Full-year 2025 revenue fell 45% to $45.9 million from $83.3 million, and our net loss widened 38% to $117 million from $84.6 million the year before—so the loss grew as revenue shrank, right? First‑quarter 2026 came in at $8.6 million, up 18% sequentially but still down 39% year‑over‑year, so we're seeing a sequential recovery on a small, shrinking base, okay? Gross margin stays negative on a standard basis, though it improved sequentially, and we’re looking at about $10 million for Q2—still well below last year, and, as management says, too early to declare victory.
Yeah, I want to highlight what sits beneath those numbers: we are a pure-play analog and mixed-signal specialty foundry, 1.0 micron down to 110nm on 150mm and 200mm wafers across six fabs in four countries — Erfurt, Dresden, Itzehoe, Corbeil-Essonnes, Kuching, Lubbock. Automotive, industrial, medical is 94% of revenue. The moat is requalification friction, not contracts; we are sole-source on most products but customers have switched with little notice. Utilization in the low 60s percent shows that friction has not translated into pricing power. Does that answer the question?
Yeah, I want to highlight wide-bandgap: $15.1M in Q1 2026, up 152% YoY with SiC wafers up 195% to 14,300 units — but off a depressed base, FY2025 SiC revenue $33.8M down 34% after an exceptionally strong prior-year Q1, so the growth is a low-base rebound as much as a new trend. Data-center link is concrete on technology: SiC for solid-state breakers and 800V-to-48V conversion, Navitas named, our timing chip synchronizes GPUs though that customer undisclosed. Capacity 10k wafers/month, ~6k loaded (~60%). Whether data-center share climbs remains open. Does that answer the question?