Stocks/GSIT

GSIT

GSI Technology, Inc.
Technology·Semiconductors
$9.93
$290M market cap
Claude Rating
2/10SHORT
Revenue
$24.7M
Free Cash Flow
$-12.5M
Rev Growth
+12.2%
FCF Margin
-50.5%
P/FCF
--
EV/FCF
--
Fwd EV/EBITDA
--
Fair Value
$2.50
Upside
-74.8%

GSI Technology, Inc., a fabless semiconductor company, designs, develops, and markets semiconductor memory solutions to networking, industrial, medical, aerospace, and military customers in the United States, China, Singapore, Germany, the Netherlands, and internationally. The company's associative processing unit products offers applications using similarity search in visual search queries for ecommerce, computer vision, drug discovery, cyber security, and service markets. In addition, it offer

2-Year Price History

$9.66+271.5%
$2.0$4.0$6.0$8.0volMay 24Sep 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q47.0-3.6---3.3---4.1-0.237.4----------
Est2028-Q36.8-3.7---3.4---4.1-0.241.4----------
Est2028-Q26.5-3.8---3.4---4.2-0.245.5----------
Est2028-Q16.4-3.8---3.5---4.4-0.349.7----------
Est2027-Q46.2-4.0---3.7---4.7-0.354.1----------
Est2027-Q36.0-3.7---3.4---4.2-0.358.7----------
Est2027-Q26.1-3.5---3.2---4.0-0.262.9----------
Est2027-Q16.3-3.5---3.2---3.8-0.166.9----------
Act2026-Q36.1-3.6-6.9-3.0-7.9-8.2-0.370.78.834.5-41.7%----
Act2026-Q26.4-3.0-3.2-3.2-0.9-0.9-0.025.39.129.6-66.2%----
Act2026-Q16.3-2.0-2.2-2.2-1.7-1.7-0.022.79.427.0-47.0%----
Act2025-Q45.9-2.1-2.3-2.2-1.7-1.7-0.013.49.625.6-94.4%----
Act2025-Q35.4-4.0-4.1-4.0-3.6-3.6-0.015.19.825.6-143.3%----
Act2025-Q24.6-5.4-5.6-5.5-3.5-3.5-0.018.410.125.5-148.8%----
Act2025-Q14.7-4.51.11.1-4.3-4.3-0.021.810.325.720.3%----
Act2024-Q45.2-4.2-4.5-4.3-7.2-7.2-0.014.49.625.3-183.7%----
Act2024-Q35.3-6.5-6.7-6.6-3.9-3.9-0.015.19.825.3-271.9%----
Act2024-Q24.7-4.51.11.1-3.5-3.5-0.018.410.125.240.5%----
Act2024-Q15.6-4.6-5.2-5.1-4.3-4.3-0.021.810.324.9-200.5%----
Act2023-Q45.4-3.6-3.9-4.0-4.6-4.7-0.130.60.724.7<-999%----
Act2023-Q36.5-4.3-4.8-4.8-3.9-3.9-0.035.20.824.6-392.7%----
Act2023-Q29.0-3.0-3.2-3.2-3.4-3.5-0.138.20.924.6-141.8%----
Act2023-Q18.9-3.5-4.4-4.0-5.0-5.1-0.141.51.124.5-146.1%----
Act2022-Q48.7-4.0-4.3-4.4-3.9-4.1-0.244.00.924.5-112.5%----
Act2022-Q38.1-4.3-4.5-4.6-2.6-2.7-0.248.10.624.4-103.9%----
Act2022-Q27.8-4.3-4.5-4.6-2.8-3.1-0.450.70.524.2-86.9%----
Act2022-Q18.8-4.1-4.4-4.2-4.6-4.7-0.051.50.624.1-69.0%----

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude2/10SHORTFV: $2.50

GSIT is a deeply unprofitable micro-cap semiconductor company burning ~$16M annually against ~$25M in revenue, with its entire investment thesis resting on unproven APU technology that faces serious credibility challenges. The company's core SRAM business is a slow-declining commodity with no growth catalyst. The APU pivot — first Gemini II, now PLATO — has consumed years of R&D investment with zero meaningful commercial revenue to show for it. The Gemma-3 controversy, ended strategic alternatives review, heavy insider selling, and a securities investigation from Rosen Law Firm collectively paint a picture of a company whose AI narrative is far ahead of its technical and commercial reality. At a $247M market cap with $67M in cash, the market is assigning ~$180M of enterprise value to a business losing money and diluting shareholders at 35% per year. Even with the cash cushion, the relentless dilution and inability to commercialize the APU make this a value trap at best and a potential zero at worst.

Catalyst A credible, large-scale defense production contract for Gemini II or successful PLATO tape-out with demonstrable commercial interest could re-rate the stock. However, the ended strategic review removes the near-term buyout catalyst that was supporting the stock.
Risk The APU technology may be fundamentally limited (no MAC units for core LLM workloads), meaning the entire multi-year R&D investment could yield negligible commercial returns while cash is depleted through ongoing burn and dilution.
Trend
DETERIORATING
Mgmt
2/10
Quarter
4/10
Exp. Move
-8.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

GSI Technology, Inc. reported fiscal year 2026 revenue of $25.1 million, a 22.4% year-over-year increase, driven by its core SRAM business which supports AI chip development. The company achieved a strong gross margin of 54.5% and ended the year with a cash balance of $67.2 million and no debt. This financial stability provides a runway for the commercialization of their Gemini II APU and the development of the PLATO chip. Management highlighted key milestones for Gemini II, including progress in the Sentinel drone program and a new smart city project for near real-time hazard detection. These applications demonstrate the APU's efficiency in low-latency, power-constrained edge environments. The company expects the PLATO tape-out by late fiscal 2027. During the Q&A, management addressed concerns regarding commercialization timelines, explaining that software portability from Gemini II will help accelerate PLATO's market entry. For the first quarter of fiscal 2027, GSI projects revenue between $5.9 million and $6.7 million. The firm remains focused on translating technical validation in defense and infrastructure sectors into long-term commercial revenue.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$9.93
Market Cap$290M
Enterprise Value$228M
P/S Ratio11.7x
P/FCF--
EV/FCF--
FCF Margin (TTM)-50.5%
FCF Yield-4.3%
Dividend Yield (TTM)--
Annual Dilution35.1%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$24.7M
Net Income$-10.7M
Free Cash Flow$-12.5M

Revenue Growth (YoY)+12.2%
EBITDA Margin-43.3%
Net Margin-43.1%
FCF Margin-50.5%
CapEx % of Revenue1.4%
SBC % of Revenue10.1%
ROIC-62.3%
WC Change % Rev4.3%
Interest Coverage--

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$-0.35
-103.6% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$-122M
− Net Debt$-62M
= Fair Equity$-12M
Revenue Growth8.5% → 2.0%
FCF Margin-50.5% → 5.0%
Discount Rate17.0%
Terminal EV/FCF6.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float7.8%
Short Shares2.3M
Days to Cover2.5
Change (vs Prior)-3.7%
Short % Float History
7.80%+4.90pp
0.0%2.0%4.0%6.0%8.0%10.0%12.0%14.0%04-3007-1509-1511-1401-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)126%
Put IV (ATM)128%
ATM Spread4.7%
Call $OI (near money)$2.8M
Put $OI (near money)$321K
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$10.0
Major Expirations4
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$2.50$6.60/$8.500--/$0.050
$5.00$4.40/$5.601--/$0.3530
$7.50$2.45/$3.507$0.50/$0.8540
$10.00$1.55/$2.00105$1.70/$2.454
$12.50$0.95/$1.401,615$3.30/$4.200
$15.00$0.40/$1.3529$5.70/$6.300
$17.50$0.10/$0.9535$7.60/$8.600
$20.00$0.05/$0.750$9.90/$11.000
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth-0.3%
Forward FCF Margin-67.5%
Forward EBITDA Margin-60.0%
Forward P/FCF--
Forward EV/FCF--
Forward Int. Coverage--
Model Risk Score9/10
Bankruptcy Odds8%
Est. Borrow Rate18.0%
Terminal EV/FCF6.0x
LT Growth2.0%
LT FCF Margin5.0%

Employees

Headcount148
Revenue / Employee$166,797
Gross Profit / Employee$92,453
2022: 180 → 2023: 156 → 2024: 148 → 2025: 121 (-12% CAGR)

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NET BUYING

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net buyers — bought 10.2% of float, sold 4.2%. 5 filers moved >1% of shares (4 buying, 1 selling).

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
+6.0% of float (net)
Bought 10.2% · Sold 4.2%
75 filers reported (last quarter: 68)

Ownership composition

Active
12.1%(+11.0% YoY)
54 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
2.2%(+1.0% YoY)
6 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
1.7%(+1.6% YoY)
6 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
8.9%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2022-062023-032023-122024-092025-062026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
Silverberg Bernstein Capital Management LLC$4.0M$2.99+$58K+$1.3M-3.7%$180M
PRICE T ROWE ASSOCIATES INC /MD/$3.8M$5.14+$3.8M+$3.8M-0.2%$864.93B
MARSHALL WACE, LLP$3.3M$5.04−$453K+$3.3M+0.7%$92.71B
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$2.8M$5.33+$192K+$2.4M-0.2%$5.69T
TWO SIGMA INVESTMENTS, LP$2.7M$3.56+$153K+$1.5M-0.7%$117.03B
SUSQUEHANNA INTERNATIONAL GROUP, LLPMM$2.4M$5.86−$1.3M+$2.4M-0.6%$77.14B
WELLS FARGO & COMPANY/MN$2.3M$5.14+$2.2M+$2.2M-0.2%$497.71B
MILLENNIUM MANAGEMENT LLC$2.2M$5.17+$2.0M+$2.2M-0.5%$127.40B
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$1.8M$4.90+$129K+$694K+2.3%$1.61T
Potomac Capital Management, Inc.$1.8M$5.14+$1.8M+$1.8M+0.3%$114M
JANE STREET GROUP, LLCMM$1.8M$5.40+$629K+$1.8M-0.1%$92.10B
UBS Group AG$1.6M$3.83−$77K+$528K-0.3%$562.11B
CITADEL ADVISORS LLC$984K$4.00+$98K+$628K-0.4%$138.22B
GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC$812K$4.74−$162K+$812K-0.2%$760.93B
Tidal Investments LLC$785K$5.78+$314K+$785K-0.2%$32.04B
STATE STREET CORPPassive$714K$4.94+$168K+$351K-0.2%$2.89T
Squarepoint Ops LLC$695K$3.82+$95K+$695K+0.4%$46.27B
683 Capital Management, LLC$611K$6.21+$0+$611K-2.2%$1.02B
Connor, Clark & Lunn Investment Management Ltd.$598K$4.52+$154K+$598K-0.1%$43.38B
ADVISOR GROUP HOLDINGS, INC.$521K$5.63+$68K+$480K-0.3%$67.63B
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)BEARISH
Holders
-0.62%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
-0.64%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
-0.26%
28 buyers · $0.01B in
Sellers (this Q)
+0.41%
19 sellers · $0.01B out
alpha coverage: 100% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
-1.3%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
-7.2%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
-6.1%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+9.1%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
+8.3%
Sellers grew AUM elsewhere — opinionated cut of this stock.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
-6.0%
Holder mid (any stock)
-6.3%
Holder rally (any stock)
-8.2%

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

0872K1.7M2.6M3.5M$1.72$2.84$3.96$5.09$6.212021-062022-062023-062024-062025-062026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
AIGH Capital Management LLCRoumell Asset Management, LLCRENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGIES LLC79KSilverberg Bernstein Capital Management LLC786KMARSHALL WACE, LLP639KPRICE T ROWE ASSOCIATES INC /MD/743KTWO SIGMA INVESTMENTS, LP530KWorth Venture Partners, LLCCowen Prime Advisors LLCWELLS FARGO & COMPANY/MN440K

Corporate

Executive Compensation (2023-2025)

Direct Pay$4.7M
Incentive & Other$3.5M
Total Compensation$8.2M
% of Revenue12.5%

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Officers & directors
Buys ($, 12mo)
$80K
1 txn · 1 insider · 8,298 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$5.54M
18 txns · 8 insiders · 617,032 sh
Major holders (≥10% beneficial owners)
Buys ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$1.77M
2 txns · 1 insider · 153,375 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2026-05-21SELLLasserre Didierofficer: VP, Sales30,000$9.31$279K$2.89M
2026-05-14SELLSchirle Douglasofficer: CFO40,000$11.32$453K$782K
2026-05-13SELLAkerib Avidanofficer: VP, Associative Computing19,653$11.47$225K$267K
2026-05-13SELLShu Lee-Leandirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Pres., CEO and Chairman10,313$12.51$129K$6.64M
2026-05-12SELLAkerib Avidanofficer: VP, Associative Computing347$12.03$4K$280K
2026-05-12SELLCHUANG PATRICK Tofficer: Senior VP, Memory Design40,000$10.68$427K$162K
2026-05-12SELLWu Ping Takofficer: VP, U.S. Operations11,763$10.80$127K$1.59M
2026-05-11SELLShu Lee-Leandirector, 10 percent owner, officer: Pres., CEO and Chairman143,062$11.47$1.64M$6.09M
2026-03-17SELLShu Lee-Leandirector, officer: Pres., CEO and Chairman36,517$10.01$366K$19.85M
2026-03-16SELLShu Lee-Leandirector, officer: Pres., CEO and Chairman30,734$10.02$308K$19.87M
2026-03-13SELLCHUANG PATRICK Tofficer: Senior VP, Memory Design40,000$8.56$342K$130K
2026-03-10SELLWu Bor-Tayofficer: VP, Taiwan Operations80,000$6.83$546K$0
2026-03-02SELLCHUANG PATRICK Tofficer: Senior VP, Memory Design20,000$8.37$167K$127K
2025-11-06SELLCHUANG PATRICK Tofficer: Senior VP, Memory Design20,000$8.66$173K$131K
2025-11-05SELLAkerib Avidanofficer: VP, Associative Computing54,732$8.54$468K$199K
2025-11-04SELLAkerib Avidanofficer: VP, Associative Computing135,286$9.05$1.22M$211K
2025-11-04SELLCHUANG PATRICK Tofficer: Senior VP, Memory Design40,000$9.04$362K$137K
2025-11-03BUYCholawsky Elizabethdirector8,298$9.70$80K$80K
2025-08-07SELLBradley Jack A.director6,900$3.30$23K$0
2025-08-06SELLBradley Jack A.director1,100$3.50$4K$24K

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

38.2%retail-0.8pp
11.5%dark-2.9pp
week of 2026-04-13
0%20%40%60%24-1125-0225-0525-0825-1126-0226-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Segments

By Geography (2026-Q3)
UNITED STATES$2.5MNEW
CHINA$1.3MNEW
GERMANY$1.0MNEW
SINGAPORE$0.8MNEW
Rest of World$0.3MNEW
NETHERLANDS$0.2MNEW

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

GSI Technology: Future-Dated Shell Filing Lacks Material Financial Disclosures

Overall Risk
5/10
Fraud
2/10
Dilution
1/10
Insolvency
1/10
Earnings Overstated
1/10
Hidden Liabilities
1/10
Legal
1/10
Audit Warnings
3/10
Hidden Upside
1/10
Contextually Acceptable
5/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

GSI Technology (GSIT) experienced a series of severe shocks in early 2026. On February 3, 2026, the stock plummeted 14.2% following allegations on Stocktwits that the company's APU chip failed to run the 'Gemma-3' AI model as advertised, allegedly hiding that it only handled the RAG phase due to a lack of MAC units. This was followed by a massive 30% crash on March 18, 2026, after the Board of Directors abruptly ended its strategic alternatives review, signaling that no sale or merger would occur and removing the 'buyout premium' speculators had priced in (StockTitan, Rosen Law Firm).

🐻 Bear Case

The core bear case centers on a 'failed pivot' and operational hemorrhage. Despite a 22% bounce in FY2026 revenue to $25.1M, operating losses widened significantly to $17.5M from $10.8M the prior year due to outsized R&D costs for the PLATO chip. The company is burning approximately $4M per quarter ($16M annually) with a revenue base that remains roughly 50% lower than its 2019 peak. With the acquisition safety net gone, GSIT is now a high-risk 'execution play' in a market where it lacks the scale to compete with semiconductor giants (TipRanks, MarketBeat).

🚩 Red Flags

Heavy insider selling is a major red flag; executives sold over $2.47M in stock throughout late 2025 and 2026 with zero insider buys reported. Specific liquidations include CEO Lee-Lean Shu and VP Avidan Akerib, who dumped over 190,000 shares. Furthermore, the Rosen Law Firm has launched a formal securities investigation into potential materially misleading business information regarding chip performance. Analysts at AAII have labeled the stock 'Ultra Expensive' with a Value Grade of 'F' (Quiver Quantitative, AAII).

⚔️ Competitive Threats

GSIT’s Associative Processing Unit (APU) faces a technical 'identity crisis.' Skeptics argue the architecture is fundamentally disadvantaged for modern AI because it lacks dedicated Multiply-Accumulate (MAC) units essential for matrix multiplication, which is the backbone of LLM workloads. This limits the APU to niche memory-bound tasks while being outmatched by NVIDIA's GPUs and newer specialized AI ASICs. Additionally, as a fabless firm, GSIT is highly vulnerable to TSMC wafer capacity constraints and pricing power (Seeking Alpha, Stocktwits).

💬 Customer Sentiment

Sentiment among technical investors and potential customers has turned increasingly skeptical following the February 'Gemma-3' performance controversy. Social media sentiment on platforms like Stocktwits and Reddit reflects a growing belief that the company’s AI claims may be 'smoke and mirrors' intended to support its valuation rather than reflecting commercial readiness. Reliance on defense contracts (46% of Q4 shipments) also suggests a failure to achieve mainstream commercial or hyperscaler adoption (Investing.com, Intellectia.AI).

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q4 • 2026-05-07

Operator: Welcome to GSI Technology, Inc.’s Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2026 Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. At that time, we will provide instructions for those interested in joining the Q&A queue. 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 future performance of GSI Technology, Inc. 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, 05/07/2026, at the request of GSI Technology, Inc. Lee-Lean Shu, the company’s chairman, president, and chief executive officer will be hosting the call today. With him are Douglas M. Schirle, chief financial officer, and Didier Lasserre, vice president of sales. I would now like to turn the conference over to Lee-Lean Shu. Please go ahead, sir.
Lee-Lean Shu: Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us. To review our fourth quarter and fiscal year 2026 financial results. Fiscal 2026 was a year of meaningful progress for GSI Technology, Inc., marked by strong performance in our SRAM business, continued advancement of Gemini II to commercialization, and the initiation of the PLATO design. While I am pleased with the progress we have made on several fronts, significant work remains. Our team is executing our key milestones and advancing business development for the APU, and I have had several encouraging conversations on numerous fronts in these amounts. We end fiscal 2027 with continuous momentum, promoting the APU and building our customer traction. With that, I will now hand the call over to Didier.
Didier Lasserre: Thank you, Didier. Let me start by stepping back and framing where we are today. Because I think the context is important. Our SRAM business performed well in fiscal 2026 and remains the revenue foundation of the company, providing cash for APU development. For the full year, the SRAM business grew 22% year-over-year and gross margins rose to 55% from 49%. The SRAM business has benefited from increased demand from our customers that support high-performance AI chip development and manufacturing. We recently announced that we concluded our strategic review and determined that continuing to execute our standalone strategy is the best path forward for delivering long-term shareholder value. The stronger SRAM business and a strengthened balance sheet, along with non-dilutive R&D funding, are providing the resources to support our go-forward plan. With this financial foundation in place, we are now seeing real progress with Gemini II and PLATO. Over the past several months, we have reached a point where we are seeing both technical validation and early program-level engagement of Gemini II, including the Sentinel drone surveillance POC, the U.S. Army SBIR award, and a new Phase One smart city project I will discuss in a minute. On the technical side, in a bake-off for the Sentinel POC, Gemini II’s performance contributed to winning the contract award by achieving a time to first token of roughly three seconds at 30 watts of system power on Gemma 312B multimodal workloads at the edge. In this use case, time to first token is a critical metric for drone surveillance systems because it reflects how quickly the system can respond in real-world applications where response time directly affects critical decision making. We are working closely with the G2 Tech team on the Sentinel program. We have completed the software deliverables and continue to target a June demonstration of the Gemini II powered drone. This demonstration is planned for the Department of Defense and an international defense agency. In mid-April, we were notified that we had been awarded Phase One of a smart city project. The project leverages our work done for the drone-based surveillance POC and marks an important step forward towards commercial deployment. In this application, Gemini II will process inputs from distributed camera systems to provide near real-time detection of events such as fires and other public safety risks. This project demonstrates how our platform can scale across real-world infrastructure. We expect to share additional details on the smart city program around the time of a planned media event in late May hosted by the municipality. Currently, we are working on several projects in tandem. What matters most for GSI Technology, Inc. at this time is not just the number of early-stage trials and demonstrations we have, but also how these early-stage engagements are helping us identify where our APU architecture provides a clear advantage, particularly in delivering low-latency performance within a constrained power envelope. We are also leveraging our deployment work in two ways. First, we are applying what we have developed for the drone security application to a smart city application. While the end markets are different, the underlying development carries over, giving us a meaningful head start in a new use case rather than starting from scratch. Secondly, as we complete the Sentinel POC and Phase One of the smart city program, we can build on those results to pursue additional opportunities with new customers in those markets. We view this as a repeatable model where each engagement helps accelerate the next. What is exciting for us is that we see the end markets for low-latency, low-power AI at the edge expanding as AI workloads continue to move closer to where the data is generated. These applications favor the APU architecture that can deliver higher compute per watt. Gemini II is ideal for these power- and latency-constrained edge deployments, where real-time response and energy efficiency are critical. Where we are winning is where Gemini II is tested against conventional architectures requiring significantly higher system power for similar or slower responsiveness. We believe Gemini II best addresses this gap and positions us well to win as more AI loads shift towards distributed, power-constrained environments. Consistent with this, we are encouraged by our progress within defense agency programs, as evidenced by our recent U.S. Army SBIR progressing from Phase One into Phase Two. This project is about enabling real-time in-field AI deployment on small, low-power systems typically operating in challenging conditions. As part of this program, we will build and test a ruggedized node containing the Gemini II for real-world mission-critical environments. This SBIR positions us within a broader shift in defense spending, with approximately $13 billion proposed in fiscal 2026 budgeted for AI and autonomous systems, and creates a potential pathway to follow-on programs and future opportunities to supply Gemini II-based systems. So how do we move from where we are today to design wins and ultimately revenue? From a commercial standpoint, we are still in the early stages. Our focus is on advancing our current engagements and working closely with partners to integrate Gemini II into their systems, with the goal of moving into design-level discussions. Given the complexity of these deployments, we are focusing our resources on a small number of high-value opportunities where we believe we have a clear advantage. Although the number of engagements remains limited, we are seeing a meaningful increase in the depth of these engagements and our ability to leverage our prior Gemini II deployment work for new related applications. Looking ahead, our priorities are to advance current POCs and awarded programs and to leverage what we have learned from each of these engagements to drive additional design opportunities. At the edge, performance matters most when it can be delivered within real-world power and latency constraints. That is where we believe Gemini II’s advantage lies. With that, I would like to hand the call over to Doug. Go ahead, Doug. In the earnings release issued today after the close of the market, you will find a detailed summary of our financial results for the fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2026.
Douglas M. Schirle: Rather than walking through the numbers again, I will focus my comments on the key drivers behind the results and provide more context and explanation to help you better understand the business. Let me start with the results for fiscal year 2026, ended 03/31/2026. As Didier mentioned, fiscal 2026 revenue increased 22.4% to $25.1 million, reflecting continued strength in our SRAM business, particularly with customers supporting chip design and simulation for AI applications. We experienced solid growth in this customer segment throughout fiscal year 2026. We do see variability in customer orders, and sales can fluctuate from quarter to quarter. However, barring any significant change in underlying AI chip demand that would affect SRAM orders from these customers, we expect this business to remain relatively stable in fiscal year 2027. The higher level of revenue and product mix helped to lift fiscal year 2026 gross margin to 54.5%, a notable gain from the prior year gross margin of 49.4%. Operating expenses in fiscal 2026 rose to $31.2 million compared to $21 million in fiscal 2025. Operating expenses increased year-over-year primarily driven by higher R&D spending on the PLATO chip design. It is also important to note that the prior year included a $5.8 million gain from the sale of assets, which makes year-over-year comparisons appear more pronounced. We also continue to offset a portion of our R&D expenses through non-dilutive funding, SBIR contract funds, and POC-related funding. The majority of our R&D is dedicated to APU. The R&D offset in fiscal 2026 and fiscal 2025 was $1 million and $1.2 million, respectively. Higher operating expenses increased the total operating loss for fiscal 2026 to $17.5 million compared to an operating loss of $10.8 million in the prior year. The fiscal 2026 net loss included interest and other income of $4.1 million, primarily from interest payments on the increased cash balance from the capital raise completed in October 2025, and $3.4 million of other income consisting of a $6.2 million non-cash gain from the change in the fair value of prefunded warrants, partially offset by $2.8 million in issuance costs associated with the registered direct offering in October 2025. Switching now to the fourth quarter. Revenue was $6.3 million with a gross margin of 52.4%. As we have seen in prior periods, quarterly gross margin can fluctuate with the product mix and revenue levels. The fourth quarter gross margin reflects slightly lower semiconductor sales sequentially compared with the prior-year quarter. From a customer perspective, we did see some variability across accounts during the quarter, including lower shipments to certain customers and higher shipments to others. At the same time, defense-related sales increased to approximately 46% of total shipments, reflecting continued demand in that segment. Again, you will find a full breakdown of sales in today’s earnings release. Operating expenses increased from the prior year primarily due to continued investment in our Gemini II and PLATO development programs. These investments align with our strategy to advance our APU roadmap while maintaining discipline in cost management. Last quarter, we expanded quarterly earnings disclosures to help investors better understand the company’s cash consumption and cash generation. This information will complement the condensed consolidated statement of cash flows included in our Forms 10-K and 10-Q. Cash flows for the quarter ended 03/31/2026 were as follows: cash and cash equivalents as of December 31 were $70.7 million; net cash used in operating activities in the quarter was $5.5 million; net cash used in investing activities was approximately $100,000; and net cash provided by financing activities was $2.1 million. Cash and cash equivalents as of 03/31/2026 were $6.2672 billion. From a cash flow standpoint, spending in the quarter continued to reflect our investment in Gemini II and PLATO development. We expect cash usage to remain elevated as we progress through this development phase. As a general reference point, we expect the cash usage to be approximately $4 million per quarter, or about $16 million annually, although this may vary depending on development timing and program activity. We ended the quarter with $67.2 million in cash and no debt. This is a notable improvement from the prior-year cash balance of $13.4 million and is associated with $46.9 million, net of fees, registered direct offering proceeds that closed in October 2025. The absence of debt and the improved cash balance provide us with the flexibility to continue investing in APU while maintaining a disciplined approach to capital allocation. We believe our current cash position provides sufficient runway to support the initial commercialization of Gemini II and the completion of the PLATO tape-out, both expected late fiscal 2027. Before I hand the call over to the operator for Q&A, I would like to provide the first quarter fiscal 2027 outlook. For the upcoming quarter, we expect net revenues in the range of $5.9 million to $6.7 million with gross margin of approximately 54% to 56%. Overall, our strong cash position and continued support from non-dilutive funding give us a runway to advance Gemini II into early commercialization and the PLATO chip design. Operator, at this point, we will open the call for questions.
Operator: Thank you. To ask a question, you may press star then 1 on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then 2. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Once again, it is star 1 to ask a question. The first question is from Tony Brainard, retail investor.
Analyst: Hello, gentlemen. How are you?
Lee-Lean Shu: Good. Thank you.
Analyst: Yes. Can you share some color on the size—like, if you do get the design wins—the size of the market we are looking at?
Lee-Lean Shu: On which market?
Analyst: On the Gemini II.
Didier Lasserre: Okay. That is a pretty broad question. So the markets we are going after initially, you know, some of them are government, military-based, specifically these drone programs. And as we talked about, we are limited in detail now. We will give you more detail on the smart city at the end of May. But both of those markets are multibillion-dollar markets.
Lee-Lean Shu: Okay.
Analyst: Yep.
Analyst: That is fair enough. And that is my only question for today. Thank you very much.
Douglas M. Schirle: Alright. Thanks, Tony.
Analyst: Thank you.
Operator: The next question comes from Robert Christian, Private Investor.
Robert Christian: Yes. I would like to know why the PLATO project has moved up from 2027 to late fiscal 2027.
Didier Lasserre: Actually, it has not been pushed out. It might have been a mixture of calendars and fiscal quarters. When we had first talked about it, we were targeting the beginning of calendar 2027 to have the part taped out, and we are still on schedule for that. Tape-out means that the design will be done in the first quarter, and that would give us silicon because we have to make the mask sets that are used for the wafer fabs at TSMC. So we will see our first wafers in hand in summertime of calendar 2027, and I believe that has always been our schedule.
Lee-Lean Shu: Yeah. I think we mentioned fiscal year 2027. That is the beginning of the 2027 calendar year.
Didier Lasserre: That is a good point. So the end of fiscal 2027 is March of calendar 2027. Okay. That would be great. And the second question I have is, Gemini II taped out over two and a half years ago. Is it going to take that long to see expected sales, say, of PLATO?
Didier Lasserre: So that is a great question. You have two components to sales. You have the hardware component, which is the chip and any kind of board, and you have the software side. The software side actually lagged the hardware on Gemini II. With PLATO, we are trying to align the two more closely. The good news is some of the software work that is being done for Gemini II can be used for PLATO, while with Gemini I it was a completely new effort. In that respect, we can leverage some of the work from Gemini II for PLATO, and then we are also lining up the resources to be able to bring in the software with PLATO.
Robert Christian: Well, the chip is genius, and I wish you guys godspeed.
Lee-Lean Shu: Thank you.
Didier Lasserre: Thank you.
Operator: At this time, we show no further questions. This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Lee-Lean Shu for closing statements.
Lee-Lean Shu: Thank you again for joining today’s call. As a reminder, Didier will be at the LD Micro Conference on May 19. Contact LD Micro if you would like to attend this presentation or take a one-on-one meeting. We are encouraged by the progress we are making with Gemini II, and we remain focused on successfully executing against the opportunities in front of us. We look forward to speaking with you again on our fiscal 2027 first quarter earnings call. Thank you.
Operator: This concludes today’s conference. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.