IN FIRST QUARTERLY REPORT, MINIM SEES $13.7M IN NET REVENUE
Minim, the Manchester-based developer of internet of things software and hardware, reported net revenues of $13.7 million in its first quarterly report as a publicly traded company.
The company, which sells its products under the Motorola brand, said that, for the year, it had $48 million in net revenue, a 28% increase from 2019, which was before Minim’s December 2020 merger with Zoom Telephonics.
The gross profit was reported at $13.6 million.
The fourth-quarter revenue of $13.7 million was 14% higher than the previous quarter, Minim reported.
In a March 9 conference call, Gray Chynoweth, Minim’s CEO, said Minim and Zoom Telephonics have been “smoothly integrated” across departments.
He said that, among the quarter’s highlights, was its launch of software-enabled, Motorola-branded modems that are being sold by Amazon and Target.
Minim was founded in 2017 by Jeremy Hitchcock, founder of Dyn. He is executive chair of the firm, which he said he started “to advance the
smart home.” He said the firm’s goal is “to give consumers the same
protections on their data that was afforded by big enterprises.”
AMAZON’S HEALTHCARE UNIT EYES NEW HAMPSHIRE
Amazon
Care, a subsidiary of Amazon that provides telehealth services, has
filed paperwork to operate in 21 more states, including New Hampshire.
Amazon
Care was launched a year ago as an app providing on-demand chat and
video consultations with medical professionals for Amazon’s employees in
the Seattle area. Users can also book inperson visits at their home or
office with clinicians. In recent months, Amazon Care has incorporated
in New Hampshire as well as Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia,
Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Montana, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode
Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont and Wyoming,
according to the online publication Stat.
Amazon began exploring the healthcare field in 2017, when it made several high-profile hires from the sector. It also acquired
Manchester-based online drugstore PillPack for $753 million in mid- 2018
and in 2019 won approval to allow its voice-activated artificial
intelligence, Alexa, to transmit private patient information.
MASS., VERMONT CHALLENGE PAN AM RAILWAYS DEAL
Officials
in Massachusetts and Vermont are challenging CSX Transportation’s bid
to acquire Pan Am, claiming the transaction will lessen competition
among freight carriers in New England while posing risks to commuter
service in Massachusetts.
The
states have been joined by trade unions and rail shippers as well as
state lawmakers and local officials in questioning the deal, which is
before the federal Surface Transportation Board.
The
New Hampshire Department of Transportation has filed a notice to
participate in the proceedings, but has not yet submitted a substantive
comment. In New Hampshire, CSX would acquire 121 miles of track divided
among five lines owned and operated by Pan Am.
SPRAGUE’S REVENUE TOOK A BIG HIT IN 2020
Portsmouthbased
energy supplier and materials handling company Sprague Resources’ sales
were off by a third — more than $1 billion — in 2020, but the company’s
bottom line improved thanks to the value of its storage operations for
the future market and signing a contract to handle windmill components.
The
company said the pandemic and warmer weather resulted in dramatically
reduced sales as people drove less and there was a huge drop in heating
demand, particularly on the commercial side.
Sales
for the fourth quarter of 2020 were $627 million, compared to just
short of $1 billion during the last quarter in 2019, the company said in
its earnings report. Similarly, sales for the entire year totaled $2.3
billion, down from the previous year’s $3.5 billion.
Net
income fell for the quarter as well, from $2.5 million (2 cents a
share) compared to $11.8 million during the last quarter of the previous
year, but for the year, net income rose more than $2.5 million to $33.8
million or $1.11 a share, thanks to the profitability of its storage
services.