GSI Technology Q3 FY2026 Earnings Call - 3-Second TTFT Benchmark Bolsters Low-Power Edge AI Push
Summary
GSI reported $6.1 million in revenue for Q3 FY2026, up 12% year-over-year and 28.5% fiscal year-to-date, while investing heavily in its next-generation APU and memory roadmap. Management highlighted a 3-second time-to-first-token (TTFT) result for Gemini 2 on a multimodal model with video and text at roughly 30 watts, and a government-backed Sentinel proof-of-concept with Israeli partner G2 Tech that brings more than $1 million in non-dilutive funding to offset R&D.
The quarter shows a company in build mode: R&D jumped as GSI bought IP for its Plato project and added engineers, aiming to tape out Plato in early 2027. Cash sits at $70.7 million after a October registered direct offering, giving the firm runway to push Gemini 2 as a low-power edge inference option, but the near-term challenge is turning benchmarks and POCs into signed design wins while managing rising operating losses.
Key Takeaways
- Q3 FY2026 revenue $6.1M, up 12% YoY and 28.5% fiscal YTD; down slightly from $6.4M in prior quarter.
- Gross margin 52.7% in Q3, down from 54.0% YoY and 54.8% sequentially, primarily due to product mix.
- Operating expenses rose to $10.1M vs $7.0M a year ago; R&D jumped to $7.5M driven by an IP purchase for the Plato APU and consulting/engineer hires.
- Operating loss widened to $6.9M in Q3, versus $4.1M in the prior-year quarter and $3.2M in the prior quarter.
- Net loss was $3.0M, or $0.09 per diluted share, aided by $3.6M in interest and other income that included a $6.2M non-cash fair-value adjustment of pre-funded warrants and $2.8M in offering issuance costs.
- Cash and cash equivalents totaled $70.7M at December 31, 2025, up from $25.3M at Sept 30, 2025, reflecting ~$46.9M net proceeds from the Oct 22 registered direct offering.
- Company expanded cash-disclosure cadence, and reported net cash used in operating activities of $7.9M for the quarter.
- Gemini 2 benchmark: 3-second time-to-first-token for a multimodal large model using video and text at ~30W system power; third-party comparisons showed up to 3x faster first token at lower power versus a competitive chip.
- G2 Tech Sentinel POC: GSI selected after competitive evaluation; >$1M in government funding will be recorded as offset to R&D and supports software/libraries and a planned government demo later this year.
- Management is targeting edge inference and physical AI applications, emphasizing response latency and performance per watt over TOPS or datacenter training metrics.
- Plato APU roadmap advanced: IP purchased, hardware development planning underway, contract engineers added, tape-out targeted for early 2027.
- Customer and shipping mix: military/defense shipments 28.5% of Q3, SigmaQuad 41.7%; notable customer sales—KYEC $1.1M (17.9% of revenue), Nokia $675k (11.1%), Cadence $233k (3.8%).
- Q4 FY2026 outlook: revenues $5.7M–$6.5M, gross margin ~54%–56%.
- Key strategic hinge: convert Gemini 2 TTFT advantage and Sentinel POC into commercial and defense design wins; technology demonstration is strong, commercial traction remains the critical next step.
- Risk note: heavy near-term cash burn for R&D and multi-quarter development timelines (Plato tape-out early 2027) mean execution and timely government/customer conversions will determine whether the investment yields sustainable revenue growth.
Full Transcript
Conference Call Operator: Welcome to GSI Technology’s third quarter fiscal 2026 results conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. At that time, we will provide instructions for those interested in entering the queue for the Q&A. Before we begin today’s call, the company has requested that I read the following Safe Harbor statement. The matters discussed in this conference call may include forward-looking statements regarding future events and the future performance of GSI Technology that involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated. These risks and uncertainties are described in the company’s Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Additionally, I have also been asked to advise you that this conference call is being recorded today, January 29th, 2026, at the request of GSI Technology.
Lee-Lean Shu, the company’s Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, will be hosting the call today. With him are Douglas Schirle, Chief Financial Officer, and Didier Lasserre, Vice President of Sales. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Shu. Please go ahead, sir.
Lee-Lean Shu, Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, GSI Technology: Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us to review our third quarter fiscal 2026 results. I am encouraged by our overall progress this quarter. Revenue in the third quarter increased by 12% year-over-year and 28.5% on a fiscal year-to-date basis. Demand for our excellent products remains solid, and we expect strong sales from our largest customers in the first half of calendar 2026. After completing our financing in fall 2025, we advanced our APU roadmap. We began planning hardware development after purchasing the required IP. We have also added contract engineers to support our hardware design team, keeping us on track to tape out Plato in early 2027. We finalized an agreement with G2 Tech, an Israel-based AI company, for our recently announced proof-of-concept. We are partnering with G2 Tech on Sentinel, a program for autonomous perimeter security using drones and cameras. The project is backed by the U.S.
Department of War and the following government agencies. This government funding will offset our costs to build the software stack and the libraries needed for this project. Didier will share more details shortly. Another recent milestone is Gemini 2’s time-to-first token benchmark, announced in the press release earlier today. For those who have not reviewed it, please see today’s release for the full detail on the benchmark result and the methodology. Accordingly, we reported 3-second time-to-first token, or TTFT, performance for MLLM with text and video input, consuming approximately 30 watts of system power. Compared to third-party testing of competitive platforms, Gemini 2’s TTFT delivered up to three times faster first token at lower power than the competitive chip on the same workload. We believe these test results validate Gemini 2’s fast response for edge use cases that need low power and low latency.
In his comments, Didier will expand on the benchmark results. We are making steady progress, advancing playthrough, continuing to improve Gemini 2 performance, and completing the Sentinel project. We are also pursuing early proof-of-concept and prototyping opportunities for Gemini 2 in systems in the defense programs, including drones and unmanned systems, and in selected commercial edge deployments. In parallel, we continue to pursue non-diluted R&D funding through government defense programs and strategic partners. With that, I hand the call over to Didier.
Didier Lasserre, Vice President of Sales, GSI Technology: Thank you, Liliin. I’ll start by expanding on some of Liliin’s comments. On the Sentinel POC, we expect to receive more than $1 million in government funding. We will record this as an offset to R&D expenses. We plan to use it to complete key software milestones for the projects, including software development for Gemma 3 12B on our Gemini 2, ahead of the planned demonstration to the government agencies later this year. Our POC partner, G2 Tech, is receiving additional funds to develop the drone platform for this demo. I’m pleased to share that G2 Tech conducted a competitive evaluation, and GSI was selected based on Gemini 2’s performance, delivering the lowest TTFT at 30 W.
If the government evaluation later this year is successful, it could lead to a potential Gemini 2 design win with G2Tech, and we would move to pursue additional opportunities to other drone and unmanned system customers beyond the POC sponsors. Turning to today’s press release, our Gemini 2 TTFT benchmarks, we discussed preliminary results showing a 3-second time-to-first token for a multimodal model at the edge using video and text inputs at approximately 30 watts of system power. TTFT is how long it takes the system to produce the first response, which is critical for drones and unmanned systems. The threshold for a useful TTFT in video surveillance to ensure nothing is missed is 3 seconds. That means we are sampling the video image every 3 seconds. If the TTFT is 10 seconds, it takes too long, so the surveillance video could miss something.
In preparation for the Sentinel demo, we will continue improving TTFT over the next five months to further reduce Gemini 2’s first time to response. What’s exciting for GSI about these Gemini 2 preliminary benchmark results is that they demonstrate what compute and memory can provide for physical AI: faster time-to-first token and materially lower chip power. This will help enable a broader set of viable, cost-effective deployments. For added color, at CES 2026, there was a clear shift towards edge AI and physical AI systems that must make real-time decisions under tight power constraints. In that context, Intel noted that TOPS, the number of operations per second, doesn’t tell the whole story. What matters more in edge AI and physical AI is real-world load, I’m sorry, workload performance and efficiency. That is the takeaway for us as well.
For edge inference, performance per watt and responsiveness matter more than peak training metrics. We are confident that our compute and memory APU architecture, designed to reduce data movement, is well-suited for power-constrained edge inference. Our near focus is to continue validating this with additional benchmarks and customer proof-of-concepts and convert that progress into design wins for Gemini 2. To be clear, we are not trying to compete with folks at training and data centers. Our goal is to be a strong option for fast, low-power edge AI applications. Switching to the customer and product sales breakdown in the third quarter of fiscal 2026, sales to KYEC were $1.1 million, or 17.9% of net revenues, compared to $1.2 million, or 22.7% of net revenues in the same period a year ago, and $802,000, or 12.5% of net revenues in the prior quarter.
Sales to Nokia were $675,000, or 11.1% of net revenues, compared to $239,000, or 4.4% of net revenues in the same period a year ago, and $200,000, or 3.1% of net revenues in the prior quarter. Sales to Cadence Design Systems were $233,000, or 3.8% of net revenues, compared to $971,000, or 17.9% of net revenues in the same period a year ago, and $1.4 million, or 21.6% of net revenues in the prior quarter. Military defense sales were 28.5% of third-quarter shipments, compared to 30% of shipments in the comparable quarter a year ago, and 28.9% of shipments in the prior quarter. SigmaQuad sales were 41.7% of third-quarter shipments in fiscal 2026, compared to 39.1% in the third quarter of fiscal 2025, and 50.1% in the prior quarter. I’d now like to hand the call over to Doug. Go ahead, please.
Douglas Schirle, Chief Financial Officer, GSI Technology: We reported net revenues of $6.1 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2026, compared to $5.4 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2025, and $6.4 million for the second quarter of fiscal 2026. Gross margin was 52.7% in the third quarter of fiscal 2026, compared to 54% in the third quarter of fiscal 2025, and 54.8% in the preceding second quarter of fiscal 2026. The decrease in gross margin in the third quarter of 2026 was primarily due to product mix. Total operating expenses in the third quarter of fiscal 2026 were $10.1 million, compared to $7 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2025, and $6.7 million in the prior quarter. Research and development expenses were $7.5 million, compared to $4 million in the prior year period, and $3.8 million in the prior quarter.
The increase in research and development spending compared to the prior quarter is primarily due to the purchase of IP for the development of Plato and associated consulting expenses. Selling, general, and administrative expenses were $2.6 million in the quarter ended December 31st, 2025, compared to $3 million in the prior year quarter and $3 million in the previous quarter. Third quarter fiscal 2026 operating loss was $6.9 million, compared to an operating loss of $4.1 million in the prior year period and an operating loss of $3.2 million in the prior quarter.
Third quarter fiscal 2026 net loss included interest and other income of $3.6 million, reflecting a non-cash accounting adjustment of $6.2 million for the change in fair value of the pre-funded warrants and issuance costs of $2.8 million for the recent registered direct offering, and a tax benefit of $251,000, compared to $70,000 in interest and other income, and a tax provision of $44,000 for the same period a year ago. In the preceding second quarter, net loss included interest and other income of $43,000 and a tax provision of $41,000. Net loss in the third quarter of fiscal 2026 was $3 million, or 9 cents per diluted share, compared to net loss of $3.2 million, or 11 cents per diluted share for the second quarter of fiscal 2026. For the prior year fiscal quarter of 2025, net loss was $4 million, or 16 cents per diluted share.
Total third quarter pre-tax stock-based compensation expense was $783,000, compared to $429,000 in the comparable quarter a year ago and $856,000 in the prior quarter. Beginning this quarter, GSI is expanding the cash disclosures in its quarterly earnings release process to help investors understand the company’s cash consumption and cash generation. Going forward, we will disclose the beginning cash balance, net cash used by operating activities, net cash used by investing activities, and net cash provided by financing activities. This will complement the condensed consolidated statement of cash flows included in our Forms 10-K and 10-Q. Cash flows for the quarter end of December 31st, 2025, in thousands of dollars. Cash and cash equivalents as of September 30, 2025, were $25.3 million. Net cash used in operating activities was $7.9 million. Net cash used in investing activities was $296,000, and net cash provided by financing activities were $53.5 million.
Cash and cash equivalents as of December 31st, 2025, were $70.7 million. The increase in cash and cash equivalents as of December 31st, 2025, primarily reflects $46.9 million in net proceeds from the company’s October 22nd, 2025, registered direct offering. Cash used in operating activities includes spending for the development and commercialization of Gemini 2 and Plato. December 31st, 2025, we had $70.7 million in cash and cash equivalents, compared to $13.4 million at March 31st, 2025. Working capital was $71.7 million as of December 31st, 2025, versus $16.4 million at March 31st, 2025. Stockholders’ equity as of December 31st, 2025, was $83.6 million, compared to $28.2 million as of the fiscal year ended March 31st, 2025. Before I hand the call over to the operator for Q&A, I’d like to provide the fourth quarter fiscal 2026 outlook.
Current expectations for the upcoming fiscal fourth quarter are net revenues in the range of $5.7 million-$6.5 million, with gross margin of approximately 54%-56%. Operator, at this point, we will open the call to Q&A.
Conference Call Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, if you would like to ask a question, please press Star 1 on your telephone keypad, and a confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. You may press Star 2 to remove yourself from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the Star keys. And in the interest of time, we ask that you limit yourselves to one question and one follow-up, and then return to the queue for any other follow-ups. Thank you. And our first question comes from the line of Quinn Bolton with Needham & Company. Please proceed.
Robert Aguanno, Analyst, Needham & Company: Hi, guys. This is Robert Aguanno, on for Quinn here. Congrats on all of the progress on Gemini 2. I just wanted to ask, you also announced during the quarter partnership with G2 Tech as well, and that application for defense. Maybe how important is kind of the defense applications for Gemini 2? How does that establish the capabilities of Gemini in sort of real-world applications? And can you speak to potential commercial uses beyond kind of drones and defense and how this may impact the business going forward?
Lee-Lean Shu, Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, GSI Technology: Sure. Sure. So certainly, the mil and defense area have been the sectors that we’ve had our early successes in. We’ve talked about it in the past. We’ve had some of the SBIR wins with entities under the DoD, or DoW as it’s called today, specifically with the Air Force Space Development Agency and U.S. Army. So we certainly have had some successes there in getting the message out. We’ve also talked about a SAR application a board that we sent out to an offshore defense contractor for LEO satellite for SAR, in which they’re doing their evaluation now. So certainly, this is the area that has adopted our technology most quickly.
And as you mentioned, with G2 Tech, it’s a nice partnership because they’re able to actually bring a product using our subsystem APU to create a true product, in this case, like you said, a drone and camera surveillance system. Can you repeat the last part of the sentence or the question, though?
Robert Aguanno, Analyst, Needham & Company: Yeah. I guess.
Lee-Lean Shu, Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, GSI Technology: How much will it be? Yeah. Yeah. So good point. So the effort we’re doing right now with this POC, this TTFT and the whole Gemma 3 12B, lends itself to other applications outside of drones and unmanned vehicles, things like smart cities, things like robotics. And so certainly, we will be able to leverage all the work we’re doing now for this current POC with G2 Tech for these other markets as well.
Robert Aguanno, Analyst, Needham & Company: For sure. Thanks for that. And just one more on you mentioned the government funding as a catalyst for 2026. Can you talk through maybe potential timelines of when you expect this funding to come in? And any other details that you have on that front would be great.
Lee-Lean Shu, Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, GSI Technology: Yes. So for SBIRs, we have a continuous pipeline of submittals. So we have a handful right now that have already been submitted, and we’re waiting for word on whether we’ve been awarded or not. And we have others that we are putting together. This is an ongoing process. And there are different levels. They fall under the classic SBIRs. There’s also other areas like BAA, which stands for Broad Agency Announcement, I believe, STRATFI. There are other programs where other fundings are involved. And we’re active in all those areas. Again, the benefit of this funding is it’s non-dilutive first. And secondly, it allows us to get more exposure within the DOD elements for future business.
Robert Aguanno, Analyst, Needham & Company: Great. Thanks. That’s all for me for now.
Lee-Lean Shu, Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, GSI Technology: Thank you.
Conference Call Operator: As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press Star 1, and a confirmation tone will indicate you’re always in the question queue.
Lee-Lean Shu, Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, GSI Technology: Seems like there’s no more questions from the investor. So thank you all for joining us. We look forward to speaking with you again. We’re ready for our fourth quarter and the full year fiscal 2026 results. Thank you.
Conference Call Operator: Thank you. This concludes today’s conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.