Red Cat Holdings Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Factory-first scale positions company to supply drones and USVs for Ukraine, Drone Dominance, and maritime counter threats
Summary
Red Cat used this quarter to stop being a prototype shop and start acting like a production defense supplier. Management walked through rapid factory expansion, NDAA-compliant supply chain wins, and concrete ramp metrics — 50 Black Widows per day at Salt Lake, a 155,000 sq ft Georgia USV plant now operational, and stated capability to reach 1,000 drones per month and more than 100 USVs in 2026. Those manufacturing moves are the headline; they underpin a bid for large programs from Drone Dominance, Epic Fury, and urgent maritime counter requirements in the Strait of Hormuz.
The headline numbers are mixed. Q4 revenue accelerated to $26.2 million, with full year revenue of $40.7 million, but gross margins remain thin and OpEx jumped as the company built for scale. Cash swelled to $167.9 million, giving Red Cat optionality while it waits to convert pipeline interest, Ukrainian letters of request, and program awards into signed contracts. Management is confident and urgent, but cautious about issuing formal guidance until contracts are inked. This quarter feels like a pivot point, not a finished race.
Key Takeaways
- Management prioritized manufacturing scale this quarter, calling the factory "the weapon" and converting prototype wins into production lines across air and maritime domains.
- Q4 2025 revenue was $26.2 million, up $25.0 million year-over-year and up $16.6 million sequentially; full year 2025 revenue was $40.7 million, up $25.1 million year-over-year.
- Gross margin in Q4 was 4.2%, an 85% year-over-year improvement but still low and volatile; full year gross margin was 3.1%, up 332 basis points year-over-year.
- Operating expenses rose to $67.8 million in 2025 from $32.9 million the prior year, driven by an 85% increase in headcount and higher R&D spending of $17.9 million versus $8.1 million.
- Cash position strengthened dramatically, rising from $9.2 million at the end of 2024 to $167.9 million at the end of 2025, giving the company financial flexibility to fund production builds and strategic moves.
- Inventory was increased to $30.4 million from $13.6 million, reflecting deliberate supply chain buildup to meet expected demand and component lead times under NDAA Section 1709 rules.
- Facilities expanded from 36,000 sq ft to 254,000 sq ft across Utah, Florida, Georgia, and California; Salt Lake is producing 50 Black Widows per day, FlightWave Torrance can do 125 Edge 130s per month, and Valdosta, Georgia houses a 155,000 sq ft USV facility that went operational about one month ago.
- Management expects to scale Black Widow output to 1,000 units per month in H1 2026 on current lines and said USV tooling will reach full-rate production later this month, with the belief they can build over 100 USVs in 2026 while planning for much higher future capacity.
- Red Cat highlighted strategic wins and pipeline: a Letter of Request from Ukrainian forces for Black Widow replacements of Chinese ISR drones, a joint development agreement with a Ukrainian state-owned partner, and persistent interest from Gulf customers after Innovation Day amid maritime tensions.
- Counter-drone capability is a key commercial differentiator for the Variant 7 USV, combining ACS Bullfrog for short range and Aeon Zeus for long range to address FPVs and Shahed-136 threats, marketed for hotspots including the Strait of Hormuz.
- On Drone Dominance, Red Cat did not clear Gauntlet One but is preparing for Gauntlet Two; management framed the program as a sizable market with a total award of 350,000 FPV drones and downstream needs for ISR and SRR systems.
- Management is withholding formal 2026 guidance until contracts are signed, but indicated an internal scenario range between $100 million and $170 million and said they are comfortable in the top half of that range pending contract wins.
- Margins and profitability remain under pressure during the ramp, with fixed costs embedded in COGS making quarter-to-quarter results volatile until scale is achieved.
- The company called out an estimated $30 million to $40 million investment needed to fully operationalize the USV division and flagged continued focus on strategic acquisitions and inventory/supply chain management as capital priorities.
Full Transcript
Operator: Good evening, and welcome to the Red Cat quarterly earnings. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Ankit Khera, Investor Relations. Thank you, Ankit. You may begin.
Ankit Khera, Investor Relations, Red Cat Holdings: Good afternoon and welcome to Red Cat’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. Joining us are Red Cat’s CEO, Jeff Thompson, COO, Chris Ericson, and CFO, Christian Morrison. Please note that certain information discussed on the call today will include forward-looking statements for our future events and Red Cat’s business strategy and future financial and operating performance. These forward-looking statements are only predictions and are subject to risks, uncertainties, and assumptions that are difficult to predict and may cause actual results to differ materially from those stated or implied by those statements. Certain risks, uncertainties, and assumptions are discussed in Red Cat’s SEC filings, including its most recent annual report on Form 10-K and other SEC filings.
These forward-looking statements reflect management’s beliefs, estimates, and predictions as of the date of this live broadcast, March 18, 2026, and Red Cat undertakes no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this call. In addition, our comments on the call today will contain references to non-GAAP financial measures such as adjusted EBITDA and key business metrics. Non-GAAP measures should be viewed in addition to and not as an alternative for the company’s reported GAAP results. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures, as well as definitions of the key business metrics referenced and management’s reasons for including the non-GAAP measures and key business metrics referenced, may be found in the press release.
Finally, I would like to remind everyone that this call will be recorded and made available for replay via a link available on the investor relations section of the company’s website at ir.redcatholdings.com. With that, I’ll now turn the call over to Jeff.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Thanks, Ankit. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining Red Cat’s Q4 2025 earnings call. I’m gonna let Chris Ericson, our COO, and Christian Morrison, our CFO, discuss last year’s extraordinary Q4 results, which annualized would be over $100 million. I am gonna cover Blue Ops, Black Widow work in Ukraine, Drone Dominance, and guidance. A year ago, on this same call, we announced our new mission, Maritime USVs. We found a management dream team in the early summer to build this division. The new team spent many weeks in Europe to learn how these boats were so successful against the Russian Navy. By August, we had our preliminary designs, and by December, we had a boat in the water driving autonomously and out-of-the-box ATAK capable. We found a boat factory in Georgia, signed a lease for 155,000 sq ft.
That factory just went operational approximately one month ago and will have full rate production tooling later this month. We believe and are confident that they can build over 100+ USVs in 2026 as we ramp up production capability to thousands. Blue Ops is a strategic and important part of Red Cat’s family of systems. It opens the rest of the globe for Red Cat. Our family of systems was limited to 30% of Earth. With our new Variant 7 and other hulls, we can now launch from 100% of the globe. We believe that our Blue Ops USVs can keep our warfighters out of harm’s way and make them more lethal. We believe Blue Ops could be very helpful in Venezuela, in the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Gulf of America, Cuba, and urgently in the Strait of Hormuz.
Blue Ops demonstrated partners on Innovation Day that was timely. We demonstrated short-range and long-range counter-drone capability. For short range, we have the ACS Bullfrog on the front of the Variant 7 that can shoot down FPV drones up to 1,500 yards and can do the same to a Shahed-136. For long range, we have the Aeon Zeus that can travel 20 kilometers and take out Shahed-136s at a very low cost. The two weapon system combi-systems combined on the Variant 7, controlled miles away, can deliver a potent, deadly deterrent for short-range and long-range counter-drone operations. Let’s move on to recent work in Ukraine with the Black Widow.
Last fall, we deployed a team to Ukraine in hopes to get them a drone to replace the Chinese ISR drones and to verify the drones we are delivering to soldiers would work in an actual battlefield. The team received an MOU and an LOC and recently LOR, a letter of request. I’m gonna have Chris Ericson, who just got back from Ukraine last night, give more details on this mission. I also wanna thank the Red Cat ICC team for this hard and dangerous work. Drone Dominance. As you know, we did not make the cut at Drone Dominance Gauntlet One. I have a ton of excuses, but I’m not gonna go there. We are preparing for Gauntlet Two and hope to have better results.
We believe even if we lose every stage of the gauntlet, we will still be one of the larger beneficiaries of the program. There’s going to be a total award of 350,000 FPV drones. Going by the Ukrainian ratio of 20 to 1, that requires 17,500 ISR drones or 8,750 SRR systems. Sensor shooter requires a sensor, and that’s what the Black Widow is. We will support the Drone Dominance program in any way we can. Guidance. We are not currently ready to offer official guidance. We want to have our government contracts in hand before we give guidance. We do not want a replay of last year during the continuing resolution. Fortunately, we have a budget for 2026, which also just received an additional $150 billion.
It looks like we’ll be getting another $50 billion for Iran. We don’t have to wait till the next quarterly to give an update on guidance, and as soon as we have the contracts in hand, we will update the market. With that, I will hand this to Chris Ericson.
Chris Ericson, Chief Operating Officer (COO), Red Cat Holdings: Thank you, Jeff, and good afternoon, everyone. With that intro, I’ll skip ahead a little bit and talk about the most interesting part of my script. Yes, I just returned from Ukraine yesterday. My first overarching impression is that I was in awe of the spirit of resiliency of the Ukrainian people. They continue to show how David could stand up to Goliath. My favorite retort to that comment was only comparable if David wasn’t given a sling and rocks. We have now established an office in Kyiv and have a fabulous team. We are building the business and relationships to most effectively, one, test our equipment at the front and obtain true feedback. Two, identify new product and integration partners with battle-proven technology. Three, use this knowledge to increase the efficacy of our unmanned systems.
I’m happy to report that we have tested multiple systems at the front and proven that our tech works and works really well. This has now resulted in Red Cat receiving a letter of request from Ukrainian forces to provide our systems to begin replacing the use of Chinese-made ISR drones. Black Widow’s compact, rugged design, and secure communications architecture has proven invaluable in real-world deployments, which will contribute directly to mission success for our defense customers. Finally, this past week, we entered into a joint development agreement with a Ukrainian state-owned partner to bring new battle-proven technology to our USVs. This agreement is a huge step forward as we are the first non-governmental entity to successfully enter into this type of deal, which will enable the future transfer of battle-proven technology to us and our allies.
Let’s change directions a little bit and talk about how the factory is the weapon. We have quickly learned through current global conflicts how important factories and capacity are critical infrastructures in supporting a country’s defense. Over the past year, we focused on acquiring talent, improving processes and tools, transforming from a fast-moving start-up to a repeatable high reliability production enterprise that can deliver quantity and quality and stability to our customers. Our operational performance in Q4 2025 reflects the successful execution of our multi-domain strategy and our ability to adapt rapidly to the evolving defense technology landscape. We achieved remarkable production scalability while maintaining the quality and security standards our defense customers demand. This represents our ability to surge production capacity, demonstrating the operational agility that sets Red Cat apart in the defense contractor community.
We remain on track to scale Black Widow drones output to 1,000 units a month in the first half of 2026, and our USV boat manufacturing will have first deliveries expected in Q2 of 2026. The regulatory landscape shift following NDAA Section 1709 implementation has fundamentally changed how we operate, creating unprecedented opportunities while requiring enhanced focus on supply chain security and domestic sourcing. We responded by strengthening our American manufacturing capabilities and expanding our network of trusted domestic suppliers. Our NDAA-compliant supply chain has become a significant competitive differentiator, allowing us to capture market share from foreign competitors who can no longer serve defense and government customers.
Our manufacturing expansion has been transformational, with overall facility square footage increasing from 36,000 sq ft last year or two years ago to 254,000 sq ft in Utah and across new locations in Florida, Georgia, and California. Our Salt Lake facility now operates at an impressive capacity, having produced 50 Black Widow drones per day, proving the ability of producing 1,000 drones per month on a single shift. The facility has room to triple the manufacturing lines and add additional shifts. Our FlightWave facility in Torrance can produce 125 Edge 130 drones per month using only one-third of its available space. Additionally, our Valdosta, Georgia, facility provides 155,000 sq ft dedicated to our expanding Blue Ops maritime production capabilities and room to produce more than 100 boats per month.
This strategic expansion positions us to meet accelerating customer demand while maintaining our commitment to quality and security standards. During the quarter, we triumphed when faced with the challenge of rapidly scaling production to meet accelerating customer demand and still maintained our rigorous quality standards. This record quarter, we also expanded our manufacturing partnerships, most notably with Hodgson Shipbuilding, to ensure ability to quickly pivot for growing demands across all operational domains. Our expansion into maritime operations through Blue Ops represents perhaps our most significant operational advancement, extending our family of systems approach beyond air and land domains to uncrewed surface vessels. These USVs leverage the same autonomous technologies and secure communications that have made our aerial platform successful while addressing the growing demand for maritime domain awareness and operations.
The partnership with Hodgson Shipbuilding brings proven shipbuilding expertise to our advanced autonomous capabilities, creating a unique value proposition in the maritime defense market. This operational growth has truly placed us in prime position for the future, where the factory is the weapon. I’m sure you may have some follow-on questions, but first I’ll turn the call over to Christian to discuss our financial results, after which we’ll take questions. Christian.
Christian Morrison, Chief Financial Officer (CFO), Red Cat Holdings: Thank you, Chris. I’m pleased to present Red Cat’s financial performance for the fourth quarter and full year 2025, which represents a transformational period in our company’s growth trajectory. For the fourth quarter of 2025, revenue was $26.2 million, up $25.0 million year-over-year, and up $16.6 million sequentially as deliveries accelerated. This growth was driven by robust defense and government customer demand, our expanded program wins, and our ability to rapidly scale production for mission-critical requirements. Gross margin was 4.2%, up 85% year-over-year and down 2.4% sequentially, reflecting mix and ramp dynamics typical of our growth phase. For the full year 2025, revenue was $40.7 million, up $25.1 million year-over-year.
Gross margin was 3.1%, up 332 basis points year-over-year, partially driven by scale benefits and manufacturing improvements. Gross margin can be volatile on a quarter-to-quarter basis due to revenue levels that include fixed costs reflected in our cost of goods sold and investments in productions that are not yet at scale. We are continuously implementing more efficient processes and procedures that will enable us to capitalize on the expected increased demand and growth. Our ability to deliver and perform has remained strong alongside our focus on rapidly scaling operations, reflecting our disciplined approach to cost management and the premium value of our American-made secure drone platforms. Operating expenses in 2025 were $67.8 million, compared to $32.9 million in the prior year.
This increase in operating expenses were focused, planned, and deliberate to enable us for the accelerated growth we experienced in 2025, and more importantly, for further growth expansion going forward. We increased our headcount by 85%, which primarily included increased engineers and corporate headquarters functional positions. Research and development expenses were $17.9 million compared to $8.1 million in the prior year. This increase in R&D investments is focused on advancing our core platforms, developing new capabilities in artificial intelligence and machine learning, and enhancing the interoperability of our family systems across air, land, and maritime domains. Our investments in the business demonstrate the inherent value of positioning and the pricing power that comes with being a trusted domestic supplier in the defense market.
Regarding our investment priorities, we’ve made strategic investments across multiple areas to support our growth trajectory and maintain our competitive advantages. We remain focused on deploying capital across three key areas. The first area of focus is our USV division build-out, which is estimated to be a $30-$40 million investment to fully operationalize the division. Second, we remain focused on true strategic acquisitions and thirdly, increasing inventory and managing our supply chain to meet customer demand. One of the most notable improvements in our financial profile has been our improved cash position and working capital management. Our cash increased from $9.2 million at the end of 2024 to $167.9 million at the end of 2025, providing us with substantial financial flexibility to pursue strategic initiatives and capitalize on market opportunities.
These results demonstrate Red Cat’s evolution into a premier defense technology company with the financial strength and operational capabilities to capitalize on the tremendous market opportunities ahead of us. Our working capital position has strengthened considerably, driven by our enhanced cash position, healthy AR, and strategic inventory investments. We increased our inventory from $13.6 million to $30.4 million during 2025, reflecting our proactive approach to supply chain management and our commitment to meeting accelerating customer demand. The strategic nature of this inventory build becomes especially important when considering the supply chain requirements and the extended lead times for specialized components in the current regulatory environment. Looking ahead to 2026, we’re positioned for continued strong performance driven by several key factors that reinforce our confidence of Red Cat’s growth trajectory.
While we are not providing annual guidance at this time, we expect to maintain revenue momentum throughout the year. Our revenues are supported by our expanding and increasingly diversified customer base and growing international presence. When we gain additional visibility as we progress throughout the year, we look forward to updating the market. We are also being mindful of the ongoing geopolitical developments that are currently in the headlines. We are also influencing our international expansion plans, particularly in the Middle East and Asia Pacific region. While current allied relationships remain strong, changes in defense priorities or procurement policies could affect the timing or scale of international opportunities.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: We’re also monitoring potential changes in defense spending priorities as new administrations and congressional leadership evaluate budget allocations across different military capabilities. With that, we’re now happy to answer your questions. Operator, will you please open up the line for Q&A?
Operator: Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please click on the Raise Hand icon at the bottom of your screen. Once your name is called, please click on the Accept Promotion to Panelist and have your microphone and camera enabled. Our first question comes from the line of Austin Molik with Needham. Please proceed.
Austin Molik, Analyst, Needham: Can you guys hear me?
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Yes, we can.
Austin Molik, Analyst, Needham: Can you guys hear me?
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Yes.
Operator: Yes.
Austin Molik, Analyst, Needham: All right. Sorry about that. Congrats on the solid Q4 execution, guys. It seems like the pipeline is really strong. There seems to be a ton of tailwinds, everything from SRR to this bold opportunity, Drone Dominance now with this really unique opportunity in Ukraine. Any way you can give us some kind of different scenarios on what 2026 could look like?
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Yeah. We don’t wanna get ahead of our skis again, but I mean, there’s a range from all of you out there between $100 million and $170 million. Very wild, you know, crazy goalposts right now. You know, we’re fine. We’re very comfortable in the top half of that. But we’re not ready to commit to it until we get contracts in hand to give our official guidance.
Austin Molik, Analyst, Needham: Okay. No, that’s fair. Just wanted to dive into this new Ukraine opportunity that seems pretty incremental. Do you guys have any idea of, like, how many you could be potentially replacing?
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Yeah. Well, hold on. I’m gonna have Chris Ericson answer that because he just got back last night and he was in the room when they notified us.
Chris Ericson, Chief Operating Officer (COO), Red Cat Holdings: Yeah, we were there with the, you know, the war fighters and the guys who were collecting all the data there, and they came back, and I asked them the question. They said 350,000 ISR drones a year. Chinese ISR drones is what they’re going through a year on the Ukraine front. A massive number.
Austin Molik, Analyst, Needham: Wow. Big opportunity there. I guess kinda lastly for me, and more just kinda wanna touch on all businesses, the boat segment. Obviously what’s going on in Hormuz. Have you guys noticed any sort of increase in maybe RFP or interest, just given the heightened conflict in the waterways or anything you could talk about there?
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Yeah. Austin, you were at Innovation Day, you know, two days later, the war started. Our biz dev team, all of our different teams have been getting stuff coming at us in every which way and direction. Some people calling, asking panic questions, "What can we get here and now?" As things calm down a little bit, there looks like there’s gonna be some pretty massive RFPs coming out of the Gulf States. It won’t take as long as traditional RFPs. We’re seeing an uptick in some Navy inquiries that were at Innovation Day. We are hearing a lot about counter. People want counter.
As I explained in my prepared comments, the Variant 7 has a great counter configuration with the ACS Bullfrog, which can take down FPVs and also can take down Shaheds at close range. That combined with the Aeon Zeus is something we’re going very quickly at. They’re ramping very rapidly to be able to be a great solution, a counter solution for the Shaheds. They also don’t require a pilot like a lot of the Ukrainian solutions to take down a Shahed. A lot of great tech coming out of Ukraine for counter Shaheds. We think that we can also help dramatically in the Strait of Hormuz. You gotta remember, this is.
Everyone’s talking about how this is so urgent right now in the Strait, but you know, we believe that the Strait’s gonna need to be protected for not years, forever, from now on. No longer is it gonna be acceptable for the world to be held hostage by that one gap and small area there between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. We think there’s a very long-term solution is to not have billion-dollar ships escorting tankers. We’d prefer to do it with you know, 30 or 40 USVs, you know, 10, 20 on each side, and/or doing port protection, being close to the shore of Iran to make sure that nothing’s coming out with our counter capabilities.
Austin Molik, Analyst, Needham: Okay. Well, guys, keep up the great work. I’ll talk to you guys soon.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Thanks.
Chris Ericson, Chief Operating Officer (COO), Red Cat Holdings: Thanks.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Thanks, Austin.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mike Latimore with Northland. Please proceed.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Mike, it looks like you’re muted.
Mike Latimore, Analyst, Northland: Hey, Mike.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Oh, no, not anymore.
Mike Latimore, Analyst, Northland: Yeah. Sorry. I’m in an airport, so it might be a little bit noisy. I apologize. Yes, I guess, yeah, congrats on the strong year. That was great. You know, as you think about the full rate production contract, is that something that you would anticipate getting sort of one main order, or would there be separate tranches over the year?
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Are you talking for the Black Widow with the SRR program?
Mike Latimore, Analyst, Northland: Yeah. Sorry. Yes, exactly.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Yeah. Okay. ’Cause we’re going into full rate production, hopefully very soon with the boats also. Yeah, great question. As Austin alluded to earlier, there’s been an influx of orders related to Epic Fury. You know, we’re expecting, you know, again, not gonna give dates to have our new OTA full rate production contract any day. There is some possibilities of getting some immediate orders for Epic Fury, which might delay a week or two the other contract. We’re progressing the ship every month still for SRR and things are looking fantastic with the SRR program with their funding and now with Epic Fury and a lot of other needs that we’re hearing out of the Department of Defense for Black Widows.
Mike Latimore, Analyst, Northland: Excellent. I think you in your prepared remarks you talked about anticipating an order for the USV in the second quarter, I believe. I guess can you give a little more color there in terms of, you know, type of customer region, that sort of thing?
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: I’m sorry. I don’t know which order in the second quarter you heard.
Mike Latimore, Analyst, Northland: Oh, I thought you said something about a USV or anticipating a USV order in the second quarter. No?
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: No, we did not say that.
Mike Latimore, Analyst, Northland: Oh, sorry. Okay.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: We are hoping people are very interested in our USVs. There’s a lot of urgency around our USVs right now. We were previously going to use our first 15 for demos only, and now we’re gonna hull number 6, which is just coming out now today. Hull number 6 through 15 are now going to be hopefully shipped to customers as quickly as we can make them.
Mike Latimore, Analyst, Northland: Excellent. Last thing on, you talked about getting to 1,000 drones a month. Would you sort of start building to that rate even before having contracts?
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Oh, we are. We’re doing that now.
Mike Latimore, Analyst, Northland: Okay. Perfect. Great. Well, congrats. Good luck, mister.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Thank you.
Mike Latimore, Analyst, Northland: Thanks, Mike.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Ashok Kumar with ThinkEquity.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: You’re currently muted.
Operator: Ashok, you’re still muted. All right.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Awesome.
Operator: Looks like we lost the Ashok there. I don’t see any more questions. With that, I’ll pass it back to management.
Jeff Thompson, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Red Cat Holdings: Great. Well, thanks everybody for coming on. We had about 400 people on this call today. A lot of exciting stuff happening across the globe. Chris Ericson’s great news that we’ll be working very hard on quickly and scaling to help fulfill all the things that are going on. Again, we will not be waiting for an official quarterly call to update people on guidance. As soon as we have our contracts in hand, we’ll get that information out to the market. We’re very excited. We still believe that every quarter is gonna be a record going forward, and we’re excited to get back to work. Thanks again.
Chris Ericson, Chief Operating Officer (COO), Red Cat Holdings: Thank you, everyone.
Operator: This concludes today’s webinar. You may disconnect at this time. Thank you, everyone, for your participation.