Good day, and welcome to the InMode Ltd. Q4 and full year 2021 earnings results conference call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. To withdraw from the question queue, please press star then two. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Miri Segal from MS-IR. Please go ahead.
Thank you operator and everyone for joining us today. Welcome to InMode's Q4 and full year 2021 earnings call. Before we begin, I would like to remind our listeners that certain information provided on this call may contain forward-looking statements, and the safe harbor statement outlined in today's earnings release also pertains to this call. If you have not received a copy of the release, please go to the investor relations section of the company's website. Changes in business, competitive, technological, regulatory, and other factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed by the forward-looking statements made today. Our historical results are not necessarily indicative of future performance. As such, we can give no assurance as to the accuracy of our forward-looking statements and assume no obligation to update them except as required by law.
With that, I'd like to pass the call over to Moshe Mizrahy, Chairman and CEO. Moshe, please go ahead.
Thank you, Miri, and thank you all for joining our Q4 and full year 2021 earnings call. With me today are Dr. Michael Kreindel, our co-founder and Chief Technology Officer, Yair Malca, our CFO, Shakil Lakhani, our President in North America, Dr. Spero Theodorou, our Chief Medical Officer, and Rafael Lickerman, our VP of Finance. We will all be available for Q&A session after our prepared remarks. Once again, we have the pleasure of announcing a record quarter with revenue of $110.5 million and $357.6 million for a full year. An increase of 47% and 73% compared to the same period last year. Crossing the $100 million quarterly revenue marked a symbolic and meaningful achievement for our company. We continue to achieve strong profitable growth.
Net income for the quarter was $52.7 million on a GAAP basis and $55.2 million on a non-GAAP basis. In the full year of 2021, net income reached $165 million on a GAAP basis and $176.3 million on a non-GAAP basis. As a result of our strategy to focus on selling more system globally, sales of capital equipment represent 89% of our total revenue in the Q4. Sales from consumable and services increased significantly and reached record volume every quarter. These sales accounted for 11% of total in the Q4 and in the full year of 2021.
By launching new platforms and innovative modalities and growing our install base in the US and globally, we expect consistent growth in consumable revenue will become a more significant part of our revenue mix. I would like to highlight the ongoing growth from our minimally invasive and ablative technologies, which now account for 73% of our revenue, compared with 65% last year. Hands-free devices generated 17% of our revenue, and non-invasive RF and laser platforms represent the remaining 10%. The product line mix for the full year was 72% for minimally invasive, 20% for hands-free, and 8% for non-invasive RF and laser platforms. Looking at the international side of the business, Q4 sales outside the US accounted for $36.3 million, a 69% increase compared to the same quarter last year.
Full year results reached $120.3 million, a 112% increase compared to 2020. These figures represent 34% of our total revenue of all 2021, and 33% of our total revenue for the Q4. InMode currently operate in 71 countries, having added 17 countries more in 2021. We also expanded our existing operation in Italy by establishing a subsidiary there. We see most of the growth coming from region where we are already involved, yet there is opportunity in the new territories. Furthermore, despite facing serious global supply chain obstacle in 2021, we successfully delivered every system within 10 days of receiving the order. We would not have done that without our hardworking and dedicated employees and partners.
We value their contribution and thank them for it. As for 2022, we're continuing to evaluate the impact of the Omicron and the BA.2 COVID variant on our business that we do in every territory. We hope that current wave of COVID will pass and will be the last one, so that business across the world will return to normal soon. Now, I would like to turn the call over to Shakil, our President in North America. Shakil?
Thanks, Moshe, and everyone for joining us. InMode ended the Q4 in 2021 with another record performance and the successful launches of the Evolve X and Empower RF platforms. Sales from capital equipment were the main contributor to our quarterly revenues, with $98.6 million in Q4 and $319.2 million for all of 2021, with an install base of 11,600 units. Additionally, as Moshe mentioned, as our install base grows and our systems are used more frequently, the number of disposables continues to reach new records as well. The US remains the leading market and was the biggest contributor to our top line, with the total Q4 sales amounting to $74.2 million, compared to $53.7 million in the same quarter of 2020. A 38% increase.
Despite new COVID variants causing another surge across North America, physician offices in the Q4 were the busiest they've been in all of 2021. Demand for minimally invasive technologies has been steadily increasing, supporting our growth in the US and globally. With the launch of EmpowerRF, we've seen significant interest by physicians in the women's health space. Currently, our focus is on North America. However, we will gradually expand to the rest of the world. We plan to continue hiring new sales staff for the North American market, which will increase top-line growth, as proven in previous years. We're very grateful to our team and their continued commitment. We would not be as successful as we are without each and every individual. I will now hand over the call to Yair for review of the financial results in more detail. Yair?
Thanks, Shakil, and good day, everyone. Now, I'd like to break down the numbers for the quarter and the year in greater detail. Total revenue in the Q4 of 2021 increased 47% year-over-year to $110.5 million, with gross margin of 85% on a GAAP basis. For full year 2021, revenue totaled $357.6 million, an increase of 73% compared to 2020. Sales of minimally invasive and subdermal ablative technologies in the Q4 of 2021 grew 64% year-over-year. The geographical revenue mix in Q4 was 67% in the US and 33% internationally, compared to 71% and 29% for the same quarter in 2020 respectively. International sales increased year-over-year by 69%.
Capital equipment in the Q4 accounted for 89% of our revenue and consumable and service revenues represented the remaining 11%, identical to the ratio for the full year. GAAP operating expenses in the Q4 were $39.5 million and $136.5 million for the full year of 2021. A 35% and 33% increase year-over-year respectively. Sales and marketing expenses increased 40% in Q4 compared to the Q4 of 2020, and 38% for the full year 2021 compared to last year. This is a result of the improvement in the COVID status in certain countries and regions around the world, especially in the US where we saw an increase in in-person marketing events.
Share-based compensation decreased to $3.1 million in the Q4 of 2021 compared to $3.2 million in the Q4 of 2020, and to $12 million for all of 2021 from $12.8 million in all of 2020. On a non-GAAP basis, operating expenses totaled approximately $37.5 million in Q4 of 2021 compared to operating expenses of $26 million in the same quarter of 2020, an increase of 44%. Non-GAAP operating expenses for the full year of 2021 were $126.4 million compared to $90 million in the full year of 2020, a 40% increase.
GAAP operating margin was 49% in the Q4 and 47% for all of 2021 compared to 47% and 35% for the same periods in 2020. Non-GAAP operating margin was 51% in the Q4 and 50% for all of 2021 compared to 51% and 42% for the same periods in 2020. Our profitability in the quarter and during 2021 was remarkable. GAAP diluted earnings per share for Q4 2021 were $0.61 compared to $0.43 per diluted share in the Q4 of 2020, and $1.92 for the full year of 2021 compared to $0.89, excuse me, for the full year of 2020.
Non-GAAP diluted earnings per share for Q4 2021 were $0.64 compared to $0.47 per diluted share in the Q4 of 2020. $2.05 for the full year of 2021 compared to $1.06 for the full year of 2020. We ended 2021 with a very strong balance sheet. As of December 31st, 2021, the company had cash and cash equivalents, marketable securities and deposits of $415.9 million. On the cash flow front, the company generated $52.9 million from operating activities for the Q4, and $174.9 million for all of 2021. I will now turn over the call back to Moshe.
Thank you everybody. I believe we now open the Q&A session. Operator?
Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you're using a speaker phone, please pick up your handset before pressing the key. To withdraw from the question queue, please press star then two. Our first question today comes from Matt Taylor with UBS. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to start off, you mentioned Omicron in the press release and in your comments. I guess I just wanted to get some thoughts from you about how disruptive that has been in Q1. Has that had any impact on your views for the rest of the year? Just any color on recent.
Yeah. This is Moshe. Hi, Matt. Well, I cannot answer what will be the effect on the full year. One thing I can tell you that right now there are some countries which are totally closed, and we have some slowdown. For example, in China, I'm sure you know that they have adopted a zero cases program. They don't allow people to travel even within their territory. They don't allow people to travel between cities. So our salespeople in China right now are very limited in the way they can do business. They try to overcome it. Also in Europe, there are countries under lockdown like Netherlands and Austria, where hopefully soon they will get out of it.
I believe that sometime in February or maybe early March, business will go back to normal. We continue, as I said, to evaluate the situation country by country, territory by territory. You know, we are lucky that it is not affecting the United States as of now. With the Omicron and the new variant that we just came, which create another, you know, fear in some countries, we will see what will happen.
Okay, thanks, Moshe. Just to clarify, I mean, you guys are now in dozens of countries. You just mentioned a few. What, you know, what percentage of your revenue base is in these that are actually having more severe lockdowns?
Well, China is one of our growth engine. I believe that in the Q1 , we will do less than what we did in the Q4, hopefully not much less. I would say that 10% of the countries where we sell will be affected. Other than that, we need to wait and see what will happen in the next few weeks.
Okay, great. No, thanks for that. I just wanna ask one about margins and supply chain. It seems like you've been doing a good job, you know, managing through these challenges, keeping your margins really high here. Is there anything that investors should be concerned about in terms of disruption or increased costs, and how conservative are you being on your margin guidance for 2022?
Well, we managed very well the situation in 2021 as regards to the supply chain. I'm sure you know that, you know, we have established a red team in Israel that every time we had a problem with component and with sub-assembly, we managed to overcome it because we have more than one suppliers per each component and each sub-assembly. Things are not getting better. That's something that I can tell you right away. The supply chain is not improving. I don't say it's getting worse, but as we see now the beginning of 2022, we still see some difficulties, and we foresee that during 2022 it will continue. I can give you an example of logistics.
A container from Israel to North America used to cost $3,500, now the cost is $12,000. We managed to overcome it by doing some kind of special shipping in the lower cost. I believe we will overcome the supply chain like we did in 2021, and we deliver everything within a week or 10 days of every order. We do our best. I know from some of our competitors and some other companies in the medical field that they are giving now, you know, delivery time to customers of six and nine months. We did not do that. We are flexible, and I would say that hopefully it will not affect us.
Okay, maybe just ask one more. I'd like to ask one on the, on the pipeline and more of a clinical one maybe for Spero. Would just love some thoughts on Empower, if you're still feeling like $20 million or $25 million, I think you've talked about, is a good number for 2022, and maybe talk about some of the data that you're generating around it and whether that could develop into, you know, more kind of medical applications for Empower in the future.
I'll let Moshe handle the first part of that question, Shaq.
Well, if the question is whether or not we will do what we anticipated for 2022, which is worldwide $20 million, I think yes. I think we will do it in North America, and we intend to introduce the platforms in other parts or other territories as well. But I think, Spero, what Matt asked is about the clinical data.
Sure. Thank you, Matt. Great question. We're always very conservative when we're discussing female health and wellness because obviously the standards there as opposed to aesthetics are a little different. However, you know, we did do a soft launch, and we're getting feedback continuously across the country from a number of urogynecologists and gynecologists. As you know, urogynecologists are the group that is probably the most critical and the toughest group to penetrate, just as it was in plastic surgery. This is where we started and because we believe we have a product that has a lot of staying power, and we wanted them to buy in and adopt and sort of guide us through this process. I can tell you right now that the results have been very, very encouraging. They're extremely excited.
We have ways to go, absolutely. The preliminary data that's coming back is pretty remarkable. Typically, we look at a number of treatments and some of the data that shows that we go one to three treatments typically for what this new device is doing, especially as it regards to intravaginal microneedling. We wanted to see how far we can push things just with one treatment. We saw that the results are very, very strong and we're very, very happy to see that our preliminary results are coming back in this fashion. Now, as you know, Matt, this is a marathon, and we're always very conservative on the way we look at our data and the way we present it. I can tell you right now the excitement is palpable.
I'm very very happy to say that, and Shaq can probably reiterate the same thing, that feedback and the excitement across the board is something that we're very very happy to have. I'll leave it at that for now, but because a lot of the things that we're doing are in the midst of publication, as you know. Everything we do is peer-reviewed. Everything we try to put out there is gonna be published. Our adoption rate for KOLs is we always take the hard way first, as you know, and that pays us in dividends. Urogynecologist, toughest group, we have some of the top KOL leaders in the country, and we're just continuing doing studies with them and opening the doors with this group. I can tell you right now, they're very excited.
I can leave it at that.
Thank you very much, guys.
Great.
The next question comes from Kyle Rose with Canaccord. Please go ahead.
Great. Thank you for taking the questions. You know, Moshe and Yair, you talked a lot about the growth in the consumable side and with the install base you have, expectations for that to continue to grow. Can you maybe just kinda help us flesh that out a little bit more? I mean, does that mean you expect to see consumables and service revenues go from 11% to 12% next year? Does that mean that we could see it, you know, move closer towards 15%? Just trying to really understand what that looks like, now that you've got, you know, over 11,000 systems placed globally.
Well, I can tell you that, hi, this is Moshe. I can tell you that in the last quarter, we sold 132,000 disposables compared to the third quarter, where we sold only 94,000. This is growing. But as long as we continue to install or to enlarge our installed base, and by the way, in the Q4, we sold more than 1,300 systems. It went up from 10%-11%. With the installed base of 11,600 systems, that's what we have right now on the market. We have something like, I would say, close to more than 500,000 disposables every year. Don't forget, not all the systems that we sell need the disposable.
I would say that a little bit more than 50 or 55, maybe 60% are using disposable and go all the way to the subdermal fat. As we grow, all of our new platforms are designed to have disposable. We will not design additional platforms without any disposables. In the future, once the install base will get, I would say to 20,000 or 25,000, I assume that the disposable will grow to a neighborhood of, I would say 40%-50% of the total revenue. But again, I would like to say it again, we're not a razor and razor blade company. We do not sell the system for less, or we do not give the system for free just to charge high price for disposable.
We know that some companies in the medical aesthetic did it in the past, and they failed. Therefore, we charge for the system and we price the disposable at a reasonable price in order to encourage doctor to use more and more and to have more treatment. I think this is the right approach and the right philosophy, and this is basically our strategy.
Great. I appreciate the color there. You know, I think we've already gotten you know some good insights on Empower. Maybe I wondered if we could get some commentary on just the launch of EvolveX and just you know what you're seeing there, whether it's you know upgrades from existing customers or continued penetration from new customers there. Maybe just a commentary on that launch would be helpful.
Shakil, can you answer that?
Yeah, sure, absolutely. We've actually seen some, you know, the combination of RF and, you know, an EMS type of device. We're basically seeing. I know you had mentioned that if it was existing customers or not. You know, there are some that are. We're gonna be doing some upgrades for some of our existing customers, so they have the latest and greatest technology.
As in terms of the newer business with the market, we have an extremely aggressive plan put in place for you know, as you know, as Spero even just mentioned with Empower and also with Evolve, we always kind of slow both things to make sure that things are ready to excel from an efficacy standpoint, a safety standpoint, and also from a result standpoint. Now that we're very comfortable with that, you know, although we use the word launches for both Empower and for Evolve X, now we're going into the hard launch phase, which we feel pretty optimistic about, both from you know, the business perspective for our customers and also from our standpoint as well. We do see, we've seen some excitement.
The results so far have been, you know, Spero can elaborate a little more, but the results so far have been very impressive. Safety has been very impressive. Overall, we're feeling pretty good about it.
Spero, did you wanna talk a little bit about the?
Great.
Yeah, I mean, sure. Look, when you look at incontinence in these things, and you look at the standard that's been up to now, sort of if you could get a 50% improvement at three months, I think that benchmark is quite low, and that's just a function of what the technology is out there currently. 50% improvement being like, you know, a woman that loses urine and does these things, that's what she can expect. I think that if we took that as a goal, and if we went after that as a goal to hit that sort of 50% benchmark at three months, I don't think we would be in business.
You know, we're taking everything that we do from the aesthetics, and Moshe will also say the following, that we will not go to market unless we have something that could produce 85% to 90% clinical result. Because simply put, the people will not pay cash for it, and we're in the cash business. We're taking all that model, we're taking all that sort of thought process, and we're applying it to the female health and wellness sector. We need to. I can tell you right now, our preliminary results are blowing past that number, so past the 50% at three months, which is currently out there. We're very, very encouraged in that respect, but that is our standard.
We need to be able to say, if someone's coming in for a clinical treatment that is not currently covered by insurance and is paying cash for it, that patient needs to be able to say, "Okay, I have an 80%-90% improvement." I can tell you right now, that's the area we're looking in, and that's what we're getting right now is feedback from our doctors, and we're looking at the data, and we're very excited that we're actually blowing past that benchmark. I'm very cautious always because these things are numbers, but so far that's the range that we're getting, or it's really high, and it's comparable to what we get in aesthetics, and I'm excited to keep on moving this direction.
Thank Moshe for the support he's giving us, but that is our benchmark, and we wanna redefine the way things are being addressed in the space in female health and wellness, and I think we're well off on the road to do that.
Spero, can you talk a little bit about Evolve X?
Great.
Sure. I mean, it's important to understand that when it comes to radiofrequency and heating and muscle and all that sort of thing, we were the first to actually look at that space. I can tell you this much, you know, Shak and I were talking about this, and he was like, "Well, you know, how about we're preheating the muscle just as you work out?" There's a whole history of heating the muscle and rehabilitation for athletes and injured athletes. The ability to be able to preheat the muscle and then activate it with EMS is something that we started doing early on, and we did that because it's a function of our different hand pieces, right? We have a RF hand piece, and we have EMS hand piece.
Taking that ability and bringing it over to Evolve X and saying, "Okay, now we have a hand piece that can do both at the same time," is great, but you could also uncouple it. What does that mean? Well, everybody's different, everyone's requirement is different. Having the ability to change things around, to be able to come and say, "Well, what do you want? Do you wanna you know, want your muscles bigger or you want the fat gone?" 'Cause there are people who say, "Okay, I don't need the fat, all this fat," or, "I don't wanna lose volume in my butt," for example.
All these things, the more any device or any platform that respects the individuality and the change in the body habitus of every patient, and you're able to change things around like that is great, right? 'Cause everyone is sort of unique. Transform and Evolve X does that. I could do RF with EMS, preheat the muscle, and then activate it. I could do EMS on itself. I could do RF on itself. That is sort of the way we look at things in plastic surgery when we do minimally invasive and invasive surgery, and we've brought that over to non-invasive.
That ability to change things around, to couple, uncouple, is sort of something that Mishka was great at delivering, and we find a big resonance in our customer base, to be able to do that as well, 'cause it's mimicking, you know, real life and the way clinical results are being addressed.
Thank you very much for taking the questions.
Not at all.
The next question comes from Michael Matson with Needham & Company. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks. You know, I wanted to ask about the EPS guidance. You know, by my math it seems I understand there's a tax rate headwind, but it does seem to imply that there's an operating margin decline in 2021. Or sorry, from 2021, if my math is correct. So is there any reason to expect that or is it just being conservative on your part?
We always try to be conservative, as you know. In addition, we do plan to invest more in sales and marketing and some more marketing activities as well as clinical studies. This year, we expect to have a slightly higher operating expenses. Overall, we're looking at 48% operating margin. It's still quite remarkable. Adding to that, around 2022 going to be the first year, as you know, that we start paying taxes after a 10-year break. That would come out to be at around 10% we estimated at this point at least. As I mentioned, we always tend to be conservative when we can.
Okay. Got it. You know, your cash balance continues to grow here. You know, the stock has pulled back quite a bit, you know, arguably overvalued. Sorry, undervalued maybe when you look at it on a P/E basis. Would you be open to, you know, doing a share repurchase?
Mike, we did. So far we did close to 1.5 million shares that we bought back in the last, I would say, less than a year. We still have a way to go. The board of directors give us the permission to continue to buy back shares, and we will continue. I'm not saying that we will spend $200 million for that, but we'll do it on a daily basis. Yes, you're right. We have more than $400 million in cash, close to $420 million in cash. We are exploring some opportunities for M&A, but we did not find anything that will fit our portfolio yet.
One thing I can tell you, as we said before, we will not buy a laser company because laser is becoming a commodity in the medical aesthetic. We need to find something that will complement our portfolio, either in technology, marketing, and sales network, something that will two plus two will equal five. Nowadays it's very difficult to find something with a in a reasonable price. We have a very robust R&D pipeline, close to 15 projects, and we're releasing two projects every year. The organic growth will continue to be the most, I would say, growth engine for InMode, at least in the next two years.
Okay. Got it. Then just looking at the different product categories. You know, the hands-free looks like it's been down year-over-year for two quarters in a row. I mean, I would assume that's mainly just due to the comps from you know, COVID, where that was kind of benefiting back in 2020. You know, conversely, non-invasive you know, have been strengthening recently. Maybe that's a similar issue in kind of the opposite direction, just easier comps. But I was just curious if there's anything else going on there aside from the comps in those two you know, categories.
Well, the hands-free, when we came up with the hands-free to the market, we knew that this is not going to be more than 20% of our business. Our main category is minimally invasive and ablative, where we can take operations from the full surgery and the full anesthesia and bring it to the doctor office. This is exactly what the Empower is doing. The Empower is minimally invasive because you basically penetrate the skin and you do some fractional RF as well. We will continue to develop product that will have on one hand more surgical than non-surgical, and on the other hand will have some disposable as well. The hands-free is a complementary technology for us. It is not going to be 50% of our business.
The non-invasive RF and the laser, which I call it as a commodity category, we have a lot of competition for many companies. This is not the main category for us, and it is good because it's a very competitive market with very low gross margin, with overcapacity, with, you know, price per unit, which is much lower than what we can charge without any IP protection. Laser are invented, you know, 40-something years ago. There was no IP protection anymore. Therefore, we try to concentrate on where we have competitive advantage. This is basically the surgical part of our business.
I believe that we're very happy with the breakdown of the category, where more than 70% are in the area where we can protect the technology and get nice prices for the system. 20% will be the hands-free, and I hope it will continue. We are going to bring to the market second generation of the hands-free devices. The laser and the regular RF, the non-invasive RF, will continue to be between 8%-10% of our business. That kind of breakdown will continue in the future.
Okay. Got it. Thank you.
The next question comes from Jeff Johnson with Baird. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning, guys. Maybe just a couple clarifying or follow-up questions on things that have been discussed so far. Moshe, just your comments there on the hands-free, I mean, and trying to put that together with, I think it was Shaq's comments on Evolve X. You know, as Evolve X hopefully ramps some this year, does hands-free continue to decline year-over-year for the next couple quarters until we kind of anniversary through those four really tough comps? Or just how to think about the year-over-year performance of hands-free just in the next couple few quarters.
No, we did not say that this will go down. The only thing I said, it will remain something like between 18%-20% of our total business. As the business will grow, the hands-free will also grow. I mean, the Transform and Evolve X is the second generation of the Evolve, and hopefully in 2022, we will bring second generation for the Evoke, for the face hands-free as well, just to maintain the competitive advantage. I mean, the fact that we came up with EMS and RF combined in the same modality give us a major competitive advantage vis-à-vis all the other companies that in the hands-free currently. I don't think the hands-free will go down. It will continue to be a complementary technology for the doctors.
To tell you that will be more than 20% of our total business, I will say, I don't think it will be. It will maintain the same level and the same, I would say, percentage as part of the total portfolio.
Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. Just going back on Empower, you know, look, I understand you guys are a cash pay business. It's a fantastic place to be, from a consumer-facing standpoint, things like that. If some of those urinary incontinence and urinary loss, or urine loss numbers are as good as they are, and even if the path might be extended, you know, a couple few years it would take to get actual reimbursement, would there ever be a reason to go down the path of trying to get a reimbursement code? It would seem like it would open the market up so much more, and if the effect is so strong, it would seem like it would be good for the patient as well.
Just how to think about reimbursement, you know, commercial pay, government pay versus cash pay, for something like an Empower procedure on UI.
Let me try to answer, and I will hand it over to Spero, maybe he will elaborate more. We're not against reimbursement. We never said that. I mean, in the future, we will continue to develop some indication for women's health, which might need reimbursement. As of today, the Empower with the four modalities, the FormaV, the Morpheus8V, the VTone, and the Aviva, we feel like private money, it's the best, I would say, business model for these platforms. To tell you that in the future, we will not go into reimbursement indication, we might go, and we're developing some indication like that today.
Moshe, that's a great question, by the way. A lot of companies will spend a lot of time going down the reimbursement pathway and not having any revenue at all. At one point, hoping that at some point after they've burned through all that cash, that at some point they're able to go down that route. Getting breakthrough designation, as we all know, is very hard to do. I can tell you this much, that absolutely, we want to change the way women's health is being done, and we're in the unique position to have cash-based procedures that do support our research, do support indications, do support FDA, all those things, that we can do this in parallel. That's a unique position to be in.
All this data that we're collecting, everything that we're looking at, the types of KOLs we're bringing on board, the type of academic establishments that we're engaging, it's all in building the foundation for that in the future. Yes, we're not opposed. On the contrary, we wanted to be able to open the market, but we're in the unique position to be able to do these things with a cash-based foundation, which is quite different than most companies out there. It's sort of pass or fail. As far as when they're doing these sort of things. Does that answer your question?
It does. Thank you. That's helpful. The last one, I promise. Just, you know, on the competition side, Moshe, I mean, I totally agree with you. You know, docs do not like paying click fees or per-use fees. I think the model, as much as investors wanna see more recurring revenue, I totally get the model of charging a full, you know, market price for the system itself and lower price for the consumables. That's surely what those doctors appreciate. On the competitive side, you know, there is some noise out there from a company that has some good skin tightening data, but they are charging a very high consumable price as well.
One, you know, or just kind of help us understand the competition in MI skin tightening right now, with this newer competitor that has good skin tightening data, but the consumables are high.
Well, I assume you talk about Thermage, which is with Solta, which they just announced that they're going public, and they released their prospectus. In their prospectus, yes, they have three-quarters, something like, I don't know, 75% disposable and 25% platforms. Don't forget, Thermage is a 25-year-old company. They are on the market for a long time. We are on the market only five or six years, 20% the time of the 25 years that they are. They have a bigger installed base, and they sell less platforms, and they sell more consumables. I think that one day we will sell more consumables, and it will be much higher than 10%. It takes time to build the installed base worldwide.
Once the install base will be much larger than what we have today, and I assume Thermage has much more than 10,000 systems worldwide installed, especially in Asia, where they are very strong. 70% of the business is in Asia. I believe that we will also see that our disposable proportion of the total revenue will be higher. Right now, we're still young company, and as a young company with only 11,000 system installed, I mean, the revenue coming from the disposable is growing and it's growing. It's went from 10%-11%, but don't expect that to go to 20% over three quarters. It will go slowly, but it will go nicely. We see more and more treatment are being done.
We see more and more disposables are being bought from us. But at the same time, we see a lot of new platforms that we install in the market, and the new doctors need some time before they start doing 10 cases per week. This is a learning curve. We all ride on the learning curve, and one day we will not. I don't want to say like Solta and like Thermage, but the disposables will be a bigger part of our revenue.
Thanks. Maybe we can take it offline in the follow-up call, Moshe. I was actually referring to a different company, the Renuvion helium procedure. Again, maybe, in the interest of time, we can just talk offline. Thank you.
We're happy to send you an article where we did a comparison study with them, so. It just got published.
Thank you.
last week.
Yeah, of course. He's talking about J-Plasma, I understand. Okay.
This concludes our question and answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Moshe Mizrahy for any closing remarks.
Thank you, operator. Thank you. Thank you all for joining our Q4 2021 and the full year of 2021 earnings call. I want to take the opportunity to thank all of our people around the world in all of the 71 countries that we operate in. I want to thank the salespeople. I want to thank the engineering team for working very hard. Special thanks to the logistics and the manufacturing and the supply chain people that managed to supply everything on time in a tough year like 2021, and I'm sure that they will continue to do that. Thank you all and see you soon in the next earnings call.
This conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.