Thank you for holding. Good day, and welcome to The Smith Micro Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press Star, then one on your touchtone phone. To withdraw your question, please press Star and then two. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Charles Messman, Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Development. Please go ahead.
Thank you operator, and good afternoon, everyone. We appreciate you joining us today to discuss Smith Micro Software's financial results for our third quarter ending September 30, 2022. By now, you should have received a copy of the press release with the financial results. If you don't have a copy and would like one, please visit the investor relations section of our website at www.smithmicro.com. On today's call, we have Bill Smith, our Chairman of the Board, President, and Chief Executive Officer, and Jim Kempton, our Chief Financial Officer.
Please note that some of the information you'll hear during today's discussion consists of forward-looking statements, including without limitation, those regarding the company's future revenue and profitability, our future plans, new product development and new expanded market opportunities, future product deployments, migrations, and/or growth by new and existing customers, operating expenses, company cash reserves, and the expected impact of last year's acquisition of Avast Family Safety mobile business on our business strategy, operations, and financial positions going forward.
Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties which could cause actual results or trends to differ materially from those expressed or implied by forward-looking statements. For more information, refer to the risk factors included in our most recently filed Form 10-K and our subsequent filings on Form 10-Q. Smith Micro assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements which speak to our management's beliefs and assumptions only as of the date they are made.
I want to point out that in our forthcoming prepared remarks, we will refer to specific non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to our press release disseminated earlier today for a reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures. With that said, I'll turn the call over to Bill. Bill?
Thanks, Charlie. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today for our 2022 third quarter conference call. Since our last call, we've been extremely busy on many fronts, not only with our customers, but also with the strategic changes we began making as we outlined in our last call. After a long development process to migrate our tier one customers to the SafePath platform, we are finally nearing completion. Once the migration is complete, having all carriers on a feature-enhanced, best of both platform will ensure a best-in-class digital family lifestyle experience for our carrier partners' subscribers. Transitioning onto the SafePath platform also creates significant new market opportunities for SafePath Home, SafePath IoT, and SafePath Drive for Smith Micro and our carrier partners.
This really leads me to the point that this is just the beginning of our journey to deliver on our long-held vision of providing a single, comprehensive, digitally connected life experience for families around the world, keeping families safe in this ever-changing and evolving digital age through the SafePath platform. As we discussed during our Q2 conference call, another key benefit of nearing the completion of the migration development efforts was the capitalizing on the cost synergies that we had anticipated from the acquisition from Avast. Those cost rationalization efforts began in the third quarter, resulting in $1 million in sequential quarter-over-quarter reductions in operating costs.
In addition, we've taken further actions thus far in fourth quarter to continue to execute on our plan to reduce quarterly operating expenses by over $3 million compared to the $14.1 million in operating expense that we reported in the second quarter of this year. Jim reviewed these activities in more detail in his remarks. We believe that we have a very clear path to the achievement of our targeted operating expense level by the second quarter of 2023. We remain extremely focused on the very critical task at hand to bring the migration to a close and turn the focus on the building for the future. This next phase of the company is more exciting and larger than any opportunity I have seen at Smith Micro in our 40-year history.
After Jim's remarks on our financials, I will provide some additional details about our customers and some new initiatives. Let's turn the call over to Jim. Jim?
Thanks, Bill, and good afternoon, everyone. As a reminder, we acquired the Avast Family Safety mobile business in April 2021, which impacts the year-to-date comparisons that I'll be covering today. I'll now begin our discussion on the financial details of the third quarter of 2022. For the third quarter, we posted revenue of $11.7 million compared to $16.4 million for the same quarter last year, a decrease of approximately 29% as a result of the decline in CommSuite revenues, coupled with a decrease in Family Safety revenues. When compared to the second quarter of 2022, revenue decreased by approximately $1 million or 8%. Year-to-date revenues through September 30, 2022 were $37.1 million versus $43.7 million through the third quarter of last year.
The $6.6 million decrease is due to the decline in CommSuite revenues, partially offset by the increase in Family Safety revenues resulting from the acquisition from Avast in April 2021. During the third quarter of 2022, Family Safety revenue decreased by $2.3 million or 20% compared to the third quarter of last year, primarily as a result of the reduction of the legacy Safe & Found platform revenue related to the continued attrition of legacy Sprint subscribers, driven by T-Mobile's acquisition of Sprint. Family Safety revenues decreased 5% sequentially compared to the second quarter of 2022.
During the third quarter of 2022, CommSuite revenue was $1.1 million, which decreased approximately $2.4 million compared to the $3.5 million in revenue produced in the third quarter of last year. Revenue from CommSuite was down by approximately $400,000 sequentially compared to the prior quarter. This decrease is primarily attributable to the continued decline in legacy Sprint subscribers on the CommSuite platform as those subscribers transition off the Sprint network onto the T-Mobile network. This revenue stream has now been essentially exhausted, and any revenues associated with these legacy Sprint subscribers will be nominal in the fourth quarter.
ViewSpot revenue was approximately $1 million for the third quarter of 2022, which was essentially flat compared to the third quarter of last year and decreased by approximately $100,000 compared to the second quarter of 2022. As a reminder, ViewSpot revenue is comprised of both fixed and variable components. The fixed portion of the revenue is related to license fees and is generally the recurring component of the revenue. The variable portion of the revenue is related to device and promotional campaigns, and the timing and volume associated with this portion of the revenue stream is less predictable. I would note that with Verizon's acquisition of TracFone, ViewSpot is now being deployed at select TracFone retail locations.
While these deployments fall under the existing ViewSpot contract with Verizon, we are optimistic that this relationship will provide growth opportunities for ViewSpot over the longer term. While we are continuing to see increasing levels of marketing efforts at certain carriers, we are not expecting a significant increase in subscribers in the fourth quarter given the activity to date. We do expect revenue to increase for certain of our carrier customers quarter-over-quarter, but not enough to offset the projected decline in revenues for our legacy Safe and Found product line in the quarter. As such, we expect consolidated revenue for the fourth quarter to be flat to lower by 5% compared to the third quarter of 2022. For the third quarter, gross profit was $8.1 million, compared to $12.8 million during the same period last year.
Gross margin was 69% for the third quarter, compared to 77.5% in the third quarter of last year. The gross profit of $8.1 million in the third quarter declined by approximately $1 million compared to the gross profit produced in the second quarter. In the fourth quarter, we expect gross margin to be relatively in line with the current run rate. For the year-to-date period ended September 30, 2022, gross profit was $26.2 million, compared to $35.1 million during the corresponding period last year. Gross margin was 70.7% for the September 30, 2022 year-to-date period. GAAP operating expenses for the third quarter were $16.2 million, a decrease of $15 million or 48% compared to the third quarter of last year.
This decrease was primarily driven by a charge of $12.9 million in the third quarter of 2021 due to a change in the fair value of contingent consideration related to the Avast acquisition and a decline in amortization expenses of approximately $1.5 million. GAAP operating expense for the year-to-date period ended September 30, 2022 was $49.8 million, a decrease of $12.3 million or 20% compared to last year. Non-GAAP operating expenses for the third quarter were $13.1 million, compared to $12.9 million in the third quarter of 2021, an increase of approximately $200,000 or 2%.
Sequentially, non-GAAP operating expenses decreased by $1.1 million or 8% from the second quarter of 2022, primarily due to decreases in personnel-related costs and in contractor costs related to the SafePath migration. We expect fourth quarter 2022 non-GAAP operating expenses to decrease from the third quarter by 7%-9% due to the continued reduction in development costs related to our SafePath migrations, including the full quarter impact of the reductions in contractors that took place in the third quarter. In addition, since the end of the third quarter, we have taken further steps to reduce our operating expenses, including select headcount reductions. We also internally announced the closure of our Prague, Czech Republic, operations.
Because of statutory requirements in that country, the effective date of this closure will be December 31, 2022, which will result in further cost reductions in the first quarter of 2023. As Bill mentioned in his remarks, we are anticipating that these actions will result in quarterly savings of over $3 million by the second quarter of 2023, compared to the $14.1 million of non-GAAP operating expenses incurred in the second quarter of this year. Non-GAAP operating expense for the year-to-date period through September 30, 2022 was $40 million, an increase of $5.1 million or 15% compared to last year, primarily driven by the addition of the Avast business in April 2021.
The GAAP net loss for the third quarter was $7.3 million or $0.13 loss per share, compared to a GAAP net loss of $18.6 million or $0.34 loss per share in the third quarter of last year. The GAAP net loss for the year-to-date period was $22.8 million, a $0.41 loss per share, compared to a GAAP net loss of $27 million or a $0.54 loss per share in the prior year-to-date period. The non-GAAP net loss for the third quarter was $5.2 million or $0.09 loss per share, compared to a non-GAAP net loss of approximately $300,000 or breakeven from a loss per share perspective in the third quarter of last year.
The non-GAAP net loss for the year-to-date period ended September 30, 2022 was $14 million or a $0.25 loss per share, compared to a non-GAAP net income of approximately $100,000 or breakeven from a diluted earnings per share perspective last year. Within today's press release, we have provided a reconciliation of our non-GAAP metrics to the most comparable GAAP metric. For the third quarter, the reconciliation includes adjustments for intangible amortization of $1.5 million, stock compensation expense of $1.1 million, convertible note and stock offering fees of $1 million, and severance-related costs of approximately $100,000, partially offset by fair value adjustments of $1.6 million.
For the year-to-date period, the reconciliation includes adjustments for intangible asset amortization of $4.8 million, stock compensation expense of $3.8 million, convertible note and stock offering fees of $1 million, and severance-related costs of approximately $800,000, partially offset by fair value adjustments of $1.6 million. Due to our cumulative net losses over the past few years, our GAAP tax expense is primarily due to certain state and foreign income taxes. For non-GAAP purposes, we utilize the 0% tax rate for 2022 and 2021. The resulting non-GAAP tax expense reflects the actual income taxes expense during each period. From a balance sheet perspective, we reported $19 million of cash and cash equivalents as of September 30, 2022. This concludes my financial review. Now back to Bill.
Thanks, Jim. Let's dive into the progress being made with our carrier partners. As you've probably heard, T-Mobile is driving very hard on their integration effort, and we've continued to partner with their team to assist in that endeavor by completing updates to the various Family Safety Solutions. As Jim mentioned, the reduction in the legacy subscriber base continues, particularly with Safe & Found subscribers, which is directly driven by the T-Mobile acquisition of Sprint. Efforts are underway to stabilize this churn as customers migrate onto the T-Mobile network. Along those lines, we delivered several new releases to T-Mobile for FamilyMode, FamilyWhere, and Safe & Found since the second quarter, with the overall goal of reducing churn while adding some new enhancements to the FamilyMode product.
In addition to a billing integration effort, new messaging campaigns to subscribers have helped them navigate a better path onto the FamilyMode platform while the T-Mobile integration efforts continue. I am also pleased to report that we are beginning to see some new activity on the marketing front. While I can't get into the details, we expect that these efforts will include a high-profile campaign in the near term that will promote FamilyMode and build momentum for this product as we head into the holiday season. Now let's talk about Verizon, where we have been quite busy with several different initiatives. On the last call, I drew attention to the fact that an additional new feature needed to be added to the code base, which resulted in pushing the Verizon migration to SafePath into 2023.
We are still anticipating a handoff to Verizon in the first quarter of 2023 for their QA process and ultimately the launch would soon follow. I would also note that we were recently able to complete the development efforts associated with that same additional new feature on the legacy Ring Platform, which has recently been launched into the market. While the underlying code between the two platforms is very different, this successful Ring delivery does provide us with confidence as we deliver this feature in SafePath. As I discussed on the last call, Verizon has been increasing their marketing and awareness campaigns for Smart Family, and these efforts have continued. For example, a new campaign has been executed during the quarter, included an expanded trial period for retail training and spiffs outside of the corporate-owned retail outlets to the indirect partners.
This campaign illustrates how we've been able to build new relationships while enhancing Smart Family brand awareness as we've expanded our reach throughout the Verizon organization. These efforts are critical as we continue to build a strong partnership to deploy our multichannel marketing approach to grow the subscriber base. Let's move on to AT&T, where we see tremendous upside for the Secure Family product. First off, I'm disappointed to report that the migration of Secure Family onto the SafePath platform will be pushed to 2023. Our development team has made significant progress on the migration, but due to certain technical issues in the development, the handoff to AT&T has been delayed into next year. It's unfortunate, but the migration onto the SafePath platform for a tier one carrier is an incredibly complex effort and can present very challenging technical issues.
On a more positive front, I am pleased to report that we are in the final stages of negotiating a new contract with AT&T for Secure Family. While I can't go into the specifics, I would characterize the negotiations as being very collaborative, and I fully expect that the new contract will result in a significant increase in marketing activities to help drive subscriber growth for this platform. Overall, I can truly say there is real excitement at AT&T around the Secure Family platform, with the upside that they want to be the leader in the digital family safety space. I feel very good about where we stand today as partners, the strong relationship that we not only have with senior management at AT&T, but also within the working teams. We look forward to working together to expand our reach and drive new subscriber growth.
Okay, let me talk a little bit about ViewSpot. As Jim mentioned, we are pleased that we launched ViewSpot at TracFone retail locations. This was a solid win for us, and I was quite pleased with the overall speed of the deployment, which was a direct result of the enhancements made within the product. I continue to believe there is a significant opportunity ahead for ViewSpot as we pursue plans to expand our reach, serving not only in the carrier retail space, but branching out to other retail avenues as well. On CommSuite, as Jim covered earlier in the presentation, the revenues at T-Mobile Sprint are now essentially at their end, as we had expected. Going forward, we'll be focused on DISH as they roll out their new network offerings, which represent future upside potential for this product in 2023 and beyond.
In summary, we've made great strides and progress in the past quarter on several fronts. We've continued to make headway on the SafePath migrations, albeit with some delay on the delivery to AT&T. The progress on the negotiation with AT&T on a new contract is also very promising and should be completed in the very near term. The marketing efforts that we're seeing at the carriers is also creating a lot of optimism for us. I'm really pleased with our progress on reducing our cost structure with some very tangible results during the third quarter, with $1 million in reductions compared to the second quarter.
We have a very clear path to achieving our target of quarterly operating expense below $11 million by the second quarter of 2023 due to some of the actions that Jim outlined earlier in the presentation. We still have a lot of work to do, but I am confident that the constructive working relationships with our carrier customers will allow us to execute well on our initiative and that we can make positive impacts on subscriber growth in the near future. These are exciting times at Smith Micro, and we remain focused on a return to growth, profitability, and free cash flow generation in 2023. Operator, I'll open the call for questions.
Thank you. Before we open the call to questions, I'm just gonna turn the call over to Mr. James Kempton for a few remarks. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you. First, we wanted to apologize for the delay in the press release today. We had some technical issues in getting the release out. Also, I misspoke with regards to the year-to-date non-GAAP operating expenses, which were $40.6 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2022, resulting in a non-GAAP net loss of $14.6 million or a $0.26 loss per share on a non-GAAP basis. Please refer to the press release for the details of our non-GAAP results, including the reconciliation to the reported GAAP numbers. I'll now turn it back over to the operator for our question and answer session. Operator?
Thank you, sir. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touch tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star and then two. At this time, we will just pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Thank you. Your first question comes from Scott Searle at Roth Capital Partners. Please go ahead.
Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions. Hey, guys, just real quickly, I wanna make sure clarification on a couple of numbers during the call. The $3 million reduction in OpEx, Bill, I think you said you'd be below $11 million in the second quarter of next year. Wanna confirm if that's the number for the entire quarter, or you hit that run rate, so going into third quarter? Second, from a gross margin standpoint, I think you're looking for a recovery into the middle of 2023. It sounds like it's flattish initially here in the fourth quarter. Is that expected to show that kind of recovery, as we get into the middle of 2023 as well? Then I've got a couple of follow-ups.
Hey, Scott, this is Jim. First off, on the $11 million, that would be the expectation for the second quarter. We expect to have those cost reductions fully baked by the second quarter. We would be at $11 million in operating expenses or under. With regards to the gross margins, we do expect those to rebound in 2023 as the year progresses.
Great. Maybe to follow up on the Sprint comment as well, you know, continuing to be a little bit of a melting ice cube here, but the integration is done and just kinda waiting for them to really push the marketing button. Just wanna clarify then that Sprint is hitting essentially its nadir from a revenue standpoint in the fourth quarter. Then collectively, as we're going into the first quarter of next year, is that when we first start to see some growth in the overall SafePath suite?
Yeah, I guess that's a reasonable approach to take. You know, I think that the migration efforts that are ongoing at T-Mobile as far as getting back to a single network are well underway and the progress is being made. Safe & Found today is actually branded to T-Mobile, not to Sprint any longer, so we also have been making those same transitions and trying to keep up with their efforts.
Okay. Bill, I think you've been talking about the middle of next year, all three major carriers are up in some form of launch. I just wanna clarify your comments on with AT&T. Is that still the expectation by the middle of next year, that we should have T-Mobile, Verizon and AT&T all kinda pushing for new subscribers in that direction? I was wondering if you could frame for us as well how we should be thinking about growth in 2023. I know it's early. I know there's a lot of marketing efforts that are not within your control, but specifically around you know SafePath, you know, how we should be thinking about that growth in 2023. Lastly, if I could, Bill, you know, carriers march to their own timelines.
Once we get past the holiday season, it feels like the decks are cleared in 2023. It sounds like you're increasingly confident that they're gonna start pushing more aggressively, and it sounds like all of them. I guess, what makes you feel comfortable and confident that we're finally gonna start to see that inflection? Thanks.
Yeah. I think the best way to answer that is, you know, we've had over a year now with all three tier one carriers. We've built really strong relationships with the working groups and with the executives above them, so that I think we have some, you know, we have a constant flow of very meaningful dialogue. The result is I can now see a very clear path for growth. You know, it's yes, you're right. Carriers all, especially large tier ones, they set their own schedules. You know, I think we're starting to see a lot more clarity as to how they view the product, and how they view the opportunity going forward.
You know, I talked about what we thought the total addressable market was on the last quarterly conference call. Nothing's changed. It's a huge opportunity going forward. I just believe that we are fast approaching the time where this is all going to come to pass.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Josh Nichols at B. Riley. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks for taking my question. Just to follow up on AT&T. Understand that there's a little bit of a push out there, but any color you could provide on exactly when you're gonna be able to secure this deliverable? Is that something that you expect to do in the first quarter of 2023? Then I have a follow-up after that.
Yeah, this is something that we're working diligently on, and this is something we are working with the partner. It really is a joint effort, and there's responsibilities on both sides. This is a process that's underway and it is a little fluid right now. We had to work through some technical issues that we hadn't expected, and you know, we hadn't seen, let's say, in some of the other efforts that we've done. You know, there's a little bit of additional work that needs to be done before I can really answer your question.
Fair enough. Just thinking more broadly. You've already been doing a lot of work with, like, AT&T and even more so it seems like with Verizon. What's the potential trajectory? Historically, whenever you launch with a new carrier, it could take at least two to four quarters before there's a material upswing in subscribers. Is that expected to be the case here? Do you think the fact that, like I said, you've already been working with them for some time, that you could see an accelerated ramp and maybe in the second half of next year that you could see subs start to pick up?
Definitely. I think you'll see an accelerated ramp, because we have such a strong working relationship, and we already have presence in, you know, with their user base. I don't see any reason to think that it's gonna take two to four quarters, like maybe a brand new greenfield opportunity might take.
I guess, like, what's your stance, I guess, hard to say right now, right? Things have been pushed out a little bit about the commitment to reducing operating expenses. What's the company willing to do to achieve, you know, free cash flow profitability next year, given that the ramp of T-Mobile is likely to be a little bit slower than maybe people thought over the last quarter? Is there more OpEx cuts that you could integrate or what's the thoughts? 'Cause you do have some debt maturities to think about for next year.
Yeah. Look, you know, the OpEx cuts were the direct result of moving from two platforms down to one platform, that being SafePath for family safety. All the heavy lifting is virtually done from a coding standpoint. It's now really a quality and other integration tasks that have to be performed. It still takes time, but it doesn't take, you know, a large standing workforce for both platforms. Our efforts that, you know, we started in Q3 and we are continuing in Q4 and that we hope to finish, you know, we will finish in Q1 of 2023 to get down to that $11 million or less number for OpEx are all well underway and well planned for. I mean, there is a plan in place, and we're executing against that plan.
As far as, you know, if there were any other issues that came up, of course, you know, we always have options. We have a plan, and we're executing against that plan. I look for, you know, a successful outcome and the generation of profitability and free cash flow in 2023.
Thanks, Bill.
Thank you. Once again, if you do wish to ask a question, please press star then one to register. Your next question comes from Jim McIlree from Dawson James. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you. It sounds like you might be hitting the market with all three carriers kind of at the same time. I mean, it sounds like that's possible, whereas previously, it seemed like they were gonna be more spaced out. I was hoping you could address one, whether that's you know a reasonable scenario. Two, if it is, do you have the human resources, the technical resources to help carriers, all three carriers launch simultaneously?
Yeah, I guess, Jim, if indeed it did come to pass that all three were launching at exactly the same time, we are staffed to handle that, and that wouldn't be an issue. I think first off, T-Mobile has been on the SafePath platform for some time now. They are, you know, going through the conclusion of their merger activities, and I think that's been a major task for them. You know, it really has an impact on not only family safety, but probably a lot of other programs they're working on. You know, that part, you know, I think is well in hand. From the AT&T and the Verizon standpoint, they have, you know, their own approaches to the business.
I can actually make an argument that if all three were to push hard at the same time, the efforts by one would be a benefit to the others. They may actually help create a bigger wave, if it did come to pass that they are all doing it at the same time.
Okay, great. Yeah, that's helpful. Obviously the Fed rate increases are starting to have an impact on the economy, and I'm just wondering if you could address how you think that might impact your business next year.
We all operate in the same economic environment. Clearly, there's, you know, pressure being put on the consumers, and that could have, you know, some negative effects on business growth in 2023. I think we have one thing, however, that separates us from many other product offerings, and that is we're talking about the safety of your family and your friends, your loved ones. Sometimes I think when you're talking about something so basic, so fundamental, the price isn't necessarily always gonna be the driver. It's the fact that you really do care, and you really do wanna keep people safe. I think that separates us from a lot of other consumer-driven offerings. You know, I think that's an important fact to note.
Okay. Great. That's it for me. Thank you.
Thank you. That concludes our question and answer session for today. I would now like to turn the conference back to Mr. Charles Messman for closing remarks. Thank you.
I wanna thank everyone for joining us today. Should you have further questions, please feel free to reach out to us, and we'll look forward to speaking with you on our next conference call. Those that are attending Roth, we'll be attending Roth next week, in New York. Thanks again. Have a great day, everybody. Thank you.
Thank you. The conference has now concluded. Thank you all for attending. You may now disconnect your lines.