Greetings. Welcome to the TechPrecision Corporation fourth quarter fiscal 2023 financial results conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. Please note, this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to your host, Brett Maas, Managing Partner, Hayden IR. You may begin.
Thank you. On the call today is Alex Shen, Chief Executive Officer, and Tom Sammons, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I'd like to remind our listeners that management's remarks may contain forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties, and management may make additional forward-looking statements in response to your questions. The company claims protection of the safe harbor and forward-looking statements as contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ from those discussed today, we refer you to a more detailed discussion of risks and uncertainties in the company's financial filings with the SEC. Projections as to the company's future performance represents management's estimates as of today, June 15, 2023. TechPrecision assumes no obligation to revise or update these forward-looking statements.
With that out of the way, I'd like to turn the call over to Alex Shen, Chief Executive Officer, to provide opening remarks. Alex, the floor is yours.
Brett, thank you. Good afternoon to everyone, thank you for joining us. The fourth quarter of fiscal 2023 was another strong quarter for our Ranor subsidiary. For fiscal year 2023, Ranor operating results improved across the board when compared to fiscal year 2022, with higher revenue and improved gross margins. Ranor's revenue for fiscal year 2023 was $19.2 million, up from $14.6 million in fiscal year 2022. This is a 32% improvement year-over-year. Ranor's gross profit doubled in fiscal year 2023 to $7.0 million from $3.5 million in fiscal year 2022. The Stadco subsidiary is a turnaround. Revenue was 58% higher year-over-year, primarily due to having a full year of Stadco financial results.
Production at Stadco, however, was hampered by machine downtime, specifically in the fourth quarter. This negatively impacted revenue generation and resulted in increased unabsorbed overhead. These equipment problems experienced during the fourth quarter are now resolved. Since the acquisition of the Stadco subsidiary, there has been significant work on repair and rebuild of Stadco's equipment. We will continue to enhance Stadco's manufacturing capabilities and capacity. We continue our sharp focus on tactical execution and risk mitigation, driving both subsidiaries to fully comprehend, to successfully manage, and to successfully meet customer expectations, enabling continuous recapture and continuous retention of customer confidence. We remain highly focused on cash management, a critical piece of risk mitigation, and continue to manage and control expenses, capital expenditures, customer advances, progress billings, and final invoicing at shipment. As we successfully retain customer confidence, business prospects remain strong.
Our backlog was $44 million at March 31, 2023, $17.7 million at Ranor and $26.3 million at Stadco. Since March, Ranor has secured an additional $6 million in new orders. Now I'd like to turn the call over to our CFO, Tom Sammons, to continue our review of our fourth quarter and fiscal year 2023 results. To you, Tom.
Thank you, Alex. Net sales for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2023 were $7.5 million, or 1% lower when compared to the same quarter a year ago. Cost of sales were $6.7 million, or 4% higher than the prior year period, due primarily to lower margin project mix of Ranor and increased unabsorbed overhead at Stadco. Gross profit was $848,000, or 25% lower compared to the same quarter a year ago, primarily due to Stadco's production issues during the quarter and the resultant increase in unabsorbed overhead. SG&A expense increased by $174,000, primarily due to a severance accrual and one-time miscellaneous charges, such as recruitment fees and account receivables reserve.
Operating loss was $734,000, compared to an operating loss of $273,000 in the same quarter a year ago. Interest expense for the fourth quarter increased by $7,000 due to increased borrowings under our revolver loan. We ended the quarter with $650,000 outstanding on the revolver. For the 12 months ended March 31, 2023, net sales were $31.4 million, compared to $22.3 million in the same period a year ago, an increase of $9.1 million, the result of strong growth at Ranor and reporting a full 12 months of business activity at Stadco.
Our cost of sales in fiscal 2023 were $7.6 million higher, due primarily to the inclusion of the Stadco business for the full year, compared to only 31 weeks in the same period a year ago. Gross profit increased by $1.5 million or 45% higher on a strong operating period at Ranor. A weak operating period at Stadco dampened consolidated gross margins year-over-year, as certain production issues led to slower throughput. While Ranor's gross margin percentage increased from 24% to 36% in fiscal 2023, Stadco's performance resulted in only a slight increase in the consolidated gross margin percentage from 15.2% to 15.6%. SGA expenses in fiscal 2023 increased by $1.1 million, due primarily to the inclusion of Stadco for the full fiscal reporting period.
As a result of the foregoing, we recorded an operating loss of $1.1 million, compared to an operating loss of $1.6 million in the prior year. Interest expense was $356,000 for fiscal 2023, or $86,000 higher than fiscal 2022. The increase was due primarily to a full year of interest expense recorded on the Stadco term loan and increased borrowings under the revolver loan. Fiscal 2023 includes a one-time $637,000 Employee Retention Tax Credit refund, and fiscal 2022 included a gain of $1.3 million for a loan forgiveness under the Paycheck Protection Program. Our pre-tax loss was $783,000 for fiscal 2023, compared with a pre-tax loss of $542,000 in fiscal 2022.
We recorded a tax provision of $196,000 and reported a net loss of $1 million for fiscal 2023. EBITDA for fiscal 2023 was $1.8 million, compared to $1.2 million in the prior fiscal year. Moving on to our financial position, cash inflow from operating activities totaled $3.1 million, and we used $2.3 million of cash for capital expenditures. Our total debt was $6.1 million in March 31, 2023, compared to $7.4 million at the end of March 31, 2022, as we paid down principal on our term loans and revolver loan. Cash balance at March 31, 2023, was $531,000, compared to $1.1 million at March 2022.
Working capital was $5.6 million at March 31, 2023, compared to $2.8 million in March 31, 2022. With that, I will now turn the call back over to Alex. Alex?
Thank you, Tom. For those on the call today who may not be very familiar with our company, I'd like to do a quick review. TechPrecision is a custom manufacturer of precision, large-scale, fabricated components and precision, large-scale, machined metal structural components. These components that we manufacture are custom-designed. We sell to customers in two main industry sectors: the defense sector and precision industrial, predominantly defense sector. TechPrecision is proud and honored to serve the U.S. defense industry, specifically Navy submarine manufacturing through our Ranor subsidiary, and military aircraft manufacturing through our Stadco subsidiary. We aim to secure and maintain enduring partnerships with our customers. Overall, in both the Ranor and the Stadco subsidiaries, we continue to see meaningful opportunities in our defense sector, as evidenced by the strength of our backlog.
We are encouraged by the prospects for growing our revenue and for increasing profitability in future quarters. Finally, a reminder. We do most of our work in industries that are highly sensitive to confidentiality, which preclude us from speaking publicly about many things that a company not operating in these fields might discuss. As such, there are real limits as to what I can discuss, and sometimes those limits change. Please understand, my saying that I am not allowed to discuss that is based on customer requirements and the environment in which we conduct business. Operator, you can open the line for Q&A.
Thank you. At this time, we will be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press Star two 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. One moment please, while we poll for questions. First question is from Kris Tuttle with Blue Caterpillar. Please proceed.
Hi, thanks. I have a few questions. I just want to start with, you know, the Stadco situation. It sounds like the downtime came as a surprise. I'm curious to know more about the nature of the failure and your perspective on, you know, how it might have, you know, you might have been alerted earlier, specifically, like, what kind of equipment are we talking about? Did it take time to repair due to parts unavailability or labor? Just trying to get a little more color on. I want to understand it more better in terms of the business.
I'm going to be limited on what I'm going to be able to answer you. The significant downtime certainly was not anticipated. Could we have avoided it? Probably not. It was more than one machine down. Several machines down, happening at the same time. That's how I would characterize it and add the color there.
And-
I mean, we always have equipment going down from time to time. That's just the nature of the business.
Equipment going down is the nature of the business.
It's when multiple ones at the same time that you're not used to.
Yeah, I think we all understand that. It's just, it's curious, what was it, you know, a part issue, a, you know, a training issue? It's, it's odd, right, to have those multiple pieces of equipment go down at the same time.
It is a turnaround.
Okay.
It's not so odd for turnarounds.
So maybe-
It's more odd if you have a smoothly running company that you can now predict more.
It was maybe defer, you know, maintenance that maybe wasn't kept up on these machines, or?
Definitely, deferred maintenance would be one of the key factors that contributed.
Okay. Then, you know, shifting gears to, you know, some of your recent accomplishments on the shareholder side, with the reverse split and the uplisting accomplished, those are great accomplishments. I'm curious to know what, you know, what implications that has on your strategy, vis-a-vis, you know, the investment community, investor relations, what kind of, you know, shifts in activity you may have seen. I'm just trying to understand, you know, where do you think you go next now that you've accomplished... You have done some of the heavy lifting now in terms of being more investor-ready.
I'm going to pawn this one off to Tom Sammons.
I don't know that we've seen any real shift from our perspective, but I think we need to reassess, or just take a look at how we've been interacting with shareholders and maybe make some changes there as we go forward.
Do you guys have I mean, have you created, like, a budget for, you know, maybe do a little bit more on the outreach side of things, attending a few more conferences, that sort of thing?
I think that's what we have to look at.
Okay
... now that we're kind of past getting the reverse split through and up onto the Nasdaq, yes.
Okay. My last question, just for clarification, is: the Stadco outages that you guys experienced, those are in the past and you guys are operating, those machines smoothly at this point?
Let me just be really clear. The equipment problems that I experienced in my Stadco subsidiary during the fourth quarter, those specific ones are now resolved. Does it mean that I've resolved them forever on those specific machines and nothing will ever go wrong? Like Tom alluded to, we always are repairing and maintaining our equipment. Can this happen again? Maybe.
How much time or money do you think you guys need to get the Stadco plant, you know, just using the term loosely, like, up to your level of satisfaction of, you know, being current on maintenance? You know, anything can go down, I get that. But, you know, you know, like, if you buy a used car, you're like, "Oh, no one's done any work on this in the last few years. I need to take it in and really get it taken care of." You know, what's the analogy?
Right. It's not just one used car, right? It's many.
Right. Right.
Right. You have a fleet of all used cars, and what's gonna go down next? Not really sure.
Okay.
You know?
And-
...my track record, I think, we're new to each other, right, Kris?
Yes, we are.
Okay. I think my track record has been an unbroken series of wins on turnarounds. I'm not planning on having my turnaround of Stadco fail and be my first loss in my, you know, spanning several decades career of being a troubleshooter. I'm not trying to, you know, convince you that I'm such a great operator, but I do operate well, and we have recaptured and retained key customer confidence, which results in more orders and results in their support when we are experiencing these downtimes. I think that's the key, is how to grow out of these things and how to make sure that we walk in step with our customers, so they can continue to believe that we will take the right steps in the right direction, and not flinch from telling them the truth, that we have downtime, and we need some help, and we need some patience, and we will resolve our downtime and our equipment problems. Those problems that we experienced during the fourth quarter are now resolved. The customers are happy enough to show us their confidence with new POs, increasing our backlog. I think the proof is really checking to see the other metrics, not just we have downtime and we have a blip, a negative blip in our performance, reduced revenue because of reduced throughput. However, the customers, they are on our side. I think that's a good way to characterize it and give good color and background.
Well, I appreciate that, Alex. My questions were in no way driven by any doubt about you and the team's operating capability. They were just motivated by my desire to get a really good understanding of the business. That's all.
No problem. Thank you very much.
All right, well, I'll let the, I'll let the next folks, come in and ask some questions. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
The next question is from Mark Gomes with Pipeline. Mark, please proceed.
Hey, gentlemen. Thanks for taking the time. Alex, you mentioned you used the word capacity when you first mentioned Stadco's issues, at least these issues being put behind them, so that you can continue the task of increasing productivity, and I think you used the word capacity. Was I correct in that? If so, could you provide some color into what that means? Would that mean you're, you know, going to add CapEx, add more people, you're gonna try to increase the amount of work that can be done at Stadco, beyond this turnaround?
First, beyond the turnaround, it's not beyond the turnaround, it's part of the turnaround. I would characterize it that way, right? The specifics that I was talking about, there has been and will continue to be significant work on repair, and also significant work on rebuild of Stadco's equipment. Those are two different things. That significant work, focused on enhancing our capabilities of the machines, as well as enhancing capacity and throughput. I hope that's more clear.
It is. Thank you. Do you anticipate that unanticipated CapEx spending, you know, significant CapEx spending, will be required to accomplish that goal over and above what you might have expected a few months ago?
Well, certainly, this fourth quarter blip with multiple downtime on multiple machines was not anticipated. Will I run into it again? Maybe. Am I doing the right things to anticipate and see what I can avoid? Yes.
I guess my question really was this a setback in terms of your expectations of CapEx requirements going forward?
I'm not sure I get it.
Well, you have, you know, you have plans for, you know, maybe adding equipment. You know, obviously, there's always CapEx spending. I'm just curious if your anticipated CapEx spending forecast changed significantly as a result of what happened at Stadco over the last few months?
No.
Okay. Final question: We're, you know, two weeks before the end of this current quarter, you know, you're exuding a, I think, a good amount of confidence on this call. Would the operations that have occurred to this point in the quarter, contributed to the confidence you're exuding on this call?
Apparently, you and Russ are in cahoots to try to get me to forecast.
Well, it's not a forecast if two and a half months have already occurred, but your point is taken. The question stands.
The question does stand. It shall all be revealed in time.
Thanks, Alex.
Thank you.
The next question is from Ross Taylor with ARS Investment Partners. Please proceed.
Thank you. Alex, a couple of things, one of which I wanted to address. A number of calls ago, you indicated you felt that Stadco could achieve margins in line with those that you're seeing at Ranor. Now, you've executed really well at Ranor, and in fact, if this company was only Ranor right now, it would probably be worth a lot more than it is for Stadco, although I do think Stadco adds tremendous value to the business. How long is it gonna take you to get these margins at Stadco up towards the neighborhood of Ranor? They're currently less than half.
That's a question that's the question, isn't it? I don't know how to answer the question because I don't know the answer. How long is it gonna take?
Do you still believe that it's achievable in, let's say, a, standard investment horizon, which is, you know, 12-24 months?
Since this is 2 custom subsidiaries, I would venture to say that the counterpoint is that this is a non-standard look at two non-standard companies. I think also, you know, with the customer confidence at the level where it's at, we need to tactically execute, and we need to just continue our focus, divide and conquer, eat this elephant one bite at a time. I may be overreaching in the answer, but I think what I'm trying to say is, 2 calls ago, I expressed the belief that Stadco can reach, what did we just say? Can reach Ranor-like margins.
Ranor-like margins.
I'm just paraphrasing, but...
Yeah.
...that belief is there.
As I asked, is that a belief that's achievable inside? One of the frustrations I think investors have, and there are a number of them here, is that, you know, we've basically been willing to make a trade where we get really inferior investor relations for what's supposed to be superior operating execution. The execution at Ranor fits that and justifies some level of confidence. Bluntly, what's going on at Stadco does not. As I said, I think Stadco is a value-added acquisition, but at this stage, I do believe that it is not adding value for investors. To get it to back to where it will add value, we need, in a timely fashion, not a waiting for a good go, you know, fashion. We need to get these up, you know, the margins up meaningfully.
Is this the kind of thing you look at and say... I mean, I assume you have your internal models. Do your internal models have you getting to Ranor-like margins in the next two years for Stadco?
Are we forecasting, Tom, that in the next two years?
No, it's not a forecast. It's honestly, it's asking the veracity of a prior comment you made. I wasn't the one who said you could get them to Stadco, you did. I'm asking now, that was months ago, quarters ago. I'm asking now.
You're asking how long it's gonna take?
Can you get them there in 24 months? No, I'm asking, can you get them there in 24 months? It's a different question.
Right. I don't know.
Okay. I would say I think that you need to get them there. I think you need to, you know, telling us that you're that you don't fail is not what we need. We need you not to fail, which means we need to get these up and operating. We need to get the value out of this acquisition. I'd also say that you guys talked about, Tom talked about the idea that, you know, you haven't done a lot different since you became an Nasdaq stock. I would say that's very true, and I think it's an area of great frustration with people I speak to.
You really need to achieve a much more professional approach to how you handle your investors, which means you need to come up with ways, whether it's finding someone on the outside to cover the stock, or whether it's finding ways to get public information out there. Every piece of information I've given on this call in the past has been publicly available. I understand you have customers who don't want you to talk about their specific niche, but now you have two businesses. One way you can start to do is talk about the company as a whole and get away from talking about specific programs and therefore running afoul with specific customers that you have.
I think that's really exceptionally important because we need to make people wanna own TechPrecision, and the only way they're gonna wanna know if they own it is that you have to basically make it easy to understand and learn about. I also like to ask, you know, a question of: You focused on the idea of just the government. It's clear that Navy is well behind schedule in its submarine programs. The Air Force and the like, is also behind schedule in the F-15EX, which is interestingly getting more and more press as a superior air defense fighter and interceptor. Is there other plans, or is there the ability to basically step out and fill some of that time lag with commercial projects or other projects at this time?
I think I believe that you're talking about the Navy's delay.
Well, the GAO indicated that, you know, the Navy is operating, and the submarine build program is, you know, particularly in Virginia, is operating well behind schedule because of issues with the primes.
I understand what you're saying. I'm also trying to point out, Ross, if I may, that, because things are behind, there's.
Mm-hmm.
There is pressure on the vendor base to put more hours in.
Mm-hmm.
Perhaps the opposite might be true because there's a true need, for acceleration, there's truly more work.
Are you saying in Alexisms that you are finding the primes that you deal with coming interested in pushing work onto Ranor?
I think you're trying to further define my comment, but I'm just saying that where there's, where there's.
I'm always trying to clarify your comments, Alex.
Well, it's the production hours, you know, the availability of production hours.
Mm-hmm.
If that availability is, if the requirement is X, is 100, and it can only be filled up to half by somebody, then somebody else needs to step up and fill the other half. There's opportunity.
Mm-hmm
... there for custom shops like us.
Mm-hmm.
I think that's evidenced also by the number of POs and the dollar amount of the POs and the strong backlog. It's not dropping.
Recognize we do not know how many POs you get or do. That's information that's not disclosed to us, so it would be impossible for us to know that you're getting more POs. What I'm hearing you say is that you are finding opportunities with primes to pick up business that either they cannot execute or their suppliers cannot execute at this time. Is that correct?
There's opportunity.
Are you seizing those opportunities and converting them into revenue?
I think the backlog shows that.
The Ranor shows it very well. Yeah, I think Ranor does show that you're operating very well. It shows the potential of what can work on the other side. As I said, I think that we're looking at a situation where it's important at this stage that you guys, because you are now a Nasdaq stock, that we've got to get out there and you get to improve your relations. You got to help send the message so people understand who you are and what you're doing. I think that obviously, if we look at your business, what level of capacity do you think Ranor is operating at? Could you put another shift on and increase capacity? Would that be economic, and is the opportunity there to do that?
I'm in that zone of I'm not allowed to discuss that right now.
Okay. We'll continue to watch. Hopefully, what I, what you're telling me is that you are in conversations with people about increasing capacity so that you can pick up business that other people can't execute. Away from the production problems and machine problems in, at Stadco, is part of the problem you're running into there a lot of kind of first builds early, that you're early in programs, or therefore you would expect to have margins increase naturally as you run through them? I think anyone, everyone knows in the defense business that first builds are frequently the most difficult and the lowest margin. Is that part of what's happening there, or is it all internal to Stadco?
Is it part of it? It, sometimes it's part of it, for our first article costs, yes.
Yeah.
Is it, significant? Not really. The significant blip in fourth quarter was really the equipment downtime was severe because we had multiple things all, you know, it was a perfect storm, unfortunately.
Do you have a thought on how much revenue you lost in Stadco and an idea of If you had not had those unexpected downtimes, would you have been able to see significant improvements, say, 400 or 500 basis point operating margin improvements over what you generated?
I think it's probably a good, a good gauge, Tom, to say that, we wouldn't have lost money that quarter overall, probably, you know.
By the way, the question of revenue, I mean, I'd say.
It's not so much revenue. It's really, you know, it was so diminished. The throughput was so diminished, the unabsorbed part really took over.
Mm-hmm.
You know? Really, what we need is to really have that critical mass achieved, and we dropped below that for that quarter.
Yeah, I mean, you have a combination of those two things where Q2, Q3, the revenue was up around $3.7 million. You get to Q4, it dropped to about $2.7 million.
Yeah, it's like $1 million off.
You're not getting absorbed, absorption.
Yeah. That's the two things that kind of kill us.
Given the several years ago, a Stadco executive, I believe, indicated that Stadco made or generated $101.5 million revenue per CH-53K. I believe I read that somewhere. I'm not gonna ask you to comment on that. Given that that program is beginning to ramp and the expectation is, Sikorsky's expectation appears to be that they should sell somewhere, you know, 200 or so to the Marines, 25 plus to the Israelis, and, you know, 75 or more to foreign governments, shouldn't we be at that stage where that number starts to really move meaningfully higher just because of that program? Shouldn't revenues in its Stadco start to reflect the progress that Sikorsky is seeing in the CH-53K?
I wish it would. Should it? Well, I think there's a lot of factors that aren't in my control at Stadco.
Well.
That are customer related.
Yes.
I can't really comment on that, you know?
The demand's there.
The, obviously, the demand is obviously there. The PO quantities are obviously there. The funding for the POs to Stadco are all there. That's why the backlog is firm. These are firm orders.
Mm-hmm.
It's a question of timing. I just don't know how to answer it all, I hesitate to talk about what Sikorsky is doing.
No, I mean, Sikorsky tells us what they're doing, and the Navy tells us what they have a build right program on. These aren't great mysteries. This is publicly available information. I understand that you have some trouble at times talking about it, but this is part of what I think we need to address in a more effective shareholder relations effort, is the ability to get people and point people to the publicly available information, so they can make educated, informed decisions on what's happening inside this company. Okay, I've taken a lot of time. Not even my family likes to hear me talk this long, so I'll pass it back to whomever else wants to follow up.
Thank you, Ross.
The next question is from Richard Greulich with REG Capital Advisors. Please proceed, Richard.
Thank you for taking my question. First of all, Tom, thank you for the efforts you've put forward over the last several years and dealing with, and good luck in the future.
Thank you, Richard. I appreciate that.
The, let me, several different questions. I always enjoy Ross talking because he brings up interesting points and allows me to have time to make more, even more questions then. Ranor, the gross margin was 30%. Can you see a way for margin improvement that from here?
You're talking about the quarterly gross margin?
Yeah. Mm-hmm.
Yeah. Can we see improvement? We have done better than that in prior quarters. It will go up and down, depending upon the mix of product we have.
Mm-hmm.
Is one of the major factors.
The business is lumpy.
Understood. As your business grows over the next few years, I guess my question is, can it get up to 35% on an annualized 12-month basis, do you think? Is that out of the question?
Given the lumpiness of the business and the fits and starts between us and our customers, it's probably hard to draw that. It could be done sometimes. It depends, I think, is the best answer. Do we aim for that? Certainly.
Well, Ranor was 36% on average for this fiscal year.
Yeah.
For 2023.
Right.
It's definitely doable.
Sure.
Okay, if there's...
Ranor is at 36% for this whole year.
Right. On average.
On average.
One quarter.
Bumps up and down.
Right.
You got to average it out. That's what I was, I guess, I was trying to say that.
If there's increased interest, perhaps on either the primes part of segmenting business from them or perhaps assigning business to you from other subs, I don't see the.
Richard, you're going in that zone where I told Ross that I'm in that zone where I can't talk about it. I'm sorry.
Okay, okay. That's okay, but I guess what the thrust of my question, if that's not evident in the backlog numbers at the end of the quarter. In other words, like the backlog was basically flat quarter-to-quarter, it doesn't.
I understand that. What I was trying to say to Ross is, I believe Ross was saying, publicly available information indicates that the Navy is behind, right?
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
The evidence of our backlog is not dropping. Our backlog is not dropping, it is not behind. We're maintaining.
Okay.
In parts, gaining. That's what I was trying to contrast and say: Look.
Okay.
There's opportunities here.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, I think our backlog goes, it does go up and down.
It does go up and down.
And-
It's not significantly down to the point where it matches up with the publicly information that the Navy is years behind.
You mentioned that we brought in $6 million of POs so far in this quarter.
Correct.
Which would exceed our revenue, which tends to put us back up a little bit.
That's right.
It just, it goes, you know, it's not fluid, it's not a smooth.
It's not a one-to-one relationship with, you know, the delays on the Navy side versus us, a lack of capture of new POs and new opportunities on TechPrecision side.
Mm-hmm.
We.
Let me point it in a slightly different direction then. Are you seeing more opportunities, let's say, for business to capture than you saw 12 months ago because of that? Just, it's a qualitative kind of comment.
Holistically, I'm certainly not seeing less opportunity.
Okay.
Yeah, that's what I was trying to characterize...
Yeah
...to Ross's earlier question also. There's no-
Now, let...
There's no diminishing opportunity.
Thank you. Yeah, let me turn to then Stadco. You said the Stadco problems that occurred in the quarter, those have been solved. Of course, could be other ones. When, in solving them during the quarter, will there still be, in the current quarter, some impact from the problems impacting?
Those problems that occurred last quarter are now resolved.
Mm-hmm. Will there be any lingering impact into this no, if were they resolved during this during the current quarter or during the last quarter?
I carefully didn't talk about that.
Okay
... because we're not done with this. You know, I carefully try to not forecast, not tell people and get their expectations. Setting expectations, that's not what I do. Forecasting is definitely not what I do. What I do is I find a problem, I fix a problem, one at a time, and I get these things done. I can tell you that those problems are now resolved.
Okay. Let's look at SG&A expenses. Now, prior to the Stadco acquisition, they were running around, I think, $600,000, $700,000 a quarter. Now, they're $1 million higher. Is that $1 million SG&A increase at Stadco itself?
When we said they're $1 million over, I mean, we had, what? Six, seven months of Stadco last year. Part of the increase is the increased number of months with Stadco.
Full year.
Full year. Then also, we had a lot of one-time expense, especially earlier in the year, with the acquisition, with going through the audit last year, with going through everything else that we had gone through. There were certain one-time expenses that we had kind of talked about before that impacted...
Yeah
..this.
What I'm looking at...
I think-
What? Go ahead.
One second, Rich. Tom, I think what we're talking about here is that the SG&A expenses in fiscal 2023 increased by $1.1 million compared to prior year.
Yes.
This is due primarily because we included Stadco for the full 12 months.
Yes.
The previous year did not include the full 12 months.
Right.
Right.
And we've had-
That's the primary driver.
That is the main driver.
I'm looking at on a quarterly basis. On a quarterly basis, before the acquisition of Stadco, SG&A, I think, was running at, like, $600,000, $700,000 a year, and now, like, this last quarter, it's running at $1.6 million.
Yeah, we were about, I think, prior to the acquisition, about $750,000.
Right
... we were $2.8 million-$3 million a year.
Right.
Um.
Yeah, $3 million a year.
Yeah.
I think we had times where we get a little bit below that, which is good.
I just, I guess I'm surprised that Stadco's SG&A is probably more than Ranor's is.
Well, there were one-time expenses.
Even right now, is what I'm saying. Hmm?
No.
How is it more right now?
Well, I think we've just had a lot of additional expense over the last two years, that, one, especially since the acquisition, related to legal, accounting, even getting up, I mean, there's additional costs to get onto Nasdaq, additional costs to do reverse split. There's been just a lot of activity that has caused additional costs.
Non-standard activity.
Yeah, for the outside contractors or outside service providers.
Yep.
That should start whittling away at this point.
I think we need to answer the intent of Rich's question is Stadco SG&A costing us more than expected versus Ranor?
No, I don't think. Actually,
Your answer is, not really.
No.
We had all these different expenses that added up, so it makes it look like that, but a lot of it was, you know, not related to Stadco properly.
It's not Stadco's SG&A.
Yeah, it's.
Okay
-related.
Yeah, that was really... Yeah.
It's more at the corporate level.
Okay. The prior question regarding Precision Industrial, are there opportunities there? Are you seeking them? Are you utilizing them?
We're certainly open to opportunities. We're not saying-
Yeah. Are there some that loom, you know, for you to go after at this point?
Oh, certainly. That's what I mean. I'm not saying no to them.
Okay.
I'm open to those opportunities.
Okay.
If I'm open to them, that means I'm actively pursuing, yes.
Okay.
That's what open means.
You know, I know this is, it seems like a difficult quarter to announce, but actually, I'm not, you know, rose-tinted glasses on this, but I'm actually more positive because of your comments of more opportunities that seem to be coming available as a sub with the primes. Appreciate your comments there.
Yeah, our job is to tell the truth and get the facts in front of us on these earnings calls and in our press releases. You know, we can't flinch from telling all of us, including myself and Tom, who are also shareholders, that we had a bad quarter. We need to get that out there. Also, we need to get the point out there that the customer confidence is very high, to the point where the backlog is not diminishing and, you know, we continue to secure new orders and new POs that are fully funded.
Yeah.
It's very important to contrast that.
Thank you very much. Appreciate it.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you, Richard.
Okay, we have a follow-up question coming from Kris Tuttle with Blue Caterpillar. Please proceed, Kris.
Yeah, staying on that, kind of that opportunity line of questioning, given the relationships that you have with your customers, it seems like it would put you in a really good position to understand some needs they have that are not being met, or that would give you the opportunity to make, you know, some adjacent acquisitions in, you know, the custom manufacturing space, where they appreciate you and what you're doing with them. Maybe, there are adjacencies that could provide small opportunities for you to, you know, make some small acquisitions that are, you know, very close to the kind of work that you're already doing. Could you comment on that?
No. I'm in that zone, Kris, that I'm not allowed to discuss that. I'm serious about.
what I'm saying.
To that, requirement. I'm sorry.
No, I'm just saying, would is that something that you guys are open to as an idea? You really feel like you need to go through another few quarters of integration before you can contemplate that?
I think we are always open to good ideas, absolutely. Tom and I and the whole entire board, we're all open to good ideas. Absolutely.
Okay. All right, I'll leave it at that. We'll talk more later.
Thank you.
Thank you, sir.
Okay, we have no further questions. We have reached the end of the question and answer session. This concludes today's conference, and you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you.
Thank you, everyone. Have a great day.