gonna be a lot of momentum for building owners to do something to reduce their carbon footprint.
It just happened to turn out that way. We feel that we have a really compelling technology that provides a really good ROI that frankly for a few hundred dollars more is almost equivalent to the cost of a blind. The iterative process is really understanding, you know, where our inserts can go, which buildings need them, what's easy for us to deliver in order to satisfy the demand that we're seeing from some of the REITs. Look, we're in a really unique place right now. For 5 years, you know, the core team of engineers have been at it trying to develop this technology.
We're now finally getting to that stage where you can see 5 years of efforts turn into a product and a product that companies want to buy and put in their building. It's an incredibly satisfying journey, and it's an awesome place to be. You know, right now it's just about getting out, meeting with the REITs that we've been talking to and starting getting them to sign purchase orders. That's the phase that we're in right now.
From their perspective, I mean, when they look at how they might roll this out, I assume they look at their portfolio properties and, you know, they understand the product and the technology, the attributes, and then they look at their portfolio of buildings and say, you know, let's start with this 1 or something like Hudson, you know, a couple, and trying to understand how do you think that they would roll out or if you're having success at Hudson, would people be more aggressive and say, "Okay, let's take bigger bites at the apple," let's say, for roll outs?
Yeah, that's a great question, and it's actually a little bit of both. Some are, I want to try, you know, I want to see it in different regions and see, you know, how it performs. I want to see what the tenants think. By the way, the biggest pressure on building owners in my opinion is not coming from any regulatory body but actually coming from the tenants that are in the building. Which is nice for us because, you know, customers are critical for everybody, including REITs. We see a little bit of everything.
We see some companies are like, "Hey, we want to start with a handful of our properties and then roll it out across the rest of the portfolio." Some are like, you know, "We'll try with a couple of buildings and see how it goes for 6 months, and then maybe we'll expand." We get a little bit of both. You know, it kind of gets into, for us, it gets into how much of this can we make and how quickly can we deliver. Also a good problem to have, but, you know, but we're moving in that direction right now. To answer your question, Shawn, it's a little bit of both.
I guess question around another good problem to have, but will it be bottlenecks in installation? I mean, what happens if all of a sudden you get, you know, you're working on the manufacturing side, but what about if you get, you know, big orders? How does the installation process work and, you know, the rollout times?
Yeah. The way that we will do our installation, and we've done an installation already, we did it in our office in Los Angeles, but the way that our installation will work eventually is it will have a crew of Crown employees that will be responsible for the installation within a building. You know, it's labour intensive. I mean, it's a manual process. It's not hard, but it is a manual process. We'll likely have, you know, we'll start off with pure Crown employees doing all the installation because we want to understand the best, fastest, most efficient way to do it with the least amount of inconvenience to our customer. But over time, it'll likely look like a crew leader from Crown employee with a team of laborers that are probably locally sourced that are handling the installation in buildings.
You're right. I mean, these are all good problems to have. You know, when you have a demand and you have customers that want your product, you got to build it, you got to ship it, you got to install it. We're thinking through those problems and those processes right now, and we think we have a pretty good plan for it.
Great. Thanks. I think the rest of my questions offline. Thanks, Doug.
Okay.
Thank you. Just a reminder to ask a question, press star 1 on your telephone keypad. To remove your question from the queue, press star 2. We'll pause for a moment as we pull for questions. Our next question comes from Tom McMahon with McMahon Capital Management. Please state your question.
Good morning, you 2. Doug, specifically related to your patent acquisition strategy, and my question in effect, you have tangentially answered it in an earlier statement, but phrased somewhat differently. The most recent in recent months, the patent additions to your portfolio, were they intended more to impact the manufacturing process or the manufactured product, Doug?
Not so much the manufacturing process as much as what might be the manufactured product.
Got it.
When we look at IP, we look at what the IP claims to have invented, and we look to see if that's something that we need for our current product or potentially for our future plans. We also look to see if potentially it's a claim, a patented claim that could be used by a competitive technology out in the marketplace. All of those factors kind of come to bear when we make a purchase decision. It's not so much led by the manufacturing process right now as it is the actual product or what the product might be, or a product that's being used, sold, or manufactured by a competitor. It doesn't mean we won't look for manufacturing process type intellectual property. We certainly will.
We'll also invent a lot of our own processes that will be either patented or protected by trade secrets.
Got it. Okay. 1 unrelated question that show my ignorance. The time lapse, Doug, between the fabrication and installation, is there a, you know, at what point does that become a material risk or none at all? I mean, can product accumulate unintentionally at the job site? I don't mean open to the elements, but or in a warehouse, you know. Does that affect the product's efficacy?
No, it won't. Number one, when the product is shipped from our facility in Oregon to wherever the building happens to be, our expectation is that it'll be installed almost immediately. We've actually designed shipping containers, not the containers that go on a semi-truck, but our own containers that hold our inserts in a way that allows us, if we have to store it in a building, you know, over long periods of time. We don't expect that we will.
No.
We think that once the inserts arrive, they'll be installed because they're installed pretty easily on the inside of the office. We don't see that as a risk. We don't think there'll be an accumulation of inserts at a building. We think they'll get installed almost immediately.
Yes. Good. Thank you.
Sure.
Thank you. I see no further questions in the queue. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Mr. Doug Croxall, CEO and Chairman, for closing remarks.
All right. Thank you, Diego and Joel and Allison for participating today. I want to thank all of those who dialled in both on the phone and on the webcast. I want to touch on it 1 more time. There's been a team of engineers that left HP, you know, to follow a dream, and that dream was to build this technology. That dream has turned into a much bigger dream, and with a much bigger purpose, frankly. That purpose is to get our technology out into the marketplace, not only to help building owners save money, but more importantly, to help reduce the carbon that buildings put out in the environment. I feel that this company has a mandate. We must do this.
We have a role to play in the war on climate, and we think we have a really important role in that regard. It's amazingly satisfying to get to the point where you're finally getting your product built and delivered, and you're getting customers who are excited to buy and install your product. It's been a long road. Sometimes it felt like we take 3 steps forward and 16 steps backward, but you know, we're finally getting to that point where we can see all of the efforts that we put into this start to bear fruit. I want to thank everyone who participated in that process, and I'm really excited about what we have in store, not only for our shareholders and not only for our customers, but for the world moving ahead.
Thank you everybody for listening, and I look forward to talking to you soon. If not before, certainly our next earnings call.
Thank you.
Thanks.
Thank you.
Thanks.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.