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Date
Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET
Call participants
- Chief Executive Officer — Scott H. Keeney
- Chief Financial Officer — Joseph Corso
- Chief Marketing Officer — John Marchetti
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Takeaways
- Total revenue -- $80.2 million, representing a 55% increase year over year and a 1% decrease sequentially from Q4 2025.
- Aerospace and defense revenue -- $55.1 million, growing 69% year over year, led by record A&D product revenue up 98% year over year and up 10% sequentially.
- Development revenue -- $22 million, an increase of 38% year over year, while down 16% sequentially from Q4 2025, primarily due to completion of the 50 kilowatt DEM shorehead laser effector.
- Commercial markets revenue -- $25 million, up 32% year over year, with $13 million from microfabrication and $12 million from industrial markets.
- Product gross margin -- 43.6%, up from 33.5% a year ago and 37.3% in Q4 2025, achieving a quarterly record, attributable to favorable mix and A&D volumes.
- Development gross margin -- 5.1%, falling from 11.5% a year ago and 16.8% last quarter, reflecting variability linked to contract mix and deliverables.
- Non-GAAP product gross margin -- 44.6%, increasing from 35.1% a year ago and 38.6% last quarter.
- Operating expenses (GAAP) -- $27.2 million, up $3.8 million from 2025, driven mainly by higher stock-based compensation.
- Operating expenses (Non-GAAP) -- $17.1 million, down from $17.8 million in 2025 and $18.4 million last quarter.
- GAAP net income -- $645,000, or $0.01 per diluted share, compared to a net loss of $8.1 million in 2025 and $4.9 million last quarter.
- Non-GAAP net income -- $11.8 million, or $0.20 per diluted share, improving from a loss of $1.9 million in 2025 and income of $7.8 million last quarter.
- Adjusted EBITDA -- $13.9 million, up from $116,000 a year ago and $10.7 million last quarter, establishing a quarterly record.
- Cash balance -- $332.9 million at quarter end, including roughly $191 million in net proceeds from a February follow-on offering.
- Operating cash flow -- $9.7 million generated, marking the third consecutive quarter of positive operating cash flow.
- Cash flow conversion days -- 97 days, improved from 125 days in 2025.
- Guidance: Q2 2026 revenue -- Expected between $75 million and $81 million, with $58 million in product revenue and $20 million in development revenue at the $78 million midpoint.
- Guidance: Q2 2026 gross margin -- Overall 29%-33%, product gross margin 37%-41%, and development gross margin approximately 8%.
- Guidance: Q2 2026 adjusted EBITDA -- Anticipated in the range of $8 million to $12 million.
- Hades laser platform launch -- Management announced the launch of Hades, a scalable beam-combined high energy laser family with integrated atmospheric correction, offering modular system growth and integration with military platforms.
- Program progress -- Management confirmed on-track progress for the HELSI 2 one megawatt CBC high energy laser program and continued advancement on the Navy’s HELL CAP program.
- Capital deployment -- Proceeds from the equity raise are allocated to build and equip a new 50,000 square foot facility in Longmont, Colorado, and to support accelerated directed energy product development.
- Commercial market portfolio shift -- Management reiterated the exit from legacy cutting and welding markets, with no material revenue expected from these after Q2 2026.
- Government budget visibility -- The transcript cited nearly $400 million in the U.S. government fiscal 2027 and 2028 budgets for directed energy prototypes and procurement, with the overall annual laser weapons budget reaching approximately $1 billion per year.
- Capacity -- Management affirmed no current capacity constraints and confidence in fulfilling new contract awards as demand signals emerge.
Summary
nLIGHT (LASR 7.15%) reported record product gross margin and adjusted EBITDA, as well as significant year-over-year growth in aerospace, defense, and commercial sectors.
- Management specifically highlighted the formal launch of the Hades scalable high energy laser platform with integrated atmospheric correction, as well as ongoing strategic progress in major U.S. government directed energy programs.
- The February follow-on offering strengthened the company’s cash position, enabling enhanced investment in new production capacity and accelerated R&D initiatives.
- Management stated, “we are increasingly engaged not only as a laser supplier, but also as a system-level partner.” within the directed energy market.
- The company executed a disciplined cost structure, with non-GAAP operating expenses decreasing both year over year and sequentially.
- Customer demand trends and favorable product mix materially contributed to margin improvement, with about half the gross margin upside attributed to greater throughput and half to mix.
- Budgetary clarity from U.S. government sources was noted as positive for multiyear directed energy opportunities, but management cautioned that budget processes “will take time to work its way through Congress.”
- As confirmed in the call, nLIGHT has no current manufacturing capacity limitations and expects the new Longmont facility to further support growth as new demand emerges.
Industry glossary
- CBC (Coherent Beam Combining): A laser technology architecture that enables power scaling by combining multiple lasers into a single high-brightness beam with maintained coherence for greater effect in directed energy applications.
- SWaP (Size, Weight, and Power): An engineering benchmark for optimizing equipment with minimal footprint, lighter weight, and reduced energy requirements, critical for integration into defense and aerospace platforms.
- HELL CAP (High Energy Laser Counter-ASCM Program): A U.S. Navy initiative focused on integrating laser systems to defend against anti-ship cruise missiles using advanced beam control technologies.
- HELSI (High Energy Laser Scaling Initiative): A government-backed program to develop and demonstrate high-powered, scalable laser weapons for national defense applications.
- Adaptive optics: Laser system technology that corrects for atmospheric distortion, enabling higher accuracy and effectiveness for long-range directed energy applications.
- Stryker: A family of military armored vehicles that serve as platforms for integrating advanced weapons, including directed energy systems.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Scott H. Keeney: Q1 represented an exceptional quarter for nLIGHT, Inc. with total revenue, gross margin, and adjusted EBITDA comfortably beating our expectations. First quarter revenue of $80 million grew 55% year over year and was driven by aerospace and defense revenue of $55 million, which grew 69% year over year. I am particularly pleased with the continued expansion of our product gross margin and record adjusted EBITDA in the quarter. Product gross margins were a record 44%, an increase from 33% in the same quarter a year ago, and our adjusted EBITDA was a record $14 million in the quarter.
The expansion in our gross margins and the record adjusted EBITDA demonstrate the leverage that is inherent in our model and reinforces our commitment to growing the business profitably. I would like to focus my prepared remarks today on important developments within our directed energy market, which continues to be the most strategic and highest growth opportunity for nLIGHT, Inc. Directed energy remains a key priority for the U.S. and allied governments, driven by the need for highly scalable, low cost per shot solutions to counter a rapidly evolving threat environment.
Our focus remains on supporting customers across a broad range of power and mission profiles, and we are increasingly engaged not only as a laser supplier, but also as a system-level partner. Importantly, we are seeing growing customer demand for solutions that emphasize the three keys to success in directed energy: power scaling, high brightness, and atmospheric correction—areas where we believe our two-decade investment in laser technology provides a meaningful competitive advantage and where we have consistently delivered for our customers. Today, we officially launched our Hades portfolio of scalable beam-combined high energy lasers and effectors with integrated atmospheric correction.
Production-ready Hades is designed around nLIGHT, Inc.’s vertically integrated laser technology stack encompassing semiconductor laser diodes, fiber amplifiers, beam combination, and atmospheric correction. The platform architecture enables system growth to hundreds of kilowatts while maintaining pristine beam quality through advanced atmospheric correction, providing defense customers with a common modular foundation that scales from near-term operational deployments to higher power systems capable of addressing increasingly sophisticated and demanding threats. Each system can be integrated with existing beam directors, sensors, and battle management architectures, enabling rapid deployment across a broad range of military platforms and battlefield environments.
One example of this power scaling is the work we are doing on the production of the one megawatt CBC high energy laser as part of HELSI 2. We remain on track for this program, and importantly, this laser is based on the same architecture that we use across all our Hades portfolio of CBC lasers, demonstrating the scalability of the platform to deliver solutions that address a wide range of mission scenarios—counter-UAS, counter-cruise missile, and more. We also continue to make progress on the U.S.
Navy’s HELL CAP program where we are combining the 300 kilowatt CBC laser that we delivered under the HELSI 1 program with a nLIGHT, Inc. advanced beam control system that incorporates our proprietary adaptive optics for atmospheric correction. This work will help accelerate the development and deployment of future multi-100 kilowatt systems over the coming years. Looking ahead, we remain encouraged by the pipeline of directed energy opportunities, including follow-on production content, upgrades to existing platforms, and new prototype programs that should position us for continued growth over the next several years. Importantly, we have seen the U.S. government follow up on these program successes with increases to budgets associated with directed energy.
There is currently nearly $400 million in each of fiscal 2027 and 2028 budgeted for directed energy prototypes and procurement. The overall annual budget for directed energy laser weapons increases to approximately $1 billion in each of the two fiscal years with the inclusion of high-power multi-100 kilowatt directed energy prototypes that are expected to be funded through the science and technology portion of the budget. We continue to believe that our differentiated CBC high power laser technology, combined with our advanced atmospheric correction capabilities and our U.S.-based manufacturing, positions us favorably to win meaningful new awards in the coming months and years.
The growing pipeline of opportunities in our directed energy markets was a primary driver behind our decision to raise additional capital through a follow-on equity offering during the quarter. We raised over $190 million after fees and expenses, which combined with our existing cash leaves us with approximately $330 million on our balance sheet. We intend to use a portion of these proceeds to build out and equip our new 50,000 square foot manufacturing facility in Longmont, Colorado, invest ahead of our demand and supply chain, and increase staffing to help accelerate new directed energy product development.
In summary, our strategy remains consistent: leverage our vertically integrated technology platform, execute with discipline on existing programs, and invest to accelerate and support long-term growth and value creation. We believe this approach positions nLIGHT, Inc. well not only for the remainder of 2026, but for the multiyear opportunities ahead. Let me now turn the call over to Joseph to discuss our first quarter financial results.
Joseph Corso: Thank you, Scott. We had a very strong first quarter. We delivered our fifth consecutive quarter of product revenue growth, and exceptional operational execution enabled us to generate record product gross margins in the quarter. Continued operating expense discipline enabled much of the incremental gross margin to fall through to adjusted EBITDA, which was also a quarterly record. At the same time, our continued focus on working capital management and targeted CapEx enabled us to generate positive operating cash flow for the third consecutive quarter. We significantly strengthened our balance sheet through a well-received equity offering in February, and we remain on healthy financial footing to pursue the growth opportunities we have in front of us. Turning to the numbers.
Total revenue in the first quarter was $80.2 million, an increase of 55% compared to $51.7 million in 2025 and down 1% compared to the fourth quarter of 2025. Aerospace and defense revenue was $55.1 million in the quarter, up 69% year over year. A&D growth was driven by record A&D product revenue, which grew 98% year over year and 10% sequentially. Development revenue of $22 million grew 38% year over year as we continue to execute on multiple directed energy and laser sensing programs.
The quarter-over-quarter decline of 16% was primarily due to the successful delivery of our 50 kilowatt DEM shorehead high energy laser effector in 2025, partially offset by continued increases associated with our work on HELSI 2. First quarter revenue from our commercial markets, which include industrial and microfabrication, was ahead of our expectations at $25 million, an increase of 32% year over year. Revenue from our microfabrication markets was slightly better than our expectations at $13 million. Revenue of $12 million from our industrial markets benefited from increased demand for additive manufacturing products and an increase in sales associated with last-time buys for our cutting and welding products.
As we announced last quarter, we are exiting our legacy cutting and welding markets, and we do not expect to generate material revenue from these markets after the second quarter. Total gross margin in the first quarter was 33.1%, compared to 26.7% in 2025 and 30.7% last quarter. On a non-GAAP basis, excluding the costs associated with stock-based compensation, total gross margin in the first quarter was 34.4%, up from 27.8% in the same period last year and 31.6% last quarter. Product gross margin in the first quarter was a record 43.6%, compared to 33.5% in 2025 and 37.3% last quarter.
First quarter product gross margin was positively impacted by favorable customer and product mix, driven by record product revenue from our A&D markets, and an overall increase in volume. Non-GAAP product gross margin in the first quarter was 44.6%, compared to 35.1% in 2025 and 38.6% last quarter. Development gross margin was 5.1%, compared to 11.5% in the same quarter a year ago and 16.8% last quarter. The variability in development gross margin is primarily the result of contract mix and the timing of program deliverables in any given quarter. Non-GAAP development gross margin in the quarter was 7.2%, compared to 11.5% in the same period a year ago and 16.8% last quarter.
GAAP operating expenses were $27.2 million in the first quarter, compared to $23.4 million in 2025 and $30.4 million in the prior quarter. The year-over-year increase in GAAP operating expenses is primarily due to higher stock-based compensation. Non-GAAP operating expenses were $17.1 million in the quarter, down from $17.8 million in 2025 and down from $18.4 million last quarter. We expect non-GAAP OpEx to remain in the $17 million to $19 million range for the balance of the year.
The company achieved positive GAAP net income in the first quarter of $645,000, or $0.01 per diluted share, compared to a net loss of $8.1 million, or $0.16 per share, in the same quarter a year ago and a loss of $4.9 million, or $0.10 per share, in the fourth quarter of 2025. On a non-GAAP basis, net income for the first quarter was $11.8 million, or $0.20 per diluted share, compared to a non-GAAP net loss of $1.9 million, or $0.04 per share, in 2025 and non-GAAP net income of $7.8 million, or $0.14 per diluted share, last quarter.
Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter was a record $13.9 million, compared to $116,000 in the same quarter last year and $10.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. We ended the first quarter with total cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash, and investments of $332.9 million, which includes approximately $191 million of net proceeds from our February follow-on offering. While revenue growth remains the primary objective for nLIGHT, Inc., we also want to manage working capital so that, over time, we can grow profitability and cash flow faster than revenue. In the first quarter, our cash flow conversion days were 97 compared to 125 days during 2025. We generated $9.7 million in cash from operations during the quarter.
Turning to guidance. Based on the information available today, we expect revenue for the second quarter of 2026 to be in the range of $75 million to $81 million. The midpoint of $78 million includes approximately $58 million of product revenue and $20 million of development revenue. We expect sequential growth from our A&D markets in the second quarter. Overall gross margin in the second quarter is expected to be in the range of 29% to 33%, with product gross margin in the range of 37% to 41%, and development gross margin of approximately 8%. As we have mentioned previously, in a vertically integrated manufacturing business, gross margin is largely dependent on production volumes and absorption of fixed manufacturing costs.
Finally, we expect adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter of 2026 to be in the range of $8 million to $12 million. With that, I will turn the call over to the operator.
Operator: We will now open the call for questions. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, please press star 1 again. We ask that you pick up your handset when asking a question to allow for optimum sound quality. If you are muted locally, please remember to unmute your device. Please standby while we compile the Q&A. Your first question comes from the line of Peter Arment with Baird. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Analyst: Good afternoon, Scott, Joe, and John. Nice results. Scott, I was wondering if you could maybe give us—you touched upon the funding environment, and you called out a few things around directed energy. How should we think about the timing of all that and how you are expecting it? I know timing around all this can be lumpy, but what are your thoughts?
Scott H. Keeney: Thanks for the question. As we noted, the budget provides some insights into the importance of directed energy, and the data that we are showing is the President’s budget. It will take time to work its way through Congress, but I do think that there is signal there. Notably, we are seeing increases from OSD within the core directed energy—the Principal Director—and various programs that are going on there, and I think that we do have insights into the priorities that have been put forward that further reinforce this.
As you know, the budget process takes time to work its way through Congress, and we hope to have more insights in the coming quarters there, and certainly you can read the comments from leadership with respect to directed energy.
Analyst: Got it. And just as a quick follow-up, the Hades scalable high energy lasers family that you launched today—can you talk a little bit about the positioning there versus some of your other products and how you are thinking about that?
Scott H. Keeney: Thanks for asking that. It is something that we have been working on, and we are very excited about this product family. It is our platform for scaling to higher power, and so we are starting with the greater-than-50 kilowatt class, but it will continue to scale, and that is one of the key benefits to coherent beam combining. It also provides for a brighter beam, a laser beam that can be focused more effectively, and then finally, it provides for the ability to correct for the atmosphere.
All three of those features we believe are very important, and it also is in a form factor that is smaller than other products, and one that we have integrated into the Stryker as we have talked about, and can be integrated in other platforms. It is an exciting announcement, and we will be making further announcements as we continue to migrate that product family.
Analyst: Appreciate the color. I will jump back in the queue. Thanks.
Operator: Thanks. Your next question comes from the line of Louis DePalma with William Blair. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Analyst: As a follow-up to the question on Hades, can the Hades platform be integrated into aircraft, as there was a defense contractor in Israel that recently discussed the incorporation of high energy lasers into aircraft and helicopters? It would seem to be a large addressable market. You mentioned how Hades can be incorporated into the Stryker and other platforms. Could you provide some potential color on those other platforms?
Scott H. Keeney: Absolutely. The platforms that we have talked about in more detail are the Army, the Stryker—and by the way, that is just one platform. What ultimately will be the right platforms is to be determined, but I think it is a challenging platform to integrate; it is a very small space. Certainly, the Navy has a number of opportunities for integration, and so the small size of Hades is important for those, but as you noted, it becomes even more important as you look at airborne applications. One of the topics that we talked a bit about is our leadership with respect to SWaP—size, weight, and power.
We have leading performance in that area, and that provides a very good foundation for airborne platforms also. Obviously, you would engineer the product to be different in those platforms, but we do have leadership with respect to SWaP also.
Analyst: Thanks. There also seems to have been progress with the Army’s 30 kilowatt Enduring High Energy Laser program. Is there the opportunity for you to serve as a supplier for that program or other programs below the 70 kilowatt threshold that you have established with Hades? And related to this, how do you view competition between the 70 kilowatt and above class versus the class of lasers below 70 kilowatts?
Scott H. Keeney: That is a very good question. The short answer is yes. We are excited about the work that we are doing with partners in the lower power space like the 30 kilowatt, where we provide key components that go into that, and it is indeed different from Hades. It does not require the same level of sophistication with respect to the coherently combined sources for higher power. So we are partnered with others to provide those components at the lower power level, and as the requirements go up to higher power, that is where Hades comes in.
I think we are uniquely positioned there to provide not only the higher power, but also the higher beam quality and the atmospheric correction for those threats that require a more sophisticated laser source.
Analyst: Thanks for the color. Thanks, Scott, Joe, and John.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Jonathan Siegmann with Stifel. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Analyst: Hey, good afternoon, Scott, Joe, and John. Thanks for taking my question. Sales and margins were fantastic. It sounds like within products, both sensing and directed energy were increasing. Just hoping to get a sense on which horse was leading the pack in the quarter, and then thinking about how margins demonstrated 500 basis points of upside relative to your own high end of your guidance range for products—should we think of that as just being the operating leverage of the higher sales, or how much was mix contributing? Thank you.
Joseph Corso: Great, thanks for the question, Jonathan. We had a good quarter across the board. All of our products fared well during the quarter—from directed energy to laser sensing—and even if you look at the end markets, our industrial and microfabrication markets performed well. As you think about the upside relative to the guidance, about half of it was just volume-related—leveraging overhead and selling more through the factory and keeping the factory more occupied—and then the other half was a combination of slightly higher margin mix. There can be a pretty big mix within any given quarter, and this quarter we saw very nice mix as we continue to control costs.
So I think, again, it was a good quarter that we were firing on all cylinders.
Analyst: Thank you. And maybe I will slip one on Hades too, which has to be one of the best franchise names in defense right now. You have talked a lot about how coherent is differentiated and scalable over high power, but you introduced the 30 and the 10 kilowatt systems and talked about having proprietary beam quality that would not be coherent. Can you talk a little bit about what is differentiated in that class of power and what is your company’s right to win in those areas?
Scott H. Keeney: Thanks for the question. Just to replay, there are only two ways to combine lasers to preserve a very bright coherent laser source: spectral beam combining and coherent beam combining. We have a very strong position that, as you go up in power, coherent beam combining is the best way to scale to higher power, to provide a brighter source, and to also more effectively allow for atmospheric correction. For lower power, we do provide spectral beam combined sources, and again, we work with other partners to provide components and combined laser sources there. We do not integrate it into the full effector with the beam director in that space. We have, as I mentioned, leading SWaP—size, weight, and power.
We have high reliability. We have lasers that are serviceable. There is a whole host of differentiation that we have that is the result of 25 years of building lasers for a broad range of industrial and defense applications that allows us to serve that market well, but we do not integrate as far forward in the lower power space. Does that help answer your question?
Analyst: Thank you. I think I misunderstood the website. I thought the 10 were new products. Appreciate the clarification.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Greg Palm with Craig-Hallum. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Analyst: Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions. Going back to segment results, what drove—most of the upside was actually in the industrial segment. Can you just maybe talk about what surprised you there? Joe, you talked about some last-time buys. Presumably, maybe that continues into Q2. But what are we now expecting for the full year relative to that $25 million to $30 million number you gave last quarter?
Joseph Corso: Thanks, Greg. The upside in industrial was a little bit better than we expected around producing revenue and taking orders for last-time buys in our cutting and welding business, but the brighter upside spot really was additive manufacturing. We had a nice quarter in additive manufacturing, and we are seeing that business continue to show better growth than we had anticipated going into the quarter and into the balance of the year. As you know, it is difficult to predict. We do not guide on a full-year basis because we do not have the amount of visibility that we do in the defense business.
But I think relative to what we said during our last earnings call, things have gotten better, and so we are starting to chip away at that hole that we talked about. There is still a lot of work that we need to do as we go through the year to really close that.
Analyst: Okay. And then, Scott, going back to some of the budget items—and I want to go back to some of the comments in the last call as well—talking about a number of new real prototypes that you are going after at different power levels. Can you give us maybe an update on when we should hear more on some of those programs that you alluded to last quarter?
Scott H. Keeney: I would like to predict how Congress will work this year, but I have enough experience to know that there are error bars around that. The budget numbers that we provided were the President’s budget requests, and that will work its way through the appropriations process in the coming quarters. We should have more insights this fall, but those can be delayed. More specifically, there are opportunities for specific programs in the current budget that we certainly will announce when we are able to do so. The higher-level budgets will take time for that process to work itself out.
Analyst: But just to be clear, the prototypes that you alluded to last quarter—was that not current fiscal year budget, or was that for 2027?
Scott H. Keeney: That was for 2027.
Analyst: Okay. Alright. Thanks for the color.
Operator: As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, please press star 1 again. We ask that you pick up your handset when asking a question to allow for optimum sound quality. If you are muted locally, please remember to unmute your device. Your next question comes from the line of Troy Jensen with Cantor Fitzgerald. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Analyst: Hey, gentlemen. Congrats on the stellar numbers here. Maybe just a question for anyone. Are there any capacity constraints? What I am getting to is $81 million in revenues in December, $80 million in March. The high end of guide here is $81 million for June. What needs to happen for you to break through that level?
Joseph Corso: Short answer, Troy, is we are not capacity constrained today. We have done a great job of improving both the capacity on the lasers that we are building as well as the efficiency with which we are building those lasers. We talked about what we were adding in Longmont. So today, capacity really is not an issue. What we need to continue to break through that $80 million threshold is demand signals from our customers, U.S. government, etc., which we are starting to get, but we have no concerns at all today on capacity.
Analyst: Got it. So new wins will be easy to fulfill as they come in. And just, Joe, on the gross margin guidance—you started the call highlighting 44% product gross margins and it seems like it should stay around this level. What would get it down to the lower end of the guidance range, or do you think it starts to creep higher here?
Joseph Corso: The primary factor of our margin is really volume—both the volume that we are putting through the factory and what we are selling through to the customer in any given quarter. Beyond that, it is really just the mix of the products as we go through the quarter. On average, as we have gotten out of China and narrowed our focus—particularly with the last-time buys with customers in cutting and welding—the overall product margins, or the band on the margins of the products that we are selling, are becoming less variable, but there is still some variability as we go quarter to quarter, and that will also have an impact.
We are not talking about huge numbers here, so the margins can swing a couple hundred basis points, and there is really not all that much to read into it. We are happy that we have been able to get to a point today where we are consistent at 40% or above product gross margins.
Analyst: Great. Last one here for Scott. If I remember correctly, I think the delivery date for the one megawatt laser was sometime in 2026. Correct me if I am wrong. What is the highest power you have shown to date, and thoughts on hitting the deadline?
Scott H. Keeney: Thanks, Troy. You are referring to the HELSI 2 program that is targeting a megawatt-class laser. In HELSI 1, we exceeded 300 kilowatts in that program, which led to the award for HELSI 2. We are tracking to that program; however, it is not a delivery of a product—it is a demonstration of that technology. As soon as we are able to provide more insights into that, we will certainly do so. I am comfortable saying that we are on track, there is progress, and we are learning a lot from what it takes to scale to much higher power levels. Things are on track and going well.
Analyst: Great. Great. Keep up the good work.
Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back to John Marchetti for closing remarks.
John Marchetti: Thanks, everyone, for joining us this afternoon and for your continued interest in nLIGHT, Inc. We will be participating in several investor conferences over the next several weeks. We look forward to speaking with you during those events and throughout the remainder of the quarter. Have a great afternoon.
Operator: This concludes today’s call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.
