Company: CPSH
Filing Date: 2025-08-01
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0001437749-25-024312
Chunk: 14

Company: CPS TECHNOLOGIES CORP/DE/
Filing Date: 2025-08-01
Form: 10-Q
Item: Part I, Item 1
Chunk 14
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 such that we will be able to meet our obligations as they become due.

Contractual Obligations (all $ in 000’ s unless otherwise noted)

The Company has a line of credit (LOC) in the amount of $3.0 million with Rockland Trust Company. The LOC is secured by the accounts receivable and other assets of the Company and has an interest rate of the National Prime Rate as published by the Wall Street Journal (7.5% on 6/28/2025). OnJune 28, 2025, the Company had $0 of borrowings under this LOC and its borrowing base at the time would have permitted an additional $3.0 million to have been borrowed.

In March 2020, the company acquired a scanning acoustic microscope for a price of $208 thousand. The full amount was financed through a 5 year note payable with a financing company. This note was paid in full in the first quarter of 2025.

The Company has one real estate lease expiring in February 2026. CPS also has a few other leases for equipment which are minor in nature and are generally short-term in duration. None of these have been capitalized. (Note 6, Leases)

  ITEM 3      QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK  
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The Company is not significantly exposed to the direct impact of interest rate changes or foreign currency fluctuations. Nevertheless, one of the Company’s major competitors is located in Japan. The relative strength of the US dollar versus the Japanese yen can have a negative impact on the Company’s ability to raise prices when necessary to offset increasing costs. The Company has not used derivative financial instruments.

Although CPS has not been directly impacted by the war in Ukraine, potential supply chain disruptions and its impact on energy costs are areas where we could be impacted in the future.

Inflation and the impact of tariffs on our costs is an area where we have seen some affect on our business. We have seen price increases in commodity raw materials, such as aluminum, as well as increases in other costs of doing business. As we receive new orders we have been able to pass on most of these costs to our customers. Fortunately, raw materials make up a smaller portion of our overall costs. While they provide a headwind to our profitability, they are a relatively small factor in that total equation. As inflation continues or new tariffs are put in place, our ability to continue to