CVV March 30, 2026

CVD Equipment Corporation Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Sale of SDC to Atlas Copco, cost cuts and outsourcing to shore up the core CVD business

Summary

CVD Equipment disclosed a defensive reset. Management is executing a transformation to cut fixed costs, outsource some fabrication, and lean on distributors while selling its SDC business to Atlas Copco for roughly $16.9 million, a deal slated to close in Q2 2026 that should net about $14 million to $15 million after expenses and the $900,000 escrow. The move is explicit: shore up liquidity, simplify operations, and focus on the Central Islip CVD equipment franchise amid weakening bookings.

That focus is necessary. Q4 revenue plunged 33% year over year to $5.0 million, backlog slid to $6.6 million from $19.4 million a year ago, and orders for the full year collapsed to $13 million from $28 million in 2024. Management says cash plus expected SDC proceeds will cover at least 12 months of needs, but the core business remains concentrated, lumpy, and exposed to tariff risk, lower university spending, and slow adoption in target markets. The plan cuts about $1.8 million of annual operating cost in 2026, but execution risk is real as the company pivots to outsourced fabrication and a distributor-led go to market model.

Key Takeaways

  • CVD entered a definitive agreement to sell its SDC business to Atlas Copco for approximately $16.9 million in cash, subject to adjustments, expected to close in Q2 2026.
  • Net cash proceeds from the SDC sale are expected to be approximately $15 million, with about $900,000 held in escrow for post-closing adjustments and indemnities; company intends to invest proceeds initially in U.S. Treasuries.
  • The company is executing a transformation plan announced in Q4 to reduce fixed operating costs, transition certain fabrication to outsourced suppliers, and make the organization more agile.
  • A workforce reduction in the CVD Equipment division was completed in Q4 and is expected to reduce annual operating costs by about $1.8 million in 2026.
  • Revenue for Q4 2025 was $5.0 million, down 33% year over year and down 33% sequentially from Q3 2025; full year 2025 revenue was $25.8 million, down 4.1% from 2024.
  • Orders totaled $3.5 million in Q4 2025 and $13 million for the full year, versus $28 million in 2024, showing a sharp pullback in bookings.
  • Backlog at December 31, 2025 was $6.6 million, down from $19.4 million a year earlier, reflecting order weakness and timing risk.
  • Revenue concentration risk remains high: two customers accounted for roughly 53% of Q4 revenue and about 41% of full year revenue.
  • Consolidated gross margin in Q4 was 22.2% (gross profit $1.1 million), down from 26.4% a year earlier, mainly from lower CVD revenue and higher unabsorbed overhead; fiscal 2025 gross margin improved to 28.3% due largely to absence of a prior-year $1.6 million inventory write-down.
  • Operating loss for Q4 2025 was $1.3 million, compared with operating income of $34,000 in Q4 2024; fiscal 2025 operating loss was $1.9 million versus $2.4 million in 2024.
  • Net loss for Q4 was $1.3 million, or $0.18 per diluted share; fiscal 2025 net loss was $1.6 million, or $0.23 per diluted share.
  • Cash and cash equivalents were $8.7 million at December 31, 2025, down from $12.6 million a year earlier; net cash used in operating activities for FY 2025 was $3.7 million.
  • Management believes current cash plus expected SDC sale proceeds will be sufficient to support working capital and capital expenditures for at least the next 12 months, and plans to invest sale proceeds conservatively.
  • Company will retain ownership of the Saugerties, New York facility and lease it to Atlas Copco for an initial two-year term after closing.
  • Management highlighted external pressures on bookings, including tariff uncertainty, reduced U.S. government spending at universities, and slower adoption in some end markets, while emphasizing continued focus on aerospace, defense, and advanced materials applications.

Full Transcript

Diego, Conference Call Moderator, CVD Equipment Corporation: Good afternoon, and welcome to the CVD Equipment Corporation fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings conference call. As a reminder, today’s call is being recorded. We will begin with prepared remarks, followed by a question-and-answer session. Presenting on today’s call are Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Richard Catalano, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Our earnings press release and information about today’s call replay are available in the investor relations section of our website at cvdequipment.com. Before we begin, please note that comments made during this call may include forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our future financial performance, market growth, product demand, business outlook, and strategic initiatives. These statements are based on current expectations and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially.

For a discussion of these risks, please refer to our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the Risk Factors section of our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2025. We undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements except as required by law. With that, I will now turn the call over to Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer.

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Thank you, Diego, and good afternoon, everyone. We appreciate you joining us today to review our fourth quarter and full year 2025 financial results and to provide you an update on our business and strategic initiatives. Following our prepared remarks, we will be happy to take your questions. As previously disclosed, in response to continued volatility in order rates and recent decline in bookings within our CVD Equipment division, we have initiated a transformation strategy during the fourth quarter designed to significantly reduce fixed operating costs, create a more agile organization, and better position the company to maximize shareholder value. Key elements of this plan included transitioning the CVD Equipment business from a vertically integrated fabrication model to outsource fabrication for certain components, which we expect will reduce fixed costs and improve scalability.

Completing a workforce reduction in the CVD Equipment division during the fourth quarter, which was to rightsize the organization and is expected to reduce annual operating costs by approximately $1.8 million in 2026. Revising our sales approach by leveraging distributors and external representatives to complement our internal sales organization and exploring strategic alternatives for certain businesses and product lines, including potential asset sales or divestitures. As part of our strategic review, on March 23, 2026, we announced that we had entered into a definitive agreement under which our SDC business will be sold to Atlas Copco Group. The purchase price is approximately $16.9 million in cash, subject to certain purchase price adjustments. The transaction is expected to close during the second quarter of 2026, subject to customary closing conditions.

This transaction will allow us to sharpen our focus on our core CVD Equipment business in Central Islip, New York. It is also expected to strengthen our balance sheet and provide additional financial flexibility as we continue to evaluate opportunities across the CVD Equipment business, its product lines, and our facilities. We expect net cash proceeds after transaction expenses and taxes to be approximately $15 million, of which $900,000 will be held in escrow for post-closing adjustments and indemnification obligations under the agreement. We retain ownership of our Saugerties, New York facility, which will be leased to Atlas Copco Group for the initial term of 2 years following the closing. I also want to express our appreciation to our SDC employees for their contribution to the company over the years. Turning to our financial results.

Fourth quarter 2025 revenue was $5 million, down 33% from prior year period and down 33% sequentially from the third quarter. For our full year 2025, revenue was $25.8 million, a decrease of 4.1% from fiscal year 2024. Orders in the fourth quarter totaled $3.5 million, driven primarily by the demand in our SDC segment for gas delivery equipment and the receipt of two orders from Stony Brook University for two PVT150 units. For the full year, orders totaled $13 million compared to $28 million in 2024, primarily driven by demand in our SDC business for gas delivery equipment and order for spare parts and service for our CVD Equipment division.

At December 31, 2025, backlog was $6.6 million, compared with $8 million at the end of September 30, 2025, and $19.4 million at the end of December 31, 2024. Our bookings continued to be pressured by several factors, including softer demand for our products in our CVD Equipment division, tariff-related uncertainties, reduced U.S. government spending for universities, and a slower pace of adoption of our solutions in certain end markets. We continue to monitor our customer demand, the general uncertainty of the geopolitical environment and potential tariff impacts as we are planning accordingly. Even against this backdrop, we remain focused on delivering solutions across our key targeted markets of aerospace, defense, industrial applications, including silicon carbide on graphite and silicon carbide use in high power electronics and other emerging applications.

With that, I will turn the call over to our CFO, Richard Catalano, to review the financial results in more detail.

Richard Catalano, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Thank you, Manny, and good afternoon, everyone. Fourth quarter of 2025 revenues was $5 million. This compares to $7.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. This year-over-year decline was primarily driven by lower CVD systems revenue. Revenue in our CVD equipment segment was concentrated among two key customers, which together represented approximately 53% of total fourth quarter revenue. Our SDC segment reported revenue of $2.2 million in the quarter, compared to $1.9 million in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024 and $1.7 million in the third quarter of 2025. Consolidated gross profit for the quarter was $1.1 million, resulting in a gross margin of 22.2%. This compares with a gross profit of $2 million and a gross margin of 26.4% in the prior year quarter.

The decrease was primarily due to lower CVD revenue, which resulted in higher unabsorbed overhead as well as a less favorable contract mix. Our operating loss for the fourth quarter of 2025 was $1.3 million, compared to operating income of $34,000 in the fourth quarter of 2024. Included in the fourth quarter of 2025 results was a non-cash impairment charge of $163,000. This was related to certain equipment and capitalized software associated with our transition to outsource fabrication of certain components in our CVD business. After interest income, the net loss for the quarter was $1.3 million or $0.18 per diluted share, compared with net income of $132,000 or $0.02 per diluted share in the prior year quarter. For the full fiscal year, revenue was $25.8 million.

This compares to $26.9 million in fiscal 2024. The year-over-year decline was primarily due to lower SDC revenue and lower MesoScribe revenue as we ceased that business. MesoScribe ceased operations in 2024. Revenue in our CVD Equipment segment was again concentrated among two key customers, which together represent 41% of total revenue for the year. Our SDC segment reported full year revenue of $7.6 million as compared to $7.8 million in fiscal 2024. Consolidated gross profit for fiscal 2025 was $7.3 million or 28.3% of revenue, compared to $6.1 million or 22.5% of revenue in fiscal 2024. The increase in gross profit was primarily due to improved gross margins in our CVD Equipment segment.

This was primarily due to a prior year charge of $1.6 million that we took last year to write down certain inventory to net realizable value. We did not incur a similar charge in fiscal 2025. This improvement, not having the charge, was partially offset by lower gross profit in the current year in our SDC and MesoScribe segments due principally to lower revenues. Operating loss for fiscal 2025 was $1.9 million. This compares to an operating loss of $2.4 million in fiscal 2024. After interest income, net loss for the year was $1.6 million or $0.23 per diluted share, compared to a net loss of $1.9 million or $0.28 per diluted share in fiscal 2024. At December 31, 2025, we had cash and cash equivalents of $8.7 million.

This compares to $12.6 million at December 31, 2024. Net cash used in operating activities during fiscal 2025 was $3.7 million. This was largely driven by changes in working capital and contract timing as far as milestone billings. Working capital improved to $14.1 million at year-end 2025. This compares to $13.8 million at the end of 2024. This was due in part to the classification of approximately $0.5 million of fixed assets that we had held for sale and for which we sold in the early part of 2026. Looking ahead, our return to consistent profitability will depend on improved equipment order flow, disciplined cost management, successful execution of our transformation plan, and continued control of capital expenditures.

While our quarterly results might continue to fluctuate based on order timing, we believe our current cash position and projected cash flows will be sufficient to support our working capital and capital expenditure requirements for at least the next 12 months. In addition, upon the closing of the transaction to sell SDC, we expect net net cash proceeds, excluding the $900,000 escrow amount, to approximately $14 million, and we currently intend to initially invest those proceeds in U.S. Treasury securities. With that, I’ll now turn it back to Manny.

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Thank you, Rich. Our priorities are clear: serving our customers, supporting our employees, and creating value for our shareholders, and returning the business to sustained profitability. Operator, we are now ready to open the line for questions.

Diego, Conference Call Moderator, CVD Equipment Corporation: Thank you. At this time, we’ll conduct our 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 that 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. Once again, to ask a question, press star one. We’ll pause for a moment while we pull for questions. Our first question comes from Brett Reiss with Janney Montgomery Scott. Please state your question.

Brett Reiss, Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott: Yeah. Hi, Manny. Hi, Richard. Can you hear me?

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: We can hear you, Brad. Good to hear you again.

Brett Reiss, Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott: Great. Hi. You’re sitting on, you know, $23 million-$24 million in cash. Could you describe to us, you know, the skill sets of your existing, you know, engineers? And what I’m trying to get at is, you know, what their skill sets would be complementary and enhance what type of acquisition you might be contemplating with the $23 million?

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Yeah. Well, Brett, the number, you know, I’ll let Rich speak to the actual number on the cash, and, you know, cash on hand plus what we’ll net from the transaction. But as far as the talent pool, you asked, there are a couple of questions in your one question. The first is talent pool, is consistent with what the talent pool was, essentially, from a capabilities perspective a year ago. We have a full complement of resources in the engineering and technology group for CVD Equipment, or CVI equipment, basically the main product line from Central Islip. We retain that skill set.

As far as the subsequent question, which is what are we gonna do with the cash and the proceeds, the board is looking at opportunities and strategic alternatives for increasing shareholder value, and we’ll continue to do that. At this point in time, we do not have something that is material or a path yet. This was a fair transaction for all parties, the SDC transaction, so we took advantage of that. Time will tell, but we don’t have something to highlight today.

Brett Reiss, Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott: Yeah. Fair enough. Can you give, you know, us some sense, though, of what the pipeline of opportunities you’re looking at? You know, are you looking at three, four, five different things? You know, how long have you been kicking the tires on some of these opportunities?

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Well, you know, we as a board, we’ve been looking at strategic alternatives for quite a, you know, several quarters, as you can imagine. You know, you don’t do a transaction in a quarter or two.

Brett Reiss, Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott: Right.

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Again, at this point in time, I’d be speaking out of turn. You know, I think in the next few quarters, you know, we’ll be able to identify and share with you certain, some additional information. But right now, again, Brad, I don’t have anything to speak of.

Brett Reiss, Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott: Okay. Are you guardedly optimistic, though, you’ll be able to find something that will have, you know, a less lumpy or a more recurring, you know, revenue stream, perhaps with service revenue, you know, which has always been what the company would like to have had, but just the nature of the type of businesses we’re in, it’s always been a kinda lumpy revenue cadence.

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Well, the equipment business, Brad, is lumpy in itself, you know, especially you know, when you’re sub-$200 million of revenue as we are, of course. I think you’ve outlined nicely the objective for any strategic activity, which we’d like to have is a smooth, non-lumpy revenue stream, good customer value in spares and in service. Those are all the attributes of entities we would like to entertain. Again, I can’t speak to that at this point.

Brett Reiss, Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott: Okay. I’ll drop back. I don’t know if there are any other, you know, people on the-

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Thank you again, Brad. Good hearing your voice.

Brett Reiss, Analyst, Janney Montgomery Scott: You bet.

Diego, Conference Call Moderator, CVD Equipment Corporation: Thank you, and a reminder to the audience, to ask a question, press star one. To remove yourself from the queue, press star two. Your next question comes from Frank Giordano, Private Investor. Please go ahead.

Frank Giordano, Private Investor: Hello, Manny and Richard. I just wanted to ask a question, continuing on with Brett before. Regarding that, have you ever considered paying a special dividend in situations like this, or is it something that the company doesn’t pay?

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: I do not believe that in the history of the company a special dividend was paid. I at least in the period of time that I’ve been with the company, which is nine years, that has not been the case. I could be corrected. I think I’m accurate. You know, clearly, we believe shareholder value is based on growing the business, and utilization of our funds in a respectful manner. We are conservative. At this point in time, that is not actively on the table.

Frank Giordano, Private Investor: Okay. Something else regarding the business itself. Are you concentrating a little bit with the military right now, let’s say in the drone companies or anything dealing with the military due to the situation that we are in?

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Yes, Fran, thank you. Yeah, we do serve aerospace and defense. That’s one of our key markets. About 78% of our revenue over the last several years of our orders has come from military and defense, whether it’s gas turbine engines, the use of CMCs or other ceramics, which we build the equipment that creates the material, and that goes into both commercial and also military gas turbine engines. As well as last year, we received an order we shipped it this year. Actually, we shipped it in 2025, was for a research system that will be used for especially the ceramic materials for hypersonic. So we are in next generation, I would say, materials. It’ll continue.

I foresee that it’ll continue to be our revenue and previously to that orders will be driven by aerospace defense for the foreseeable future. That’s where these advanced materials are primarily utilized.

Frank Giordano, Private Investor: Okay. I just wanted to tell you just from my opinion here. You remind me of a company based out of Milan. It’s called SAES Getters. It was founded during Mussolini’s time, the dictator Mussolini. It survived World War II, then it became a company. It was taken over, I believe, a couple of years ago at a much higher price than what it was in 2000. It was the only Italian company trading on the Nasdaq back in 2000, and it was around your price, around $3 or $4 a share. They used to pay a dividend every year, three months. You know, I couldn’t believe it, but it was with the vapor, the precision. They do a lot of stuff, maybe different from your kind of company. Again, it was similar.

If you could research that and it’d give you some ideas, interesting company out of Milan.

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Yeah. Drop us a line on the, I didn’t catch the name entirely, but drop us a line on that.

Frank Giordano, Private Investor: It’s CVDs.

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Sias?

Frank Giordano, Private Investor: Oh, I’ll repeat it again. SAES Getters. G-E-T-T-E-R-S. There was a takeover, but it’s the name is still there. There’s a website, of course, you could research it. But again, I don’t know if they do have a division here still in the United States, out of Denver or something like that. But I remember that, you know, 20 years ago when I used to deal with them.

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Will do. Thank you, sir. Appreciate it.

Frank Giordano, Private Investor: Okay. All right. Thanks.

Diego, Conference Call Moderator, CVD Equipment Corporation: Thank you. There appears to be no additional questions at this time. I’ll hand the floor back to Emmanuel Lakios for closing remarks. Thank you.

Emmanuel Lakios, President and Chief Executive Officer, CVD Equipment Corporation: Thank you, Diego, and thanks to everyone for joining us today. We appreciate your continued interest and support of CVD Equipment Corporation. If you have any additional questions, as I said earlier, please reach out to myself or Rich directly. This concludes our today’s conference call.

Diego, Conference Call Moderator, CVD Equipment Corporation: Thank you. All parties may now disconnect. Have a good day.