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home / news releases / BRSYF - BrainsWay Ltd. (BWAY) Q3 2022 Results - Earnings Call Transcript


BRSYF - BrainsWay Ltd. (BWAY) Q3 2022 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

BrainsWay Ltd. (BWAY)

Q3 2022 Results Earnings Conference Call

November 16, 2022, 08:30 AM ET

Company Participants

Bob Yedid - Investor Relations, LifeSci Advisors

Christopher von Jako - President and Chief Executive Officer

Scott Areglado - Chief Financial Officer

Conference Call Participants

Steven Lichtman - Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.

Jeffery Cohen - Ladenburg Thalmann

Jayson Bedford - Raymond James & Associates, Inc.

Boobalan Pachaiyappan - H.C. Wainwright & Co.

Jason Wittes - Loop Capital

Presentation

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, greetings and welcome to the BrainsWay third quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a-listen only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions]. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Bob Yedid of LifeSci Advisors. Please go ahead.

Bob Yedid

Thank you. And welcome to BrainsWay's third quarter 2022 earnings conference call. With us today are BrainsWay's President and Chief Executive Officer, Chris von Jako, and Chief Financial Officer, Scott Areglado.

The format for today's call will be a discussion of recent trends and business updates from Chris, followed by a detailed discussion of the financials from Scott. Then we will open up the call for your questions.

Earlier today, BrainsWay released financial results for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022. Copy of the press release is available on the company's Investor Relations website.

Before I turn the call over to Chris and Scott, I would like to remind you that this conference call, including both management's prepared remarks and the question-and-answer session, may contain projections or other forward-looking statements regarding, among other topics, BrainsWay's anticipated future operating and financial results, business plans and prospects, and expectations for its products and pipeline, which are all subject to risk and uncertainties, including shifting market conditions resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, the global supply chain constraints, as well as the use of non-GAAP financial information.

Additional information regarding these and other risks are available in the company's earnings release and its other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the Risk Factors section contained in BrainsWay's Form 20-F.

With those prepared remarks, it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Chris von Jako. Chris?

Christopher von Jako

Thank you, Bob. Welcome, everyone. And thank you for joining us today. To begin, as I stated on our last call, the current macroeconomic environment, including staffing shortages, higher interest rates, inflation, and recessionary fears continued to impact our customers and patients and in turn our third quarter results.

Simply put, smaller practices which make up the large portion of our current customer base, continue to take a cautious approach to purchasing decisions in this environment. Given these conditions, the company is increasingly cognizant of its spending levels. It remains focused on conserving cash in order to ensure that we make the most prudent use of our shareholder capital.

Additionally, while we remain committed to strengthening our sales force to penetrate the market, the economic environment and tight labor market has made it more difficult to hire the right talent, which is making our planned expansion take longer than expected.

You may recall our previously stated objective of expanding the sales force to 21 territories. We currently have 14 sales professionals, and we believe these challenges could lead to a longer ramp up period before we're able to reach our desired sales force size.

You will also recall that Eric Hirt joined us in May as our Vice President of Sales. Since that time, he is laying the groundwork toward building a truly transformational commercial infrastructure for BrainsWay. He is focused on putting new pipeline tracking measures in place and improving the messaging and education related to the benefits of a deep TMS platform technology.

Also, as we target larger enterprise customers that are somewhat more insulated from the economic fluctuations, Eric is focused on ensuring that when the commercial team is appropriately built out, it's done with experienced professionals with the requisite experience to meet the needs of the sizeable accounts.

Specifically, the right professionals for us need to effectively communicate our scientific differentiation, as well as the significant return on investment that can be generated using deep TMS in their clinics and practices.

Dr. Colleen Hanlon, our recently appointed Vice President of Medical Affairs, will play an important role here. Dr. Hanlon, formerly a professor at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, and a member of the Wake Forest Center for Addiction Research, brings nearly 20 years of experience in the field of brain imaging and brain stimulation research.

One of her roles at BrainsWay will be to drive the integration of medical and scientific intelligence. She will also be instrumental in working with key opinion leaders to enhance awareness, including among the larger, more sophisticated institutional and enterprise customers that are playing an increasingly important role within the industry. We believe that this will help us to improve the sales process and commercial results.

So, while we're focused on being good stewards of capital, it is important to know that we have the right plan in place to continue investing in growth, including our commercial team and leverage the substantial opportunities we see with enterprise customers when conditions warrant.

As we prepare for this moment, there are several tailwinds in our business and the industry overall that I'd like to highlight. First, we are building momentum in our international business. While these international sales generate lower average selling prices and margins, our out of the US performance bodes well for our business long term. As further context for our thriving prospects internationally, we've sold multiple systems to the largest TMS provider in Australia, and even more systems in India in recent months as we penetrate those markets.

We're also achieving significant progress with reimbursement. Most recently, we announced that another Blue Cross Blue Shield licensee will be extending positive coverage for deep TMS for the treatment of OCD, effective February 3, 2023. The policy will impact commercial health care coverage for more than 2.6 million people in the Pacific Northwest. The policy also reduces its TMS coverage criteria for depression, now requiring only three failed medication trials instead of four.

In addition, final and draft local coverage determinations, respectively, were recently issued by CGS and NGS, two Medicare administrative contractors, or MACs, reducing the number of previous medication failures required to qualify for deep TMS treatment for depression from four to two.

These MACs collectively represent 14.5 million covered lives. And once implemented, the changes will result in all 60 million plus Medicare beneficiaries qualifying for deep TMS depression coverage after either one or two failed medication trials. Furthermore, NGS is now expanding its TMS coverage criteria to include psychiatric nurse practitioners, making it the first MAC to join the commercial players who have already taken this step, including Magellan, Centene, HCSC and SelectHealth Intermountain Healthcare, among others.

Also, in the third quarter, Cigna announced positive coverage which will apply to deep TMS for the treatment of OCD. Cigna, one of the largest major medical insurance companies in United States, provides commercial health care coverage to about 17 million members, has Medicare Advantage plans in 16 states and participates in the health insurance marketplace online exchange.

Through the positive coverage decisions, we now have approximately 90 million covered lives for OCD indication. Moreover, approximately 45% of our total installed base now includes OCD treatment capability. We view this progress not only as a testament to our customers' strong belief in the benefits of deep TMS treatment for OCD, but also our growing success in securing reimbursement in this important indication.

Switching gears to our key clinical and regulatory progress. Most recently, we received 510(k) clearance from the FDA for the use of our deep TMS H7 Coil in treating adults suffering from depression, including those suffering with comorbid anxiety symptoms, commonly known as anxious depression. This was our ninth FDA clearance for the deep TMS and represents an important differentiator for our industry-leading technology. TMS treatment for depression is not a one-size-fits-all solution for all anatomical targets.

The H1 targets one region of the brain and the H7 targets a different regions. And we now see that stimulating either of these regions can mitigate depressive symptoms. We believe this additional clearance supports our goal of enabling clinicians to provide more personalized medicine for their patients.

Another key driver for us is generating additional market awareness. This is the intent of our recently announced collaboration with NOCD, an organization that facilitates access to online therapy for people with OCD through its innovative telehealth platform. The goal of the collaboration is to raise awareness about the life saving treatments of both companies, amongst patients, caregivers, and clinicians. BrainsWay's collaboration with NOCD will help patients find the treatments they urgently need with access to NOCD's therapists and deep TMS providers nationwide.

Staying with raising treatment awareness, we also participated in five onsite medical conferences in and outside the US during the third quarter, including the World Congress of Psychiatry and the Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association.

Another critical positive indicator for our business is the medical community's growing focus on dramatically rising mental health issues, and in some cases, the use of TMS as a potential treatment.

I'd like to highlight two very compelling recent developments. First, the US Preventive Services Task Force, an independent volunteer panel of national experts in prevention in evidence-based medicine issued a public proposal, stating that US doctors should regularly screen all adults under 65 for anxiety. The recommendations are based on a review that began before the COVID-19 pandemic, which has been shown in numerous studies and published literature to have worsened the US mental health crisis.

The task force said that the evidence for the benefits of regular screening include the availability of effective treatments. Of significance, this is the first time this influential group has recommended anxiety screening in primary care for adults without symptoms.

Next, Psychiatry News recently published an op-ed advocating for TMS to be considered as a first line treatment for moderate to severe depression. This is important for two reasons. First, Psychiatry News is the official print and electronic news service of the American Psychiatric Association, or APA, and is the primary and most trusted source of information for APA members, other physicians and health professionals, and the public about developments in the field of psychiatry that impact clinical care and professional practice. I'd also like to highlight that the APA promoted the op-ed on social media channels, including LinkedIn.

The second reason this op-ed is important is because the author, Dr. Richard Bermudes, Chief Medical Officer of Mindful Health Solutions in California, is a longtime user of deep TMS. We are grateful to Dr. Bermudes for advocating for changes to the APA's current treatment guidelines for depression, and would certainly agree with his sentiment that the compelling evidence for the use of TMS has grown steadily since the initial guidelines were published in 2010. Of course, we are proud to be at the forefront of innovation trends since that time.

With the spotlight firmly remaining on mental health and TMS specifically, we believe BrainsWay is well positioned to leverage this enhanced visibility to further grow our business for the long run.

With that, I would like to look ahead to the remainder of the year. As the current macroeconomic environment continues to present challenges to both our smaller customers and their patients, we intend to remain vigilant in controlling our expenses. We will focus on ensuring that our strength of our sales force has a measured pace, and we're doing so with professionals who can help us further penetrate key enterprise accounts.

As I mentioned earlier, we believe that this ramp up will take longer than previously anticipated. Until such time, we are fortified with a strong balance sheet and continue to be buoyed by advancements in several key areas, including sustainable success internationally, further progress with reimbursement, additional clinical and regulatory milestones, increased market awareness, and favorable long term industry trends, and multiple growth catalysts.

With that, I will now pass the call to Scott for his review of our third quarter 2022 financial results. Scott?

Scott Areglado

Thank you, Chris. And good morning, everyone. As Chris noted, and more than we expected, our business was impacted by inflationary and recessionary headwinds in the third quarter.

Revenue for the third quarter of 2022 was $5.2 million, a 36% decrease compared to the prior-year period revenue of $8.2 million. We placed 22 deep TMS systems in the third quarter and continued to experience strong international momentum, a trend we believe is sustainable.

Our total installed base is now 851 systems as of September 30, 2022 compared to 717 systems or 19% growth as compared to September 30, 2021.

For the first nine months of 2022, revenues were $21.1 million, flat as compared to the first nine months of 2021.

Gross profit for the third quarter of 2022 was $3.8 million or a 74% gross margin compared to $6.1 million or a 76% gross margin during the prior-year period.

Gross profit for the first nine months of 2022 was approximately $15.7 million or a 74% gross margin compared to $16.5 million or 78% gross margin during the prior-year period. The decrease in gross margin was largely attributable to expenses related to inventory obsolescence charges, increased shipping and inventory costs, and a higher mix of international sales. We expect margin pressure in the fourth quarter as well due to these factors.

Moving on to operating expenses. For the third quarter of 2022, research and development expenses were $2.2 million compared to $1.9 million in the third quarter of 2021. The increase was driven primarily by clinical data projects to support our ongoing clinical differentiation in the marketplace.

Sales and marketing expenses for the third quarter of 2022 were $4.8 million compared to $4 million for the third quarter of 2021. These increases are due primarily to increased costs of travel, marketing events in the quarter, and increased personnel to support our customers.

Moving on to G&A, expenses for the third quarter of 2022 were $1.7 million compared to $1.5 million for the third quarter of 2021, due primarily to increased consulting costs.

Looking ahead, as the macroeconomic challenges Chris outlined earlier continued to impact our operating environment, we remain focused on prudently managing expenses in the current quarter and strategically investing in our commercial and research activities to reflect current market dynamics.

Operating loss for the third quarter was $4.9 million compared to an operating loss of $1.2 million for the same period in 2021. For the third quarter ended September 30, 2022, we incurred a net loss of $5 million compared to a net loss of $1.8 million in the same period of 2021.

Moving on to the balance sheet. We ended the third quarter with cash, cash equivalents and short-term deposits of $49.6 million as compared to $57.3 million at December 31, 2021.

Our strong balance sheet and ongoing prudent management of expenses has positioned us well to face the temporary headwinds presented by the current macroeconomic environment. We will continue to appropriately invest in commercial and marketing efforts to drive greater adoption of our multi indication deep TMS system, as well as in product development and clinical research to ensure our technology remains highly differentiated. We are confident that this approach will support shareholder value now and into the future.

This concludes our prepared remarks. I will now ask the operator to please open up the call for questions. Operator?

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. Our first question comes from the line of Steven Lichtman from Oppenheimer & Company. Please go ahead.

Steven Lichtman

I'm wondering in terms of the mix of units, beyond the units being lower sequentially, should we assume that you saw significantly higher increase in leased systems versus direct? Is that really where you saw the big drop off?

And then secondly, can you talk about the sales force? I think you said you have 14 reps. Where were we again in 2Q? I thought it was a lot higher than that. Can you talk a little bit about what's going on in terms of the churn of the sales force.

Scott Areglado

This is Scott. The first question, I think if you look at the math, our lease revenue has been relatively consistent over the quarters. So with revenue being down, the lease versus sale mix is just going to shift to a higher percentage of lease because the revenue is overall lower and the consistency of lease revenue on a quarter-to-quarter basis.

Christopher von Jako

It's Chris. Your question about the sales people, I think maybe at the end of Q2, or maybe we talked about in the period, we may have been around 16 or 17 at that time. We just go through the normal course, obviously, of evaluating reps. And Eric's done a great job of doing that. And I think that's part of the normal process we've been doing. And I think he's been doing a great job of really bringing on some new additional people, not only in the sales reps, but in the practice development team as well, which is really enhancing the entire commercial team.

Steven Lichtman

Can you talk about the enterprise customer opportunity? I guess, in your mind, if you could scale it for us versus what you've been going after on the smaller customer side? And can you talk to us in terms of what your preparations are to go after that side of the market?

Christopher von Jako

Just to give some context there, and I'm asked this by investors from time to time and talking about like enterprise accounts, we've had a number of smaller customers that continue to grow and they continue to get scale. And some of these customers that we've had have been acquired by larger TMS providers. So, there's definitely some consolidation that's going on in that market. And we feel that there's an opportunity for us to kind of impact some of these larger psychiatry networks not doing TMS today that we are trying to penetrate in there. So, we have been bringing in several people into the organization that a higher level can be able to talk commercially. But, as I stated in the prepared remarks, also about return on investment and the things that we can do for those centers. So, we're making that focus right now. That's something that has been key to Eric Hirt over the last number of months. We've been really focusing in that area. We believe it will be fruitful moving forward.

Steven Lichtman

Just lastly, maybe, Chris, a little bit more color on what you're hearing from your customers, and particularly during this third quarter versus the second quarter. Obviously, we know the macro headwinds, but what furthered or changed during this quarter and what's sort of your visibility in terms of, like, any sort of backlog of systems that may be building as there's interest, but perhaps reservation given the economic environment?

Christopher von Jako

Steve, I think we mentioned on the last call, we started to see those headwinds and we made those statements on the last call. Those headwinds were obviously a little bit larger than we felt. Our pipeline is vast, but I won't use the word strong. It's vast. There are a lot of centers that are looking to acquire the technology. But the problem is they just keep pushing it off, they continue to push it off. So we're hoping now that, as things, hopefully, in the next several quarters, begin to stabilize that we'll be able to continue to make inroads there with those smaller customers.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Jeffery Cohen from Ladenburg Thalmann.

Jeffery Cohen

Firstly, can you give us an update on H4 coils from Q3 or maybe an outlook for Q4 and talk a little bit about some of the addiction programs out there and placements please?

Christopher von Jako

The H4 coil is for our smoking addiction products. We don't actually give numbers of the number of systems that we put out there. But I think roughly, Scott, how many do we have out there at this time? Over 50? Over 60? Over 60 systems, yeah. And our focus continues to be there, like it had been on OCD in the beginning, is to continue to acquire clinical data there in support of reimbursement efforts that we're looking at.

Jeffery Cohen

Are you seeing any payers come forth? Or have you submitted any paperwork to any payers for reimbursement on their front page for?

Christopher von Jako

Yeah, we haven't at this time. For us, with our experience, with that really good experience, obviously, we've seen from OCD, we're getting closer and closer to about 100 million there on covered lives. We see it's a combination of a good clinical data, followed by a combination of good post marketing data. So we don't want to go too quickly to the payers and start talking about that, until we actually have that. That's some of the things that we've learned before in the past with the OCD.

Jeffery Cohen

I did want to follow up on – in the third quarter, it looked like patient starts were light. Were there any interruptions in patient care as far as early stops or delayed starts? And should we expect more of that or some of that into the fourth quarter as far as folks out there delaying starting or halting sessions kind of midway through and then what might that look like as far as capital goes in the fourth quarter? It's traditionally been strong and any outlook there on the capital front.

Christopher von Jako

From a patient perspective, we can monitor how our customers are doing with patients. It looked like it was fairly flat between Q2 and Q3. Now, obviously, we added a number of systems, but it looks like it was fairly flat. We also look at numbers of patients that are going into psychiatric offices. There are some reports that we get on a weekly basis to see that. And from July on, we saw kind of a drop off in the number of patients that were visiting psychiatric offices. So we feel that may also have some effect obviously that our smaller customers are seeing as well.

Jeffery Cohen

Lastly, some of the International placements, are they all capital sales or some are leases as well? Any color there would be helpful.

Scott Areglado

Yeah, no. Jeff, typically the sales outside the US have all been capital placements.

Christopher von Jako

So we're selling to a distributor…

Scott Areglado

We're selling to a distributor.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Jayson Bedford from Raymond James.

Jayson Bedford

Just a few for me. I realize that you have an existing kind of lease versus direct sales offering. But is there an opportunity to be even more flexible in terms of price or lease terms, just given the constrained environment?

Christopher von Jako

I think there's always that opportunity. Jayson, you may remember quite well, when I first started back in 2020 with COVID, you saw this happen with the environment that we got with the pandemic in that first and second quarter, and we started doing certain things with leasing that really kind of got us back in the ballgame. So, there's definitely things that we can do to make it a little bit more flexible on customers that are looking to expand.

Scott Areglado

And we've done that, right? So, I think we'll do things like extending out lease terms, et cetera, to lower payments longer term there. But, obviously, those take longer to contribute to revenue when you do that.

Jayson Bedford

But you are implementing…

Scott Areglado

Absolutely. Look, I think the bottom line is we still want to build our install base and get systems. I think getting into an account and being a first mover in an account is a really important thing. As customers learn how to use your system and get trained, it gives us better opportunities for repeat business. And we're focused on trying to get into accounts and get first position there wherever we can.

Jayson Bedford

And you mentioned supply chain challenges. I think it may have been tied to some margin commentary. But did any supply chain issues hold back system placements at all?

Scott Areglado

Absolutely not.

Jayson Bedford

Chris, you have a good balance sheet here. Is there opportunity to strengthen the business through capital deployment? Is that something you're contemplating now? Or is the environment still choppy for that?

Christopher von Jako

So capital deployment, in what sense? Just want to make sure I…

Jayson Bedford

Either acquisition, licensing, technology, buyback, however you want to use the 40 some odd million in cash?

Christopher von Jako

Again, I think we want to be measured in things we do. We're always evaluating things. And what we're continuing to do is I think what we talked about in our prepared remarks where we're focused on building the best commercial team possible and continue to strengthen our clinical and our regulatory areas and making sure we're doing the right things.

Look, I think it was incredible we brought on Dr. Colleen Hanlon to the team. She's a really well known person in this space. She has a lot of expertise, not only in psychiatric conditions for TMS, but also in the addiction space. So we know she's going to be an added value in working together with our commercial team as well.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Boobalan Pachaiyappan from H.C. Wainwright.

Boobalan Pachaiyappan

Firstly, you mentioned about CGS and NGS Medicare coverage update for deep TMS for depression. So do you foresee any such update for OCD in the near future? Any thoughts?

Christopher von Jako

Medicare in particular?

Boobalan Pachaiyappan

Yeah.

Christopher von Jako

We have one Medicare already that's come on with Palmetto. The other ones are continuing to look at the data. We're continuously talking with them at all points. So we have one so far. So we're really focused on the other six too as well.

Boobalan Pachaiyappan

One of your competitors, they use a tool called PHQ-10, Patient Health Questionnaire, and then they claim that it helps them to identify patients within the treatment practice. So I would like to hear your thoughts about PHQ-10 utilization in your practice? Do you guys consider implementing one? Or have you implemented one already?

Christopher von Jako

From our side, our practice development consultants work directly with our customers and looking for the patient that fit that mix. So, we go through that quite extensively in the training process. And I think that has been really sufficient for us and the needs for our customers at this time.

Boobalan Pachaiyappan

One more question. As we look into the fourth quarter, and maybe 2023, in addition to the macro headwinds that we just discussed, that impacted your 3Q 2022 sales, are there other growth restraints you can think of?

Scott Areglado

Other growth constraints?

Boobalan Pachaiyappan

Yeah.

Christopher von Jako

I'm not sure we heard you at the end there.

Christopher von Jako

Nothing that comes off of the top of my mind. Right now, we've been looking at the challenges really being the macroeconomic areas, right? And that's why we're looking at also getting to the enterprise areas as well. Growth constraints, Scott.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Jason Wittes from Loop Capital.

Jason Wittes

On the sales force, sounds like you're reevaluating sort of which sales should we be bring in. I guess a couple questions related to that. First, where have you been getting your sales people? And is that changing where you're looking now?

Secondly, I don't know if it was clear in terms of how long you think it might take to reach the previously stated goals, or whether there's new goals to be set, just want to get a sense of the outlook and how you see the sales force shaping up in the next 6 to 12 months?

Christopher von Jako

Like I said, we're at 14 right now. Our goal is really to get to 21. And obviously, with a new leader, like Eric Hirt coming in place, and things change within the sales force a little bit, and he has different criteria. And he's been doing, I think, an amazing job of kind of bringing in the right talent that we need. So, we're trying to be measured, we're trying to make sure we have the right people in place. So I think our goal continues to get to 21. But it may be measured over time, as we kind of see the macroeconomic environments changing.

Jason Wittes

I realize the focus is first trying to be the first one in and locking in customers. In terms of your current customer base, do you have any leverage in terms of pricing or different pricing options, or just increases that you can, especially for your current install base, that you're thinking about? Or is that model pretty much set the way it is at the moment?

Christopher von Jako

We're always looking. We did the same thing, I think we mentioned a little bit earlier, during COVID. We're always looking at getting some flexibility in our models to make sure that we can do things in the right way. Obviously, our goal is to place these systems in customers to treat these patients. So we're continuously looking at different models. And I think that there are some opportunities that lie ahead for sure, definitely.

Jason Wittes

Just a follow-up on our housekeeping. You may have answered this, so apologize. But did you give the number of OCD helmets placed this quarter, the total install base currently?

Scott Areglado

I thought we did, but it was…

Christopher von Jako

380, I think.

Scott Areglado

It was 12 OCD oils in the quarter. 380 in total.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of the question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the conference to Chris von Jako, CEO, for closing comments.

Christopher von Jako

Thanks. So, I'd like to thank our valued partners and providers as well as the entire BrainsWay team for elevating their commitment to boldly advancing neuroscience to improve health and transform lives. Additionally, to thank all of the investors, analysts and other participants for their interest in BrainsWay. With that, please enjoy the rest of your day.

Operator

Thank you. The conference of BrainsWay has now concluded. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines.

For further details see:

BrainsWay Ltd. (BWAY) Q3 2022 Results - Earnings Call Transcript
Stock Information

Company Name: Brainsway Ltd Ord
Stock Symbol: BRSYF
Market: OTC
Website: brainsway.com

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