Yemi Okupe
Analyst · Mark Mahaney with Evercore
Thanks, Andrew. In March, we made a deliberate strategic pivot within our weight loss specialty, one that we knew it to create near-term financial noise to unlock immense potential for the platform to accelerate at scale. Today, I'll walk through the initial impact of that decision, early evidence that gives us conviction that it was the right one, our investment priorities moving forward. And finally, for our financial profile built from here. We believe the pivot that we made to prioritize branded products within our weight loss specialty will be transformational for the Hims & Hers platform, and early success signals are already emerging. As we've stated in the past, the power of our model centers around pairing the best assortment of offerings with the powerful experience our platform is able to provide. In March, we discontinued advertising of compounding products to prioritize expanding the population we are able to serve. With the introduction of branded products such as the Wegovy pill and Wegovy pen, we are already seeing our addressable market expand significantly. Within weeks of this launch, we are on track to add north of 100,000 new subscribers per month within our weight loss specialty. Early signs point toward a high level of subscriber engagement with nearly 90% of these users downloading the app and the average subscriber of these products interacting with the provider 3 times in the first month. Our belief is that weight loss is a critical specialty as a result of its ability to bring a broad audience of consumers to the platform that allows us to cross-sell other products in the future, achieve scale across our pharmacies to accelerate the realization of economies of scale and gather robust insights that enhance data model quality and ultimately allow us to elevate the tools and services we are able to provide to subscribers and providers. Our aspiration is to become the default health [indiscernible] platform for consumers around the world. Near-term success centers around expanding the addressable market and becoming a leading health and wellness service provider in each of our key markets. while continuing to maintain our ability to drive healthy free cash flow. Longer term, we expect to continue to optimize our cost structure and value delivered to consumers to progressively expand margins. Strong early signals from our pivot, continued robust execution from our team and the increasing size of the opportunity in front of us, reinforce our conviction in our ability to deliver our 2030 ambitions, at least $6.5 billion in revenue and $1.3 billion in adjusted EBITDA. Our financial focal point will be on accelerating growth to establish a leadership position in the U.S. and international markets, while maintaining discipline to ensure continued healthy free cash flow generation. To reach our longer-term aspirations, we are undergoing what is likely to be a transition period that may create volatility in GAAP results and ratios as reflected in our first quarter results. In the first quarter, revenue grew 4% year-over-year to $608 million, subscribers grew 9% year-over-year to nearly $2.6 million and adjusted EBITDA was $44 million, representing a 7% adjusted EBITDA margin. Revenue and adjusted EBITDA within the U.S. operations was temporarily pressured by revenue recognition dynamics from shorter shipping cadences, further compounded by a tougher comparable period resulting from record level additions of weight loss subscribers in the first quarter of last year. International growth driven by our acquisitions of ZAVA and Livewell remained strong as revenue increased nearly tenfold from the first quarter to $78 million. The strategic pivot in our weight loss specialty impacted our financials in the first quarter. Prior to our strategic pivot, we made meaningful investment in product, technology and other capabilities to support our GLP-1 compounding supply chain. As a result of our pivot, we incurred approximately $33 million of restructuring costs, primarily consisting of the write-downs related to our compounded GLP-1 supply chain that now face risk of obsolescence. Approximately $28 million of onetime charges negatively impacted gross margins by roughly 5 points in the first quarter, which were 65% on a GAAP basis and 70% when adjusted for these costs. The remaining $5 million of onetime restructuring charges impacted operations and support costs. In the first quarter, we continued investing in talent and capabilities across several areas, inclusive of technology and operations. We expect to continue investing in technology in the near term as the benefits cascade across multiple areas of the platform. More robust infrastructure accelerates the pace at which we are able to bring new features and offerings to our consumers. Additionally, specialized technology and engineering talent positions us to unlock even more value for our subscribers as we better leverage insights from throughout the consumer journey, what their symptoms were, what treatments worked versus did not and what behavioral patterns facilitated greater success across different demographics. These insights have the ability to drive increased tenure on the platform. Lastly, [indiscernible], in particular, has the potential to reduce both organizational and operational costs in a way that not only does not sacrifice service quality for subscribers, but enhances it. We expect technology investments to be financially accretive in the mid- to long term with continued signs of success appearing in the near term. Additionally, we expect continued near-term investment in our operational capabilities that enable us to expand into new specialties as well as bring our costs to serve our subscribers down over time. In the first quarter, we continued investing in talent to ensure that the organization is equipped to expand into more complex offerings such as injectable based low testosterone treatments. In addition, we invested in talent to ensure that we are well positioned to take advantage of opportunities for new offerings such as peptides as the regulatory landscape evolves. Trust remains the cornerstone of the Hims & Hers brand today and will continue to be as we scale. As in the past, new specialty expansion will follow a thoughtful compliance consumer-centric framework that ensures the quality and safety standards of the offering align with what consumers have come to expect from Hims & Hers. Gains in marketing efficiency have unlocked our ability to thoughtfully deploy capital to these areas. Marketing as a percentage of revenue improved 3 points year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter to 36% in Q1. Efficiency gains have come from stronger retention, increased cross-sell [indiscernible] on the platform organically and acquisition from lower-cost channels as our brand continues to gain more recognition. As we continue expanding the assortment of offerings across the platform, our belief is that these efficiency gains can continue also with some quarter-to-quarter volatility. Before going into our investment strategy, I'll take a moment to reinforce our operational priorities. Our primary financial objective will center around continuing to grow the business while ensuring that we are generating strong free cash flow to be able to move quickly on market opportunities as they emerge. From time to time, this may result in heavier investment or even periodic strategic pivots that impact our GAAP financials as we saw in the first quarter. GAAP net income declined to a loss of $92 million in Q1. Q1 results were impacted by nonrecurring restructuring costs related to the strategic pivot in our weight loss specialty, transaction costs related to M&A activity and legal costs. While we expect to be positioned to return to net income profitability in 2027, our primary focus will be on driving strong growth and cash flow generation. In the first quarter, we generated $89 million of cash flow from operations and $53 million of free cash flow. We found thoughtful ways to deploy capital to capabilities that we have high confidence will drive long-term growth. For example, in Q1, we completed the acquisition of YourBio, a provider of technology that allows consumers to collect blood painlessly from the comfort of their own home. This will be a critical component of our long-term strategy to bring tens of millions of subscribers onto the platform as a [indiscernible] that prevents consumers from obtaining deeper health insights to unlocking a new level of preventative care. As of the end of the first quarter, available cash and short-term investments on our balance sheet were $751 million. As we mentioned in the past, our primary focus will center on investments that allow our platform to scale for serving tens of millions of subscribers. We also have $225 million remaining on our share repurchase program, which allows us to take advantage of moments and we believe the intrinsic value of our stock meaningfully disconnects from the market value. Our investments in the coming quarters will orient around the strategic growth levers we outlined at the start of this year that are the cornerstones of our 2030 financial ambitions. Expanding into new specialties, utilizing technology to elevate the quality of care, providing the access to personalized care across specialties, leveraging partnerships to become a best-in-class creative health services and expanding internationally. I'll highlight a few of these will expect heavier near-term investment. First, we will continue investing in our facilities to expand both capabilities and operating efficiency. The [indiscernible] foundation to effectively expanded new specialties while also evolving the assortment of our current specialties. Our scale provides us with the ability to continue verticalizing our existing specialties in a way that provides a level of efficiency that [indiscernible] the industry can match. We expect to invest in both talent and equipment that set a foundation to verticalize current specialties as well as those that we may launch in the future. This allows us to not only reduce our cost structure, but also ensures we can fully scale our offerings in a way that meets the high bar that we set for safety and quality. Second, we believe that we can elevate the quality of care by removing friction through technology, both digital and physical. Our conviction is high that we can increase subscriber engagement and retention through services like at-home blood collection, AI-supported shop bots like the ones we recently began to play in labs and eventually expanding data from wearable devices that can further reinforce the feedback loop between subscribers and providers. Finally, international expansion is the area where we expect to make the heaviest investment in the coming quarters. Eucalyptus, which we expect to close in the second half of this year, will meaningfully expand our ability to evolve the consumer experience across several additional markets. Efficiency within mature markets can allow us to invest in strategic markets that can emerge as future profit centers once they scale. At the time of closing of eucalyptus, we expect to make a payment of approximately $240 million, with the remaining guaranteed consideration and earn-out payments extending through early 2029. Importantly, the flexible structure of the transaction gives us the ability to satisfy a meaningful portion of obligations after closing in either cash or stock, which we believe supports long-term balance sheet flexibility. As we have in the past, we will continue to monitor the landscape for opportunities to reinforce our balance sheet and preserve strategic optionality in a way that remains thoughtful around dilution. With that, I will walk through our outlook for the remainder of the year. The exact timing of the closing of the Eucalyptus transaction remains unknown, so we have not included it in our updated outlook. In the second quarter, we are anticipating revenue in the range of $680 million to $700 million, representing a year-over-year increase of 25% to 28%. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be between $35 million to $55 million, representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of 7% at the midpoint of both ranges. For the full year, we are raising our 2026 revenue outlook to $2.8 billion to $3 billion, representing a year-over-year increase of 19% to 28%. It is our expectation that 2026 adjusted EBITDA will be between $275 million and $350 million. These adjusted EBITDA and revenue ranges imply an adjusted EBITDA margin of 11% at the midpoint of both ranges. To help contextualize our outlook, I will highlight a few points. First, as previously mentioned, our focus will center on maintaining strong growth. We expect gross margins to compress as we prioritize scaling areas such as weight loss, labs and international markets, which have a lower gross margin profile than our longer-tenured specialties. These specialties sets a foundation for us to build a deeper relationship with our subscribers as well as become the leading global platform for health and wellness services. Second, our success has historically centered around verticalizing operations to bring our subscribers an exceptional level of service. Our belief is that this drives greater tenure on the platform. Our agreement with Novo Nordisk still allows us to leverage our provider network, digital tools and breadth of other offerings on the platform to better serve subscribers from beginning to end. This includes leveraging our pharmacies to fulfill medication for our subscribers for products like the Wegovy pill and Wegovy pen, which may unlock efficiencies over time. We recognize revenue associated with the products fulfilled by our pharmacies, inclusive of those from Novo Nordics on a gross basis. Near-term margin headwinds are expected in the second quarter as the majority of our weight loss specialty moves toward 1-month shipments. Third, we expect a meaningful step-up in adjusted EBITDA dollars in the third and fourth quarters. The compounding effect of monthly cohorts acquired throughout the year is expected to result in accelerating revenue and EBITDA growth. Additionally, we expect to gain operating leverage in G&A as well as drive continued marketing efficiency gains. Lastly, we expect to continue making investments in technology on our platform. We believe we can elevate the overall experience for consumers on our platform, whether in the form of new apps and tooling, faster care or deeper insights. We also believe that a more robust infrastructure enables us to move faster and the technology has the ability to meaningfully reduce the cost to serve consumers. Whether that be through upgrading software to enable more efficient pharmacy operations or identifying ways to leverage AI to reduce operational and G&A costs across the company. Our expectation is that some of these efficiency benefits could start to emerge in 2027. We've made a deliberate strategic shift in the first quarter. We believe this shift in conjunction with the strength of our other specialties and platform capabilities positions us to become the default health and wellness provider in the U.S. Our confidence is high that we can replicate the success and similarly established category leadership in key international markets such as Canada, the U.K., Australia and other European countries. The early signs are promising, giving us greater conviction in the long-term trajectory of the business. Our trajectory provides us with confidence to keep investing and delivering on our mission. The opportunity in front of us is immense. We expect some volatility in GAAP financial margins as we continue to lean into the opportunity to drive more value to consumers. But we do not expect to change is the excellence in execution and rigorous adherence to our capital allocation framework, which we feel will allow us to generate strong free cash flow while establishing category leadership positions around the world. This supports our continued confidence in the 2030 ambitions we outlined last year, at least $6.5 billion in revenue and $1.3 billion in adjusted EBITDA. Our success would not be possible without the significant efforts of Hims & Hers employees around the world. I'd like to thank them, our subscribers and our shareholders for supporting us and our mission to help the world [indiscernible] through the power of better health. With that, I will now turn the call back over to Bill to kick off Q&A with 2 questions from our retail community.