
Rave Restaurant Group: Fiscal Q3 Earnings Snapshot
THE COLONY, Texas — THE COLONY, Texas — Rave Restaurant Group Inc. (RAVE) on Thursday reported earnings of $722,000 in its fiscal third quarter.
On a per-share basis, the The Colony, Texas-based company said it had profit of 5 cents.
The pizza chain operator posted revenue of $3 million in the period.

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27 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Tim Jensen, Co-Owner and Chief Brand Officer of Grunt Style, Joins Aristocrat Group Corporation Board of Directors
SAN ANTONIO - June 10, 2025 ( NEWMEDIAWIRE ) - Aristocrat Group Corporation (OTC: ASCC), a dynamic and innovative brand development company in the consumer products sector, is proud to announce the appointment of Tim Jensen, Co-Owner and Chief Brand Officer of Grunt Style, to its Board of Directors. A combat-decorated U.S. Marine Corps veteran and nationally recognized branding expert, Jensen brings over a decade of experience in lifestyle brand development, digital strategy, and veteran-focused initiatives. Under his leadership, Grunt Style has grown into one of the most recognizable patriotic apparel brands in the United States, earning a devoted customer base and widespread recognition for its bold messaging and strong cultural identity. 'We are thrilled to welcome Tim Jensen to the Aristocrat Group Corporation board,' said Derek Sisson, CEO of Aristocrat Group Corporation. 'His unmatched branding expertise and commitment to excellence and giving back to the veteran community align perfectly with our vision for future growth. Tim's leadership will be instrumental as we continue to expand our portfolio and strengthen our presence in the lifestyle and consumer goods markets.' Jensen's appointment marks a strategic step for Aristocrat Group Corporation as it positions itself for long-term value creation through innovative brand development, targeted acquisitions, and deeper engagement with veteran and patriotic communities. Jensen's experience, both as a military leader and a brand visionary, is expected to play a key role in shaping ASCC's strategy and accelerating its expansion into high-growth markets. About Aristocrat Group Corporation Aristocrat Group Corporation (OTC: ASCC) is a brand management company specializing in the development and marketing of emerging consumer brands. Through strategic partnerships and targeted marketing, ASCC aims to create sustainable, long-term growth across its portfolio of lifestyle and consumer products. Media Contact: Derek Sisson Aristocrat Group Corporation Email: [email protected] Website: Safe Harbor Statement: This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the company's expectations, hopes, beliefs, or intentions regarding future events. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied in these statements due to various risks and uncertainties, including, but not limited to, the company's ability to successfully execute its business strategy, the impact of competitive products and pricing, general economic conditions, and other risks detailed from time to time in the company's filings with the OTC Markets and other regulatory agencies. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date hereof, and the company undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this release. View the original release on

Associated Press
27 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Askeladden Capital Discloses Questionable Origins of AstroNova's MTEX Technology and Associated Risks, Comments on Q1 Results
C-level executive at Afinia provides extensive context on AstroNova's quality issues, go-to-market failures, and MTEX technology's reliability challenges and risks Askeladden Capital believes AstroNova's Board violated its fiduciary duty by acquiring MTEX with insufficient due diligence and incomplete integration plan We believe AstroNova's governance is careening from bad to worse, with a risky plan to build many AstroNova products on a technology base with known quality concerns - products which now also apparently face competition from MTEX's Chinese development partner Q1 FY26 results demonstrate AstroNova continues to underperform Askeladden to host an open Town Hall forum for all interested parties on Thursday, June 12, at 11 AM ET FORT WORTH, TX / ACCESS Newswire / June 10, 2025 / Dear AstroNova Shareholders, As AstroNova's largest shareholder, jointly with my firm Askeladden Capital (collectively, 'we,') I recently filed a definitive proxy statement soliciting your vote for five new directors at this year's Annual Meeting on July 9 th . We will host a Town Hall via Zoom at 11:00 AM Eastern Time (10:00 AM Central Time) on Thursday, June 12, 2025, for all interested stakeholders to interact directly with our slate; we invite your toughest questions. You can register here . Recently, we published our detailed plan for improving AstroNova's performance, backed by extensive primary research . We believe thorough due diligence is a fiduciary duty of any Board, so we have spent the past few months interviewing relevant industry experts. We continue to extend our research; we have recently spoken to additional former high-level AstroNova employees and managers at several competitors. Today, we release critical findings shedding further light on why the MTEX acquisition represents a severe, fundamental, and ongoing failure of governance by AstroNova's Board, creating a compelling case for change. MTEX's 'disruptive' technology - which AstroNova dramatically overpaid for, in light of the subsequent goodwill impairment - was seemingly co-developed in conjunction with a Chinese supplier, UP Group (UPG), based on printheads that UPG apparently sourced on the open market rather than directly from HP. If that is the case, it could mean that MTEX lacked HP's support in key technical areas potentially critical for product reliability, which could provide insight into MTEX's reliability challenges discussed below. According to both a C-level industry executive and information on UPG's website, UPG now seemingly competes directly against AstroNova, offering a product that appears substantially similar to AstroNova's recently-launched QL-435. These findings reinforce our belief that a boardroom reset is urgently needed. AstroNova's Q1 results fail to demonstrate meaningful inflection in the business - and Mr. Woods, with the backing of the Board, continues to double down on what we believe is a deeply flawed strategy. We cover the following topics in this letter: Section 1 summarizes relevant MTEX history and associated governance failures. Section 2 provides extensive further detail about key MTEX-related challenges. Section 3 builds on our previous primary research, providing further context on numerous strategic failures by AstroNova, ranging from channel partner relationships to ink quality issues. Section 4 briefly addresses several key lowlights from Q1 FY26 results. In the near future, we plan to publish our comprehensive presentation, 'Building a Better AstroNova,' which will summarize and visualize all of Askeladden's published analysis, and comprehensively demonstrate how our slate of talented and motivated nominees better serves AstroNova's shareholders at this critical juncture. Section 1: Summary of MTEX History and Governance Failures We recently interviewed a C-level executive at Afinia who shared many alarming insights that reflect extremely poorly on AstroNova's governance of the MTEX acquisition from start to finish . [1] Afinia is an AstroNova competitor that seems well-regarded in the industry; a former Senior Vice President at printhead-technology vendor Memjet told us that Afinia seemed to be outcompeting AstroNova in the marketplace, despite being a smaller company with fewer resources.[2][3] Afinia spent over a year working with MTEX to commercialize and sell an MTEX product, ultimately walking away due to serious concerns about MTEX's technological reliability and organizational immaturity. The executive also cited specific quality concerns that could arise from the use of 'multi-sourced inks' - noting that original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) such as HP, Canon, and Epson spend millions of dollars to test their ink and ensure it is optimized for the machine, and multi-sourced inks that have not undergone such testing - particularly once mixed together in the machine in unpredictable ways - could damage printheads. AstroNova is no stranger to quality issues, nor has it proven adept at resolving them. While the Memjet ink quality issue affected many customers, the Afinia executive noted his company resolved the issue in about six months - whereas AstroNova struggled with it for over two years, which its Form 10-K discloses ultimately damaged its brand.[4] Another former AstroNova employee (on the aerospace side) expressed severe concerns about AstroNova's quality culture, and we recently spoke to a TrojanLabel customer who has faced consistent and 'existential' issues with his TrojanLabel printer and AstroNova-supplied media.[5] With that already-tenuous backdrop, we believe that a rushed rollout of products based on immature and unreliable MTEX technology could critically and permanently damage AstroNova's brand image. We believe the company's current strategy not only risks perpetuating years of underperformance, but may also jeopardize its future. Despite management's claims that MTEX's technology is 'disruptive,' it has failed to achieve any meaningful product-market fit - prompting a basic but critical question: if MTEX's platform truly offers transformative value, why aren't customers buying it? Why has MTEX technology not found product-market fit? Since the acquisition, MTEX has generated less than half of the expected revenue run-rate; in fact, sales actually declined sequentially from Q3 FY25 to Q4 FY25, and again from Q4 FY25 to Q1 FY26.[6] Compounding AstroNova's challenges in commercializing this technology, UPG seemingly offers the same products at a lower cost; we identified a product on UPG's website that appears identical to AstroNova's recently launched QL-435. Below, we present a summary of our understanding of critical MTEX-related matters leading up to the present day. We then summarize key governance failings, and share detailed insights from our interview with the Afinia executive. We believe this series of unfortunate events highlights a comprehensive failure of corporate governance on the part of AstroNova's Board (including Mr. Woods, who serves as both CEO and Board member.) Specifically: Governance Failure 1: Lack of Coherent Long-Term Strategic Planning. We believe the MTEX acquisition should be evaluated in context of AstroNova's previous acquisition - Astro Machine. It is strategically incoherent - and fiscally irresponsible - to spend $17 million of shareholder capital in 2022 to purchase a company heavily reliant on Memjet, then to spend over $20 million of shareholder capital in 2024 to diversify away from the same reliance that was just increased. Governance Failure 2: Approving MTEX Acquisition Despite Accelerated Due Diligence. Mr. Woods has admitted that due diligence was accelerated.[33] At the time of the acquisition, the company touted 'handsome margins' and made no indication that 70% of the company's product portfolio was low-profit. The company's initial expectations for MTEX's revenue and profitability seem clearly unrealistic. Governance Failure 3: Lack Of Evaluation Of Alternatives. As we discussed extensively in our primary research analysis , and expound upon later with Afinia's experience, AstroNova had other options to diversify its supplier base; the Afinia executive stated he did not believe AstroNova would have needed to spend $20 million to develop and launch products akin to those that it is launching today. Instead, it rushed into the MTEX acquisition. Governance Failure 4: Lack of Integration Plan and Contingency Plan for Key-Man Risk. AstroNova appeared to have limited to no understanding of the challenges it would face in incorporating a " freewheeling 'entrepreneurial company lacking 'established policies and procedures"[34] into the internal-controls environment of a publicly-traded company. AstroNova 'didn't care"[35] about the differences between Portuguese and American culture. AstroNova lacked an integration plan, failing to build relationships between AstroNova leadership and MTEX employees, instead relying entirely on its relationship with MTEX CEO Eloi Ferreira - which soured to the point that Mr. Ferreira and AstroNova are now engaged in legal proceedings. Governance Failure 5: Poor Balance Sheet Management. Compounding the overly optimistic expectations for MTEX profitability based on limited due diligence, the quantum of debt used to finance the acquisition has put the balance sheet at risk. Shareholders were told in June 2024 that 'we have the goal of repaying most […] of the revolving credit debt by the end of the year."[36] Instead, the company breached its covenants, suffered an event of default, and was forced to seek extended repayment terms from its lender. If the lender had not waived the event of default or agreed to a deferred repayment schedule, AstroNova could potentially have been forced to seek rescue financing on unfavorable terms. Governance Failure 6: Doubling Down Rather Than Reevaluating. AstroNova appears to be stuck in the sunk-cost fallacy. The company cannot recover the cash lost as a result of overpaying for an immature company, but it can avoid doubling down on a bad hand. Unfortunately, as we will discuss later, rather than admitting that the MTEX acquisition was a mistake, the company appears to be taking a 'bet-the-farm' approach and rapidly rolling out numerous new products, several in market segments that are new to the company, on the basis of MTEX's technology. The company appears to be careening from an unwise overreliance on Memjet to an unwise overreliance on MTEX technology, rather than establishing a truly diversified technology base. As discussed, this technology has historically experienced reliability issues, may have intrinsic flaws due to the provenance of its development, faces apparent competition from the Chinese supplier UPG with whom the technology was co-developed, and which has yet to demonstrate any sort of commercialization maturity or product-market fit, given the tepid and sequentially declining MTEX revenues reported by AstroNova from Q3 FY25 - Q1 FY26. Conclusion The governance failures we identify are not isolated incidents - they reflect a consistent pattern of poor judgment, inadequate oversight, and a Board that has lost its strategic compass. If elected, Askeladden nominees would correct these governance failures by immediately creating a new Strategy and Risk Committee , whose primary near-term objectives would be a comprehensive re-evaluation of the product portfolio, ensuring that AstroNova's brand and reputation are not further damaged by rushing immature products to market. A longer-term objective will be thoughtful diversification of underlying print-engine and technology platforms. Such an endeavor, as we discuss in the next section, is something that smaller competitor Afinia has accomplished - it remains puzzling why AstroNova is either unable or unwilling to appropriately diversify. Section 2: Detailed Analysis of Key MTEX Challenges AstroNova's governance failures are now operational risks. Below, we present detailed analysis of several key MTEX challenges that we believe AstroNova's Board failed to recognize and appropriately respond to. 2.1: Ongoing Competition from UPG While AstroNova presents MTEX's technology as disruptive and proprietary, we believe that it in fact faces like-for-like competition from the Chinese supplier (UPG) with whom it was co-developed. The Afinia executive noted that " UPG Group has shown these systems at trade shows, " and UPG's website indeed has a press release announcing their participation at Drupa in 2024[37], where AstroNova and MTEX also presented. The executive expressed concern that AstroNova's sales may be hampered by ongoing competition from UPG: 'I think the big thing is to look at their relationship and how things go with the UPG Group. It makes the situation a bit difficult for other people to engage with AstroNova because since it's been at the exhibitions and shows, their product, from what we have out in the market and the quotes they're giving out, is going to be cheaper, of course, on hardware and probably cheaper ink. So, I don't know how those two are going to play together in this industry between AstroNova and UPG Group. I don't know what's in their contract, but it's going to make people leery about selling it, especially through a channel when they know the Chinese can come in and probably sell it for five grand less."[38] We have not yet comprehensively compared products marketed by UPG to products marketed by AstroNova. However, we have identified at least one stark example. UPG's 'LQ-MD M330 Label Printer"[39] appears nearly identical to AstroNova's recently-launched QL-425 and QL-435 printers (which we believe are substantially similar to each other than their media width). UPG and AstroNova's products bear a striking visual similarity. Moreover, the products' technical brochures also display substantially similar specifications. For example, as shown in the image below, AstroNova's QL-435 brochure[40] references a 1-liter ink tank holding water-based CMYK pigment or dye inks, maximum of 1200 x 1200 dpi, a print speed of 18m/min at 1200x600 DPI, a maximum media thickness of 0.5mm, and a maximum print width of 297mm. Meanwhile, as shown in the image below, technical specifications on UPG's website for the LQ-MD M330[41] match all of these criteria: Key governance failure: AstroNova's Board either failed to realize that MTEX's development partner was planning to compete with its products in the marketplace - or worse, realized it, yet proceeded to pay a high price for MTEX anyway. 2.2: Reliability and Quality Challenges Potentially Inherent To MTEX Technology We believe that AstroNova's decision to bet much of its future on MTEX technology - a platform with known reliability issues, potentially caused by its co-development with a Chinese supplier - is not just a failure of governance; it is arguably a more reckless and costly mistake than the company's prior overdependence on Memjet. As referenced in our primary research analysis , we twice interviewed a senior vice president from Memjet who cited reliability issues with MTEX products.[42] A former MTEX sales leader reporting directly to MTEX CEO Eloi Ferreira corroborated some of these challenges: 'Due to the learning curve, clients were doing things wrong and ruining their own printheads. This was a big problem for the clients and MTEX, and we were losing money. As a result, the printheads required a lot of maintenance.' [43] Meanwhile, a former Sales Director at AstroNova said he did not perceive the MTEX technology as " specifically good " and called it " basically very cheap. It's more of a desktop-style printhead from HP."[44] Meanwhile, the Afinia executive explained that after over a year, Afinia ultimately walked away because it was not comfortable associating its brand with MTEX: 'We were not comfortable putting our name on it. Afinia is a well-recognized name in the industry for our products, quality, service, and the support we provide both pre-sales and post-sales. After a year and a half, or whenever this whole thing started, we [we]re not at the comfort level needed to ensure its viability in the market and its true commercialization."[45] Afinia wouldn't risk its brand on even one MTEX product. AstroNova bought the whole company - and is now building much of its future on the same technology platform Afinia walked away from. The Afinia executive went into far more depth on the quality and reliability challenges associated with MTEX technology's original provenance: 'This project involved acquiring an engine from the open market. I can't say whether it was bought through repair shops or spare heads […] this engine, we all know, is an HP engine. This was taken off the open market and developed without interaction from the manufacturer […] There are all kinds of things out there, including refurbished parts. If you go to an HP partner and say, 'Hey, I need 10 or 20 heads,' I don't know if they ask many questions, especially in places like China. They just care about revenue, so they keep selling you print heads. […] When you do that, you won't be able to call Epson or HP and say, 'Hey, how do I write the driver for this?' or 'The software isn't interacting with the print head properly,' or 'The timing isn't right,' or 'It's not feeding at the correct rate.' You have to build all this stuff, and not being an expert or the one who built the print head, it gets quite complicated. Your end product may not optimize that engine because you don't know all the inner workings. You might get it to work and it could be okay or good enough, but you don't get that expertise from the manufacturer. […] We've all had printers where the ink clogs, and you see lines or other issues. I'm guessing they're probably discussing not having the specifications for these maintenance modules and how to keep the print head healthy. What is the schedule? It's complicated to keep these print heads alive and functioning optimally. Without the specifications, knowing how often to perform maintenance, or understanding the capping pressure, it's challenging. […] There's a whole sequence, and it's complicated. Without proper training, if people insert materials that are too thick or don't stay within tolerances, the material can crash into the head. I'm guessing that was happening too. When you crash the head, it's done. If something crashes into the head, you have to replace it."[46] It is possible that AstroNova may now be sourcing printheads directly from HP. If so, we invite the company to clarify this - shareholders deserve transparency about the technology the CEO repeatedly describes as 'disruptive.' Governance failure: AstroNova is basing a substantial portion of its future product portfolio on a technology platform that may be fundamentally unreliable. We do not know if AstroNova has re-engineered the MTEX platform in collaboration with HP to address the serious deficiencies cited above. But if the company is now working directly with HP, it raises yet another critical governance question: why did the Board approve a $20 million acquisition of MTEX - an immature company working with a Chinese supplier (and apparently now competitor) seemingly using components sourced on the open market - instead of partnering with HP from the outset? If AstroNova ultimately arrived at a relationship directly with HP, then the entire MTEX detour through Portugal and China was a costly, unnecessary, and avoidable mistake. One that shareholders paid for. 2.3: Multi-Sourced Inks Create Potential Quality Issues Subsequent to the MTEX acquisition, we were initially excited about AstroNova's promises regarding 'multi-sourced inks.' In light of new information, we have serious reservations. Recall the printhead maintenance issues cited by the former MTEX employee. The Afinia executive pointed to a likely cause: multi-sourced inks can interact unpredictably with printheads - and with each other - increasing the risk of damage and system failure. 'Epson, Canon, and HP optimize their inks for these print engines. If they say a print head is good for 20 liters of ink, they're usually conservative, knowing the ink won't burn out the print head until after 20 liters. In this scenario, when you source your own ink, you need to do extensive testing to ensure it doesn't damage the print head. […] If you don't have a single source or have multiple sources, you need to understand what happens when those inks mix in the delivery system. There are still inks in the tubes and in the print head. If you get two different inks in there, how do they react? Do they lessen the life of the print head or burn it out? There's a risk involved. If it says 20 liters, you have to test your ink. Companies like HP and Epson test for years and spend millions of dollars. It's up to the individual to decide how much testing to do. They might just say it's good enough and choose an ink to buy."[47] As we will discuss in Section 3, it took AstroNova over two years to resolve a quality issue tied to a single supplier - Memjet. Afinia fixed the same problem in six months. What happens if AstroNova now introduces multiple ink suppliers? Any cost savings could be quickly erased by a new wave of quality failures. The Afinia executive also noted that this platform is more complex than the Trojan T2-C - one of the printers affected by AstroNova's unresolved ink issues. [48] 'The print head on [the Trojan T2-C] is much less complicated than an HP that's been taken off the market. To replace a print head, you click in the software, it uncaps a little lid, you pull it out, similar to how you replace a print cartridge at home. You pop a new one in, close the cap, and it goes through its maintenance and service. With these machines, you're talking about removing screws and unbolting components. Once you install the new print head, you have to go through an alignment process to align all the jets. It's complicated. It's not something someone making labels for jams and jellies can do without training. […] Those who buy this equipment expect it to run 24/7. If it doesn't, someone from AstroNova will need to get on a plane or in a car to go there and fix it.' [49] Governance failure: Management is now layering added complexity onto an already fragile platform, in pursuit of cost savings that could be easily undone by reliability problems, despite the company's own history of quality failures, including a two-year struggle to resolve a single-supplier ink issue. We believe shareholders deserve substantial transparency into the quality and reliability testing that has been performed on the many new products that AstroNova aims to launch in quick succession on the basis of MTEX's technology platform. 2.4: MTEX's Organizational Immaturity After more than a year working with MTEX, the Afinia executive offered blunt criticism of its maturity and execution, noting that 'everybody in the industry' knew their Atom 1 [50] product 'didn't work.' 'It wasn't like a public company with established policies and procedures. It was more of a freewheeling environment where you experiment and come up with different things. The structure was lacking, which is not typically how we operate. With the right partner, we weren't looking for 10 products; we focused on one. During the engagement, it was clear they weren't used to our way of working. There was a lack of focus, trying to do too much at once. It was spread so thin that anyone can get a printer to 90%, but that last 10% to make it a sellable product is tough. When you have a bunch of products at 80%, you have nothing. You have to push them across the finish line, which sometimes requires hard work and hearing things people don't want to hear. Looking back, and this is public knowledge, they did the Memjet project several years ago, which turned out to be a disaster. They didn't finish their product. There are great Memjet products in the marketplace, but they couldn't take theirs across the finish line. Everyone in the industry knew it didn't work.' Samir Patel: 'You're still talking about MTEX?' Afinia Executive: 'Yes, when they had the Memjet. I think it was called the Atom 1.' [51] Governance failure: The Board appears to have overlooked, ignored, or failed to investigate MTEX's lack of institutional maturity, quality controls, and product discipline - all of which were apparently well-known in the industry. Section 3: Further Analysis of Other AstroNova Challenges 3.1: AstroNova's Perplexing Struggle To Diversify Away from Memjet In our primary research analysis , we extensively discussed AstroNova's over-concentration with printhead supplier Memjet. The Afinia executive expressed confusion about AstroNova's difficulties in organically developing alternatives to Memjet technology, something Afinia - even as a smaller company - managed to accomplish: Afinia Executive: 'We just deal with [Memjet]. We can't change their business model. It has to make sense for them, and then we decide if we continue doing business with them.' Samir Patel: 'To that point, AstroNova makes a big deal about not being able to move away from Memjet without acquiring MTEX. I would think there were other options, as Memjet is not the only supplier in the world.' Afinia Executive: 'That's a true statement. You can move away. We have Memjet, HP, and OKI. We have toner-based equipment and UV equipment. There are many alternatives […] there are different technologies available.' Samir Patel: 'So you're saying they didn't have to buy MTEX? AstroNova did not have to buy MTEX to move away from Memjet technology if they really wanted to?' Afinia Executive: 'This is just my opinion. With the expertise inside AstroNova, between TrojanLabel, AstroNova, and the Canon systems they have, along with HP box printers through the channel, I don't think it would take $20 million for them to build the system by themselves. Maybe they felt it was the fastest way to market, but I don't think it would have taken $20 million to build the new [QL-]425 or [QL-]435. That's my opinion. I don't know who said that was the only way."[52] It's competitively rational for Memjet to leverage its position; nonetheless, many companies, including Afinia, use Memjet successfully. The key is maintaining alternatives. With a balanced supplier strategy, Memjet can still be a valuable partner - just not the only one. Who is to blame for AstroNova's historical inability to organically diversify away from Memjet? According to this Afinia executive, the problem is certainly not with AstroNova's " incredible… rockstar " Chief Technology Officer Mike Natalizia: 'Mike is incredible. He's a good guy, and I have nothing negative to say about him. I talk to him all the time. He was given a very difficult situation that they're working in now, and he's been a rock star.' [53] This mirrors comments made by others. One other relevant quote comes from a former manager at Epson, who rated AstroNova's technical capabilities only a two or three out of five, but stated: 'Mike Natalizia is very knowledgeable and understands the technology well.' [54] AstroNova purportedly bought MTEX for its technological expertise and product development, but industry veterans have observed that MTEX's products were immature and had known reliability challenges. Moreover, MTEX has less than $6 million of reported revenue in the trailing four quarters. Conversely, AstroNova has spent $6.6, $6.9, and $6.8 million on product development in the past three years - more than MTEX's entire revenue! [55] If AstroNova has a sizable product development budget, and its Chief Technology Officer Mike Natalizia is well-regarded as 'very knowledgeable' and an 'incredible… rock star' by industry peers - then why could AstroNova not organically develop products based on alternative printheads, as MTEX and Afinia both did, despite far fewer resources? What is the 'difficult situation' that Mr. Natalizia is trying to make the best of, according to the Afinia executive? We believe it could only come from one direction - the very top of the company. Recall that we previously heard criticism of AstroNova's 'dinosaur' [56] trade-show dependent marketing strategy from industry peers, as well as former AstroNova employees such as a former sales manager. [57] A former Sales Director at AstroNova explained that the sales organization pleaded with CEO Greg Woods to allocate funds to a modern approach, but he appeared uninterested in others' feedback: Sales Director: 'In a nutshell, it was not just me, it was also our VP [of] Sales saying exactly the same thing. He put quite some emphasis on getting batch budgets allocated to SEO, SEA [search engine advertising], and so on, but it was never really done in a consequent[ial] manner. At the end, it always was 'Well, no, we had so much success in the past with the trade shows. Let's do that right.' […] It really comes from the top of the company really, I have to say that. […]' Samir Patel: 'Just to clarify […] you're saying Greg Woods wants to go to these trade shows regardless of what his VP of sales and the people who are actually selling and trying to generate leads are telling him […].' Sales Director: 'Exactly. I would certainly go that far."[58] Mr. Woods is apparently equally uninterested in participating in collegial industry discussions -the Afinia executive explains: 'All the other companies on the desktop were constantly, communicating. What are you seeing in the market? What are you doing about this? I don't know if Greg doesn't know about the industry, doesn't care, or thinks he already knows what's going on and doesn't want to engage, but I can count on one hand the times we've probably even spoken […] I'm sure you know Primera, NeuraLabel. All of us, we always go at shows or talk a few times a year and want to compare notes. Not him. I don't know if he reaches out to other people in the industry, but with us and our size and our volumes and what we do, you would imagine he would. But the only time we've ever reached out is if they wanted to buy us.' Perhaps if Mr. Woods had spent more time engaging with industry peers, he would have learned about the various quality and reliability issues plaguing MTEX, or identified alternative options to develop innovative new products without spending over $20 million of shareholder capital on the poorly-conceived, poorly-diligenced, and poorly-planned MTEX acquisition. Governance Failure: The Board failed to hold management accountable for developing internal alternatives to Memjet, despite ample resources, talent, and market options. Askeladden Response: Developing a truly diversified technology base will be a critical priority for our newly-established Strategy and Risk Committee. 3.2: AstroNova's Quality Culture Recall that we spoke to a TrojanLabel customer who had faced numerous, 'existential' quality issues with AstroNova media that had shut down his production for a week during peak season,[59] and a quality manager on the Aerospace side of the business who stated " when it came down to making a shipment for revenue, that was priority and that was the culture… if it was functioning even marginally, it was a shipment, it was going.' [60] The Afinia executive shed more light on Memjet-related quality issues. While these took AstroNova more than two years to fully resolve[61], Afinia fixed the same problem in six months due to its focus on quality and customer satisfaction: 'Regarding the ink on Memjet, yes, there was an issue with contamination and shelf life […] Our approach was to mitigate the damage in the marketplace. Whether it involved swapping out ink with new ink or disposing of some inventory, we tried to mitigate it on our side as much as possible. If AstroNova kept shipping the old stock and then switched to the new formulation, I'm not privy to that information. We took corrective action, and that's the only way I can explain why they had so many problems. […] There were various things we ended up doing. Some of it involved absorbing some inventory costs and assisting customers if they had issues, as these were quite sporadic. Another thing we did was implement filtration systems to mitigate the problem. We provided accessories to customers that could be attached to the ink delivery system, which included a set of micro filters. It was fairly straightforward. And we resolved it. […] We just did what needed to be done. We're the type of company that, because we're not public, focuses on taking care of our customers. We took corrective actions, but it wasn't a one-size-fits-all solution since every customer had different scenarios. Some received fresh ink immediately, others used filters, and sometimes we provided free ink or swapped out products or gave a free print head. We aimed to keep everyone satisfied, and I think we dealt with that for about six months.' [62] Governance Failure : AstroNova's Board tolerated a culture that prioritized shipments over quality and failed to instill the accountability needed to resolve customer-facing issues in a timely manner. Askeladden Response: We believe quality cultures are instilled from the top of organizations. Our slate believes that maximizing the value of an installed base starts with treating customer satisfaction and product reliability as non-negotiable - not optional. Unlike the current Board, Askeladden's slate will prioritize proactive service, rapid issue resolution, and quality-driven culture to protect the brand and unlock the full lifetime value of every customer relationship. 3.3: AstroNova's Competition with its Own Channel Partners Recall that we have previously heard many criticisms of AstroNova's mismanagement of its channel partner relationships. A Senior Vice President at Memjet explained: 'They've struggled to really, even as a public company, with the resources they've got, outcompete on the channel marketing skills of somebody like an Afinia."[63] Others, such as a Managing Director at OKI, explained to us why especially in Europe, a channel approach is superior to a direct approach due to differences in local language and culture.[64] The OKI executive also commented on AstroNova's bizarre approach of trying to partner with OKI to go to market, then undercutting OKI on price.[65] The Afinia executive also described AstroNova poaching sales from its own dealers - a shortsighted tactic that sacrifices long-term channel trust for small, short-term gains, ultimately undermining future revenue growth. 'Yes, we are channel-based, and the reason for that is many of these systems require people who would like more local support. […] [AstroNova] typically sell[s] direct. They say they have some partners, but typically the partners don't sell a lot because we know them. They may show the product to get people to call them, but they won't sell much. What ends up happening is they train the customer, do samples, and invest time and money. Then, if the customer calls AstroNova or QuickLabel Systems directly, they'll offer a discount, like selling it for two grand less. The dealer then calls the customer back, only to find out the customer bought directly from AstroNova at a better price. There's a huge conflict. They've tried to have a channel before but have been unsuccessful because they have people selling direct.' [66] Governance Failure: The Board has tolerated a go-to-market strategy that undermines long-term channel relationships in favor of short-term sales, impairing sustainable revenue growth. Askeladden Response: We will prioritize implementing policies to prevent channel-partner conflict and hire a dedicated executive with demonstrated expertise in building and maintaining a successful channel strategy. Section 4: Q1 FY26 Results Review While we are more focused on longer-term strategic concerns at this point rather than quarterly results, we believe there are three elements of Q1 FY26 results that shareholders should carefully consider. 4.1: Inventory Balances AstroNova has long promised to normalize elevated post-pandemic inventory levels, yet results continue to move in the wrong direction. For example, Mr. Woods promised in May 2023: 'We're starting to work our inventory down… it's definitely higher than what we need…. You'll start to see that come down as we go through this year. We've got plans to do it. And we have good, reliable supply… we typically try to keep about three months' supply."[67] On the Q4 FY25 earnings call in April 2025, Mr. Woods promised 'decisive action": 'we're taking decisive action to reduce debt and improve cash flow through an inventory reduction program. These initiatives reflect our commitment to financial discipline and delivering value to our shareholders."[68] Decisive action on inventory balances remains nowhere to be found. We measure inventory balances by the 'inventory days on hand' metric that AstroNova itself calculates and discloses in its SEC filings, which normalizes for the size of the business (given various acquisitions consummated over time). During Q1 FY26, inventory days on hand increased to 185, from 175 at year-end - exceeding the prior year-end peak of 176 (at the end of FY23).[69] By this metric, inventory balances are roughly 50% higher than levels in FY18 and FY19. The company's utter inability to reduce its inventory balances despite promises dating back years is directly harming shareholders. The company's current inventory balances of $51.5 million exceed the company's indebtedness[70] and represent more than 70% of the company's current market capitalization - an incredible figure.[71] If the company converted its $15 - $20 million of excess inventory into cash, it would free up a substantial amount of capital to make organic investments and repay debt. (This is particularly critical given that merely a quarter ago, AstroNova breached its debt covenants, suffered an event of default, and was forced to seek a waiver and a deferred repayment schedule from its lender.) [72] 4.2: Lack of Self-Recognition and Accountability Slide 4 of the company's earnings presentation[73] includes a tone-deaf and accountability-free graphic including the words 'value-generating M&A": The first step to self-improvement is admitting you have a problem. Highlighting 'value-creating M&A' merely one quarter after a covenant breach and goodwill impairment related to the MTEX acquisition demonstrates an alarming lack of accountability. As referenced earlier, MTEX has not only failed to achieve original expectations, but its revenue has actually declined sequentially in Q4 FY25 and Q1 FY26. The company provides a poorly-explained disclosure attributing half of Q1's $1.4 million in sales to 'intercompany' sales[74], and MTEX continues to lose over $1 million per quarter. The company's own Form 10-K plainly states that MTEX's current value, based on historical performance and future expectations, is dramatically below the original acquisition price: Current year operating expenses included a $13.4 million goodwill impairment charge related to the under performance of the MTEX acquisition. Originally, we expected MTEX to achieve $8.0 million to $10.0 million in revenues for the period of May 2024 through January 2025, however, during this period, MTEX generated only $4.2 million of revenue. Due to the actual and expected underperformance of MTEX relative to our original expectations, we performed a strategic review of the MTEX operation, which ultimately led to the conclusion that the goodwill in our PI segment was impaired. Over the year following the MTEX acquisition, AstroNova's shares have also plummeted nearly 50%. During the same time period, small and micro-cap indexes had low single digit declines. Meanwhile, segment-specific benchmarks such as the iShares Aerospace ETF and industrial-printing peers such as Brady Corporation and Zebra Technologies had returns of negative 8% to positive 32%, as shown on the charts below based on data from YCharts. Finally, the company's Form 10-K also disclosed the termination of roughly 10% of the company's global workforce in a restructuring action. So there is not a single framing we can identify in which it is whatsoever reasonable for management to make any claims about 'value-creating M&A.' 4.3: Comparison to Q1 FY25 Results Without Acknowledging FY24 Results or Original Guidance In the presentation and on the earnings call, CEO Greg Woods made much of the company's double-digit year-on-year revenue growth in Q1 FY26. This certainly sounds impressive. However, a deeper look demonstrates that results continue to underwhelm. First, we believe it is worth remembering that Q1 FY25 saw year-over-year declines in revenues in both segments. As such, a more accurate comparison is to revenues from two years ago. [75] Further, there are important dynamics to note for each segment. First, in Product ID, the company's own Q1 FY24 earnings release[76] notes that revenues were impacted by the then-ongoing ink quality issues that were not resolved until the end of FY24. So even Q1 FY24 results are not exactly a starting point to be excited about. Second, we note that given the company's dominant market share for ACARS printers in its Aerospace segment, revenue growth in the Aerospace segment is driven less by anything that AstroNova management is doing, but instead more by production rates at Airbus and Boeing, as well as delivering on shipments that were delayed last year. As Mr. Woods explained on the call in his own words: 'Backlog for the quarter declined by $2.8 million year-over-year to $25.5 million, primarily driven by clearing previously delayed shipments. As we move through fiscal 2026, we expect to benefit from our new product introductions and the increasing build rates with Airbus and Boeing."[77] Moreover, we believe that shareholders should be more focused on profitability metrics than revenue metrics; it is ultimately profitability and cash flow that drive shareholder value. While the company seems to be proud of its guidance for FY26, we note that expected results this year are well below actual results in FY24, and even farther below the company's original guidance for FY25 and FY26 provided at the end of FY24. The subsequent acquisition of MTEX with over $20 million in shareholder capital should have improved upon earnings. The waterfall charts below demonstrate the significant shortfall relative to where earnings should be, according to AstroNova's own words from 2024.[78] Conclusion We believe that AstroNova's board violated their fiduciary duty to shareholders by consummating the MTEX acquisition. In review, MTEX: Despite all of these challenges, AstroNova consummated the MTEX acquisition based on rushed due diligence, then failed to develop a credible integration plan. Is it any wonder that less than a year later, shareholders have suffered a nearly 70% impairment on the original cash outlay, lived through a covenant breach and event of default (subsequently waived), and suffered a nearly 50% decline in the stock price? Even now, the Board is compounding past mistakes-doubling down on a failed strategy rather than acknowledging error and charting a better course. The Board is building a large portion of AstroNova's future product portfolio on a technology platform with known reliability concerns -a decision that could prove catastrophic to AstroNova's brand image given the company's checkered past track record of resolving quality issues in a timely fashion. Setting aside any other issues, we believe that the comprehensive failure of governance related to the MTEX acquisition represents a fireable offense. Indeed, we advocate that shareholders summarily dismiss Mr. Quain, Mr. Woods, Mr. Warzala, Ms. Schlaeppi, and Mr. Michas from Board service - instead electing Askeladden's five nominees, Mr. Kravetz, Mr. Oviatt, Mr. Patel, Mr. Roberts, and Mr. Sands on the GOLD card. I encourage all shareholders, large or small, to reach out to me directly if they wish to share their perspectives on AstroNova and discuss how our nominees can set the company on a path to a brighter future. I have committed to not accepting any cash or stock compensation for serving as a director (only customary reimbursement of expenses.) My sole motivation is the restoration of shareholder value on behalf of my clients and all long-suffering AstroNova shareholders. I look forward to speaking with you individually and earning your vote. As a reminder, this Thursday, June 12 th , at 11 AM ET, we plan to host a virtual town hall meeting for AstroNova shareholders to interact directly with our nominees. You can register here . This filing, and future filings, will also be made available to shareholders after dissemination on EDGAR via our website: These documents will also be available at no cost at Sincerely, Samir Patel [email protected] (682) 553-8302 Samir Patel, Askeladden Capital Management LLC, Jeff Sands, Shawn Kravetz, Ryan Oviatt and Boyd Roberts (collectively the 'Participants') filed a definitive proxy statement and accompanying proxy card with the SEC on May 20, 2025, as amended on May 21, 2025, to be used in soliciting proxies in connection with the 2025 annual meeting of shareholders (the 'Annual Meeting') of AstroNova, Inc. (the 'Company'). All shareholders of the Company are advised to read the Proxy Statement and other documents related to the solicitation of proxies, each in connection with the Annual Meeting, by the Participants, as they contain important information, including additional information related to the Participants, including a description of their direct or indirect interests by security holdings or otherwise. The Proxy Statement and an accompanying GOLD proxy card will be furnished to some or all of the Company's stockholders and is, along with other relevant documents, available at no charge on the SEC website at , or by contacting Samir Patel at 1452 Hughes Road, Suite 200 #582, Grapevine, TX, 76051. [1] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [2] 'Former SVP at Memjet Believes AstroNova Needs Clear Marketing Strategy for Growth and Profitability.' Tegus. Published May 15, 2025. [3] Tangentially, Afinia is also a customer of AstroNova; some of its products are produced by AstroNova's Astro-Machine subsidiary. [4] FY2024 Form 10-K filed April 12, 2024. [5] AstroNova: Trojan Label Customer's Perspective. In Practise - Published May 31, 2025. [6] MTEX revenues disclosed in AstroNova's filings as follows. Revenue of $768,000 and loss before taxes of $1.754M reported in Form 10-Q for Q2 FY25, filed September 17, 2024, see note 3 (10-Q does not appear to have page numbers.) Revenue of $1.74M and loss before taxes of $1.42M reported in Form 10-Q for Q3 FY25, filed December 12, 2024, see note 3 (10-Q does not appear to have page numbers.) Revenue of $4.163 million and operating loss of $16.88 million, including $13.4 million goodwill impairment, reported for full year on page 24 of the Form 10-K filed April 15, 2025. By subtraction, Q4 revenue is $1.657M. Q1 FY26 MTEX revenue of $1,402 reported on Page 10 of Form 10-Q for Q1 FY26, filed June 6, 2025, although for the first time, a disclosure reads that $727,000 of MTEX revenue was 'related to sales that were sold to third parties via intercompany sales,' and also that 'MTEX no longer operates as an independent business, but rather our manufacturing operation in Portugal is treated as a cost center. The majority of MTEX sales are through intercompany operations.' We do not have a clear interpretation of what this implies for like-to-like comparisons of MTEX's revenue and cost structure to prior quarters where this disclosure was not made. [7] AstroNova; MTEX Post Acquisition Challenges. In Practise. Published May 31, 2025. [8] Former SVP at Memjet Believes AstroNova Needs Clear Marketing Strategy for Growth and Profitability.' Tegus - May 15, 2025. [9] AstroNova; MTEX Post Acquisition Challenges. In Practise. Published May 31, 2025. [10] Former SVP at Memjet Believes AstroNova Needs Clear Marketing Strategy for Growth and Profitability.' Tegus - May 15, 2025. [11] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. With regards to the Atom 1 reference, we note that MTEX showcased its 'Atom 3" product at the Drupa trade show in June 2024, according to an AstroNova press release on June 5, 2024. Although we are not specifically familiar with the Atom 1 product, we presume it was a predecessor to the Atom 3. [12] AstroNova; MTEX Post Acquisition Challenges. In Practise. Published May 31, 2025. [13] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [14] Former [Sales] Director at AstroNova Believes Competitors' Faster Solutions Pose Challenges and Emphasizes Need for Improved Online Presence. Tegus / Alphasense. Published May 7, 2025. [15] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [16] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [17] AstroNova; MTEX Post Acquisition Challenges. In Practise. Published May 31, 2025. [18] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [19] We have signed affidavits from multiple other shareholders to whom Mr. Woods represented the same. [20] Former Manager at Epson America Thinks AstroNova Must Embrace Advanced Technology to Compete With Chinese Rivals. Tegus / Alphasense. Published May 5, 2025. [21] 'Former SVP at Memjet Believes AstroNova Needs Clear Marketing Strategy for Growth and Profitability.' Tegus - May 15, 2025. [22] Legal proceedings between Mr. Ferreira and AstroNova are discussed on page 19 of FY2025 Form 10-K, published April 15, 2025. [23] AstroNova; MTEX Post Acquisition Challenges. In Practise. Published May 31, 2025. [24] MTEX Acquisition Announcement 8-K and MTEX Acquisition Call Transcript, May 9, 2024. [25] AstroNova Q2 FY25 Earnings Call Transcript, September 16, 2024. [26] AstroNova Form 10-K for FY2025. [27] AstroNova Form 10-K for FY2025. Impairment discussed on page 11; purchase price discussed on page 15. [28] Form 8-K filed March 21, 2025. [29] Term 'highly disruptive' used on both Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript - April 14, 2025 - and Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript - June 5, 2025. [30] Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript - June 5, 2025. [31] Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript - June 5, 2025. [32] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [33] We have spoken with other shareholders to whom Mr. Woods has made similar statements. [34] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [35] AstroNova; MTEX Post Acquisition Challenges. In Practise. Published May 31, 2025. [36] Q1 FY2025 Earnings Conference Call Transcript. June 6, 2024. [37] [38] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [39] UPG website, accessed June 8, 2025. [40] QL-435 Professional Digital Label Press. AstroNova. Accessed June 8, 2025. [41] [42] 'Former SVP at Memjet Believes AstroNova Needs Clear Marketing Strategy for Growth and Profitability.' Tegus - Published May 15, 2025. [43] AstroNova; MTEX Post Acquisition Challenges. In Practise. Published May 31, 2025. [44] Former [Sales] Director at AstroNova Believes Competitors' Faster Solutions Pose Challenges and Emphasizes Need for Improved Online Presence. Tegus / Alphasense. Published May 7, 2025. [45] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [46] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [47] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [48] 'Memjet Ink Issues.' Post by user 'hgrunwell' on 'Print Planet' forum on December 23, 2021. See also ensuing posts by users Ivilyn, schwarzmuller, and jwoyshnar discussing the same issues. [49] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [50] With regards to the Atom 1 reference, we note that MTEX showcased its 'Atom 3" product at the Drupa trade show in June 2024, according to an AstroNova press release on June 5, 2024. Although we are not specifically familiar with the Atom 1 product, we presume it was a predecessor to the Atom 3. [51] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [52] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [53] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [54] Former Manager at Epson America Thinks AstroNova Must Embrace Advanced Technology to Compete With Chinese Rivals. Tegus / Alphasense. Published May 5, 2025. [55] FY2025 Form 10-K filed April 15, 2025. Page 22. [56] AstroNova: Domino & Product Identification Landscape. In Practise. Published May 9, 2025. [57] AstroNova: Product ID Go-To-Market Challenges. In Practise. Published May 25, 2025. [58] Former [Sales] Director at AstroNova Believes Competitors' Faster Solutions Pose Challenges and Emphasizes Need for Improved Online Presence. Tegus / Alphasense. Published May 7, 2025. [59] AstroNova: Trojan Label Customer's Perspective. In Practise - Published May 31, 2025. [60] 'Former Quality Manager at AstroNova Believes Aggressive Change and Leadership are Key for Competitive Edge.' Tegus - Published May 6, 2025. [61] FY2022 Form 10-K filed April 14, 2022 and Q4 FY 2022 earnings conference call transcript on April 14, 2022. FY2023 and FY2024 Form 10-K [62] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [63] 'Former SVP at Memjet Believes AstroNova Needs Clear Marketing Strategy for Growth and Profitability.' Tegus. Published May 15, 2025. [64] AstroNova: OKI OEM Partnerships & Channel Strategy. In Practise. Published June 2, 2025. [65] AstroNova: OKI OEM Partnerships & Channel Strategy. In Practise. Published June 2, 2025. [66] Preliminary transcript of interview with C-level executive at Afinia, conducted via In Practise on June 5, 2025. Formatted transcript to be published in the In Practise database later this month. [67] May 2023 Sidoti Micro-Cap Virtual Conference - Call Transcript. [68] Q4 2025 Conference Call Transcript. 2025-02-14 [69] The inventory days on hand metric is referenced on page 31 of AstroNova's Q1 FY26 Form-10Q, filed June 6, 2025. All data in the chart below is similarly sourced from the Form 10-K with the SEC for the relevant years. [70] The company's Form 10-Q, filed June 6, 2025, reflects $18.4 million outstanding on the line of credit, $6 million of current long-term debt, $327,000 of short-term debt, and $20 million of long-term debt, totaling just under $45 million - less than the company's $51.5 million inventory balance. One could also consider the royalty obligations and lease obligations on the balance sheet as forms of indebtedness, but these would not change the math significantly. [71] Data sourced from YCharts as of June 8, 2025. [72] Form 8-K filed March 21, 2025. [73] AstroNova Q1 FY26 Earnings Presentation published June 6, 2025. [74] All data in the chart is sourced from AstroNova's filings, other than the estimate of quarterly profitability, which is Askeladden analysis based on management's discussion of 'handsome' margins. MTEX revenues disclosed in AstroNova's filings as follows. Revenue of $768,000 and loss before taxes of $1.754M reported in Form 10-Q for Q2 FY25, filed September 17, 2024, see note 3 (10-Q does not appear to have page numbers.) Revenue of $1.74M and loss before taxes of $1.42M reported in Form 10-Q for Q3 FY25, filed December 12, 2024, see note 3 (10-Q does not appear to have page numbers.) Revenue of $4.163 million and operating loss of $16.88 million, including $13.4 million goodwill impairment, reported for full year on page 24 of the Form 10-K filed April 15, 2025. By subtraction, Q4 revenue is $1.657M. Q1 FY26 MTEX revenue of $1,402 reported on Page 10 of Form 10-Q for Q1 FY26, filed June 6, 2025, although for the first time, a disclosure reads that $727,000 of MTEX revenue was 'related to sales that were sold to third parties via intercompany sales,' and also that 'MTEX no longer operates as an independent business, but rather our manufacturing operation in Portugal is treated as a cost center. The majority of MTEX sales are through intercompany operations.' We do not have a clear interpretation of what this implies for like-to-like comparisons of MTEX's revenue and cost structure to prior quarters where this disclosure was not made. [75] Data sourced from Form 10-Q for relevant years. [76] Q1 FY24 Earnings Release. June 8, 2023. [77] AstroNova Q1 FY26 Earnings Call - June 6, 2025. [78] AstroNova's Q4 FY24 earnings release from March 22, 2024 explains: 'For fiscal 2025, AstroNova expects to achieve full-year organic revenue percentage growth in the mid-single digits. Additionally, as AstroNova continues to drive operational improvements throughout the business, the Company expects its full-year adjusted EBITDA margin to be 13% to 14% this year and further improve by 100 basis points per year over the following two fiscal years.' 5% (mid single digit) growth would imply revenues increasing from $148.1 million to $155.5 million; the midpoint of margins (13.5%) implies $21 million based on that revenue. Similar math is used to arrive at our estimate for FY2026. MTEX estimates are based on management commentary at the time of acquisition, discussed extensively elsewhere in this document. SOURCE: Askeladden Capital Management LLC press release


The Hill
27 minutes ago
- The Hill
States sue 23andMe over genetic data sales
More than two dozen states, along with the District of Columbia, are suing biotechnology company 23andMe over plans to auction off personal genetic information without their customers' knowledge or consent. The lawsuit, which was filed Monday by twenty-seven states in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Eastern District of Missouri, says that the California-based firm, which filed for bankruptcy in March, cannot sell off customers' sensitive data without obtaining consent from each of the individuals. 'New Yorkers and many others around the country trusted 23andMe with their private information and they have a right to know what will be done with their information. My office is joining 27 other attorneys general to protect people's most private information and to make sure 23andMe abides by the law,' New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) said in a news release on Tuesday. The human genetics firm, founded in 2006, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in March in U.S. federal court in Missouri. The company gained popularity for its at-home DNA tests. Customers had to send saliva samples by mail and then they would get genetic reports. 23andMe has collected biological samples and genetic information for more than 15 million consumers. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, another biotechnology company, said last month that it would purchase for $256 million. When it filed for bankruptcy, 23andMe said the personal information of customers could be accessed, transferred or sold as part of a transaction, but the potential buyers will have to comply with its privacy policies. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals said it would follow the outlined policies and the laws on-hand. Customers can erase their data from the 23andMe site. House lawmakers launched an investigation a month after the biotech company filed for bankruptcy, expressing concerns over the individuals' data and added that some users were unable to delete their information off the website.