Assertio Holdings, Inc.

Assertio Holdings, Inc.

ASRT·NASDAQ

$23.45

-0.043%
HealthcareDrug Manufacturers - Specialty & Generic

Assertio Holdings, Inc., a specialty pharmaceutical company, provides medicines in the areas of neurology, hospital, and pain and inflammation. Its pharmaceutical products include INDOCIN, an oral solution and a suppository form for the treatment of moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, including acute flares of chronic disease; ankylosing spondylitis and osteoarthritis; and acute painful shoulder and gouty arthritis. It also provides CAMBIA, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) for the treatment of migraine, nausea, photophobia, and phonophobia; Zipsor, a NSAID for relief of mild to moderate acute pain; SPRIX, a NSAID for the short term management of moderate to moderately severe pain that requires analgesia at the opioid level; and Otrexup, a single-dose auto-injector containing a prescription medicine and methotrexate that is used to treat adults with severe, active rheumatoid arthritis, and children with active polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis. The company was formerly known as Assertio Therapeutics, Inc. and changed its name to Assertio Holdings, Inc. in May 2020. Assertio Holdings, Inc. was incorporated in 1995 and is headquartered in Lake Forest, Illinois.

At a Glance

Live Snapshot
Market Cap$151.54M
EPS-4.7400
P/E Ratio-4.95
Earnings Date07/30/2026

Earnings Call Transcript

ASRT • 2023 • Q1

Operator
Good afternoon and welcome to the Assertio Holdings, Inc. First Quarter 2023 Financial Results Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Matt Kreps from Darrow Associates, Investor Relations for Assertio. Please go ahead.
Matt Kreps
Good afternoon and thank you all for joining us today to discuss Assertio's first quarter 2023 financials. The news release covering our earnings for this period is now available on the Investor page of our website at investor.assertiotx.com. I would encourage you to review the release and tables in conjunction with today's discussion. With me today are Dan Peisert, President and CEO, and Paul Schwichtenberg, Senior Vice President and CFO. Dan will open the remarks and provide an overview of the business followed by Paul who will review our financials. After that, we will open the call for your questions. During this call, management will make projections and other forward-looking statements regarding our future performance. Such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties including those noted in this morning's press release as well as the Assertio's filings with the SEC. These and other risk factors are more fully described in the Risk Factors section and other sections of our annual report on Form 10-K. Our actual results may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements and Assertio specifically disclaims any intent or obligation to update these forward-looking statements except as required by law. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Dan.
Dan Peisert
Thank you, Matt. I want to start by welcoming our long term shareholders, new shareholders and those that are considering investing in Assertio. On my very first public call as CEO of Assertio, a short 26 months ago, I laid out my go forward strategy and priorities. My strategy was ambitious, but necessary to put Assertio on a path for success. We needed to develop a sustainable business model that repositioned the business to compete more effectively in a changing environment, improve our profitability and cash flow generation, improve our balance sheet and reduce our cost of capital, protect INDOCIN, add new products to diversify our business and extend the portfolio's duration, create internal opportunities for growth and mitigate our legacy legal uncertainties. The recent announcement of the acquisition of Spectrum Pharmaceuticals and their key asset, ROLVEDON, was just one of the many tactics that we've completed in the aim of achieving that strategy. I'm proud to say that by the time we closed the acquisition, currently expected to be sometime this third quarter, we will have largely checked the box and everything we set out to do. I want to offer a heartfelt thank you to not only the executive team, but to all of the employees of Assertio, who have worked so hard in helping us achieve our goals. After the close of the acquisition, we'll have a business aligned with the realities of the business environment of today and the future, where contracting and market access are critical to success as opposed to pure salesforce size. In addition, we'll soon have complementary digital and in-person promotional platforms that we can continue to add products into, providing further value to patients, our customers and our shareholders. The execution of our strategy has had the most profound impact on our balance sheet to date. On March 31, we had $68.6 million of cash and $40 million of long term debt with a 2027 maturity. This is the first time we've been in a positive net cash position since March 2020. For an even more dramatic comparison, in December of 2020, when Paul and I took over a CEO and CFO, we had $20.8 million of cash and $85 million of debt, maturing early 2024. In just a little over two years, we've flipped from net debt to net cash, a positive swing of almost $94 million. We extended our maturities by three-and-a-half years, reduced our cost of debt from 13% to 6.5% and achieved this, all while spending $60 million in cash to acquire two new assets with patents extending into the 2030s. This was a strong first quarter for Assertio. We started with a $5 million hole due to the loss of exclusivity for both Cambia and
Paul Schwichtenberg
Thank you, Dan. This morning, I will review the financial highlights from our first quarter of 2023. For full details, please refer to the tables and financial statements in our earnings release and 10-Q. Net product sales were $41.8 million for the first quarter of 2023 compared to net product sales of $35.5 million in the prior year quarter and $49.9 million last quarter. The increase in net sales versus the prior year quarter was primarily driven by INDOCIN and the addition of Sympazan, which more than offset the expected declines in Cambia and
Matt Kreps
Thank you, Paul. At this time, we've completed our prepared remarks from the management team, and we'll take questions from our research analysts and institutional investor community. Operator, can you please provide the instructions for Q&A from our listeners?
Operator
[Operator Instructions]. And your first question comes from the line of Thomas Flaten with Lake Street Capital Markets.
Thomas Flaten
Congrats on the quarter. Dan, I was wondering if you might be able to provide some more color on the upcoming meeting that you're going to request from FDA. Was there something in particular you saw there? Just wondering if you could give some color on what you're looking for input on from FDA.
Dan Peisert
It's us providing them with additional information to see if we can avoid some of the things in their original IND feedback. One of those specifically would be – we do not or would not like to do the dose ranging that they had suggested. So we're going to be providing them with some additional information to see if we can eliminate that from the clinical trial design, which would allow us to enroll and complete it far quicker.
Thomas Flaten
Switching over to Sympazan, I'm just curious, on a kind of a same store sales basis, is the growth you're seeing from traditionally productive accounts or are you seeing any impact from maybe non-touched accounts under the Aquestive model?
Dan Peisert
I don't have any information on that. Do you, like on existing prescribers?
Paul Schwichtenberg
I don't have any specific information.
Dan Peisert
We can get back to you on that, Thomas. We'll check with our sales team on that.
Thomas Flaten
Finally, I think you guys have your AGM tomorrow. And is it safe to assume that the merger vote will happen at that meeting? And then secondly, any insight into when Spectrum might be planning their AGM? I think last year was in June,
Dan Peisert
The AGM is not going to address the Spectrum acquisition. It's just the information that was in the proxy that was provided to shareholders in April. We will be submitting a new S-4 here in the coming weeks. That is in combination with Spectrum. And we will be having a shareholder vote in the late July, early August timeframe.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Scott Henry with ROTH Capital.
Scott Henry
Congratulations on a quite a run these past couple of years. I did have a couple questions. First, I guess I'll start with the income statement. The SG&A number, you talked about why it was a little higher in the quarter. My question is, was there any one-time noise in there? Or is that kind of the number we should think about going forward?
Paul Schwichtenberg
Scott, there were a couple of differences in the quarters. There was a one-time charge, as I mentioned, related to the Spectrum acquisition. And then the other is just the timing of stock based comp. The annual grant this year was in February, last year was in May. So there's a little bit of a timing difference there that's driving it. And then the rest is going to be the sales and marketing expenses that I mentioned related to Otrexup and Sympazan.
Scott Henry
Shifting gears, ROLVEDON, it looks like a really good quarter for Spectrum. As far as you know, and I know it's not your product right now, was that a clean quarter, meaning is there any stocking in there? Or is that a pretty good demand based quarter for where the launch is at currently?
Dan Peisert
From what we know of it, from conducting diligence, it's a good clean quarter that reflects demand.
Scott Henry
Could you talk about what kind of gross margins we should expect for ROLVEDON, at least relative to your current business?
Paul Schwichtenberg
The ROLVEDON gross margins I think are going to be in the high 70s, 80% range. I'm sorry. Let me let me clarify that point. I'm sorry, mid 80s is going to be the margins on ROLVEDON.
Scott Henry
Shifting gears, Sprix, how should we think about that? Not just this year, but next year and the following year. How do we think about that franchise from a growth standpoint?
Scott Henry
It's clearly product four on our list, but it requires a heavy lift. There's a lot of things that need to be done in what I call break medical inertia. And think about this one a little bit differently. We need the number one thing that we need to do to improve sales here is improve market access. It's got very poor coverage today. I think less than 15% of covered lives – or lives are covered for this product. So it's incredibly important if you're going to be getting an acute pain med that it be reimbursed and paid for. So we've got a very effective, I guess, patient access program in place. However, it also becomes expensive if you start growing the product. So we need to look for things that are outside the traditional routes to increase coverage for the product. Some of the things that we're exploring also include a price decrease for that product. So we haven't come up with all the answers yet, Scott, but right now, it's been bouncing in us what roughly…
Operator
Sorry, Mr. Peisert, your line cut out. [Technical Difficulty] Please continue.
Dan Peisert
Sorry about that everyone. We had a little technical difficulty. Our equipment shut down.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Mayank Mamtani with B. Riley.
William Wood
This is William on for Mayank. Congratulations on a great quarter as well as your recent Spectrum acquisition. A couple of questions from us. Maybe when thinking about continuing the early impressive growth of ROLVEDON going forward, could you discuss your strategy for maintaining the growth of your targeting clinics, 340B and then the non-340B hospitals and how do you view having a J-code in place will make you more competitive in your execution? And then one follow-up.
Dan Peisert
We don't anticipate doing anything different. The targeting that they've done, we think is right on point. And if anything, what we intend to do is help them reach a broader number of clinics sooner and without increasing additional operating expenses. So by pairing their in-person promotion with our non-personal platform, we think we can target a far greater number of clinics than just what you're limited to by geography with the current salesforce that they have. So, right now, we don't intend to do anything different. The J-code, we think it facilitates reimbursement and makes things easier. So we were very excited to see that went into effect on April 1 And we're really looking forward to closing this acquisition, so we can help them up.
William Wood
Just in regards to your CDR related milestones for 2024 and 2025, just curious if your level of confidence on meeting these. And also, could you remind us if there's is a CDR or a milestone for 2023 that's in place.
Dan Peisert
There is no 2023 milestone. And we're not going to be giving forward-looking guidance or confidence for what we think this product can do in 2024 or 2025 at this point.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Hamed Khorsand with BWS Financial.
Hamed Khorsand
So the first question I had was about INDOCIN, and is it still too early for you to see what the kind of impact or benefit this new guideline from ASGE is having for you?
Dan Peisert
Yes, it is. It's too early to see it. So we still see the product performing inside of statistical control, what it's been doing the last 24, 36 months.
Hamed Khorsand
And what's driving the Sympazan sales increase for you? Is that because of what you have undertaken ever since you acquired it or was that in place before you acquired it, the success it's seen?
Dan Peisert
The product had been on a growth trend, but it was slowing as they were essentially losing reps. And then I believe they exited the salesforce in the September timeframe. So to see it actually perform well and hit hold in there without much disruption and then start to set new quarterly and monthly peaks here in the first quarter was incredibly encouraging. And so far, all signs are that the increased reach and frequency of our promotion is starting to drive awareness and uptake of the product. So we're excited about what we can do with this.
Hamed Khorsand
My last question was just about having the Otrexup samples in Q1. it How does that build momentum for you going into Q2? And are you expecting any momentum in sales for Otrexup now that you have samples available?
Dan Peisert
It's certainly going to help. What I can tell you is I've been actually pretty pleased with the first couple of weeks of April that we have data on. It's not going to double this product or anything by any means. But it has been coming in, at least the first couple of weeks in April, a little bit ahead of our trends. Volumes were fine, a little bit better in the first quarter, but it was a gross to net hit. Most of those volumes came in more discounted channels.
Operator
Your next question come is a follow-up and comes from the line of Scott Henry with ROTH capital.
Scott Henry
Just a couple of very technical questions around the merger. You may not have the answers, but given that it's a merger, will there be any amortization expense here that will be added on from this transaction?
Paul Schwichtenberg
There should be. But I don't have a good handle on what it will be. We can give you that later, Scott.
Scott Henry
I assume we'll get that post the transaction. And then as well, I'm looking at putting out –doing a joint model for the company, even though the vote still has to happen. When we think about total shares outstanding, it looks like we should be thinking about $110 million. Am I in the ballpark there?
Paul Schwichtenberg
Just to give you the high level, as it stands right now, we have 55.6 million shares outstanding as of March 31. I can't give you the exact share count that's going to – or the increase in shares that's going to result from the merger. That will be released when we release our S-4. But very big picture, you could take the Spectrum outstanding shares and divide it by the exchange ratio to get an estimate of what those additional shares will be.
Scott Henry
And add that on to your fully diluted?
Paul Schwichtenberg
Correct.
Scott Henry
I guess just final question, company is making money pretty regularly now. How should we think about – not in 2023, but in 2024, do expect it to be taxed at around 24% at that point, assume you take a gain on any tax losses you still have, how should we think about that kind of next year?
Paul Schwichtenberg
Scott, from a cash tax rate – effective tax rate perspective, we're expecting it to be around 10% to 12%, kind of low double digits. Obviously, our book tax rate is going to be the federal and state combined rate of 25%.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Mitra Ramgopal with Sidoti.
Mitra Ramgopal
Congrats on a strong start to the year. Dan, you certainly checked all the boxes in the two plus years you've been there. So it's been a great job. And I look forward to that continuing. Just a couple of questions around the Spectrum Pharmaceuticals transaction. And might be getting a little ahead of myself here, but do you plan to use their sales force to also sell your products? Or would it be strictly for ROLVEDON?
Dan Peisert
No, it's going to be strictly for ROLVEDON. We don't want to do anything to impact that launch. We might be able to find – we've already got some ideas of other products that we can acquire in the future that would fit with them. I think the initial people that would likely be able to help both sides of the house from the Spectrum side would be their market access, the contracting folks that work with both the payers as well as the clinics. I think I see a good potential overlap between what they're doing and what we're trying to do in our business.
Mitra Ramgopal
And it sounds as though this is certainly the biggest deal you're doing since you took over, business model changing a little, et cetera. It seems like there might be some heavy lifting near term. But at the same token, you sound pretty interested in pursuing additional BD opportunities. Is that fair?
Dan Peisert
It's fair. But don't get me wrong, number one priority is making sure there's a successful integration of these two companies. So we're not going to do anything to distract either team from that. That's going to be the critical success factor for us this year.
Mitra Ramgopal
Again, it seems just from the guidance, the underlying business remains – it's in good shape. And obviously, adding on Spectrum is a game changer. Any potential headwinds we're missing here or is it pretty much under control right now from your standpoint, just executing on a transaction, etc.?
Dan Peisert
There's not any headwinds that we're aware of. We've been pretty keen at it steering clear of them. So there might be turbulence upcoming, but we don't see any of that right now.
Operator
There are no further questions at this time. So this concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Dan Peisert, President and Chief Executive Officer, for any closing remarks.
Dan Peisert
Thank you all for participating in our call today. I look forward to seeing many of you in our upcoming trip to New York and Boston next week with ROTH Capital and at the Craig-Hallum conference in Minneapolis at the end of this month. If you'd like to set up a meeting with us, please contact Matt Kreps at Darrow. As a final note, I'd like to congratulate the Blackhawks on getting the first pick in the NHL draft. Go Hawks.
Transcript from May 9, 2023

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