Parrot SA reported QQ2 2024 revenue of β¬30.593 million, representing a QoQ increase of approximately 99.95% from β¬15.30 million in Q1 and a YoY decline of about 3.04%. The company produced a gross profit of β¬12.65 million, translating to a gross margin of 41.35% on revenue. Despite this, operating expenses totaled β¬34.95 million, yielding an operating loss of β¬9.646 million and an EBITDA of β¬-9.375 million. Net income came in at β¬-5.05 million for the quarter, with basic and diluted EPS of β¬-0.33. The disparity between gross margin and net profitability is driven by substantial other expenses (β¬17.45 million) and ongoing R&D investment, underscoring Parrotβs continued push into hardware and software ecosystems (drones, Pix4D, SaaS offerings) that aim to monetize via data services and enterprise solutions over the longer term.
From a balance sheet and cash flow perspective, the group remains cash-rich on an absolute basis but shows signs of operating cash burn. Operating cash flow was negative at β¬-2.95 million for QQ2 2024, with capex at β¬-0.50 million, resulting in free cash flow of β¬-3.45 million. Net change in cash for the period was negative β¬8.50 million, bringing cash and cash equivalents to β¬19.57 million at period end. The company maintains a net cash position (net debt of β¬-13.20 million) despite a modest level of gross debt (short-term β¬4.88 million, long-term β¬6.35 million).
Strategically, Parrot benefits from its integrated hardware/software ecosystem, including Pix4Dmapper and drone-based vine monitoring and industrial applications, which position it to capitalize on growing enterprise and agricultural drone adoption. However, the QQ2 results highlight the ongoing challenge of translating top-line momentum into near-term profitability amid heavy R&D and other non-operational costs. Investors should monitor the trajectory of gross margin sustainability, operating expense discipline, and progress toward profitability as Parrot scales its software and services portfolio.