Q3 2025 LifeMD Inc Earnings Call
Speaker #1: Please stand by. Your meeting is about to begin. Good afternoon. Thank you for joining us today to discuss LifeMD's results for the third quarter ended September 30, 2025.
Speaker #1: Joining the call today are Justin Schreiber, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Marc Benathen, Chief Financial Officer. Following management's prepared remarks, we will open the call for a question-and-answer session.
Speaker #1: Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that during this call, the company will make a number of forward-looking statements, which are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those projected.
Speaker #1: These risks and uncertainties are described in the company's 10-K and 10-Q filings, as well as in other filings that LifeMD may make with the SEC from time to time.
Speaker #1: Forward-looking statements made during this call are based on current information available to the company as of today, November 17, 2025. The company assumes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements after today's call, except as required by law.
Speaker #1: Also, please note that management will be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures that the company believes are important in evaluating LifeMD's performance. Details on the relationship between these non-GAAP measures and the most comparable GAAP measures, along with reconciliations thereof, can be found in the press release issued earlier today.
Speaker #1: Finally, I would like to remind everyone that today's call is being recorded and will be available for replay in the investor relations section of the company's website.
Speaker #1: Now, I'd like to turn the call over to LifeMD's CEO, Justin Schreiber. Please go ahead.
Speaker #1: ahead. Thank
Speaker #2: You, and good afternoon, everyone. After the market closed, we issued a news release announcing our third quarter financial results and posted an updated corporate presentation on our website at ir.lifemd.com.
Speaker #2: LifeMD made considerable progress executing on our strategic plan in the third quarter. Our RecMD business returned to growth, adding approximately 10,000 net new subscribers.
Speaker #2: And our weight management offering has stabilized and is now well positioned for significant growth in 2026. We also continued to deliver strong year-over-year performance, with telehealth revenue up 18% and adjusted EBITDA increasing 30% compared to the prior year period.
Speaker #2: That said, the most exciting thing about LifeMD today is not our past performance or even the results this quarter, but the important foundational steps we have taken to set the company up for an exceptional 2026.
Speaker #2: During and following the third quarter, we made substantial progress on our women's health and behavioral health offerings. Two verticals we believe have the potential to each become nine-figure businesses over the next three years.
Speaker #2: We also advanced the development of our LifeMD Plus membership and in-app health marketplace, which we expect will meaningfully enhance patient experience, deepen engagement, and strengthen long-term retention.
Speaker #2: In addition, we secured regulatory approval for our non-sterile 503(a) compounding pharmacy, a major milestone that will dramatically expand our ability to produce personalized medications at scale and at significantly improved economics compared to relying on third-party pharmacy partners.
Speaker #2: We were also pleased to successfully divest our majority interest in WorkSimply. This transaction strengthened our balance sheet and allows us to operate as a pure-play virtual care and pharmacy company.
Speaker #2: While it was a difficult decision, the opportunity in front of our core business is so substantial that we felt it was essential to dedicate 100% of our focus and resources to our core healthcare platform.
Speaker #2: As we look ahead to 2026, our strategic priorities are clear: one, accelerating high-quality growth in our weight management offering by leveraging our collaborations with Novo Nordisk, Eli Lilly, and others.
Speaker #2: Two, scaling our virtual women's and behavioral health businesses built around synchronous care delivered by highly trained providers and personalized therapies. Three, expanding and diversifying RecMD, particularly through personalized compounded medications and hormone therapies. Four, launching a more robust, unified LifeMD platform and marketplace designed to increase patient engagement, improve cross-care participation, and deliver a significantly enhanced experience across both mobile and desktop applications.
Speaker #2: LifeMD has made a deliberate decision to play the long game in the GLP-1 space. We are one of the few virtual care providers fully integrated with both Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly.
Speaker #2: And we believe these collaborations represent a significant and durable competitive advantage, especially as prices come down on branded therapies and oral therapies come to market.
Speaker #2: The last two quarters have been challenging in the weight management category due to intense competition from low-cost and, in many cases, low-quality compounded GLP-1 marketers offering prices we cannot and will not match.
Speaker #2: While many of these compounded products are less effective, and in some cases unsafe, aggressive marketing and artificially low entry price points have drawn in a portion of consumers and created near-term pressure.
Speaker #2: Despite this environment, we have maintained our market share, remained disciplined, and continued investing in the high-quality, clinically sound weight management model that we believe will create long-term shareholder value.
Speaker #2: We have consistently believed that branded GLP-1 manufacturers would ultimately reduce pricing to broaden patient access. And that moment is now clearly underway. Just this morning, we announced that, through our collaboration with Novo Nordisk, LifeMD will begin offering Wegovy and Ozempic to self-pay patients for $199 for the first two doses.
Speaker #2: A 60% reduction from current prices. Higher doses will be available to self-pay patients for $349 per month, representing a 30% reduction. Eli Lilly also recently announced that self-pay patients will be able to access the Zepbound multi-dose pen, if FDA approved, at $299 for the lowest dose and up to $449 for the highest dose.
Speaker #2: Even more exciting is the expected approval of the Wegovy pill, with a PDUFA date in late December. Analysts widely anticipate FDA approval and commercial availability in early January.
Speaker #2: LifeMD will be among the first virtual care providers to offer oral Wegovy through our collaboration with Novo Nordisk. While formal pricing has not been publicly released, we expect lower dose levels to be approximately $149 per month based on recent public remarks from President Trump.
Speaker #2: The Wegovy pill is expected to be the most effective oral medication for weight loss ever approved by the FDA. In clinical trials, patients achieved, on average, a 15% weight loss over 68 weeks.
Speaker #2: With side effect profiles comparable to the injectable formulation. In addition, Eli Lilly plans to launch its oral GLP-1 or Glipirone later in 2026.
Speaker #2: Which we also anticipate offering through our platform at accessible pricing. The bottom line is clear: oral therapies combined with substantial price reductions will fundamentally broaden access, accelerate demand, and reshape the GLP-1 landscape.
Speaker #2: With more than 130 million Americans eligible for treatment, LifeMD is uniquely positioned to be a leading virtual destination for high-quality, longitudinal care—care that is essential for patients to achieve the long-term outcomes these medications can deliver.
Speaker #2: Our men's health platform, RecMD, also had a strong quarter overall. Demand for our personalized ED medications, which combine sildenafil and tadalafil, has been exceptional.
Speaker #2: And these formulations now represent 25% of all new ED prescriptions on the platform. These medications are currently fulfilled through a third-party pharmacy partner, but we plan to bring the majority of this fulfillment into LifeMD's in-house pharmacy in early 2026.
Speaker #2: This transition will meaningfully reduce COGS, improve gross margins, and give us full control of the end-to-end patient experience. Our hormone replacement therapy offering is also demonstrating strong momentum and clear signs of future scalability.
Speaker #2: Early patient retention has been strong, new patient acquisition continues to grow, demand is robust across age groups, and we have expanded into men's HRT coverage to 35 states.
Speaker #2: In addition, RecMD continues to broaden its portfolio with new men's-focused pharmacy products across behavioral health, weight loss, dermatology, and more. We believe that our recently licensed 503(a) compounding pharmacy will be a major enabler of RecMD's growth, allowing us to offer personalized therapies, lower-cost compounded options, and superior margins across multiple men's health categories in 2026 and beyond.
Speaker #2: In addition to our weight management and men's health businesses, we are very optimistic about the 2026 opportunity in both women's health and behavioral health.
Speaker #2: Demand in both categories is very strong, and while these businesses are not yet contributing meaningfully to revenue, the initial engagement metrics, interest levels, click-through rates, and acquisition costs are on par with categories like ED and weight loss that scaled rapidly within their first year.
Speaker #2: In both verticals, our focus is on building high-quality, high-retention revenue streams. In my view, industry-leading retention is driven by three things: an exceptional product, great patient care and customer service, and transparent pricing and a strong value proposition.
Speaker #2: We also believe that enabling patients to use their commercial or government insurance is a critical part of the equation. While insurance enablement has been slower to deploy on our platform than planned, it remains a top strategic priority and will be an important component of our 2026 story.
Speaker #2: Our women's health business is highly differentiated. We have built and continue to expand an exceptional advisory board of national leaders in women's hormonal health, menopause, bone health, and longevity.
Speaker #2: We've also assembled a dedicated, highly trained clinical team to deliver this care, and we are confident in our ability to scale as demand accelerates.
Speaker #2: Patients can choose between bundled care and prescription cash pay programs, or flexible models where they pay a la carte or use insurance to cover visits, lab work, and commercially available medications.
Speaker #2: In addition, our in-house compounding pharmacy will enable affordable access to compounded therapies for hormone optimization, sexual health, dermatology, and more. We believe this will be the highest quality, most comprehensive, and most accessible virtual women's health offering in the country.
Speaker #2: And we expect demand to be extremely strong. Our psychiatry offering follows a similar structure, combining a la carte consults with bundled care plus medication programs that deliver discounted access and long-term, high-quality care.
Speaker #2: Most patients begin with a synchronous consultation with a state-licensed provider before transitioning into asynchronous, message-based ongoing care. While the current patient count is small relative to our overall business, we saw meaningful quarter-over-quarter traction and expect psychiatry to become a sizable business in 2026.
Speaker #2: We believe this category will be another powerful, durable growth engine for LifeMD. Given the strength of our balance sheet and the promise of these new offerings, we intend to invest in the growth of these verticals early on in 2026 to rapidly build the patient base in these two verticals and in our offerings to drive superior long-term retention.
Speaker #2: Lastly, we are investing significant energy and resources into launching the core functionality and features that will enable LifeMD to execute on its long-term vision: building the leading integrated marketplace for virtual care, pharmacy, laboratory services, and wellness.
Speaker #2: Much of this functionality, including a comprehensive relaunch of the LifeMD website and mobile app, will be rolling out between now and early Q1 2026.
Speaker #2: These upgrades will allow patients to effortlessly participate across multiple care programs, access a broad suite of pharmacy offerings, and order convenient in-home lab testing through a partnership we expect to formally announce early next year.
Speaker #2: Enabling seamless navigation across cash pay and insurance-supported workflows is not easy, but it is essential to our long-term strategy. When completed, these enhancements will not only broaden the depth and breadth of services we provide, they will also deliver a significantly improved patient experience with clearer pricing, more flexibility, and expanded à la carte options.
Speaker #2: Our objective is for patients to view LifeMD as a true virtual care destination—a place where they can access synchronous or asynchronous visits with trusted clinicians, obtain generic, branded, or compounded medications at transparent prices, and conveniently order the labs that support their health goals and inform long-term care plans across both primary and specialty programs.
Speaker #2: We believe the integration of these capabilities will meaningfully differentiate LifeMD, deepen patient relationships, and serve as a key driver of sustainable growth as we move into 2026 and beyond.
Speaker #2: With that, I'll now turn the call over to our CFO, Marc Benathen, to provide more detail on our third quarter financial results and outlook.
Speaker #2: Marc, thank you. Justin, good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for your flexibility in rescheduling this call from November 6th to today. Our third-quarter telehealth business results were solid, with year-over-year growth of 18% in revenue and 30% in adjusted EBITDA.
Speaker #2: Our Rex business rebounded from its late second quarter lows with a net gain of 10,000 new members in the third quarter. We've also executed initiatives to significantly strengthen our balance sheet, including the divestiture of our majority ownership position in Work Simply and the payoff of all our debt.
Speaker #2: Following these transactions, LifeMD has the strongest balance sheet and liquidity position in the company's history. This will enable us to operate from a position of strength in 2026 as we continue to invest in scaling our core offerings, plus further diversifying our platform through growth in recently launched offerings.
Speaker #2: Now turning to third quarter numbers. Consolidated revenue grew 13% versus the year-ago period to $60.2 million. Telehealth revenue increased 18% to $47.3 million, with telehealth adjusted EBITDA growing 30% to $2.9 million.
Speaker #2: Telehealth subscriber growth remained strong, with the number of active subscribers increasing 14% year-over-year to over 310,000 at quarter's end. Gross margin for the third quarter was 88%, a decline of 290 basis points versus the prior year due to revenue mix.
Speaker #2: Gross profit was $52.8 million, an increase of 9% from the year-ago period. Gross margin was 86%, compared to 89% in the year-ago period, driven by the revenue mix.
Speaker #2: Our GAAP net loss attributable to common stockholders for the third quarter of 2025 was $4.6 million, or a loss of $0.10 per share. This compares with a GAAP net loss attributable to common stockholders for the third quarter of 2024 of $5.4 million, or a loss of $0.13 per share.
Speaker #2: Adjusted EBITDA is a non-GAAP measure we define as income or loss attributable to common shareholders before various items as outlined in today's news release.
Speaker #2: Adjusted EBITDA totaled $5.1 million for the third quarter of 2025, compared with $4.3 million in the year-ago period. Telehealth adjusted EBITDA is a non-GAAP measure defined as adjusted EBITDA for only the ongoing telehealth business, excluding Work Simply.
Speaker #2: This measure was $2.9 million for the third quarter of 2025, compared to $2.2 million in the year-ago period. We exited the third quarter with $23.8 million in cash and no debt.
Speaker #2: As previously disclosed on November 5th, we identified adjustments following system migrations related to the recognition of revenue with offsetting related balance sheet accounts for 2022, 2023, 2024, and the six months ended June 30, 2025.
Speaker #2: This resulted in an approximate $4.6 million impact in the over-recognition of revenue attributable for the total period. This adjustment had no impact on the company's cash flow or cash position.
Speaker #2: Turning to financial guidance, following the divestiture of our majority ownership in Work Simply, resulting in a pure-play standalone telehealth business, we expect fourth quarter revenue in the range of $45 million to $46 million, with adjusted EBITDA in the range of $3 million to $4 million.
Speaker #2: For the full year 2025, we expect revenue in the range of $192 to $193 million, and adjusted EBITDA in the range of $13.5 to $14.5 million.
Speaker #2: Full-year guidance represents growth of 24% for revenue and 254% for adjusted EBITDA versus 2024. With that, let's now open the call to your questions.
Speaker #2: Operator.
Speaker #3: Thank you. If
Speaker #3: You'd like to ask a question, press star one on your keypad. To leave the queue at any time, press star two. Once again, that is star one to ask a question.
Speaker #3: And we'll pause for just a moment to allow everyone a chance to join the queue. Our first question comes from David Larson with BTIG.
Speaker #3: Your line is open. Please go.
Speaker #3: ahead. Hey,
Speaker #4: Congratulations on a good quarter. Can you talk a little bit about the mix of telehealth product revenue, especially in weight loss? How much is coming from branded scripts?
Speaker #4: How much is coming from compounded scripts? There's obviously a sequential decline. Just any color on why that happened and any thoughts around 2026 and the obesity health sort of product line.
Speaker #4: Thanks.
Speaker #2: Yeah, David, this is Marc. I'll let Justin take the second part of the question on go-forward product strategy. As far as the revenue mix, weight management still accounts for more than 50% of the company's total revenue mix.
Speaker #2: Yes, there was a slight sequential decline that we had quarter on quarter. The subscriber base was roughly flat; it was down about 1,000 quarter on quarter, although that has stabilized and looks to be stable through the balance of Q4.
Speaker #2: And then, with some of the product innovation in 2026, we should return back to growth levels. The biggest, I'd say mix-wise, as far as new patient sign-ups, we're seeing more than half of them coming in through branded therapy.
Speaker #2: It's less than half of the total revenue because the new patient base obviously needs time to build up relative to the existing base.
Speaker #2: On the patients that are coming through branded therapy, of which, obviously, it is a substantial portion at this point, as we mentioned, the only real difference in the economics is the fulfillment fee.
Speaker #2: That was on the personalized compound. So, obviously, we do lose that. For the majority of the time period, it was roughly about $50 in order.
Speaker #2: So we have had some impact from that. We expect to have some additional impact in Q4, which is reflected in the guidance that we put out today.
Speaker #2: And then we expect ourselves, particularly with a lot of the product innovation going on in the market and where we're positioned with our collaboration partners, to be able to capitalize upon pretty solid growth heading into next.
Speaker #2: year.
Speaker #4: Okay. This is Justin.
Speaker #5: I'll just add quickly on 2026. I mean, there are two big things that we expect to drive the weight management business. The first, as we emphasized in the call, is better pricing for branded therapies, which, as you know, we've made a kind of big investment in.
Speaker #5: And so, I think you're already seeing the writing on the wall there. I also think that as pricing for the cash pay programs comes down, you'll see more and more payers covering these medications.
Speaker #5: We've also obviously seen the outline of a program for Medicare to cover these drugs, which is also something that LifeMD set up for. So, I mean, we're generally really, really positive on 2026.
Speaker #5: The other big thing that would help us would be the Trump administration doing something, and I think this is likely, not just possible, but likely. As these branded therapies that are FDA approved become more affordable to patients, I think it is highly likely that you see the FDA crack down on compounding, which would be an amazing thing for our business if the FDA were to slow that down.
Speaker #5: Right now, we're getting beat up every single day by just a lot of these very low-priced semaglutide and tirzepatide offers out there that are all compounded, and it's very difficult for us to compete in that kind of environment.
Speaker #5: marketplace. So Justin, I
Speaker #4: I think you had been talking at one point about the percentage of new obesity health members coming on the platform in December of '25. It was expected to be around either 50% or 75%.
Speaker #4: Is that still true? The majority of new patients are on branded products?
Speaker #5: Yeah. I mean, that's what Marc just said. I don't have the actually, I don't have the precise number as of the last 30 days, David, but I mean, I still think that that range is certainly extremely likely.
Speaker #5: I think we're at the lower end of that range now. But I think as these prices come down, and especially when the initial doses come down into the $200 to $300 range per month, it makes it very competitive with a lot of the other compounded offers that are out there.
Speaker #5: So, I mean, I think you could easily see that number going to $75 or even higher in the very near future.
Speaker #5: future. Okay.
Speaker #4: That's very helpful. And then in terms of your coverage—your insurance coverage, like Medicare, Medicaid, commercial—just, I mean, it seems to me like now that Medicare and Medicaid apparently will cover these branded products in 2026.
Speaker #4: I'm not sure when that's going to start in '26, but assuming that does happen, I mean, it seems like that could be a significant revenue stream for you.
Speaker #4: What portion of your revenue now is, I guess, Medicare or Medicaid or insurance-covered versus cash pay? And by the end of 2026, what percentage of your revenue do you think will be?
Speaker #4: insurance-related? Yeah.
Speaker #5: I mean, David, I'm not really prepared. I'm not really prepared to—Marc, nor I are prepared today to give you an exact number for on a percentage by the end of '26.
Speaker #5: What I can say is that we are 100% ready to go. With Medicare, once these drugs are covered, I think that's going to be a very significant thing for our business.
Speaker #5: And we have actually been seeing—I don't think "traction" is the right word, but we did turn on—we have right now, it's somewhere between 100.
Speaker #5: I think it's somewhere between 100 million and 150 million lives under coverage right now. And we actually turned this on for the first time broadly last week.
Speaker #5: And we saw over a one-third reduction in our CPA. So it's a very, very positive thing for acquisition costs. So I think that I don't want to say I think, but the team at LifeMD is really energized around this.
Speaker #5: It's one of our differentiators. It's been frustrating how long it's taken for us to get these programs live. But I think that also speaks to the difficulty for others that try to launch a 50-state payer network, right?
Speaker #5: So, I think it's going to be a very positive thing for the business, and I'm really hopeful that we'll start to see that in the coming quarters and be able to talk in more detail about that becoming a greater share of our patients.
Speaker #4: The members that are on your platform now actually have insurance, or what percentage that perhaps don't join the platform, don't because they wanted insurance, but now that you take it, they can join in '26?
Speaker #4: Just can you put some numbers or anything around the potential lift in revenue we might see with insurance?
Speaker #4: coverage? Well, I can
Speaker #5: I can tell you, Dave, that a decent percentage—almost at least 25% of patients that sign up for our program—end up not continuing with the program because they don't have insurance coverage for the medication.
Speaker #5: So that's a big thing. As coverage increases for these medications, it's going to be a massive thing for our business. On the care side, I think it's significant.
Speaker #5: I mean, I think that, look, I mean, the stat I just gave you, we saw a 33% ballpark reduction in customer acquisition costs when we turned on the ability to use your health insurance.
Speaker #5: For, I don't know, perhaps a third of the population—probably even less. So, I mean, that's a great sign that there's massive demand out there and that once we get these programs live and functioning the way we need them to function at scale, it will actually have a really positive repercussion on the overall business.
Speaker #4: And then just one more before I hop back in the queue. Can you talk about your clinical services and your retention levels among members?
Speaker #4: So let's say these GLP-1s go solid oral in early '26. The value that LifeMD brings to members that, say, for example, on Amazon would not, or a typical Costco maybe would not.
Speaker #4: Can you maybe just talk about the value you bring and the retention levels or the weight loss that your members typically see that they may not see otherwise at a different platform?
Speaker #5: Sure. So, I mean, some of the other partners are the Costcos of the world. They are going to have these drugs in inventory. Just like I think it's pretty likely that at some point, LifeMD will be able to direct ship these medications as well, from our pharmacy directly to patients.
Speaker #5: So, not a big differentiator there. Where I think there is a really big differentiator is in the portfolio of services and products that LifeMD offers.
Speaker #5: So the way I envision it, David, is people may come to LifeMD and/or they may, as an alternative to Costco or their family doctor's office, have an amazing visit that typically starts with a state-licensed provider.
Speaker #5: And they're going to use that to access initially. The goal might be to access a GLP-1 medication and use their insurance for the pharmacy coverage.
Speaker #5: Maybe even use their insurance to cover the cost of the visit. need. And most people that are most people that are using a GLP-1 have many other health needs, whether it's preventative care, whether it's lab work, for it could be something that most of these people have never had a provider speak to them about their hormone health, LifeMD's also launching a cardiovascular offering in late this quarter, early January, which is going to be an incredible program.
Speaker #5: There's an incredible shortage right now of cardiologists throughout the country, so we're very excited about that. The ability to get a different medication is significant. We obviously don't compound GLP-1 medications, but we have a full-blown compounding pharmacy here that can create hormone or dermatology products. We can compound those at a fair price and ship them directly to the patient.
Speaker #5: So this is the type of thing that I think many of these other retailers that you mentioned—I don't want to name names—but I think they would all love to have this type of marketplace.
Speaker #5: And even the brand associated with that marketplace. So that's going to be the big difference between LifeMD and these other places. Also, it's worth pointing out that Costco doesn't have a doctor or a nurse practitioner.
Speaker #5: They don't have the provider that can write the script. So you can go pick up your drug at Costco or some other pharmacy, like CVS, right?
Speaker #5: But you still need a provider. And that's where LifeMD comes into play. I think with Amazon, you obviously could get the provider, but look, there's a big difference in the LifeMD brand and Amazon's brand.
Speaker #5: And there are certainly people who are going to be very loyal to Amazon. But it's a big space, right? There's going to be room for a number of high-quality players in this market.
Speaker #4: Great. And last one, Mark, was there any revenue impact from that, I guess, restatement we'll call it? Was there a would revenue have been 4 million higher, or was it there was no impact?
Speaker #5: So it was not a restatement; it was a revision. The revision had a $1.1 million impact on this year. However, they applied to.
Speaker #5: So, there were no revisions made in the quarters that impact this quarterly results from it.
Speaker #4: Okay, thanks very much. I'll hop back in the queue.
Speaker #1: Thanks,
Speaker #1: David. Thank you.
Speaker #6: We'll now move on to Steven Valikrat with Mizuho. Your line is now.
Speaker #7: Yeah, thanks, good
Speaker #7: Good afternoon, guys. Thanks for taking the open question. So, I think you kind of touched on this a little bit, but I guess I was kind of curious also on the brand uptake and how that's tracked relative to your expectations.
Speaker #7: You gave some comments on less than half is still on brand, but I guess what kind of jumps out to me is just the fact that since you guys announced your brand drug partnership deals with Novo back in April and May, we've seen Novo Nordisk sign partnership deals for low-cost branded drugs with a whole bunch of other companies in the virtual care space and pharmaceutical supply channel.
Speaker #7: So I'm wondering if some of those deals have diluted your expected uptake in any way. Have some of those other deals actually helped you in some ways?
Speaker #7: Again, just trying to get a better sense of your ability to capture your fair share of customers seeking the lower-cost brand drugs in the weight management category and diabetes, too.
Speaker #7: Thanks.
Speaker #1: Sure. Yeah, this is Justin. I'll answer that. So I think we knew that Novo and Lilly would do multiple deals I think, look, I don't think them I don't think that them collaborating with other retailers and pharmacies and telehealth companies has an impact on the demand or the take rate or the conversion rate on our platform.
Speaker #1: I think it's all about me, and I'm pretty sure they agree with me. I think, and I can tell you think it comes down to price.
Speaker #1: And in a world where the FDA ignores what's happening in the compounding world, and you can go out there and get a compounded therapy for, I don't know, even half the price or more a lot of times compared to where the branded therapies are priced, it just makes it really difficult for even the compounding industry.
Speaker #1: world is something that we didn't expect has since these drugs have come off of since these drugs have come off of the shortage And the competitiveness list, the number of players out there, the number of direct marketing firms that are competing in the compounded GLP-1 world has skyrocketed.
Speaker #1: I don't have an exact number, but it's just gotten worse. We expected it to get better, and it actually got a lot more competitive.
Speaker #1: So when people are seeing a branded therapy that's priced at $349 to $499, they're seeing, while they're purchasing and immediately after they purchase, while they're waiting for a visit, right, they're seeing 10, 20 other ads, right, for these drugs, sometimes as low as $99 for the first month and usually the prices are quickly escalate a lot of times a lot of times in ways that aren't clearly disclosed to the consumer.
Speaker #1: But that's the current landscape. So we're really optimistic about we're really optimistic about branded therapy continuing to these branded therapies continuing to perform on our platform.
Speaker #1: I think there's a big demand. We believe the price point needs to be in the $200 to $300 range to be competitive. With a lot of these offers, we need to see better coverage.
Speaker #1: We think oral therapies and I mean, most importantly, we think the we think that the Wegovy pill that's likely to be launched in January is going to be could be a massive catalyst for the business.
Speaker #1: Kind of where we're at. And so that's today.
Speaker #7: Okay. That's helpful. Thank
Speaker #7: you. Thank you.
Speaker #6: We'll now move to Anderson Chuck with B. Riley Securities. Your line is now open.
Speaker #6: open. Hi.
Speaker #8: Thank you for taking the questions. So first, on the return to Wrexham degrowth, how much of this volume has been driven by the men's HRT offering versus the ED business returning to historical levels?
Speaker #8: And how does ED patient acquisition now look compared to historic levels? I know you previously mentioned it was back to around 80% to 90% of historic levels as of the call in.
Speaker #8: August. Yeah.
Speaker #5: So this is Mark. Most of the growth, so the 10,000, about 8,000 came from the sexual health business, which is mostly ED. The balance of it came from a mix of the HRT business, hair loss, and insomnia, as far as the acquisition volume.
Speaker #5: I mean, the acquisition volume is very close to where it was at historical levels. I'd say the CACs are about $5 to $10 higher than what they had been, but still a healthy unit of economics comparable to where they have been.
Speaker #5: And the levels are very close to where they have been historically.
Speaker #8: Okay. Got it. Thank you. And then, telehealth growth margin declined around 350 basis points. Could you provide some more color on what drove this?
Speaker #8: This and? How should we think about, yeah, the telehealth?
Speaker #5: Yeah. So this is Mark. Nothing in the business drove it. Like-for-like product lines or service lines, the margins are the same, but it was really a couple of folds.
Speaker #5: One, as we mentioned, we're shifting more to branded products than the way management business. That branded product obviously doesn't carry with it some of the medication processing or medication processing fulfillment fees that we had on the personalized compounds.
Speaker #5: That contributed probably about 150 basis points to that change. And we had always mentioned that before when we had spoken about the change from compounding to branded.
Speaker #5: The balance of the rest of it is mixed in business. So today, weight management is over 50% of the company's total revenue. If you were to flip back a year ago, Rex was the biggest part of our revenue.
Speaker #5: Particularly, Rex Sexual Rex Health will have the highest gross margins. It'll sit in the upper 80s. So, the mix in that business and the shift there contributed to the rest.
Speaker #8: Okay, got it. And how should we think about the telehealth margins going forward with the new offerings in women's and behavioral health, and also as you scale the 503(a) compounding pharmacy?
Speaker #5: Yeah. So, in general, we would expect gross margins on a rate basis to probably be slightly below where they are today. And the reason for that is a fewfold.
Speaker #5: One, mental health is a big area of opportunity for us, which will be very accretive to the company's top line and bottom line. But with that being said, gross margins in that business are not going to be 85% to 87% or so.
Speaker #5: They are going to be lower. They'll typically have a 7 in front of them from a gross margin standpoint, which is, if you operate very well, which we do, operate our business very well.
Speaker #5: Secondly, some of the compounded offerings of the gross margins will be slightly lower even after we transition; although, after we transition fully to our pharmacy, they'll probably get back to where the generic is, or very close there.
Speaker #5: But in the interim, the gross margins will be slightly lower. We expect that the ratio of branded therapy to weight will continue to go up and up.
Speaker #5: The gross margins under current arrangements today, where the product is a complete pass-through to the end customer, would also have a mild impact on gross margins for all of these businesses.
Speaker #5: We do expect to be accretive to the bottom line, and they all have massive ability to scale and growth opportunities. Some of them have lower advertising costs than some other businesses.
Speaker #5: That we've been in. So there are puts and takes there, but from a pure GM rate standpoint, we would expect mild erosion in the rate just due to the mix of.
Speaker #5: business. Okay.
Speaker #8: Got it. Thank you for taking our questions.
Speaker #6: Thank you. We'll now move on to Sarah James with Cantor. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker #6: ahead. Thank you.
Speaker #9: Earlier, you mentioned turning on insurance broadly last week, and you talked about an observation of customer acquisition costs being down 33%. I'm wondering if you have any other observations from turning it on broadly. And then, just to clarify the 33%—was that the lower cost of customers with insurance coming on, or was it that the cost for customer acquisition costs for those with insurance was even lower, and you just had a big mixed shift to those with insurance?
Speaker #9: insurance? Hi, Sarah.
Speaker #10: It's Justin. I'll take that one. Look, I think what it demonstrates I think what it demonstrates is that a lot of patients that are coming through the medical intake process that have clicked on a LifeMD ad or a business because it's something they saw on TV, I think it just demonstrates that a lot of these a lot of people want to use their insurance for healthcare.
Speaker #10: And one of the unique things about the platform that we have, which is still mostly synchronous, is that we can participate in the benefits world.
Speaker #10: So it's just a function of more people getting through the flow, being able to check the insurance route versus the self-pay route. Obviously, they're seeing a lower price point as well if they choose the insurance route.
Speaker #10: So there's also an LTV kind of exercise that we need to go through to kind of rework the financial model and see how that all plays out.
Speaker #10: But it was super encouraging and I think there's a lot more optimization that we could do as well. And so where I get really excited about this, especially is even things like Medicare where if you have broad coverage for these drugs, and we know we're going to get paid for a consult and it's really just about the patient going through the initial benefits verification process, and then you have the visit and the medication that are covered, and then we can ship the medication directly from our pharmacy to the patient.
Speaker #10: I think that's super exciting. And I think it just I think we've always known that this would have a big impact. We were just pleasantly surprised to see that to see that it was that big of an impact without optimizing it more.
Speaker #9: Great. And the new consumer-facing app and website that you're launching, do you have any thoughts on how that could impact cross-selling?
Speaker #9: ability? Yeah.
Speaker #10: I mean, it’s massive. I mean, the number of cross-care sign-ups per day is substantial. I think it could easily be 50 or 100 consults per day off the bat in various care programs.
Speaker #10: Without us doing any work except for just the technology functioning. So I'm really excited about it. I mean, I think I know that it has the I know that it has the potential to totally change the profile of the business and also just totally LTV and retention rates across the business.
Speaker #10: So it's been a big effort, and the new app is going to be beautiful. It's going to look... I mean, I think our current app looks good.
Speaker #10: But what we're launching is just leagues ahead of where we are today. I think it's going to have a big impact on the brand and also on the cross-care rate, and ultimately the LTV for the.
Speaker #10: business. Great.
Speaker #9: Thank
Speaker #9: you. Thank
Speaker #6: You. We'll now move on to Yichen with HCW. Your line is now open.
Speaker #11: Hi, this is Eduardo on for you. Thanks for taking the questions. I had a question regarding the 503(a) pharmacy. You mentioned that you're licensed in 14 states now.
Speaker #11: Just curious, if you have an anticipated timeline to reach the 50-state coverage and how much margin impact you think that'll have once you're fully scaled?
Speaker #10: Yeah, I think this is Justin again. The licensing process is pretty quick for a pharmacy that's already licensed up across the country like we are.
Speaker #10: So I would expect to be I would expect to be 35-state licensed in the next 60 to 90 days. It's at the latest. It could be even sooner.
Speaker #10: And then the next kind of 15 states will trickle in. I think, let's just say another 30, 60, or 90 days from there, with one or two—California being the most difficult.
Speaker #10: So it's not a long-term thing unless, just say, I think we can be 50-state licensed for compounding, maybe with the exception of one or two difficult states.
Speaker #10: In the next couple of
Speaker #10: months. Got it.
Speaker #11: Thanks so much.
Speaker #11: And then regarding the. And
Speaker #10: And I'll jump in. On your question on the margin, I mean, the reality is it does have a—I mean, owning and operating a 503(a) compounding pharmacy is a big, big competitive advantage for us.
Speaker #10: It's extremely difficult to get the cogs to where you need them to be for our type of business working with a third-party pharmacy. We do have some great we do have some great third-party compounding pharmacy partners.
Speaker #10: And they're not going anywhere. But again, being able to bring these things in-house, control the patient experience, and really leverage our supply chain capabilities as well, which are really good, especially in pharmacy.
Speaker #10: To drive down COGS. I mean, it just makes these things so much more accessible for.
Speaker #10: patients. Got it.
Speaker #11: Thanks for those details. And regarding the oral obesity products that we anticipate coming onto the market soon, do you have any visibility? Is there any market research indicating what kind of bump we might see and what fraction of patients are really holding back because they don't like the needle?
Speaker #11: I'm just trying to get a feel for your impression of how much these orally bioavailable obesity products are going to have on uptakes of these.
Speaker #11: therapies. I think it's big.
Speaker #10: But I think your guess is as good as mine. And probably as good as the drug manufacturers, right? I don't think there's ever been an oral medication for weight loss with the type of efficacy profile that people are being told will have that's been approved by the FDA.
Speaker #10: So, it's really difficult. I think it's enormous. I mean, in my social circles, especially with people that are a little bit older, I think that it could expand the market by 25% to 50%.
Speaker #10: I personally know a number of people that I would never think would avoid a very small needle like this or injectable, but that are just waiting for the oral product to come to market.
Speaker #10: So I think it's going to be I think it's going to be very big. I mean, to put it in a number on it is very difficult.
Speaker #10: But there is going to be massive demand, is what I...
Speaker #10: think. Got
Speaker #11: Got it. Thanks so much for taking the questions.
Speaker #6: Thank you. At this time, we've reached our allotted time for questions. I'll now turn the call back over to Justin Schreiber.
Speaker #10: Thank you for your questions and for your interest in LifeMD. And we look forward to speaking with you once again. We report our third-quarter results or sorry, when we report our fourth-quarter results in March of next year.
Speaker #10: Have a great evening.