Item 7.
MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS.
The following management’s discussion and analysis of financial condition and results of operations provides information that management believes is relevant to an assessment and understanding of our plans and financial condition. The following selected financial information is derived from our historical financial statements and should be read in conjunction with such financial statements and notes thereto set forth elsewhere within this Annual Report on Form 10-K and the "Forward-Looking Statements" explanation included elsewhere herein. For discussion and analysis pertaining to 2024 overview and highlights as compared to 2023, please refer to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on March 18, 2025.
Overview
Lightwave Logic, Inc. is a specialty materials and intellectual property company focused on the development and commercialization of proprietary electro-optic (“EO”) polymer materials designed to enable high-speed optical modulators for data communications and other photonic applications.
Our Perkinamine® family of EO polymer materials is engineered for integration into silicon photonics (“SiPh”) and other photonic integrated circuit (“PIC”) platforms. When incorporated into device architectures, these materials are designed to support high-speed, high-bandwidth optical modulation with lower drive voltage requirements relative to certain conventional silicon-based approaches and certain other traditional photonic material systems, including III-V–based technologies. The electro-optic properties of these materials can allow shorter interaction lengths in modulator designs, which can contribute to more compact device footprints and increased integration density. In addition, our materials are intended to be compatible with complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (“CMOS”) fabrication processes, which may facilitate integration into established semiconductor foundry workflows. Reduced drive voltage operation may enable lower system-level power consumption and simplified driver electronics in specific implementations.
We do not manufacture optical transceivers, photonic devices, or complete optical modules. Instead, our strategy is to commercialize our technology through a combination of material sales, intellectual property licensing, process design kit (“PDK”) enablement, and royalty or other fee-based arrangements tied to customer production.
Our customers and prospective customers include semiconductor foundries, silicon photonics device designers, optical module manufacturers, and system integrators serving artificial intelligence (“AI”), cloud computing, data center, and telecommunications markets. We pursue customer adoption through a structured commercialization process designed to support evaluation, integration, qualification, and production readiness within established semiconductor manufacturing ecosystems.
As of January 2026, multiple customer programs are progressing through defined development stages under our commercialization framework. The timing and scale of potential production revenue depend on customer product qualification and adoption cycles, technical validation, manufacturing readiness, end-market demand, and broader industry conditions.
Unless the context otherwise requires, all references to the “Company,” “we,” “our” or “us” and other similar terms means Lightwave Logic, Inc. Also, this Form 10-K Annual Report may include the names of various government agencies and the trade names of other companies. Unless specifically stated otherwise, the use or display by us of such other parties’ names and trade names in this report is not intended to and does not imply a relationship with, or endorsement or sponsorship of us by, any of these other parties.
Commencement of Commercial Operations
We commenced commercial operations in May 2023. Presently, our commercial operations consist of a material supply license agreement to provide Perkinamine ® chromophore materials for polymer based photonic devices and photonic integrated circuits (PICs). The license agreement represents tangible commercial progress for electro-optic polymers as part of our Company's business plan. During 2025, we entered into a non-recurring engineering joint development arrangement with a customer to develop an electro-optical polymer-based modulator chip for use in communication applications
Business Strategy
Business Model - Material + IP Licensing
Our business model is centered on the commercialization of proprietary electro-optic polymer materials and related intellectual property through material supply and licensing arrangements.
We do not currently seek to manufacture finished optical transceivers, discrete photonic devices, or complete optical modules. Our strategy is to enable customers to incorporate our materials into their own device platforms and manufacturing ecosystems, leveraging established semiconductor foundry infrastructure.
Our revenue model may include one or more of the following components:
Material Sales
We supply EO polymer materials to customers for evaluation, prototyping, and potential commercial production. Material sales may occur during development phases as well as during volume manufacturing, subject to customer qualification and demand.
If customer programs transition to commercial production incorporating our materials, material revenue would be expected to scale with device volumes.
Intellectual Property Licensing
We may enter into licensing agreements covering aspects of our polymer compositions, device designs, integration processes, and related intellectual property. Licensing arrangements may include:
Upfront license fees,
Development or milestone-based payments, or
Field-of-use or application-specific licenses.
The structure and economics of such agreements vary depending on customer requirements and the scope of intellectual property granted.
Royalty or Production-Based Fees
In certain arrangements, we may receive royalties or other production-based payments tied to the manufacture or sale of devices incorporating our materials or licensed technology. The structure, rate, and duration of such payments depend on negotiated terms and customer product lifecycles.
There can be no assurance that any given customer program will result in royalty-bearing production.
Revenue Timing Considerations
Customer engagements typically progress through multi-stage development cycles. During early stages, revenue may consist primarily of material sales, non-recurring engineering (“NRE”) fees, prototype-related activities, or development support.
Based on the current status of customer programs, we anticipate that revenues, if any, recognized during 2026 would primarily relate to material supply, NRE arrangements, or prototype and development activities. We do not currently expect significant revenue from volume commercial production of customer products until 2027 at the earliest. The timing and magnitude of any production-related revenue depend on successful product qualification, yield validation, customer adoption decisions, end-market demand, and broader industry conditions.
There can be no assurance that development-stage programs will transition to volume production, that anticipated timelines will be achieved, or that commercial revenues will occur as expected.
Strategic Flexibility
While our current strategy is focused on materials supply and intellectual property licensing, we may evaluate selective opportunities to participate more directly in device-level development in limited circumstances. Such participation, if pursued, would likely be application-specific and would depend on market conditions, partnership opportunities, capital requirements, and strategic considerations.
We have not committed to entering device manufacturing as a core component of our business model, and any such activity would be evaluated in the context of our overall capital allocation priorities and commercialization strategy.
Operating Leverage
Our model is designed to leverage existing semiconductor fabrication infrastructure rather than require capital-intensive wafer fabrication facilities. By integrating into established foundry process flows, we seek to enable scalable production through customer and foundry manufacturing capacity.
If customer programs advance to high-volume production, incremental material demand and royalty streams may provide operating leverage due to the intellectual property-driven nature of our model. However, realization of such leverage depends on successful qualification, customer adoption, competitive dynamics, and end-market demand.
Commercialization Process (Design Win Cycle)
We pursue customer adoption through a structured, multi-stage engagement framework that we refer to as our Design Win Cycle. This process is designed to guide customer programs from initial technology evaluation through potential production ramp within established semiconductor manufacturing ecosystems.
While program timelines vary based on customer requirements, foundry schedules, application complexity, and market conditions, the Design Win Cycle typically spans approximately 18 to 24 months.
Capital Requirements
We have satisfied our capital requirements since inception primarily through the issuance and sale of our common stock.
Results of Operations
Comparison of the year ended December 31, 2025 to the year ended December 31, 2024
Revenues
During the year ended December 31, 2025, we recognized $106,855 of licensing and royalty revenue and $130,000 of non-recurring engineering revenue. During the year ended December 31, 2024, we recognized $81,855 of licensing and royalty revenue and $13,750 of revenue for the device processing work on the device supplied by a customer.
Cost of Sales
During the year ended December 31, 2025, we recognized $6,823 in cost of sales. During the year ended December 31, 2024, we recognized $7,395 in cost of sales.
Operating expenses
For the
Year Ended
December 31, 2025
For the
Year Ended
December 31, 2024
Change from
Prior Year
Percent
Change from
Prior Year
Research and development
General and administrative
Research and development expenses decreased for the year ended December 31, 2025, as compared to the year ended December 31, 2024, primarily due to decreases in research and development non-cash stock option and restricted stock awards and units amortization expenses, prototype device development and wafer fabrication expenses, research and development salary and employee benefits expenses, and research and development travel expenses.
We expect to continue to incur substantial research and development expenses developing and commercializing our electro-optic materials platform. These expenses will increase because of accelerated development efforts to support commercialization of our non-linear optical polymer materials technology and create next-generation photonic EO device designs; working with semiconductor foundries; hiring additional technical and support personnel; engaging senior technical advisors; pursuing other potential business opportunities and collaborations; customer testing and evaluation; and incurring related operating expenses.
General and administrative expenses increased for the year ended December 31, 2025, as compared to the year ended December 31, 2024, primarily due to increases in general and administrative salary and employee benefits expenses and general and administrative non-cash stock option and restricted stock awards and units amortization expenses, offset by a decrease in consulting expenses.
Other Income
For the
Year Ended
December 31, 2025
For the
Year Ended
December 31, 2024
Change from
Prior Year
Percent
Change from
Prior Year
Other Income
Other income decreased for the year ended December 31, 2025, as compared to year ended December 31, 2024, primarily due to an increase in commitment fee associated with the purchase of shares by an institutional investor for sale under a stock purchase agreement and a decrease in interest income on money market account, offset by a decrease in loss due to retirement of certain expired patent applications and patents.
Net Loss
For the
Year Ended
December 31, 2025
For the
Year Ended
December 31, 2024
Change from
Prior Year
Percent
Change from
Prior Year
Net Loss
Net loss was $20,313,797 and $22,535,041 for the year ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively, for a decrease of $2,221,244 due primarily to decreases prototype device development and wafer fabrication expenses, and research and development travel expenses, offset by net increases in salaries and employee benefits expenses and an increase in commitment fee associated with the purchase of shares by an institutional investor for sale under a stock purchase agreement.
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
Our Company’s accounting policies are more fully described in Note 1 of Notes to Financial Statements. As disclosed in Note 1 of Notes to Financial Statements, the preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and accompanying disclosures.
An accounting policy is considered to be critical if it requires an accounting estimate to be made based on assumptions about matters that are highly uncertain at the time the estimate is made, and if different estimates that reasonably could have been used, or changes in the accounting estimate that are reasonably likely to occur, could materially impact the consolidated financial statements.
We consider the estimates related to the fair value of option and warrant awards on the date of grant using the Black Scholes model, recognition of the compensation expense for performance stock units over the service period based on the likelihood that the applicable performance goals will be achieved, valuation of internally developed patents and externally acquired intangible assets, test for impairment of long-lived and finite-lived intangible assets, and estimation of the deferred tax assets valuation allowance to be the most critical in the preparation of our consolidated financial statements as they are important to the portrayal of our financial condition and require significant or complex judgment and estimates on the part of management. Further details on each item are discussed in Notes 1, 7, 9 and 11 to our Financial Statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
Although these estimates are based on our management’s best knowledge of current events and actions our Company may undertake in the future, actual results could differ from the estimates.
Liquidity and Capital Resources
During the year ended December 31, 2025, our primary source of operating cash inflows was (i) proceeds from the sale of common stock to Titan Partners Group LLC (investment banker) (“Titan”), proceeds from the sale of common stock to Lincoln Park Capital Fund, LLC (institutional investor) (“Lincoln Park”) pursuant to purchase agreements with Lincoln Park and proceeds from sale of common stock by Roth Capital Partners, LLC (investment banking company) (“Roth Capital”) pursuant to the at-the-market sales agreement with Roth Capital as described in Note 10 to the Financial Statements and (ii) proceeds received pursuant to the exercise of options and warrants.
On December 15, 2025, we entered into an underwriting agreement (the “Underwriting Agreement”) with Titan Partners Group LLC, a division of American Capital Partners, LLC, as the underwriter (the “Underwriter”), relating to an underwritten public offering of 11,666,667 shares of the Company’s common stock, par value $0.001 per share, at a price to the public of $3.00 per share (the “Offering”). Pursuant to the Underwriting Agreement, we granted to the Underwriter an option, exercisable not later than thirty (30) days after the date of the closing of the Offering, to purchase from us up to 1,750,000 additional shares of common stock for the purpose of covering over-allotments, if any. The Offering closed on December 17, 2025. The net proceeds us from the Offering were approximately $32.8 million during the year ended December 31, 2025, and approximately $4.9 million in January 2026, after deducting underwriting discounts and commissions and other estimated offering expenses payable by us. We intend to use the net proceeds from the Offering for working capital and other general corporate purposes and may use a portion of the net proceeds to accelerate our commercialization timeline, accelerate and expand its U.S. production capacity to support customer partnerships and design-ins, to pursue strategic mergers and acquisitions or to invest in complementary technologies or businesses. Pursuant to the Underwriting Agreement, we agreed to issue to the Underwriter warrants to purchase up to 350,000 shares of Common Stock, or three percent (3%) of the total number of shares of Common Stock sold in the Offering, as well as additional underwriter warrants to purchase up to an aggregate of 52,500 shares of common stock, which were issued upon the exercise by the Underwriter of its option. The underwriter warrants will be immediately exercisable at an exercise price of $3.45 per share during the five-year period following the date of the Underwriting Agreement.
On February 28, 2023, we entered into a purchase agreement with Lincoln Park (the “2023 Purchase Agreement”) to sell up to $30 million of registered common stock over a 36-month period. On March 17, 2025, we entered into a new purchase agreement with Lincoln Park (the “2025 Purchase Agreement”) to sell up to $30 million of registered common stock over a 36-month period. On December 12, 2025, the 2025 Purchase Agreement was terminated in conjunction with the Titan Offering. On December 9, 2022, we entered into the at-the-market sales agreement with Roth Capital, as sales agent, (the “Roth Sales Agreement”) pursuant to which we may offer and sell up to $35 million in shares of our registered common stock, from time to time through Roth Capital. As of the date of this filing, $12,235,261 remains available pursuant to the Roth Sales Agreement.
During the year ended December 31, 2025, the Company received $1,486,983 in proceeds pursuant to the 2023 Purchase Agreement, $3,646,655 in proceeds pursuant to the 2025 Purchase Agreement, $18,785,657 in proceeds pursuant to the Roth Sales Agreement, $32,825,700 in proceeds from the Titan Offering, $355,583 in proceeds pursuant to the exercise of options and warrants, and $75,000 in cash collections from the material supply and license agreement.
During the year ended December 31, 2025, our primary sources of cash outflows from operations included payroll, rent, utilities, payments to vendors including laboratory and wafer fabrication materials and supplies expenses, and third-party service providers.
Sources and Uses of Cash
Our future expenditures and capital requirements will depend on numerous factors, including: the progress of our research and development efforts; the rate at which we can, directly or through arrangements with original equipment manufacturers, introduce and sell our products; the costs of filing, prosecuting, defending and enforcing any patent claims and other intellectual property rights; market acceptance of our products and competing technological developments; and our ability to establish cooperative development, joint venture and licensing arrangements. We expect that we will incur approximately $2,400,000 of expenditures per month over the next 12 months. On December 31, 2025, our cash and cash equivalents totaled $69,017,354.
We expect the proceeds received pursuant to the Titan Offering and the Roth Sales Agreement, the exercise of options and warrants, and commercial operations to provide us with sufficient funds to maintain our operations over the next 12 months. Our current cash position enables us to finance our operations at least through December 2027 before we will be required to replenish our cash reserves. Our cash requirements are expected to increase at a rate consistent with our Company’s revenue growth as we expand our activities and operations with the objective of increasing our revenue stream from the commercialization of our electro-optic polymer technology. We currently have no debt to service. We expect that our cash used in operations will continue to increase during 2026 and beyond because of the following planned activities:
The addition of management, sales, marketing, technical, production and other staff to our workforce;
Increased spending for the expansion of our research and development efforts, including purchases of additional laboratory and production equipment;
Increased spending in marketing as our products are introduced into the marketplace;
Partnering with commercial foundries to implement our electro-optic polymers into accepted PDKs by the foundries;
Developing and maintaining collaborative relationships with strategic partners;
Developing and improving our manufacturing processes and quality controls; and
Increases in our general and administrative activities related to our operations as a reporting public company and related corporate compliance requirements.
At the Market Sales Agreement – Roth Capital
On December 9, 2022, we entered into the Roth Sales Agreement with Roth Capital, as sales agent. Pursuant to the Roth Sales Agreement, our Company may offer and sell up to $35 million in shares of our common stock, from time to time through Roth Capital. Upon delivery of a placement notice based on our Company’s instructions and subject to the terms and conditions of the Roth Sales Agreement, Roth Capital may sell the shares by methods deemed to be an “at-the-market offering” as defined in Rule 415(a)(4) promulgated under the Securities Act, including sales made directly on or through The Nasdaq Capital Market, on any other existing trading market for the Company’s common stock, in negotiated transactions at market prices prevailing at the time of sale or at prices related to such prevailing market prices, or by any other method permitted by law, including negotiated transactions, subject to the prior written consent of our Company. We are not obligated to make any sales of shares under this agreement. The Company or Roth Capital may suspend or terminate the offering of shares upon notice to the other party, subject to certain conditions. Roth Capital will act as sales agent on a commercially reasonable efforts basis consistent with its normal trading and sales practices and applicable state and federal law, rules and regulations and the rules of Nasdaq. We have agreed to pay Roth Capital commissions for its services of acting as agent of 3.0% of the gross proceeds from the sale of the shares pursuant to the Roth Sales Agreement.
The amount of proceeds we receive from the Roth Sales Agreement, if any, will depend upon the number of shares of our common stock sold and the market price at which they are sold. There can be no assurance that we will be able to sell any shares under or fully utilize this agreement. Roth Capital is not required to sell any specific number of shares of our common stock under the agreement.
We cannot assure you that we will be able to sell any shares under or fully utilize the Roth Sales Agreement with Roth Capital. In the event we fail to do so, and other adequate funds are not available to satisfy long-term capital requirements, or if planned revenues are not generated, we may be required to substantially limit our operations, which could result in our Company reducing some capital expenditures or reducing staff and discretionary costs.
Analysis of Cash Flows
For the year ended December 31, 2025
Net cash used in operating activities was $13,749,186 for the year ended December 31, 2025, primarily attributable to the net loss of $20,313,797 adjusted by $2,051,204 in options issued for services, $551,466 amortization of deferred compensation, $801,595 amortization of performance stock units, $1,278,403 amortization of restricted stock units, $370,311 in common stock issued as commitment shares under the 2023 and 2025 Purchase Agreements, $1,903,368 in depreciation expenses and patent amortization expenses, $205,354 amortization of right of use asset, $20,018 gain on disposal of property and equipment, $45,170 loss due to retirement of certain expired patent applications, ($145,188) in accounts receivable, ($199,360) in prepaid expenses and other current assets, and ($277,694) in accounts payable, accrued bonuses, accrued expenses, contract liability and other liabilities. Net cash used in operating activities consisted of payments for research and development, legal, professional and consulting expenses, salaries, rent and other expenditures necessary to develop our business infrastructure.
Net cash used by investing activities was $1,817,202 for the year ended December 31, 2025, consisting of $485,429 in cost for intangibles and $1,331,773 in asset additions for the Colorado headquarter facility and labs.
Net cash provided by financing activities was $56,915,778 for the year ended December 31, 2025, and consisted of $355,583 in proceeds from exercise of options and warrants, ($171,925) cashless option exercise tax payments, ($12,875) tax payment on net settlement of vested restricted stock awards, $5,133,638 in proceeds from the sale of common stock pursuant to the 2023 and 2025 Purchase Agreements, $32,825,700 in proceeds from the Titan Offering and $18,785,657 in proceeds from the sale of common stock pursuant to the Roth Sales Agreement.
On December 31, 2025, our cash and cash equivalents totaled $69,017,354, our assets totaled $79,185,249, our liabilities totaled $4,539,419 and we had stockholders’ equity of $74,645,830.
For the year ended December 31, 2024
Net cash used in operating activities was $15,550,515 for the year ended December 31, 2024, primarily attributable to the net loss of $22,535,041 adjusted by $4,440,003 in options issued for services, $446,628 amortization of deferred compensation, $154,210 in common stock issued for commitment shares, $1,682,760 in depreciation expenses and patent amortization expenses, $192,487 amortization of right of use asset, $213,440 loss on disposal of property and equipment and retirement of certain expired patent applications and patents, $(15,189) in accounts receivable, $835,880 in prepaid expenses and other current assets, and ($965,693) in accounts payable, accrued bonuses, accrued expenses, contract liability and other liabilities. Net cash used in operating activities consisted of payments for research and development, legal, professional and consulting expenses, rent and other expenditures necessary to develop our business infrastructure.
Net cash used by investing activities was $2,697,899 for the year ended December 31, 2024, consisting of $430,501 in cost for intangibles and $2,267,398 in asset additions for the Colorado headquarter facility and labs.
Net cash provided by financing activities was $14,484,291 for the year ended December 31, 2024, and consisted of $337,350 in proceeds from exercise of options and warrants, $12,366,965 in proceeds from resale of common stock to an institutional investor and $1,779,976 in proceeds from at the market sale of common stock by an investment banking company.
On December 31, 2024, our cash and cash equivalents totaled $27,667,964, our assets totaled $37,807,983, our liabilities totaled $4,384,078 and we had stockholders’ equity of $33,423,905.
Contractual Obligations
See “Note 8–Leases” of the notes to the financial statements contained elsewhere within this Annual Report on Form 10-K for a discussion of our operating lease for office and laboratory space.