AEye’s QQ1 2025 results reflect a company transitioning from a technology-focused narrative to a commercialization-focused one, anchored by the Apollo lidar program and a capital-light operating model. Revenue was modest for the quarter at $64k, but the year-over-year trajectory shows material top-line growth in a highly early-stage revenue environment (YoY revenue up 220% and QoQ up 39%). The quarter featured several high-impact milestones: the Apollo units moving into high-volume production with LITEON as a Tier 1 manufacturing partner, initial B-sample readiness for automotive OEM quoting, and progress toward NVIDIA DRIVE integration in the ADAS ecosystem. Management highlighted a pivot to a capital-light framework, cost discipline, and the ability to deploy Apollo across multiple markets with software-driven configurability, which potentially lowers marginal cost per new deployment. The company also disclosed a strengthened liquidity position, including $25.9 million in cash and marketable securities and total liquidity around $74 million when including credit facilities, targeting a cash runway into mid-2026. However, GAAP profitability remains negative with Q1 operating loss of $6.8 million and net loss of $8.02 million, and the company reiterated that the near-term cash burn will reflect lease-dispute settlements and one-time payroll costs. Management guided 2025 cash burn to $27–$29 million, implying a staged burn-down as non-lease-related costs normalize. The narrative emphasizes Apollo’s software-definable advantage, manufacturing flexibility, and international market expansion as key catalysts, balanced against the execution risk of scaling manufacturing and converting PoCs into revenue. Investors should weigh the near-term burn against the longer-term TAM opportunities in automotive lidar and adjacent markets where Apollo can displace legacy sensor stacks.