Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for standing by and welcome to Adeia's third quarter 2022 earnings conference call. During today's presentation, all parties will be in listen-only mode. Following the presentation, the call will be opened for questions. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I'd now like to turn the conference over to Jill Koval of Adeia. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us as Adeia reports its third quarter 2022 financial results. With me on the call today are Paul Davis, Chief Executive Officer, and Keith Jones, Chief Financial Officer. In addition to today's earnings release, there is an earnings presentation which you can access along with the webcast on Adeia's Investor Relations website. Before we begin, I would like to provide a few reminders. First, today's discussion contains forward-looking statements that are predictions, projections, or other statements about future events, which are based on management's current expectations and beliefs, and therefore subject to risks, uncertainties, and changes in circumstances.
For more information on the risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially from what we discuss today, please refer to our Risk Factors section in our SEC filings, including our annual report on Form 10-K and our quarterly report on Form 10-Q. Please note that the company does not intend to update or alter these forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances arising after the call. Second, we refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures which exclude one-time or ongoing non-cash acquired intangibles amortization charges, costs related to actual or planned business combinations, including transaction fees, integration costs, severance, facility closures and retention bonuses, separation costs, stock-based compensation, loss on debt extinguishment, and debt refinancing costs, impairment of intangible assets and related tax effects.
We have provided reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures in the earnings release and on the investor relations section of our website. The recording of this conference call will be available on the IR website at www.adeia.com. I will now turn the call over to Adeia CEO, Paul Davis.
Thank you, Jill. I want to welcome everyone to Adeia's first earnings call as a leading independent, publicly traded IP licensing company. On behalf of our management team and our board, I want to extend a big thank you to all our employees and partners who have worked so diligently over the past few years to make our separation from the Xperi product business a success. I also want to wish the Xperi management team and its employees all the best as they begin their own journey as a standalone public company. I am very proud of what the Adeia team has accomplished. We have built an incredible licensing platform and world-class innovation engines in both our media and semiconductor businesses. Our financial profile reflects strong recurring cash flows driven by long-term license agreements with companies in a diverse cross-section of the technology and media landscape.
We are also excited about the growth opportunities that are in front of us, which I will cover in more detail shortly. As a reminder, the product business spin-off closed on October 1st, so our third quarter financial results are inclusive of the product business prior to separation. However, Keith and I will focus today's comments on Adeia. We would refer listeners to yesterday's replay of Xperi Inc.'s third quarter earnings call for more commentary on the product business. As we prepared for separation from the Xperi product business, we focused on positioning Adeia for continued long-term success as a standalone business. These efforts included assembling a new management team and board of directors, presenting our long-term vision for Adeia on a standalone basis for the first time during our Investor Day in September, and implementing new systems, processes, and corporate governance policies and practices.
While work continues on these efforts, I am proud of everything the team has accomplished, and we believe we are well-positioned to drive the business forward. While preparing for separation, we also successfully closed a number of key deals. Over the last four quarters, we executed nearly 30 license agreements, which include both new deals and renewals, once again validating the strength and continued relevance of Adeia's IP portfolios. During the third quarter, deals signed include a new multi-year deal with Philo, a leading entertainment-focused pay TV streaming service, and a long-term renewal with Foxtel, Australia's leading pay TV provider. The new license agreement with Philo demonstrates our continued applicability and growth in virtual MVPD and streaming services. Similarly, the Foxtel renewal demonstrates how pay TV providers around the world use Adeia's intellectual property to reach consumers in more innovative ways.
As we have mentioned before, we remain committed to getting the most beneficial deals done for Adeia, which can sometimes lead to a pushout in the timing. This occurred in the third quarter, with a few deals pushing out to the fourth quarter. As a result, revenue for the third quarter came in at approximately $90 million. Importantly, we remain confident in our guidance for the year as the cadence and nature of the dialogue with multiple customers remains positive. Accordingly, we have maintained the midpoint of our full year revenue expectations and have narrowed the range to $430 million-$445 million. In addition to the normal review of the quarter, I want to spend some time today covering the market opportunity for the media business. As we have noted previously, growing our annual baseline revenue is a core objective for us.
Our media business represents more than 90% of our baseline revenue, and several aspects of the media business represent important areas of growth for us. As we look at the overall media opportunity, we believe it is helpful to provide a breakdown of our current addressable markets. First, U.S. Pay TV, which in 2021 was a market in excess of $100 billion, is an area in which we have historically been, and continue to be, very successful. The U.S. Pay TV market represents roughly 60% of our overall baseline revenue. Pay TV will continue to be a significant contributor well into the future for us, even as the industry remains in secular decline. We anticipate offsetting those declines with growth in other markets, including the adjacent markets that are still emerging for us.
Moving to international Pay TV, which in 2021 was roughly $60 billion in our target international markets. Outside of Canada, we view this opportunity as a modest area of growth given the fragmentation of the international Pay TV market generally. Thus, we will focus our efforts on the more significant remaining unlicensed Pay TV providers, but we don't believe we will reach the same level of penetration as the U.S. Pay TV market given this fragmentation. OTT, which in 2021 was already a $97 billion market, is an area we believe will continue to grow. While we have been successful in starting to penetrate this market with some key wins and dialogue with other potential licensees are progressing well, we are still in the early innings of translating that into our financial results. As of today, much of the market remains a significant opportunity for us.
Moving forward, we also anticipate that we will be able to approach the OTT market more aggressively following our recent separation from the product business since we are no longer restricted by the channel conflicts we've discussed in the past. When we look at this market, it is important to note that we anticipate the average per subscriber rate will be less than what we have established in the U.S. Pay TV market. However, given the average number of OTT services each household subscribes to, this is a significant opportunity for us. Next is consumer electronics. First, for the purpose of this presentation, we have excluded mobile from the CE market. The total CE market in 2021 was $139 billion and continues to be an attractive licensing opportunity for us, especially for the global CE providers that ship significant volume into the United States.
Consumer electronics provides us with strong visibility for our annual baseline revenue and represents an area of growth with further market penetration. Lastly, social media is an attractive growth market for us, and in 2021 was a $136 billion market. We have had early success in this market, and we believe the opportunity will continue to expand with the explosion of video on social media platforms. In addition to these already large and attractive markets, we are actively working to expand into ad tech, automotive, gaming, music streaming, and sports gambling. As these markets further develop, we will provide additional details on these opportunities. Supporting these growth opportunities is our world-class team of engineers, inventors, and IP licensing executives and professionals.
Our headcount currently stands at approximately 110 employees, and we expect to grow that in the near term to around 125. I would like to highlight our media R&D team. This impressive team averages over 20 years of experience at top-tier companies, including Dolby, Amazon, Qualcomm, Charter, Samsung and Snap, to name a few. Approximately 60% of the team have PhDs and the rest hold Master's degrees, and they are all prolific inventors. Our strong internal team also collaborates with top R&D labs and academia around the world to enhance our patent innovation engine. Collectively, this team is now producing more innovation disclosures than we had prior to separation with the combined product business. It is these invention disclosures that will lead to organic growth in our patent portfolios.
Another benefit of the separation that we expected and are now beginning to realize is that without the need to navigate the separate roadmaps and strategic priorities of the Xperi product business, there is a greater focus and alignment in our R&D teams on the truly innovative and disruptive technology that will drive the value of our portfolio over the long term. Turning to our semi business, we continue to focus on executing in our five core semiconductor market segments. Image sensors, RF front-end, DRAM, NAND, and logic. We are actively engaging in partnership and licensing discussions with the remaining major unlicensed companies in each of these sectors, with an emphasis on promoting the adoption of our hybrid bonding and advanced processing node technologies. We also continued our efforts to promote our proprietary hybrid bonding technology and advancing the industry beyond Moore's Law.
Our marketing, thought leadership, and promotion of hybrid bonding at industry events has increased significantly over the past year as the world began to emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic. At these events, and based on customer feedback, we are widely recognized in the industry as a leader in hybrid bonding, and we've recently seen an increased pull from our customers and partners. We also significantly enhanced our internal semiconductor team with key additions, including a new senior sales executive and a new head of strategy. These hires add decades of experience and domain expertise and will help drive success for the next chapter of our semiconductor business. Before I turn it over to Keith, I want to provide a high-level look at 2023. As a reminder, we will provide 2023 guidance on our fourth quarter earnings call in February of next year.
First, we anticipate modest decline in revenue year-over-year. However, after accounting for the impact of our revenue recognized from Micron in the first quarter of 2022, we anticipate revenue growth in 2023. Second, in our first full year as a standalone IP company, we will demonstrate the benefits of the leverage from our highly profitable business model with investments in our patent portfolio growth, returning capital to our shareholders, primarily through our quarterly dividend, and paying down our debt through making accelerated payments. Third, we will continue to progress our efforts to expand into adjacent markets that will help accelerate our revenue growth. We anticipate initial progress in music streaming as our IP portfolio already has significant applicability, and we have begun the customer engagement process. The entire management team is excited about sharing our progress in 2023 and beyond.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Keith to discuss our financials. Keith?
Thank you, Paul. As Paul mentioned earlier, we successfully completed the separation of the IP and product businesses on October 1st, thus achieving a tremendous milestone in our history. However, as of September 30th, we were still operating as a combined company, and the financial statements presented in our earnings release today reflect the results for both the IP and product businesses. Additionally, on November 8th, our counterparts at Xperi Inc. provided a comprehensive review of the operating results for the product business for the quarter ending September 30. We refer you to their earnings release and earnings call replay for more color on the financial results and the future outlook of the product business. While we have provided GAAP and non-GAAP results for the combined business, our discussion today will focus on the results of Adeia on a standalone basis.
To aid our conversation today and to provide a more historical perspective of Adeia as a standalone organization, we have supplementally provided historical income statements of the business within our earnings deck. The earnings deck also provides reconciliations of the GAAP to non-GAAP numbers. Now let me walk you through our operating results for the third quarter. Revenue was $89.3 million, representing a 17% decrease from the prior quarter. The decline was principally driven by the recognition of a significant catch-up license fee in the prior quarter. As Paul mentioned earlier, there were a couple of deals in our pipeline we anticipated to close within the third quarter that have subsequently moved into our fourth quarter forecast. We remain confident we will get these deals closed this year, which is reflected in the guidance, which I will cover later in the call.
During the third quarter, we signed several agreements covering both our media and semiconductor portfolios, including agreements with Philo and Foxtel. These multi-year agreements contribute to the stability of our $375 million baseline revenue amount. Now let's discuss our operating expenses, which I will be referring to non-GAAP numbers only. Operating expenses were $30.4 million, a 7% increase from the prior quarter. Research and development expenses increased $466,000, or 4%, primarily due to spending associated with our efforts to further build out our innovation and development engine. Selling, general, and administrative expenses increased $1.3 million, or 8% from the prior period, primarily due to higher personal costs and administrative support functions as we continue to put in place the infrastructure to operate as a standalone company.
In the third quarter, interest expense related to our term loan was $12.3 million, up from $9.5 million in the prior quarter, primarily due to the impact of higher interest rates on the loan. Other income was $900 thousand, primarily related to interest earned on our cash and investment portfolio. Our non-GAAP income tax rate was 23% for the period. Our income tax expense consists primarily of federal and state domestic taxes as well as Korean withholding taxes. As we discussed during our Investor Day, our financial model provides significant operating leverage. Specifically, our EBITDA for the third quarter was $59.2 million, reflecting an EBITDA margin of 66%. Depreciation expense for the quarter was approximately $400 thousand. Now let me provide a few balance sheet details for Adeia post-separation.
Following the separation, we had $89.6 million in cash equivalents, and marketable securities. Additionally, we retained the outstanding term loan, which had a balance of $759.4 million. This balance reflects paying down $10.1 million during the third quarter. Also, during the quarter, we paid a cash dividend of $0.05 per share of common stock. Further, our board approved the payment of a $0.05 per share dividend on December 21st to stockholders of record as of November 30th. Now turning to our guidance. Our license agreements tend to be quite large and complex by their nature. As we look to ensure that we achieve the commensurate economic return for the value that our patented inventions provide, the timing and execution of our license agreements can vary, creating fluctuations in our revenue from quarter- to- quarter.
As such, we generally believe evaluating our performance on an annual basis is the most appropriate measure. Thus, we'll be focused on providing guidance on a full year perspective only. Accordingly, we'll be providing standalone guidance for the full year 2022. However, as Q4 will be the first time we are reporting standalone results, on this particular occasion, we'd like to give more insight, and we'll also be providing guidance for the fourth quarter of 2022. For the fourth quarter of 2022, we expect revenue to be in the range of $95 million-$110 million. We expect operating expenses to be in the range of $35 million-$39 million. We expect interest expense to be in the range of $15 million-$17 million, and we expect other income to be approximately $0.5 million.
For the full year 2022, we are narrowing our prior revenue guidance range to $430 million-$445 million. We expect operating expenses to be in the range of $120 million-$124 million. We expect interest expense to be in the range of $45 million-$47 million, and we expect other income to be approximately $2 million. We expect the non-GAAP tax rate to remain consistent at roughly 23% for both the fourth quarter and the full year. Our tax rate on a standalone basis is higher than previously reported on a combined basis, largely in part due to a greater mix of domestic-based income and utilization of certain tax credits. From a CapEx perspective, our overall needs are relatively light given our operating structure and condensed operational footprint.
As such, CapEx for the fourth quarter is expected to be approximately $200,000. In closing, I am very pleased with our results. Our media and semiconductor portfolios provide exceptional opportunities in both markets that will drive our long-term growth. With the operating leverage our financial model provides, we are well positioned to have a balanced capital allocation strategy that will help grow our business. This consists of making both organic and inorganic investments in our company to help further expand our patent portfolio and drive adoption. Additionally, we look to make accelerated payments against our term loan in order to strengthen our balance sheet. As part of our long history of returning capital to shareholders, we remain committed to continuing our dividend program. Also, I'd like to acknowledge and thank all the employees of both Adeia Inc. and Xperi Inc.
For all their hard work and dedication throughout this process to have successfully fulfilled the long-term vision that was set forth several years ago. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to the operator for questions. Operator?
Thank you, sir. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star and then one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. You may press star two to leave the question queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary for you to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys.
Our first question comes from Nick Zangler of Stephens.
Yeah. Hey, guys. So I think you're talking about a modest revenue decline in 2023, obviously, when you're comparing to the Micron deal. If I recall at the Analyst Day, you talked about a 6% CAGR. I think that was starting from FY 2021 and going through what I believe was FY 2025. So would that imply that, you know, there's an acceleration in revenue as you look past 2023 into the 2024, 2025 period, if I'm getting my math right there? If so, just curious what the driver of that acceleration might be.
Yeah. Hey, Nick. Thanks. This is Paul. You know, I think that's a great question. Thanks for asking it. You know, the CAGR was built from 2021 revenue as the baseline and went out about five years, so into 2026. Certainly we see revenue growth expanding past 2023 and accelerating a bit. But from, you know, 2021 into that 2026 period, and certainly it won't be linear as our business is often, you know, high dollar, you know, small number of deals, but high dollar deals. You can see step-ups during that period of time.
Gotcha. Is there just actually on that then a way to think about, I guess, the number and size of IP arrangements and agreements that come up for renewal each year? Just, I guess, to gauge, you know, either the risk of a non-renewal in a year, but also as well the likelihood that a particular arrangement is renewed and at more favorable rates.
Hi, Nick, that's a great question. You know, I wish there was an easy answer. You know, the truth of the matter is that our deals do vary in size. You know, one thing to kind of point out is that we're a big dollar on a small volume shop. So, you know, with that being said, all of the deals that we chase have some impact. But really what I would point to is if you take a look at our history, we have been incredibly successful at renewing. You know, it's greater than 90%. So, I think one parallel you could follow is when we talk about our baseline revenue at $375, you know, it's a combination of a couple things.
It's a combination of what we have signed today and those things that we have very good line of sight and a high degree of confidence of signing. You know, from that risk profile, you know, we adjust, but on both ends, you know, we see that growing and we have great confidence in renewing in the future.
Got it. Very helpful. Last one for me, just obviously because, you know, you're a standalone company now and we're getting used to the way that you guide. Obviously 85% of your revenue base is considered recurring. Yet if you look at, like, the guide for Q4, the range is $15 million between peak and trough. Basically like, you know, that's the 15% right there, or pretty close. Just considering that so much of your revenue base is recurring, you know, maybe you can help explain, like, why the gap between the peak and trough revenue estimate is theoretically so wide. Like, what considerations are being made when you put out that revenue range for the quarter?
Nick, that's a great question, and I like the way you tied that question back into your previous question because they're related. What that really means is that, once again, we have large sizable deals. What I had talked about, you know, the impact of any given deal in a quarter could have some influence on what we report from quarter- to- quarter. Quite frankly, even though we manage the business and we have targets, but really when we think about how we want a report card and how we score ourselves, it's on an annual basis, because the timing of those deals can shift.
There clearly could be a situation where we're negotiating a contract in general commercial terms that we need to, as Paul said, kind of hold the line and get the best terms that we can, and that might slip a month or something like that. That could have $10 million impact on revenue if they're out of license, if you will. With that's why you're seeing that gap in the range, and that's why it's very difficult just really to measure us on a quarterly basis, and that annual guidance is much more reflective.
Because, going back to your first question, when I take a look at what we had talked about at Analyst Day, and then looking at what our profile looks like, the pipeline remains strong and it's pretty much the consistent strong numbers. You know, there's really no change in our outlook.
Got it. I don't know if I said last one last time, but this is the last one. I don't know if you guys are willing to do it again, obviously, you know, now that you've broken out and new company and everything. Is there obviously, litigation expenses are a recurring cost for you guys. Are you willing to kinda like walk through everything that's pending right now, like all of your efforts that you're, you know, the various, you know, potential companies that you're going after and trying to come to some sort of agreement? Is there any way to kinda just walk through the list of, you know, where you're chasing potential agreements?
Nick, I guess maybe just a clarifying question first. Are you referring to outstanding litigation or in a broader sense?
I'm more referring to, I guess, outstanding litigation. I'm just trying to determine, like, where there are opportunities.
Sure
where you have, you know, feet on the ground, you know, trying to come to a resolution and therefore like an agreement could be reached, you know, at any near-term time.
Sure. If you look in our 10-Q, Nick, it lists all of our outstanding litigation currently. It's really Canada, and then there's an older litigation matter with NVIDIA that's still outstanding as well. That's really it that we currently have outstanding. We'll provide those updates obviously on a quarterly basis in our 10-Q, and that's where you should look for them. I would remind you, though, that the vast majority of our deals get done without litigation, right? It's not a significant part. We use litigation as a last resort, but our goal is to, you know, get deals done without litigation, and we're very successful at that.
And so, you know, I wouldn't look at that as kind of the driver necessarily for our success. It's really, you know, when we end up in litigation, it's because we need, you know, a third party to help validate the value of our portfolio.
Understood. Great. Thanks so much for that. Really appreciate it. Good luck going forward. Thanks.
Thanks, Nick.
Thanks, Nick.
The next question comes from Hamed Khorsand of BWS Financial.
Hi. Could you just talk about the essence of why the push out occurred and why you thought it would happen in Q3, and it did not?
Sure. Obviously we did get deals done in Q3. The business, as Keith mentioned earlier, is a hard one to predict on a quarterly basis because they are, you know, sizable deals that we're trying to get done, and we wanna, you know, make sure we're getting the best deal done, you know, over a longer period of time. You know, the negotiations and discussions with the other parties are going well, but we just weren't ready to, you know, close them out at that time. We, you know, we decided, you know, as a company it was better to go for the longer term value. We see that from time to time.
on an annual basis, and this is why Keith mentioned it earlier, is that we'll guide on an annual basis going forward because that's how we see and value the business rather than on a quarterly, 'cause you can get those shifts from time to time.
Is this with an existing licensee?
There's multiple discussions. It wasn't just one deal.
Okay. Just given the fluid nature of the business with these negotiations, how do you know, put them into each bucket of what's a certain event and what's not, so this doesn't happen again, especially when you look out into 2023?
Sure. Well, I would say again, I'd you know, we look at it certainly on an annual basis and the quarterly fluctuations can happen from time to time. You know, I'd say that what we look at is where they are in the cycle you know of the deal negotiation. Are we talking financial terms? Are we exchanging you know draft agreements? Or are we you know at an earlier stage where we're having technical discussions on the value of the portfolio? You know, we monitor that closely and we're very good at kind of gauging on where we're coming out on you know over a year. Again, those quarterly fluctuations can happen.
You know, right now as we look at, you know, closing out the year, we feel very confident in our annual guide, and that hasn't changed.
Okay. My last question is, given the different end markets that you were talking about in your presentation slides, what does the funnel look like for 2023? Is there a particular end market that you think you'll be capturing more of when you look out the next twelve months?
You know, certainly we continue to have success in, you know, U.S. paid TV and also in consumer electronics. We've had, you know, quite a bit of success in both of those areas. The other markets are large and attractive as well. You know, OTT, you know, and social media we've had deals there. There's deals across and even international paid TV with our announcement of Foxtel, right? We continue to have deals in all of those. We've signed 30 deals in the last, you know, 12 months, as we mentioned earlier as well. You know, there's not one deal. You know that we, you know, as we look out in each market, there's opportunities everywhere.
Not to mention, you know, we also have deals in semi as well. We're actively progressing as well. Those market segments that I highlighted today were in media, but we also feel good about the progress we're making on the semi part of the business as well.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, just a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question, you're welcome to press star and then one to place yourself in the question queue. The next question comes from Matthew Galinko of Maxim Group.
Hey, good afternoon. Thank you for taking my questions. I guess maybe going to the unlicensed opportunity in semi, particularly around the addressable markets for hybrid bonding, how do you think about the pace of capturing that opportunity?
Yeah, we're, you know, excited about the opportunities that we see. There's obviously we're getting a lot of pull, as I mentioned on the call. These deals, you know, take time. Our average sales cycle is 18-24 months and, you know, then from start to finish, and so we're at various different time periods with a number of those discussions. You know, as I look at the semi market, you know, certainly, you know, as memory, we've had a lot of success in, and we continue to have some unlicensed opportunities there, especially in, you know, the NAND market that we're actively pursuing. We also see logic, you know, starting to come into play more and more and seeing more pull there.
Obviously can't get into the details of the specific customers, but you know, we're excited about the pipeline of opportunities in semi as that business continues to really kind of expand into its next phase.
Got it. Thanks. I guess I think you mentioned plans to add to headcount modestly. What is the cadence or what should we expect in terms of that cadence in terms of how they hit between fourth quarter and you know throughout 2023? Does the current dynamics in the tech labor market make it more likely that you're able to make the hires that you're targeting?
Yeah, we certainly hope so. I mean, I think, you know, we're in a unique situation where, you know, we're trying to, you know, expand our team, especially on the R&D effort. As we've talked about before, we've got a 10% growth target. We've already expanded that team significantly, as I mentioned on the call. But we do have some hires specifically in that area that we're focused on, and we think there'll be tremendous opportunity given the market dynamics that we're seeing globally. To answer your question in terms of the timing, it will really be spread out over the year.
I don't think there'll be a you know a big hire in Q1 or not, but you know we are actively looking to expand the team, so you know it might be slightly front-loaded, but you know I do see that spread out over the course of the year.
All right. Thank you.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of our question and answer session. I will now turn the call over to Mr. Paul Davis for closing remarks.
Thank you, operator, and thank you everyone for joining today's call. Keith and I look forward to seeing many of you at the Stephens Annual Investment Conference next week in Nashville. As we close out 2022, we are excited about our path forward on a standalone basis and demonstrating continued growth in our highly profitable business model. Thank you again for joining us on the call. Goodbye.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's teleconference. Thank you for your participation, and you may now disconnect your line.