Data Storage Corporation (NASDAQ:DTST) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript April 14, 2026
Data Storage Corporation beats earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $0.4, expectations were $-0.09.
Operator: Greetings, and welcome to the Data Storage Corporation Fiscal Year 2025 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to your host, Ms. Alexandra Schilt, Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.
Matthew Galinko: Thank you. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Data Storage Corporation’s 2025 Fiscal Year Business Update Conference Call. On the call with us this morning are Chuck Piluso, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Chris Panagiotakos, Chief Financial Officer. The company issued a press release this morning containing its 2025 fiscal year financial results, which is also posted on the company’s website. If you have any questions after the call or would like any additional information about the company, please contact Crescendo Communications at (212) 671-1020. Before we begin, please note that today’s call contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Actual results may differ materially due to various risks and uncertainties described in the company’s filings with the SEC. Except as required by law, the company assumes no obligation to update or revise forward-looking statements. I’d now like to turn the call over to Chuck Piluso. Please go ahead, Chuck.
Charles Piluso: Thanks, Allie. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. First, I would like to acknowledge the delay in reporting our fiscal year 2025 results. which was necessary to allow additional time to complete our year-end audit. This was primarily driven by the complexity of several significant transactions during the year, including the sale of our CloudFirst subsidiary, the classification and settlement of many of our outstanding warrants and the completion of a tender offer. However, we are pleased to be here today to discuss our results in more detail. 2025 was the most consequential year for Data Storage Corporation’s 25-year history. It was a year defined not just by strong financial results by decisive action.
Action that fundamentally reshaped our company, strengthened our balance sheet and positioned us for a new phase. Over the past year, we made deliberate choice to unlock the value we had spent more than 2 decades building and redirect that value towards what we believe is a significantly larger opportunity ahead. We executed on that strategy in 3 critical ways. First, we monetized CloudFirst for a total transaction value of $40 million. That transaction generated approximately $31.6 million in net proceeds and a $20.1 million gain. We sold a strong asset at full value because we believe that capital could be deployed into opportunities with greater long-term potential. At closing, we had an estimated $41 million in the bank based on our cash balance of $10 million plus the sale of CloudFirst.
Second, we returned $29.3 million of that capital directly to shareholders through a tender offer at $5.20 per share, reducing our outstanding share count by approximately 72%. That level of capital return is rare for a company of our size and reflects a core principle of ours, capital belongs to the shareholders. And when we generate it, we allocate it responsible, whether that means returning it or investing it for growth. Third, we reset the company. We entered 2026 debt-free with over $10 million in capital, a clean balance sheet and at this point, a simplified operating structure. From a financial standpoint, these actions resulted in record performance. We reported a net income of $19.2 million for the year compared to $500,000 for 2024.
At the same time, I want to be very clear with investors this level of profitability reflects the CloudFirst transaction and other nonrecurring events. It does not yet represent earnings power of DTST, and we are being intentional and transparent. What it does demonstrate is our ability to create value and recognize and to realize that value and to act with discipline in how we allocate capital. Today, our core operating business is Nexxis and it’s performing. In 2025, Nexxis generated $1.4 million in revenue, representing a 13.4% year-over-year growth. Gross margins expanded to 44.4%. And importantly, we improved the quality of the business by reducing customer concentration, with no single customer accounting for more than 10% of the revenue.
Nexxis is lean, subscription-based recurring revenue business with improving margins and real operating leverage. And that brings us to the most important part of our story. What comes next? We have deliberately positioned DTST as a NASDAQ-listed acquisition platform with capital, flexibility and a clear mandate to identify, acquire and scale high-quality businesses in large and growing technology markets. We are actively evaluating opportunities in areas where we believe we have both a strategic alignment and the ability to add value, including AI-enabled vertical SaaS GPU infrastructure, cybersecurity and SOC-related services as well as scalable technology businesses with recurring revenue models. These are not abstract targets. These are markets with significant tailwinds where disciplined capital deployment can drive meaningful long-term returns.

In fact, we’ve already identified and are actively pursuing a number of strategic opportunities with an emerging GPU infrastructure segment in enterprise technology. These areas are being shaped by strong tailwinds, including a rapid adoption of AI-driven workloads, ongoing data architecture, modernization and increasing demand for scalability, resilient digital infrastructure. Our focus remains on large evolving markets where demand visibility is high, and we believe we can deploy capital in a disciplined, accretive manner with an emphasis on opportunities that are offering compelling, risk-adjusted returns and clear avenues for long-term value creation. We are actively advancing these initiatives, positioning ourselves to stay agile and selective as they’re developed.
We expect to provide meaningful updates in the near term as these opportunities evolve. Importantly, we are only pursuing opportunities where we understand the consumer behavior and business deeply, and where we see a clear and credible path to value creation. At the same time, we are focused internally on improving efficiency. As we move through 2026, we expect corporate overhead to decline meaningfully as we transition from CloudFirst divestiture is completed. Our objective is to ensure that the earning power of this company is driven by operations, not onetime events. So when you step back and you look at DTST today, what you see is a company that has undergone a complete transformation. We have moved from a traditional cloud-based managed service model to a streamlined, well-capitalized platform with flexibility to pursue higher growth, higher-margin opportunities.
We have demonstrated that we can build value that we are willing to realize it when the timing is right. And now we are focused on the next phase, building a company defined by our sustainable growth, disciplined execution and long-term shareholder returns. 2025 was about realizing value. 2026 and beyond will be out seeking opportunities, bringing together synergistic companies and creating shareholder value. Now I’d like to turn the call over to Chris Panagiotakos for a review of our financial results. Chris?
Chris Panagiotakos: Thank you, Chuck. Good morning, everyone. As discussed on our last call, on September 11, 2025, we closed the sale of our CloudFirst business for $40 million. As a result of the transaction and in accordance with auditing and reporting standards, our ongoing financial reporting now reflects only our continuing operations, specifically our Nexxis subsidiary. Sales from continuing operations were $1.4 million for the year ended December 31, 2025, an increase of $164,000 or 13.4% compared to $1.2 million in the prior year. The increase was primarily attributable to continued growth in our Nexxis Voice and Data Solutions business driven by the addition of new customers and increased spending for existing customers.
Revenue growth during the period reflects continued demand for our voice and data connectivity solutions and expansion of services within our existing customer base. Selling, general and administrative expenses for the year ended December 31, 2025, increased $348,000 or 9.1% to $4.2 million from $3.8 million for the year ended December 31, 2024. The increase was primarily driven by a $507,000 or 101.6% increase in noncash stock-based compensation primarily related to the accelerated vesting of equity awards in connection with the sale of the CloudFirst business, which triggered a fundamental transaction clause in equity award agreements with employees. Salaries and director fees increased $166,000 or 9.8% attributable to annual merit-based salary adjustments and bonuses.
These increases were significantly offset by a $301,000 or 22.8% decrease in professional fees, primarily related to lower legal and consulting expenses in the current year. We expect expenses to decrease for the year ended December 31, 2026, as compared to the year ended December 31, 2025, since a significant number of its employees are no longer working for us and instead are working for the buyer of CloudFirst business, and we anticipate having lower legal and accounting costs. Net income attributable to common shareholders for the year ended December 31, 2025, was $19.2 million compared to net income of $523,000 for the year ended December 31, 2024. The significant increase in net income for the 2025 fiscal year was primarily driven by the gain recognized on discontinued operations.
We ended the quarter with cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities of approximately $41 million at December 31, 2025, compared to $12.3 million at December 31, 2024. Thank you. I will now turn the call back to Chuck.
Charles Piluso: Thanks, Chris. Before we open the call to questions, I just want to reinforce what we believe we’re entering into an exciting new phase. We attended the NVIDIA conference a few weeks ago, which reinforced the magnitude of the opportunity emerging across both technology and business. The pace of innovation and the scale of investment underway are substantial, signaling a transformation shift across industries. At the same time, it sharpened our approach rather than competing directly in a capital-intensive area, such as the billions being deployed into GPUs and core infrastructure, we are focused on a disciplined participation. We have identified several key areas to focus to pursue that — and we are advancing them deliberately allocating capital thoughtfully and concentrating on opportunities we see a clear differentiation and the potential to drive meaningful long-term value. Now I’d like to open it up for questions. Operator?
Q&A Session
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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Matthew Galinko with Maxim Group.
Matthew Galinko: And congratulations on getting to this point in the transition. Maybe can you give us some sense of what valuations look like? Is it kind of what you expected when you started this process, particularly as you look towards some of the AI and HPC opportunities? Is there — is it kind of within reason? Or is it over overheated at all?
Charles Piluso: Thanks, Matt, and it’s good hearing your voice. What’s going on is after attending that conference, Matt, is that this is like nuclear energy. Some people are frightened, but most people are very, very excited. And what’s happening on the equipment side of things, you can put your hands on and it’s very, very tangible. On the software side, everyone uses the term, they’re training. They’re training their platforms, their software and all. So when we see the valuations really you hear things like someone that’s not even at a beta side of the software, people are hoping to get $700 million and their pre-revenue. But for the most part, as I walk through the conference, I would say that NVIDIA has paid for everyone at that conference.
It was huge out of San Jose. It was just amazing on it. But after spending 25 years in disaster recovery and business continuity, I went there with, Matt, one of our Board members. And we think we have an idea on a potential opportunity to be able to cost something out. That’s something that we know pretty well. We’re still testing the waters. We still have a lot of research to do on it over a period of time. But there are parts that you can play in that you’re not going to get crushed or playing with someone that’s raising or spend $50 billion on GPUs. So there are some opportunities given that based on our past experience that we see. So the valuations are all over the place. Most of the people that we spoke to — and by the way, Matt, over the — since September and we closed, we’ve spoken to 21 companies that we either have passed on, we’ve passed on, that are everything from a SaaS AI offering to an MSP to VoIP companies.
And we’re both basically seeing on the MSP side, you’re looking really it’s nonrecurring usually for the most part, unless it’s software renewals. They’re trading at 1x, but they’re trying to get 2.5x revenue. It’s according to the size that they really are. And on some of the AI stuff, I just have to say that 95% of everyone we’ve spoken to either at that conference and all, they’re waiting to go buy their 120-foot yacht. So it’s not there yet. But the excitement of what’s going on is incredible. I think we potentially have some ideas on where we can play that separates us a little bit. But An answer to your question, Matt, it’s just all over the place, you’re hoping to, like I say, get a $700 million value. I mean, I’m sitting in a — not that I’m a bar goer, but sitting in a hotel bar locked in with around 15 to 20 people that have pass-through that a lot of people kind of knew.
And one guy was working on the software and his laptop sitting next to me, and they’re going literally for a $700 million valuation. So I think it’s all over the place. Everybody is trying to create water. It’s a long answer, but it’s that incredible, Matt. It’s that incredible what’s going on.
Matthew Galinko: No, I appreciate the color. And maybe does having cash in the bank ready to deploy, get the counterparties a little more interested in the conversation? Or is that helping to kind of move things along in some of these conversations?
Charles Piluso: Two of the things that we’re kind of looking at, well, 3 things, which we always laid out. Oh, is there a reverse merger out there that will give stockholder value great value and all. We’re not rushing to that, but people are approaching us and we’re saying, well, gee, why can they do that and we can’t. Why can they build something that has a $100 million market cap and more why can’t we? So we’re really not so focused on that now. We’ll look at opportunities because they’re approaching us. But there’s also — I’m going to call it the medium tech, the stuff that’s not on fire, you could get burned. So there are some really good MSPs out there, and some of them have developed some AI software. So we’ve been talking to them, some of these companies about, well, how about we separate it and what’s the meat and potatoes that your MSP and we look at doing something there.
And then anything on the software side that for the term that everybody is still training still working on we’ll create something as a joint venture or something where we have the opportunity to buy it if you actually deploy it. So you need to really get creative because most of the folks that are in this MSP space as well as VoIP companies as well. They caught on, and they’re trying to develop the software so they can roll it out to their customer base that they have. And I think that’s pretty good. But I don’t think we have to give any value yet to that software. But it might be something that’s good because organic growth is very tough and there might be some good cross-selling that goes on. So that’s some of the stuff that we’re looking at, let’s go medium tech.
Let’s not — while we’re still looking at this other thing that we kind of feel that might be a good opportunity in the AI infrastructure GPU space.
Matthew Galinko: Got it. And then maybe just last question for the existing business. Can you — is it possible to give us a sense of what the quarterly run rate or burn would look like operating without a transaction currently? And generally, what your expectations for Nexxis are over the next year operating independently?
Charles Piluso: Sure. I’ll handle the Nexxis. I’ll turn the [ burn ] over to Chris. Go on Chris, you have an idea of what our run rate was typically where a range of where you think it might be?
Chris Panagiotakos: So I think the burn rate for 2026 will be probably about $2 million for the year. being a public company.
Charles Piluso: Yes. So we think we can reduce some of that, Matt, in certain areas because the legal fees were pretty high. and we’re still incurring some of them as we go through it. So we’ll give it a range, that’s an estimate. Don’t hold us to it, but that’s kind of what we’re expecting on that. On the Nexxis side of things, they’re growing. We own 80% of Nexxis. John Camello runs that does a great job. He has a small staff. He’s adding some folks to it. I think he has to — I don’t want to say he has to, we have to allocate a little bit more money, not much, but to improve his inbound leads. He does a great job with agents and with shows, associations and all of that. But I think we have to spend a little bit of money not much to improve the SEO side of things.
But he’s profitable, he turned to profit. We never really allocated a lot of money in this sense to growth. It’s been around for a while. We put money in as we needed it. But we haven’t said, here’s $100,000 get a digital marketing agency, get the lead flow going. We’re trying to hold on to the cash we have, be very disciplined for the first acquisition, along with — we have 2.1 million shares outstanding, give or take, it’s a little bit more than that. But we want to be careful with that, that if we’re going to say, hey, we’re going to go raise money, which we would, that it’s going to be an increase in value.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Mr. Piluso, I see no other questions at this time. I’ll turn the floor back to you for final comments.
Charles Piluso: Thank you. Thanks for the questions, Matt. As we enter this next phase from a position of real strength with capital on the balance sheet and a clean simplified structure and a clear strategic mandate. That combination gives us the ability to be selective, to be disciplined and to focus only on opportunities that we believe can create meaningful long-term value for our shareholders. At the same time, we remain grounded in execution. Our priorities are clear: Continue improving performance of Nexxis, deploy capital thoughtfully into areas that enhance our scale, expand our margins and strengthen the overall quality of our earnings. We are building with intention, and we are building for durability. And we do appreciate the trust and support of our shareholders. We look forward to updating you on our progress as we move through 2026 and execute on the opportunities ahead. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. This concludes today’s conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.
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