SomaLogic, Inc. (NASDAQ:SLGC) Q1 2023 Earnings Conference Call May 11, 2023 4:30 PM ET
Company Participants
Marissa Bych – Investor Relations, Gilmartin Group LLC
Adam Taich – Chief Executive Officer
Shaun Blakeman – Chief Financial Officer
Conference Call Participants
Daniel Brennan – TD Cowen
Dan Arias – Stifel Financial Corp.
Kyle Mikson – Canaccord Genuity Group Inc.
Brandon Couillard – Jefferies Group LLC
Operator
Good afternoon, and welcome to SomaLogic’s First Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. We will be facilitating a question-and-answer session towards the end of today’s call. As a reminder, this call is being recorded for replay purposes.
I would now like to turn the call over to Marissa Bych with Gilmartin Group Investor Relations for introductory comments.
Marissa Bych
Thank you. Today, SomaLogic released financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2023. A copy of the press release is available on the company’s website. Before we begin, I’d like to remind you that management will make forward-looking statements during this call within the meaning of federal securities laws, which are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor Provision of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Any statements contained in this call that relates to expectations or predictions of future events, results or performance are forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements, including without limitation, those relating to our market opportunity, gross margin and future financial performance, protein content and database growth, customer base, diagnostic pipeline, expectations for hiring, and growth in our organization are based upon our current estimates and various assumptions.
These statements involve material risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or events to materially differ from those anticipated or implied by these forward-looking statements. Accordingly, you should not place undue reliance on these statements. For a list and description of the risks and uncertainties associated with our business, please refer to the Risk Factors section of our latest Form 10-K or 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
This conference call contains time-sensitive information and is actuate only as of the live broadcast today, May 11, 2023. SomaLogic disclaims any intention or obligation, except as required by law, to update or revise any financial projections or forward-looking statements, whether because of new information, future events, or otherwise.
I will now turn the call over to Adam Taich, Interim Chief Executive Officer.
Adam Taich
Thank you all for joining us this afternoon. It has been a busy 6 weeks since stepping into the CEO role. There is work to do and decisions to make, but I remain excited to lead SomaLogic into this next phase with a talented and dedicated team. During my portion of the call today, I’ll provide a brief overview of our first quarter results and some of my early impressions before turning the line to Shaun, our CFO, who will then review our financial results for the first quarter.
In our last call, we announced significant changes to the leadership and the board, and committed to focusing resources to serve our Life Sciences’ customers. The changes are centered around a simple objective, driving accelerated and predictable growth, while improving operational rigor and significantly reducing spend. We are leading innovators in the proteomics market, and we know what we need to do to execute on this objective.
Revenue for the first quarter was $20.4 million, tracking in line with our full year outlook. In addition, our expense reduction initiatives are on track, and we continue to actively assess opportunities to take our cost discipline further, reflecting our commitment to running the business efficiently with a focus on disciplined cash management to maintain the strength of our balance sheet. Plenty of work remains ahead. SomaLogic is just starting to become a scaled global commercial enterprise. In recent years, the transition has been too slow and the spend too high, and we are focused on fundamentally changing that dynamic.
Translating our assets, most importantly, our innovative technology into sustainable revenue growth requires commercial execution and as part of that process thoughtful customer engagement. This takes time and requires some shifts in how we develop and deliver innovation, support and service across the SomaLogic platform.
Today, we are focused on expanding our commercial base, where we saw nice traction over the course of the first quarter. We continue to see ample opportunity to scale our existing customers, while we grow and diversify our biopharma engagements across clinical, translational and early discovery projects.
Our operations are currently focused in North America, but we see significant opportunity to expand to new customers domestically and in EMEA and APAC. To this end, we recently announced a key partnership with BioStar, a Shanghai based leader in Life Sciences, to support our commercial rollout in China. This builds on our partnership with G42, our first authorized site in the Middle East, which we announced earlier this year.
An important contributor to commercial excellence is offering solutions to customers that meet very specific needs. To accomplish this, we are making our platform more accessible, in large part by accelerating our authorized site or kits offering, so that institutions around the world can run the SomaScan assay in their own lab. We expect to double the number of our sites by the end of 2023.
We also remain on track with our partnership with Illumina to deliver the SomaScan assay utilizing Illumina’s market leading install base of next generation sequencers with the full force of Illumina’s commercial team equipped and incentivized to market and sell our proteomics platform, we continue to expect early access to begin in 2024. Bolstering our suite of solutions is our ongoing work to bring more comprehensive, biologically relevant information to customers. As we drive forward in content leadership, we are pleased to reiterate that our SomaScan 10k plex solution is on track for the fourth quarter rollout.
As I mentioned in my opening remarks, our balance sheet and cash position remain a key differentiator for our business, especially in this current market environment. Today, while we remain heads down on operational and commercial execution, the board and I are actively evaluating inorganic opportunities, including those that could fundamentally change our business profile.
In closing, 6 weeks in, I have continued confidence in positioning SomaLogic to increase revenue and improve margins, while spending less capital. It’s a simple statement that requires hard work and discipline, but we are focused on delivering against these objectives and building shareholder value.
I will now turn the call to Shaun Blakeman, CFO, to review our financial performance and outlook.
Shaun Blakeman
Thanks, Adam. Turning to our financial results for the first quarter, revenue for the 3 months ended March 31, 2023 was $20.4 million, an 11% decrease from $23 million in the same period of the prior year. This quarter’s revenue was in line with our expectations and reflects continued customer expansion as our commercial team matures and achieves higher productivity. In the comparison of Q1 of 2023 to Q1 of 2022, it’s worth noting that Q1 of 2022 benefited from $3 million of NEB licensing revenue, and net of that number, our revenue growth was 2% year-over-year.
Gross margin for the first quarter of 2023 was 39.6%, compared to 49.3% in the first quarter of the prior year. Gross margins were driven down primarily by customer mix, including assay services completed for our work with the Human Technical Institute. As mentioned during our last earnings call, we expect full year gross margins will return to the 50% plus range as customer mix shifts in future quarters.
Total operating expenses for the first quarter of 2023 were $48.3 million, an 8% increase from $44.6 million in the first quarter of 2022. R&D expenses for the first quarter of 2023 were $14.1 million, compared to $13.8 million in the first quarter of 2022.
Sales, general and administrative expenses for the first quarter of 2023 were $34.2 million, including nearly $1.3 million in non-cash executive transition charges, compared to $30.8 million in the first quarter of 2022.
On a cash basis, our operating expenses align with our expense reduction efforts. For clarity, our full year GAAP operating expenses are expected to be around $170 million with stock compensation being approximately $25 million.
Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter of 2023 was a loss of $36.1 million, compared to an adjusted EBITDA loss of $32.3 million in the first quarter of 2022. Please see our press release on filed with the SEC as of this afternoon for a reconciliation between GAAP net loss and non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA, and we ended the quarter with $500.6 million of cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments.
As expected, Q1’s burn of $39 million was higher than we anticipate for the remainder of the year due to the impact of various 2022 restructuring charges. We expect more modest restructuring charges in Q2 with quarterly cash burn decreasing sequentially for the remainder of the year. We reiterate our guidance of $120 million or less in total cash burn for 2023.
Turning to our full year outlook, we are reiterating our 2023 revenue guidance of $80 million to $84 million, driven primarily by assay services and product sales. We believe this guidance range reflects the appropriate outlook for our business as we lay the foundation for meaningful top line expansion in future years.
As Adam expressed, our primary objective in 2023 is to apply more rigorous focus, process and fiscal discipline across the organization. Our progress in the first quarter is reflective of that with our commercial performance and cash burn tracking to plan.
At this point, I would like to turn the call back to Adam.
Adam Taich
Thanks, Shaun. With that, we will open it up to questions. Operator?
Question-and-Answer Session
Operator
Thank you. At this time, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Dan Brennan of TD Cowen. Your line is now open.
Daniel Brennan
Great, thank you. Thanks for the question, guys. Maybe just starting on the kit business, are you talking about doubling the number of customers, year-over-year? I think on the first quarter call you discussed maybe a gating factor with some of the robotics, the upfront stuff. So maybe just give us some color on kind of how that’s going, the kit rollout, maybe some color on how many kits customers you have, any context for the revenue contribution you’re expecting this year? Thanks. And then I have a couple of follow ups.
Adam Taich
Yeah, Dan. Thanks for that. It’s Adam here. So, yeah, we’re still 100% committed to doubling the number of sites that we have by year end. So when we lapped got together, we had 8 sites. We continue to make great traction, and we’re highly confident that we can at least double the number of sites that we have by year end. As it relates to kit contribution, it isn’t something we’ve pulled out or sort of teased out from our guidance, but one of the things that we’re highly confident in it as we select the right partners. That’s part of when I was thinking about sort of you mentioned gating. We don’t have any gating issues as it relates to the robotics per se. It’s really just ensuring we’ve got the right partners in the right geographies that can hit the ground running.
So while I would expect in certain areas, there could be a wider range of pull through per customer as we get these things up and running. We’re doing our best just to ensure that sort of country-by-country, territory-by-territory. We’re selecting those partners that we think can be the most successful partners for us.
Daniel Brennan
Okay. Maybe on biopharm, and there’s been a lot of noise this quarter to date across the industry with emerging biopharma tapping the brakes, even some large pharma. We’ve seen some pauses, particularly for instruments this. Maybe give some color kind of what you’re seeing within Q2 in the funnel and kind of any help on maybe what’s contracted this year from some of your larger customers?
Adam Taich
Sure, Dan. I think for us – there’s a blessing and a curse of having fairly small share of wallet at many of these accounts. And so I think for us, we’re not really seeing a lot of that break tapping that you mentioned. We’re still not active at some of the accounts where I’m highly confident we could and will be active. And so for us, it’s really about taking those existing accounts that we have, penetrating further into those accounts with the value of the SomaScan platform. And then in terms of knocking on new doors, it’s something we’ve been able to do successfully as we’ve grown our commercial effort over the last couple of quarters.
Daniel Brennan
And then maybe on the gross margin, so Shaun, you mentioned you had that maybe it was a one big contract, maybe there are some others I know you’ve signed on a couple of these big deals that are lower margin because they’re important. But can you give us a sense, if you strip like how much that big deal or deals contributed to this lower gross margins which missed your guidance in the first quarter, and then how much visibility and confidence you have getting north of 50 or 50-plus for the full year?
Shaun Blakeman
Yeah, nothing has fundamentally changed. I mean, it was a little off again due to some kind of lost small number type adjustments in the COGS, but it was all really due to that transitory customer mix, as we mentioned in the call, Dan. And we’re very confident when you look at the core business outside of that, it does reflect those 50% margin. So we’re confident we’ll see the business go back to that net of those transitory mix issues.
Daniel Brennan
And then – sorry for a couple, just maybe two more. Any help on pacing from here? You guided for the first quarter at the end of March, so I think most of us felt like you had pretty good visibility. You guys sound good in terms of how things are going out of the gate, Adam, with you kind of at the helm? But how do we think about at least Q2 and/or you want to give us any help on how that your pace is out?
Shaun Blakeman
Yeah, this is Shaun again. I would say that looking at our guide that would imply that each quarter is not going to be a lot different from the others throughout the year. But I would think about it in terms of having a modest bias in the second half as kits ramp up.
Daniel Brennan
Got it. And then maybe final one, Adam, you talked in the beginning about it takes time and requires shifts to show traction. So I’m just wondering could you give us a little flavor in that. Maybe it sounded a little bit more like obviously you’re still a very young company, but just kind of what have you observed? You’ve been at the company, I think, for maybe a couple of years, but what are you observing now in terms of penetrating customers and things of that nature? Thanks.
Adam Taich
Yeah. Thanks, Dan. Yeah, so I’ve been with the company a little over a year, and I’m just a couple of months into this role. I think a couple of things that I would just note to sort of reiterate it sort of comments from earlier. It’s really important to meet customers where they want to be met, and so if we’re not present in certain geographies, it’s impossible for us to get shared wallet in those areas. And so we’re working on fixing that.
I think the second thing I would mention around kits, we’ve been slow to get that rolled out, and we know and this is something just from my history and experience in the industry, it’s absolutely critical. Not everyone wants to be doing business in a services model and sending samples to us here in Boulder, Colorado. And so the kits model is a huge driver. And then the ongoing diversification of our product platform, including our relationship with Illumina, which will give us access to their installed base and their commercial team. For NGS, it’s going to be critical to our growth going forward.
Daniel Brennan
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Okay. Please standby for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Dan Arias of Stifel. Your line is now open.
Dan Arias
Good afternoon, guys. Thanks for the questions. Adam, maybe on China in the BioStar partnership, when does the Shanghai site go live, and is the 7,000 assay content going to be available both as a service and kit next year? And then can you just talk about the sales presence that you have in Asia right now? I think last year the plan was to go from basically no head to 10 or so. So where is that building? Where might you finish the year?
Adam Taich
Yeah. Thanks, Dan. Thanks for mentioning the partnership with BioStar, something I’m very excited about. And so we expect to be live and certified at that site by the end of the second quarter. And that will be the 7k assay for your question, and they’ll be running that as a service, but it’s an authorized site, so that will be a kits customer for us, essentially processing samples on behalf of their – they have a commercial channel, so on behalf of their customers. And that will give us access to a wide range of biopharma and academic and government accounts there in the country of China.
More broadly to the second part of your question, Dan, on the sales presence in Asia, we’re at about 10 people right now. We’ve been deliberate and focused in terms of those geographies, where we feel like we can have the biggest impact. And those are areas that also we would expect like we did in Singapore and like we’ve done now and announced in China. We’ll be enabling those territories really through an authorized site through distributed kits model.
Dan Arias
Okay, great. Maybe just a follow-up. Just thinking about some of the catalysts over the next 12 to 18 months, I wanted to ask about the Illumina partnership. Are the terms of that deal when it comes to just fees and economics are they set? And if so, can you remind us how that works? And just as an update maybe where are you in terms of key milestones and just overall tech development?
Adam Taich
Yeah, so the terms are set and as it relates to those were we did file that agreement. So I just point you sort of back into that in terms of what we disclosed that is still the prevailing document that governs our agreement together. Tech milestones, everything’s going really well, I’ve been nothing but thrilled with the engagement from all levels of the company, but the Illumina team is extremely engaged and passionate about getting this product out to market. Progress is going quite well and we still are on track to have early access in 2024, which is what we had announced as the original plan.
Dan Arias
Okay. Maybe just if Dan is going to hit the half a dozen mark on the questions, maybe I’ll feel comfortable sticking a third in here. Just going back to the partnership in Asia, should we think about something similar for Europe, EMEA was on the list of strategic focuses last year. I’m just wondering if a similar approach might be taken. Thanks so much.
Adam Taich
Yeah. Sure. Thank you, Dan. It is, I mean, one of the things we’ve been able to do in EMEA is penetrate that market with our services offering, but again there’s limitations to that. But certainly supply chain getting cold samples from the UK to Boulder is easier than getting them from Australia to Boulder. And so while we do have a good services business in EMEA, we do expect that a good chunk of the growth and part of that strategy there will be to enable those authorized sites just to give folks a distributed kit solution there in the markets, as well as the option, certainly, of sending samples back to us at headquarters in Boulder if they so desire.
Operator
Okay. Please standby for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Kyle Mikson of Canaccord. Your line is now open.
Kyle Mikson
Yeah. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. Congrats on the quarter. Can you just talk about the product revenue this quarter kind of below our model? What happened with kits that you didn’t already discuss on the call earlier? Thanks.
Shaun Blakeman
Hey, Kyle, this is Shaun. Well, I mean, I would point out that still year-over-year, we’re approximately 300% growth in kits. I think it’s the early rollout of the kits probably don’t want to get ahead of ourselves and trying to read too much into each quarter. The real metric here, as Adam’s put out, is really the installation pace. We’re still confident about our ability to more than double the number of kit sites. So as far as our expectations for this year, it’s really not reflected in that Q1 number. There’s nothing that’s happened. It’s just, again, as we roll out, I would expect that to be something that you’re not going to necessarily see something go up sequentially every quarter until we have a large install base.
Kyle Mikson
Okay. Thanks, Shaun. So maybe, Adam, just talk about the order funnel kind of pent-up demand for the 10k launch later in 2023. I’m just curious if there could be like an air pocket here if there’s going to be some delayed orders potentially, just given that really exciting products coming out pretty soon. Thanks.
Adam Taich
Yeah. Thanks, Kyle. We’re the content leader today with our 7k product. And so while our customers are very excited to get their hands on 10k. We aren’t seeing stalling as a result of that.
We’ve got ongoing pipeline that’s very strong both on the service side of things as well as the enthusiasm around kits. But everything’s on track. As I’d mentioned earlier, as it relates to our 10k launch, we’re super excited to continue to extend our technology leadership in that area.
Operator
Please standby for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Brandon Couillard of Jefferies. Your line is now open.
Brandon Couillard
Great. Thanks. Good afternoon, Adam, back on the new China partner BioStar press release noted, they have over 1,000 customers. Just curious, how many of those do you think are potential proteomics opportunities for them to service with SomaScan?
Adam Taich
Yeah. Sure, Brandon. I’d like to say all of them, a huge number. One of the reasons that we selected BioStar, I would say there’s two or three really strong reasons: one, just incredible track record there in the market with innovative technologies being driven of multinational corporations like ourselves; two, great commercial reach. So they’ve been a distributor for a variety of technologies, and so they’ve got a very strong selling presence in the country; but third, one of the things that’s extremely attractive and ultimately why we selected them is the strength of their services business. They have a deliberate focus. It isn’t just an afterthought or something that they’re sort of doing on the side.
They have a deliberate focus on having the most innovative technologies in their lab with highly trained and skilled operators running. And so they’ve got a fantastic customer base that spans, the biopharmas that are headquartered in the country of China, as well as those that aren’t, as well as incredible relationships with many of the large academic and government institutions in the country.
Brandon Couillard
Okay. And then any chance you’re able to share an updated statistic in terms of total number of customers over the last 12 months? I think the last number you gave was 162. And any color between pharma and academia researchers in terms of demand in the period? Thanks.
Adam Taich
Yeah. Sure, Brandon, I can take the second part of your question first, which we’re roughly 65% or so biopharma in terms of our customers from a revenue perspective, smaller as it relates to total count of customers. You’re right, we did disclose just a couple of weeks back when we worked together for our year end of that 162, and we continue to grow our customer base. For us, there’s a couple of things I think to focus on as it relates and really where we have our internal focus. When we’re talking about customers at 160, for us that could be a large biopharma is one in that type of count.
And so for us, what we’re really focused on is ensuring that we’re extending our reach within the existing customers that we have, so that we’re penetrating different therapeutic areas, different areas, different geographies of those, particularly for some of the larger biopharmas. And then, of course, we’re trying to continue to extend and expand our reach into new customers. So it’s a huge focus for us and we’re measuring that from an internal perspective. It’s one of key measurements for our commercial effort.
Operator
At this time, I would now like to turn it back to Adam Taich for closing remarks.
Adam Taich
Yeah, I want to just thank you all for joining us. We’re excited about the progress that we’re making and we look forward to speaking to you next quarter. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect.
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