Q1 2025 Intuitive Machines Inc Earnings Call

In This Article:

Participants

Stephen Zhang; Head of Investor Relations; Intuitive Machines Inc

Stephen Altemus; Chief Executive Officer, Director; Intuitive Machines Inc

Peter Mcgrath; Chief Financial Officer; Intuitive Machines Inc

Austin Moeller; Analyst; Canaccord Genuity

Edison Yu; Analyst; Deutsche Bank

Andres Sheppard; Analyst; Cantor Fitzgerald

Ronald Epstein; Analyst; Bank of America

Griffin Boss; Analyst; B. Riley Securities

Greg Pendy; Analyst; Clear Street

Suji Desilva; Analyst; ROTH Capital

Josh Sullivan; Analyst; The Benchmark Company

Presentation

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Intuitive Machines First Quarter 2025 Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. After this week's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. (Operator Instructions) Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded.
I would now like to turn the conference over to Stephen Zhang, Head of Investor Relations. Go ahead

Stephen Zhang

Good morning. Welcome to the Intuitive Machines first quarter 2025 earnings call. Chief Executive Officer, Steve Altemus; and Chief Financial Officer, Pete McGrath, are leading the call today. Before we begin, please note that some of the information discussed during today's call will consist of forward-looking statements setting forth our current expectations with respect to the future of our business, the economy and other events.
The company's actual results could differ materially from those indicated in any forward-looking statements due to many factors. These factors are described under forward-looking statements in the company's earnings press release and the company's most recent 10-K and 10-Q filed with the SEC. We do not undertake any obligation to update forward-looking statements.
We also expect to discuss certain financial measures and information that are non-GAAP measures as defined in the applicable SEC rules and regulations. Reconciliations to the company's GAAP measures are included in the earnings release filed on Form 8-K. Finally, we posted an earnings call presentation to our website, which provides additional context on our operational and financial performance. You can find this presentation on our Investor Relations page at www.intuitivemachines.com/investors.
Now I'll turn the call over to Steve Altemus.

Stephen Altemus

Thank you, and welcome, everyone. On our last call, we emphasized that the company would be focused on execution as the new administration began to take shape. Over the last few months, we have seen the administration rethinking how the federal government acquires emerging technology and services, instigates private sector innovation and creates long-term value.
Recently, we have seen signals of alignment at the federal level, including key appointments and clear budgetary direction from the executive branch in Congress. The President's budget request reinforces NASA's funding priorities and the House Armed Services Committee has advanced an additional $150 billion reconciliation package supporting DoD initiatives.
These developments give us visibility into future opportunities across civil and national security space. The evolving federal landscape, including shifting NASA priorities, presents a clear opportunity for Intuitive Machines. We're leveraging our proven performance and speed to market across LTV, NSS and clips the track record of stretching the federal dollar through innovation that scales to expand into adjacent markets like national security space and other non-lunar domains.
This diversification and track record builds on our core strengths and positions us as a broader infrastructure and data services provider across the space economy. As we anticipated last year, the Artemis campaign is evolving, nominated NASA Administrator, Jared Isaacman has articulated an all dual track vision to pursue lunar and margin exploration with Artemis at the stepping stone. We believe this vision reinforced by the President's recent NASA budget request, signals continued support for Deep Space initiatives that Intuitive Machines, it's built to serve.
Our technologies developed through projects like CLPS and NSNS and LTV are designed for applications across both Moon and Mars. While Congress continues to debate potential reductions in NASAs science budget, we remain confident in the resilience of our core exploration programs. CLPS initiative and the LTVS program are progressing with three delivery procurements planned this year, and our major contracts are aligned with national priorities and long-term strategy.
As part of this alignment, Intuitive Machines was invited to testify before the House Space Aeronautics subcommittee on NASA's CLPS initiative. In my testimony, I highlighted how CLPS drives innovation and reshapes the cost of exploration. I also highlighted the opportunity for larger bulk-buy CLPS task orders, showcasing how NASA's early investments in commercial lunar services set the stage for broader participation across various government sectors.
For example, through our NSNS contract, we're extending the benefits of this model by enabling other federal agencies beyond NASA to utilize our data infrastructure and payload delivery services on lunar orbit missions. This strategic approach of leveraging NASA's infrastructure investments to support national security space exploration goals exemplifies how the CLPS model can scale to meet the needs of diverse government initiatives.
As part of our ongoing efforts to diversify into national security space, the first quarter saw meaningful progress under our stealth satellite and orbital transfer vehicle programs. Additionally, we recently secured a key contract award for an earth free entry vehicle, broadening our footprint across the space domain for new government and commercial customers.
Leveraging our Lunar lander architecture, the orbital transfer vehicle is designed to deliver payloads to multiple orbital regimes. We initiated Phase 2 activities under a letter contract with a government customer with the full contract scope expected to be finalized by the end of this month.
We continue to advance next-generation technologies that can transform spacecraft operations in orbit. In the first quarter, we prepared to complete Phase 1 of the Air Force Research Laboratories JETSON contract focused on developing a low-power nuclear electric propulsion system designed to enable stealth-like satellites without the volume or visibility of traditional solar-powered systems.
Intuitive Machines is a sole contractor selected for this program, and we anticipate exercise of the follow-on option later this year. In the days following Q1, we completed the study to transition the on-orbit satellite servicing and manufacturing mission to geostationary orbit for the space force, a move that would diversify our revenue base in alignment with the anticipated 2026 budget growth for national security space. We'll continue to support the study through May and expect the government decision later this quarter.
Transitioning to an adjacent strategic horizon, Intuitive Machines is advancing a critical new capability, Earth reentry. This effort supports our long-term vision to deliver end-to-end space services from the Lunar surface to Precision return on Earth.
In the days following the first quarter, the Texas Space Commission finalized the contract awarding Intuitive Machines $10 million to initiate development of a precision Earth reentry vehicle and microgravity research laboratory. This technology is expected to serve as a key element in the architecture for our future Moon and Mars sample return missions.
This initiative also demonstrates a forward-leaning funding model using state investment to catalyze commercial and federal participation. Alongside the $10 million stake commitment, we're working to secure additional funds through a diverse pipeline of biopharmaceutical customers and strategic government stakeholders.
Our approach will include proprietary precision landing technology, differentiated from traditional ballistic reentry and builds on a strategic partnership with Boryung that we announced in 2023 to accelerate investment in commercialization in microgravity applications.
While we continue to diversify outside of NASA, we are simultaneously advancing and executing on our data transmission services. Under NASA's NSNS contract, we completed a key customer verification milestone and recognized $3 million in revenue during the first quarter. Entering the second quarter, we issued an additional task order valued at $18 million for the next two near space network services milestones, which we expect to complete this summer.
In parallel, we are actively discussing with national security space stakeholders to host multi-agency payloads on our lunar data relay satellites. The lunar data satellite constellation portion of NSNS is designed to provide secure and continuous connectivity for navigation, command and control of spacecraft for a wide array of customers, while driving higher-margin recurring revenue streams.
To complement the satellite constellation, Intuitive Machines operates and provides data analytics services for the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera and ShadowCam As part of this activity, Intuitive Machine stewards the repository for virtually all US lunar imaging and mapping data collected to date.
By pairing high-resolution lunar imagery and analysis with real-time data relay and positioning from our satellites, Intuitive Machines is working to build the foundation for a lunar navigation operating system, enabling secure mobility, route planning, surface navigation and logistics coordination across government and commercial lunar missions.
Our first data relay satellite deployment remains on schedule for a launch along with our IM-3 surface delivery mission in the first half of 2026. In the first quarter, we landed our second lunar mission. The IM-2 mission landed further south than any mission in history in an area surrounded by mountains and perpetual low-angle sun light, conditions no lunar spacecraft had ever previously navigated. We now have first-hand operational data from that region, and we're using it to harden our systems and inform how the industry approaches this part of the move.
IM-3 progress continued in the first quarter. We completed payload testing, including testing of NASA's 3 Jet Propulsion Laboratory-developed rovers. The mission is destined for Reiner Gamma, a mid-latitude region of the moon and one of the most distinctive and enigmatic natural features of the moon known as a lunar magnetic swirl.
As momentum builds for IM-3, it's important that we stay transparent about the technical outcomes of each flight and the real work we're doing to make our systems better.
After completion of the IM-2 mission, which ended early due to the landing anomaly, we performed the comprehensive post-mission review. It included internal teams, external experts and independent reviewers working with NASA and our suppliers to analyze every aspect of descent and landing at the Moon's south pole.
Planning in this harsh environment requires two things. First, you have to land precisely. Second, you have to land softy. Achieving both of these requires our sensors and onboard navigation algorithms to perform nearly perfectly in extreme environments.
We identified three primary contributors that affected the IM-2 landing. One, laser altimeter interference. In the final phase of descent, we saw signal noise and distortion that did not allow for accurate altitude readings.
Two, terrain and lighting effects. South Pole topography and low-angle sunlight created long shadow and dim lighting conditions that challenged the precision capability of our landing system.
Three, crater recognition tuning. Our optical navigation used imagery from LRO at 100 kilometers from the lunar surface that could not accurately account for how craters appear at lower altitudes with South Pole lighting conditions as you approach the landing site.
Moving forward, we will succeed, land softly, land upright, land ready to operate. We've identified the issues and are making the necessary changes we believe will get us there on IM-3.
Here's what's different. We've added dissimilar and redundant altimeters to the sensor suite, and they're going through more rigorous and extreme flight-like testing than we've done before. We've incorporated an additional lighting independent sensor for surface velocity measurements.
We've expanded onboard terrain crater database for enhanced navigation across the surface of the Moon. Additionally, we collected the most detailed imagery of the Lunar South Pole on Mission-2, and we're feeding this unique flight data directly into our machine learning algorithms to improve crater tracking and navigation performance in these extreme conditions.
We must learn fast, needs fixing and move forward smarter. IM-2 gave us data that nobody else has. We're using it to build a better system and applying those lessons directly to IM-3, which remains on schedule.
As we continue to lay the groundwork for improved surface delivery, we are maturing infrastructure programs for essential equipment and systems that make space operations possible. We continue to grow this area of business, and in January, NASA awarded the company a $2.5 million contract to define the Moon to Mars architecture for logistics handling and offloading combined with surface cargo and mobility.
The award for the architecture definition incorporates Intuitive Machines, lunar terrain vehicle and cargo-class lander designs, which made significant strides towards design maturity for NASA's Lunar Terrain Vehicle Services contract culminating and successfully completing the preliminary design review just last week.
Building on the human-in-the-loop testing conducted at Johnson Space Center in quarter four last year for Artemis astronauts evaluate the terrestrial LTV mockup, the team implemented key vehicle modifications based on direct astronaut feedback and verified that these changes met or exceeded NASA's expectations through additional testing. Notably, the team also integrated a scanning LiDAR system in the terrestrial prototype, enabling autonomous self-driving terrain navigation, an essential feature for the extended uncrewed lunar operations and demonstrate this capability in a live evaluation with NASA's LTV Selection team.
Additionally, Moon RACER activated a high fidelity 6 degrees of freedom simulator that digitally replicated 1 6 gravity conditions using lunar surface data from NASA and Intuitive Machines, Phoenix office for Lunar Reconnaissance imagery. This tool advances design validation and astronaut training, while reducing dependency on costly physical prototypes.
We believe the team is positioned with a distinct competitive advantage by achieving these technical milestones, before the final feasibility assessment. Further strengthening its proposal, Intuitive Machines has advanced its heavy-cargo class lunar lander design and integrated its in-house data transmission architecture built on the company's near space network services contract to provide seamless direct to earth and lunar data relay communications, an offering, we believe, is a comprehensive offering versus the other competing LTVS companies.
As stated at the top of the call, national priorities like LTVS continue to be part of the nation's long-term space strategy and timing remains on track for the award of the next phase of LTVS by the end of 2025. A second draft RFP was recently distributed with a response date in the coming months with an award later this year.
On our last call, I said 2025 will be all about execution, and we believe the first quarter set the tone for the rest of the year, as we make progress across our diverse list of programs. Financially, we remained strong with sequential revenue growth, positive free cash flow for the first time in the company's history and moving steadily towards EBITDA profitability.
We expect opportunities for key contract awards throughout the balance of the year for CLPS, LTV and additional NSNS task orders, all of which incorporate Intuitive Machines competitive advantage of delivering technical capability with speed and at an attractive price point.
Now I'll hand off to Pete McGrath, our CFO, for further comments on our financials. Pete?