Mark Frost
Analyst · KeyBanc
Thank you, John. I will start my comments with our first quarter 2026 financial results, the details of which will be found starting on Slide 4 of the earnings presentation posted to our IR site. We had strong growth from pharma and biotech customers, as John mentioned, reflecting momentum from new products. Revenue was $20.8 million, in line with our $20 million to $22 million guidance and below the $21.8 million we reported in the first quarter of 2025. The year-over-year decline was primarily due to lower sales from academic institutions in the Americas and distributors in APAC, although our Chinese business rebounded to growth in the first quarter. With regard to academics, we expect university level approvals to increase in quarter 2 with the passage of the NIH budget on February 3, setting the stage for improved Q2 and Q3 results in the U.S. academic sector. These are use it or lose it funds and must be committed by the September 30 fiscal year-end, and we are seeing increased proposal activity. Gross margin of 59% was at the high end of our 57% to 59% guidance range and up 300 basis points from 56% in the first quarter of 2025. The improvement is attributable to cost actions related to employee costs and operational efficiencies that were implemented at the end of 2024 and in 2025 as well -- as well as higher-margin NPI revenue, which grew to more than 12% of total revenue in the quarter from approximately 4% in the prior year quarter. Operating loss was $1.2 million compared to a loss of $49.7 million last year, which included $48 million from goodwill impairment. Adjusted operating income of $0.2 million was slightly down from $0.3 million last year. Adjusted EBITDA of $0.8 million was flat year-over-year and came in slightly below our expectations due to higher investment in sales and marketing activities, which we believe will pay dividends in later quarters. A significant portion of the cost came in at the end of the quarter. Now moving to Slide 5, results by -- for revenue results by geography. Geographically, quarter 1 revenues in the Americas were down 9% year-over-year due to lower academic and government sales. In Europe, quarter 1 revenues were up 7% year-over-year, thanks to increased sales from our distribution partners and pharma customers. And in APAC, quarter 1 revenues were down 9% year-over-year due to lower distributor sales in a number of our Asian markets. That said, as John noted, we saw 3% year-over-year growth in China, driven primarily by CRO sales. We also piloted our Made in China initiative, which we anticipate will be a tailwind in this region as we implement additional products throughout the year. Now I will now move to Slide 6 to discuss further financial metrics. GAAP diluted EPS in quarter 1 was negative $0.77 compared to a loss $11.42 last year. And quarter 1 adjusted EPS was negative $0.33 compared to negative $1.25 last year. The year-over-year comparisons have been retroactively presented to reflect the 1 for 10 reverse split that took effect in March. Last year's figures reflect the $48 million goodwill impairment we recorded in the quarter. Now as I've mentioned in the past, the differences between GAAP EPS and adjusted EPS are typically the impact of stock compensation, amortization and depreciation as well as now our restructuring charges related to Project Viking. These differences between net loss and adjusted EBITDA are highlighted in the reconciliation tables on Slide 10 and 11 and are all noncash items except Project Viking costs. Now cash used in operations was $0.7 million in the quarter compared to cash generation from operations of $3 million in quarter 1 last year due primarily to higher inventory. The increase in inventory stems from inventories built to support improving lead times for certain products and prebuild for Project Viking. There are also onetime administrative costs related to our reverse split and S3 filing to meet regulatory compliance around these corporate actions, which reduced operating cash. The cash balance itself decreased in the quarter by $1.5 million reflecting payment of strategic debt costs from 2025. Now net debt is up roughly $1.9 million from prior year due to the recording of deferred finance costs related to December 2025 debt deal including fees, debt legal expense, warrant fair value costs and debt discount with a debt balance reduced by principal payments made last year. The deferred financing costs will be amortized over the life of the credit facility. The amortization will be reflected in our interest expense each quarter through the end of the debt facility. In quarter 1, the amortization interest expense was $300,000 in noncash. In addition, we are recording exit fees each quarter of approximately $200,000 which will start being paid 2 years from the initiation of our credit facility. These are noncash for the first 2 years. I'll now move to Slide 8 to discuss our outlook for the second quarter and full year 2026. In the second quarter, we expect revenue between $20.5 million and $22.5 million, adjusted gross margin between 57% and 59% and adjusted EBITDA between $1 million and $2 million. Midpoint of these ranges implies revenue growth of 5% margin expansion of 160 basis points and flat EBITDA. Now as a reminder, with the expected growth in the business in 2026, we have reinstated bonuses and merit-based compensation for our employees, which was suspended in 2025 due to macro headwind impacts. In addition, as the business has stabilized, we have increased sales activities to help drive the business, including trade shows and T&E to get in front of customers and build relationships. These will have an impact on our operating expenses and are built into our year-over-year adjusted EBITDA guidance. We're maintaining our full year 2026 guidance of revenue growth of 2% to 4%, gross margin of 58% to 60% and adjusted EBITDA growth of 6% to 10%. Our performance in the quarter as well as our line of sight to accelerated sales growth in the second half of the year, driven by high-margin NPI revenue growth driving bottom line improvement gives us confidence in our outlook for the full year. We look forward to updating you on our progress next quarter. Now before I turn it over, I want to mention that John and I will be attending and presenting at both the Sidoti Microcap Conference next week and Benchmark's Virtual Healthcare Conference the following week. With that, I'll turn the call back to our operator to take questions. Michelle?