First Time Loading...

Hamilton Thorne Ltd
XTSX:HTL

Watchlist Manager
Hamilton Thorne Ltd Logo
Hamilton Thorne Ltd
XTSX:HTL
Watchlist
Price: 1.45 CAD 4.32%
Updated: May 3, 2024

Earnings Call Analysis

Summary
Q3-2023

Robust Sales Growth Despite Net Losses

The company showcased a solid sales increase of 16% for the quarter, with a notable growth in gross profits driven by high-margin products and direct sales, despite global inflationary challenges. Striving to maintain this momentum, quarterly adjusted EBITDA saw a marginal rise to $2.2 million, although net losses amounted to $785,000 due to heightened operating and interest expenses. The cash balance dipped slightly to $15.3 million, reflecting investments in growth and M&A activities. Looking ahead, the company anticipates a 15% growth in Q4 reported results with organic growth between 9-10%, and a projected improvement in adjusted EBITDA margins to around 19%.

Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2023-Q3

from 0
Operator

Welcome to the Hamilton Thome LTD Third Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. Before turning the call over to your host today, please be reminded of our standard public company policy on forward-looking information and use of non-IFRS measures. Certain information presented or otherwise discussed on this call may contain forward-looking statements. These statements may involve, but are not limited to, comments relating to strategies, expectations, planned operations, product announcements, scientific advances or future actions. This information is based on current expectations that are subject to significant risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict. Should one or more risks or uncertainties materialize or should assumptions underlying the forward-looking statements prove incorrect, actual results, performance or achievements cover materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. These factors should be considered carefully and prospective investors and other parties should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. The company assumes no obligation to update such forward-looking statements or to update the reasons why actual results could differ from those reflected in the forward-looking statements unless and until required by securities laws applicable to the company. Additional information identifying risks and uncertainties is contained in filings by the company with the Canadian securities regulators, including without limitation, the company's management discussion and analysis for the quarter and 9 months ended September 30, 2023, which filings are available under the company's profile at www.sedar.com. During this call, the company may reference adjusted EBITDA, constant currency and organic growth as non-IFRS measures, which are used by management as measures of financial performance. Please see the sections entitled use of non-IFRS measures and Results of Operations in the company's management discussion and analysis for the period covered for further information and a reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA to net income. Now let me turn the call over to Hamilton Thome's CEO, David Wolf.

D
David Wolf
executive

Great. Thank you very much. Good morning, and welcome to the Hamilton Thome Third Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. I'd like to reintroduce myself, David Wolf, President and CEO of Hamilton Thome. And also on the call with me today will be Francesco Fragasso, our CFO. Our call will have the following format. First, I'll provide a summary of operational and financial results for the quarter and 9 months ended September 30, 2023, with a focus on our sales, markets and operational performance. Francesco will follow with a more detailed discussion of our financial results for the periods as well as a review of our financial position and liquidity, and I will return for a few minutes to provide some information on our outlook for the balance of 2023 and a few comments on 2024. We will then open our line up for questions. I'll begin with sales results. Sales grew 16% for the quarter and 17% for the year-to-date. Gross profit as a percentage of sales increased to 49% for the quarter and 50.5% for the 9 months ended September 30 versus 48.5% and 49% for the comparable periods of 2022, so a 50-basis point increase, primarily due to increased sales of higher-margin proprietary equipment and software, services and branded consumables combined with increased direct sales of products as well as the addition of Microptic. All this was partially offset by higher material costs in the third quarter 2023, caused by global inflationary environment. Equipment sales growth was 9% for the quarter, but was adversely affected by a somewhat higher-than-expected decline in equipment sales to China in the quarter. due to several factors, including continued economic slowdowns in China, the enforcement of buy China policies, combined with the emergence of some local competition and delays in regulatory class. While some of this reduction is transient with our orders in Q4 are looking strong, these trends have been impacting our business for some time. We do expect we are likely reaching a bottom. Consumables, software and services grew over 20% in the quarter, reflecting continued strong demand for these largely high-margin recurring revenue categories. Organic sales growth was 10% for the 9-month period and 5% for the quarter, with the lower growth in the quarter largely due to the impacts of a consumable's product recall by a contract manufacturer and slower equipment sales in China, which I previously mentioned. Adjusted EBITDA increased 3% to $2.2 million for the quarter and increased 11% to $7.8 million for the 9-month period. EBITDA margins for the quarter declined about 180 basis points versus Q2-Q3 2022 in part due to product mix as our China sales consist primarily of high-margin proprietary products and grow our operating expenses spread over lower revenues than expected. Francesco will discuss operating expenses more fully in his remarks. On a geographic basis, sales in the Americas and EMEA regions were up significantly for the quarter and year-to-date, with sales to the Pacific region down substantially in Q3 due in large part to the slowdown in China in the quarter, which I mentioned, but we're essentially flat for the year-to-date. As we have discussed in prior calls, due to stabilizing exchange rate, currency fluctuations and translating financial statements to the presentation of currency of U.S. dollars had a positive impact this quarter but a minimal impact for the year-to-date. Results in sales growth in constant currency were 12% for the quarter and 16% year-to-date. I'm also happy to report that while sales supply chain issues continue from time to time, they are far more normalized, leading to fewer delays in production in some. I'll now turn the call over to Francisco who will provide a more detailed discussion on the numbers.

F
Francesco Fragasso
executive

Thank you, David. Good morning, everyone. I'm Francesco Fragasso, CFO at Hamilton Thome. I will briefly highlight the third quarter 2023 financial results. David has already provided an update on sales and gross profit. So I will focus on the other elements of the income statement as well as the cash flow and liquidity of the company. Operating expenses, excluding expenses related to M&A activities, increased 27% for the quarter and 28% for the 9-month period to $8.1 million and $23.7 million, respectively. Expense increase was mainly due to the addition of Microptic expenses for the full quarter, increased costs associated with investment in sales and other personnel to support growth and inflationary pressure across many cost items. The return to [ PicoBit ] level for sales and marketing activity is also a factor for expense increase in Q3 2023 compared to the same period of 2022. Overall increase in operating expenses were in line with our expectations. In light of continued inflationary pressure on our debt operating expenses, we are actively looking at cost containment strategies that we expect to improve our overall financial performance. Net interest expense in Q3 2023 increased by $265,000 to $369,000 due to additional term debt incurred to finance Microptic acquisition in November 2022 and a higher use of a bank line of credit to fund working capital, partially offset by the repayment of outstanding principal on term loans. In the quarter, income tax expense increased to $317,000 tax recovery from $337,000 tax recovery in Q3 2022 primarily due to the reduction in income before taxes and to the reduction in deferred income tax recovery of $387,000 in Q3 2023 compared to a deferred income tax recovery of $432,000 in the same period of 2022. The change relates to temporary differences between income tax value and the carrying value of assets and liabilities. Net loss for the quarter was $785,000 compared to net income of $99,000 in the prior year quarter. Net loss for the 9-month period was $1.1 million versus a net income of $930,000 in the prior year period. This is primarily due to the increased operating and interest expenses I previously mentioned. Adjusted EBITDA, which we consider an important metric of our financial performance, increased by 3% to $2.2 million for the quarter and increased 11% to $7.8 million for the 9-month period. This was mainly due to revenue and gross profit growth, offset by planned increases in operating expense. As a reminder, adjusted EBITDA is a non-IFRS measure. Please see the reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA to net income for the quarter and the 9-month period in our MD&A report filed today on both SEDAR and on our website. Turning now to company cash flow and balance sheet. The company cash balance at the end of September 2023 was $15.3 million compared to $16.7 million at the end of 2022, a decrease of $1.4 million. The decrease in cash balance was primarily due to investments in working capital to support expected growth, the investment in product development and in expanding our manufacturing capacity and payments related to M&A activities. The company generated cash from operations of $1.5 million in the first 9 months of 2023 after having invested $1.3 million in inventories. In the first 9 months of 2023, cash used in investing activities was $2.8 million of this $1.9 million related to the normal expenditures in PP&E and for ongoing investment in capitalizing tangible of product development activities and EUR 0.9 million lease of improvement, achievement and for nature related to the expansion of manufacturing capacity in some of our operating business units. Investments in inventory and capacity growth have continued longer than we originally expected. However, cash flow is expected to improve as investment in expanding capacity has been completed and inventory has decreased in the coming months. Cash used in financing activity was $70,000 for the 9 months of 2023. Those were mainly related to payment of scheduled term loan and lease obligations, net of $2.9 million proceeds from a working capital line of credit. Note payable and term loans outstanding totalled $14.9 million at the end of September 2023, equal to 1.4x the 12 trailing months adjusted EBITDA. At the end of September 2023, the company had a strong liquidity position of EUR 25.3 million, including EUR 15.3 million in available cash and $10 million in unused borrowing capacity. This liquidity has been partially used to fund medical product acquisition on October 10. Post acquisition, the company's liquidity position is approximately $12 million. Outstanding loans are EUR 22.4 million and pro forma 12 trailing months adjusted EBITDA, including genetics, is EUR 13.3 million, resulting in a 1.7% ratio debt to pro forma adjusted EBITDA. We are in the process of discussing a renewal of our M&A line of credit with our bank, which could provide us with additional liquidity. I will now turn the call back over to David to comment on Hamilton Thome outlook.

D
David Wolf
executive

Thank you. As Francesco mentioned, after the end of the quarter, we acquired Dynetics based in Belgium. Dynetics is a leading manufacturer of a wide range of proprietary high-quality devices to the global IVF market, including Ovum pickup needles and embryo transfers catheters. This is an important addition for us as it expands our addressable market from the laboratory into the procedure room in a meaningful way. Dynetics has a store also. Dynetics has historically enjoyed higher gross profit and EBITDA margins than our base business, which will have some impact on Q4 but is expected to be meaningfully positive in 2024. Looking forward to the balance of 2023, we continue to feel the company is in a strong position as demand for our products and services remains robust based on the positive trends in our field. We do believe that the soft organic growth in Q3 is temporary, and the company should return to double-digit organic growth in the short term and maintain that kind of growth through in the longer term. Company's recent investments in operating expenses and capital expenditures have been made to facilitate longer-term growth and can support significant expansion of our business that should also lead to EBITDA margin expansion in the coming years. In the short term, we are also implementing cost containment strategies in light of the continued inflationary pressure on operating expense. As previously mentioned, exchange rate headwinds have stabilized and if this trend continues, we expect foreign exchange fluctuations should provide some tailwinds through the end of the year. Based on these trends, we are expecting fourth quarter reported results to grow approximately 15% with organic growth for the quarter between 9% and 10%. While adjusted EBITDA margins were below our expectations in Q3, we expect adjusted EBITDA margins of approximately 19% in Q4. As Francesco discussed, cash flow is expected to improve as the investment in expanding capacity has been largely completed and inventory will decrease in the following months. Regarding our M&A activities, we have an extensive pipeline and continue to actively work on multiple acquisitions and with total liquidity of over $12 million after our most recent acquisition and further debt capacity, I believe we're well positioned to continue to execute on our acquisition program. In summary, we feel extremely positive about the market position, and we are in and are confident in our team's ability to execute on our strategy of driving long-term growth and EBITDA expansion by investing in our organic growth while building scale, enhancing our product offerings and expanding our geographic and direct sales footprint through acquisitions. We'll now open the line up for questions. Operator, can you present the first question from a queue when you have it ready?

D
David Martin
analyst

First question, the China factors that you mentioned, you said you thought they'd be transient. I'm wondering why you think they'll be transient instead of persisting or possibly even getting worse. And what form are they taking? Is there a ban on sales of products that aren't made in China? Are they increasing duties? And how are you adjusting to that?

D
David Wolf
executive

Yes. Thanks for the question. So maybe I could have been clearer. My point was part of these are transient, but part of these, I think, are in fact, structural. There are 3 things going on. One is the decline in demand that we're seeing in China based on -- again, it's not perfect reporting in China, but the information we're getting is lower cycles and lower and just generally lower economic activity and more nervousness about the economy. Now not a great macroeconomic scale, but again, we view those to be transient because at some point, China is an economic powerhouse that will return to even maybe not the robust growth they had through last decade, certainly should return to good growth. Other of these, as I said, are somewhat structural in the sense that there is a buy China policy, respectively in certain situations, I would say, maybe requiring the buyer to buy Chinese products if there are alternatives available. Primarily, this is primarily exercised in state-owned hospitals and institutions. There are certainly exceptions that role when equivalent products are not available in China. And for some of our more, I would say, high-tech products and more highly differentiated products, we continue to see strong demand. And lastly, this is kind of in the, I guess, somewhat structural and somewhat trends. China has clearly made it more difficult for foreign manufacturers to register our products to continue to sell in China. We have, over the past couple of years, had some products that we have registered both renewals of existing products and new products. And we've had some products that have been delayed. In one case, where the authority has actually changed the class of the product in a renewal, which actually increased the burden of registering it pretty substantially. Nevertheless, I guess, we view that to be somewhat transitory because we are working our way through these things.I would say we are not expecting robust sales in China in Q4, though, as I said, they look somewhat normalized, and we're certainly not forecasting even though we still believe we're going to have good growth in 2024, and we'll talk about that a little bit later when we have finished our budgeting process. We're not today expecting robust growth in 2024 either.

D
David Martin
analyst

What percent of hospitals in China are government-owned or controlled? Is it the vast majority of them?

D
David Wolf
executive

Yes. So the major hospitals are in some way government owned or controlled, but there is a large sector that doesn't necessarily operate completely in the sunlight that is private.

D
David Martin
analyst

And last question related to this. You said high-tech products or if they're not available, would circumvent these rules. What percent of your portfolio of products, would you say fall into that category?

D
David Wolf
executive

So the products we've been selling there, I would say, virtually all of them. Historically, we have done a strong business there in our laser systems, our CASA systems, which I would say are highly, highly technically differentiated. We've also done strong business in our incubators and our flow hoods, which are, by no means, commodity products, but have a little less pure technical differentiation.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Stefan Quenneville of Echelon.

S
Stefan Quenneville
analyst

Can you talk a bit about why you expect things to bounce back sort of quickly sort of in Q4? What gives you the confidence around that? I know we have a good chunk of the quarter is already in. And could you give a little more color on the consumables product we call -- just help us understand what's going on there?

D
David Wolf
executive

Okay. Great. So I think you sort of answered your first question. We're almost halfway through the quarter. And certainly, on our capital equipment business, we typically have orders pretty much in at this point for almost everything that we're going to ship during the quarter. And for the consumables business, there's a steadiness to the business. So we have -- again, there can always be variations, but we have what we believe are reliable forecast from our sales and marketing teams of the sales that we should see in the quarter. So I mean we certainly have confidence in the numbers. But that is behind it are, I think in back Q3 was somewhat and maybe Q2 a lesser degree with somewhat of the exception quarter where we did see some slowdown in the organic growth. I will say, as you well know, certainly on the capital equipment side, particularly, there's some serious significant lumpiness to our business. And in order of even a couple of hundred thousand dollars that potentially slips for one quarter and other, given our size of our company actually has a meaningful impact. But that being said, we do feel confident that everything that we have TDC can get out the door. On the recall side, so I think we've been pretty clear on most of our capital equipment is manufactured and probably more accurately assembled in-house by our own teams because it's a relatively high value but relatively low volume equipment, so it doesn't really make sense to outsource that for a number of reasons. On the consumables side, we generally used contract manufacturers or outsourced labor to make those products. One, maybe 2 product lines, and I want to get into too many specifics that we had outsourced or maybe I should say, had a contract manufacturer make for us. We did have a recall due to -- they declared a recall due to some testing issues. Those 2 product lines were out of the market completely in part in Q3. And we've started receiving back in and shipping one of those product lines in Q4. So we'll certainly see some of those revenues because still a strong demand for it. The other where we haven't yet cleared the recall, but we're hopeful that we'll see at least some of that happen in Q4. To give you a size of scale, this is a several hundred thousand dollar a quarter set of product lines. And I would say we'll recover maybe less than 1/3 of it in Q4, but we do expect and certainly are hopeful in 2024, we'll be able to begin -- recommence full sales in shipment.

S
Stefan Quenneville
analyst

Okay. And just a quick follow-up. In terms of the margin impact of sort of China and the product recall, just can you give me a big sense of which one had more of an EBITDA impact?

D
David Wolf
executive

Yes. So I mean, just numerically, if you compare Q3 versus Q3, the China number was much -- just a bigger absolute number. Margins were roughly similar because of the mix. I will say there's a little bit of fuzziness in there because we are comparing a Q3 that was certainly below, but we've averaged during 2022, but to a particularly high quarter in 2022. So if you had more normalized it probably would have had roughly equal significance.

S
Stefan Quenneville
analyst

Got it. And maybe just one last question on China. I think there's a view that maybe you're under-indexed to Asian markets and your overall business, China obviously included as a major driver in Asia Pac. With these issues, like I'm certain they're not just affecting you and you sound like you're still sort of long-term bullish on China for a number of reasons, which makes a lot of sense. Despite the challenges here in the near term over the next little while, which you've been facing in the last few quarters, is it providing any opportunities for you in terms of M&A opportunities or get product focused, given that other people might be having the same challenges?

D
David Wolf
executive

Yes. So it's a good question. So clearly, we have been under-indexed in China and in Asia. And as I mentioned, it's going to be roughly flattish for the year-to-date. And so on a percentage of sales basis, that little slice of the pie is going to go down even more. So to the extent you're under, as you say, under-indexed in a growing market, that does provide opportunity. Exercising that opportunity can be challenging. As we've discussed in the past, India is an attractive growth market. We're clearly seeing growth in some of the more secondary and tertiary markets, and maybe that's a function of slowdowns in some of the core markets like China. So we've seen growth and significant growth in Vietnam and Thailand, where there's a lot of medical tourism. We're seeing good solid growth in Australia. Now that shouldn't be surprising because we do our own direct sales there. So hopefully, we should do better there. And we're I guess I should say we still think that Asia Pac is an important region, roughly half the world's population is in that area. Wealth is growing, which means according to IBS is growing. So it's clearly an area we continue to focus on.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] This will conclude our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to David Wolf for any closing remarks.

D
David Wolf
executive

Thank you very much. As I usually end our call, I'd like to give my thanks to all of our employees, the great work they do and their dedication they've shown to our business and to our customers. And I'd like to also thank our business partners, shareholders and all those on this call and the support they've shown in our company. I'd like to encourage anybody who is for interest in learning more to go to our website, www.hamiltonthome.ltd for more information on Hamilton Thome's products, initiatives and further investor information. With that, I'll end the call and look forward to speaking with you after Q4 results.

Operator

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation, and you may now disconnect.