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DATE

Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • President and Chief Executive Officer — Donald R. Young
  • Chief Financial Officer — Grant Thoele

TAKEAWAYS

  • Revenue -- Aspen Aerogels (ASPN +24.27%) reported $37.9 million in revenue for fiscal Q1 2026 (period ended March 31, 2026), down 8% sequentially from fiscal Q4 2025, with $21.6 million from Energy Industrial and $16.3 million from thermal barrier.
  • GAAP Net Loss -- Negative $23.7 million compared to negative $72.9 million in fiscal Q4 2025.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- Negative $12.7 million, improving 29% sequentially from negative $18 million in fiscal Q4 2025 despite lower revenue.
  • Gross Margin -- 11% company-wide; segment gross margin was 15% for Energy Industrial and 6% for thermal barrier.
  • Inventory and Supply Chain Management -- Temporary operational disruption following an East Providence facility explosion was mitigated through inventory and external manufacturing capacity.
  • Claim Proceeds -- Received $37.6 million from General Motors (NYSE: GM), with $3.5 million recognized as revenue in fiscal Q1 2026 and $4.9 million per quarter to be recognized through 2027 under ASC 606.
  • Cash Position -- Ended fiscal Q1 2026 with $175.6 million in cash and cash equivalents, an increase from $158.6 million at year-end 2025, supported by General Motors proceeds and $8 million working capital benefit.
  • Debt and Leverage -- Term loan balance of $86 million; maintained sole covenant of cash equal to at least 100% of term loan balance after fiscal Q1 2026.
  • Capital Spending -- Fiscal Q1 2026 capital expenditures totaled $1 million; full-year guidance remains under $10 million for CapEx and $26 million in scheduled debt payments.
  • Fiscal Q2 2026 Guidance -- Revenue expected between $40 million and $48 million, a 5%-28% sequential increase; adjusted EBITDA guidance of negative $10 million to negative $4 million, pending production and supply outcomes.
  • Energy Industrial Growth Outlook -- Management reiterated expectation for approximately 20% segment growth in 2026, driven by subsea, LNG, and maintenance turnaround opportunities.
  • European Thermal Barrier Growth -- Revenue tripled year over year for the quarter; management forecasts $10 million to $15 million in European thermal barrier revenue for 2026.
  • General Motors EV Production Dynamics -- General Motors EV market share averaged 14.1%, with Cadillac EV sales at over 30% of segment sales in fiscal Q1 2026; management cited lower General Motors production relative to sales, resulting in destocking.
  • Strategic Review Process -- Management stated, "we are confident that our current approach...represents the best path to deploy our financial strength and deliver long-term value for our shareholders."

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RISKS

  • Temporary operational disruption at the East Providence facility due to an explosion, causing plant shutdown and near-term cost pressures from repair, expedited freight, and elevated inventory across facilities.
  • Elevated costs in fiscal Q2 and possibly fiscal Q3, with management commenting, "Elevated costs in this circumstance are difficult to estimate as production evolves by product, location and customer."
  • Energy Industrial revenues declined 15% sequentially, impacted by delivery delays in the Middle East and conflict in Iran, which created logistics and inventory challenges.

SUMMARY

Management expects sequential revenue growth each quarter through 2026, underpinned by a recovering Energy Industrial segment, growing European thermal barrier contributions, and stabilization in General Motors-related business activity. The staged restart of the East Providence facility is planned for May, conditional on safety reviews and agency coordination. Cash flow for the period benefited from General Motors claim proceeds and working capital management, allowing maintained covenant headroom and flexibility for debt reduction or targeted growth investment. Expenses were impacted by one-time items, including a $2.2 million property tax charge and approximately $1 million of charges related to nonrecurring professional services in fiscal Q1 2026.

  • Management reiterated that sequential improvement for each quarter in 2026 is expected, targeting adjusted EBITDA breakeven at $50 million in quarterly revenue during the second half.
  • Guidance assumes the East Providence staged restart proceeds as planned, with any delays likely to increase near-term cash outflows and pressure gross profit.
  • Sale of Plant 2 assets is expected in fiscal Q4 2026 and will be applied directly for debt reduction.
  • The financial framework established through restructuring enables management to reduce breakeven revenue levels from $330 million in 2024 to $175 million by end of 2027, as cited in the call.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • PyroThin: Aspen Aerogels' proprietary thermal barrier designed for lithium-ion battery fire protection in electric vehicles and energy storage systems.
  • ASC 606: Accounting Standard Codification Topic 606, governing the recognition of revenue from contracts with customers.
  • EMF: External Manufacturing Facility, used by Aspen Aerogels to supplement internal production and supply chain flexibility.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Donald Young: Thanks, Neal. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us for our Q1 2026 earnings call. My comments will cover an April event in our manufacturing facility in East Providence, our growth outlook for the Energy industrial segment, the evolving demand environment for electric vehicles and our progress in developing a battery energy storage systems segment. I will also provide an update on our strategic review process. Grant will amplify these points with his comments. On April 8, we experienced an operational disruption in our aerogel manufacturing facility in East Providence. The incident involved an explosion in a high temperature oven and resulted in plant damage confined to that specific area of the facility and the temporary cessation of operations.

We are immensely grateful that no employees were seriously injured in the incident and want to recognize the Aspen team for their tireless work towards a safe and disciplined restart of the facility. We currently expect a staged restart of operations to begin in May, subject to continued progress in our mechanical, operational and safety reviews as well as ongoing coordination with local and state agencies. To date, we have mitigated any significant commercial impact of the disruption by working through inventory and by leveraging the capacity of our external manufacturing facility. It will take time to restore full capability to the EP plant a task that will receive our full attention once we complete the restart phase.

We are also closely -- we are also working closely with our external manufacturing facility to enhance its capabilities to support our Energy, Industrial and Thermal Barrier segments and to enhance short- and long-term supply flexibility, all of which is intended to strengthen our operational resilience and commitment to customers. Turning to our Energy & Industrial segment. Even with a messy start to the year due to the EP disruption and delivery delays in the Middle East, we still have our sights set on 20% revenue growth for the year. We believe we will gain considerable momentum in the second half of the year, leading to further growth in 2027 and 2028.

With energy security and supply diversification paramount and structurally higher energy prices projected, our customer base is gearing with urgency for a multiyear investment cycle in global energy infrastructure from which we expect to benefit. These dynamics are translating into 3 clear growth drivers for our business. First, Subsea. We continue to build a strong pipeline of opportunities that extend through the decade. We were recently awarded a second subsea project deliverable in Q3 and with the win announced earlier this year, positions us in 2026 to be within our historical annual revenue range of $10 million to $20 million. Second, LNG and natural gas infrastructure. LNG has become one of the clearest and most dynamic growth lanes for us.

We are seeing positive developments in the United States and in the Middle East with large-scale LNG infrastructure activity moving from market interest into executable commercial opportunities. Our confidence is not based only on the LNG macro cycle but also based on our concrete engagement with project level execution. We are actively working with customers, EPC contractors and construction teams and believe we have the potential to increase our scope on several projects, which would increase our 2026 opportunity and extend visibility into 2027. We believe this supports our expectation that LNG-related activity can approximately double in 2026 versus 2025 and provide continued momentum into 2027. Third, maintenance and turnaround work remains an important deferred demand opportunity.

Refiners have continued to prioritize uptime and operate at high utilization, which has compressed some maintenance windows. Over time, reliability requirements should bring that work back into scope, and we remain well positioned to support customers as turnaround activity normalizes. Taken together, we believe these drivers support our expectation of approximately 20% growth in energy industrial in 2026. We anticipate building momentum through the second half of the year and remain focused on scaling this segment into a $200 million high-margin business without the need for incremental capital investment. Turning to our PyroThin thermal barrier business. The EV market in the United States remains in reset mode.

Market share for EVs in the U.S. appears to be settling at approximately 5% to 6%, roughly half the level of when incentives and regulation favored EV adoption. GM's monthly market share for EVs this year has averaged 14.1%, which would suggest a sales rate over 100,000 EVs in 2026. GM produced EVs in Q1 and in April at levels below current sales volume, resulting in lower finished vehicle inventory levels. We anticipate GM will begin aligning production rates more closely with sales volumes, consistent with its stated objective of operating in a demand-driven manner and adapting to current market conditions.

GM has maintained its full line of EV nameplates and has stated that it remains dedicated to its long-term EV success, including in its Cadillac division, where EV sales represented 28% of total sales in 2025 and over 30% in Q1 2026. We see a different dynamic in Europe where battery electric vehicles now account for more than 20% of new vehicle registrations and where stronger structural drivers are supporting the early stages of production ramp-up among the OEMs with whom we have design awards.

Our EU thermal barrier revenue in Q1 increased more than threefold versus the prior quarter -- prior year quarter and we believe this momentum could translate into 2026 revenue in the range of $10 million to $15 million. Across these European awards, we are supporting programs that incorporate battery cells from a diversified global supply base, including European, Korean, Japanese and leading Chinese manufacturers. We are encouraged by our momentum in Europe and again, believe the region will be an important contributor to our revenue in 2027 and beyond. Looking beyond our current segments, we are also advancing new growth opportunities.

In battery energy storage systems, we are actively engaged in multiple qualifications and commercial discussions with developers serving grid infrastructure, data centers and other high reliability applications as system architectures evolve toward higher energy density, the thermal challenges increasingly resemble those we have already solved in EV platforms. With proven performance and domestic manufacturing capability, we believe we are well positioned to enter this market and generate initial revenue in 2026 following a period of market change and internal restructuring, we initiated a strategic review in Q4 last year. Our goal was to execute a disciplined evaluation of our strategic options to ensure our growth strategy and capital allocation priorities were aligned with maximizing long-term shareholder value.

The process allowed us to open the aperture to compare our existing opportunities to a wider array of strategic alignments and capital structures. While optimizing strategy is an ongoing endeavor for all good companies, we are confident that our current approach, scaling energy industrial, driving new growth and diversification for PyroThin thermal barriers, expanding into adjacent markets and continuing targeted R&D to create breakthrough opportunities represents the best path to deploy our financial strength and deliver long-term value for our shareholders. Grant, over to you.

Grant Thoele: Thanks, Don, and good morning, everyone. I'll cover our first quarter 2026 results and Q2 outlook, along with drivers for the remainder of the year. As we signaled on our last earnings call, Q1 2026 was projected to be the lowest revenue quarter of the year, and we remain confident that it will be. We also anticipated sequential revenue growth each quarter through 2026, which we continue to track towards as expected. First quarter revenue was $37.9 million, including $21.6 million from Energy Industrial and $16.3 million from thermal barrier. Total revenues declined 8% quarter-over-quarter. Energy Industrial revenues came in below expectations, declining 15% quarter-over-quarter.

Customer demand was constrained by ancillary impacts from the conflict in Iran, creating logistics and inventory challenges. Our supply chain and commercial teams have taken targeted steps to mitigate further disruption. On the positive side, we have secured 2 project awards in Q1, both expected to contribute revenue this year. Thermal barrier revenues were in line with expectations and flat quarter-over-quarter, although we did see softer GM production volumes as they continue to destock inventory, encouragingly, GM's market share grew during the quarter, a positive commercial signal. In Q1, we received $37.6 million in claim proceeds from GM. The GAAP treatment of the claim is informed by ASC 606.

This payment is recognized as revenue ratably through the end of 2027, with $3.5 million booked as revenue for Q1 and approximately $4.9 million revenue per quarter thereafter. Gross profit of $4.3 million or 11% gross margin reflected the impact of lower production volumes being unable to fully cover fixed manufacturing costs. Gross margin at the segment level was 15% for energy, industrial and 6% for thermal barrier. Adjusted operating expenses, excluding impairments, restructuring charges and other onetime items remained relatively flat from $21 million in Q4 '25 to $21.2 million in Q1 '26.

Q1 results included a few onetime items, a $2.2 million property tax charge related to Plant 2 and approximately $1 million of charges related to nonrecurring professional services. GAAP net loss was negative $23.7 million in Q1 versus negative $72.9 million last quarter. And adjusted EBITDA was negative $12.7 million in Q1 versus negative $18 million last quarter, representing a 29% improvement despite slightly lower revenues. Moving to liquidity. We generated $17 million of cash in Q1 and ended the quarter with $175.6 million in cash and cash equivalents versus $158.6 million at the end of 2025.

The increase in cash was driven by the receipt of $37.6 million GM claim proceeds, along with a working capital benefit of $8 million, while CapEx of $1 million and debt payments of $15.6 million represented the primary uses of cash aside from Q1's operating loss. Debt payments in Q1 were driven by $6.5 million in principal amortization connected to the term loan and a $7.6 million reduction in the revolving credit facility. Our term loan balance at the end of Q1 was $86 million.

Our sole financial covenant under the MidCap facility requires us to maintain cash equal to at least 100% of the term loan balance with $175.6 million of cash against an $86 million term loan, we have substantial covenant headroom. Turning to Slide 6. For the second quarter of 2026, we expect increased revenue and profitability relative to Q1, with total revenue expected to be between $40 million and $48 million. This range represents between 5% to 28% growth quarter-over-quarter. Our Q2 guidance assumes GM production at an annualized rate of approximately 55,000 to 65,000 vehicles in the quarter, an increase versus Q1 where GM sourced the equivalent of 43,000 vehicles annualized.

The current IHS forecast has GM producing nearly 100,000 vehicles for 2026, which points to more production weighted to the second half of the year. Given the product mix included in our range, we expect adjusted EBITDA to be between negative $10 million and negative $4 million for the second quarter. This profitability range is dependent on supply mitigation efforts. So all the variability resides above the gross profit line. A few items worth noting here, mainly around production and supply. The incident at EP is creating near-term cost pressure.

Our teams are doing an exceptional job managing supply continuity, but expedited freight, expedited repair costs and inventory build across both EP and EMF will all result in elevated costs in Q2 and potentially Q3. Elevated costs in this circumstance are difficult to estimate as production evolves by product, location and customer, particularly as we balance safely restarting EP. Protecting supply and meeting customer expectations is our clear focus during this time. As a reminder, our restructuring actions were designed to achieve EBITDA breakeven at $50 million of quarterly revenue.

Our Q2 guide reflects progress toward that target, and we expect to reach it in the second half of the year, assuming success of our ongoing production and supply mitigation efforts. All estimates reflected in our guidance assumes that the staged restart of our East Providence plant proceeds as we currently expect. Turning to our liquidity outlook. Let's start with what we can control. CapEx and scheduled debt payments should total less than $12 million in Q2. And Alternatively, working capital will be more variable depending on where we produce inventory and ultimately sell finished goods. Additionally, we will build to higher inventory targets for safety stock at quarter end, depending on the pace at which EP comes back online.

We will continue to be prudent with cash during this period, but want to strive for the high end of our Q2 revenue range. As a result, we could see total cash outflows of $20 million to $30 million for Q2, which includes $12 million of CapEx and scheduled debt payments, again, highly dependent on our ongoing production and supply mitigation efforts. With Q1 as our base, we anticipate sequential revenue growth through 2026, supported by 3 primary drivers. First, GM production continues to recover as inventory levels normalize and destocking subsides. Second, the continued ramp of our European OEM programs which we expect to contribute approximately $10 million to $15 million of revenue in 2026.

We see activity picking up here. Third, we expect approximately 20% growth in energy industrial with a greater concentration of project activity in the second half. As volumes increase, while we continue to lower our cost structure we expect improved operating leverage and margin expansion throughout the year. Full year capital assumptions remain unchanged from the last earnings call. We continue to expect less than $10 million of capital expenditures and approximately $26 million of scheduled debt payments. Proceeds from the potential sale of Plant 2 assets are most likely a Q4 event rather than Q3. We and would be applied directly to reduce our term debt on a dollar-for-dollar basis.

Combining these assumptions with our profitability expectations for the rest of the year, we anticipate ending the year with a strong net cash position. As a result of restructuring by reducing our fixed costs, we've built a financial framework that supports both resilience and growth as evidenced by our progress reducing EBITDA breakeven levels from $330 million revenue in 2024 to our $200 million revenue target in 2026 and even further to our $175 million revenue target by the end of 2027. With ample levels of liquidity, we still see flexibility to further delever the business, and we're evaluating a host of options while staying nimble to opportunistically invest in strategic growth initiatives.

As we continue to navigate 2026, driving incremental profitability with new commercial activity and maintaining balance sheet strength remain top priorities. Don, back to you.

Donald Young: Thanks, Grant. To close, while the first half of 2026 has been shaped by temporary disruptions and evolving market conditions, we believe the fundamentals of our business are solid. We see market signals -- positive market signals across our energy and industrial platform alongside growing diversification and new growth in thermal barriers. As we move through the year, we expect to build momentum and further strengthen our positioning for sustained growth into 2027 and beyond. With that, we'll open the call to your questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Eric Stein of Craig-Hallum Capital.

Unknown Analyst: This is Luke on for Eric. So I guess, first, just on the European demand for thermal barrier, just following the record quarter on that front. I mean do you think OEMs are looking to accelerate production in part just because of the volatility in energy markets? Could you just talk about what you're hearing from customers in the pipeline? And also, would you expect to be leaning on the EMF to meet that ramp just with everything going on in Rhode Island right now?

Donald Young: In terms of the ramp, I think it's a little too early to associate their active first quarter and the levels of activity that we're seeing here in 2026 with higher energy prices and switching from ICE vehicles to EV vehicles. I think more broadly, though, this has been building for some period of time. We've seen significant EV market share gains in Europe and the OEMs with whom we have won awards are beginning to benefit from that. In terms of supply, look, we want to be sure that we have as much flexibility as we can and make sure we're capable of meeting expectations of our customers.

And everything that we can do to assure that we're going to do. And that does include having capability in our East Providence facility and in our Chinese EMF supplier.

Unknown Analyst: Got it. So I guess just for my follow-up, switching gears here to EI. I mean you've talked about ultimately scaling that business to, let's say, a $200 million annual business. Do you have line of sight into just some of the subsea and LNG opportunities that could really make that a real possibility before the end of the decade? And just what are some of the factors that ultimately would get you there?

Donald Young: Yes. I really think it's the 3 things that I touched on in my earlier statements. And certainly, Subsea is one of them. If you think back, as I cited, our historic range for a long time going back, I want to say, to 2008 or so, has been in the range of between $10 million and $20 million in '23 and '24, we had numbers that were closer to $30 million. And in '25, we had a very quiet year, a number less than $5 million. So we see a lot of activity going on, and it's not just the 2 awards that we've won to date, but the roster of opportunities. I can't remember when it's been stronger.

And again, our value proposition and our record serving that market is outstanding. So that is definitely one component. And then LNG, as I said again in my statements, we're not just looking at the LNG kind of macro cycle. Our teams are engaged with the owners, with the EPC contractors in the field accelerating projects and expanding some of the opportunities that we have there. So that has a good opportunity. I have said that we have the opportunity to double the size of that business compared to 2025, both in number of projects and in dollars, and we are aiming to do that. And then the third area has been kind of a quiet area for us.

It's our day in and day out maintenance work, turnaround work that we do in refineries and petrochemical plants around the world. These refiners have been running their plants pretty hard, and they've had relatively narrow maintenance windows. And we know that reliability is critical to them, and that cycle will move and create opportunity for us in that nice baseload day in and day out revenue that we're accustomed to in that area. So if you add those 3 things together, we believe that, that $200 million mark is a very realistic opportunity for us.

Operator: With no further questions, we have reached the end of the Q&A session. I will now pass the call back over to Don Young for closing remarks.

Donald Young: Thank you, [indiscernible]. We appreciate your interest in Aspen Aerogels and look forward to reporting to you our second quarter results in August. Be well. Have a good day. Thank you.

Operator: This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.