Had a quick glance at Spectur, a tiny little company (~$8m market cap) that develops remote sensing systems. They're pretty impressive, largely self sufficient units that can have high definition and thermal vision, and connected to smart cloud based software, storage and control. They're mainly used by utilities, and for Government and Construction sites.
At the latest half, the company reported revenue of just over $2m and a loss of $1m.
Roughly half of revenue comes from renting out a fleet of units to customers, and the other half from associated SaaS products. In total they get a roughly 60% gross margin.
On a run-rate basis from January levels, which picked up from a covid induced slump, Spectur is looking at $3m in annual revenues. That'd bring it much closer to breakeven, assuming they can do it.
It seems that the key thing to watch is the growth in the rental fleet, as that feeds the SaaS business. Spectur now has 350 units in the field, having grown from 0 in 2017. But numbers here have been flat over all for the past year or so, supposedly due to covid. Really good to see a strong start to the second half, but i'm mindful that sales tend to be especially lumpy for small businesses. Too early to tell if there's genuine traction.
I also have no insights into the competitive nature of the industry. As an outsider, Spectur's tech looks pretty cool, but I have no idea what else is out there, and how it compares. I might be wrong, but it's hard to see what competitive advantage you could have in this space; i dont think any of the (hardware) tech is proprietary.
I also dont know what the SaaS offering is like, but there'd be a lot of intense competition here in terms of image processing applications. That being said, the system is open to 3rd party integrations, and demand for things like AI, analytics, face recognition etc could be a good driver of unit sales.
The company has around $2m in net cash, which isnt a huge amount of wiggle room. They may need to raise again.
Shares are very thinly traded too, so will be very hard to build any reasonable position, and it'll be very volatile.
Anyway, it's something I might keep on a watch list.