NYSE:RMD ResMed Q4 2023 Earnings Report $4.07 -0.20 (-4.68%) As of 04/16/2025 03:58 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast FIGS EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.60Consensus EPS $1.67Beat/MissMissed by -$0.07One Year Ago EPS$1.49FIGS Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.12 billionExpected Revenue$1.14 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$19.53 millionYoY Revenue Growth+22.70%FIGS Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2023Date8/3/2023TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, August 3, 2023Conference Call Time4:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsFIGS' Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 8, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 5:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by FIGS Q4 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 3, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Hello, and welcome to ResMed's 4th Quarter Fiscal Year 2023 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It's now my pleasure to turn the call over to Amy Wakeham, Chief Communications and Investor Relations Officer. Please go ahead, Amy. Speaker 100:00:34Great. Thank you so much, Kevin. Hi, everyone, and welcome to ResMed's 4th Quarter Fiscal Year 2023 Earnings Call. This call is being webcast live and the replay will be available on the Investor Relations section of our corporate website later today, Along with a copy of the earnings press release and the presentation, both of which are available now. On the call Today, our Chief Executive Officer, Mick Farrell and Chief Financial Officer, Brett Sandercock. Speaker 100:01:01Following our prepared remarks, Mick and Brett will be joined by Rob Douglas, our President and Chief Operating Officer and Lucille Blaise, President of our Sleep and Respiratory Care Business During today's call, we will discuss several non GAAP measures. Please review the supporting schedules in today's earnings press release for a reconciliation of the non GAAP measures to our GAAP reported numbers. Our discussion today will also include forward looking statements, including but not limited to expectations about our future financial and operating performance. We believe these statements are based on reasonable assumptions. However, our actual results could differ. Speaker 100:01:41Please review our SEC filings for a complete discussion of the risk factors that could cause our actual results I'd like to now turn the call over to Mick. Speaker 200:01:55Thanks, Amy, and thank you to all our shareholders for joining us today as we review the results of our June quarter, the last quarter of our fiscal year 2023. Our results reflect incredible growth across our entire business with double digit growth in our devices, masks and software businesses. Unconstrained availability of our market leading cloud connected flow generator platforms has enabled us to continue to offer access to 100 percent cloud connectable AirSense 10 flow generator devices in all of our major global markets and beyond. In parallel, we are ramping up and improving the availability of our best in class AirSense 11 platform, which will gain further geographic regulatory approvals throughout the fiscal year and steadily increasing supply also throughout the fiscal year 2024 and beyond. Although challenges within the post COVID Supply chain haven't completely been mitigated yet. Speaker 200:02:57We expect ongoing steady improvement in component and end product supply in the quarters ahead using a combination of AirSense 10 and AirSense 11 platforms. While we remain focused on scaling production and global availability of the AirSense 11 We remain on allocation for the Air 11 platform for the next few quarters. But I want to be clear on this point. With combined availability of the unconstrained Air 10 platform, we have enough devices to meet all the customer needs that we see in major markets and globally. With the powerful combination of the Air 10 and the Air 11 platforms, we have the 2 best device platforms on the market. Speaker 200:03:38Our strong double digit 23% year over year growth in the devices category demonstrates that customers are choosing ResMed and we are delivering. Our masks and accessories business also performed at a very strong 18% growth in constant currency this quarter. Patient demand continues to drive increased adoption and utilization of our mask resupply programs augmenting a steady cadence of new patient setups. We continue to see strong growth in both the U. S. Speaker 200:04:07Business where provider resupply programs have augmented growth and in our markets outside the U. S. Where our consumer outreach and subscription programs are also driving mass replenishment directly with those end user patients. Our teams continue to work incredibly hard to achieve these strong growth results amid a challenging industry environment where component costs and freight costs are still working their way through our inventory post this supply chain crisis. I'm proud of the work that 10,000 resmedians have put in Let's now briefly review updates on the top three strategic priorities for our company. Speaker 200:04:58Number 1, to grow and differentiate our core sleep apnea and respiratory care business. Number 2, to design, develop and deliver Market leading medical devices as well as digital health solutions that can be scaled globally and number 3, to create, Innovate and grow the world's best software solutions for care delivered outside the hospital, a field that we call residential medicine. In terms of our patient facing digital health platforms, adoption continues to go very well. The feedback we hear from patients and healthcare professionals remains very positive. We are seeing strong adoption of the MyAir patient app by folks using AirSense it's 11. Speaker 200:05:40In fact, it is more than double the adoption rate that we saw with our AirSense 10 platform with many, many millions of patients signing up and engaging daily on their MyAir app to view their own sleep data on their own phone and to review their own therapy data. This is important as engagement with a digital health platform like MyAir is directly linked to higher adherence to therapy in patients and higher adherence to therapy is directly related to better patient outcomes to increased resupply and to better economics for the payer and the health care provider with lower overall health care costs. Last month, we announced and closed the acquisition of Somnowhere. Somnaware is a U. S.-based leader in sleep and respiratory care diagnostics software and physician management software. Speaker 200:06:34As part of our ongoing efforts to improve and streamline the end to end pathway for patients and make it easier for Sleep Labs and physicians and their practices to diagnose and manage patients, we're excited about this acquisition that complements our current Ecosystem of Software Solutions including AirView for providers and physicians and Brightree for home care providers. These ecosystem together will drive greater efficiency and better patient care by accelerating the pathway to therapy and with a better overall customer experience. We're also excited about our progress across several digital health technology initiatives to further increase the value proposition for our connected health care ecosystem. Over the next several quarters, we plan to introduce several Artificial intelligence driven data products and capabilities on both the physician and provider facing AirView platform as well as the patient facing MyAir app. Early testing of these AI driven data products is very positive in both of these customer groups and we will refine to the optimal digital design and then we will launch and then we will scale these products around the world. Speaker 200:07:49These AI driven data products provide personalized suggestions to increase therapy adherence and to ultimately improve patient outcomes as well as patient physician and provider experience. We will continue to invest in the world's largest digital healthcare ecosystem that we have with over 15,500,000,000 nights of medical data in the cloud As we continue to unlock value from those data to benefit physicians, providers, payers and patients. We saw strong growth in our respiratory care business in the quarter through ongoing adoption of our non invasive ventilators as well as our life support ventilator solutions. We're still in the early stages of market development with some of our newer to market technologies The prevalence of respiratory insufficiency due to COPD as well as respiratory insufficiency due to neuromuscular disease continues to increase And we are focused on having low cost, high quality solutions to address this health epidemic. Growth was supported by another full quarter contribution from our fast growing Medifox Dan business as well as solid organic growth of 8% across our Brightree and MatrixCare portfolio of SaaS businesses. Speaker 200:09:56We're pleased to see sustained High single digit growth in our SaaS business on an organic basis driven by the ongoing strength in the HME and Infusion segment and more stability in the Facilities segment as patient flows have now rebounded post COVID. I'm very impressed by the leadership of our most recent SaaS portfolio addition Medifox Dhan, which is on track and meeting or beating our expectations. I'll be visiting personally with the team in Hildesheim, Germany, this quarter to discuss the growth face to face with the digital health innovators there in Hildesheim who are changing health care and taking care of people in the lowest cost, lowest acuity and highest quality of life setting, which is very often the home. We believe this is the future of health care and that's where we're investing and that's where we're winning. Our customers continue to see the value of adopting technologies to improve and optimize business efficiencies and personalized care and we deliver the best software solutions to help basis to double digit growth on an organic basis in the mid to long term. Speaker 200:11:36Our SaaS business remains an integral part of ResMed's group growth strategy. This business complements the market leading software and device solutions that we have in our core sleep apnea and respiratory care businesses. As an important example, our Brightree resupply program continues to demonstrate strong synergies between SaaS and our core business, providing resupply for patients with sleep apnea, COPD, neuromuscular disease and beyond. The output of this work can be seen in our very healthy 19% growth in mask revenues in the U. S. Speaker 200:12:07Geography this quarter. Ultimately, this work results in better outcomes for the patient, the physician, the provider and the payer with lower overall health care costs. We are well positioned as the leading global Strategic provider of SaaS solutions for residential medicine globally and we've created differentiated value for our customers as well as long term sustainable growth for our stakeholders. Here at ResMed, we are transforming respiratory medicine and residential medicine at scale, leading the market in digital health technology across our businesses. As we continue to scale and drive efficiencies in our operations in this post COVID world, we continue to leverage appropriate pricing and cost reductions to drive accelerated growth in our bottom line. Speaker 200:12:50We are focused on driving top line revenue and maintaining tight discipline and increasing efficiencies so that we can lower costs and ultimately so that we can accelerate our impact and our bottom line profitability, delivering even further value for all of our shareholders. As we move through fiscal year 2024, I see improvements in our business margins with geography mix, With product mix and specifically with strong bilevel and non invasive ventilator growth with strong mask growth and with increased software solutions growth. All these business lines are margin accretive to our group. I also see that the higher inventory costs and freight costs that we've seen through the supply chain crisis continue to work their way through our sold products. And as we progress through the fiscal year, we will continue to drive the transition to AirSense 11 and we will gain regulatory approvals and we will scale production. Speaker 200:13:47All these factors above lead to tailwinds for the gross margin and the net margin of our business as we move through the fiscal year. I can tell you we are working furiously to drive all of the above elements with our global teams. We now have over 15,500,000,000 nights of medical data in the cloud as I said earlier and those data come from over 21,500,000 100% cloud connectable medical devices on bedside tables in 140 countries worldwide. We continue to lead the industry in digital health and we don't plan to stop anytime soon because there's so much opportunity ahead of us. 7% of our revenues go straight into R and D to power our hardware and our data innovation engines. Speaker 200:14:34ResMed's mission and key Goal remains crystal clear. We will improve 250,000,000 lives through better residential healthcare in 2025. This patient centric mission drives and motivates ResMedians every day. We made excellent progress towards that inspiring goal over the last 90 days. And during the trailing 12 months, we have improved over 160,000,000 lives with the delivery of a complete device platform to a patient or a complete mask As we start fiscal year 2024 here, I'm very excited about the opportunities in front of us. Speaker 200:15:17We just had our SaaS ASM earlier this week and I'll be attending the Country Market Group CMG Group for our North America team in the coming weeks And sales meetings are happening around the world. We're on a good trajectory. We have an exciting pipeline. In closing, I want to express my sincere gratitude to the more than 10,000 ResMedians for their perseverance, their hard work and their dedication both today and every day. With that, I'll hand the call over to Brett in Sydney and then we'll move and open up for Q and A for the group. Speaker 200:15:47Brett, over to you. Speaker 300:15:50Great. Thanks, Mick. In my remarks today, I will provide an overview of our results for the Q4 of fiscal year 2023. Unless noted, all comparisons are to the prior year quarter. We Year on year movements in foreign currencies negatively impacted revenue by approximately $3,000,000 in the June quarter. Speaker 300:16:34Looking at our geographic revenue distribution. Excluding revenue from our Software service business, sales in U. S, Canada and Latin America countries increased by 25%. In constant currency terms, sales in Europe, Asia and other markets increased by 14%. Globally, in constant currency terms, device sales increased by 24%, increased by 30% as we benefited from strong demand and as previously mentioned, our continued ability to fully supply the market with combined availability Masks and other sales increased by 19%, reflecting growth in resupply and new patient setups. Speaker 300:17:26Europe, Asia and other markets, device sales increased by 15% in constant currency terms, In constant currency terms, reflecting increased patient setups. Software as a Service revenue increased by 34% In the June quarter, reflecting the contribution from our Medifox Dan acquisition and continued strong performance from our HME vertical. Excluding our Medifox Dan acquisition, SaaS revenue grew by 8% in the June quarter. Medifox Dan contributed revenue We have provided a full reconciliation of the non GAAP to GAAP numbers in our Q4 earnings press release. Gross margin declined by 200 points to 55.8 percent in the June quarter. Speaker 300:18:28The decrease primarily reflects component cost increases, in our gross margin. And we saw a lower than expected product mix benefit as we continue to see strong growth in sleep devices Moving on to operating expenses. SG and A expenses for the 4th quarter increased by 25% or in constant currency terms increased by 26%. The increase was predominantly attributable to increases in employee related costs, marketing and travel expenses As well as the incremental SG and A expenses associated with Medifox Dan that we acquired in November 2022. SG and A expenses as a percentage of revenue were 21.5% compared to 21.1% in the prior year period. Speaker 300:19:32Looking forward and subject to currency movements, we expect SG and A expense as a percentage of revenue to be in the range of 20% to 22 by 23%. R and D expenses as a percentage of revenue was 7%, consistent with the prior year quarter. Looking forward and subject to currency movements, we expect R and D expenses as a percentage of revenue to be in the range of 7% to 8% during fiscal year 2024. Operating profit for the quarter increased by 13%, underpinned by strong revenue growth, partially offset by lower gross margin. Following the acquisition of Medifox Dan, our net interest expense for the quarter is $15,000,000 and we expect interest expense to be a similar amount per quarter in the first half of fiscal year 'twenty four. Speaker 300:20:28Our effective tax rate for the June quarter was 18 point 3% compared to the prior year quarter rate of 17.6%. Looking forward, we estimate our effective tax rate for the fiscal year 'twenty four Non GAAP diluted earnings per share also increased by 7%. During the quarter, we incurred 1,800,000 closure of the ARIA lymphedema business and workforce rationalization in our German and SaaS business verticals. We also recognized a gain of $20,200,000 within other income in relation to a business interruption insurance claim. These have all been treated as non GAAP items in our Q4 financial results. Speaker 300:21:24Cash flow from operations for the quarter was $237,000,000 reflecting solid underlying earnings, partially offset by a modest increase in working capital. Capital expenditure for the quarter was $34,000,000 depreciation and amortization for the quarter totaled 47,000,000 We ended the Q4 with a cash balance of $228,000,000 At June 30, we had $1,400,000,000 in gross debt and CAD1.2 billion in net debt, which mainly reflects the funding of our Medifox Dan acquisition. During the quarter, we reduced our debt by $145,000,000 At June 30, we had approximately $745,000,000 available for drawdown under our revolver facility, and we continue to maintain a solid liquidity position. Our Board of Directors today declared a quarterly dividend of 0.4 Going forward, we plan to continue to reinvest in growth through R and D and expect to deploy further capital for tuck in acquisitions, Such as our recently announced acquisition of Somnaware, a company that provides an upstream diagnostic management platform that is complementary to our current AirView and Brightree And with that, I will hand the call back to Amy. Speaker 100:22:47Great. Thank you, Brett, and thank you, Mick. Kevin, I'd like to go ahead and turn the call back over to you to provide the instructions and run the Q and A portion of our call. Operator00:22:58Certainly, we will now be conducting a question and answer session. Our first question today is coming from Matthew Mishan from KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is now live. Speaker 200:23:26Hey, good afternoon and thank you for taking the questions. Hey, Mick, With the devices number sort of steady sequentially around the $600,000,000 mark, is this where the number would kind of base Yes. Thanks for the question, Matthew, and it's a good one. It's hard to predict because there are so many factors involved that are going on in the in the quarter and 30% growth in U. S, Canada, Latin America, 15% growth in Europe, Asia and rest of world. Speaker 200:24:20Look, we're seeing a strong So mid single digits level of patient flow into the channel. We're seeing in addition to that like in terms of new patients. We're seeing in addition to that resupply of patients at that 5 year point for most U. S. Reimbursement and various points in the other 139 countries where people make their own decisions or insurance has other criteria to drive that. Speaker 200:24:45So it's new patient setups, it's resupply setups And there's of course the impact of the competitor recall which is was supposed to be over in June 30 and now has no definitive date and so as we look to that with all those unknown factors it's very hard for me to say Matthew that it's just stopping steady growth from here it might be stronger growth from here. And that makes it hard to predict gross margins because as we grow those CPAP and APAP numbers so well In the U. S. Geography, it's incredible great revenue and cloud connected and links us with the patient for life, but it is lower gross margin than our group and it's great gross profit dollars but has an impact on our gross margin as you saw that steady apart from FX moving it down 30 basis points. So A complex equation, but I'd say it's at minimum. Speaker 200:25:31It stays where it is and grows with the market, but it could potentially grow above that as we continue to take share and solidify that shared through our digital ecosystem. Thanks for the question, Matthew. Operator00:25:46Thank you. Our next question today is coming from Margaret Kaczor from William Blair. Your line is now live. Speaker 400:25:51Hey, good afternoon and good morning, everyone. I wanted to follow-up first on the competitive dynamic to the extent that you'll see anything maybe into the in the marketplace. So whether your key competitors coming back, either approaching or maybe hiring processes, marketing campaigns, anything that maybe they're gearing up for that you're seeing or is demand relatively similar to what you've seen in the past, no real Thank you. Speaker 200:26:22Yes. Thanks, Margaret, and welcome back. I think It's difficult to predict exactly where they're at from those sort of early emerging signs as you say. Look, we have regional competitors in Europe that we are fighting with every day there and we have regional competitors in Asia that we're fighting with every day and regional competitors in the Americas we're fighting with every day. When Philips comes back they'll have to start at position number 4 if you like in new patient set We are they are back and we are competing with them in some countries in Europe like in Spain. Speaker 200:26:55They never went away because they never had a phone device there. They've been there the whole time through this recall and we've been beating them handsomely there. And as other markets in Europe where they've started to come back, It's going to be a very slow progress for them country by country whether or not they get a consent decree in the largest geography. And so we look at it going forward and say look do we have enough supply to take care of all the market demands between us and the other regional players and we finally got there where I can say that this quarter that we're there and So for us it sort of takes away that uncertainty and allows us to push forward. But yes, we're competing head to head with them in some many countries in Asia and some countries in Europe. Speaker 200:27:47And it's like it was in 2019 where our smaller, quieter, more comfortable, more connected and more digital solutions are taking share and holding share. And it's an ongoing competitive game. And as I said, we're launching some of these AI driven products on top of this ecosystem. It's an exponential game when you think about digital and we're well ahead. We've had 2 or 3 years here to sprint ahead. Speaker 200:28:09We were ahead before that and I think it's a long term game. Won't get We'll keep productively paranoid, but we are improving outcomes. We're lowering costs and the physicians like the workflow efficiencies and patients like the increased adherence and payers like the fact that there's an ROI in lowering total healthcare costs. Speaker 400:28:33Thank you, guys. Operator00:28:35Thank you. Next question is coming from Anthony Petrone Speaker 500:28:49Nick, one would be just on the amount of resupply that's now coming in as it relates to the share gains that you've seen over the past 2 years. 2, there's obviously the debate out there on GLP-1s. Maybe from the perspective of ResMed, how do you see the GLP-1 phenomenon Speaker 200:29:29Yes. Thanks, Anthony, and welcome back to you too to ResMed following us here. I'll take both of your questions and your follow-up in order. So firstly on resupply, as you know you've been following us for a number of years. It's not a Lock and key, you can use our mask on other devices and you can use other masks on our devices. Speaker 200:29:49The way that we've won mask share And nobody's been on a major in terms of not being able to sell recall out there on this. And so we've had head to head competition with all the top 5 players in masks these last 3 years and we've gained really good share with that. So I think it's just the smallest, the quietest, the most comfortable, the minimalist size ones, the ones that have full freedom and the ones that have the ability to for the front prone sleepers and side sleepers to provide that capability. And so that's how we've gained share in the mask side and maintain that share. So there is a better together in that when you have an Essence 10 or an Essence 11 the mask leak data are more accurate. Speaker 200:30:30The interoperability of an AHI calculation or calculation and more accurate. So we certainly push that angle and we do get some extra share through the device, but it's not as material as the fact that the masks themselves are just excellent, Which I think speaks to the sustainability there. So that strong resupply as you said 19% growth in the U. S, 14% growth in Europe, Asia and beyond where we don't have that sort of automated resupply that we have with Brightree resupply solutions in the U. S. Speaker 200:30:59That's been from hard work from our teams in Asia, Latin America and Europe on patient outreach, subscription programs and connecting directly to that end user. So I think post COVID people care about respiratory health, respiratory hygiene and taking care of themselves outside the hospital and we've been able to leverage that trend in the consumer side as well. So I think it's sustainable and I don't think although it may be catalyzed somewhat by our increased device share, I think our mask share On its own extraordinary due to the intrinsic products. The second question around GLPs, yes, look, there's a lot of moving parts. I was just reading in Press today that many U. Speaker 200:31:38S. Employers are banning coverage of GLP-1s due to cost. European governments have all said no from the government insurance side. These things are incredibly expensive about That will mitigate GLPs in the space. 1 is cost, 2 is adherence and 3 is side effects. Speaker 200:32:05I'll take them really quickly in order. If you look at cost, Take a 40 year old person who's on therapy full time for 40 years. 40 times 12 times $1,000 is $480,000 life time cost for that patient on a GLP-one from 40 to 80 lifetime cost. If you take that same patient and say, look, let's treat them with CPAP, Right. 1st year maybe $1,000 and then 39 years of let's take a really strong case where you get 4 masks a year and they're all full face masks. Speaker 200:32:34That's about $13,500 So it's 35 times more expensive to go with the GLP-one. It's just like what's the ROI here? So that's cost. On adherence, the data out there are about 33% adherence at 1 year through the clinical trials on GLP-1s. That's incredibly low. Speaker 200:32:51We get 87% adherence 90 days and we hold it pretty strong there. So I think adherence is a big deal. And third is side effects, reading thyroid, pancreas, kidney, Cancer, these major side effects and minor ones like nausea, constipation and pain. Our biggest side effect President Biden had a little mark on his face and he was asked about it and it was from his CPAP. Look, I think it's a long road to play out here. Speaker 200:33:15I think it's frankly good marketing around the area of obesity and it can drive patients into the funnel, but I don't think it's going to be a major impact on patients because we got 936,000,000 of them worldwide. We need them to get into the funnel. If they come in the funnel because they try to fill and it didn't work, that's good for us too. Operator00:33:35Thank Our next question is coming from Suraj Kalia from Oppenheimer. Your line is now live. Speaker 600:33:49Hi, this is Seamus on for Suraj. So we saw gross margin step down a little bit. I know you said there were some reasonings for it. But I just looking forward kind of in the future, Maybe you can walk us through the temporary and more structurally permanent changes we should think through as far as GM outlook is concerned? Yes. Speaker 200:34:09Thanks for the question. And you look and it's a good one. Lots of factors going on gross margin. Actually the major one that as you noticed sequentially on the 30 basis points was foreign exchange and that was on inventory as it flowed through our funnel as we sold those CPAPs, APAPs we had FX that had impacted them 6, 9 months ago but they're flying through inventory that we sold during the June quarter. That was the headwind of 30 basis points from Q3 to Q4. Speaker 200:34:39Look, I think there's so many moving parts. But when you add it up and you look at Geography mix and the upside opportunity for us to grow our business in Europe, Asia, particularly Japan, which has some chance for The STA, AirCurve ASV, these are incredible and our mask side, particularly the full face, but any of the masks, all of those gross margin accretive to our group. And I see opportunities for strong growth in all those categories. And also our software solutions have gross margin accretive capabilities. And as we go on an organic basis from single digits to high single digits to low doubles there on the software SaaS side of the business, I think that's margin accretive. Speaker 200:35:30So I feel good about that. I also know that we're working through the sort of higher inventory costs that we had in that supply chain crisis. We had to spend more on chips, parts and pieces in those contracts and get more expensive components for the cloud connected chip and beyond. And those freight costs that we invested in and everyone's talking all the news the freight costs are down you should take away your surcharge. Well, no actually the freight costs that we paid 6, 9 months ago are working there with through We'll wait through our gross margin as you saw in the June quarter and that will go on for some time, but that's going to continue to go down over time. Speaker 200:36:04And as that does go through our sold products, there's going to be some tailwinds for gross margin. And the final one and really important one is we're going to drive Essence 11. It's the best in the world product. It's better than the 2nd best product in the world which is the Essence 10. And it gives us a chance as we gain regulatory approvals and we scale that production to improve our gross margins there as well. Speaker 200:36:27So all those are tailwinds for the gross and net margin of the business as we move through the fiscal year. Hard to predict in that one of the main factors is how do we accelerate in the U. S. And particularly in CPAP, APAP. I will never turn down a patient. Speaker 200:36:40If there's demand for a patient and they want to CPAP and APAP, I'm not going to reverse engineer and we know how to do it. We could reverse engineer our gross margin 30, 50 basis points by slowing down sales of product. We're not going to do that. When a patient needs care, we're going to take care of them even if it's a slightly lower gross margin. And by the way, it is very good gross profit dollars and we get to take that cash flow. Speaker 200:37:01As you saw, really strong cash flow in the quarter and reinvested in R and D. So we're working on all the above furiously and we're going to get success as we go over the next 1, 2, 3 and 4 quarters. Operator00:37:15Thank you. Next question is coming from Laura Sutliff from UBS. Your line is now live. Speaker 100:37:21Hello. Thank you. I was just wondering if you could talk about how you're positioned to increase your mask supply in the event that the consent decree over the competition impacts Speaker 200:37:39Yes. Look, we have run all sorts of scenario analyses around that. I think one of the differences if you think in terms of ResMed's ability to work with suppliers in the core device side where in terms of chipsets The whole medtech sector is a group. And I serve on the Board of AdvoMed and we were advocating for more semiconductor chips for the whole industry. When we were going to Intel and TI and all these companies and sort of begging for semiconductor chips 12, 18 months ago, altogether we were less than 1% All the supply of chips and it was very difficult. Speaker 200:38:15We did get some and as you saw we did have to pay a little more but we were able to get those contracts with Other players and get long term contracts and get that supply. In the field of medical grade silicon rubber, we are one of Top users in the world for this. As you know, we sell tens of millions of mask products per year and we are an incredibly Large part of that supply chain. So if a competitor was not able to sell masks their demand for that LSR would go down and those or similar suppliers would then want to keep their factories operating and be looking for other supplies and we would running the game theory and the analysis of where we go and how we go to ramp that production up. So it would be a good problem to have for Rob, do you have any thoughts on that? Speaker 700:39:12Rob Douglas, our President and COO. Yes, hi. Just one other minor comment on that. And we've said this before, Because of the relatively low CapEx of our supply chain and the equipment that we need, we generally run with Quite a lot of burst capacity of life. And so our ability to rapidly increase volumes as needed is really strong. Operator00:39:37Your next question is coming from Sean Laaman from Morgan Stanley. Your line is now live. Speaker 200:39:43Good afternoon, Mick. Hope you're well. Mick, I'm wondering if you could characterize for us some of the price dynamics that might have been present during the quarter. Yes. Thanks for the question, Sean. Speaker 200:39:57Yes, a simple question, very complex answer across 140 I think one thing that I'm comfortable to say though on this is that if you look over the last Four quarters, our commercial teams have done an incredible job of partnering up with our customers to say look inflation is up, costs are up. How do we share some of the pain if you like of these increased costs and we were able to increase some prices on some mask systems and components and some devices where we could, it's tough because customers often don't get much relief from the payers. They did in the Medicare side in the U. S. Market where there was an inflation adjustment up of around 5% January 1. Speaker 200:40:43So that was a benefit for our providers and so we can share some of the pain there in terms of increased pricing. But we've also had some surcharges on our products in terms of Right. And although as I said in the prep remarks, we've seen all the news media that freight costs are all down. Well, yes, okay, they are on a spot price, But 12 months ago or 9 months ago as that works through our inventory that freight charge is still there and it's still impacting our costs and inflation although coming down is still high. But I think our commercial teams have done a really good job of partnering up with our customers, walking them through the situation, the reality that costs are up, inflation is up, freight is up, Inventory costs are up. Speaker 200:41:22We need to work on appropriate pricing to make that happen and we've had some appreciation in average selling price over these last 12 months. And we'll look to do over the next 12 months to do an appropriate pricing with customers on a per customer per contract basis to And so it's a really strong sort of price elasticity question of how do we make sure we get that balance right. But It's a competitive game. Some of our competitors are out there saying the same thing publicly that costs are up and so we need to move prices appropriately. And we're out there working with customers to make sure that we as an industry take care of patients in a sustainable economic way and that involves both Operator00:42:18From Bank of America, your line is now live. Speaker 800:42:22Good morning, Nick. Can I ask a question about outlook? Through the earlier quarters, you mentioned that we were going to see sequential revenue growth through 20 23, and we have seen that and that's been fabulous. But with your competitor key competitor out of the market, do you still Or for how long as they remain out of the market? Speaker 200:42:55Yes. So it's a great question, Lianne. And yes, 12 months ago, When it was pretty clear that we had a strong runway there on the devices side and it was really we were constrained by our own production. I was able to very strongly say look I am confident that our supply chain team has got access to this reengineering redesign And redeployment of key components particularly electronic components particularly semiconductors and we did that. And we grew Device revenue every quarter throughout fiscal year 2023 as you noted. Speaker 200:43:28I was really excited with the team on that. As we look forward to fiscal year 2024, we don't give guidance really on the top line, Brett's given some really solid guidance on our SG and A, our R and D, our tax rate and how we're looking in those parts of the business are very controllable. As I said in some of the earlier questions, we handle so many moving factors in overall demand in the market. But look, I'm confident because new patients continue to come into the funnel, right? That's happening across the world. Speaker 200:44:00And it's not happening randomly. We're driving demand gen programs. We're driving them in Australia and New Zealand with our Awaken Your Best campaign. We're driving them through our German teams, our India teams, social media programs in our China team is really strong social media demand gen. And so we're getting new patients in the funnel. Speaker 200:44:22And there was A glut of patients who couldn't get a replenishment device when their device hit 3 years or 5 years or whatever time their insurance allows or they as a consumer decide that they want to get to the next gen product. And I think the Essence 11 and all its features, its Engagement with the patient with compliance coach and its ability to engage with them directly on the touch screen has driven some demand as well. So all that together make me confident that over the fiscal year we're going to have strong demand. But as you go from Q4 to Q1 there's a seasonal impact Northern European and U. S. Speaker 200:44:58Markets take summer vacations and these have impacts seasonally on the business. And so traditionally Q4 to Q1 isn't one I'm not giving guidance for it, but traditionally that's the way it happens. We're not we're no longer supply constrained. We are back to a demand environment. And then there's the factor of that number 4 competitor probably not coming back during the next 60 days through so the end of this 90 day period. Speaker 200:45:22But I'm not going to jump in and predict on that. All I'm going to say is we're out there all day every day driving demand gen of new patients in. We're out there farming for patients who need to get a replacement device and every day we're engaging with patients on MyAir and reminding them of the importance of a clean Hygiene and a new mask and engagement with their digital app. So all the above gives me very strong confidence for high growth of ResMed throughout the year. But I'm not going to call it on an every 90 day basis here. Speaker 200:45:49We just don't do that on the top line. Operator00:45:53Thank you. Next question is coming from Chris Cooper from Goldman Sachs. Your line is now live. Speaker 900:45:59Good morning. Afternoon. Thank you. So, Mick, on AirSense 11, you sort of emphasized its importance for gross margin. You also said at the start of the call, You sort of expect this to remain on allocation for a few more quarters yet. Speaker 900:46:13I know this time frame was probably a bit longer than you'd hoped. I just wanted to confirm Whether that's entirely a function of supply chain at this point or I guess whether there's any sort of strategic consideration to manage volumes during such an unusual competitive dynamic? Speaker 200:46:28Yes. Chris, thanks for the question. We've really been focused on that patient and making sure no one's left behind as I said in an earlier question. And although the Essence 11 is better margin for us and it's better innovation and it has a higher engagement on the MyAir app which drives engagement adherence Mass Respawn everything, our view is that if there's a patient available and we have the parts and pieces and the ability to make an Essence can and take care of that demand now while we ramp ASENCE 11, we're going to do it and we're going to take care of that patient. By the way, there's some really strong upside for that patient and The alternative is a competitor device which would not be as small, quite, comfortable and connected. Speaker 200:47:08And so they have a much worse experience than the Essence 10 with a competitive one. So it's better for the patient. It is slightly lower margin for us, but we get that patient on therapy and there is the better together with ResMed that it's more likely hopefully that they get a ResMed mask and that they use that mask for the rest of their life. And so I think there's an overlap there if you like of altruism and the profit motive to do the right thing on a gross profit cash flow driven environment. We're not going to manage just to a GM line and say well let's not do that and make those products. Speaker 200:47:38And so it's less I mean it's strategic in this way that our brand is about patient care. Our brand is about taking care of someone who's suffocating and getting them out of hospital and doing that. And if we have to do it with an AirSense 10 which is an amazing 7 year old platform then we're going to do it. If we can do it with the brand new Essence 11 platform we're going to do it. And look nothing is slowing us down. Speaker 200:47:59Our quality and regulatory teams going geography by geography to get the AirSense 11 approved in each of the regulatory environments. So as soon as that is, we can start selling the products. But the ramp up on AirSense 11 is probably not as fast as it would be in a market where you had All 5 major competitors competing there because of that excess demand. We're covering a lot of that with the Essence 10. So that's sort of how we're thinking about it. Speaker 200:48:25Patient centric, patient demand, Take care of that patient now, get them on our ecosystem and then ramp as fast as we can AirSense 11 and we're doing that. Nothing is slowing down the accelerator is firmly Pedal to the floor on AirSense 11. And so everyone we make, we sell, but it will be on allocation just given the huge demand that we see in the market right now, Chris. Thanks for the question. Operator00:48:48Thank you. Next question is coming from Dan Hurn from MST. Your line is now live. Speaker 1000:48:54Good morning and thanks very much. Nick, at Operator00:48:56the 3rd quarter results, you seem Speaker 1000:48:57to be very confident in our gross margin. In fact, I think at the time we know The most positive gross margin commentary we've heard out of ResMed in recent memory. So I know you've spoken component costs and why You don't manage Speaker 1100:49:10the gross margin, but what else changed since the Speaker 1000:49:12time you gave that commentary to the results? Speaker 200:49:18Yes. Thanks for the question. And I think actually if you go back and look at the all the factors that I talked about 90 days ago, we're talking about today, but in addition The Essence 11 ramp that we're putting together there. What happened in these 90 days that was unpredicted was there was more demand. What we thought a competitor may be back and there There was more demand for CPAPs and APAPs and we didn't I know the exact number of how we could have slowed down our AirSense 10 Generation to get gross margin to be plus 30 basis points from Q to Q, but we didn't engineer it and reverse engineer it that way. Speaker 200:49:52We said there's demand out there, let's go take care of those patients. That was the unexpected factor. It was U. S. CPAP and APAP demand. Speaker 200:50:00And I mean, you look through the numbers, you'll see that it was incredibly Strong and gross profit generation, cash flow generation incredibly strong during the quarter. And we did think about it. Oh gosh, do we follow through and saying, oh, we want to get accretive GM 90 day to 90 day point, or do we say take care of that patient? And we said, no, we're going to do the right thing. We're going to take care of the So we're thinking about the long term here. Speaker 200:50:22But no, I'm still bullish over this fiscal year for sure. I you never can know what Demand is going to look like and where it's at, and we are not going to not take care of a patient. But as those higher inventory costs work their way through our system, there's opportunity for gross margin improvement as we go forward. There's also the impact of if you looked at the SG and A, this time A year ago in the June quarter of 2022 versus 2023 there were still a lot of people on that sort of COVID. I'm not traveling. Speaker 200:50:51I'm not going to see customers. I'm not going to do the strategic meetings and We've opened some of that up as you saw in our SG and A and so that's impacting our net margin as well. We're going to manage those tightly and carefully and we'll probably have some further vigilance if you like on our SG and A. We won't be pulling back really on R and D. I think that the innovation engine has Continue to grow and we're doubling down on AI. Speaker 200:51:14And I think our leadership in digital health we have to make that happen. So I'm still bullish throughout the fiscal year of FY 24. But we're not going to not take care of a patient if there's excess demand with a CPAP and APAP to manage one component of the P and L versus taking care of the patients and thinking about the 1, 3, 5 year strategic engagement with the patient, with the physician, with the provider and doing the right thing for the industry. So that's the sort of factors that have changed in the next 90 days. And I hope actually all this comes together and we continue to do both, right? Speaker 200:51:46Drive the needs of the patient and be able to get accretion And I'm very confident we'll do that over the coming 3, 6, 9, 12 months. Operator00:51:57Thank you. Next question is coming from David Lowe from JPMorgan. Your line is now live. Speaker 900:52:04Thanks very much. Nick, could I give you Speaker 300:52:05a comment a little on what you saw in the ex U. S. Markets? Obviously, last quarter, we saw the big Speaker 200:52:19Yes, David that's a good point. We didn't really see anything of material context in this quarter in terms of exacerbation of COVID that led to hospital based life support ventilator sales. And so we're back to I would say the sort of Steady growth that we see in our neuromuscular disease, our COPD and other sort of respiratory insufficiency parts of our business for life support events. On the non invasive events and adaptive survey events and buy levels, we're back to steady market growth and actually we saw strong double digit growth As those post COVID, we're starting to see the clinics open up and patient flow start to come back. Robin, any thoughts on ventilators? Speaker 700:53:00No, not on ventilators because I'm just going to comment on masks. Yes. The masks in all these other markets were really strong and really it's showing underlying strength of the market not affected by recall dynamics or anything like that. So really the whole patient diagnostic systems are working in order and everything is going strongly. Operator00:53:22Thank you. Next question is coming from Steven Ween from Jordan. Your line is now live. Speaker 1100:53:29Yes. Thanks very much. I just wanted to ask Brett about the working capital position. Again, last quarter, you were thinking that you'd be able to make some inroads into those to the inventory balances that you had, such that we might see a bit of more of the release of cash, but obviously inventory stepped up again As has the receivables, is that just building more to the demand that you see or Could you just help put that into a bit more context as watching the quite play out the way you thought? Speaker 300:54:05Yes. Hi, Steve. It's Brad. The inventory actually came down a little bit sequentially. So that's sort of tracking down how we're expecting. Speaker 300:54:13We expect that inventory balance should Decline over the course of FY 'twenty four as well. The receivables you're right was up a little bit, but that's really driven by the revenues. I think Overall, the working capital, we're in pretty good shape. It was up a little bit this quarter. But when you look at that, we it's really the timing around tax payments this quarter. Speaker 300:54:34So we paid higher tax this quarter than we would typically do each quarter. So that Drive, if you like, a little bit of negative working capital. But again, that's just a timing element. So we're expecting pretty robust Cash flow generation through each of the quarters in FY 2024 and we'll continue to work hard on the working capital and bringing that down. A big driver of that will obviously be the inventory and working that down progressively over the fiscal year. Operator00:55:08Thank you. Next question is coming from Mike Matson from Needham and Company. Your line is now live. Speaker 1200:55:15Hi, guys. This is Joseph on for Mike. Could you maybe talk about the new patient And Repap backlog internationally, I guess the way that I understand it is, it's full of work through in the U. S, but there's Still work to do internationally. I don't know if that's the case and if you could size that at all. Speaker 200:55:39Yes. Look, I don't think we've fully worked through the backlog of patients in the U. S. In terms of patients who want to get Whose insurance has got to the 5 year point if they're Medicare or 3, 4, 5 depending on which private payer they're under. And so I do think our competitors actions slowed down that particularly if they are on a competitive device and the demand limitation and the physicians saying look I've got to take care of new patients. Speaker 200:56:08They weren't as prone to write prescriptions or to allocate repap if you like for patients. So I actually think there's some runway still left on repap within the U. S. Geography and I think that's even more so in other markets. As Rob just noted and As we talked about the engagement with consumers and patients in different geographies is driving mask growth. Speaker 200:56:31And any quarter they have 14% revenue growth in masks in Europe, Asia, Rest of World would be incredible. And that's not driven by any recall dynamics whatsoever from competitor. Everybody's been competing in masks globally. And so I think that speaks to our ability to hopefully have a Sustainable approach to repap not only in the U. S. Speaker 200:56:52Where we have incredibly strong relationships with Brightree and MyAir directly to patients directly to providers. But the ecosystems that we're generating in some of our other sort of omni channel markets around the world. So I think the opportunity for Repap in the U. S. Is Still there over this fiscal year and beyond and to make it a rhythm right so it becomes a steady part of the growth of the devices and to drive it. Speaker 200:57:14I think there's even more opportunity in the other parts of the world leveraging the work we've done on the mask side to then remind patients and track them when they're at that 3, 4, 5 year time period to pull forward. Now I want to be there with the appropriate supply, so I'm not jumping ahead of ourselves, but we do have the programs and Speaker 300:57:48Good day, Brett and Rob. Just wondering on masks, it's been a while since we've seen some new product coming out from ResMed. Just wondering how Has the recall better recall impacted on your ability to continue to focus on new product development and new product launch? And I guess on the mask side, should we expect anything near term in terms of a refresh of the mask portfolio? Thanks. Speaker 200:58:12Yes. So it's a great question. And yes, our R and D team have obviously been incredibly focused on the reengineering, the resupply and the redesign on our core Device platforms and we're able to Speaker 1100:58:23do that right. So we're Speaker 200:58:24able to get the supply back of Air 10s as you saw and Air 11s. But yet look we have the whole board down in Sydney innovation new mask from ResMed as we go through this fiscal year. And as a personal user of these products, I try every new mask that comes out. And this new one which has a great project name that I'm not able to say, but it's a beautiful island that you can travel to by boat. I have tried that mask and it's incredible and I can't wait for that to come to the market. Speaker 200:59:08But yes, look we do have masks that are coming in the pipeline that are working their way through regulatory and then of course commercial ramp up to make sure that when we deliver it, it's ResMed quality, ResMed capability, first time fit, Incredible adherence and to drive through the channel. And so you'll see those come to our major markets and then globally throughout the So I'm excited about that pipeline. The one that I can talk about is the digital side where we've launched an AI product and I'm really excited. Operator00:59:45Thank you. We've reached the end of our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the floor back over to Mick for any further or closing comments. Speaker 200:59:52Yes. Thanks, Kevin, and thanks to all of our stakeholders for joining us this last hour as we talked through our results and we'll talk to you again in 90 days. In closing, I want to thank the 10,000 ResMedians. Many of you are shareholders and listen to these calls as well. Thanks for your dedication and hard work, Helping people sleep better, breathe better, live better lives in 140 countries. Speaker 201:00:12These results are yours. Incredible double digit growth. Thanks for all that you do. I'll hand the call back to you Amy to close us out. Speaker 101:00:20Awesome. Thank you, Mick, and thanks everyone. We do appreciate your interest and your time. If you have any additional Please don't hesitate to reach out directly. This does conclude our ResMed's Q4 2023 conference call. Speaker 101:00:33Kevin, I'll turn it back to you to close the call. Operator01:00:37Thank you. You may now disconnect. We do thank you for your participation today.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallFIGS Q4 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) FIGS Earnings HeadlinesQudian: Balance Sheet Strength Gives The Income Statement Time To ImproveApril 15 at 2:02 AM | seekingalpha.comQudian Inc. Reports 2024 Financial Results Amidst Competitive ChallengesMarch 20, 2025 | tipranks.comAltucher: Turn $900 into $108,000 in just 12 months?We are entering the final Trump Bump of our lives. But the biggest returns will not be in the stock market.April 17, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Qudian Inc. Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2024 Unaudited Financial ResultsMarch 20, 2025 | gurufocus.comQudian Inc. Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2024 Unaudited Financial ResultsMarch 20, 2025 | prnewswire.comQudian Inc. 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There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Hello, and welcome to ResMed's 4th Quarter Fiscal Year 2023 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It's now my pleasure to turn the call over to Amy Wakeham, Chief Communications and Investor Relations Officer. Please go ahead, Amy. Speaker 100:00:34Great. Thank you so much, Kevin. Hi, everyone, and welcome to ResMed's 4th Quarter Fiscal Year 2023 Earnings Call. This call is being webcast live and the replay will be available on the Investor Relations section of our corporate website later today, Along with a copy of the earnings press release and the presentation, both of which are available now. On the call Today, our Chief Executive Officer, Mick Farrell and Chief Financial Officer, Brett Sandercock. Speaker 100:01:01Following our prepared remarks, Mick and Brett will be joined by Rob Douglas, our President and Chief Operating Officer and Lucille Blaise, President of our Sleep and Respiratory Care Business During today's call, we will discuss several non GAAP measures. Please review the supporting schedules in today's earnings press release for a reconciliation of the non GAAP measures to our GAAP reported numbers. Our discussion today will also include forward looking statements, including but not limited to expectations about our future financial and operating performance. We believe these statements are based on reasonable assumptions. However, our actual results could differ. Speaker 100:01:41Please review our SEC filings for a complete discussion of the risk factors that could cause our actual results I'd like to now turn the call over to Mick. Speaker 200:01:55Thanks, Amy, and thank you to all our shareholders for joining us today as we review the results of our June quarter, the last quarter of our fiscal year 2023. Our results reflect incredible growth across our entire business with double digit growth in our devices, masks and software businesses. Unconstrained availability of our market leading cloud connected flow generator platforms has enabled us to continue to offer access to 100 percent cloud connectable AirSense 10 flow generator devices in all of our major global markets and beyond. In parallel, we are ramping up and improving the availability of our best in class AirSense 11 platform, which will gain further geographic regulatory approvals throughout the fiscal year and steadily increasing supply also throughout the fiscal year 2024 and beyond. Although challenges within the post COVID Supply chain haven't completely been mitigated yet. Speaker 200:02:57We expect ongoing steady improvement in component and end product supply in the quarters ahead using a combination of AirSense 10 and AirSense 11 platforms. While we remain focused on scaling production and global availability of the AirSense 11 We remain on allocation for the Air 11 platform for the next few quarters. But I want to be clear on this point. With combined availability of the unconstrained Air 10 platform, we have enough devices to meet all the customer needs that we see in major markets and globally. With the powerful combination of the Air 10 and the Air 11 platforms, we have the 2 best device platforms on the market. Speaker 200:03:38Our strong double digit 23% year over year growth in the devices category demonstrates that customers are choosing ResMed and we are delivering. Our masks and accessories business also performed at a very strong 18% growth in constant currency this quarter. Patient demand continues to drive increased adoption and utilization of our mask resupply programs augmenting a steady cadence of new patient setups. We continue to see strong growth in both the U. S. Speaker 200:04:07Business where provider resupply programs have augmented growth and in our markets outside the U. S. Where our consumer outreach and subscription programs are also driving mass replenishment directly with those end user patients. Our teams continue to work incredibly hard to achieve these strong growth results amid a challenging industry environment where component costs and freight costs are still working their way through our inventory post this supply chain crisis. I'm proud of the work that 10,000 resmedians have put in Let's now briefly review updates on the top three strategic priorities for our company. Speaker 200:04:58Number 1, to grow and differentiate our core sleep apnea and respiratory care business. Number 2, to design, develop and deliver Market leading medical devices as well as digital health solutions that can be scaled globally and number 3, to create, Innovate and grow the world's best software solutions for care delivered outside the hospital, a field that we call residential medicine. In terms of our patient facing digital health platforms, adoption continues to go very well. The feedback we hear from patients and healthcare professionals remains very positive. We are seeing strong adoption of the MyAir patient app by folks using AirSense it's 11. Speaker 200:05:40In fact, it is more than double the adoption rate that we saw with our AirSense 10 platform with many, many millions of patients signing up and engaging daily on their MyAir app to view their own sleep data on their own phone and to review their own therapy data. This is important as engagement with a digital health platform like MyAir is directly linked to higher adherence to therapy in patients and higher adherence to therapy is directly related to better patient outcomes to increased resupply and to better economics for the payer and the health care provider with lower overall health care costs. Last month, we announced and closed the acquisition of Somnowhere. Somnaware is a U. S.-based leader in sleep and respiratory care diagnostics software and physician management software. Speaker 200:06:34As part of our ongoing efforts to improve and streamline the end to end pathway for patients and make it easier for Sleep Labs and physicians and their practices to diagnose and manage patients, we're excited about this acquisition that complements our current Ecosystem of Software Solutions including AirView for providers and physicians and Brightree for home care providers. These ecosystem together will drive greater efficiency and better patient care by accelerating the pathway to therapy and with a better overall customer experience. We're also excited about our progress across several digital health technology initiatives to further increase the value proposition for our connected health care ecosystem. Over the next several quarters, we plan to introduce several Artificial intelligence driven data products and capabilities on both the physician and provider facing AirView platform as well as the patient facing MyAir app. Early testing of these AI driven data products is very positive in both of these customer groups and we will refine to the optimal digital design and then we will launch and then we will scale these products around the world. Speaker 200:07:49These AI driven data products provide personalized suggestions to increase therapy adherence and to ultimately improve patient outcomes as well as patient physician and provider experience. We will continue to invest in the world's largest digital healthcare ecosystem that we have with over 15,500,000,000 nights of medical data in the cloud As we continue to unlock value from those data to benefit physicians, providers, payers and patients. We saw strong growth in our respiratory care business in the quarter through ongoing adoption of our non invasive ventilators as well as our life support ventilator solutions. We're still in the early stages of market development with some of our newer to market technologies The prevalence of respiratory insufficiency due to COPD as well as respiratory insufficiency due to neuromuscular disease continues to increase And we are focused on having low cost, high quality solutions to address this health epidemic. Growth was supported by another full quarter contribution from our fast growing Medifox Dan business as well as solid organic growth of 8% across our Brightree and MatrixCare portfolio of SaaS businesses. Speaker 200:09:56We're pleased to see sustained High single digit growth in our SaaS business on an organic basis driven by the ongoing strength in the HME and Infusion segment and more stability in the Facilities segment as patient flows have now rebounded post COVID. I'm very impressed by the leadership of our most recent SaaS portfolio addition Medifox Dhan, which is on track and meeting or beating our expectations. I'll be visiting personally with the team in Hildesheim, Germany, this quarter to discuss the growth face to face with the digital health innovators there in Hildesheim who are changing health care and taking care of people in the lowest cost, lowest acuity and highest quality of life setting, which is very often the home. We believe this is the future of health care and that's where we're investing and that's where we're winning. Our customers continue to see the value of adopting technologies to improve and optimize business efficiencies and personalized care and we deliver the best software solutions to help basis to double digit growth on an organic basis in the mid to long term. Speaker 200:11:36Our SaaS business remains an integral part of ResMed's group growth strategy. This business complements the market leading software and device solutions that we have in our core sleep apnea and respiratory care businesses. As an important example, our Brightree resupply program continues to demonstrate strong synergies between SaaS and our core business, providing resupply for patients with sleep apnea, COPD, neuromuscular disease and beyond. The output of this work can be seen in our very healthy 19% growth in mask revenues in the U. S. Speaker 200:12:07Geography this quarter. Ultimately, this work results in better outcomes for the patient, the physician, the provider and the payer with lower overall health care costs. We are well positioned as the leading global Strategic provider of SaaS solutions for residential medicine globally and we've created differentiated value for our customers as well as long term sustainable growth for our stakeholders. Here at ResMed, we are transforming respiratory medicine and residential medicine at scale, leading the market in digital health technology across our businesses. As we continue to scale and drive efficiencies in our operations in this post COVID world, we continue to leverage appropriate pricing and cost reductions to drive accelerated growth in our bottom line. Speaker 200:12:50We are focused on driving top line revenue and maintaining tight discipline and increasing efficiencies so that we can lower costs and ultimately so that we can accelerate our impact and our bottom line profitability, delivering even further value for all of our shareholders. As we move through fiscal year 2024, I see improvements in our business margins with geography mix, With product mix and specifically with strong bilevel and non invasive ventilator growth with strong mask growth and with increased software solutions growth. All these business lines are margin accretive to our group. I also see that the higher inventory costs and freight costs that we've seen through the supply chain crisis continue to work their way through our sold products. And as we progress through the fiscal year, we will continue to drive the transition to AirSense 11 and we will gain regulatory approvals and we will scale production. Speaker 200:13:47All these factors above lead to tailwinds for the gross margin and the net margin of our business as we move through the fiscal year. I can tell you we are working furiously to drive all of the above elements with our global teams. We now have over 15,500,000,000 nights of medical data in the cloud as I said earlier and those data come from over 21,500,000 100% cloud connectable medical devices on bedside tables in 140 countries worldwide. We continue to lead the industry in digital health and we don't plan to stop anytime soon because there's so much opportunity ahead of us. 7% of our revenues go straight into R and D to power our hardware and our data innovation engines. Speaker 200:14:34ResMed's mission and key Goal remains crystal clear. We will improve 250,000,000 lives through better residential healthcare in 2025. This patient centric mission drives and motivates ResMedians every day. We made excellent progress towards that inspiring goal over the last 90 days. And during the trailing 12 months, we have improved over 160,000,000 lives with the delivery of a complete device platform to a patient or a complete mask As we start fiscal year 2024 here, I'm very excited about the opportunities in front of us. Speaker 200:15:17We just had our SaaS ASM earlier this week and I'll be attending the Country Market Group CMG Group for our North America team in the coming weeks And sales meetings are happening around the world. We're on a good trajectory. We have an exciting pipeline. In closing, I want to express my sincere gratitude to the more than 10,000 ResMedians for their perseverance, their hard work and their dedication both today and every day. With that, I'll hand the call over to Brett in Sydney and then we'll move and open up for Q and A for the group. Speaker 200:15:47Brett, over to you. Speaker 300:15:50Great. Thanks, Mick. In my remarks today, I will provide an overview of our results for the Q4 of fiscal year 2023. Unless noted, all comparisons are to the prior year quarter. We Year on year movements in foreign currencies negatively impacted revenue by approximately $3,000,000 in the June quarter. Speaker 300:16:34Looking at our geographic revenue distribution. Excluding revenue from our Software service business, sales in U. S, Canada and Latin America countries increased by 25%. In constant currency terms, sales in Europe, Asia and other markets increased by 14%. Globally, in constant currency terms, device sales increased by 24%, increased by 30% as we benefited from strong demand and as previously mentioned, our continued ability to fully supply the market with combined availability Masks and other sales increased by 19%, reflecting growth in resupply and new patient setups. Speaker 300:17:26Europe, Asia and other markets, device sales increased by 15% in constant currency terms, In constant currency terms, reflecting increased patient setups. Software as a Service revenue increased by 34% In the June quarter, reflecting the contribution from our Medifox Dan acquisition and continued strong performance from our HME vertical. Excluding our Medifox Dan acquisition, SaaS revenue grew by 8% in the June quarter. Medifox Dan contributed revenue We have provided a full reconciliation of the non GAAP to GAAP numbers in our Q4 earnings press release. Gross margin declined by 200 points to 55.8 percent in the June quarter. Speaker 300:18:28The decrease primarily reflects component cost increases, in our gross margin. And we saw a lower than expected product mix benefit as we continue to see strong growth in sleep devices Moving on to operating expenses. SG and A expenses for the 4th quarter increased by 25% or in constant currency terms increased by 26%. The increase was predominantly attributable to increases in employee related costs, marketing and travel expenses As well as the incremental SG and A expenses associated with Medifox Dan that we acquired in November 2022. SG and A expenses as a percentage of revenue were 21.5% compared to 21.1% in the prior year period. Speaker 300:19:32Looking forward and subject to currency movements, we expect SG and A expense as a percentage of revenue to be in the range of 20% to 22 by 23%. R and D expenses as a percentage of revenue was 7%, consistent with the prior year quarter. Looking forward and subject to currency movements, we expect R and D expenses as a percentage of revenue to be in the range of 7% to 8% during fiscal year 2024. Operating profit for the quarter increased by 13%, underpinned by strong revenue growth, partially offset by lower gross margin. Following the acquisition of Medifox Dan, our net interest expense for the quarter is $15,000,000 and we expect interest expense to be a similar amount per quarter in the first half of fiscal year 'twenty four. Speaker 300:20:28Our effective tax rate for the June quarter was 18 point 3% compared to the prior year quarter rate of 17.6%. Looking forward, we estimate our effective tax rate for the fiscal year 'twenty four Non GAAP diluted earnings per share also increased by 7%. During the quarter, we incurred 1,800,000 closure of the ARIA lymphedema business and workforce rationalization in our German and SaaS business verticals. We also recognized a gain of $20,200,000 within other income in relation to a business interruption insurance claim. These have all been treated as non GAAP items in our Q4 financial results. Speaker 300:21:24Cash flow from operations for the quarter was $237,000,000 reflecting solid underlying earnings, partially offset by a modest increase in working capital. Capital expenditure for the quarter was $34,000,000 depreciation and amortization for the quarter totaled 47,000,000 We ended the Q4 with a cash balance of $228,000,000 At June 30, we had $1,400,000,000 in gross debt and CAD1.2 billion in net debt, which mainly reflects the funding of our Medifox Dan acquisition. During the quarter, we reduced our debt by $145,000,000 At June 30, we had approximately $745,000,000 available for drawdown under our revolver facility, and we continue to maintain a solid liquidity position. Our Board of Directors today declared a quarterly dividend of 0.4 Going forward, we plan to continue to reinvest in growth through R and D and expect to deploy further capital for tuck in acquisitions, Such as our recently announced acquisition of Somnaware, a company that provides an upstream diagnostic management platform that is complementary to our current AirView and Brightree And with that, I will hand the call back to Amy. Speaker 100:22:47Great. Thank you, Brett, and thank you, Mick. Kevin, I'd like to go ahead and turn the call back over to you to provide the instructions and run the Q and A portion of our call. Operator00:22:58Certainly, we will now be conducting a question and answer session. Our first question today is coming from Matthew Mishan from KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is now live. Speaker 200:23:26Hey, good afternoon and thank you for taking the questions. Hey, Mick, With the devices number sort of steady sequentially around the $600,000,000 mark, is this where the number would kind of base Yes. Thanks for the question, Matthew, and it's a good one. It's hard to predict because there are so many factors involved that are going on in the in the quarter and 30% growth in U. S, Canada, Latin America, 15% growth in Europe, Asia and rest of world. Speaker 200:24:20Look, we're seeing a strong So mid single digits level of patient flow into the channel. We're seeing in addition to that like in terms of new patients. We're seeing in addition to that resupply of patients at that 5 year point for most U. S. Reimbursement and various points in the other 139 countries where people make their own decisions or insurance has other criteria to drive that. Speaker 200:24:45So it's new patient setups, it's resupply setups And there's of course the impact of the competitor recall which is was supposed to be over in June 30 and now has no definitive date and so as we look to that with all those unknown factors it's very hard for me to say Matthew that it's just stopping steady growth from here it might be stronger growth from here. And that makes it hard to predict gross margins because as we grow those CPAP and APAP numbers so well In the U. S. Geography, it's incredible great revenue and cloud connected and links us with the patient for life, but it is lower gross margin than our group and it's great gross profit dollars but has an impact on our gross margin as you saw that steady apart from FX moving it down 30 basis points. So A complex equation, but I'd say it's at minimum. Speaker 200:25:31It stays where it is and grows with the market, but it could potentially grow above that as we continue to take share and solidify that shared through our digital ecosystem. Thanks for the question, Matthew. Operator00:25:46Thank you. Our next question today is coming from Margaret Kaczor from William Blair. Your line is now live. Speaker 400:25:51Hey, good afternoon and good morning, everyone. I wanted to follow-up first on the competitive dynamic to the extent that you'll see anything maybe into the in the marketplace. So whether your key competitors coming back, either approaching or maybe hiring processes, marketing campaigns, anything that maybe they're gearing up for that you're seeing or is demand relatively similar to what you've seen in the past, no real Thank you. Speaker 200:26:22Yes. Thanks, Margaret, and welcome back. I think It's difficult to predict exactly where they're at from those sort of early emerging signs as you say. Look, we have regional competitors in Europe that we are fighting with every day there and we have regional competitors in Asia that we're fighting with every day and regional competitors in the Americas we're fighting with every day. When Philips comes back they'll have to start at position number 4 if you like in new patient set We are they are back and we are competing with them in some countries in Europe like in Spain. Speaker 200:26:55They never went away because they never had a phone device there. They've been there the whole time through this recall and we've been beating them handsomely there. And as other markets in Europe where they've started to come back, It's going to be a very slow progress for them country by country whether or not they get a consent decree in the largest geography. And so we look at it going forward and say look do we have enough supply to take care of all the market demands between us and the other regional players and we finally got there where I can say that this quarter that we're there and So for us it sort of takes away that uncertainty and allows us to push forward. But yes, we're competing head to head with them in some many countries in Asia and some countries in Europe. Speaker 200:27:47And it's like it was in 2019 where our smaller, quieter, more comfortable, more connected and more digital solutions are taking share and holding share. And it's an ongoing competitive game. And as I said, we're launching some of these AI driven products on top of this ecosystem. It's an exponential game when you think about digital and we're well ahead. We've had 2 or 3 years here to sprint ahead. Speaker 200:28:09We were ahead before that and I think it's a long term game. Won't get We'll keep productively paranoid, but we are improving outcomes. We're lowering costs and the physicians like the workflow efficiencies and patients like the increased adherence and payers like the fact that there's an ROI in lowering total healthcare costs. Speaker 400:28:33Thank you, guys. Operator00:28:35Thank you. Next question is coming from Anthony Petrone Speaker 500:28:49Nick, one would be just on the amount of resupply that's now coming in as it relates to the share gains that you've seen over the past 2 years. 2, there's obviously the debate out there on GLP-1s. Maybe from the perspective of ResMed, how do you see the GLP-1 phenomenon Speaker 200:29:29Yes. Thanks, Anthony, and welcome back to you too to ResMed following us here. I'll take both of your questions and your follow-up in order. So firstly on resupply, as you know you've been following us for a number of years. It's not a Lock and key, you can use our mask on other devices and you can use other masks on our devices. Speaker 200:29:49The way that we've won mask share And nobody's been on a major in terms of not being able to sell recall out there on this. And so we've had head to head competition with all the top 5 players in masks these last 3 years and we've gained really good share with that. So I think it's just the smallest, the quietest, the most comfortable, the minimalist size ones, the ones that have full freedom and the ones that have the ability to for the front prone sleepers and side sleepers to provide that capability. And so that's how we've gained share in the mask side and maintain that share. So there is a better together in that when you have an Essence 10 or an Essence 11 the mask leak data are more accurate. Speaker 200:30:30The interoperability of an AHI calculation or calculation and more accurate. So we certainly push that angle and we do get some extra share through the device, but it's not as material as the fact that the masks themselves are just excellent, Which I think speaks to the sustainability there. So that strong resupply as you said 19% growth in the U. S, 14% growth in Europe, Asia and beyond where we don't have that sort of automated resupply that we have with Brightree resupply solutions in the U. S. Speaker 200:30:59That's been from hard work from our teams in Asia, Latin America and Europe on patient outreach, subscription programs and connecting directly to that end user. So I think post COVID people care about respiratory health, respiratory hygiene and taking care of themselves outside the hospital and we've been able to leverage that trend in the consumer side as well. So I think it's sustainable and I don't think although it may be catalyzed somewhat by our increased device share, I think our mask share On its own extraordinary due to the intrinsic products. The second question around GLPs, yes, look, there's a lot of moving parts. I was just reading in Press today that many U. Speaker 200:31:38S. Employers are banning coverage of GLP-1s due to cost. European governments have all said no from the government insurance side. These things are incredibly expensive about That will mitigate GLPs in the space. 1 is cost, 2 is adherence and 3 is side effects. Speaker 200:32:05I'll take them really quickly in order. If you look at cost, Take a 40 year old person who's on therapy full time for 40 years. 40 times 12 times $1,000 is $480,000 life time cost for that patient on a GLP-one from 40 to 80 lifetime cost. If you take that same patient and say, look, let's treat them with CPAP, Right. 1st year maybe $1,000 and then 39 years of let's take a really strong case where you get 4 masks a year and they're all full face masks. Speaker 200:32:34That's about $13,500 So it's 35 times more expensive to go with the GLP-one. It's just like what's the ROI here? So that's cost. On adherence, the data out there are about 33% adherence at 1 year through the clinical trials on GLP-1s. That's incredibly low. Speaker 200:32:51We get 87% adherence 90 days and we hold it pretty strong there. So I think adherence is a big deal. And third is side effects, reading thyroid, pancreas, kidney, Cancer, these major side effects and minor ones like nausea, constipation and pain. Our biggest side effect President Biden had a little mark on his face and he was asked about it and it was from his CPAP. Look, I think it's a long road to play out here. Speaker 200:33:15I think it's frankly good marketing around the area of obesity and it can drive patients into the funnel, but I don't think it's going to be a major impact on patients because we got 936,000,000 of them worldwide. We need them to get into the funnel. If they come in the funnel because they try to fill and it didn't work, that's good for us too. Operator00:33:35Thank Our next question is coming from Suraj Kalia from Oppenheimer. Your line is now live. Speaker 600:33:49Hi, this is Seamus on for Suraj. So we saw gross margin step down a little bit. I know you said there were some reasonings for it. But I just looking forward kind of in the future, Maybe you can walk us through the temporary and more structurally permanent changes we should think through as far as GM outlook is concerned? Yes. Speaker 200:34:09Thanks for the question. And you look and it's a good one. Lots of factors going on gross margin. Actually the major one that as you noticed sequentially on the 30 basis points was foreign exchange and that was on inventory as it flowed through our funnel as we sold those CPAPs, APAPs we had FX that had impacted them 6, 9 months ago but they're flying through inventory that we sold during the June quarter. That was the headwind of 30 basis points from Q3 to Q4. Speaker 200:34:39Look, I think there's so many moving parts. But when you add it up and you look at Geography mix and the upside opportunity for us to grow our business in Europe, Asia, particularly Japan, which has some chance for The STA, AirCurve ASV, these are incredible and our mask side, particularly the full face, but any of the masks, all of those gross margin accretive to our group. And I see opportunities for strong growth in all those categories. And also our software solutions have gross margin accretive capabilities. And as we go on an organic basis from single digits to high single digits to low doubles there on the software SaaS side of the business, I think that's margin accretive. Speaker 200:35:30So I feel good about that. I also know that we're working through the sort of higher inventory costs that we had in that supply chain crisis. We had to spend more on chips, parts and pieces in those contracts and get more expensive components for the cloud connected chip and beyond. And those freight costs that we invested in and everyone's talking all the news the freight costs are down you should take away your surcharge. Well, no actually the freight costs that we paid 6, 9 months ago are working there with through We'll wait through our gross margin as you saw in the June quarter and that will go on for some time, but that's going to continue to go down over time. Speaker 200:36:04And as that does go through our sold products, there's going to be some tailwinds for gross margin. And the final one and really important one is we're going to drive Essence 11. It's the best in the world product. It's better than the 2nd best product in the world which is the Essence 10. And it gives us a chance as we gain regulatory approvals and we scale that production to improve our gross margins there as well. Speaker 200:36:27So all those are tailwinds for the gross and net margin of the business as we move through the fiscal year. Hard to predict in that one of the main factors is how do we accelerate in the U. S. And particularly in CPAP, APAP. I will never turn down a patient. Speaker 200:36:40If there's demand for a patient and they want to CPAP and APAP, I'm not going to reverse engineer and we know how to do it. We could reverse engineer our gross margin 30, 50 basis points by slowing down sales of product. We're not going to do that. When a patient needs care, we're going to take care of them even if it's a slightly lower gross margin. And by the way, it is very good gross profit dollars and we get to take that cash flow. Speaker 200:37:01As you saw, really strong cash flow in the quarter and reinvested in R and D. So we're working on all the above furiously and we're going to get success as we go over the next 1, 2, 3 and 4 quarters. Operator00:37:15Thank you. Next question is coming from Laura Sutliff from UBS. Your line is now live. Speaker 100:37:21Hello. Thank you. I was just wondering if you could talk about how you're positioned to increase your mask supply in the event that the consent decree over the competition impacts Speaker 200:37:39Yes. Look, we have run all sorts of scenario analyses around that. I think one of the differences if you think in terms of ResMed's ability to work with suppliers in the core device side where in terms of chipsets The whole medtech sector is a group. And I serve on the Board of AdvoMed and we were advocating for more semiconductor chips for the whole industry. When we were going to Intel and TI and all these companies and sort of begging for semiconductor chips 12, 18 months ago, altogether we were less than 1% All the supply of chips and it was very difficult. Speaker 200:38:15We did get some and as you saw we did have to pay a little more but we were able to get those contracts with Other players and get long term contracts and get that supply. In the field of medical grade silicon rubber, we are one of Top users in the world for this. As you know, we sell tens of millions of mask products per year and we are an incredibly Large part of that supply chain. So if a competitor was not able to sell masks their demand for that LSR would go down and those or similar suppliers would then want to keep their factories operating and be looking for other supplies and we would running the game theory and the analysis of where we go and how we go to ramp that production up. So it would be a good problem to have for Rob, do you have any thoughts on that? Speaker 700:39:12Rob Douglas, our President and COO. Yes, hi. Just one other minor comment on that. And we've said this before, Because of the relatively low CapEx of our supply chain and the equipment that we need, we generally run with Quite a lot of burst capacity of life. And so our ability to rapidly increase volumes as needed is really strong. Operator00:39:37Your next question is coming from Sean Laaman from Morgan Stanley. Your line is now live. Speaker 200:39:43Good afternoon, Mick. Hope you're well. Mick, I'm wondering if you could characterize for us some of the price dynamics that might have been present during the quarter. Yes. Thanks for the question, Sean. Speaker 200:39:57Yes, a simple question, very complex answer across 140 I think one thing that I'm comfortable to say though on this is that if you look over the last Four quarters, our commercial teams have done an incredible job of partnering up with our customers to say look inflation is up, costs are up. How do we share some of the pain if you like of these increased costs and we were able to increase some prices on some mask systems and components and some devices where we could, it's tough because customers often don't get much relief from the payers. They did in the Medicare side in the U. S. Market where there was an inflation adjustment up of around 5% January 1. Speaker 200:40:43So that was a benefit for our providers and so we can share some of the pain there in terms of increased pricing. But we've also had some surcharges on our products in terms of Right. And although as I said in the prep remarks, we've seen all the news media that freight costs are all down. Well, yes, okay, they are on a spot price, But 12 months ago or 9 months ago as that works through our inventory that freight charge is still there and it's still impacting our costs and inflation although coming down is still high. But I think our commercial teams have done a really good job of partnering up with our customers, walking them through the situation, the reality that costs are up, inflation is up, freight is up, Inventory costs are up. Speaker 200:41:22We need to work on appropriate pricing to make that happen and we've had some appreciation in average selling price over these last 12 months. And we'll look to do over the next 12 months to do an appropriate pricing with customers on a per customer per contract basis to And so it's a really strong sort of price elasticity question of how do we make sure we get that balance right. But It's a competitive game. Some of our competitors are out there saying the same thing publicly that costs are up and so we need to move prices appropriately. And we're out there working with customers to make sure that we as an industry take care of patients in a sustainable economic way and that involves both Operator00:42:18From Bank of America, your line is now live. Speaker 800:42:22Good morning, Nick. Can I ask a question about outlook? Through the earlier quarters, you mentioned that we were going to see sequential revenue growth through 20 23, and we have seen that and that's been fabulous. But with your competitor key competitor out of the market, do you still Or for how long as they remain out of the market? Speaker 200:42:55Yes. So it's a great question, Lianne. And yes, 12 months ago, When it was pretty clear that we had a strong runway there on the devices side and it was really we were constrained by our own production. I was able to very strongly say look I am confident that our supply chain team has got access to this reengineering redesign And redeployment of key components particularly electronic components particularly semiconductors and we did that. And we grew Device revenue every quarter throughout fiscal year 2023 as you noted. Speaker 200:43:28I was really excited with the team on that. As we look forward to fiscal year 2024, we don't give guidance really on the top line, Brett's given some really solid guidance on our SG and A, our R and D, our tax rate and how we're looking in those parts of the business are very controllable. As I said in some of the earlier questions, we handle so many moving factors in overall demand in the market. But look, I'm confident because new patients continue to come into the funnel, right? That's happening across the world. Speaker 200:44:00And it's not happening randomly. We're driving demand gen programs. We're driving them in Australia and New Zealand with our Awaken Your Best campaign. We're driving them through our German teams, our India teams, social media programs in our China team is really strong social media demand gen. And so we're getting new patients in the funnel. Speaker 200:44:22And there was A glut of patients who couldn't get a replenishment device when their device hit 3 years or 5 years or whatever time their insurance allows or they as a consumer decide that they want to get to the next gen product. And I think the Essence 11 and all its features, its Engagement with the patient with compliance coach and its ability to engage with them directly on the touch screen has driven some demand as well. So all that together make me confident that over the fiscal year we're going to have strong demand. But as you go from Q4 to Q1 there's a seasonal impact Northern European and U. S. Speaker 200:44:58Markets take summer vacations and these have impacts seasonally on the business. And so traditionally Q4 to Q1 isn't one I'm not giving guidance for it, but traditionally that's the way it happens. We're not we're no longer supply constrained. We are back to a demand environment. And then there's the factor of that number 4 competitor probably not coming back during the next 60 days through so the end of this 90 day period. Speaker 200:45:22But I'm not going to jump in and predict on that. All I'm going to say is we're out there all day every day driving demand gen of new patients in. We're out there farming for patients who need to get a replacement device and every day we're engaging with patients on MyAir and reminding them of the importance of a clean Hygiene and a new mask and engagement with their digital app. So all the above gives me very strong confidence for high growth of ResMed throughout the year. But I'm not going to call it on an every 90 day basis here. Speaker 200:45:49We just don't do that on the top line. Operator00:45:53Thank you. Next question is coming from Chris Cooper from Goldman Sachs. Your line is now live. Speaker 900:45:59Good morning. Afternoon. Thank you. So, Mick, on AirSense 11, you sort of emphasized its importance for gross margin. You also said at the start of the call, You sort of expect this to remain on allocation for a few more quarters yet. Speaker 900:46:13I know this time frame was probably a bit longer than you'd hoped. I just wanted to confirm Whether that's entirely a function of supply chain at this point or I guess whether there's any sort of strategic consideration to manage volumes during such an unusual competitive dynamic? Speaker 200:46:28Yes. Chris, thanks for the question. We've really been focused on that patient and making sure no one's left behind as I said in an earlier question. And although the Essence 11 is better margin for us and it's better innovation and it has a higher engagement on the MyAir app which drives engagement adherence Mass Respawn everything, our view is that if there's a patient available and we have the parts and pieces and the ability to make an Essence can and take care of that demand now while we ramp ASENCE 11, we're going to do it and we're going to take care of that patient. By the way, there's some really strong upside for that patient and The alternative is a competitor device which would not be as small, quite, comfortable and connected. Speaker 200:47:08And so they have a much worse experience than the Essence 10 with a competitive one. So it's better for the patient. It is slightly lower margin for us, but we get that patient on therapy and there is the better together with ResMed that it's more likely hopefully that they get a ResMed mask and that they use that mask for the rest of their life. And so I think there's an overlap there if you like of altruism and the profit motive to do the right thing on a gross profit cash flow driven environment. We're not going to manage just to a GM line and say well let's not do that and make those products. Speaker 200:47:38And so it's less I mean it's strategic in this way that our brand is about patient care. Our brand is about taking care of someone who's suffocating and getting them out of hospital and doing that. And if we have to do it with an AirSense 10 which is an amazing 7 year old platform then we're going to do it. If we can do it with the brand new Essence 11 platform we're going to do it. And look nothing is slowing us down. Speaker 200:47:59Our quality and regulatory teams going geography by geography to get the AirSense 11 approved in each of the regulatory environments. So as soon as that is, we can start selling the products. But the ramp up on AirSense 11 is probably not as fast as it would be in a market where you had All 5 major competitors competing there because of that excess demand. We're covering a lot of that with the Essence 10. So that's sort of how we're thinking about it. Speaker 200:48:25Patient centric, patient demand, Take care of that patient now, get them on our ecosystem and then ramp as fast as we can AirSense 11 and we're doing that. Nothing is slowing down the accelerator is firmly Pedal to the floor on AirSense 11. And so everyone we make, we sell, but it will be on allocation just given the huge demand that we see in the market right now, Chris. Thanks for the question. Operator00:48:48Thank you. Next question is coming from Dan Hurn from MST. Your line is now live. Speaker 1000:48:54Good morning and thanks very much. Nick, at Operator00:48:56the 3rd quarter results, you seem Speaker 1000:48:57to be very confident in our gross margin. In fact, I think at the time we know The most positive gross margin commentary we've heard out of ResMed in recent memory. So I know you've spoken component costs and why You don't manage Speaker 1100:49:10the gross margin, but what else changed since the Speaker 1000:49:12time you gave that commentary to the results? Speaker 200:49:18Yes. Thanks for the question. And I think actually if you go back and look at the all the factors that I talked about 90 days ago, we're talking about today, but in addition The Essence 11 ramp that we're putting together there. What happened in these 90 days that was unpredicted was there was more demand. What we thought a competitor may be back and there There was more demand for CPAPs and APAPs and we didn't I know the exact number of how we could have slowed down our AirSense 10 Generation to get gross margin to be plus 30 basis points from Q to Q, but we didn't engineer it and reverse engineer it that way. Speaker 200:49:52We said there's demand out there, let's go take care of those patients. That was the unexpected factor. It was U. S. CPAP and APAP demand. Speaker 200:50:00And I mean, you look through the numbers, you'll see that it was incredibly Strong and gross profit generation, cash flow generation incredibly strong during the quarter. And we did think about it. Oh gosh, do we follow through and saying, oh, we want to get accretive GM 90 day to 90 day point, or do we say take care of that patient? And we said, no, we're going to do the right thing. We're going to take care of the So we're thinking about the long term here. Speaker 200:50:22But no, I'm still bullish over this fiscal year for sure. I you never can know what Demand is going to look like and where it's at, and we are not going to not take care of a patient. But as those higher inventory costs work their way through our system, there's opportunity for gross margin improvement as we go forward. There's also the impact of if you looked at the SG and A, this time A year ago in the June quarter of 2022 versus 2023 there were still a lot of people on that sort of COVID. I'm not traveling. Speaker 200:50:51I'm not going to see customers. I'm not going to do the strategic meetings and We've opened some of that up as you saw in our SG and A and so that's impacting our net margin as well. We're going to manage those tightly and carefully and we'll probably have some further vigilance if you like on our SG and A. We won't be pulling back really on R and D. I think that the innovation engine has Continue to grow and we're doubling down on AI. Speaker 200:51:14And I think our leadership in digital health we have to make that happen. So I'm still bullish throughout the fiscal year of FY 24. But we're not going to not take care of a patient if there's excess demand with a CPAP and APAP to manage one component of the P and L versus taking care of the patients and thinking about the 1, 3, 5 year strategic engagement with the patient, with the physician, with the provider and doing the right thing for the industry. So that's the sort of factors that have changed in the next 90 days. And I hope actually all this comes together and we continue to do both, right? Speaker 200:51:46Drive the needs of the patient and be able to get accretion And I'm very confident we'll do that over the coming 3, 6, 9, 12 months. Operator00:51:57Thank you. Next question is coming from David Lowe from JPMorgan. Your line is now live. Speaker 900:52:04Thanks very much. Nick, could I give you Speaker 300:52:05a comment a little on what you saw in the ex U. S. Markets? Obviously, last quarter, we saw the big Speaker 200:52:19Yes, David that's a good point. We didn't really see anything of material context in this quarter in terms of exacerbation of COVID that led to hospital based life support ventilator sales. And so we're back to I would say the sort of Steady growth that we see in our neuromuscular disease, our COPD and other sort of respiratory insufficiency parts of our business for life support events. On the non invasive events and adaptive survey events and buy levels, we're back to steady market growth and actually we saw strong double digit growth As those post COVID, we're starting to see the clinics open up and patient flow start to come back. Robin, any thoughts on ventilators? Speaker 700:53:00No, not on ventilators because I'm just going to comment on masks. Yes. The masks in all these other markets were really strong and really it's showing underlying strength of the market not affected by recall dynamics or anything like that. So really the whole patient diagnostic systems are working in order and everything is going strongly. Operator00:53:22Thank you. Next question is coming from Steven Ween from Jordan. Your line is now live. Speaker 1100:53:29Yes. Thanks very much. I just wanted to ask Brett about the working capital position. Again, last quarter, you were thinking that you'd be able to make some inroads into those to the inventory balances that you had, such that we might see a bit of more of the release of cash, but obviously inventory stepped up again As has the receivables, is that just building more to the demand that you see or Could you just help put that into a bit more context as watching the quite play out the way you thought? Speaker 300:54:05Yes. Hi, Steve. It's Brad. The inventory actually came down a little bit sequentially. So that's sort of tracking down how we're expecting. Speaker 300:54:13We expect that inventory balance should Decline over the course of FY 'twenty four as well. The receivables you're right was up a little bit, but that's really driven by the revenues. I think Overall, the working capital, we're in pretty good shape. It was up a little bit this quarter. But when you look at that, we it's really the timing around tax payments this quarter. Speaker 300:54:34So we paid higher tax this quarter than we would typically do each quarter. So that Drive, if you like, a little bit of negative working capital. But again, that's just a timing element. So we're expecting pretty robust Cash flow generation through each of the quarters in FY 2024 and we'll continue to work hard on the working capital and bringing that down. A big driver of that will obviously be the inventory and working that down progressively over the fiscal year. Operator00:55:08Thank you. Next question is coming from Mike Matson from Needham and Company. Your line is now live. Speaker 1200:55:15Hi, guys. This is Joseph on for Mike. Could you maybe talk about the new patient And Repap backlog internationally, I guess the way that I understand it is, it's full of work through in the U. S, but there's Still work to do internationally. I don't know if that's the case and if you could size that at all. Speaker 200:55:39Yes. Look, I don't think we've fully worked through the backlog of patients in the U. S. In terms of patients who want to get Whose insurance has got to the 5 year point if they're Medicare or 3, 4, 5 depending on which private payer they're under. And so I do think our competitors actions slowed down that particularly if they are on a competitive device and the demand limitation and the physicians saying look I've got to take care of new patients. Speaker 200:56:08They weren't as prone to write prescriptions or to allocate repap if you like for patients. So I actually think there's some runway still left on repap within the U. S. Geography and I think that's even more so in other markets. As Rob just noted and As we talked about the engagement with consumers and patients in different geographies is driving mask growth. Speaker 200:56:31And any quarter they have 14% revenue growth in masks in Europe, Asia, Rest of World would be incredible. And that's not driven by any recall dynamics whatsoever from competitor. Everybody's been competing in masks globally. And so I think that speaks to our ability to hopefully have a Sustainable approach to repap not only in the U. S. Speaker 200:56:52Where we have incredibly strong relationships with Brightree and MyAir directly to patients directly to providers. But the ecosystems that we're generating in some of our other sort of omni channel markets around the world. So I think the opportunity for Repap in the U. S. Is Still there over this fiscal year and beyond and to make it a rhythm right so it becomes a steady part of the growth of the devices and to drive it. Speaker 200:57:14I think there's even more opportunity in the other parts of the world leveraging the work we've done on the mask side to then remind patients and track them when they're at that 3, 4, 5 year time period to pull forward. Now I want to be there with the appropriate supply, so I'm not jumping ahead of ourselves, but we do have the programs and Speaker 300:57:48Good day, Brett and Rob. Just wondering on masks, it's been a while since we've seen some new product coming out from ResMed. Just wondering how Has the recall better recall impacted on your ability to continue to focus on new product development and new product launch? And I guess on the mask side, should we expect anything near term in terms of a refresh of the mask portfolio? Thanks. Speaker 200:58:12Yes. So it's a great question. And yes, our R and D team have obviously been incredibly focused on the reengineering, the resupply and the redesign on our core Device platforms and we're able to Speaker 1100:58:23do that right. So we're Speaker 200:58:24able to get the supply back of Air 10s as you saw and Air 11s. But yet look we have the whole board down in Sydney innovation new mask from ResMed as we go through this fiscal year. And as a personal user of these products, I try every new mask that comes out. And this new one which has a great project name that I'm not able to say, but it's a beautiful island that you can travel to by boat. I have tried that mask and it's incredible and I can't wait for that to come to the market. Speaker 200:59:08But yes, look we do have masks that are coming in the pipeline that are working their way through regulatory and then of course commercial ramp up to make sure that when we deliver it, it's ResMed quality, ResMed capability, first time fit, Incredible adherence and to drive through the channel. And so you'll see those come to our major markets and then globally throughout the So I'm excited about that pipeline. The one that I can talk about is the digital side where we've launched an AI product and I'm really excited. Operator00:59:45Thank you. We've reached the end of our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the floor back over to Mick for any further or closing comments. Speaker 200:59:52Yes. Thanks, Kevin, and thanks to all of our stakeholders for joining us this last hour as we talked through our results and we'll talk to you again in 90 days. In closing, I want to thank the 10,000 ResMedians. Many of you are shareholders and listen to these calls as well. Thanks for your dedication and hard work, Helping people sleep better, breathe better, live better lives in 140 countries. Speaker 201:00:12These results are yours. Incredible double digit growth. Thanks for all that you do. I'll hand the call back to you Amy to close us out. Speaker 101:00:20Awesome. Thank you, Mick, and thanks everyone. We do appreciate your interest and your time. If you have any additional Please don't hesitate to reach out directly. This does conclude our ResMed's Q4 2023 conference call. Speaker 101:00:33Kevin, I'll turn it back to you to close the call. Operator01:00:37Thank you. You may now disconnect. We do thank you for your participation today.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by