Paysign Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

There are 6 speakers on the call.

Operator

As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. The comments on today's call regarding PaySign's financial results will be on a GAAP basis unless otherwise noted. PaySign's earnings release was disseminated to the SEC earlier today and can be found on the Investor Relations section of our website, paysign.com, which includes reconciliations of non GAAP measures to GAAP reported amounts. Additionally, as set forth in more detail in our earnings release, I'd like to remind everyone that today's call will include forward looking statements regarding PacSun's future performance. Actual performance could differ materially from these forward looking statements.

Operator

Information about the factors that could affect future performance is summarized at the end of PaySign's earnings release and in our recent SEC filings. Lastly, a replay of this call will be available until August 7, 2024. Please see Paysign's 1st quarter earnings call announcement for details on how to access the replay. It's now my pleasure to turn the call over to Mr. Mark Newcomer, CEO.

Operator

Please go ahead.

Speaker 1

Thank you, Kevin. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our Q1 earnings call. I'm Mark Newcomer, President and Chief Executive Officer. Joining me today is Jeff Baker, our Chief Financial Officer. Also available for Q and A session are Matt Turner, our President of Patient Affordability and Matt Lanford, our Chief Payments Officer.

Speaker 1

Earlier today, we released our financial results for the Q1 of 2024. I'm delighted to report that we have seen substantial growth in both our top and bottom lines. Our first quarter revenue reached $13,200,000 marking a robust 30% increase year over year. Most impressively, our adjusted EBITDA increased by 135 percent to $1,700,000 or $0.03 per fully diluted share, up from 720,000 dollars or $0.01 per fully diluted share in the previous year. We also observed significant improvements across other key performance indicators, including a 13% rise in gross dollar load volume and an 11% increase in gross spend volume.

Speaker 1

In our previous earnings call, we highlighted the patient affordability business as a key growth driver for the company. I am pleased to affirm that its growth trajectory has not only continued but accelerated, exhibiting a remarkable 305 percent revenue increase from same period last year from $590,000 in Q1 2023 to roughly $2,400,000 in Q1 2024. This segment contributed 59% of our total year over year revenue growth. During the quarter, we added a net total of 10 patient affordability programs, concluding with 53 active programs. Many of the new programs were well established ones that transition from another provider, delivering claims immediately upon onboarding.

Speaker 1

As we continue to demonstrate the value of our solutions to pharmaceutical manufacturers in the specialty drug space, we have successfully expanded into the retail drug programs, which typically have higher claims volumes. This expansion led to the addition of 4 retail programs in Q1 and we expect further launches throughout the year. Our claims process in the Q1 increased by 2 35 percent compared to Q1 2023, a trend we expect to continue. Our sales cycle remains steady at 90 to 120 days and our pipeline remains exceptionally robust, further enriched by our recent participation in the Assembia Summit held annually in late April to early May here in Las Vegas. This event has proven to be crucial for our marketing, sales and client management efforts And this year's summit was our most productive yet.

Speaker 1

We engaged in over 50 targeted meetings, addressing specific potential client concerns with overwhelming positive feedback. We are highly optimistic that the interactions from this year's Asembia Summit will lead to many long term wins and further relationships with major pharmaceutical companies. Based on our current sales pipelines and the response from the Summit, we expect patient affordability revenue will increase sequentially throughout the remainder of the year. Our plasma donor compensation business also continued its growth trajectory with revenue increasing to $10,400,000 up 11% from last year's Q1. As typical of the Q1, we experienced some seasonality due to the effects of donors receiving their tax refunds when many donors take a break from donating.

Speaker 1

Nevertheless, revenue per center grew by 5% from $7,066 in Q1 2023 to $7,414 in Q1 20 24. During the quarter, we added 6 new centers, 1 center was closed and we ended the quarter servicing 4 69 centers. We anticipate adding 15 to 25 new centers throughout 2024. We expect moderate but stable growth in our plasma compensation business as the plasma collection industry stabilizes after a period of rapid expansion. In summary, Q1 twenty twenty four has been quarter of outstanding growth, particularly for our patient affordability business.

Speaker 1

We remain committed to our mission to bring innovative FinTech solutions to the forefront of the companies. Our plasma business continues to grow steadily and we remain optimistic about its future. We are also actively exploring other markets to enter and are investing in our people and systems to meet the rapidly growing demand for our products and services. This positions us well to capitalize on numerous opportunities ahead and deliver long term value to our shareholders. Jeff will now provide more insight to our financial performance for the

Operator

quarter. Thank

Speaker 2

you, Mark. Good afternoon, everyone. As Mark said, we started off 2024 with a solid start fueled by continued growth across all of our businesses. Plasma donor compensation revenue increased $1,000,000 or 11% to $10,400,000 driven by more plasma centers, 469 versus 439 at the end of the period, an increase in the average monthly revenue per plasma center of $7,414 versus $7,066 a 13% increase in gross dollar card loads and an 11% increase in gross dollar spend volume, all while the average load amounts remained fairly steady. Pharma patient affordability revenue increased $1,800,000 or 305 percent to $2,400,000 primarily driven by the addition of 27 net new pharma patient affordability programs launched over the past 12 months.

Speaker 2

Pharma patient affordability revenue equated to 18% of total revenue during the quarter versus 6% during the same period last year. We exited the quarter with 53 active pharma patient affordability programs, an increase of 10 programs since the end of 2023. Other revenue increased $240,000 or 124 percent due to the growth in our payroll, retail and other corporate incentive businesses. As in previous calls, with all of the details we provided in the press release and that will be available in our 10 Q filing tomorrow morning, I simply hit the financial highlights for the Q1 of 2024 versus the same period last year. 1st quarter 2024 total revenues of $13,200,000 increased $3,000,000 or 30% versus the same period last year.

Speaker 2

Gross profit margin for the quarter was 52.6% versus 49.8% during the same period last year, an improvement of 280 basis points. SG and A for the quarter increased 19.5 percent to 5 point $9,000,000 with total operating expenses increasing 24.3 percent to $7,200,000 We continue to make significant investments in IT and personnel to support the continued growth of our businesses. We exited this quarter with 132 employees versus 112 during the same period last year. For the quarter, we posted a net income of $309,000 or $0.01 per fully diluted share versus a net loss of $160,000 or just under breakeven per share for the same period last year. We recorded a tax expense of 100 and $64,000 during the quarter for an effective tax rate of 34.7%.

Speaker 2

We expect the effective tax rate for the remaining quarters to be 25.65%. For the Q1 adjusted EBITDA, which is a non GAAP measure that adds back stock compensation to EBITDA, was $1,700,000 or $0.03 per diluted share versus $720,000 or $0.01 per diluted share for the same period last year. This equates to 135 percent year over year growth in our adjusted EBITDA. The fully diluted share count for the quarter used in calculating the per share amount was 54,800,000 shares, which reflects additional in the money options that were previously out of the money. The adjusted EBITDA margin was 12.8% versus 7.1% during the same period last year.

Speaker 2

Regarding the health of our company, we exited the quarter with $7,000,000 in unrestricted cash and 0 debt. This was a $10,000,000 decline from the end of 2023, primarily due to the timing of accounts receivable and accounts payable payments related to our patient affordability business of $9,600,000 As discussed in the past, patient affordability customers are invoiced at the end of the period to reimburse funds used to cover related co pay amounts for monthly patient affordability claims. The changes in these balances do not equate to the revenue per claim we charge the pharmaceutical companies for paying such claim amounts. We expect that as the business grows, so will the fluctuations in AR, AP and unrestricted cash. Restricted cash increased $16,000,000 to $108,300,000 from the December 31, 2023, primarily due to increases in funds on cards of $2,700,000 and customer deposits for our plasma and pharma customers of $13,200,000 restricted cash or funds used for customer card funding and pharmaceutical claims with the corresponding offset under current liabilities.

Speaker 2

As we did not complete any share repurchases during the Q1, dollars 3,900,000 remains outstanding under our share repurchase program. Now turning your attention to our Q2 2024 guidance. We expect total revenues to increase by approximately 27.5 percent over the Q2 of 2023 with pharma revenue accounting for approximately 18% of the total. We expect adjusted EBITDA to increase 65% to 70% from the Q2 of 2023 with an adjusted EBITDA margin in the range of 13.5% to 14%. With that, I would like to turn the call back over to Kevin for question and answers.

Operator

Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. Our first question today is coming from Gary Prestopino from Barrington Research. Your line is now live.

Speaker 3

Hi, good afternoon, Mark and Jeff. Hey, you gave us some idea of how many plasma centers you're going to add this year, which is great. Can you give us or are you willing to give us a range of how many new patient affordability programs you think you're going to add this year? Or is that something you can't really share with us at this point?

Speaker 4

I think this is Matt Turner, by the way. I don't know that we can give a number quite yet. Maybe as we get into the Q2, we can probably narrow that down a little bit more. But just a lot of business in flight right now, we don't want to put in a number too soon.

Speaker 3

Okay. But is it safe to say you've got a pretty full pipeline of potential opportunities?

Speaker 4

Yes. We're stacked with business between now and the end of the year.

Speaker 3

Okay. And then just if you as you look at this business, right now, it's about just on this quarter, it is about 25% of your total of the pharma revenues or the plasma revenues that you generate. Does this business have the potential over time to grow to be a bigger than the actual plasma business that you have, so the income statement would flip flop where you get more pharma revenue every quarter than plasma?

Speaker 1

Yes, absolutely.

Speaker 3

Okay. So there's a huge runway out there for what you guys are doing, right?

Speaker 1

Yes. I would say, I mean, we've you have a much larger TAM associated. And basically, from my view, and we've been looking at this for a number of years, it's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when it's going to surpass the plasma. So I do feel that's coming.

Speaker 3

And what is the TAM?

Speaker 4

So that's a really great question that I think everybody's asked us in almost every meeting. It's very difficult to narrow down what the TAM is because the funds used to pay for this are typically part of marketing funds. So if a pharma company allocates $500,000,000 of marketing for a specific drug, we don't really necessarily know what percentage comes to us. We think right now there's around 1500 active 1500 to 1600 active co pay programs in the space right now. And kind of just backing into a guesstimate of number of claims and things like that, we certainly feel like the TAM is north of 500,000,000 dollars We certainly think that number is probably higher, and we're kind of working with some different consultants right now to see if we can 0 in on that.

Speaker 4

But right now, we think the TAM is certainly north of 500,000,000

Speaker 3

dollars Okay. And then just the last question. Could you are there some public competitors out there that do this? Or is it mostly done by private firms or divisions of larger firms?

Speaker 4

Yes. So there's a lot of divisions of larger firms that do this. We're I'll kind of I'll talk about us for just one second, then I'll kind of talk to you about some other in the space. So we're one of the only companies out there that only does patient affordability. We don't try to do a whole bunch of the other add on services that really required entirely different subset of specialty knowledge.

Speaker 4

Those would be like hub service companies. So there may be 1 or 2 other very small companies out there. When I say very small, I mean, like employees in the numbers of tens that are out there doing this in conjunction with some other stuff. But if you want to look at companies that offer co pay assistance as part of their overall offerings, McKesson has a subsidiary called CoverMyMeds, which was formerly Rx Crossroads. You have Mercalis, which until recently was named trial card.

Speaker 4

You have ConnectiveRx, which is owned by Jim Stewart. They're private equity held and Eversana, which is, I think, a VC or PE backed company. So really only 1, then you've got Lash that's owned by AmerisourceBergen. So you've got 2 people that are publicly traded and have very but I mean for McKesson, CoverMyBets is a rounding error with the amount of money that McKesson makes. So there's not really detailed financials out there around this business in the public sector.

Speaker 5

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question is coming from John Ekman from Ladenburg Thalmann. Your line is now live.

Speaker 5

Hold on, sorry. I had a quick question. So each pharma program is an individual drug. Is that that's true, right?

Speaker 4

No, not necessarily. We have programs that contemplate multiple drugs. We have programs that contemplate multiple drugs or multiple offers for a single drug. So you can't it's not quite as simple as a drug is a program. You can have a program that has several drugs in it, and you can have a program that has technically like several programs within it, we typically look at SOW based business when we're talking about the programs.

Operator

So could

Speaker 5

you tell us how many separate pharmaceutical companies you're working for?

Speaker 4

I don't have the number in front of me right now. Out of 53 active programs, At least upper 40. Yes, at least somewhere north of 40. Yes. And then we have larger manufacturers now that came on during the Q1 that we were running for 1 of them, we're running 9 programs now, another one we're running 5.

Speaker 4

So we've got some, I don't want to say repeat business, but we're getting multiple programs now from larger manufacturers that have very large portfolios of business. So when I say we're getting now, we have 9 programs out of 1 manufacturer. That's just the start for that manufacturer. We're going to get more programs from them.

Speaker 5

So the risk for you is that a program that a drug goes generic and the growth is new drugs coming on, getting approved out of the FDA?

Speaker 4

Yes. So Yes. So there's a well, the growth potential is 1 in new business. If you look at our track record over the last well, I mean, the last 5 years, right, we are predominantly focused on transition business and it's because it delivers immediate claim volumes. Now we've gotten plenty of new to market drugs as well, especially in the oncology space.

Speaker 4

But those program numbers tend to be but the patient counts tend to be a lot lower, which means the claim counts are going to be lower. So our goal, right, is to kind of diversify the types of clients that we're bringing on to whether we do retail or specialty and whether they are transition or new. If we have a transition product and it's been out there for 5 years, hey, maybe we have 3 years left where we're going to have really high volumes and then you'll see them slide back off. But just because a drug goes generic doesn't mean that the claim volume ceased to exist. If you go back to the days of Crestor, Lipitor, Plavix, right, when those drugs came out, when Crestor went LOE, the or lost exclusivity, the pharma company did an amazing job in contracting of keeping that drug on Tier 1 formulary above generics.

Speaker 4

So even though especially in the retail space, when a drug goes generic, it doesn't necessarily mean the end of co pay. You look at all the HUMIRA biosimilars that are out there now, look at formulary coverage for HUMIRA. There's like 9 or 10 generics or biosimilars, don't want to call it generics, but there's 9 or 10 biosimilars available. HUMIRA still has top bill in that space for a lot of plans. So we don't want a bunch of assets coming on that are going to lose exclusivity in 6 or 12 months, right?

Speaker 4

So we like stuff. It's got some tail left to it to deliver some immediate volume now while we continue to build the overall long term multiyear pipeline.

Speaker 5

Okay. Thank you. That was very helpful and nice quarter.

Operator

Thank you. Thank you. We reached the end of our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the floor back over for any further or closing comments.

Speaker 1

I'd like to thank everybody for joining us today. Special thanks goes out to all

Speaker 4

of our employees and our

Speaker 1

board for their continued hard work and support. 2024 has started off very excitingly and I believe the rest of the year will be equally promising. We are looking forward to updating you on the next call. Thank you all very much for joining and have a great day.

Operator

Thank you. That does conclude today's teleconference webcast. May disconnect your line at this time and have a wonderful day. We thank you for your participation today.

Earnings Conference Call
Paysign Q1 2024
00:00 / 00:00