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Earnings Call: Q4 2022

Mar 9, 2023

Operator

Good day. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Harvard Bioscience fourth quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Dave Sirois, Director of SEC Reporting. Please go ahead.

Dave Sirois
Director of Corporate Accounting and SEC Reporting, Harvard Bioscience

Thank you, Shannon, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining the Harvard Bioscience fourth quarter 2020 earnings conference call. Before we begin, I would like to suggest that you take a moment and download a copy of a presentation that will be referred to during this call. The file is entitled Q4 2022 HBIO Quarterly Earnings Presentation and is located in the Investor Overview Events and Presentation section of our website. Leading the call today will be Jim Green, Chairman of the Board, President, and Chief Executive Officer, and Jennifer Cody, Interim 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 31st, 2021, 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 better 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 difference between our GAAP and non-GAAP results are outlined in the earnings release in today's presentation.

These two documents, as well as a replay of this call, can be found on our website under Investor Overview, Events and 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
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Thank you, David. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Let me start by saying that despite inflation and currency and the lingering effects of the global supply chain, we kept our heads down and completed the previously disclosed portfolio optimization and related cost reductions. These actions are designed to support our stated goals for revenue growth with 58%-60% growth margins and EBITDA margins in the high teens or better. Now, let's go to slide three of the presentation to look at highlights for the quarter. Reported revenue for the quarter was $28.4 million, down 14% from a very strong Q4 prior year. Adjusting for a $1 million impact from currency, we were down 11%.

The majority of the impact was seen in preclinical revenues, with order demand recovering later in Q4, though not in time for revenue shipments to catch up. Strong order growth with a substantially improved product portfolio points to a strong start for 2023. Adjusted gross margin recovered to 57%, consistent with historical gross margins, in spite of the remaining low-margin obsolete products as they wind down. Adjusted operating margin came in at 12%. Going forward, we'll be reporting Adjusted EBITDA, which in Q4 measured 13% of revenue. In the appendix, you'll find the bridge from GAAP measurements to non-GAAP Adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted EPS measured $0.04 per share, down from a very strong $0.08 last year. Cash flow from operations measured $2.7 million. Let's move to slide four, take a look at the revenue in the quarter by product family.

This slide shows Q4 2022 revenue adjusted to reflect Q4 2021 exchange rates. Starting with the first row of the table, our cellular and molecular technology revenue was roughly flat when adjusted for currency. We had solid growth in Asia-Pacific, which was offset by slowness in the Americas. Cell-based testing products were up double digits globally. We saw continued rotation out of the low-margin products, with revenues from discontinued products decreasing by about $300,000 versus the same quarter last year. We are seeing demand increase going forward, augmented by exciting new products with new consumables and services, such as electroporation for bioproduction. Next, our preclinical products were down 19% in constant currency from a historically strong Q4 prior year.

Globally, telemetry and inhalation revenue shipments were down in Q3 and early in Q4, recovering somewhat in the quarter, though much of the order improvement came later in the quarter. The China lockdown further delayed shipments, with strong order demand recovering later in the quarter as lockdowns eased. Overall, order demand recovery later in the quarter didn't help Q4 much, but strong order growth with a solid book-to-bill ratio point to a strong start for 2023. The strong U.S. dollar compared to the euro and British pound drove a currency impact of $1 million I spoke of just earlier. Now let's move to slide five, so I can tell you about some of the exciting new product launches in the quarter. Before I start, let me take a minute to explain a little bit about this slide.

Over the last three years, we've optimized our product offerings to critical areas of the drug and therapy continuum, with cellular and molecular technology products focusing on enabling research and discovery of new compounds by both biopharma companies and top academic research universities. Now more recently, we're also offering a bridge to bioproduction, where electroporation or electrofusion is a widely used method to create the new therapy, drug, or vaccine. Our preclinical systems primarily offer biotech, pharma, CRO, and large academics the ability to measure and wirelessly collect critical physiologic and behavioral information from animal models. This data is then utilized for longitudinal studies and for the safety and regulatory filings required prior to human clinical use.

Our enterprise software provides efficient access to the large data pools collected during preclinical testing for data reduction, and report generation, and also for future AI-related processing as we see coming in the future. Starting with cellular and molecular technology, in Q4, we received a large order from a top pharma company for our BTX electroporation system configured for bioproduction. This order began significant shipments in Q1 of 2023 and is expected to quickly ramp to $1 million annually, primarily driven by consumption of our unique Flatpack reaction chambers and augmented by expanded services. We're excited about this emerging value proposition for the BTX system in bioproduction, which is often used today in pharmaceutical research and development to create the initial strains of therapeutics and vaccines.

BTX electroporation has the potential to provide substantial ongoing stream of Flatpack and other consumable revenue that benefits from production quantities in addition to those historically required in research and discovery. Second, we introduced the new U7500, our premium spectrophotometer, building on our well-known Ultrospec name. This system replaces three existing models and is designed to better penetrate pharma and CRO companies and top academic sites, and started shipping late in Q4. Lastly, continuing to drive market leadership in preclinical wireless continuous monitoring, we launched our exclusive continuous monitoring glucose implant. This new implant allows for continuous monitoring of glucose levels and avoids the cost, inconvenience, and variability inherent in periodic manual blood draws for sampling.

Glucose monitoring is expected to be an incremental growth driver in academic labs, and government labs, and pharma companies in the pursuit of solutions for the ever-growing problems of obesity and diabetes. This new line of implants began shipping late in Q4 and will augment new growth of our consumables and services in 2023 and beyond. Now, I'll turn the call over to Jennifer Cody, our Interim CFO, for a quick look at key financials. Jen?

Jennifer Cody
Interim Chief Financial Officer, Harvard Bioscience

Thank you, Jim. I'm pleased to be able to share our financial results in greater detail. If you can, please refer to slide seven. As a reminder, my discussion will focus on adjusted results for P&L performance, which aligns with measurements we use to internally manage the business. Jim has already taken you through our revenue performance, and I will take you through additional details on our expenses, balance sheet, and cash flows. Q4 adjusted growth margin was 57.2%. As discussed earlier, this was consistent with the full year 2021 adjusted growth margin, but was 2.4 percentage points below that of last Q4 2021. Q4 2021 was a near record quarter for revenue, and this drove favorable absorption of fixed overhead costs. Our growth margin for Q4 2022 was also impacted by increases in certain components costs.

In general, our growth margin will fluctuate from period to period based on revenue mix and volume, inflation, impact to supply chain, among other factors. We initiated the discontinuation of non-strategic products in Q3 and also implemented pricing updates during Q4. We will enter Q1 of 2023 with lower labor and overhead costs as the headcount reductions related to our portfolio rationalization are realized. With the implementation of these improvements, together with our pricing increases, we expect to see initial margin improvement in Q1 and to achieve the full benefit of these changes in Q2. Now moving to operating margin. Q4 adjusted operating margin was $3.4 million or 11.9% compared to $5.3 million or 16% in Q4 2021.

The decrease was primarily driven by lower revenue and, as a result, lower gross margin, partially offset by lower operating expenses in Q4. We continue to work diligently to optimize our cost structure across our global functions. Planned restructuring is largely behind us as we exit 2022, although we will continue to look for opportunities to improve the operating effectiveness of our company going forward. We do expect an increase in capital expenditures in 2023 as we invest in the consolidation of certain business tools and also invest in tooling and capital equipment related to new products. As we enter 2023, we will start to report on Adjusted EBITDA, as Jim mentioned, in replacement of operating income and margin.

The primary difference for Harvard Bioscience is depreciation on our fixed assets, which is approximately $300,000 each quarter and we believe this change aligns more closely with our focus on cash flow improvements and is consistent with the presentation of other comparable companies. Interest expense was $900,000 in Q4 2022 as compared to $400,000 in Q4 2021. We executed an interest rate swap during Q1 of 2023 to fix the majority of the interest on our floating rate bank debt and this mitigates further expense growth in 2023. Now turning my attention to cash flow. As Jim mentioned, cash flow provided by operations was $2.7 million in Q4 of fiscal 2022 compared to $100,000 in last Q4. Primary drivers for this change related to accruals for variable compensation.

Cash provided by operations for the full year was $1.2 million, consistent with 2021, despite $4 million of cash payments related to the final resolution of Biostage litigation, which we put behind us early last year. Over the course of the year, we saw strong improvements in our days sales outstanding and reduced our accounts receivable balance by $4.8 million over the course of 2022. Inventory remains relatively flat despite the headwinds of higher component costs and spot purchases to secure raw materials needed to produce our products. We expect to make meaningful progress against our days inventory on-hand metric in 2023. While our net debt is slightly higher at the end of 2022, we did reduce our outstanding debt by $1.8 million over the course of the year.

This will be a focus and a strategic priority for us in 2023, and we are targeting solid reductions in our outstanding debt. Jim will cover this in the next section as he discusses 2023 guidance. Back to you, Jim.

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Thanks, Jen. Now, moving to our summary on slide nine and a look at what we see for the year 2023. With the market headwinds of 2022 behind us, our leaned cost structure and our exciting new product portfolio in hand, we expect a strong 2023 for Harvard Bioscience. We expect reported revenue growth in the low to mid-single digit range, inclusive of approximately 4 percentage points of discontinued product revenue. We also expect improved gross margins with significant expansion in Adjusted EBITDA margins. With our expanded EBITDA combined with improved working capital cash flow, we plan to significantly pay down our debt. We target reducing our debt leverage to the 2x level by the end of 23. Thank you. Now I'll turn the call back over to the operator and open the line for questions. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Bruce Jackson with Benchmark Company. Your line is now open.

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Hi, Bruce.

Bruce Jackson
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Benchmark Company

Hi. Good morning. Good morning, and thank you for taking my question. You mentioned that we would potentially be seeing some gross margin improvement during 2023. I was wondering if maybe you could give us an idea of the cadence on that margin improvement. Is it going to continue to rise off the fourth quarter number, or, and where do you think it could get to by the end of the year?

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Thanks, Bruce. That's a great question. We expect to see gross margin improve almost immediately. We would expect to see the margin move into the 58%-60% region, and I mean, even in early in the year and then improving through the year, especially as we get to late in the year with higher volumes, certainly I would expect to be bouncing up against 60% or somewhere right in that area.

Bruce Jackson
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Benchmark Company

Okay and then the other question I had is on the non-cash expenses when we're looking at the new EBITDA number, will the stock comp or the amortization numbers change meaningfully during 2023 compared to 2022?

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

I don't think so. I think they'll probably remain pretty stable. You know, you already see those adjustments made in what we've always used for adjusted operating margins. What you'll see by moving to EBITDA is really also adding the, you know, the depreciation and for us, the depreciation is not a great big number. We're not highly capital intensive, but we do think it gives us more of a pro forma view of basically the cash generation of the company.

That's where we're really focusing this year is, you know, driving up EBITDA, reducing our multiple on our leverage ratio, paying down the debt and really positioning, you know, getting this business back into great shape, just like we started to do back in, you know, when I first joined here, but now that we've, you know, completely changed the structure and the cost of the business and really made these changes, we have a much stronger portfolio. This is going to improve throughout the year. Like I said, even starting in Q1, you know, I believe you're gonna see, you know, measurable improvement in the overall business.

You know, there is gonna be some rotation out of revenue, this revenue that we're working out of the things that we've obsoleted, and we project that to be somewhere around $5 million or, you know, 4 percentage points. Much of that's gonna rotate out in Q1, and then as we get into Q2 and forward, you know, we certainly see expansion of our core revenues, you know, offsetting that number early in the year and then driving the overall growth as we get to more like, you know, Q3, Q4, but all through the year, you'll see a much better operating leverage on this business.

Bruce Jackson
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Benchmark Company

Okay. Okay. Then, last question for me is on China. Sometimes historically the revenue number has shown some sensitivity to market conditions in China. What are you, what are you seeing right now, and what do you anticipate for 2023?

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

You know, China. We see it as a major growth driver for our business, and we see it for driving across the spectrum of our product lines, both in. We see growth coming very nicely on the CMT side and on the preclinical. We did, you know, with the shutdowns that happened last year, it caused some fluctuation and, you know, delays in ordering at times and then impacts on shipment and shipment revenues. You know, there was probably some buildup in, you know, late in Q4, you know, with the book-to-bill, you know, really moving, so we couldn't ship things fast enough. You know, the demand line , the demand stream really has dramatically improved in China. They've opened up.

There's also a lot more investment in China now in advanced research for discovery. We're seeing that driving our outlook for China. We see significant opportunity growing also on the preclinical side, because that's an area that, you know, the Chinese really wanna grow that area, both in research and then the ability to actually, you know, produce these new drugs and therapies. Yeah, China's definitely gonna be, you know, a big growth driver for us in 2023.

Bruce Jackson
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Benchmark Company

Thank you.

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Thanks, Bruce.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Harrison Schrage with KeyBanc. Your line is now open.

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Hi, Harrison.

Harrison Schrage
Equity Research Associate, KeyBanc

Hi, Jim. Hi. First question from me is just on the, on the guide, so low to mid single digits with about 4% of the portfolio optimization. Would you say that that high single digit to low double digit range, that that kind of implies on the base business is a good way to think about it going forward in the longer term?

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

I do. I do and that's really consistent with what we wanted, what I wanted to be able to underpin for targets, you know, to start with. Again, like I said, we'll see a little rotation out with the $5 million coming out in, you know, Q1 and maybe in some of Q2. But, you know, that gets replaced, you know, almost as that comes out, it replaces with the new growth. That new growth, as you know, is, you know, it's, you know, much, much better mix of business. Yeah, I think you've kind of hit that right, you know, kind of high single digits on the reported basis.

maybe it's close to 10% and then, you know, I mean, and that wound be on the core business. You know, but then.

Harrison Schrage
Equity Research Associate, KeyBanc

Right

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

reported basis, kind of in that, I don't know, maybe it's flat or a little better than flat, so it's, you know, 5-ish%, maybe a little better. You know, I'll give better updates as we get a little further into the year, and I'm able to give, you know, more of, you know, give better visibility into further points into the year as those funnels develop in the pipelines.

Harrison Schrage
Equity Research Associate, KeyBanc

Got it. That's helpful. On the portfolio optimization and new products that you're rolling out, I guess, could you kind of talk to strategically how you're thinking about the different end markets that you're going to be catering to and the new business and new portfolio compared to the old portfolio maybe in terms of, you know, the more biopharma compared to academic government? You know, what are you kind of thinking there?

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Yeah, I, you know, I think of them in many ways as somewhat independent activities, but the focus is in key areas. Our technologies in discovery, like electroporation and the cell-based testing, you know, those sell through our and report through our Molecular and our Cellular and Molecular side. Those that we expect nice expansion there. We know what all is happening in the use of electroporation and electrofusion for, you know, creation of these new, exciting new drugs and, you know, large molecule therapies and vaccines. That's, you know, that's gonna drive growth into academic research and discovery.

The new introduction of the ability to, for us to provide bioproduction, a bridge to bioproduction, especially where they used us to create the initial compound, that's a natural for us to be able to expand. For us, it's new, it's a lot of white space, and it's a place that we're putting the effort in and the time to make sure that that drives growth for our business. You'll also see that there's a much more focus on us identifying and showing the annuity-based growth in the business.

We're, you know, it turns out, you know, we haven't in the past, in many ways, even had much of the tools to be able to properly report it, but some of our product lines, I mean, a product line like AAA or electroporation, I mean, those revenue lines, you know, half of that is likely, you know, what we see as consumables and services. We're expanding the consumables piece. The new products that we're introducing are designed primarily to go in as a system that it has the pull-through of consumables and new services. We're expanding our service offerings.

A lot of our products that are used, if they're used in bioproduction, you know, we can go out and offer and help the pharmaceutical company or the biotech, you know, get through the GMP process that had to be qualified so they can produce product with our technology. On the preclinical side, you know, you have to have GLP compliance to be able to collect the data for submitting your regulatory submissions. We do that also, so expanding the services to these companies once they buy our equipment. You know, in the past, we often were seen as just selling a piece of capital equipment, and that was the end of it. That's no longer the strategy here, and we're seeing this change. The systems go in.

We now are offering and expect to see much more growth on the consumable side. We also, with new expanded service offerings, we can, you know, we're involved with going out now and offering, you know, the calibration and the installation services and the support services, you know, going forward once they use our equipment. Again, I, you know, I'd highlight maybe three or four areas where we see real opportunity to grow, and much of it here in the short term, not long term, not a long time wait for it. I would also say, though, that the long-term value proposition, we see access to the large data pools that are collected with our enterprise software solutions and our Ponemah software.

That's what's been used for the majority of pharmaceutical companies and CROs for collecting all the data during the preclinical phases and we all know that there's gonna be a hard push to use historical data and longitudinal data to be able to submit, to be able to submit and show that new drugs, you know, can leverage on testing that's maybe already been done in a line. We believe they still have to go through all the final tox and pharmacology tests, which, you know, there, of course, you know, that's a big part of our business and very stable.

You know, but the ability for us to offer access to large data pools that were collected, we know that, you know, some of the new advanced data processing is coming, you know, AI-based applications and getting access to that data that'll be another area of expansion in the business. That's probably a little bit further down the road, you know, but, you know, again, we have to... You know, we eat what we kill here, so can't invest in everything at the same time, but picking out the key ones, bioproduction, I think advancements that we see coming in, moving to organoids, that's an area where we're very well-positioned, and we already have the technology that where you put the organ on the chip. We already built those kinds of chips.

Again, we've got three or four very interesting areas, and I'm looking forward to my next non-deal roadshow , where I can really show the shareholders where these investments are going and show that there is an opportunity to dramatically grow this business and improve it.

Harrison Schrage
Equity Research Associate, KeyBanc

Got it. Super helpful. Thanks, Jim.

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Great. Thank you, Harrison.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Christopher Sakai with Singular Research. Your line's now open.

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Hi, Christopher.

Aseem Bhardwaj
Analyst, Singular Research

Thanks. This is Aseem for Chris. Jim, I was wondering, with the restructuring done and operating margins improving, you have committed to reducing the debt. I was wondering, in terms of new product development, would you look at business development like acquisitions also? Or you're thinking mostly de novo, you know, pipeline?

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

No, great question. We're, you know, what I really wanted to do was to first make sure that we made these changes, that we could show a stable growth business with far improved operating leverage. As I get through the next couple of quarters, a couple of things will happen. One is we'll be in a much better position to, first of all, know where those real growth opportunities and improvement opportunities are. You know, we are really figuring this out now. Secondly, figure out what's the right way to fund it. How do we wanna do that? Do we wanna do it mostly through organic? Do we want to use, maybe do some M&A or some teaming and licensing? All those opportunities we'll be developing here this year.

In my mind, there's no question, you know, we need to grow the business, continue, you know, of course, the best growth is always organic, but we really wanna be able to augment and get into some of these newer spaces and then we'll look at what's the best way to accomplish those growth vectors.

Aseem Bhardwaj
Analyst, Singular Research

Perfect. I know inflation and currency have adversely affected your current results. In terms of guidance, how you have kind of factored those two things in, if you can give some color?

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Yeah. Well, I mean, first of all, we're, you know, we started dialing in, you know, new pricing, which, we see that starting already to come into our revenue streams. You know, pricing is gonna help us offset. That'll help us offset any inflation. The currency, you know, in general, we kinda think it's starting to stabilize and ease. You know, but that to me, the best way for me to do this is to continue to just keep driving my overall cost structure down, see where I can expand, both, you know, pricing and volume and really, you know, get through this the right way.

You know, as we pay the debt down, you know, and I'll be paying that down quite a bit this year, you know, we're not gonna see such an impact from interest rates. Again, like as things kinda stabilize on the currencies, that'll help us on a, you know, on a currency translation basis. Again, we should start to see an ease of currency impacts, inflation. You know, we'll again improve that, against that with, you know, pricing and also with, as we grow and get more leverage in the business. You know, the dropdown leverage is much better now with this new growth and not to mention, with the new product portfolio, the mix of products is dramatically improving.

Aseem Bhardwaj
Analyst, Singular Research

Perfect. Thank you.

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Thanks, Christopher.

Operator

Thank you. This concludes the question and answer session. I would now like to hand the call back over to Jim Green for closing remarks.

Jim Green
Chairman of the Board, President, and CEO, Harvard Bioscience

Thank you. Thanks for joining us, everybody. This ends today's presentation. Certainly, I hope that you'll join us in May for our first quarter results for our fiscal 2023, and we look forward to this being such a great business that we'd envisioned it to be. Again, thanks again for your patience and sticking with us as investors. Thank you.

Operator

This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

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