Q4 2022 LumiraDx Ltd Earnings Call

Speaker 2: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the LaMera-Derek 4th Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session.

Speaker 2: To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star 1 1 on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message stating that your hand is raised to withdraw your question. Please press star 1 1 again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker. Melissa Garcia. Please go ahead.

Speaker 2: Hello, everyone. We'd like to welcome you to today's call to discuss Lumeria DX's fourth quarter and 2022 full year financial results issued earlier today.

Speaker 2: With us are Lumeria DX's Chairman and CEO Ron Zwonsicker, Deputy CEO Veronika May, and Chief Financial Officer Dorian LeBlanc.

Speaker 2: The press release announcing our financial results is posted on the Investor Relations section of the company's website at lumiradx.com.

Speaker 2: Before we begin, I would like to caution listeners that any statements we make today other than historical facts are forward-looking statements made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Please be aware that all such forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, such as those detailed in our annual report on Florida's

Speaker 2: Any forward-looking statements that we make must be considered in light of these factors. Actual results may vary materially.

Speaker 2: Also, during today's call, we may refer to certain non-IFRS financial measures.

Speaker 2: Non-IFRS financial measures should not be considered in isolation from or as a substitute for financial information presented in compliance with IFRS.

Speaker 2: There is a schedule showing the reconciliation of these non-IFRS financial measures in our press release issued earlier today which can be found on our website at Lumereydx.com. I will now turn the call over to Ron Zwanziger for opening remarks. We will then provide financial and business updates before answering questions.

Speaker 3: Ron?

Speaker 4: Thanks, Melissa.

Speaker 5: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our fourth quarter results call.

Speaker 5: As announced this morning, we continue to make progress commercializing new products to drive near-term growth, as well as progressing our pipeline to deliver on high-value products.

Speaker 5: These efforts advancedly mirror the EFSA strategy transform.

Speaker 5: point of care diagnostics while strengthening our financial position.

Speaker 5: As planned, we continue to adapt and shift the business in response to changing COVID market dynamics, leveraging new product innovation and introduction of combinations to retain and grow market share. At the same time, we are working actively with customers to redeploy instruments to support broader community-based testing. We continue to remain focused on expanding and diversifying the business.

Speaker 5: Fourth quarter results were approximately $41 million, mainly from COVID sales. This performance was achieved with higher volume but lower average selling price based on market mix compared to the third quarter. We shipped approximately 1,500 platforms.

Speaker 5: during the quarter primarily in Europe .

Speaker 5: Next, I would like to share progress against the key priorities we have communicated for advancing our strategy and driving financial performance.

Speaker 5: Our key priorities are to commercialize a newly authorized CE product portfolio in Europe and other international markets. To progress our US revenue pipeline and 510K plan.

Speaker 5: To accelerate the development of high sensitivity to troponin molecular assays on the platform.

Speaker 5: and to shape our organization and cost base to support strong innovation and commercial success.

Speaker 5: First, we continue to deliver on our priority of commercializing new products in Europe and other international markets.

Speaker 5: We commenced commercial shipments of our NT Pro BMP tests in Europe into key accounts. This is a first-of-its-kind product, delivering quantitative results from a finger stick sample in 12 minutes and designed to allow immediate detection and referral of heart failure in primary care.

Speaker 5: Initial key opinion leader and customer feedback for this test has been very positive. The HBA1C rollout, which began in Q3, is progressing well and together with CRP has catalyzed our instrument consolidation strategy.

Speaker 5: As a reminder, our current test menu is designed to enable customers

Speaker 5: to consolidate three different instruments they are currently using into a single Lumetri DX platform and workflow right now with the opportunity to consolidate up to six instruments in the next 18 to 24 months.

Speaker 5: Earlier this month we also achieved NGSP certification in Europe for our HbA1c test, which now opens up many more tender opportunities in key European markets.

Speaker 5: Finally, Europe is not a huge respiratory market, however, innovation in the overall respiratory portfolio such as COVID flu, COVID RSV combos together with differentiated products such as COVID pooling and COVID ultra-five minutes have enabled us to defend our market share and serve COVID customers in the region. This Guest

Speaker 5: We are growing our US revenue and pipeline and remain focused in the near term on respiratory tests.

Speaker 5: We're actively working on 510K submissions for both COVID Ultra and COVID Flu combination tests. We initiated clinical studies earlier this year and plan to submit our 510K applications for the COVID Ultra and Q2.

Speaker 5: This enables us to continue sales after the public health emergency ends.

Speaker 5: We're still on track to complete the HbA1cNI and start clinical studies this year.

Speaker 5: With the respiratory system ending, acquiring sufficient clinical samples to complete COVID and flu 510 care requirements may be at risk. However, we are working with the Independent Test Assessment Program, ITAP established by the National Institute of Health.

Speaker 5: rapid acceleration program, the Radix tech program to achieve accelerated FDA EUA review for our COVID and flu combination product.

Speaker 5: Next, our commitment to accelerate the development of high-value assays and the capability to perform both antigen and molecular tests on our platform.

Speaker 5: We've made progress on two key programs since the start of Q4, troponin and strep A molecular.

Speaker 5: In preclinical studies, our strep molecular A test is demonstrating high sensitivity equivalent to the leading point-of-care molecular tests in the market. We anticipate talking clinical studies during the...

Speaker 5: 23-24 respiratory season with an IVDR submission in Europe and 510K submission in the United States in the first half of next year.

Speaker 5: We have a strong molecular pipeline following this product including COVID, TB, FluA, B, and Chlamydia and Gonorrhea, where we have already demonstrated the feasibility of the chemistry developed from our fast lab technology.

Speaker 5: We have made good progress with our troponin tests since our last update. In preclinical studies, the test has high sensitivity equivalent to laboratory analyzers within 12 minutes test time from finger stick blood and venous blood and plasma samples.

Speaker 5: We expect to commence initial clinical studies in the fall with an IVDR submission in Europe and a 510K submission by mid next year and faster access to select strategic markets such as the UK.

Speaker 5: We continue to be excited about both programs which are of high interest to our customers.

Speaker 5: In summary, we continue to progress on our strategic milestones, enabling us to deliver our mission for improved health.

Speaker 5: outcomes at lower costs through fast, accurate, and comprehensive diagnostic information at the point of need. I'll now hand things over to Dorian to go deeper into our financial performance. Dorian.

Speaker 6: Thanks Ron. For the 2022 fiscal year, Lameridex revenue was $254.5 million, compared to 2021 fiscal year revenues of $421.4 million. Fourth quarter revenues in 2022 were $41.1 million.

Speaker 6: COVID antigen test strips from the Lamere DX platform contributed 25 million.

Speaker 6: and FastLab Solutions COVID revenues were $8 million for the quarter.

Speaker 6: Non-COVID specific revenues in Q4 2022 were 8 million, or 20% of total revenues, including 3 million of non-COVID specific point of care platform related revenues.

Speaker 6: This is the first quarter that we've had a meaningful percentage of non-COVID-specific revenues.

Speaker 6: As Ron mentioned, while COVID test volumes increased from Q3 to Q4, the geographic mix yielded a lower average selling price.

Speaker 6: As we progress in Q123, we have seen both a change in customer utilization of COVID-only tests and a weak respiratory season lead to a volume decline in test sales.

Speaker 6: We expect Q1-23 total revenues between $18 and $20 million as COVID testing declines and inventory at customers is consumed.

Speaker 6: We anticipate continued growth in the non-COVID portfolio outside of the U.S.

Speaker 6: And we expect strong contributions from our flu COVID products for both the point of care platform and the fast lab solutions for the 23-24 respiratory season.

Speaker 6: Total adjusted gross margins for 2022 were 63.2 million or 25%.

Speaker 6: Adjusted gross margins exclude amortization, stock-based compensation, restructuring and impairment charges, but do include approximately $12 million of depreciation expense.

Speaker 6: recognizes cost of sales.

Speaker 6: Poor point-of-care test strip margins continue to exceed 80% for the quarter and the full year.

Speaker 6: In the quarter, the company recognized impairment charges on inventory and fixed assets related to the decline in COVID testing demand and the decision to forego the commercial launch of the Amira COVID test.

Speaker 6: The impairment included reducing the accounting carrying value for manufacturing equipment not currently in use and not currently installed of $23 million for Amira and $27 million for the uninstalled platform test strip manufacturing equipment. An impairment on the accounting carrying value of our inventory is a significant improvement in the value of our manufacturing equipment.

Speaker 6: end of 2022 with approximately 28,000 instruments.

Speaker 6: an increase of more than 1,500 in the quarter.

Speaker 6: Our installed base includes approximately 6,000 instruments previously identified as located in non-traditional point of care settings specifically for COVID testing.

Speaker 6: and 5,500 instruments in Africa, mainly under the grant we received from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Speaker 6: We expect limited testing utilization from these instruments in 2023.

Speaker 6: The transition of our European install base from COVID-specific use cases to broad menu adoption has been one of our core successes since the launch of the new menu in Europe .

Speaker 6: Our high value customer installations in the US also provide us an excellent growth opportunity.

Speaker 6: for our COVID flu multiplex test for the 23-24 respiratory season and beyond.

Speaker 6: As discussed in our third quarter earnings call, we implemented additional restructuring activities. Over the last year, the model increased imports for h Although, we are starting with concept of

Speaker 6: late in 2022 to reduce the cost associated with the excess capacity in our manufacturing facilities and to right-size the organization.

Speaker 6: The full impact of these restructuring activities will be realized in Q1 2023.

Speaker 6: Nonetheless, fourth quarter adjusted R&D expenses were $19.3 million compared to $29.2 million in Q3 2022.

Speaker 6: fourth quarter adjusted SG&A expenses were $23.1 million compared to $27.9 million in Q3 2022.

Speaker 6: both as a result of our restructuring activities earlier in 2022 and the early impact of the change as we started implementing in the fourth quarter.

Speaker 6: We continue to focus on managing our cost basis across the company, have the ability, if necessary, to realize further savings as we progress in 2023. Finally, in our results for the year, the net finance expenses of the company in 2022 include non-cash foreign exchange losses of $81 million.

Speaker 6: resulting from the internal accounting revaluation of intercompany loans.

Speaker 6: which has no present or future cash flow impact on the consolidated company. At December 31, 2022, our cash balance was $100 million.

Speaker 6: We announced in February an amendment of our Senior Debt Facility to waive financial covenants through the end of June . The value proposition of L leader X' combination of performance and Moneyba X' determination ofja to live

Speaker 6: highly scalable low-cost test strip production, and our expanding menu continues to resonate with customers and partners.

Speaker 6: We are especially pleased with the customer response in Europe for our expanded menu and I'm happy to hand over to our Deputy CEO , Veronique Amay, to provide a commercial update on recent developments. Veronique? Thank you Dorian. We've been heartened to see the customer traction in Europe as we have commercially rolled out the new products over the last few quarters.

Speaker 7: The combination of lab comparable performance, menu and usability has opened up new and improved cases for diagnosing and managing respiratory conditions, diabetes, heart failure, suspected deep vein thrombosis, and metabolism, as well as managing vitamin K antagonist therapy in community based settings.

Speaker 7: I'd like to provide some details for two of our largest markets.

Speaker 7: one in the UK and the other in DAC which compromises Germany, Austria and Switzerland, where the strategy is being played out and critically accepted in healthcare systems and by healthcare professionals and providers.

Speaker 7: Early in the pandemic, the UK Department of Health and Social Care procured 1,500 instruments for fast, accurate COVID testing in the community. These instruments were deployed in testing hubs, hospital emergency departments, surgery units and at hospital districts.

Speaker 7: The variety of use cases enabled the users to experience the impact of lab comparable results in minutes. By moving testing from laboratory-based molecular testing to our platform, they were able to triage patients quickly and reliably.

Speaker 7: As the pandemic waned, the NHS has been redeploying these instruments for broader community care applications. We believe this is a testament to their confidence in our platform.

Speaker 7: The Lumere DX platform has been recommended all NHS sites for implementation in the virtual ward program, which is intended to minimize hospital presence in the UK by proactively managing COPD, inflammation and frail patients at home and in other community settings, and ruling out deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism.

Speaker 7: Our portable, easy to use, fully connected platform is ideal for nurses and healthcare practitioners to take testing into the community, including care homes and home visits, and immediate action near the patient.

Speaker 7: The platform is also being used in community settings and primary care offices across the UK for fast, accurate and early detection of heart failure. A total of approximately 800 instruments have been requested by the NHS site to be reallocated for these use cases since the asset repurchasing started and we are working to deploy them to the designated sites and begin testing.

Speaker 7: The opportunity in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria is very different. Covertesting was more centralized in these markets, and our opportunity was with RNA STAR complete reagents due to their speed and performance, as well as the platform, but mostly non-clinical applications.

Speaker 7: Now, with the launch of INR, CRP, D-Dimer, anti-probian P, and HPA1C, we are seeing instrument placements and utilization grow.

Speaker 7: In the past year, our customer base has grown from 100 to 350 plus with customers ordering multiple tests.

A year ago, only 20% of customers in Germany were ordering two or more tests. Today, that number is more than 50%. A year ago, less than 5% of our customers in Germany were ordering three or more tests. Today, that number is 20%.

Although harder to quantify with overall market volumes dropping, menu expansion with differentiated respiratory products has helped us retain COVID revenue, driving short-term value for the company. If we look at our major COVID markets, namely the UK, Italy and Japan, in the past year platform revenue contribution from the 12-minute COVID antigen test has declined from over 62 down to just below 30.

The product has been rapidly adopted by many of our primary care accounts and work has started to introduce the product into secondary care.

A recent community voluntary healthy heart check exercise in cooperation with Medtronic at a city in England included our finger stick anti-BNP test on a small number of patient volunteers.

This resulted in the detection of 2% of patients with significantly elevated values and 10% of patients with intermediate values, showing the incredible power of an effective screening program to detect early heart disease and take immediate action.

In summary, we are very pleased with how the products are contributing to the overall commercial strategy and early success. We will now open the poll for questions.

Certainly. As a reminder to ask a question, press star 1 1 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 1 1 again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster.

One moment for our first question.

And our first question will come from Jeffrey Clohan of Leidenberg. Your line is open. Jeffrey Clohan, Leidenberg, USA

Hi. Good morning. How are you? Good morning.

So a few from our end. Firstly, you walked through some of the European business with INR, D-Dimer, CRP, ProBNP. Could you also talk about HPA1C and could you talk about some of the past driving commercialization in Europe as far as 26 years?

tenders and geographies of some of the governments there.

Well, that's a very broad question.

We've started winning tenders but some of them take when you win them it takes a while before they get implemented as they run out from previous the previous world so that started happening in a number of countries. A1C is of a great deal of interest and now with the

in quite a number of the countries, actually, essentially everywhere. So pretty much everywhere, whichever country in Europe you're looking at, you'll see that in different ways, but similarly, the combination of these various tests.

helping to drive acceptance.

Up until now, because we've been launching one test at a time, we didn't have enough sort of combination tests to be of interest to large, very large number of locations, but that's clearly changing and the virtual war program, which Veronique described,

is showing the power of actually having a group test. Now on the platform we have the essential ingredients for Weintraub community testing. So I don't know if that answers your question.

Yeah that's helpful Ron. So in generally speaking on the tenders versus you know one-off sales they may take longer to get through the system but they tend to be larger in size and longer duration.

Sure, that could affect that. Yes, I mean that's true. But generally speaking, even most, a good point of the business is not tender supported. But once a product goes in, once you've gone through the stage of working with the both KF&N leaders within the country and the special...

once they're in it doesn't tend to be that different to tenders even though the tenders are contractually long. There's not really that much difference between them. Okay, got it. That's helpful. And then on the instrument placements for 2023, any sense of what you'd anticipate? I would say that it was very strong for 2022 to expect.

with.

CRP and A1C was part of the drive for the placement of the unit in fourth quarter and that the recent launch in the NT Pro is also driving a tremendous amount of interest. So no, by no means do we think

I think we'll have a – I suspect we'll have a really pretty good year for placements simply based on the products we've recently launched in Europe .

Okay, got it. Thanks Dorian for calling out some of the...

the various revenue components and any commentary on it sounds like most of your restructuring concluded during the fourth quarter and it sounded like although you made some commentary about some

So further on restructuring into the first quarter, could you elaborate if you may?

Yeah, the second set of restructuring that we did, the full impact didn't take place until the end of February . So, in the first quarter, we still won't have quite the full impact of some of the restructuring, especially the response that took place in our UK facilities.

So, we'll have an additional decline in the overall operating expenses, including the portions that go through cost of sales, stepping down from Q4 to Q1 and then again from Q1 to Q2, just based on the timing of those restructuring activities. Okay, got it. That's helpful. Thank you for taking your questions.

One moment for our next question.

And our next question will come from Matt Fikes of Goldman Sachs. Your line is up. Your line is up.

Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Maybe, Ron, first one for you. You made some comments in the prepared remarks about pipeline progress in the U.S. Can you maybe provide a little bit more color on what you're expecting in terms of timing for tests? Obviously, knowing that the approval process is relatively uncertain, but how are you thinking about sort of non-COVID test rollout?

in the US as it relates to the regulatory process? Well, so the – in the short term, we are – we're in the – as we mentioned, the ISAT program specifically around –

COVID flu A flu B, we're working through that and are expecting for that to clear, which will help us in the future.

in the flu season at the end of the year. We're also submitting, which we also mentioned, for the first time, a 510k on COVID-19.

on COVID, you may ask why COVID went on. Entire focus of the company is on non-COVID. Well, the issue is it's the first time the agency will have seen our instrument and they're obviously very familiar with our COVID test. So we're submitting that one first. And with that, and then once that is done,

we will be then adding, as we mentioned previously, additional tests with a focus on A1c, INR, and also NT-Pro at some point. So we expect to have those submissions and the clinical trials for those all done later this year and submitted in such a way that, assuming everything goes smoothly, we will

We have those to drive revenues in next year. Got it. Thanks for that. It's helpful. You all mentioned the NHS helping you with sort of the non-COVID conversion that's taking place there and redeploying those instruments. For other countries in Europe , are there other types of bodies similar to the NHS that can help you with that type of conversion?

focused on discussing the pickup in

in Central Europe , in Germany, Austria, in Switzerland, and then in as well as obviously the UK. But yes, there are similar in one of our in our biggest European market, which is Italy, there is a similar program which is slightly different.

And we'll talk about it more later on, but in Italy the situation is slightly differently in that we still, in most cases, own the instruments because they're played. And so it's much more of the onus on us to work with the various authorities and moving them to...

to the right locations and that program is getting underway. By the way, the same is true in Africa where the strip revenues per instrument are very low, but there's a program there and we're moving, we started moving with experimental programs.

around moving some of those issues, some of those instruments into non-communicable disease locations, essentially meaning A1c initially. And so that's also going. So it is a very good question. We have a big focus on making sure.

that we get these instruments redeployed.

Great, thanks. That's very helpful. And then last one, Dorian, for you. Just on 23, you kind of outlined the Q1 guide. I'm assuming that's total. It looks like, based on my math and correct me if I'm wrong, that you did about $8.5 million in sort of non-COVID in Q4. Is that a base we should think about for non-COVID? Is there any kind of growth rates or kind of bars around that growth for non-COVID we should think about for 23?

Yeah, no, I think that is a good base that we expect to grow from there throughout 23. So the difference in Q4 to Q1, the decline is entirely related to COVID and customer inventories from purchase of COVID late in Q4.

So, we would expect that that base of 8 is the core base that we grow from for the non COVID products. Okay, and any commentary on potential growth rate for that, or is it too early?

I think we'll hold that for now. Okay, thank you very much for the questions. One moment for our next question.

And our next question will come from Vijay Kumar of Evercore. Your line is open. Are any slides the same?

Hi, this is Alexandra on for Vijay. So, Doreen, you gave out the 1Q revenue expectations. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit more about the cadence for the full year and how those numbers might ramp and then also in terms of your cash burn. And you had previously stated that you were focused on exiting 23 with breakeven cash flows. Can you still expect that and sort of how are you expecting cash burn to look this year?

Yes, certainly. So I think we would look at the full year as having great contribution from the non COVID products in the growth is similar to the question that Matt just asked. I think we also have a tremendous opportunity in the second half of the year with the flu COVID multiplex.

We do have a very differentiated product, a single sample test result very rapidly for flu-8 will be COVID that fits well in the pharmacy segment, fits well in the physician office segment, and any place where performance is really valued by the customers given the sensitivity of the platform.

So the back half of the year converting what historically was our COVID business into a more complete respiratory testing business gives us a lot of momentum with the installed base that we have all in the right place to capture that opportunity in the US to a lesser degree in Europe .

And then also a growing business in Japan for respiratory as well, which is obviously the 2nd largest respiratory testing market.

So for if you think about the cadence of revenues for the year, the core non-COVID business, we will continue to grow throughout the year and and then we have a good opportunity in the second half of the year on the respiratory leveraging the installed base and the differentiation of the of the multiplex product. On the second piece on the on the cash burn

towards operating cash break even in the fourth quarter. And we are concentrating on managing the cost base to achieve that outcome.

Great. And then can I just ask another one on the point of care TB test? You guys had previously talked about finalizing the test strip design and manufacturing. I was just wondering how that process is going as well as any preclinical studies you had.

So, But BryanANGLE does own a…

Very well, we've got a fair number of results coming in. And I think we're on track to seek registration later this year and to get it into some of the programs for the various organizations that help sponsor.

particularly in Africa and we're being aided significantly by the Gates Foundation in this process. Great. Thanks for taking my questions.

And one moment for our next question. And our next question will come from Mark Massaro of BTIG. Your line is open.

Hey, guys, good morning. Thank you for taking the questions. Maybe first one is for you, Dorian. I think I believe adjusted gross margins came in at 25% for 2022. So, recognizing that your Q1 guidance was...

significantly below consensus, I guess, how should we think about your ability to hold gross margins at that level? Or is it right that we might expect perhaps a temporary pause until revenues pick back up?

Yeah, no, that that is right. You should think of it as a temporary decline in margin until revenues pick back up. We do still have a fixed cost base. You know, we, as we highlighted in the script, we do have over 3M dollars of depreciation expense alone running through for the installed manufacturing equipment.

And we have the facilities expense as well. So there is a fixed cost element here. So at a 20M dollar quarter. You know, it will be hard for us to have significant positive gross margin.

But the benefit of our manufacturing structure is that a 40 million dollar quarter, that delta essentially flows right to the bottom line, a 75 million dollar quarter, that delta almost entirely flows to the bottom line just because the direct materials costs are so small on the disposable. The other element I'll remind you, Mark, is that

We are still expensing any instruments that we install without having reagent rental agreements in place. You know, versus I know some of our peers are capitalizing those and spreading that expense over 3 or more years. So we are, as we place 1,500 instruments in a quarter, we are taking a 4.5 plus million dollar hit directly to the P&L as a periodic cost.

And as we transition into more of the non-COVID broader menu where we're able to do reagent rental deals, some of the tenders that we spoke about before where we have multi-period commitments, we'll start changing that business model and therefore changing the accounting for that. But that'll still be a burden, I think, in the first quarter for us. Okay, that's helpful. And congrats on driving 20% of your revenue from non-COVID.

be I think a standalone 510k. And then can you talk about the timing of COVID flu AB? I guess the reason why we're asking the questions is just to try to fine-tune our modeling with respect to 2023 and 2024 revenue pacing coming from the United States.

Yeah, I know, entirely understood. That's why we explained that.

We're busy collecting and are not quite there, but closing in on finalizing the number of tests we need for the 510k. We only have about 20% of the numbers left to collect. And then we'll submit the 510k.

for the COVID Ultra, we're not planning on submitting for the old 12-minute test. We're only going for the 510k on the 5-minute version because it's so differentiating. Customers, as you heard from the conversion in Europe over to it, have been quite fast.

So we're only doing that one. And then on the 510K, we will then, where we're getting samples extremely difficult, we'll get some samples from the southern hemisphere. But then we'll have to get some additional samples in the US. But from a modeling standpoint, that's why we explained about the Public Safety investigationin a public health side to target theENTcos!!!

ITAT program where we're expecting to finalize that and we expect to get the EUA on that to make sure that we have a smooth transition for the COVID flu A flu B for the next respiratory season. And that's going to also add some of those things are that will also add.

And this probably won't surprise you that we've had tremendous customer response in the US since your question was focused on the US, but we've also had a tremendous customer response on Flue Fluby in Europe , which as Dorian commented doesn't tend to be a particularly strong market for flu. But in fact, quite a number of locations, including the UK and elsewhere, have actually bought a significant amount of...

COVID flu, it could be the same product that we're taking in through the through the ITAP program. Okay, that's great. I know that you have some good support from the Gates Foundation. I think on your Q3 call, Ron, you talked about partnership discussions. We just love any sense for any update, you know, with respect to commercial partnerships or perhaps

entities that could potentially provide non-dilutive financing, anything on the partnership side would be really helpful.

We continue, there is really no update on that other than to say that we're continuing, we're very active working with a select group. And we think it's a fairly good probability we'll get something done, but we'll update you when obviously when something's done.

All right, thanks very much. One moment for our next question. And our next question will come from Andrew Cooper of Raymond James. Your line is open, Andrew. My map says it's about 70 miles away from Ap engines. And my plan is not to be able to fly through the top of that at eight o'clock in the morning the

Well, everybody, thanks for the question. A lot asked already, but maybe first, just hoping you could give a little bit more color. You had a actually pretty substantial dollar step up in adjusted cost of goods, quarter over quarter with pretty steady revenue. So just trying to get a sense for the gross margins and where we can see that stabilized relative to, like you mentioned, some of the fixed costs for some of the uh.....

but actually a lower average selling price just based on the geographic mix of where those sales occurred. So a little less in the U.S., a little more in the Middle East and in Europe .

So that was a portion of that difference, Andrew. And the other piece is that we still had beyond the impairments that we had, we still did have some inventory write off to kind of get rid and flush through the last piece of the legacy of dealing with the

Very variable demand of COVID. So I think we've put that behind us now between the impairment and the in the fourth quarter inventory reserves and we're looking forward to having a focus on products that are much easier to predict the the growth rates and the consumption of and will be much easier on our manufacturing processes to stay efficient versus

the challenges we've had and everyone's had on trying to predict demand and plan raw material purchases and production schedules around various waves during the pandemic as we kind of transition into what we're used to as a as a business with our legacy of just dealing with a respiratory season.

Okay, great. That's helpful. Andrew, just to add, we did a thorough spring cleaning of the balance sheet and generally – but the company itself in the fourth quarter to transition us.

to the non-COVID, which was obviously the original plan of the company and the 1500 instruments that we referred to primarily in Europe . They were essentially all for the beginning of the non-COVID sales, as we mentioned, particularly around CRP A1C and NA1C.

And so I think the impact of that is going to flow in the numbers in the next few quarters. Okay, helpful. And then, Tori, I think you mentioned also just, you know, if necessary, more room on OPEX to continue to trim throughout the year. I guess what do you need to see to decide, hey, it is necessary and then how do we think about where some of those...

fact that we can generate tremendous performance on this very inexpensive to manufacture form factor in our test strip.

So, you know, as we've got this menu that now is very compelling, meets a lot of the needs of a physician office trying to really run in a decentralized way, comprehensive care for primary care, the value proposition of the platform has never been stronger.

And that's really driving a number of great conversations that we're having. So I think strengthening the balance sheet is the core part of the answer to your question, Andrew. We need to focus on that, which we have been doing as we updated in the prior call. And we're confident that we're going to work with that so that we can continue the momentum of populating the platform and growing the installed base.

That's really what the focus is to grow the enterprise. You asked about the criteria we would use. One of them, which is probably very hard for you from the outside to see, is the progress we're making around getting changes.

in countries to major changes in their programs. Now we talked a great deal about the virtual ward because that's already implemented, but there are similar ideas running elsewhere. And so the state of play of the effectiveness of the virtual ward program, the changes we're seeing in Germany.

and Austria already, similar changes are likely to happen. And so the nature of how we look at it will depend very much on how some of those go. And I should say that the advanced indications we're having about changes that come to help us are all coming in our directions.

and particularly importantly in large geographies. So the authorities dealing with

with help in much the same way that obviously there were obviously decisions made around why the UK is running this virtual work programme. There are similar things in countries are dealing with different ways and they're all coming in our direction because authorities everywhere are recognising that it is

that the rapid testing in the community helps to lower costs to the various troubled healthcare systems around the world. And I'm focusing particularly on the larger geography. And so partly an answer to your question about how we.

test, COVID and flu A, B, is that form factor a COVID or is it an ultra product? Is that one that we could think about the time, the runtime being, you know, five minutes? Is it more like the traditional 12? Is it something different? Just want to understand kind of where that's going to fit in the competitive stack versus what's out there and what may maybe to come from others as well.

Dorian, do you want to answer that question? Yeah, so the test strip design is a similar design to the 12-minute COVID antigen using the independent channels. So it's a 12-minute runtime on the flu COVID. And what's nice is if you think about the...

most significant competitor that we see in the space for truly point of care, being able to get that result in 20 minutes or less and getting really high sensitivity, that competitive offering is two separate cartridges.

and the feedback that we're getting from customers on the workflow, usability, and time to result, gives us a lot of confidence about how that will play out in the respiratory season in the back after this year. Is there any likelihood of that becoming an ultra product over time?

development on an ultra-reversal.

But all our developments are going into the Ultra program. This was expedient to make sure we got it into the US quickly. But in general, all our tests coming through are switching to the Ultra platform. Okay, great. That makes sense. I will stop there. Thanks for the time.

And I would now like to hand the call back to Ron for closing remarks.

Well, over the past couple of quarters, we've focused on reshaping our business priorities, assets, and organization structures to accelerate the near-term delivery. Having done this, we've been able to now reinvest and bring momentum to our highest value programs. We continue to advance our product and pipeline.

strategies for transforming the 50 billion point of care diagnostic markets and we look forward to updating you on our progress and appreciate your continued support. Thanks very much.

And ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

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Q4 2022 LumiraDx Ltd Earnings Call

Demo

LumiraDx

Earnings

Q4 2022 LumiraDx Ltd Earnings Call

LMDX

Tuesday, March 21st, 2023 at 12:30 PM

Transcript

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