Hyperfine, Inc. (HYPR) CEO Scott Huennekens on Q2 2022 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

Hyperfine, Inc. (NASDAQ:HYPR) Q2 2022 Earnings Conference Call August 10, 2022 4:30 PM ET

Company Participants

Marissa Bych – Gilmartin Group LLC

Scott Huennekens – Interim President and Chief Executive Officer

Alok Gupta – Chief Financial Officer

Conference Call Participants

Lawrence Biegelsen – Wells Fargo

Vijay Kumar – Evercore ISI

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the Hyperfine Q2 2022 Earnings Conference Call. At this time all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers’ presentations, there will a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to turn the call over to your host Ms. Bych. You may begin.

Marissa Bych

Thank you for joining today’s call. Earlier today, Hyperfine released financial results for the fiscal quarter ended June 30, 2022. A copy of the press release is available on the company’s website as well as sec.gov.

Before we begin, I would like to remind you that management will make statements during this call that includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, which are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Any statements contained in this call that relate 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 operating trends and future financial performance, expense management, expectations for hiring, physician training and adoption, growth in our organization, market opportunity, commercial and international expansion, regulatory approvals, and product development 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 form 10-Q filed with the SEC on May 12, 2022.

This conference call contains time-sensitive information and is accurate only as of the live broadcast today, August 10, 2022. Hyperfine 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.

And with that, thank you again. I will turn the call over to Scott Huennekens, Interim President and Chief Executive Officer of Hyperfine.

Scott Huennekens

Thank you, Marissa. Good afternoon and thank you all for joining us. I am also joined by our Chief Financial Officer, Alok Gupta.

We are pleased to continue the conversation on Hyperfine story with you today and highlight our recent progress. But first I would like to repoint listeners with our vision as a company and our transformative solution in the field of medical imaging. Hyperfine’s vision is to transform the healthcare by creating access to life saving diagnostics and actionable data at the patient bedside.

Today, brain diagnostics are a single point in time and delay the time from door to discharge. Our mission remains to transform that experience, first and foremost, with our portable bedside MRI system. Our initial product, our portable MRI system called Swoop was FDA cleared in 2020. Today, we are driving adoption of the Swoop system in the hospital setting to solve significant unmet patient and provider needs.

This device addresses an immense 20 billion-plus medical imaging market opportunity considering the potential for installations across hospitals, clinics, outpatient centers over time. Today, just 10% of the world’s population has access to MRI. And we are committed to improving that.

As we have noted in the past, our near-term opportunities for improving patient care are first in the ICU; secondly, in pediatric hospitals to address hydrocephalus; and third, in stroke. Patients in the ICU for neurological conditions experience a variety of challenges when it comes to getting an MRI. Patients are typically too unstable to transport to the MRI suite for imaging and it takes time to get imaging completed and can be prohibitively long in a process and consume valuable resources. There’s simply not an effective way to perform MRI imaging for ICU patients today. We’ve been working with our clinical partners to build strong clinical validation to support the ICU use case.

Turning to hydrocephalus, a disease that accounts for over 40,000 hospital emissions each year, and is an excellent use case for portable MRI. Hydrocephalus is characterized by a buildup a fluid in the brain, addressed by introducing a shunt and tubing to drain that fluid. Although, MRI is the preferred approach for regular imaging of these patients, patients are typically taken for CT scans due to lack of MRI availability. Our technology enabled to quick, simple radiation-free diagnosis process for shunt failure.

This July at the National Hydrocephalus Association Conference, HA CONNECT, we announced a new Swoop enhancement enables brain scans for hydrocephalus patients in under three minutes with no ionizing radiation. This development is essentially — especially significant for younger patients who may have difficulty to stain still without sedation and have previously received a CT scan. Hyperfine is an official partner with the Hydrocephalus Association, the nation’s most widely respected organization dedicated to research and advocacy of hydrocephalus.

These are just two examples of use cases where we have received overwhelmingly and early positive responses to the Swoop system. We have systems located at leading institutions across the country with ongoing studies to add even greater validation to the utility and clinical efficacy of our technology in both of these use cases.

We also remain focused on building our base of clinical data in stroke. Data demonstrates that MRI scans can better detect ischemic stroke damage compared to CT scans. And we are continuing to leverage research including the independent publication by our partners at Yale and Harvard, Massachusetts General in science advances earlier this year, to build awareness that a value Swoop in the detection and evaluation of stroke.

As a reminder, this science advances paper concluded that Hyperfine Swoop enabled highly accessible and dynamic bedside evaluation of ischemic stroke, obtaining actionable bedside neuro imaging for 50 confirmed patients. Overall, Swoop detected infarcts in 45 of 50 patients or 90% and captured lesions as small as four millimeters. The authors highlighted the safety and convenience of portable low field MRI as a tool to expedite the stroke treatment pathway and concluded that results validated the use of low field MRI to obtain clinically useful imaging of stroke, setting the stage for broader use.

We’re continuing to engage multiple U.S. hospitals to collect data, demonstrating the clinical value of Swoop and stroke patients. As we gather greater clinical data, we will increase our focus on driving awareness and educating the field about Swoop utilization for the stroke use case. We look forward to sharing our progress over the coming quarters.

In addition to improving patient workflow and saving critical time for these use cases across ICU, hydrocephalus and stroke patients, we remain hard at work on our next-generation development to expand use cases beyond the intensive care unit and hydrocephalus into stroke and new anatomy such as C-spine.

I would like to highlight a recent strategic initiative. We’ve had the exciting opportunity to launch a partnership with Viz.ai, a leading AI-powered disease detection and intelligent care coordination platform, to bring MRI to the patient’s bedside and deliver valuable insights to the clinician’s fingertips for timely decision making. The partnership between Hyperfine and Viz.ai further validates our aligned mission statements to provide fast and accurate point-of-care through intelligence software. Together, we are opening doors to expedite clinical access to MRI imaging and increasing access to timed critical diagnostics in acute and post-acute care phase. With Viz.ai, we are hoping to introduce Swoop to new sites of care, as we continue generating awareness of our value proposition.

Now turning to our recent commercial progress. We installed nine commercial Swoop systems in the second quarter of 2022, driving revenue of $1.53 million. Our progress included broadening our global footprint to Australia, New Zealand, where we placed commercial units and established the foundation for additional installations over time. We are pleased that we have continued to develop and enhance our customer relationships, working closely with neurosurgeons, interventional neuroradiologist, and critical care clinicians alongside radiology and hospital executives, all influential stakeholders to roll out successful new programs and placements.

However, our business has not been immune to the challenges of today’s selling environment. These include limitations to accessing hospital administrative personnel and department leadership, staffing shortages at hospitals, local regulatory and administrative approval timing of new purchases and spending constraints in today’s inflationary environment, all resulting in an overall elongated sales cycle. These factors have detracted from our ability to finalize contracts in the timing we have projected. As the macro environment continues to impact order timing, we are also projecting an elongated sales cycle going forward.

As a result, we are revising our 2022 expectations to 35 to 45 commercial system installations and $7 million to $8 million in total revenue. Despite our lower near-term expectations, we remain highly confident in our value proposition and long-term goals. Our team remains hard at work stimulating awareness of our technology, and we have a robust network of ongoing communications with existing and new potential customers that leave us optimistic for the future.

We continue to expand our commercial footprint and are not losing opportunities in our pipeline. The time to close sales is simply proving longer than we projected at the start of the year. For example, just this week, we received a signed letter of intent for seven commercial units from Barnes-Jewish Healthcare System in St. Louis, which is one of the leading hospital systems in the United States. We expect to receive a final purchase order from BJC HealthCare within the quarter. And we anticipate delivering these systems over the next six months. We originally expected this order in June, a testament to the slower selling process or approval process we are experiencing today.

Separately, I’m pleased to announce that we’ve received a letter of intent from King’s College, London to order 20 commercial systems. This is an association with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. We expect to receive a final order shortly and begin shipment of these units over the next several months.

Lastly, given market conditions in the elongated sales cycle, we have updated our intermediate term operational plan with a focus on prioritizing projects and extending our cash runway. We feel good about the momentum we are building for sales growth in 2023 and 2024. And we are continuing to prioritize our commercialization, clinical and R&D spending accordingly.

We are confident that we have adequate capitalization given this plan through year-end 2024. We will continue to be diligent in our OpEx planning, while continuing to invest where we see potential for the greatest growth. As part of the prioritization of all projects and expenditures, we will be assessing the company’s strategic options for Liminal, our brain sensing platform, which is in the early stages of development with a view towards maximizing shareholder value creation across all of Hyperfine.

In summary, we are pleased with our progress towards achieving our long-term goals. Before I turn the call over to Alok, our Chief Financial Officer, a quick note on our CEO search. We are working with a leading goal search firm and are in the process of the interviewing multiple high level seasoned executives for our CEO role. We are excited about the quality and depth of candidates for the position and are hopeful to have the role filled in Q4.

I will now turn the call over to Alok to review our second quarter performance and financial outlook in greater detail. Alok?

Alok Gupta

Thank you, Scott. Turning to our financial results for the second quarter 2022, revenue for the quarter ended on June 30th, 2022 was $1.5 million compared to $400,000 in the second quarter of 2021. Gross margin for the second quarter of 2022 was negative $0.2 million compared to negative $0.1 million in the second quarter of 2021.

R&D expenses for the second quarter of 2022 was $7.3 million compared to $6 million in the second quarter of 2021. Sales, general and administrative expenses for the second quarter of 2022 were $15.8 million compared to $8.5 million in the second quarter of 2021.

Net loss for the second quarter was $23.2 million equaling to a net loss of $0.33 per share as compared to the net loss of $14.6 million or a net loss of $88.80 per share for the same period of prior year. We ended the second quarter of 2022 with $145.1 million in cash and cash equivalents.

Turning to over 2022 outlook. As Scott mentioned, based on our first and second quarter progress and current trends in the business, we now anticipate installing 35 to 45 commercial systems in 2022. This compares to four commercial system installations in 2020, 23 commercial systems in 2021 and implies that at year-end 2022, we expect to have a total commercial install base of 62 to 72 Swoop systems. In conjunction with our lower system placement expectations, we are revising our full year revenue expectation to be in between $7 million to $8 million.

Shifting to our additional expectations for the year. Based on the trend of our business on as Scott described, we currently anticipate a relatively flat to slightly down third quarter in terms of system placements and revenue versus our second quarter results. We now anticipate total cash burn of $70 million to $80 million in 2022, as we focus on investments in our business, which offer the greatest growth return potential.

At this point, I would like to turn the call back to Scott for closing comments.

Scott Huennekens

Thank you, Alok. Despite transitory headwinds in our operating environment, I want to reiterate our differentiated value proposition and our confidence in the future of Hyperfine. We believe greater access to medical imaging through portable point-of-care MRI is inevitable, and we are determined to continue delivering high-quality imaging to new sites of care, to improve provider workflow and patient care. With our early success marked by a total global installed base of over 90 Swoop systems today, we are setting the stage for affordable point-of-care imaging to transform lives and enhance patient care around the world.

With that, I want to thank you for your time and open it up to any question.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

[Operator Instructions]

Our first question comes from Larry Biegelsen with Wells Fargo. Your line is open.

Lawrence Biegelsen

Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Can you hear me okay?

Scott Huennekens

We can.

Lawrence Biegelsen

Hey, Scott. Hey, Scott, first, on the Barnes seven systems and the College of London 20 systems, what’s in the commercial and revenue guidance for 2022? I mean, the guidance implies only 20 systems at the midpoint of the second — at the mid — only 20 systems in the second half at the midpoint of the guidance. Are those College of London systems I heard you say, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, are those not commercial systems and how derisk are those systems? And I had a couple follow ups.

Scott Huennekens

Yeah. Those are commercial systems, all 20 of them. And in our projections, we have five to 10 coming from that group. And that kind of explains the bandwidth around the 35 to 45 to a large degree.

But Alok, anything to add there?

Alok Gupta

No, I think you covered that. So, it is a commercial contract with King’s College, London, Larry, and supported by Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for King’s College. It’s not a direct — unlike the first grant, this is not a grant. This is a commercial system sales.

Lawrence Biegelsen

So, I heard you say, that you’re going to be shipping these systems in the next few months. So, why is the midpoint of the guidance now 20 systems in the second half when you have these letters of intent for 27 systems?

Scott Huennekens

As I mentioned, only five to 10 of the Gates — King’s London, which during the second half of the year and potentially three to five of the BJC units. So.

Lawrence Biegelsen

I understand.

Scott Huennekens

They’re only a portion of the 20 systems in the second half of the year.

Lawrence Biegelsen

Okay. And Scott — go ahead.

Scott Huennekens

I was just going to say, so hopefully we’re starting to build a backlog running into quarters to, have a little better predictability as we move forward.

Lawrence Biegelsen

Scott, I guess, you reaffirmed — I feel compelled to ask this. You reaffirmed the guidance on June 29th, obviously you’re lowering it pretty significantly here. What changed from June 29th, when you did the CEO call and reaffirmed and today?

Scott Huennekens

Alok, do you want to take a crack at that first with the detail and I can answer as well?

Alok Gupta

Yeah. So, I think, look, as Scott pointed out, some of these orders, like Barnes-Jewish for example, we were expecting this order to come earlier in the quarter, but we were still anticipating towards the end of the quarter. And order timing as expect will not happen. I mean, we just got the LOI last week. So, you can see the extension of the order — the sales order process by at least six weeks, even for just one order. And those are the reasons why we — when we originally thought that we’ll be able to meet our second quarter guidance, realizing that the elongated sales cycle and taking more time to get these orders in place.

Scott Huennekens

Yeah. I think that’s entirely at it. It’s — we’re just living in a little bit of a — we’re living in a relatively uncertain time. You’ve heard it across other medical device companies with general business conditions. And we’re just trying to be very thoughtful here as we go forward with what we’re seeing with elongated sales cycles. And again, not losing deals, it’s just — we’re getting stack up of deals in the pipeline. So, you take — I think it’s a combination, Larry, of three things. It’s general business environment and dynamics, a salesforce that’s maturing as we go here with, the time that they’ve been on board and their ability to predict. Business is already — it’s hard when you’re introduced in a new technology like this, it’s even harder in today’s environment.

And then I would say that the third thing is that it is proving — the value proposition is there for customers, but there are workflow changes. There are different people that have to prove in a hospital, radiology departments, local departments, administration. And that also is something that in a lot of cases, it’s taking us longer to get those POs done, where I think some of the original participation, the first half of the year with Dave Scott and that management group was that you didn’t — you may not need all of those approvals, which also. So you got a combination of factors that are elongating the sales cycle, but not changing the value proposition. So, just kind of pushing the demand curve to the right in time.

Lawrence Biegelsen

Lastly, Alok, to get to that burn rate, you talked about, what’s the OpEx implied for the second half or for the full year?

Alok Gupta

So the full year OpEx, Larry, we are still expecting slightly over $80 million, which by the way, includes all the non-cash, stock-based comp included in it. But the cash burn commentary, if you recall, originally, we were expecting it to be $80 million to $90 million. We have revised it down $70 million to $80 million now.

Lawrence Biegelsen

Okay.

Scott Huennekens

Yeah. And as you looked out in 2023 and 2024, the combination of reasonable assumptions on revenue increases with the combination of units and pricing, gross margin expansion relative to cost, a little bit of volume, our gross margin goes up, our R&D and sales and marketing vis-à-vis this year flat to down, G&A a level of leverage. So cash burn goes down rather significantly in 2023 and 2024, which allows us to extend cash in our plan to the — so we have that cash balance at the end of 2024, going into 2025.

Lawrence Biegelsen

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Vijay Kumar with Evercore. Your line is open.

Vijay Kumar

Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Scott, maybe a big picture question for you, right? Given the guidance change, and I understand your commentary around the macro environment. I guess for investors, the question is why isn’t this an indicator of underlying demand that maybe the technology is too new for the market? Like what gives you the confidence? I know you sort of alluded to the demand shifting to the right, just talk about what gives you confidence? Why is this not a demand issue and why you’re optimistic about the business?

Scott Huennekens

Because the pipeline continues to grow and the interest by deal is still there. Whether it’s for ICU, whether it’s hydrocephalus, whether it’s for stroke relative to improvements in the software and what we’re seeing in hearing, the customers want the product and they’re figuring out ways to get the product, it’s just taking longer and/or they’re having to prioritize when they can budget and get it. So, you’re — if you’re — so relative to demand, the demand is there for this large market, the demand in the particular timeframe is lower. Maybe that — hopefully that clarifies. Yeah. But we don’t — I don’t think we have an overall demand problem. We’ve got a timing problem with it taking longer.

Vijay Kumar

If we just had to unpack that a little bit. What you’re saying is when you look at the funnel — your indication of interest, that funnel that remains healthier, has a change over the past six months? It’s just the sales cycle. Like once it goes beyond the physician point of contact is where we’re seeing slow down and ability to close deal?

Scott Huennekens

In a number of instances that is accurate. Correct.

Vijay Kumar

Okay. And then, Alok …

Scott Huennekens

Look, I don’t want to blame everything on the environment. It’s multi-factorial. It’s the environment which maybe 50%. It’s 25%, a sales channel that is maturing to understand all of the things it takes to close a deal. In every geography, there’s a lot of subtle differences required. And then, there’s 25% of it’s, it’s a new technology. And so, they want it if any — there’s going to be workflow differences. Radiology department needs to approve it, support it. So, in the ICU, they maybe want it, they got to work things out with the ICU, I mean, the radiology department and that coordination and figuring out new workflow, even though they want it and they both want it. The administration wants clarity — from the two groups before they approve, first, that’s a little bit of the Barnes-Jewish situation, get the clarity, get it resolved, and now have an order for seven systems, and arguably one of the top 10 healthcare systems in the U.S.

Vijay Kumar

Understood. That’s helpful. On the 20 system order from King’s College, are there any other large, IDN sort of contractor in the pipeline, which would be in — something similar to what you’re seeing along the lines of King’s College of London order?

Scott Huennekens

No. Not at this time.

Vijay Kumar

Okay.

Scott Huennekens

There are things in the multiple unit status in the pipeline, but not of that magnitude.

Vijay Kumar

Gotcha. Gotcha. And then, Alok, maybe a couple for you. I think I heard you say third quarter sequentially flatting or down, was it a system placement commentary or revenue commentary?

Alok Gupta

Both, because system — revenue are driven by the system placement. So, it is both. So, we had nine units there, we are guiding flattish to down, but still at a midpoint, like we talked about from 35 to 45, we expect. And the midpoint, if you take a midpoint, it’s 40 units. And sequentially Q3 to Q4, it will be slightly higher. So that’s what we’re guiding to today.

Vijay Kumar

And to hit the guidance, the revenue guidance at the midpoint 7.5, assuming sequentially revenues are flattish, step up for 1.5 to $3 million-plus in Q4. Yeah. Sorry, go ahead.

Alok Gupta

No. So what I was going to tell you is, as we talked about it in our very first earning call, since the January 1st, when we change over pricing model, that impact hasn’t flown through — as we originally indicated, all of those transitions will likely happen in the second half, and we are seeing the data points on that. So, if I were to talk about why we are seeing higher revenue for the 20 units in the back half versus 20 units in the first half, you can see on an average on a per device revenue in the first quarter, it’s 110,000. For this quarter with nine units and 1.2 million device revenue, total is 1.5. The device revenue is at 1.2, that has gone up to 130. So that’s another 16%, 17% increase.

In the second half, the legacy devices are tailing off, with a very — if any, one or two left in there. So, we expect that pricing transition into 250,000 or 200,000-plus will happen in the future contracts as we are talking about it. And that’s the reason — that gives us confidence that the second half revenue is at a midpoint 4.5 versus 3 for the first half. Does that make sense, Vijay?

Vijay Kumar

That does. That does. And then maybe my last one on– your commentary on cash burn. Is that a good starting number for fiscal 2023? And the reason I ask is, obviously, with 145, 146 of cash on hand, I think I heard Scott mention looking at strategic optionality for the brain sensing part of the business. How — when you think about that existing cash on hand, how long can you run the business, make the necessary investments before thinking about additional raises.

Alok Gupta

So, I’ll let Scott talk about additional raises. But we are not commenting on the 2023 cash burn, Vijay. But what Scott did say is, we have built a plan to last this cash. We started the year at 188.5. And like I guided, we will burn $70 million to $80 million this year, that will give us enough cash to lead us through 2024. So, we will have cash at the end of December 24th.

I will let Scott to comment on the other one.

Scott Huennekens

No. That’s absolutely correct. And not only have cash at the end of 2024, I think we’ll demonstrate over that time, significant revenue growth, expansion of clinical indications, progression of the technology and the next version of the product, expanding gross margins, as well. And that’s from price as well as that’s from cost. So, I think we’ll be in a strong position and hit significant milestones for value creation over that timeframe. By the time we would need to raise additional capital.

And so like all programs, you’re looking at them to try and figure out how you can advance them vis-à-vis other programs, as efficiently capital wise to create the best returns for shareholders. So as we progress in that regard, we’ll share that appropriately.

Vijay Kumar

Understood. Thanks guys.

Operator

And I’m not showing any further questions at this time. I turn the call back over to Scott.

Scott Huennekens

Well, thank you all for joining today. And we look forward to sharing our continued progress as we go forward. Thanks again, [indiscernible].

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today’s presentation. You may now disconnect and have a wonderful day.

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