Physitrack PLC (STO:PTRK)
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Earnings Call: Q1 2026

Apr 23, 2026

Henrik Molin
CEO and Co-founder, Physitrack

Hello everybody, and welcome to Physitrack's Q1 2026 Earnings Call. My name is Henrik Molin. I'm the CEO and founder of Physitrack, and I'm joined by our CFO, Matthew Poulter. Let's get into it. We will start by looking at the overall performance for the group, what worked and what didn't work. Then we'll look at the two different divisions. Matt's going to walk you through a financial update from the whole group, and then we're going to revisit strategy and outlook, and we'll open up for Q&A after that. As usual, you can use the Q&A function on the Zoom panel at the bottom of your screen. Let's start with the quarter, the ups, the downs, and where we exit. On what was up, we delivered 6% revenue growth on a constant currency basis, which translates to 3% on a year-on-year basis.

Subscription revenue came in at 96% of total revenue. As everybody on this call knows, this is the gold standard for running a business. It gives us predictability, it gives us control, and it allows us to invest with confidence across our business lines and everything that we want to do. Lifetime ARR was up 5% year-on-year to EUR 11.8 million. Average revenue per license was up 9% year-on-year. Now, on the wellness side, we returned to profitability. EBITDA was EUR 117,000 for the quarter, and net profit after tax from continuing operations was EUR 58,000. Importantly, we're now ready to launch our remote therapeutic monitoring platform in the coming weeks, which you saw from the intro clip to this call. We're also evaluating a parallel listing in the U.S. on OTCQX, and Matt is going to touch on that in his segment.

On what was down or, more accurately, what we deliberately invested into. The EBITDA margin is down slightly, and that was planned. We have invested in sales and marketing, most notably into building out the New York office. Free cash flow came in at EUR 0.1 million positive, down year-on-year. Again, that's driven by a higher CapEx cycle related to RTM development. The Lifecare license count was down slightly year-on-year, and there's actually one single large customer in the U.K. that churned. They had a discounted rate and didn't pay that much for that legacy contract that they were in. It's not a signal of underlying weakness in any shape or form. Now, on the exit position, we are in a strong position as we move into Q2.

We are ready to launch RTM, and we're seeing some very large and interesting deal activity in the U.S. market on the back of this. You should expect more news on that in the coming weeks. Our annual revenue run rate is now EUR 12.8 million, and we're a much smaller and more efficient organization. We're going to have 36 people employed versus 81 a year ago. That's a significant shift, but importantly, we have not compromised on execution velocity as part of that. CapEx is expected to moderate in the second half of the year as the RTM build completes. Let me just walk you through the headline financials here. Revenue for the quarter, EUR 3.2 million. Adjusted EBITDA was EUR 1.1 million. ARR is at EUR 12.8 million. Free cash flow, EUR 0.1 million. We remain a highly recurring revenue business, close to 100% subscription revenue.

SaaS gross margins are around 90%, and now we've been cash flow positive for six consecutive quarters, which is nice. Now moving into Lifecare. Revenue grew 6% year-on-year to EUR 2.9 million. Churn is stable at 1%, the EBITDA margin is 46%, and EBITDA minus CapEx is 21%. Overall, solid quarter, solid KPIs for profitability. The only distortion here is in the numbers of the license count here, which is slightly down due to that one larger U.S. customer, sorry, U.K. customer that churned. Outside of that, the KPIs are exactly where we want them. Moving over to wellness. Revenue is down and that is planned. We have deliberately exited parts of the hands-on clinical network and unprofitable contracts. Recurring revenue is now EUR 0.8 million. Adjusted EBITDA margin is now 36%, which is EUR 1 million. EBITDA less CapEx, 26%.

What you're seeing here is the stabilization of the division and importantly, early-stage deal flow starting to come through again. You saw an announcement of a deal with a very, very large U.K. corporate a few weeks ago, and there's a lot more to come here. Now, execution priorities for 2026. North America is front and center. The New York hub here where Matt and I are today is fully operational. There's a lot of commercial activity underway. We've already seen the first results of that with the State University of New York deal, which we saw on an announcement just a few weeks ago. There's a lot more in the pipeline. RTM is the second major focus, and we will talk you through the drivers of that and why that is the case and how that all comes together in just a moment.

We have over 6,000 active accounts where RTM can be applied as a revenue enhancement layer. Alongside that, we are exploring being closer to U.S. investors through an OTCQX listing, and we have put in place an investor relations capability in North America to support that. If you haven't already done so, keep on the lookout for Physitrack IR, which is our new LinkedIn account with IR updates and other socials. There'll be more systematic activity around IR that's actually global, not just the U.S. From a financial driver perspective, margins and cash discipline has been maintained, as we've seen. We're operating with a smaller team, but we have a much higher output per person, and this is driven by the use of AI models and agents across the organization, which we started on very, very early, right in 2022.

We're running a very lean team here without compromising at all on innovation velocity, which is great. We're net profit positive from continuing operations EUR 58,000, which is an important milestone. On the product side, top right there, RTM is obviously central, particularly in North America. We are also continuing to enhance the Physitrack platform more broadly, including the addition of motion capture capabilities, which you saw also in that intro clip, and that will be a key driver of customer value in the coming quarters. We believe price elasticity is still on our side. There's a lot more value that can come in the platform itself just to support that further.

On the wellness side there, bottom right, Champion Health is now enterprise-ready with a much more simplified onboarding process and an abbreviated health assessment, which is really, really key for getting end users on board. It's critical scaling into larger organizations. We have fully exited the hands-on clinical business. Care escalation within the ecosystem via the Nexa product is now handled through our partner network, and that gives us more scalable, higher margin revenue while we still deliver this full prevention to intervention pathway. Now, let me spend some more time on RTM, because this is where the real shift happens, and we've spoken about that a lot. There's also a section on that in the quarterly report, so you can read up on that. This is a summary slide. Now, what RTM does is that it fundamentally changes how customers perceive Physitrack.

Instead of being seen as a cost, we become a revenue enabler. Through Medicare and Medicaid incentives, providers can generate revenue by monitoring and treating patients remotely, and that creates a direct financial incentive to use the Physitrack platform for it. In 2024, this market was approximately $400 million in this physical therapy segment. We've done something similar before with telehealth, where we enabled customers to monetize remote care, and that's how we shot to fame during the pandemic. RTM is the next step of this. It allows revenue to scale with patient volume, and it increases the deal sizes. It also strengthens the ecosystem lock-in because we are now directly tied into our customers' revenue streams and more close to the clinical processes. That's a fundamentally different position for us and a very powerful one. Right.

Just to recap, solid quarter, maintained profitability, continued to grow, stabilized wellness, and we're entering into a very important phase with RTM in North America. With that, I'm going to hand over to Matt to take you through the financials in more detail. Matt, over to you.

Matthew Poulter
CFO, Physitrack

Thank you, Henrik. I'd actually like to start not with revenue, which is what we always start with, but actually profitability, because I think this is actually the most important signal from this quarter. Q1 2026 is the quarter in which Physitrack became profitable. Not adjusted profit, not Adjusted EBITDA, not EBITDA profitable, but profit before tax of €75,000 from continuing operations and then net profit after tax €58,000. For a company that reported a net loss from continuing operations of €376,000 in the same quarter last year, that's a huge inflection point. I want to make sure that all our investors and the wider market are aware that this doesn't get lost in the detail of the numbers, which I'm going to follow. I want to flag something important for anyone who's cross-referencing these results against prior period disclosures.

The numbers you see today and the comparative figures alongside them reflect continuing operations only, following the completion of our divestment program towards the end of last year and the closure of clinics on the 16th of January this year. Comparatives have been restated accordingly, so they're not going to necessarily reconcile through to the figures which have been presented in prior year reports, because they included the entities that were part of the group then. We set out the basis clearly in the interim report, and I'm happy to walk through any specific reconciliation questions anyone has. Now to revenue. Reported revenue grew 3% year-on-year to EUR 3.2 million. What sits beneath that headline number is really important because I actually think there's a few things that understate the positivity in that growth. On currency, as I'm sure you're all aware, we operate globally.

We've got revenue across different currencies, including U.S. dollar, euro, sterling, Canadian dollar, Australian dollar, and as we're seeing globally, there are FX headwinds there. That impacted our cash growth or revenue growth there by 3%. On a constant currency basis, revenue grew 6% year-on-year. Also importantly, our cost base is distributed globally across the same currencies, so it does provide a natural hedge there. Currency movements, while they do have an impact on the top-line revenue, they also flow through to profitability, and at an EBITDA line, they do have more of a muted impact. On licenses, as Henrik mentioned, our headline license count fell year-on-year, quarter-on-quarter. That movement is actually attributable to a single large customer which churned in February. This was a very long-standing account that held historically favorable license rates under a commercial rate that predated our current pricing structure.

That customer did represent about EUR 8,000 MRR. It's a modest figure, but if you then compare that to the license count, that was impacting our ARPL. Actually, when you look at revenue growth, including that, to have that loss in MRR and license count is a really, really important signal to show there. It also shows the increase in ARPL, which increased 9% year-on-year. What that signifies is the replacement business we're writing is at a much material higher price point than what it had been previously. When it comes to growth, I want to be honest and straightforward. These numbers are not yet where we want them to be. We are focused on driving that number, and we're beginning to see the first green shoots of success since the quarter closed.

We've announced new new customer wins in April alone, and this is early evidence that this commercial investment that we're making is having a big impact, and we're beginning to convert. Next slide, Henrik, please. On revenue, subscription revenue now represent 96% of total revenue, and that's up one percentage point from a year ago, and 92% the full year in 2025. Every quarter, the revenue base becomes more recurring, more predictable, and more valuable. The annualized revenue run rate from continued operations is EUR 12.8 million, and that's up 1% on the prior quarter. Lifecare ARR of EUR 11.8 million is up 5% year-over-year, but flat quarter-over-quarter, which in the context of resolving the large customer churn, as I described, is actually a good outcome, and it reflects the new enterprise additions at higher price points filling the gap. Next slide, please, Henrik.

Now on profit, I think while we have been profitable, I do want to be transparent when we're comparing that quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA was EUR 1.1 million, with a margin of 34%. In Q1 2025, that margin was 36%, so that margin is lower. There are a few reasons behind that, and this was deliberate. I also want to flag something on EBITDA more broadly. You'll see the reported EBITDA before adjusting items was EUR 950,000, up 20% year-over-year. As we move forward, we expect EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA to converge much more closely together. The adjusted items in recent years, which have been substantial in relation to restructuring, divestment, legal settlements, impairments, et cetera, these are predominantly behind us now, and we would expect the gap going forward to become even more narrow.

Which means Adjusted EBITDA you see today is increasingly clean representation of what our underlying performance is. On the margin movement, during 2025, we restructured the business fundamentally. Headcount reduced by 56% year-on-year. We're now a team of 36 people, down from 81 a year ago. That restructure was necessary, and in many respects, quite painful. We made the difficult decisions when we needed to, but the result is much leaner, efficient organization, and that efficiency is visible in our productivity metrics. ARR per employee is actually up to EUR 350,000, which is 132% year-on-year. I think that single number captures better than almost anything else the transformation we've achieved. We're generating substantially more recurring revenue per person than we were 12 months ago, and that ratio will continue to improve as RTM and North America scale.

The investment in Q1 2026 has been deliberate and it has been targeted. We hired when it hurt, adding sales and marketing capability in North America ahead of revenue because we believe commercial returns will justify it. That is the right decision at the business at our stage and what our growth ambitions are. Management expects margin to recover through half two 2026 and as that investment converts into ARR growth. On wellness, the division delivered Adjusted EBITDA of EUR 117,000 in Q1 2026, which is the first quarter of meaningful profitability when you compare it to what that division was last year, and that reflects the completion of our divestment program. The legacy businesses that were generating losses are now gone, and what now remains is a lean, profitable, pure SaaS operation, and we're building from that foundation. Next slide, please, Henrik.

On cash, free cash flow from continuing operations was EUR 0.1 million, lower than recent quarters, and I want to explain that clearly. Obviously, working capital does have an impact there, but our capital expenditure in Q1 was EUR 0.8 million, which was a little bit higher than what we'd had in previous quarters as we're investing in the development of the RTM platform ahead of our release in Q2. We feel that this is peak investment and that management expects it to moderate through to half two as the primary RTM development phase is complete. I also want to flag one specific item for you for Q2 models. During Q1, we reached a final settlement on a legacy legal dispute, which has been disclosed in the annual report for a number of years now.

A provision that had been on the balance sheet going back, I think, to 2017 or 2018. That total assessment is at EUR 300,000, which is being discharged in equal monthly installments across April to July 2026. That cash outflow will be visible in Q2 free cash flow. I want to be explicit, while we do target positive free cash flow on a quarterly basis, this settlement will have a one-off impact on Q2. It is non-operating in nature and entirely behind us, so there's no further contingent exposure there. I would encourage you to look through that when assessing the underlying cash generation of the business in Q2. Despite the elevated CapEx, free cash flow remains positive. This is the sixth consecutive quarter of positive free cash flow from continuing operations. Operating cash flow of EUR 0.9 million is robust.

The group is funding its own investment without having to draw down on the RCF. Available liquidity at 31st of March was EUR 2 million. Net debt of EUR 3.5 million represents approximately 0.9x annualized EBITDA, which is a conservative leverage position, and in this context, conservative is unambiguously good. It means we can repay all of our debt from less than a year of operating earnings. It gives us balance sheet flexibility to fund our growth organically and to act if the right opportunity presented itself. I know Henrik has also mentioned and discussed RTM, but I also wanted to cover that from a CFO perspective as well, because I think it's important how investors directly model it for the business. RTM changes our commercial model in a way that has direct financial consequences. Before RTM, Physitrack was evaluated by U.S. clinics as a software cost.

Purchase decisions went through procurement and budget approval. The value case was built on clinical efficiency, time savings, often qualitative, hard to quantify, vulnerable to budget pressure at renewal. With RTM, Physitrack becomes a revenue-enabling tool. A clinic can directly offset the cost of their Physitrack license against CMS reimbursements. The platform enables them to generate. The value case becomes far more quantifiable in dollar terms. That changes the sales conversations, shortens decision timelines, and structurally reduces churn risk because the platform embeds in a clinic's billing workflow, not just in its clinical workflow. The financial impact will build progressively. We're not promising a huge step change in Q2. The launch is a pilot with our largest U.S. enterprise customers with active discussions already underway.

Half 2026, we'll see a broader rollout to existing and new customers, and we expect meaningful contributions over the next 12-18 months coming from RTM. It's going to be steady, and it's going to be compounding. With 6,000 active U.S. licenses today, we have an immediate upsell base. U.S. RTM market is $387 million and growing at 17% a year. We're entering early, and we're entering with an established customer base. Next slide, please, Henrik. I just want to give a quick update on the share buyback as well. One of the legal requirements in order to perform a share buyback is to have positive retained earnings. Currently at the moment, Physitrack has negative retained earnings, although it does have positive net assets.

We are going through a capital reduction process at the moment with our external legal counsel to move that share premium account to retained earnings, which will then give us positive retained earnings to legally be able to do the share buyback program. We expect that to be completed over the coming months, and we expect at least by the Q2 or no later than the Q2 results presentation to be able to present to you a much more structured share buyback program, and potentially also the share option program too. Watch this space, and we're doing everything we can in the background to ensure that this happens. Next slide, please, Henrik. Okay. Henrik briefly mentioned we're exploring a listing on the OTCQX Best Market. Essentially, I want to be really clear, this isn't a relisting of Physitrack. This isn't a dual listing.

Our listing on the OTCQX is a tool enabler to allow frictionless investment from our U.S. investors who from time to time do struggle to acquire our shares on the Nasdaq First North Growth Market. We, as a constituent of that exchange, are able to take advantage of several SEC exemptions, which mean that we don't need to be necessarily SEC compliant from a SOX reporting perspective of listing on there. It very much will be business as usual, but it's just a tool to allow our U.S. investors to have the opportunity to purchase our shares. Why are we doing this now? As you've seen through the presentation, North America has a really, really compelling growth story, especially with RTM there.

We'd like to reflect our investor base more within the market where we do see our growth and where we have a real growth story. We want local investors in that market to be able to share in our success, which is why we're looking at this OTCQX listing. It is still in exploratory phases at the moment, and when we are at the point where we would like to pursue this, we will make a further announcement on that. Back to Henrik.

Henrik Molin
CEO and Co-founder, Physitrack

Thank you so much, Matt. Let's move on to strategy and outlook. Why is Physitrack positioned to win? Well, at the core, we are a clinic-embedded SaaS platform. We are deeply integrated into practitioner workflows, and this is not a light touch tool. This sits inside the day-to-day delivery of care, and that creates real switching costs for our customers. Once we are embedded into these ecosystems, it becomes operationally difficult to replace us, and that's where our biggest moat comes from. You see that clearly reflected in our churn, which sits at around 1% on a rolling 12-month basis. At that price point, that is a very strong signal of product market fit and stickiness. If you look at care and education proposition that we have, we're not just delivering software.

We are integrating continuing education and physiotherapy content directly into the platform and of course, RTM as well. We have a single ecosystem that covers delivery, compliance, professional development, and that increases both relevance and monetization potential. It gives us a clear path to expanding average revenue per license and has strengthened our position in enterprise environments. RTM, of course, as we discussed, that is a step change. It moves Physitrack from being perceived as a cost center to being a revenue generator for our customer.

It changes the conversation completely when you're tied directly into a provider's revenue stream, your importance in the stack increases, deal size increases, and retention strengthens further. From a business model perspective, we are at 96% subscription revenue. That gives us a highly predictable and stable platform to operate from. Gross margin is around 90% and that translates into a very strong cash conversion over time, in line with our long-term model. That's a business that's built to scale efficiently. Of course, truly global footprint, as you know, and we're building some very focused commercial hubs here in New York and in London as well. Global platform, local execution. Now, if we step back and look at the investment case, the underlying market dynamics are supportive. Healthcare is digitizing. Providers are looking for scale with delivery models. Reimbursement frameworks like RTM are accelerating adoption.

We are well-positioned from an innovation standpoint, and the model is highly scalable. Now, in terms of financial goals, we are targeting a doubling of the company in the medium term, and EBITDA margin is in the range of 40%-45% based on the KPIs that we are seeing, particularly on profitability and efficiency. We are well on the track on the margin side. Overall, sticky embedded platform model, multiple levers for revenue expansion, and a scalable high-margin model. We're entering a phase where North America can materially accelerate growth. With that, I'd like to open up for Q&A. Please use the Q&A function at the bottom of your screen, and we'll take your questions. See you on the other side. All right. Let's see if we can get Matt in the room as well, since we are in New York at the same time.

There we go. Perfect. Let's see what we have here with the Q&A, and please continue to ask us questions. We are yours until we finish every single one of them. All right, let's see. First question here: what milestones do you see in place to take growth from around 6% to double-digit levels? There are really two parts to that. There's a quantitative piece and a qualitative piece with milestones within both. Now, on the quantitative side, we now have a proper marketing engine in place that is measured very clearly in terms of marketing qualified leads coming in through the various channels that are connecting to it.

There are milestones around the number of thousands of leads that need to come in at the top of the funnel, and then those are subject to defined conversion rates as they move through the funnel, through sales qualified leads and then throughout to sales conversations, whether those are automated through product-led growth or if they're manual. In the manual funnel, so these leads are qualified by sales development representatives with specific conversion percentages from marketing qualified leads into sales qualified opportunities and then into deals. Then you work on them individually, salesperson by salesperson. We have clear milestones both at the top of the funnel and in terms of conversion metrics inside it.

Now, on the qualitative side, and this is where it gets even more important, we have suffered historically from not having had enough sales presence, and not necessarily in terms of sales headcounts, but in terms of the time that the sales team spent on applying their talent to sales processes. In sales, that's the key to success in a very big way. The amount of time you apply to the talent that you have really matters. What I'm happy to conclude now is that the new regime that we put in place in the last quarter of last year is really starting to pay off. We see that both in the overall volume of leads that we're working on and in the conversion metrics. I'm really happy with what's going on in the Newark office.

I think that team there is absolutely fantastic, and I couldn't be happier to be working closely with all of them. There's some additional factors around the expansion within the existing customer base, of course, particularly here in North America, where we have about 6,200 users now. That's a very real opportunity, and it's about working through those accounts one by one and identifying expansion opportunities and executing on them as efficiently as possible. We have our new customer excellence presence there with a completely new methodology that has been defined out of New York, and I'm really happy that we are now closer to our customers than ever. We understand them, and we see the potential in a very big way. I see great things coming out of that. Now, finally, we've become much more disciplined around hiring and performance.

We now have a recruitment methodology and interview process that ensures the right caliber of people coming in, and we're actually not afraid anymore to make tough decisions where needed. In the past, we were probably too lenient on our teams, especially within the commercial structure. Now it's much more disciplined, it's performance-driven, and the environment really aligns with that quantitative framework that I described there at the start of it. I hope that all makes sense. Now, can we have an update on your current deal pipeline, particularly in RTM? Yeah. We currently have four active RTM deals in progress. That's as of today, and I would expect probably half of those to convert this quarter, and I would say the remaining half in the next quarter. Assuming normal execution in that sits on top of broader activities.

It's not the full picture in terms of sales here, but it's a good indicator of momentum, I'd say. How should we think about margin expansion as the business scales? Yeah, I mean, there's definitely some further room for margin expansion as we see revenue growing, because at the 90% gross margin, you have really strong conversion from revenue down to cash. If we can get growth into the right side of double digits, you should start to see margin expansion come through as well, because the relationship between investment and output is not perfectly linear, so we don't need to invest proportionally to drive growth. Incremental revenue should carry higher margins, and that's where the operating leverage comes in. Okay, let's see what else we have here. During Q4, OpEx per employee was EUR 36,000. Now, in Q1, it was EUR 58,000.

In absolute terms, roughly the same. One would assume this implies better profitability going forward. Matt, I'm going to pass that to you.

Matthew Poulter
CFO, Physitrack

Yeah, I can see now. This was the first quarter where we had them off from continuing operations. I'd like to think now with the cost base being pretty stable and us not having additional, unlikely to have additional one-off adjusting items, that we can expect to see profitability going quarter-over-quarter. As the business scales as well, like with any SaaS business, that's all going to flow through to profitability. Yeah, I think it's right to imply that there will be better profitability going forward.

Henrik Molin
CEO and Co-founder, Physitrack

Thank you, Matt. Next question. Do you have any estimates of what RTM is worth to you per customer? Yes, indeed. If you look at the average license pricing here in the U.S., it hovers depending on the size of the ecosystem. You have legacy contracts, obviously, where people have negotiated quite favorable rates. You're looking at license revenue of, say, between $12-$15 per month for some of these big customers. If you add RTM in there, we should be able to get to from 3-10x on that in terms of monthly license revenue, depending on patient volume. Now, important to keep in mind that this is new business for a lot of our customers here, so they're in the early stages of doing this.

They have their own estimates as to what the patient volumes will be, and they estimate that you can have patient volumes of around 50 patients per practitioner, which would translate into somewhere between $300-$400 per month per user. The revenue dynamics of that are really interesting. Again, if you have really good ecosystem lock-in and you have a long-standing relationship with these customers, they trust us to actually deliver that. That's why this is just so interesting to us to keep pushing on. I hope that makes sense for you. Any updates regarding the share buyback program, and what will a listing in the U.S. cost? I'll start at the end. The U.S. listing is not an expensive one at all. We're looking at about $25,000 a year.

There's a minimum setup fee, so this is not something that is very costly at all. Share buyback program. Matt gave a little update on that. Do you want to maybe just go down the list. There's a box-ticking exercise that we're going through for that at the moment.

Matthew Poulter
CFO, Physitrack

Yeah. We need to have profitable retained earnings or retained earnings to pay that out. We're going through a capital reduction process in order to make that happen. That's going through all the legals. We have to have a court hearing for that in the U.K., and we're expecting that to be completed in the next couple of months. I would say at the Q2 announcement, we will have a much more structured buyback program in place that we will be able to outline the details to the market for that. Very much is watch this space, but we can't do anything at the moment until that capital reduction has occurred.

Henrik Molin
CEO and Co-founder, Physitrack

Yeah. I believe that that will come in relation to the AGM at the end of May, right?

Matthew Poulter
CFO, Physitrack

Yeah.

Henrik Molin
CEO and Co-founder, Physitrack

We have to have an EGM in place that approves that. I think they go back-to-back on May 26th. That's the timeline. We do know who we want to do this with, and we know the methodology behind this, and so everything is lining up nicely to start as soon as we can. Here's some praise, actually, another question. A significant improvement in the report structure. Well done to all of you. Well, the team is watching, so this is a really nice recognition, and thank you for seeing that, guys. There's a lot of work that goes into this in just three weeks. Two languages, and so we appreciate that feedback.

Matthew Poulter
CFO, Physitrack

Yeah. Just on that, they were always open to receiving feedback as well. If there's anything we can include or do further to improve the reports, we're listening, and we want to, yeah, ensure that you're getting the information that you need.

Henrik Molin
CEO and Co-founder, Physitrack

Right. Question here. Are you managing to cover Canada, or are you too busy working around U.S. and New York customers? Well, we're actually big in Canada. We are integrated into Jane, which is the biggest small to mid-size business EMR in that country. They have 65,000 installs. So they are very dominant in that space. They were just here in the office yesterday. We have been deeply embedded with them since 2015. That's a big source of revenue for us. We're also with Clinicmaster, which is the other big EMR there, more for institutional customers. So yes, we do have time. We have CBI, which is the biggest national network of physical therapy clinics, for example. So yeah, Canada very much has been a priority. We were in Canada before we were in the U.S., so a lot going on there as well.

We do have time as well to go up north of the border. Can you indicate how you assume the RTM can impact your revenue and profit, assuming a weak, moderate, and high market adoption? Well, it is early days, but I would say if you look at a weak adoption, that's to say that we get maybe one or two of these deals in. We're still looking at six-digit U.S. dollar ARR for that. That's just assuming that you get into an ecosystem where they're just starting out and they start to slowly but surely. You're still looking at a very, very nice number there for customers. If it's moderate, I'd say probably between half a million and a million USD ARR. If you look at high market adoption, well then, it is a $300 million, almost $400 million per year total addressable market for that.

Then you can take a portion of it. I assume that over time, we can probably land several million ARR on that if we do things right, if we can have a dominant market position. From indications with working with some of these biggest hospital systems, we do actually have a shot at that, which is very, very exciting. Question here. Are there any bigger investors that have approached you regarding the U.S. listing option? The answer to that is yes, but also some interesting things that you are faced with in dealing with the U.S. investors. You sit in front of retail, high net worth, ultra-high net worth, family offices, and also institutions. They love the story, and then they want to go onto their Schwab platform or their Fidelity platform. They want to press the button and buy, and they can't.

There are so many hoops to jump through to do that. Nobody lifts the phone anymore to call a broker. If it's not readily accessible by pressing a button to get in, then it's not going to be readily accessible to press the button to get out either. This is an important part of that, and then so we'll see what happens. It's also very frustrating to be in a room with investors at a conference and speak about an investment case where literally nobody can pick up their phone or their iPad and just press a button to buy. I think this is something that's going to change the momentum that we have. Of course, as we mentioned, we have hired a New York-based investor relations firm. They've been working globally, so you'll see more activity across socials.

We now have a dedicated social on LinkedIn for IR, Physitrack IR. We'll be reactivating our X account, and you'll be seeing more in between reporting season in terms of content that we can drip feed out. There's a lot of buzz around, as you know, those of you who follow us commercially on social media. There's a lot of that can be tracked for investors. Now we have a dedicated team for that. We're also recrafting the story to be more palatable to U.S. investors, to stuff like translating stuff from euros to USD so that people get the right KPIs in place. Overall, it's about exposure, it's about road showing, it's about participating in conferences, getting investment cases picked up by local analysts, et cetera.

We have now Harbor Access in place in New York since a few weeks that will work on this as we gear up for that OTCQX listing. Let's just scroll through the QA and see if we have anything more. No, I think that's it. Thank you very much for participating. Thank you for following the story, and we wish you a really nice rest of the day. See you soon. Thank you.

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