Q4 2025 Velo3D Inc Earnings Call

Operator 2: Greetings, and welcome to the Velo3D Fiscal Year 2025 financial results. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, James Carbonara, Hayden Investor Relations. Thank you, James. You may begin.

Operator: Greetings, and welcome to the Velo3D Fiscal Year 2025 financial results. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, James Carbonara, Hayden Investor Relations. Thank you, James. You may begin.

Speaker #2: If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

Speaker #2: It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, James Carbonara, Hayden Investor Relations. Thank you, James. You may begin. Thank you, operator. Good afternoon.

James Carbonara: Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and welcome to Velo3D's Q4 and full year 2025 earnings call. Before we begin, please note that today's call will contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected. Please refer to our press release issued earlier today as well as our filings with the SEC, including our 2025 Form 10-K for a discussion of these risks. We will also reference certain non-GAAP financial measures during the call. Reconciliations between GAAP and non-GAAP results can be found in today's press release, which is available on the investor relations section of our website. A replay of this call will also be available shortly after its conclusion. With that, I will turn the call over to our CEO, Arun Jeldi.

James Carbonara: Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and welcome to Velo3D's Q4 and full year 2025 earnings call. Before we begin, please note that today's call will contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected. Please refer to our press release issued earlier today as well as our filings with the SEC, including our 2025 Form 10-K for a discussion of these risks. We will also reference certain non-GAAP financial measures during the call. Reconciliations between GAAP and non-GAAP results can be found in today's press release, which is available on the investor relations section of our website. A replay of this call will also be available shortly after its conclusion. With that, I will turn the call over to our CEO, Arun Jeldi.

Speaker #2: And welcome to Velo3D's fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. Before we begin, please note that today's call will contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the 1995 Act.

Speaker #2: These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected; please refer to our press release issued earlier today as well as our filings with the SEC, including our 2025 Form 10-K for a discussion of these risks.

Speaker #2: We will also reference certain non-GAAP financial measures during the call, reconciliations between GAAP and non-GAAP results can be found in today's press release, which is available on the Investor Relations section of our website.

Speaker #2: A replay of this call will also be available shortly after its conclusion. With that, I will turn the call over to our CEO, Arun Jeldi.

James Carbonara: Arun, please go ahead.

James Carbonara: Arun, please go ahead.

Speaker #2: Arun, please go ahead.

Arun Jeldi: Good afternoon. 2025 was a defining year for Velo3D. A year where strategy, execution, and market timing converged to unlock meaningful growth and position us at the center of next-generation manufacturing. We delivered double-digit revenue growth driven by accelerating demand for our Rapid Production Solutions and our unmatched large format additive manufacturing capabilities. Importantly, we exited the year with powerful momentum. In Q4, we achieved record bookings and built a backlog of approximately $31 million, which we believe is clear evidence that demand is not only strong but accelerating. This momentum gives us high confidence as we look ahead to 2026 and beyond. We believe that what's driving this growth is not just adoption, it's reliance. Our technology has become mission-critical.

Arun Jeldi: Good afternoon. 2025 was a defining year for Velo3D. A year where strategy, execution, and market timing converged to unlock meaningful growth and position us at the center of next-generation manufacturing. We delivered double-digit revenue growth driven by accelerating demand for our Rapid Production Solutions and our unmatched large format additive manufacturing capabilities. Importantly, we exited the year with powerful momentum. In Q4, we achieved record bookings and built a backlog of approximately $31 million, which we believe is clear evidence that demand is not only strong but accelerating. This momentum gives us high confidence as we look ahead to 2026 and beyond. We believe that what's driving this growth is not just adoption, it's reliance. Our technology has become mission-critical.

Speaker #3: Good afternoon. 2025 was a defining year for Velo3D. A year where strategy, execution, and market timing converged to unlock meaningful growth and position us at the center of next-generation manufacturing.

Speaker #3: We delivered double-digit revenue growth, driven by accelerating demand for our rapid production solutions and our unmatched large-format additive manufacturing capabilities. An importantly, we exited the year with powerful momentum.

Speaker #3: In the fourth quarter, we achieved record bookings and built a backlog of approximately 31 million that demand is not only strong but accelerating. This momentum gives us high confidence as we look ahead to 2026 and beyond.

Speaker #3: We believe that what's driving this growth is not just adoption. It's reliance. Our technology has become mission-critical. In defense, we reached a major milestones by becoming the first additive manufacturing vendor qualified under the US Army's Ground Vehicle Systems Center initiative.

Arun Jeldi: In defense, we reached a major milestone by becoming the first additive manufacturing vendor qualified under the U.S. Army's Ground Vehicle Systems Center initiative. This is a breakthrough moment, not just for Velo3D, but for the broader adoption of additive manufacturing in defense supply chains. We deepened that relationship through a cooperative research and development agreement with DEVCOM, positioning us at the forefront of solving some of the most urgent challenges in the defense manufacturing: speed, resilience, and scalability. We also secured a key Department of War contract supporting Project FORGE, enabling faster prototyping and qualification of components to eliminate bottlenecks in defense production. Importantly, we won a multi-year full rate production contract with major defense prime contractor, a strong validation that our technology is moving beyond prototyping and into sustained high volume production. On the commercial side, adoption is accelerating just as quickly.

Arun Jeldi: In defense, we reached a major milestone by becoming the first additive manufacturing vendor qualified under the U.S. Army's Ground Vehicle Systems Center initiative. This is a breakthrough moment, not just for Velo3D, but for the broader adoption of additive manufacturing in defense supply chains. We deepened that relationship through a cooperative research and development agreement with DEVCOM, positioning us at the forefront of solving some of the most urgent challenges in the defense manufacturing: speed, resilience, and scalability. We also secured a key Department of War contract supporting Project FORGE, enabling faster prototyping and qualification of components to eliminate bottlenecks in defense production. Importantly, we won a multi-year full rate production contract with major defense prime contractor, a strong validation that our technology is moving beyond prototyping and into sustained high volume production. On the commercial side, adoption is accelerating just as quickly.

Speaker #3: This is a breakthrough moment not just for Velo3D, but for the broader adoption of additive manufacturing in defense supply chains. We deepened that relationship through a cooperative research and development agreement with DEVCOM, positioning us at the forefront of solving some of the most urgent challenges in the defense manufacturing.

Speaker #3: Speed, resilience, and scalability. We also secured a key Department of War contract supporting Project FORGE, enabling faster prototyping and qualification of components to eliminate bottlenecks in defense production.

Speaker #3: An importantly, we won a multi-year full-rate production contract with major defense prime contractor, a strong validation that our technology is moving beyond prototyping and into sustained high-volume production.

Speaker #3: On the commercial side, adoption is accelerating just as quickly. Our rapid production solutions are now being used by Intergalactic to manufacture advanced heat exchanger components for next-generation aviation platforms.

Arun Jeldi: Our Rapid Production Solutions are now being used by Intergalactic to manufacture advanced heat exchanger components for next-generation aviation platforms, demonstrating how our technology scales seamlessly across industries with precision, repeatability, and performance. What truly differentiates Velo3D and where we see the next phase of value creation is the evolution of our business model beyond hardware. As we scale our installed base and expand production capacity, Velo3D is well-positioned to pursue opportunity in digital manufacturing data and analytics. This is a powerful shift. Every build, every part, every material input, and every de-design iteration across our growing network of production systems generates high-value data. With this expansion, over time, we expect to build a connected ecosystems that could deliver real-time insights across materials, design optimization, and process performance.

Arun Jeldi: Our Rapid Production Solutions are now being used by Intergalactic to manufacture advanced heat exchanger components for next-generation aviation platforms, demonstrating how our technology scales seamlessly across industries with precision, repeatability, and performance. What truly differentiates Velo3D and where we see the next phase of value creation is the evolution of our business model beyond hardware. As we scale our installed base and expand production capacity, Velo3D is well-positioned to pursue opportunity in digital manufacturing data and analytics. This is a powerful shift. Every build, every part, every material input, and every de-design iteration across our growing network of production systems generates high-value data. With this expansion, over time, we expect to build a connected ecosystems that could deliver real-time insights across materials, design optimization, and process performance.

Speaker #3: Demonstrating how our technology scales seamlessly across industries with precision, repeatability, and performance. But what truly differentiates Velo3D—and where we see the next phase of value creation—is the evolution of our business model beyond hardware.

Speaker #3: As we scale our install base and expand production capacity, Velo3D's well-positioned to pursue opportunity in digital manufacturing data and analytics. This is a powerful shift.

Speaker #3: Every build, every part, every material input, and every design iteration across our growing network of production, systems, generates high-value data. With this expansion, over time, we expect to build a connected ecosystems that could deliver real-time insights across materials, design optimization, and process performance.

Arun Jeldi: Over time, we expect that this platform could enable customers to not only manufacture complex metal parts but to continuously improve them. We see a future where engineers can design, simulate, validate refined components in a closed loop environment powered by live production data. Accelerating innovation cycles and unlocking entirely new classes of metal applications. This is about moving from manufacturing parts to powering next-generation digital manufacturing intelligence. Importantly, we see potential to extend across industries from defense to aerospace to energy, which we believe could create an additional revenue layer on top of our production business. This is a key pillar of our long-term strategy and a significant driver of potential future value. Now, stepping back into the broader market. Across defense and aerospace, we are seeing a structural shift. Customers are demanding faster, more localized, and more resilient supply chains.

Arun Jeldi: Over time, we expect that this platform could enable customers to not only manufacture complex metal parts but to continuously improve them. We see a future where engineers can design, simulate, validate refined components in a closed loop environment powered by live production data. Accelerating innovation cycles and unlocking entirely new classes of metal applications. This is about moving from manufacturing parts to powering next-generation digital manufacturing intelligence. Importantly, we see potential to extend across industries from defense to aerospace to energy, which we believe could create an additional revenue layer on top of our production business. This is a key pillar of our long-term strategy and a significant driver of potential future value. Now, stepping back into the broader market. Across defense and aerospace, we are seeing a structural shift. Customers are demanding faster, more localized, and more resilient supply chains.

Speaker #3: Over time, we expect that this platform could enable customers to not only manufacture complex metal parts, but to continuously improve them. We see a future where engineers can design, simulate, validate, and refine components in a closed-loop environment powered by live production data.

Speaker #3: Accelerating innovation cycles and unlocking entirely new classes of metal applications. This is about moving from manufacturing parts to powering next-generation digital manufacturing intelligence. And importantly, we see potential to extend across industries from defense to aerospace to energy, which we believe could create an additional revenue layer on top of our production business.

Speaker #3: This is a key pillar of our long-term strategy, and a significant driver of potential future value. Now, stepping back into the broader market across defense and aerospace, we are seeing a structural shift.

Speaker #3: Customers are demanding faster, more localized, and more resilient supply chains. Programs are no longer staying in development. They're scaling into production. They're doing so rapidly.

Arun Jeldi: Programs are no longer staying in development, they're scaling into production. They're doing so rapidly. We believe this creates a compounding demand effect. Programs that begin with a single system are quickly expanding to multiple systems, sometimes within months. As volumes increase and new programs come online, demand just doesn't grow, it accelerates. Based on the programs we have already won and the trajectory we are seeing across our customer base, we developed a long-term capacity plan envisioning up to approximately 400 production systems over the next decade, subject to securing additional financing and continued growth programs. This is a demand-driven roadmap grounded in real programs, real customers, and real scaling needs that we are seeing today. To capture this opportunity, we are moving decisively. We are developing a near-term expansion plan designed to significantly increase our production capacity.

Arun Jeldi: Programs are no longer staying in development, they're scaling into production. They're doing so rapidly. We believe this creates a compounding demand effect. Programs that begin with a single system are quickly expanding to multiple systems, sometimes within months. As volumes increase and new programs come online, demand just doesn't grow, it accelerates. Based on the programs we have already won and the trajectory we are seeing across our customer base, we developed a long-term capacity plan envisioning up to approximately 400 production systems over the next decade, subject to securing additional financing and continued growth programs. This is a demand-driven roadmap grounded in real programs, real customers, and real scaling needs that we are seeing today. To capture this opportunity, we are moving decisively. We are developing a near-term expansion plan designed to significantly increase our production capacity.

Speaker #3: We believe this creates a compounding demand effect. Programs that begin with a single system are quickly expanding to multiple systems. Sometimes within months, as volumes increase and new programs come online, demand just doesn't grow.

Speaker #3: It accelerates. Based on the programs we already won, and the trajectory we are seeing across our customer base, we developed a long-term capacity plan envisioning up to approximately 400 production systems over the next decade.

Speaker #3: Subject to securing additional financing and continued growth programs. This is a demand-driven roadmap grounded in a real programs, real customers, and real scaling needs that we are seeing today.

Speaker #3: To capture this opportunity, we are moving decisively. We are developing a near-term expansion plan designed to significantly increase our production capacity. This includes scaling our manufacturing footprint and investing in automation to drive higher throughput while maintaining the exceptional quality required for mission-critical applications.

Arun Jeldi: This includes scaling our manufacturing footprint and investing in automation to drive higher throughput while maintaining the exceptional quality required for mission-critical applications. With demand accelerating, we expect to raise additional capital to move faster. Our approach to capital is disciplined and shareholder-focused. We are leveraging asset-backed financing as a core strategy, using our production systems as collateral to fund growth with minimal dilution. We already demonstrated success with this model and expect to continue financing a significant portion of new systems through debt. In parallel, we are actively exploring potential government-backed financing program designed to support domestic manufacturing expansion, which offer highly attractive non-dilutive capital. Any equity we raise will be targeted, focused on scaling our workforce and operational infrastructure with the goal of timing dilution while enabling us to fully capitalize on the significant market opportunity.

Arun Jeldi: This includes scaling our manufacturing footprint and investing in automation to drive higher throughput while maintaining the exceptional quality required for mission-critical applications. With demand accelerating, we expect to raise additional capital to move faster. Our approach to capital is disciplined and shareholder-focused. We are leveraging asset-backed financing as a core strategy, using our production systems as collateral to fund growth with minimal dilution. We already demonstrated success with this model and expect to continue financing a significant portion of new systems through debt. In parallel, we are actively exploring potential government-backed financing program designed to support domestic manufacturing expansion, which offer highly attractive non-dilutive capital. Any equity we raise will be targeted, focused on scaling our workforce and operational infrastructure with the goal of timing dilution while enabling us to fully capitalize on the significant market opportunity.

Speaker #3: And with demand accelerating, we expect to raise additional capital to move faster. Our approach to capital is disciplined and shareholder-focused. We are leveraging asset-backed financing as a core strategy.

Speaker #3: Using our production systems as collateral to fund growth with minimal dilution. We are already demonstrated success with this model and expect to continue financing a significant portion of new systems through debt.

Speaker #3: In parallel, we are actively exploring potential government-backed financing programs designed to support domestic manufacturing expansion, which offer highly attractive non-dilutive capital. Any equity we raise will be targeted and focused on scaling our workforce and operational infrastructure.

Speaker #3: With the goal of timing dilution while enabling us to fully capitalize on the significant market opportunity. This is about scaling intelligently, efficiently, and with strong returns in mind.

Arun Jeldi: This is about scaling intelligently, efficiently, and with strong returns in mind. Beyond organic growth, we also see meaningful opportunity to strengthen our ecosystem through strategic M&A, particularly in areas like feedstock and metal powder, where vertical integration can drive both cost advantages and supply chain resilience. As we look ahead, we believe the story is clear. It appears we are in the intersection of two powerful forces, the re-industrialization of critical supply chains and the rapid adoption of additive manufacturing at scale. Velo3D is not just participating in this shift, we are helping lead it. 2025 was the foundation year where we proved the model, secured critical partnerships, and build the momentum. 2026 and beyond is about positioning us to pursue sustained growth, expanding our footprint, building a category-defining digital manufacturing platform, and delivering long-term value for our shareholders.

Arun Jeldi: This is about scaling intelligently, efficiently, and with strong returns in mind. Beyond organic growth, we also see meaningful opportunity to strengthen our ecosystem through strategic M&A, particularly in areas like feedstock and metal powder, where vertical integration can drive both cost advantages and supply chain resilience. As we look ahead, we believe the story is clear. It appears we are in the intersection of two powerful forces, the re-industrialization of critical supply chains and the rapid adoption of additive manufacturing at scale. Velo3D is not just participating in this shift, we are helping lead it. 2025 was the foundation year where we proved the model, secured critical partnerships, and build the momentum. 2026 and beyond is about positioning us to pursue sustained growth, expanding our footprint, building a category-defining digital manufacturing platform, and delivering long-term value for our shareholders.

Speaker #3: Beyond organic growth, we also see meaningful opportunities to strengthen our ecosystem through strategic M&A, particularly in areas like feedstock and metal powder where vertical integration can drive both cost advantages and supply chain resilience.

Speaker #3: As we look ahead, we believe the story is clear. It appears we are in the intersection of two powerful forces, the reindustrialization of critical supply chains and the rapid adoption of additive manufacturing at scale.

Speaker #3: Velo3D is not just participating in this shift. We are helping lead it. 2025 was the foundation year, where we proved the model, secured critical partnerships, and built the momentum.

Speaker #3: 2026 and beyond is about positioning us to pursue sustained growth, expanding our footprint, building a category-defining digital manufacturing platform, and delivering long-term value for our shareholders.

Arun Jeldi: With that, I'll turn the call over to our CFO, Bernard Chung, to walk through our financial performance in more detail.

Arun Jeldi: With that, I'll turn the call over to our CFO, Bernard Chung, to walk through our financial performance in more detail.

Speaker #3: With that, I'll turn the call over to our CFO, Bernie Chung, to walk through our financial performance in more detail.

Bernard Chung: Thank you, Arun, for letting me serve as the acting CFO during this exciting time at Velo3D. I am pleased to have Jim Suva, our incoming CFO, begin in early April 2026. Q4 revenue was $9.4 million, down 25% compared to $12.6 million in the year-ago quarter. This decrease was driven primarily by our product mix and timing related to the Q4 government shutdown. We expect in 2026 to build upon each quarter to grow revenues. Gross margin for the Q4 was -73.6% compared to -3.5% in the year-ago quarter and 3.2% in the prior quarter. As noted in our non-GAAP net loss table, we recorded a non-recurring $7 million inventory obsolescence write-off to better position our current inventory levels for 2026 production.

Bernard Chung: Thank you, Arun, for letting me serve as the acting CFO during this exciting time at Velo3D. I am pleased to have Jim Suva, our incoming CFO, begin in early April 2026. Q4 revenue was $9.4 million, down 25% compared to $12.6 million in the year-ago quarter. This decrease was driven primarily by our product mix and timing related to the Q4 government shutdown. We expect in 2026 to build upon each quarter to grow revenues. Gross margin for the Q4 was -73.6% compared to -3.5% in the year-ago quarter and 3.2% in the prior quarter. As noted in our non-GAAP net loss table, we recorded a non-recurring $7 million inventory obsolescence write-off to better position our current inventory levels for 2026 production.

Speaker #1: Thank you, Arun, for letting me serve as the acting CFO during this exciting time at Velo3D. I am pleased to have Jim Suva, our incoming CFO, begin in early April 2026.

Speaker #1: Fourth quarter revenue was $9.4 million, down 25% compared to $12.6 million in the year-ago quarter. This decrease was driven primarily by our product mix and timing related to the fourth quarter government shutdown.

Speaker #1: We expect in 2026 to build upon each quarter to grow revenues. Gross margin for the fourth quarter was negative 73.6% compared to negative 3.5% in the year-ago quarter and 3.2% in the prior quarter.

Speaker #1: As noted in our non-GAAP net loss table, we recorded a non-recurring $7.0 million inventory obsolescence write-off to better position our current inventory levels for 2026 production.

Bernard Chung: We expect margins to improve as RPS scales and new Sapphire XC systems are built to order. Operating expenses for Q4 were $14.9 million, down from $20.6 million a year ago. On a non-GAAP basis, excluding $1.5 million of stock-based compensation, operating expenses were $13.3 million, again down compared to $18.9 million in the prior year quarter, demonstrating continued cost discipline. GAAP net loss for the quarter was $21.9 million, compared to a net loss of $21.3 million in the year ago quarter. Non-GAAP net loss for the quarter was $11.6 million, excluding stock-based compensation of $2.2 million, compared to a non-GAAP net loss of $15 million in the year ago quarter.

Bernard Chung: We expect margins to improve as RPS scales and new Sapphire XC systems are built to order. Operating expenses for Q4 were $14.9 million, down from $20.6 million a year ago. On a non-GAAP basis, excluding $1.5 million of stock-based compensation, operating expenses were $13.3 million, again down compared to $18.9 million in the prior year quarter, demonstrating continued cost discipline. GAAP net loss for the quarter was $21.9 million, compared to a net loss of $21.3 million in the year ago quarter. Non-GAAP net loss for the quarter was $11.6 million, excluding stock-based compensation of $2.2 million, compared to a non-GAAP net loss of $15 million in the year ago quarter.

Speaker #1: We expect margins to improve as RPS scales and new Sapphire XC systems are built to order. Operating expenses for the fourth quarter were $14.9 million, down from $20.6 million a year ago.

Speaker #1: On a non-GAAP basis, excluding $1.5 million of stock-based compensation, operating expenses were $13.3 million, again down compared to $18.9 million in the prior year quarter, demonstrating continued cost discipline.

Speaker #1: Gap net loss for the quarter was $21.9 million compared to a net loss of $21.3 million in the year-ago quarter. Non-gap net loss for the quarter was $11.6 million, excluding stock-based compensation of $2.2 million, compared to a non-gap net loss of $15 million in the year-ago quarter.

Bernard Chung: Adjusted EBITDA for Q4 2025 improved to -$10 million compared to -$11 million in Q4 2024. Turning to the full year results. Full year 2025 revenue was $46 million, up 12% compared to $41 million a year ago. Excluding the $5 million other revenue related to the 2024 licensing rights, the increase was 28% growth in revenue. This increase was driven primarily by growth in RPS printed parts and XC system sales over the prior year. Gross margin for the full year was -16.1% compared to -5.1% in the prior year. As noted in our non-GAAP net loss table, we recorded a non-routine $7 million inventory obsolescence write-off to better position our current inventory levels for 2026 production.

Bernard Chung: Adjusted EBITDA for Q4 2025 improved to -$10 million compared to -$11 million in Q4 2024. Turning to the full year results. Full year 2025 revenue was $46 million, up 12% compared to $41 million a year ago. Excluding the $5 million other revenue related to the 2024 licensing rights, the increase was 28% growth in revenue. This increase was driven primarily by growth in RPS printed parts and XC system sales over the prior year. Gross margin for the full year was -16.1% compared to -5.1% in the prior year. As noted in our non-GAAP net loss table, we recorded a non-routine $7 million inventory obsolescence write-off to better position our current inventory levels for 2026 production.

Speaker #1: Adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter of 2025 improved to negative $10 million, compared to negative $11 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. Turning to the full-year results, full-year 2025 revenue was $46 million, up 12% compared to $41 million a year ago.

Speaker #1: Excluding the $5 million in other revenue related to the 2024 licensing rights, the increase was 28% growth in revenue. This increase was driven primarily by growth in RPS-printed parts and XC system sales over the prior year.

Speaker #1: Gross margin for the full year was negative 16.1% compared to negative 5.1% in the prior year. As noted in our non-GAAP net loss table, we recorded a non-routine $7 million inventory obsolescence write-off to better position our current inventory levels for 2026 production.

Bernard Chung: We expect margins to improve as RPS scales and new Sapphire XC systems are built to order. Operating expenses for the full year 2025 were $47.5 million, down from $76.8 million in the prior year. On a non-GAAP basis, excluding $7.5 million of stock-based compensation, operating expenses were $40 million, again down substantially compared to $66.5 million in the prior year. GAAP net loss for 2025 was $71.4 million compared to a net loss of $69.9 million in 2024. Non-GAAP net loss for 2025 was $41.3 million compared to a non-GAAP net loss of $79.4 million in the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA for the full year 2025 improved to -$33.3 million compared to -$58.5 million in 2024.

Bernard Chung: We expect margins to improve as RPS scales and new Sapphire XC systems are built to order. Operating expenses for the full year 2025 were $47.5 million, down from $76.8 million in the prior year. On a non-GAAP basis, excluding $7.5 million of stock-based compensation, operating expenses were $40 million, again down substantially compared to $66.5 million in the prior year. GAAP net loss for 2025 was $71.4 million compared to a net loss of $69.9 million in 2024. Non-GAAP net loss for 2025 was $41.3 million compared to a non-GAAP net loss of $79.4 million in the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA for the full year 2025 improved to -$33.3 million compared to -$58.5 million in 2024.

Speaker #1: We expect margins to improve as RPS scales and new Sapphire XC systems are built to order. Operating expenses for the full year 2025 were $47.5 million, down from $76.8 million in the prior year.

Speaker #1: On a non-GAAP basis, excluding $7.5 million of stock-based compensation, operating expenses were $40 million, again down substantially compared to $66.5 million in the prior year.

Speaker #1: Gap net loss for 2025 was $71.4 million, compared to a net loss of $69.9 million in 2024. Non-gap net loss for 2025 was $41.3 million, compared to a non-gap net loss of $79.4 million in the prior year.

Speaker #1: Adjusted EBITDA for the full-year 2025 improved to negative $33.3 million, compared to negative $58.5 million in 2024. As of December 31, 2025, we had a backlog of $31 million, compared to $16 million at the end of 2024, and $21 million at the end of the previous quarter.

Bernard Chung: As of 31 December 2025, we had a backlog of $31 million compared to $16 million at the end of 2024 and $21 million at the end of the previous quarter. This growth was driven in part by Q4 2025 bookings, which were the largest quarterly bookings in company history, reflecting strong demand for our Rapid Production Solutions and expanding adoption across defense and aerospace programs. Importantly, the composition of our backlog has shifted significantly towards RPS, fueled by strong demand from both the space and defense sectors. On the balance sheet at year-end 2025, our cash and cash equivalents totaled $39 million, up from $1.2 million at the end of 2024. The increase was driven in large part by the $30 million private placement of common stock and a $10 million equipment loan, providing a strong financial foundation heading into 2026.

Bernard Chung: As of 31 December 2025, we had a backlog of $31 million compared to $16 million at the end of 2024 and $21 million at the end of the previous quarter. This growth was driven in part by Q4 2025 bookings, which were the largest quarterly bookings in company history, reflecting strong demand for our Rapid Production Solutions and expanding adoption across defense and aerospace programs. Importantly, the composition of our backlog has shifted significantly towards RPS, fueled by strong demand from both the space and defense sectors. On the balance sheet at year-end 2025, our cash and cash equivalents totaled $39 million, up from $1.2 million at the end of 2024. The increase was driven in large part by the $30 million private placement of common stock and a $10 million equipment loan, providing a strong financial foundation heading into 2026.

Speaker #1: This growth was driven in part by Q4 2025 bookings, which were the largest quarterly bookings in company history, reflecting strong demand for our rapid production solutions and expanding adoption across defense and aerospace programs.

Speaker #1: Importantly, the composition of our backlog has shifted significantly towards RPS-fueled by strong demand from both the space and defense sectors. On the balance sheet at year-end 2025, our cash and cash equivalents totaled $39 million, up from $1.2 million at the end of 2024.

Speaker #1: The increase was driven in large part by the $30 million private placement of common stock and a $10 million equipment loan providing a strong financial foundation heading into 2026.

Bernard Chung: We used a portion of this capital to reduce accounts payable from $18.5 million to $10.3 million, helping unlock our supply chain. In addition, in Q1 2026, we converted an aggregated $15 million of debt into equity with $5 million of premium, reducing outstanding debt by roughly 60% to $10 million, further strengthening the balance sheet and reinforcing confidence in our capital market value. These actions position the company to efficiently scale operations and capture growing demand across our defense and aerospace markets. In summary, these milestones position Velo3D to capitalize on growing demand, scale production of high-value components, and continue driving growth. With a strengthened balance sheet, record backlog, and accelerating adoption of RPS, we are well-positioned to execute on our strategy and capture an increasing share of market opportunities.

Bernard Chung: We used a portion of this capital to reduce accounts payable from $18.5 million to $10.3 million, helping unlock our supply chain. In addition, in Q1 2026, we converted an aggregated $15 million of debt into equity with $5 million of premium, reducing outstanding debt by roughly 60% to $10 million, further strengthening the balance sheet and reinforcing confidence in our capital market value. These actions position the company to efficiently scale operations and capture growing demand across our defense and aerospace markets. In summary, these milestones position Velo3D to capitalize on growing demand, scale production of high-value components, and continue driving growth. With a strengthened balance sheet, record backlog, and accelerating adoption of RPS, we are well-positioned to execute on our strategy and capture an increasing share of market opportunities.

Speaker #1: We used a portion of this capital to reduce accounts payable from $18.5 million to $10.3 million, helping unlock our supply chain. In addition, in the first quarter of 2026, we converted and aggregated $15 million of debt into equity with a $5 million premium, reducing outstanding debt by roughly 60% to $10 million, further strengthening the balance sheet and reinforcing confidence in our capital market value.

Speaker #1: These actions positioned the company to efficiently scale operations and capture growing demand across our defense and aerospace markets. In summary, these milestones position Velo3D to capitalize on growing demand, scale production of high-value components, and continued driving growth with a strengthened balance sheet record backlog and accelerating adoption of RPS where well-positioned to execute on our strategy and capture an increasing share of market opportunities.

Bernard Chung: With that, I will turn the call back to Arun for a few remarks regarding our outlook for 2026. Thank you.

Bernard Chung: With that, I will turn the call back to Arun for a few remarks regarding our outlook for 2026. Thank you.

Speaker #1: With that, I will turn the call back to Arun for a few remarks regarding our outlook for 2026. Thank you.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you, Bernie. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect continued momentum as we scale our operations and capture growing demand across defense and commercial aerospace markets. For the full year, we anticipate revenue in the range of $60 million to $70 million, reflecting both ongoing adoption of RPS, and expansion of our large format additive manufacturing capabilities. We expect sequential improvements in gross margins, with product margins projected to exceed 30% in H2 2026 as production scales and operational efficiencies are realized. Non-GAAP adjusted operating expenses are expected to be in the range of $45 million to $55 million, reflecting disciplined cost management while supporting strategic growth initiatives. Capital expenditures are projected to be in the range of $40 million to $50 million to support expansion of production capacity and enhance process automation.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you, Bernie. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect continued momentum as we scale our operations and capture growing demand across defense and commercial aerospace markets. For the full year, we anticipate revenue in the range of $60 million to $70 million, reflecting both ongoing adoption of RPS, and expansion of our large format additive manufacturing capabilities. We expect sequential improvements in gross margins, with product margins projected to exceed 30% in H2 2026 as production scales and operational efficiencies are realized. Non-GAAP adjusted operating expenses are expected to be in the range of $45 million to $55 million, reflecting disciplined cost management while supporting strategic growth initiatives. Capital expenditures are projected to be in the range of $40 million to $50 million to support expansion of production capacity and enhance process automation.

Speaker #2: Thank you, Bernie. Looking ahead of to 2026, we expect continued momentum as we scale our operations and capture growing demand across defense and commercial aerospace markets.

Speaker #2: For the full year, we anticipate revenue in the range of $60 million to $70 million. Reflecting both ongoing adoption of RPS and expansion of our large-format additive manufacturing capabilities, we expect sequential improvements in gross margins, with margin products projected to exceed 30% in the second half of 2026 as production scales and operational efficiencies are realized.

Speaker #2: Non-GAAP adjusted operating expenses are expected to be in the range of $45 million to $55 million, reflecting disciplined cost management while supporting strategic growth initiatives.

Speaker #2: Capital expenditures are projected to be in the range of $40 million to $50 million to support expansion of production capacity and enhance process automation. Finally, we expect to achieve EBITDA positive in the second half of 2026.

Arun Jeldi: Finally, we expect to achieve EBITDA positive in the H2 of 2026. As we noted earlier, our long-term capacity plan targets approximately 400 production systems over the next decade. The investments we are making in 2026 in manufacturing infrastructure, supply chain optimization, and workforce represent the critical first phase of that build-out. We expect to provide periodic updates on capacity milestones as we execute against this plan. Thank you all.

Arun Jeldi: Finally, we expect to achieve EBITDA positive in the H2 of 2026. As we noted earlier, our long-term capacity plan targets approximately 400 production systems over the next decade. The investments we are making in 2026 in manufacturing infrastructure, supply chain optimization, and workforce represent the critical first phase of that build-out. We expect to provide periodic updates on capacity milestones as we execute against this plan. Thank you all.

Speaker #2: And as we noted earlier, our long-term capacity plan targets approximately 400 production systems over the next decade. The investments we are making in 2026, in manufacturing infrastructure, supply chain optimization, and workforce, represent the critical first phase of the build-out.

Speaker #2: We expect to provide periodic updates on capacity milestones as we execute against this plan. Thank you all.

Operator 2: Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we poll for questions. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Jaeson Schmidt with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please proceed.

Operator: Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we poll for questions. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Jaeson Schmidt with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please proceed.

Speaker #3: Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad.

Speaker #3: A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue.

Speaker #3: For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment, please, while we pull for questions.

Speaker #3: Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Jason Smith with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please proceed.

Jaeson Schmidt: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Just curious if you could share how much RPS revenue comprised in 2025. Then as we look at 2026, how should we think about that composition increasing either exiting this year or for the full year?

Jaeson Schmidt: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Just curious if you could share how much RPS revenue comprised in 2025. Then as we look at 2026, how should we think about that composition increasing either exiting this year or for the full year?

Speaker #4: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Just curious if you could share how much RPS revenue comprised in 2025, and then as we look at 2026, how should we think about that composition increasing either exiting this year or for the full year?

Arun Jeldi: The RPS is 10% to 15% of for the first year, and the rest is systems. It will rapidly grow year after year, doubling that number as we projected in the previous presentations of ours. It will take about 2 to 3 years to fully overtake RPS as our main revenue because of the infrastructure build, and also project maturity timelines. This 2025 has proven the concept of how the demand is grown by. If you see the backlog, that tells you the story why it is the highest backlog ever in the company's history.

Arun Jeldi: The RPS is 10% to 15% of for the first year, and the rest is systems. It will rapidly grow year after year, doubling that number as we projected in the previous presentations of ours. It will take about 2 to 3 years to fully overtake RPS as our main revenue because of the infrastructure build, and also project maturity timelines. This 2025 has proven the concept of how the demand is grown by. If you see the backlog, that tells you the story why it is the highest backlog ever in the company's history.

Speaker #2: So the RPS is 10% to 15% for the first year, and the rest is systems. But it will rapidly grow year after year, doubling that number as we projected in the previous presentations of ours.

Speaker #2: It will take about two to three years to fully overtake RPS as our main revenue because of the infrastructure built and also project mature timelines.

Speaker #2: But this 2025 has proven the concept of how the demand has grown. If you see the backlog, that tells you the story—why it is the highest backlog ever in the company's history.

Jaeson Schmidt: Gotcha. That's really helpful. Just looking at sort of the ramp of the printers this year, can you remind us how many printers you currently have? How should we think about that number growing to exiting this year? Relatedly, can you provide any update on the Midwest facility plans?

Jaeson Schmidt: Gotcha. That's really helpful. Just looking at sort of the ramp of the printers this year, can you remind us how many printers you currently have? How should we think about that number growing to exiting this year? Relatedly, can you provide any update on the Midwest facility plans?

Speaker #4: Gotcha. That's really helpful. And then, just looking at sort of the ramp of the printers this year, can you remind us how many printers you currently have? And then, how should we think about that number growing to exiting this year?

Speaker #4: And, relatedly, can you provide any update on the Midwest facility plans?

Arun Jeldi: We have currently about 15 printers on our floor and 140 printers in the field. Our own hosting of the printers for this year will be at the range of 40+. On the expansion plan, the phase one expansion plan for next 100 machines will be done in California to reduce the operational cost at the early stages. Then the later stages, we'll expand it to the later part of the country, depending on the customer demand on those parts. This also gives us the time to build the timeline to have more teams to execute the future in next two years. Just to reiterate, we're expanding the first 100 printers of footprint in California, just close to the present headquarters.

Speaker #2: So we have currently about 15 printers on our floor, and 140 printers in the field. Our own hosting of the printers for this year will be in the range of 40-plus.

Arun Jeldi: We have currently about 15 printers on our floor and 140 printers in the field. Our own hosting of the printers for this year will be at the range of 40+. On the expansion plan, the phase one expansion plan for next 100 machines will be done in California to reduce the operational cost at the early stages. Then the later stages, we'll expand it to the later part of the country, depending on the customer demand on those parts. This also gives us the time to build the timeline to have more teams to execute the future in next two years. Just to reiterate, we're expanding the first 100 printers of footprint in California, just close to the present headquarters.

Speaker #2: So, and on the expansion plan, the phase one expansion plan for the next 100 machines will be done in California to reduce the operational cost at the early stages.

Speaker #2: And then the later stages, we'll expand it to the later part of the country depending on the customer demand on those parts. But this also gives us the team to build the timeline to have more teams to execute the future in the next two years.

Speaker #2: So just to reiterate, we're expanding the first 100 printers of footprint in California just close to the present headquarters. This will help our operational efficiency and reduce the cost this year.

Arun Jeldi: This will help our operational efficiency and reduce the cost this year.

Arun Jeldi: This will help our operational efficiency and reduce the cost this year.

Jaeson Schmidt: Okay, that makes sense. Just the last one for me, and I'll jump back into queue. I'm just curious if you could provide some additional color on the U.S. Army ground vehicle announcement, how we should be thinking about that potential size and the revenue opportunity?

Jaeson Schmidt: Okay, that makes sense. Just the last one for me, and I'll jump back into queue. I'm just curious if you could provide some additional color on the U.S. Army ground vehicle announcement, how we should be thinking about that potential size and the revenue opportunity?

Speaker #4: Okay, that makes sense. And then just the last one from me, and I'll jump back into the queue. Just curious if you could provide some additional color on the US Army ground vehicle announcement—how we should be thinking about that potential size and the revenue opportunity.

Arun Jeldi: As we mentioned in the contract itself, this is a milestone-based contract. I mean, total potential will be much more, but the first 12 months is qualification and whatever the number we mention in that will be considered as a revenue part pretty quickly. Those are the details I can give now.

Speaker #2: So, as we mentioned in the contract itself, this is a milestone-based contract. And the potential will be—I mean, total potential will be—much more.

Arun Jeldi: As we mentioned in the contract itself, this is a milestone-based contract. I mean, total potential will be much more, but the first 12 months is qualification and whatever the number we mention in that will be considered as a revenue part pretty quickly. Those are the details I can give now.

Speaker #2: But the first 12 months is qualification, and whatever number we mentioned in that will be considered as revenue pretty quickly. So those are the details I can give now.

Jaeson Schmidt: Okay, perfect. Thanks a lot, guys.

Jaeson Schmidt: Okay, perfect. Thanks a lot, guys.

Speaker #4: Okay. Perfect. Thanks a lot, guys.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you.

James Carbonara: Thank you. Thanks, Jaeson.

James Carbonara: Thank you. Thanks, Jaeson.

Speaker #2: Thank you.

Speaker #1: Thank you. Thanks, Jason.

James Carbonara: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you.

James Carbonara: Thank you.

Speaker #3: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Alex Furman with Lucid Capital Markets. Please proceed.

Operator 2: The next question comes from the line of Alex Fuhrman with Lucid Capital Markets. Please proceed.

Operator: The next question comes from the line of Alex Fuhrman with Lucid Capital Markets. Please proceed.

Alex Fuhrman: Hey, guys. Thanks very much for taking my question, and congratulations on everything you accomplished in 2025. Wanted to ask about gross margin. It looks like gross margin was low single-digit positive the last two quarters if you exclude the inventory write down. You know, quite a number of drivers it sounds like that get you to 30%+ in H2. Can you talk about sort of what are the biggest drivers and kind of help us understand the relative importance? I mean, obviously it sounds like the growth of the RPS business is gonna be a really nice tailwind to gross margins. How much of it is just gonna be driven by scale and just improved pricing on the systems themselves?

Alex Fuhrman: Hey, guys. Thanks very much for taking my question, and congratulations on everything you accomplished in 2025. Wanted to ask about gross margin. It looks like gross margin was low single-digit positive the last two quarters if you exclude the inventory write down. You know, quite a number of drivers it sounds like that get you to 30%+ in H2. Can you talk about sort of what are the biggest drivers and kind of help us understand the relative importance? I mean, obviously it sounds like the growth of the RPS business is gonna be a really nice tailwind to gross margins. How much of it is just gonna be driven by scale and just improved pricing on the systems themselves?

Speaker #6: Hey, guys. Thanks very much for taking my question and congratulations on everything you accomplished in 2025. I wanted to ask about growth margin. It looks like growth margin was low single-digit positive the last two quarters if you exclude the inventory write-down.

Speaker #6: Quite a number of drivers, it sounds like, that get you to 30-plus percent in the back half of the year. Can you talk about sort of what's what are the biggest drivers and kind of help us understand the relative importance?

Speaker #6: I mean, obviously, it sounds like the growth of the RPS business is going to be a really nice tailwind to gross margins. How much of this is going to be driven by scale and just improved pricing on the systems themselves?

Alex Fuhrman: just any color on what that ramp kind of looks like in Q1 and Q2 on the way from, you know, 1% to 30% or more.

Alex Fuhrman: just any color on what that ramp kind of looks like in Q1 and Q2 on the way from, you know, 1% to 30% or more.

Speaker #6: And then just any color on what that ramp kind of looks like in the first and second quarter on the way from 1% to 30 or more?

Arun Jeldi: Last year, this is what we dealt with: like an extensive downdraft in revenue. I mean, of inventory we have in storage. I mean, if you go back and look at the balance sheets and P&Ls from 2024 to 2025, how we cleaned up, that is accounting for the loss of the gross margin losses. Like we have mentioned in our previous calls, like the overhead in 2024 was 400 employees, and then the total costs on it was very expensive. These actually sitting in the inventory for too long is causing this overhead to drive down those gross margins. The new builds from 2024 later quarter, we started building the new machines have very least amount of overheads.

Arun Jeldi: Last year, this is what we dealt with: like an extensive downdraft in revenue. I mean, of inventory we have in storage. I mean, if you go back and look at the balance sheets and P&Ls from 2024 to 2025, how we cleaned up, that is accounting for the loss of the gross margin losses. Like we have mentioned in our previous calls, like the overhead in 2024 was 400 employees, and then the total costs on it was very expensive. These actually sitting in the inventory for too long is causing this overhead to drive down those gross margins. The new builds from 2024 later quarter, we started building the new machines have very least amount of overheads.

Speaker #2: So last year, this is what we dealt with—it's like an extensive downdraft in revenue, I mean, of inventory we have in storage. I mean, if you go back and look at the balance sheets and P&Ls from '24 to '25, how we cleaned up, that is adding up for the loss of the gross margin losses that we have mentioned in our previous calls. It's like the overhead in 2024 was 400 employees, and then the total COGS on it was very expensive.

Speaker #2: So these actually sitting in the inventory for too long is causing this overhead to drive down those gross margins. So the new builds from 2024, later quarter, we started building the new machines, have very least amount of overheads.

Arun Jeldi: As we push those out in Q1, Q2 and Q3, Q4, that's the driver for your highest, I mean, big gross margin increases. That's why we took that effort to clean up all that downdraft and the inventory levels that we don't want to carry to 2026. We, as we promised to the investors, want to be gross profitable, and then EBITDA positive is driving that, not having that overhead dragging our feet, okay? We cleaned up the balance sheet, we cleaned up the debt, so this should give a good momentum for getting us where we wanna be.

Arun Jeldi: As we push those out in Q1, Q2 and Q3, Q4, that's the driver for your highest, I mean, big gross margin increases. That's why we took that effort to clean up all that downdraft and the inventory levels that we don't want to carry to 2026. We, as we promised to the investors, want to be gross profitable, and then EBITDA positive is driving that, not having that overhead dragging our feet, okay? We cleaned up the balance sheet, we cleaned up the debt, so this should give a good momentum for getting us where we wanna be.

Speaker #2: So as we push those out in the first quarter, second, and third, fourth quarters, that's the driver for your highest—I mean, big gross margin increases.

Speaker #2: That's why we took the effort to clean up all that downdraft and the inventory levels that we don't want to carry to '26. And as we promised to the investors, we want to be gross profit profitable and then EBITDA positive is driving that not having that overhead dragging our feet, okay?

Speaker #2: So we cleaned up the balance sheet. We cleaned up the debt. So this should give a good momentum for getting us where we want to be.

Alex Fuhrman: Okay. That's really helpful. Thank you, Arun. And then I think you mentioned that most of the growth you're expecting to see in the RPS business is coming from aerospace and defense. Did I hear that correctly? Are there any other sectors where you're focused there and, you know, is that just a matter of where the demand is or where, you know, you've put more marketing efforts? Thank you.

Alex Fuhrman: Okay. That's really helpful. Thank you, Arun. And then I think you mentioned that most of the growth you're expecting to see in the RPS business is coming from aerospace and defense. Did I hear that correctly? Are there any other sectors where you're focused there and, you know, is that just a matter of where the demand is or where, you know, you've put more marketing efforts? Thank you.

Speaker #6: Okay, that's really helpful. Thank you, Arun. And then I think you mentioned that most of the growth you're expecting to see in the RPS business is coming from aerospace and defense.

Speaker #6: Did I hear that correctly? Are there any other sectors where you're focused there? And is that just a matter of where the demand is, or where you've put more marketing efforts?

Speaker #6: Thank you.

Arun Jeldi: We are still focusing on our key areas of defense, space, semiconductor, and energy markets. The main force to drive RPS will be the qualification speed. Defense is moving as you see the unmanned vehicles and munitions programs and everything going on. It will be still a big driver, but space is also expanding the same way. We consider those two as our main bread and butter in addition to semiconductors. Semiconductor qualifications take longer time, and these are expensive feats. That will come as a third layer, and then energy comes as a fourth layer. By 2027, we should have a full good mix of all of them. At least you know 50% on defense and 20% on space, and the rest is semiconductor and energy markets.

Speaker #2: So, we are still focusing on our key areas of defense, space, semiconductor, and energy markets. So the main force to drive RPS will be the qualification speed.

Arun Jeldi: We are still focusing on our key areas of defense, space, semiconductor, and energy markets. The main force to drive RPS will be the qualification speed. Defense is moving as you see the unmanned vehicles and munitions programs and everything going on. It will be still a big driver, but space is also expanding the same way. We consider those two as our main bread and butter in addition to semiconductors. Semiconductor qualifications take longer time, and these are expensive feats. That will come as a third layer, and then energy comes as a fourth layer. By 2027, we should have a full good mix of all of them. At least you know 50% on defense and 20% on space, and the rest is semiconductor and energy markets.

Speaker #2: So defense is moving as you see the unmanned vehicles and munitions programs and everything going on. It will be still a big driver, but space is also expanding the same way.

Speaker #2: So we consider those two as our main bread and butter, in addition to semiconductor. Semiconductor qualifications take a longer time, and these are expensive feats.

Speaker #2: So that will come as a third layer. And then energy comes as a fourth layer. So by 2027, we should have a full, good mix of all of them.

Speaker #2: At least 50% on defense and 20% on space, and the rest is semiconductor and energy markets. So that's the mix we're looking at. But we're not depending, like previously, on a few focused customers.

Arun Jeldi: That's the mix we are looking, but we're not depending, like previously, on few focused customers. It's now broadened, and we are adding more logos to our customer base. If you have seen just in 2025 how it's diversified and how the interest grew by reducing the barrier of entry to what we do is driving that $31 million backlog, which the company has never seen. In 2026, we expect even bigger numbers as we projected in our revenues and others. It's a snowball effect. Like, you start slow, but second, third, fourth. By the time you reach fifth year, you're tremendously profitable on these because of the gross margins. And the amount of operations to do this is very least because of the

Arun Jeldi: That's the mix we are looking, but we're not depending, like previously, on few focused customers. It's now broadened, and we are adding more logos to our customer base. If you have seen just in 2025 how it's diversified and how the interest grew by reducing the barrier of entry to what we do is driving that $31 million backlog, which the company has never seen. In 2026, we expect even bigger numbers as we projected in our revenues and others. It's a snowball effect. Like, you start slow, but second, third, fourth. By the time you reach fifth year, you're tremendously profitable on these because of the gross margins. And the amount of operations to do this is very least because of the

Speaker #2: It's now broadened and we are adding more logos to our customer base. And if you have seen, just in 2025, how it's diversified and how the interest grew by reducing the barrier of entry to what we do, it is driving that $31 million backlog, which the company has never seen.

Speaker #2: And then 2026, 2026, we expect even bigger numbers as we projected in our revenues and others. So it's a snowball effect. You start slow, but second, third, fourth—by the time you reach the fifth year, you're tremendously profitable on these because of the gross margins and the amount of operational operations to do this is very least, because of the—I mean, if you consider each machine as a robot and they are automated, you don't really need too much overhead.

Arun Jeldi: I mean, if you consider each machine as a robot and they are automated, you don't really need too much of overhead. That operational efficiency will begin within next 2 years, and then you start seeing the growth at fourth, fifth year. It's very clear on how we wanna expand. Velo is not gonna be just based on that. We are also now targeting the product market and expanding our portfolio in different areas. That should give us a good scope of what we wanna do.

Arun Jeldi: I mean, if you consider each machine as a robot and they are automated, you don't really need too much of overhead. That operational efficiency will begin within next 2 years, and then you start seeing the growth at fourth, fifth year. It's very clear on how we wanna expand. Velo is not gonna be just based on that. We are also now targeting the product market and expanding our portfolio in different areas. That should give us a good scope of what we wanna do.

Speaker #2: That operational efficiency will end—I mean, will begin—within the next two years, and then you start seeing the growth at the fourth, fifth year.

Speaker #2: So it's very clear on our how we want to expand. And Velo is not going to be just based on that. We are also now targeting the product market and expanding our portfolio in different areas.

Speaker #2: So that should give us a good scope of what we want to do.

Alex Fuhrman: Okay. That's really helpful, Arun. I appreciate the thoughtful response.

Alex Fuhrman: Okay. That's really helpful, Arun. I appreciate the thoughtful response.

Speaker #6: Okay. That's really helpful, Arun. I appreciate the thoughtful response.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you, Alex.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you, Alex.

Speaker #2: Thank you, Alex.

Operator 2: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Troy Jensen with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please proceed.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Troy Jensen with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please proceed.

Speaker #1: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Troy Jensen with Canter Fitzgerald. Please proceed.

Troy Jensen: Hey, Arun. Congrats. Thanks for taking-

Troy Jensen: Hey, Arun. Congrats. Thanks for taking-

Speaker #5: Hey, Arun. Congrats. Thanks for taking my questions here. A couple of quick questions. The backlog that you quoted, can you just comment on the duration of that backlog?

Arun Jeldi: Thank you.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you.

Troy Jensen: My questions here. A couple quick questions. The backlog that you quoted. Can you just comment on the duration of that backlog? Is that more than one year, or is that within one year?

Troy Jensen: My questions here. A couple quick questions. The backlog that you quoted. Can you just comment on the duration of that backlog? Is that more than one year, or is that within one year?

Speaker #5: Is that more than one year, or is that within one year?

Arun Jeldi: It's within 12 months. That's the backlog we have. We'll capture all that with this year.

Arun Jeldi: It's within 12 months. That's the backlog we have. We'll capture all that with this year.

Speaker #2: It's within 12 months. That's the backlog we have. So we'll capture all that this year.

Troy Jensen: Okay. Perfect. All right. I guess I get a question. It's been a while since I got an update from you, but is your fleet entirely Sapphire system still? Your fleet?

Troy Jensen: Okay. Perfect. All right. I guess I get a question. It's been a while since I got an update from you, but is your fleet entirely Sapphire system still? Your fleet?

Speaker #5: Okay. Perfect. All right. And then I guess I have a question. It's been a while since I got an update from you, but is your fleet entirely Sapphire systems still?

Arun Jeldi: No. No. Like, we have 3 variations. They are like, I mean, we still have Sapphires, but they're different sizes, right? The biggest one we have is Sapphire 1MZ, so that we can print up to 1 meter Z height. In the future calls, I will disclose some of the things what we are doing as an engineering feat. There is more to come, but right now, I think this fleet will suffice most of the RPS needs. We have, in a way, two ways to do, I mean, the size of the machine is not more important. The design aspect and other factors also matter.

Arun Jeldi: No. No. Like, we have 3 variations. They are like, I mean, we still have Sapphires, but they're different sizes, right? The biggest one we have is Sapphire 1MZ, so that we can print up to 1 meter Z height. In the future calls, I will disclose some of the things what we are doing as an engineering feat. There is more to come, but right now, I think this fleet will suffice most of the RPS needs. We have, in a way, two ways to do, I mean, the size of the machine is not more important. The design aspect and other factors also matter.

Speaker #5: Your fleet?

Speaker #2: No, variations—that's what I mean. We still have Sapphires, but they're different sizes, right? So the biggest one we have is Sapphire 1MZ, so that we can print up to one meter Z height.

Speaker #2: And we'll be—I mean, in future calls, I will disclose some of the things we are doing as an engineering feat. So there is more to come, but right now, I think this fleet will suffice for most of the RPS needs we have. In a way—as to ways to do—I mean, the size of the machine is not most important; the design aspect and other factors also matter.

Troy Jensen: Okay.

Troy Jensen: Okay.

Arun Jeldi: Yeah.

Arun Jeldi: Yeah.

Troy Jensen: Well, I guess two questions for you. I guess my question was, is all of your machines and your RPS service internally developed by Velo? And I guess I'm asking the question 'cause I've always thought that your machines were so much more sophisticated, much more harder to operate. I'm curious if you guys would consider deploying other metal machines that are maybe more efficient. And can you also just talk about the automation that you've added to these machines, if I'm wrong on the cost of kinda running them?

Troy Jensen: Well, I guess two questions for you. I guess my question was, is all of your machines and your RPS service internally developed by Velo? And I guess I'm asking the question 'cause I've always thought that your machines were so much more sophisticated, much more harder to operate. I'm curious if you guys would consider deploying other metal machines that are maybe more efficient. And can you also just talk about the automation that you've added to these machines, if I'm wrong on the cost of kinda running them?

Speaker #5: Okay, well, I guess two questions for you, though. I guess my question was, is all of your machines and your RPS service internally developed by Velo?

Speaker #5: And I guess I'm asking the question because I've always thought that your machines were so much more sophisticated, much harder to operate. I'm curious if you guys would consider deploying other metal machines that may be more efficient.

Speaker #5: And can you also just talk about the automation that you've added to these machines, if I'm wrong, on the cost of kind of running them?

Arun Jeldi: I have mentioned this before. Like, Velo is not going to just stick to Laser Powder Bed Fusion. As we expand, the offerings what we give to the customer have to come from customer demand on various sides of it. At the same time, we're not gonna compromise our technology itself. I mean, there are two reasons. If you think RPS as somebody can just buy different kinds of machines and just run it is the most impossible and hassle that you can take upon and not successful because then you have to have different people for understanding different machines, and you cannot control your own technology. The powerful thing Velo has is an OEM which can control its technologies according to what we wanna do. Okay? That's a powerful tool which others will miss are.

Arun Jeldi: I have mentioned this before. Like, Velo is not going to just stick to Laser Powder Bed Fusion. As we expand, the offerings what we give to the customer have to come from customer demand on various sides of it. At the same time, we're not gonna compromise our technology itself. I mean, there are two reasons. If you think RPS as somebody can just buy different kinds of machines and just run it is the most impossible and hassle that you can take upon and not successful because then you have to have different people for understanding different machines, and you cannot control your own technology. The powerful thing Velo has is an OEM which can control its technologies according to what we wanna do. Okay? That's a powerful tool which others will miss are.

Speaker #2: I think I have mentioned this before. Velo is not going to just adopt laser-bit fusion. As we expand, the offerings—what we give to the customer—have to come from customer demand on various sides of it.

Speaker #2: At the same time, we're not going to compromise our technology itself. I mean, there are two reasons. So if you think RPS as somebody can just buy different kinds of machines and just run it, it's the most impossible and hassle that you can take upon.

Speaker #2: And not successful, because then you have to have different people understanding different machines, and you cannot control your own technology. The powerful thing Velo has is an OEM, which can control its technologies according to what we want to do, okay?

Speaker #2: That's a powerful tool, which others will miss. I mean, if you think of any of these, I mean, machine shops or the guys who are contract manufacturers can do this, right?

Arun Jeldi: I mean, if you think of any of these, I mean, machine shops or the guys who are contract manufacturers can do this, right? What is that we are adding as a value. I mean, the market is missing that point. When you are an OEM and the technology at the software and the hardware side, you have much more success to quickly iterate and collect the data to the point that no one has the abilities to do so. When you can do that, you are the powerful machine on the data that all these companies are missing. You cannot go and wait on a service. You cannot go and wait on somebody to fix your software or upgrade software or fix your machine.

Arun Jeldi: I mean, if you think of any of these, I mean, machine shops or the guys who are contract manufacturers can do this, right? What is that we are adding as a value. I mean, the market is missing that point. When you are an OEM and the technology at the software and the hardware side, you have much more success to quickly iterate and collect the data to the point that no one has the abilities to do so. When you can do that, you are the powerful machine on the data that all these companies are missing. You cannot go and wait on a service. You cannot go and wait on somebody to fix your software or upgrade software or fix your machine.

Speaker #2: But what is it that we are adding as a value is not—I mean, the market is missing that point. When you are an OEM, and on the technology and the software and the hardware side, you have much more success to fastly iterate and collect the data to the point that no one has the abilities to do so.

Speaker #2: And when you can do that, you are the powerful machine on the data. That's what all these companies are missing. So you cannot go and wait on a service.

Speaker #2: You cannot go and wait on somebody to fix your software or upgrade software or fix your machine. And at the same time, when we take upon any technologies, that's going to be under Velo wing.

Arun Jeldi: At the same time, when we take upon any technologies, that's going to be under Velo wing. When I mentioned M&A, the mergers and acquisitions, we have a strong focus on the business for next five years, where Velo will be the AWS of data and analytics company and a product-based company at a defense level, which what you see is a base of start. What you see in next seven years is the vision of Velo, where Velo will make sure that we are ready for the next generation manufacturing and digital platforms, which is very siloed at this point and does not have access to all the things I'm talking.

Arun Jeldi: At the same time, when we take upon any technologies, that's going to be under Velo wing. When I mentioned M&A, the mergers and acquisitions, we have a strong focus on the business for next five years, where Velo will be the AWS of data and analytics company and a product-based company at a defense level, which what you see is a base of start. What you see in next seven years is the vision of Velo, where Velo will make sure that we are ready for the next generation manufacturing and digital platforms, which is very siloed at this point and does not have access to all the things I'm talking.

Speaker #2: And when I mentioned M&A—the mergers and acquisitions—we have a strong focus on the business for the next five years, where Velo will be the AWS of data and analytics company and a product-based company at a defense level, which what you see is a base of start.

Speaker #2: And what you see in the next seven years is the vision of Velo, where Velo will make sure that we are ready for the next-generation manufacturing in digital platforms.

Speaker #2: Which is very siloed at this point and does not have access to all the things I'm talking about.

Troy Jensen: Yeah. If I could just ask one more, and I'll cede the floor here. Did you talk at all about what your margins are on the RPS side of the business?

Troy Jensen: Yeah. If I could just ask one more, and I'll cede the floor here. Did you talk at all about what your margins are on the RPS side of the business?

Speaker #5: Yeah, I could just ask one more, and I'll cede the floor here. Have you talked at all about what your margins are on the RPS side of the business?

Arun Jeldi: Mm-hmm.

Troy Jensen: what they may be at scale?

Troy Jensen: what they may be at scale?

Arun Jeldi: Yeah. Margins on RPS is between 40% and 60% depending on the project, but that's the highest gross margins you can see compared to any-

Arun Jeldi: Yeah. Margins on RPS is between 40% and 60% depending on the project, but that's the highest gross margins you can see compared to any-

Speaker #5: What they may be at scale?

Speaker #2: Yeah, so margins on RPS are between 40% and 60%, depending on the project. But that's the highest gross margins you can see compared to any of the machine sales or anything.

Troy Jensen: Yeah.

Troy Jensen: Yeah.

Arun Jeldi: of the machine sales or anything. Our machine sales gross margins range about if you make a brand-new machine and sell immediately, it's about 35%. This is why it's so powerful for us to expand our fleet and have that adoption very quickly, rather than just depending on the sale of the machine. We are selling capacity now. We're not just selling machines and put it on somebody's floor to struggle with it just like other machines. We're customer-focused mostly, and we want to be customer-focused to give them the easy access to the parts they want.

Arun Jeldi: of the machine sales or anything. Our machine sales gross margins range about if you make a brand-new machine and sell immediately, it's about 35%. This is why it's so powerful for us to expand our fleet and have that adoption very quickly, rather than just depending on the sale of the machine. We are selling capacity now. We're not just selling machines and put it on somebody's floor to struggle with it just like other machines. We're customer-focused mostly, and we want to be customer-focused to give them the easy access to the parts they want.

Speaker #2: Our machine sale gross margins range about—if you make it brand new machine and sell immediately, it's about 35%. So this is why it's so powerful for us to expand our fleet and have that adoption very quickly, rather than just depending on the sale of the machine.

Speaker #2: And we are selling capacity now. We're not just selling machines and putting them on somebody's floor to struggle with, just like other machines.

Speaker #2: We're not—we're a customer-focused company, mostly. And we want to be customer-focused, to give them easy access to the parts they want. By the end of the day, these tools are made to make parts, complex parts, whether it's a secured location for the customer or a non-secured location for us.

Arun Jeldi: By end of the day, these tools are made to make parts, complex parts, whether it's a secured location for the customer or a non-secure location for us, we want to fulfill both ends, and we will cover all of this with different technologies in future.

Arun Jeldi: By end of the day, these tools are made to make parts, complex parts, whether it's a secured location for the customer or a non-secure location for us, we want to fulfill both ends, and we will cover all of this with different technologies in future.

Speaker #2: We want to fulfill both ends, and we will cover all of this with different technologies in the future.

George Mariama: Perfect. All right, sir. Thanks, and good luck. Thank you.

George Mariama: Perfect. All right, sir. Thanks, and good luck. Thank you.

Speaker #5: Perfect. All right, sir. Thanks, and good luck.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you.

Speaker #1: Thank you.

Speaker #2: Thank you.

Operator 2: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of George Mariama with Pareto Ventures. Please proceed.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of George Mariama with Pareto Ventures. Please proceed.

Speaker #3: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of George Mariama with Perto Ventures. Please proceed.

George Mariama: Yeah. Hi, good afternoon, Arun. Nice to see-

George Mariama: Yeah. Hi, good afternoon, Arun. Nice to see-

Speaker #2: Yeah, yeah. Good afternoon, Arun. It's nice to see the business model proving out. I had a question: could you provide some color on your plans to strengthen supply chain?

Arun Jeldi: Yeah.

Arun Jeldi: Yeah.

George Mariama: The business model proving out.

George Mariama: The business model proving out.

Arun Jeldi: Yeah.

Arun Jeldi: Yeah.

George Mariama: I had a question. Could you provide some color on your plans to strengthen supply chain, the, you know, feedstock materials you mentioned?

George Mariama: I had a question. Could you provide some color on your plans to strengthen supply chain, the, you know, feedstock materials you mentioned?

Speaker #2: Feedstock and materials you mentioned?

Arun Jeldi: Yeah. I mean, if you imagine the scale of. I mean, there is no one in the whole country has what we are building as a fleet. Velo is taking the first initiative. I always believe that if you can control your feedstock supply chain, you have a tremendous value as a company. Just like if you take some of the companies which are vertically integrated, you see the bottom line of their main source of metals or anything they build themselves, okay. This is why our supply chain has to be robust if we have to scale to that 400 or 500 machines at scale. We're building a total ecosystem of how the additive manufacturing at scale happens.

Arun Jeldi: Yeah. I mean, if you imagine the scale of. I mean, there is no one in the whole country has what we are building as a fleet. Velo is taking the first initiative. I always believe that if you can control your feedstock supply chain, you have a tremendous value as a company. Just like if you take some of the companies which are vertically integrated, you see the bottom line of their main source of metals or anything they build themselves, okay. This is why our supply chain has to be robust if we have to scale to that 400 or 500 machines at scale. We're building a total ecosystem of how the additive manufacturing at scale happens.

Speaker #5: Yeah. So, I mean, if you imagine the scale of—I mean, there is no one in the whole country that has what we are building as a fleet.

Speaker #5: So Velo is taking that first initiative. And I always believe that if you can control your feedstock supply chain, you have tremendous value as a company.

Speaker #5: Just like if you take some of the companies which are linearly integrated, you see their bottom line of their main source of metals or anything—they build themselves, okay?

Speaker #5: This is why our supply chain has to be robust. If we have to scale to that 400 or 500 machines in scale, we're building a total ecosystem of how the additive manufacturing at scale happens.

Arun Jeldi: I'm focused on that metal powders and the feedstock to be very well secured for years to come for us. When we promise to the customer, we wanna deliver it on time. I don't want any. I mean, we don't want to wait on vendors to give us what we want. At the same time, at the post-processing side, we want to make sure that we have full collaborations of contract manufacturers and a supply chain robustness to give the end product to the customer. It's a big feat which no one has done, and we are taking upon that as first digital manufacturing million-dollar square foot facilities.

Arun Jeldi: I'm focused on that metal powders and the feedstock to be very well secured for years to come for us. When we promise to the customer, we wanna deliver it on time. I don't want any. I mean, we don't want to wait on vendors to give us what we want. At the same time, at the post-processing side, we want to make sure that we have full collaborations of contract manufacturers and a supply chain robustness to give the end product to the customer. It's a big feat which no one has done, and we are taking upon that as first digital manufacturing million-dollar square foot facilities.

Speaker #5: So I'm focused on that—metal powders and the feedstock—to be ready to come for us when we promise to the customer. We want to deliver it on time.

Speaker #5: And then I don't want any vendor waiting—I mean, we don't want to wait on vendors to give us what we want. At the same time, at the post-processing site, we want to make sure that we have full collaboration with contract manufacturers and a supply chain robustness to give the end product to the customer.

Speaker #5: It's a big feat, which no one has done. And we are taking upon that as a manufacturing—digital manufacturing—million-dollar, square-foot facilities. Velo has a big project to do.

Arun Jeldi: Velo has a big project to do, both on the data of the industrial manufacturing as digital and also future, in future how the manufacturing is done, which is used by any OEMs, anybody who wants to do a product.

Arun Jeldi: Velo has a big project to do, both on the data of the industrial manufacturing as digital and also future, in future how the manufacturing is done, which is used by any OEMs, anybody who wants to do a product.

Speaker #5: Both on the data of the industrial manufacturing as digital, and also in the future, how the manufacturing is done, which is used by any OEMs—anybody who wants to do a product.

George Mariama: Okay. Thank you. One other question I had was on the acquisition side. Would that be sort of into the data software sort of to create the AWS sort of idea, along those lines?

George Mariama: Okay. Thank you. One other question I had was on the acquisition side. Would that be sort of into the data software sort of to create the AWS sort of idea, along those lines?

Speaker #5: Okay, thank you. And then, the other question I had was on the acquisition side. Would that be sort of into the data software, sort of to create the AWS sort of idea, along those lines?

Arun Jeldi: Yes. On the acquisition side, we do have our internal IP-protected software, which no one has the ability, I mean, no one has that kind of complex software that can actually do algorithms that produces a complex part, which some companies outside is trying, but they're not actually in use of what they make. But Velo is already adopted that and most of our products are at a production scale and also prototyping scale. Not only that, but the traditional manufacturing is super important for us to make it digital and collect all the data.

Arun Jeldi: Yes. On the acquisition side, we do have our internal IP-protected software, which no one has the ability, I mean, no one has that kind of complex software that can actually do algorithms that produces a complex part, which some companies outside is trying, but they're not actually in use of what they make. But Velo is already adopted that and most of our products are at a production scale and also prototyping scale. Not only that, but the traditional manufacturing is super important for us to make it digital and collect all the data.

Speaker #2: Yes. So on the acquisition side, we do have our internal, IP-protected software which no one has—the ability, I mean, no one has that kind of complex software that can actually do algorithms that produce a complex part.

Speaker #2: While some companies outside are trying, they're not actually in use of what they make. But Velo is already adopted that, and most of our products are at a production scale.

Speaker #2: And also, prototyping scale. So not only that, but the traditional manufacturing is super important for us to make it digital and collect all that data.

Arun Jeldi: The whole line from the material side to, I think, every layer of what we print, every layer of what the material is used, to all the way to giving that finished product to the customer is the targets for us to acquire and then basically give an ecosystem that is fully digitally manufactured. Now the siloed data is not working, and that's why you have these supply chain problems. When you transform the traditional, some of the traditional parts into digitalized data collection from the early stages of design, it will really help everybody, not just one OEM or a Prime, to adopt those in scale. That's where you see the product being designed differently, manufactured differently, and analyzed differently, which gives the full scope of what Velo is trying to do.

Arun Jeldi: The whole line from the material side to, I think, every layer of what we print, every layer of what the material is used, to all the way to giving that finished product to the customer is the targets for us to acquire and then basically give an ecosystem that is fully digitally manufactured. Now the siloed data is not working, and that's why you have these supply chain problems. When you transform the traditional, some of the traditional parts into digitalized data collection from the early stages of design, it will really help everybody, not just one OEM or a Prime, to adopt those in scale. That's where you see the product being designed differently, manufactured differently, and analyzed differently, which gives the full scope of what Velo is trying to do.

Speaker #2: So the whole line from the material side too, I think every layer of what we print, every layer of what the material is used to, all the way to giving that finished product to the customer, is a target for us to acquire.

Speaker #2: And then, basically, you have an ecosystem that is fully digitally manufactured. So now, the siloed data is not working, and that's why you have these supply chain problems.

Speaker #2: And then, when you transform some of the traditional parts into digitalized data collection from the early stages of design, it will really help everybody, not just one OEM or a prime, to adopt those at scale.

Speaker #2: And then that's where you see the product being designed differently, manufactured differently, and analyzed differently. Which gives us a full scope of what Velo is trying to do.

George Mariama: Very exciting. Thank you, Arun.

George Mariama: Very exciting. Thank you, Arun.

Arun Jeldi: Yep, thank you.

Arun Jeldi: Yep, thank you.

Speaker #5: Very exciting. Thank you, Arun.

Speaker #2: Yeah. Thank you.

Operator 2: Thank you. There are no further questions. I'd like to pass the call back over to Arun for any closing remarks.

Operator: Thank you. There are no further questions. I'd like to pass the call back over to Arun for any closing remarks.

Speaker #3: Thank you. There are no further questions. I'd like to pass the call back over to Arun for any closing remarks.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you everyone who asked the questions. Hopefully, I answered your questions. The vision is clear for Velo3D, and we are advancing and marching towards what I have mentioned in our questions. We're not trying to just be an OEM of machine manufacturer. We're transforming the digital manufacturing in, while I talk, to the future, where any part of the world or to the stars, these can be transferred. This is necessary to manufacture and build things, and we're taking that step as Velo3D. The future is bright, and we have proven our remarks and concept in the year one. Year two, three, four is actual stability of the company financially, progressing towards the full digital manufacturing, full fleet of digital manufacturing shown in numbers and also satisfying the customers as their needs come through.

Arun Jeldi: Thank you everyone who asked the questions. Hopefully, I answered your questions. The vision is clear for Velo3D, and we are advancing and marching towards what I have mentioned in our questions. We're not trying to just be an OEM of machine manufacturer. We're transforming the digital manufacturing in, while I talk, to the future, where any part of the world or to the stars, these can be transferred. This is necessary to manufacture and build things, and we're taking that step as Velo3D. The future is bright, and we have proven our remarks and concept in the year one. Year two, three, four is actual stability of the company financially, progressing towards the full digital manufacturing, full fleet of digital manufacturing shown in numbers and also satisfying the customers as their needs come through.

Speaker #2: Thank you, everyone, who asked the questions so fully. I answered your questions, but the vision is clear for Velo3D, and we are advancing and marching towards what I have mentioned in our questions.

Speaker #2: We're not trying to just be an OEM of machine manufacturer. We're transforming digital manufacturing, and while I talk to the future, where any part of the world, or to the stars, these can be transferred.

Speaker #2: And this is necessary to manufacture and build things, and we're taking that step as Velo3D. So the future is bright, and we have proven our remarks.

Speaker #2: And concept in year one, year two, year three, year four is actual stability of the company—financially—progressing towards full digital manufacturing, a full fleet of digital manufacturing shown in numbers, and also satisfying the customers as their needs come through.

Arun Jeldi: I hope we'll have a great journey in the future, and thank you for the support from the investors, employees, and all the supporters of Velo3D. I appreciate everything you say about us, and hope you have a wonderful day. Thank you.

Arun Jeldi: I hope we'll have a great journey in the future, and thank you for the support from the investors, employees, and all the supporters of Velo3D. I appreciate everything you say about us, and hope you have a wonderful day. Thank you.

Speaker #2: So, I hope we'll have a great journey in the future. And thank you for support from the investors, employees, and all the supporters of Velo3D.

Speaker #2: I appreciate everything you say about us, and hope you have a wonderful day. Thank you.

Operator 2: This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.

Operator: This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.

Q4 2025 Velo3D Inc Earnings Call

Demo

Velo3D

Earnings

Q4 2025 Velo3D Inc Earnings Call

VLDX

Tuesday, March 24th, 2026 at 9:00 PM

Transcript

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