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Harvard Bioscience, Inc. (HBIO)

Q4 2023 Earnings Call· Thu, Mar 7, 2024

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to Harvard Bioscience, Inc. Fourth Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Please note that today's conference is being recorded. I will now hand the conference over to your speaker host, Dave Sirois, Director of SEC Reporting. Please go ahead, sir.

Dave Sirois

Analyst

Thank you, Olivia, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining the Harvard Bioscience fourth quarter 2023 earnings conference call. Before we begin, I would like to suggest that you take a moment and download a copy of our presentation that will be referred to during this call. The file is entitled Q4 2023 HBIO Quarterly Earnings Presentation and is located in the Investor Overview/Events & Presentations section of our website. Leading the call today will be Jim Green, Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Jennifer Cote, Chief Financial Officer. Before I turn the call over to Jim, I will read our safe harbor statement. In our discussion today, we may make statements that constitute forward-looking statements. Our actual results and performance may differ materially from what we have projected due to risks and uncertainties, including those described in our annual report on Form 10-K for the period ended December 31, 2022, our subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and our other public filings. Any forward-looking statements, including those related to the company's future results and activities, represent our estimates as of today and should not be relied upon as representing our estimates as of any subsequent day. Also much of today's call will focus on our non-GAAP quarterly results, which we believe that it represents the ongoing economics of the business, reflects how we set and measure our incentive compensation plans and how we manage the business internally. The differences between our GAAP and non-GAAP results are outlined in the earnings release and today's presentation. These two documents as well as a replay of this call can be found on our website under Investor Overview/Events & Presentations. Additionally, any material, financial or other statistical information presented on the call which is not included in our press release and presentation, will be archived and available in the Investor Relations section of our website. I will now turn the call over to Jim. Jim, please go ahead.

Jim Green

Analyst

Thank you, David, and hello, everybody. Let's move to Slide 3 of the presentation and take a look at the highlights for the quarter. Let me start with saying, I'm pleased to see growth in North America. However, similar to numerous life science tools companies, we were held back by post COVID lower demand in China. Revenue for the quarter was $28.2 million, down a modest 1% from last year on an as reported basis. This revenue includes the net effect of $900,000 of discounted products compared to the prior-year period. We did see a net positive currency effect of $400,000. So, adjusting for both currency and discontinued products, underlying core revenue was up about 1 percentage point from the same period last year. Gross margin improved to $16.3 million or 58% of revenue, up 230 basis points from the same period last year. Our GAAP operating profit was $300,000, up from a negative $500,000 last year. Adjusted operating profit measured $3.3 million or 11.6% of revenue, about flat with prior year. Adjusted EBITDA measured as $3.7 million or 13% of revenue, again about flat to last year. GAAP earnings per share was $0.04 loss, again same as last year. And adjusted EPS measured a positive $0.04 a share, again same as last year. Cash flow from operations came in at $4.3 million, up from $2.7 million last year. In the appendix, you'll find the bridge from GAAP measurements to adjusted or non-GAAP measurements. So, let's move on to Slide 4 and take a look at revenue in the quarter by product family and by region. Starting in the Americas, revenue was up 4.1% as reported and included a 2.1% net reduction from discontinued products. So, our core revenue is up about 6%. Pre-clinical had strong growth in core telemetry…

Jennifer Cote

Analyst

Thank you, Jim. Let's jump into our Q4 and full year financial results in a little bit more detail. If you can all please refer to Slide 7. And as a reminder, in addition to our reported GAAP results, we also include discussion about adjusted or non-GAAP financial results. These align with information we use to internally manage the business, and our slide deck includes a reconciliation between our adjusted results and the corresponding GAAP financial measures on Slide 12. So, if you could please refer to the top middle of the slide, on a reported basis, our Q4 gross margin was 58.0% compared to 55.7% last year, an improvement of 230 basis points. Our gross margin can fluctuate based on mix of products, but the year-over-year improvement in our gross margin primarily reflects the impact of the product portfolio improvement initiatives that we completed in 2022. If you refer to the top right of the slide, our adjusted EBITDA during Q4 was flat to last year. It did include investments to complete and launch our new VivaMARS behavioral system and our shared housing SOHO platform and to introduce our new Mesh MEA system at Society for Neuroscience in November. And with the challenging macroeconomic environment, we continue to manage our overall operating expenses ensuring that our spend is tied tightly to our highest priorities. Let's move to Slide 8 where we'll discuss full year results and also our success this year with improving operating cash flow and liquidity. Our full year gross margin truly demonstrated the impact of the changes we made last year and finished at 58.9% compared to 53.7% last year, an improvement of 520 basis points. Last year's gross margin did include inventory write-downs related to the discontinued product of $1.5 million, which accounted for 1.3…

Jim Green

Analyst

Thank you, Jen. So, moving to Slide 10, let's take a look at what we see for the full year 2024. As we enter the year with continued market headwinds from China, we expect 2024 to be a tale of two halves. Taking everything into account, we expect flat to modest revenue growth for the full year. We expect weakness in the first half versus a strong and very difficult prior-year comparison. And this is especially true in our China revenue, where in Q1 2023 was up significantly from 2022 and where we're expecting revenue to be down significantly in Q1 2024 entering this year with these continued headwinds coming in from China. The good news is we do think it's going to annualize by the going into the second half and even with the latest news that we've been hearing out of China, it looks like there might even be some upside from that. We do, however, expect strong second half growth versus the first half of this year and versus the second half of last year. So, the second half is really the key for the business here and we're preparing for the second half of this year. You see the new products entering production, commercialization, this is going to augment what's happening in the market. So, we feel very good about the second half, and we'll get through the first half here. We expect meaningful growth from new product commercializations, and we expect China funding to improve going into the second half. We expect gross margins in the 60% range, up from 59%, and we expect adjusted EBITDA margins improving to the mid-teens, up from 13%. With that, I'll turn it over back to the operator and open the line for questions. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And our first question coming from the line of Paul Knight with KeyBanc. Your line is open.

Paul Knight

Analyst

Hi. Jim, as I look at Slide 5, the SoHo product, the other products on that slide, what portion will they be of your incremental growth in 2024? Or will they be half of -- what's the level of their importance?

Jim Green

Analyst

Yes, good question. Certainly, if I think about those four driving pillars, first with the products introduced into our main, what I call, base business, the introduction of SoHo and the ability to now offer shared housing and more longitudinal testing, we think that's going to add a nice -- that will continue to support our base business, and my expectation is that keeps us at or above at kind of the market level. And then, the incremental new items, which is the ones you see to the right, starting with VivaMARS, we had the first sale of that last year, which approached $1 million. We see that growing fairly -- even though it's starting with a small base, we see that growing very fast. So that could easily be doubling as we get into this into '24. And then, our goal, I would be disappointed if we didn't see it doubling again going into '25 and that's kind of a growth vector. And in time, I see the behavioral product with VivaMARS really becomes part of the base business, because it really provides that overall ability to do your acquisition and your data reduction and consolidation of not just telemetry data, but now you can combine it with all the behavioral data, the neuro safety data, all of that comes together now on a big high-volume data analytics system, which is really designed for the ability for getting -- deriving the right kind of information from it. And that's again where we plan to start to apply some of the new technologies of machine learning to that. Electroporation/bioproduction, that's the third area. That's again an area where coming off of a lower base, maybe this last year, it was -- if you put all of it together, it's probably…

Paul Knight

Analyst

And then, should we be in what low-single-digit declines in first half and mid- to high-single in second half on revenue?

Jim Green

Analyst

Yeah. I think that it's fair to say that. Coming in, I mean, certainly, given such a tough comparable to last year, I mean, Q1 last year, that was a record. I mean, I think it was an all-time record. And it was primarily driven by China. So, imagine that. So, China gives us a difficult comparison and then turns around a year later and gives us a low entry into the year. But we do think that's going to correct. So, I think to your point, I would expect Q1 is going to be tough. But then I would expect us to be improving throughout the year from there. Certainly, the second half should really be a great business for us by then, because we've at least got the headwinds. They're no longer headwinds, maybe they're tailwinds, but they're at least no wind, and we'll take that over headwinds anytime. So, this is going to be -- I'd say, will be weak in the first half and I think very, very strong in the second half. And that's with the new products kicking-in to augment that. There's no reason to think that that's not going to be driving the trajectory of our growth vector in -- from second half and going forward. Because this is a sustainable growth structure that we put in place really driven so much by the introduction of these new exciting products.

Paul Knight

Analyst

Okay. And last question, what's your long-term growth rate target, Jim?

Jim Green

Analyst

I mean, certainly, I would target to be double digits. I mean, I think a company like this, we have to be somewhere near 10%. And depending on how these growth areas, these new growth areas with bioproduction, with organoids and such, that will determine just how far above or below 10% we are. I mean, I see the base business, my target would be base ought to be at or a better -- a little bit better than market, maybe it's 5% to 7%. And these new growth areas, maybe they're adding another 4% or 5% early on, but then adding another -- moving up from there. So, I think in that range. And again, it will really depend on how fast we can commercialize in the adoption of these areas. And keep in mind, these product technologies, we have very few competitors that can do this. I mean, we are the leader in MEAs. We are -- we will be the leader -- and we're going to be the intel inside when it comes to how you measure and use -- how you use organoids. So that and bioproduction, when we -- very few companies do we see as competitors, that gives us a great position, scarcity value, pricing value. And now that we're done fixing things, I feel like we're putting our foot on the gas pedal, you're going to see now commercialization of these products.

Paul Knight

Analyst

Okay. Thanks, Jim.

Jim Green

Analyst

Thanks, Paul.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And our next question coming from the line of Frank DiLorenzo with Singular Research. Your line is open.

Frank DiLorenzo

Analyst

Good morning. A question about the...

Jim Green

Analyst

Hey, Frank.

Frank DiLorenzo

Analyst

Hey, how are you? A question about the 2023 sales. Can you give us an idea of what the dollar amount in 2023 for overall revenue was related to discontinued and divested products? And following along the idea of the long-term growth objective, is that something we could begin to assume getting close to that 10% beginning in 2025 from say 2024 base being that this year looks relatively flat, mostly due to China?

Jim Green

Analyst

Yeah, good question. I mean, I think the number of discontinued this last year on a net basis was a little over $5 million. So $5 million on $113 million or something like that, that gives you kind of a base underlying of the core growth, and that's prior to what we see as far as with the new introductions and the new growth areas. So, if I'm building on a base like that, then that kind of underpins what I would suggest to that kind of a base business of [5% to 7%] (ph) going forward as you look into out years. And then, with these new areas augmenting that by arguably -- and we'll see how it goes. I mean, maybe we add with the other new areas, we add 2 points or 3 points, maybe we add 5 points or 6 points. So that will be the swing on it as to how well adoption happens with the new areas.

Frank DiLorenzo

Analyst

Okay. Regarding -- you've been talking about a lot of new products et cetera and the launches, is that back-ended or front-ended as far as some of the new products getting out there and being purchased by clients? And also, can you maybe give a little more granularity on your strategy, expect in China? But aside from China, but what your strategy might be outside of the United States to garner maybe some incremental growth expansion into some countries you're currently in or to other regions?

Jim Green

Analyst

Well, I guess, first, the question on -- I want to make sure, could you repeat your first question, because I think that was -- you say...

Frank DiLorenzo

Analyst

Just you've been talking a lot about the new product launches, things of that nature. Can you give us an idea of what the ramp might look like? Is that going to be more of a second-half or first-half event, et cetera?

Jim Green

Analyst

Yeah. I mean, these -- the newer products, as you can tell, are they're higher content, they're higher value, they're higher numbers, and they are little -- and they're more -- they're a little bit longer, more of a consultative sale. So, the introduction started in SFN in November. We're reinvigorating it again with society with applications to toxicology. So, we see -- we're at the point now we're in full commercialization. So, the time from order to shipment can vary, but typically, you'll spend products, I would say, on average, you might spend a few months getting to -- secure the order and then you'd look at another few months for the first sale of that order. So, it certainly is a little more back-end loaded. That's why we're seeing the conversion to shipments and revenue really starting to happen in the second half of this year and then extending from there and expanding from there. And then, the other question about outside the U.S., we tend to focus really on what works and is needed in the U.S. is a good proxy for what's needed outside the U.S. So, we tend to, again, design mostly for the U.S. to start with the assumption that China is going to want the same thing. There's a heavy investment there and expect that's going to be recurring or -- returning again now to really bring up their ability to do the kind of drug development and discovery and research and then production that's going to be happening -- that's going to continue to happen there. Europe also, I mean, we see a lot of science work in Europe. So, I would think that we'll -- in Europe, we'll focus a little bit more on the science side. And then, with the U.S. and China, they're actual more higher-volume commercial applications and again, high-volume type of operations.

Frank DiLorenzo

Analyst

Okay. Thanks. Just kind of a quick follow-on. You did talk quite a bit about some of the new product launches that have been going on. Is there any potential later in this year into 2025 for some additional new product introductions or line extensions? And also, somewhat related to that, what is the landscape look like out there for potentially maybe some partnerships or small sort of M&A activity to kind of bolster some of your current future offerings? Thanks. That's it.

Jim Green

Analyst

Yeah. Good question. Let's talk about -- the partnership thing is certainly, there's no question, there's a lot of companies that would really like to penetrate some of the things like areas like bioproduction. There're companies that really want to see -- are interested in some of these technologies that might be used even in clinical applications. So, there are areas there that we could look -- that we will be looking to potentially license out, and that would be in areas that where we're not -- where we really don't have the capacity or the funding to be able to go after all of it. So, to me, the focus is going to be if you look at those core growth areas, that's where as we develop new products, we'll continue to do that, they will fit primarily into those four focus areas. And hopefully, again, like I said, the things that I can't do with a company our size, but I can do if I leverage some other major players that really heavily want to be in some of these areas that I can look to license some of what we're doing through them. And again, I may as well create the value if I can't get it directly. I'm happy to get it through working with some partners. And your thoughts about acquisitions, we now are at the point where I think we have the -- we have capital structure in place. As we start to think about acquisitions, there are areas that are very interesting that could fit nicely into our product portfolio. And some of these areas are certainly -- bioproduction provides some areas that we could potentially augment some of our portfolio. And then, expanding and accelerating what we're doing with the cellular work with organoids, that could be interesting. And a number of our products -- as you know, in the past, there was not a lot of recurring revenue with some of these products. You see the new ones we're doing, they're designed specifically to bring in recurring revenue, to have consumables, to have services and field services. We're going to continue to explore and ramp those up. And that's an area that we have some interest potentially for acquisition. When you think about some of the consumables and buffers and things that are provided -- that are needed by our -- that our products consume in order to provide the function for their customers. So, there's a plethora of items for us to expand here. We do have -- again, we're not that big, so we have to be selective of where we make that investment. But it's nice to be in a position where you have a wide area that you could do. But again, we're going to focus on the areas that are going to give us that pricing power and keep us -- and the ability to stay in our niches and expand from there.

Frank DiLorenzo

Analyst

Okay. Thank you.

Jim Green

Analyst

Thanks, Frank.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. And there are no further questions in the queue at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Mr. Jim Green for any closing remarks.

Jim Green

Analyst

Okay. Well, thank you, everybody. Thank you for listening in today. This ends today's presentation. I hope that you'll join us in May for our first quarter results of fiscal 2024. Thank you very much. This ends the presentation.

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.