Esperion Therapeutics, Inc.

Esperion Therapeutics, Inc.

ESPRยทNASDAQ

$3.14

+0.32%
HealthcareBiotechnology

Esperion Therapeutics, Inc., a pharmaceutical company, develops and commercializes medicines for the treatment of patients with elevated low density lipoprotein cholesterol. Its lead product candidates are NEXLETOL (bempedoic acid) and NEXLIZET (bempedoic acid and ezetimibe) tablets for the treatment of patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease or heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia. The company has a license and collaboration agreement with Daiichi Sankyo Europe GmbH; and Serometrix to in-license its oral, small molecule PCSK9 inhibitor program. Esperion Therapeutics, Inc. was incorporated in 2008 and is headquartered in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

At a Glance

Live Snapshot
Market Cap$652.83M
EPS-0.1100
P/E Ratio-28.55
Earnings Date08/04/2026

Earnings Call Transcript

ESPR โ€ข 2025 โ€ข Q2

Operator
Hello, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for standing by, and welcome to Esperion's Second Quarter 2025 financial results. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to Alina Venezia, Head of Investor Relations for Esperion Therapeutics. Please go ahead.
Alina Venezia
Thank you, operator. Good morning, and welcome to Esperion's Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. With us on today's call are Sheldon Koenig, President and CEO; and Ben Halladay, CFO. Other members of the executive team will be available for Q&A following our prepared remarks. We issued a press release earlier this morning detailing the content of today's call. A copy can be found on the Investor page of our website together with a copy of the presentation that we will also be referencing. I want to remind callers that the information discussed on today's call is covered under the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. I caution listeners that management will be making forward-looking statements. Actual results could differ materially from those stated or implied by our forward-looking statements due to the risks and uncertainties associated with the business. These forward- looking statements are qualified in their entirety by the cautionary statements contained in today's press release and in our SEC filings. The content of this conference call contains time-sensitive information that is only accurate as of the date of this live broadcast, August 5, 2025. We undertake no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements in the conference call and webcast. As a reminder, this conference call and webcast are being recorded and archived. We will begin the call with prepared remarks and then open the line for your questions. I'll now turn the call over to you, Sheldon.
Sheldon L. Koenig
Thank you, Alina. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We're thrilled to report a standout second quarter that delivered double-digit sequential growth, more than 42% year-over-year gains in U.S. net product sales and our first quarter of operating income from ongoing business. These results reflect accelerating clinical adoption of NEXLETOL and NEXLI
Benjamin Halladay
Thank you, Sheldon. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I'm extremely excited and proud to share our financial results today. Our second quarter 2025 financial results can be found in the press release we issued this morning and more detail will be included in our upcoming 10-Q. As you've heard Sheldon discuss, we had an exceptional second quarter, highlighted by our first of operating income from ongoing business in the company's history, which sets us up nicely and supports our plans to transition to sustainable profitability starting in the first quarter of 2026. We are proud of the progress we've made and it underscores our long-held assertion that incremental growth when compounded and expanded will drop to the bottom line. Over time, this gives us considerable leverage as we move forward with confidence. Turning now to the financial results. Second quarter 2025 total revenue was $82.4 million, up 12% from the comparable period in 2024. Note, this impressive growth was achieved even when compared to second quarter 2024, during which we received a $25 million onetime milestone payment, further highlighting the strength of our underlying business. U.S. net product revenue was $40.3 million compared to $28.3 million for the comparable period in 2024, an increase of approximately 42%. Sequential quarterly net revenue growth was 15%. Collaboration revenue was $42.1 million compared to $45.5 million for the comparable period in 2024, a decrease of approximately 7%, driven by the settlement agreement milestone with DSE received in the 3 months ended June 30, 2024, offset partially by increases in royalty sales with our partner territories and product sales to our collaboration partners from our supply agreements. Excluding the settlement agreement milestone, collaboration revenue grew 105% from the comparable period. Turning to the rest of the P&L. For the second quarter 2025, research and development expenses were $7.2 million compared to $11.5 million for the comparable period of 2024, a decrease of 37%. Selling, general and administrative expenses were $39.5 million compared to $44.2 million for the comparable period in 2024, a decrease of 11%. The decrease quarter-over-quarter was primarily related to decreased media and marketing costs. We are reiterating our full year 2025 operating expense guidance, which is expected to be approximately $215 million to $235 million, including $15 million in noncash expenses related to stock compensation. We are on our way to transitioning to sustainable profitability starting in first quarter of 2026, and our operating income from ongoing business in the second quarter validates those expectations. We ended the quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $86.1 million, which combined with our excellent operational results and continued global growth well positions us to create value and achieve our goals. With that, I will now turn the call back over to Sheldon for closing remarks. Sheldon?
Sheldon L. Koenig
Thank you, Ben. As you've heard today, we have yet again delivered strong results and are executing with precision and building meaningful momentum across every dimension of our business from commercial performance and clinical adoption to global expansion and pipeline innovation. We are not just growing, we are transforming the landscape of cardiovascular disease prevention for underserved patients. With NEXLETOL and NEXLI
Operator
[Operator Instructions] That comes from Serge Belanger with Needham.
Serge D. Belanger
Congrats on the progress this quarter. A couple of quick questions on NEXLETOL and NEXLI
Benjamin Halladay
Great. BJ?
Betty Jean Swartz
Yes. Serge, as far as the approval rates, as Sheldon had mentioned, in less than 60 days with the new field reimbursement team, they've hit 1,100 targets in those 60 days, and we're showing rates well over 80%. We have certain pacesetter regions that are even higher than 80%. But as you know, with our approval rates, like CVS, where we had our prior authorizations removed, we've hit an all-time high there at -- hitting 93% approval rates there, Aetna 94%. And overall, we're well over 80%, but we have the certain key places where we've negotiated those prior authorizations really and improve that UM criteria. We're at 92 million live updated -- or 192 million, excuse me, aligned to our new label, and we continue to just see these approvals increasing day after day.
Benjamin Halladay
Thanks, Serge. This is Ben. Thanks for the question. On the working capital side, this is just in line with what we've been emphasizing on the importance from the tech transfer, right? We have a long time -- long production time line with our product. And so as DSE takes over, we will start to ramp down inventory production on our side, which we expect to happen towards the second half of this year. So I would -- inventory will come down as we start working through that backlog, and they will start ramping up in 2026.
Operator
Our next question is from Kristen Kluska with Cantor Fitzgerald.
Kristen Brianne Kluska
Congrats on a strong quarter. So if I look at the graph on Slide 10, where you talk about the growth. Can you -- it looks like the jump from April to May was probably the largest numerical gain in the 2.5 years. So if you can -- I know you talked about several growth levers, but what in particular really like stood out during that transition time?
Sheldon L. Koenig
Thanks, Kristen. I think really for us, it's really been our strategy. We've talked a lot today about going after statin-intolerant patients and really establishing this beachhead, which has really continued to drive growth and create a significant amount of awareness. I think what you've heard today also is our plans as we move forward. You heard our tagline Can't take a statin? Make NEXLI
Lisa Schafer
Yes, absolutely. And we see the strong growth both from Medicare, which was Medicare and commercial, which was really great and also with primary care physicians and cardiologists. So it really was just sustained growth quarter-over-quarter, but the out-of-pocket expense for Medicare patients has really improved in the second quarter as they reach that deductible. So that really will be tailwinds for the rest of the year as well.
Kristen Brianne Kluska
Okay. So with the growth of the new prescribers that are coming on board, is the #1 selling point essentially that they have an option for these statin-intolerant patients? I guess, what would you rank maybe as the #2 and #3 selling points than primary prevention, secondary or anything else in particular that's really standing out as the other 2 selling points.
Lisa Schafer
Yes, absolutely. So the fact that NEXLETOL and NEXLI
Operator
[Operator Instructions] And it comes from Dennis Ding with Jefferies.
Georgia Bank
This is Georgia on for Dennis. Two questions from us. The first is, how do you view consensus U.S. revenue for the year, which is around $170 million and the underlying script growth required to get there? When will you consider giving revenue guidance? And then our second question is, can you remind us on the cadence of milestone payments from Otsuka? And are there very simple thresholds that need to be met and the contract language is very clear? And then can you reiterate that there won't be any confusion like we saw from Daiichi a few years ago?
Benjamin Halladay
Thanks for the question. I'll take those in 2 parts. So on the consensus side, yes, I think you can see that we're tracking nicely and in line. I think this was a good quarter in terms of beating consensus and we're tracking well ahead of where we would want to be for that. On the milestone side, I'll reiterate, we have milestones in the second half with the Japanese regulatory process, which is up to $120 million in milestone payments. We expect those to come like I said, in the second half of the year, we're confident we're going to achieve that full amount based on the contract language. There are tiers and thresholds associated with it, but looking and knowing what those are. I think we are in good shape to maximize the potential for those milestones.
Georgia Bank
Okay. And on the underlying script growth required to get there for the consensus, which is around $170 million?
Sheldon L. Koenig
We're not. I mean, we -- Georgia, we haven't really disclosed what we're doing. It falls in line with guidance. We haven't really given the financial guidance. We're not giving script guidance. But I think what's important is to show and something we've talked about before is that we will continue to demonstrate double-digit script growth, which we've done again this quarter with over 10% script growth, and we're confident that, that momentum will continue.
Operator
Our next question is from Jessica Fye with JPMorgan.
Jessica Macomber Fye
I have several questions this morning, mostly about the model and then kind of a bigger picture question. First, can you talk about the gross margin trend we should expect in the back half of the year and into '26? I guess I had thought it would kind of start to materialize, but maybe not. So just curious kind of how to think about the back half and then next year and frankly, ultimately, where you land. How should we think about gross to net over the rest of this year? And then it looks like R&D, particularly after this quarter is tracking below the 2025 R&D guidance. Should we expect a significant ramp-up in R&D in the back half to kind of get you into that range? So those are the model questions. And then the last one is just basically I want to ask you to kind of make the case here that NEXLETOL will remain competitive in the non-statin LDL space with additional oral mechanisms coming to market.
Benjamin Halladay
Thanks, Jess. I will handle the very exciting model questions first and then turn it over to Sheldon for the competitor side. So looking at the model, I think kind of going in order of what you asked about on the gross margin side, the true benefits from the tech transfer will kick in, I think, early next year. This quarter was a good gross margin. I think it was largely in part due to the revenue mix as well as some of the underlying movement of materials that we had. But I think it's indicative of what we can expect once the tech transfer kicks in place and the beneficial margins we would see there. On gross to net, I think we're in steady state at this point. We've seen 2 quarters of what post IRA gross to net would look like and the lack of the Medicare coverage gap. And frankly, it's been a huge tailwind for us over the course of this year. So we will not see that kind of compounding factor of gross to net worsening over the course of the year. And we will keep seeing the steady favorable gross to net, which you've seen so far in Q1 and Q2. On the R&D side, Q2 was light, but I think that's mostly just a timing thing. We have our pediatric trial, which is beginning to ramp up. And you'll see in the second half. I would not use the word significant ramp-up. R&D still remains pretty minimal in the grand scope of our spend, but you will see an increase compared to Q2 as that pediatric trial starts to ramp up in the second half of the year.
Sheldon L. Koenig
Great. Thanks, Ben. Jeff, let me address your question as it relates to NEXLETOL and NEXLI
Operator
Our next question comes from Jason
Jason Eron Zemansky
I guess, Sheldon, maybe for you, at a high level, we appreciate it's still early days in the launch, and we're certainly not overlooking the progress to date, but you've talked about the potential of bempedoic acid reaching blockbuster status and sort of comparing where we are, we're curious what gets you there? And when should we expect the inflection to occur, particularly given the potential of competitive oral non-statin agents entering and additional potential headwinds, including reductions in Medicare, Medicaid spend and so forth.
Sheldon L. Koenig
Yes. So first of all, it kind of goes back to Slide 10 of the presentation. We've seen an inflection. This is a big market. This is a TAM of 70 million patients. This isn't like an orphan rare, as you know, oncology product, where you see this hockey stick take off. It's something that -- a market that will continue to grow, and you'll continue to see the growth in our product. We're very happy in where we stand. The fact that we've been able to provide double-digit growth in basically every single metric that you look at. we think that, to your point, early in the launch, we've got a long way to go. We're just starting, and we're seeing tremendous gains. As we mentioned today, Europe is a great bellwether as well as we continue to maximize our label from the CLEAR Outcome study. As you know, Jason, we haven't given guidance of when we'll be at certain points. But I think you can see by our ongoing successful quarters we're going to get there. As it relates to future competition, as I mentioned previously, we really need to see what the outcomes data shows for these products, and they're a long way off. So I would actually ask you to ask them how they think that will look versus us in the future. Thank you.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] We have a question from Joe Pantginis with H.C. Wainwright.
Joseph Pantginis
I have 2, please. So first, on the back end, with regard to PSC and your plans, what would you consider any, if any, rate-limiting steps that might potentially impact your second half of 2016 guidance?
Benjamin Halladay
I mean we don't really anticipate any, to be honest. Everything associated with our PSC program is baked in and incorporated into our expense guidance. And we've always reiterated, this is a relatively cheap program to move forward through the IND process, which we expect to continue in the second half of the year.
Joseph Pantginis
So that's from an expense front, also, like, say, from the scientific or preclinical study part components?
Benjamin Halladay
No, no, no, nothing this year.
Joseph Pantginis
Okay. Got it. And my second question, I will admit is somewhat rhetorical, but I would love your thoughts. So when you look at just the U.S. you talked about currently having about 28,000 health care providers prescribing the drug. Looking at your various marketing campaigns, the new ones coming up, the digital campaigns and what have you, what would you say would be the key inflection areas that would take you more quickly from 28,000 HCPs to say, 50,000 versus, say, 28,000 to 29,000?
Sheldon L. Koenig
Yes. Well, look, I mean, I think to your point, Joe, we've been showing this growth every quarter as it relates to physicians increasing prescribing I think what it's allowed us to do is also analyze what are the tactics getting us there. We talked about this TV ad and connected television. This is not a big DTC campaign. But this is something as more folks look at their phone or their tablet or their iPad. These are consumers and they're watching, whether that be Hulu or NBC Sports, as we mentioned, there will be others, consumers being driven to the physician also is very helpful. A matter of fact, we've done market research that has shown that every time a consumer has asked for this drug, they've gotten it. So this tactic of Can't take a statin? Make NEXLI
Joseph Pantginis
No, perfect. I love the thoughts. I appreciate that. And again, it's just the growing strong blocking and tackling that you guys are doing.
Operator
And this concludes our Q&A session. I will turn it back to management for final comments.
Sheldon L. Koenig
Thank you, operator, and thank you all again for your time and attention this morning. We are looking forward to participating in a number of September conferences and hope to have the opportunity to connect with many of you then. In the meantime, if you have any questions or would like to have a call with the team, just reach out to our Head of Investor Relations, Alina Venezia, and have a great day and a great week. Take care.
Transcript from August 5, 2025

Other Transcripts