John D. Morberg
Thank you, Paul. As Paul stated, we are pleased to announce that we are now current on all our SEC filings. On August 9, we filed the three 10-Qs for the first three quarters of fiscal 2024 and yesterday, we filed our fiscal 2024 annual report on Form 10-K. Before we discuss the company's financial results in further detail, we want to share some important changes regarding our financial presentation since our last earnings call, which we believe will provide helpful context in comparing our performance to historical periods. First, as previously communicated, we have transitioned to a single reporting segment as the food business divestitures are complete, and the company is now a standalone CDMO business. All of our financial information has been consolidated into what was previously the Lifecore Biomedical segment, including what was previously categorized under the corporate other segment, which is now collapsed into our income statement. Secondly, we have changed our methodology for calculating adjusted EBITDA on a go-forward basis, which begins with this fiscal '24 presentation as well as the historical periods that are being compared and also carries over to our fiscal '25 outlook. Specifically, we are adding back stock-based compensation into our calculation of adjusted EBITDA, which is consistent with the reporting method used for the Lifecore only segment in prior years and many of our peers. We will continue to provide transparency regarding stock-based compensation as a line item in our adjusted EBITDA reconciliation. This change is aimed at providing a clearer and more consolidated view of our ability to generate cash as well as to align our performance with that of our peer group, which largely follows the same convention. With that in mind, I will turn to our full year fiscal '24 financial results. For the full fiscal year of 2024, our performance was consistent with the prior updates we've provided and the guidance we laid out for the year. Lifecore successfully exited the trough experienced in the prior year, achieving a recovery of revenue and profitability. The company reported a total revenue increase of 24.2%, reaching $128.3 million. This growth was driven by a 17.7% increase in the hyaluronic acid or HA raw material manufacturing or fermentation business, and a 26.5% increase in the CDMO business. The rise in HA manufacturing revenue was primarily due to higher demand in the current year. Meanwhile, the CDMO revenue growth was attributed to the previously announced commercialization of a new product in the second quarter of fiscal year '24, increased demand from existing customers, price increases from amended commercial agreements at the beginning of the calendar year and a modest increase in development services projects. Lifecore's gross profit for the full year of '24 increased by 49.5%, reaching $41.9 million, which represents a gross margin of 32.6%, up from 27.1% in the prior year. This significant improvement in gross profit was primarily due to a favorable volume variance of $6.8 million, driven by the year-over-year revenue increase and a favorable rate variance of $7.1 million. The rate variance was influenced by the higher revenue volumes in the current year, leveraging fixed overhead costs as well as the price increases contained in commercial contract amendments to offset inflationary impacts in prior years. Adjusted EBITDA for the full year of '24 increased by $9.1 million or 82%, reaching $20.2 million. As noted previously, these figures add back stock-based compensation in both periods for fiscal year '24 in the amount of $6.2 million, and in fiscal year '23 in the amount of $3.6 million. The adjusted EBITDA margin ended at 15.8%, marking a 5.1 percentage point increase over the prior year. Excluded from adjusted EBITDA for the full year of '24 are restructuring, reorganization, monetary penalties and shareholder settlement costs of approximately $15.7 million, which is down from $20.1 million in the prior year and startup and other costs of approximately $2.3 million compared to $1 million in the prior year. The company continues to incur restructuring and reorganization costs as part of its continued recentralization of back-office functions including financial, accounting, compliance and IT infrastructure. For fiscal year '25, Lifecore expects to incur $5.5 million to $6.5 million of restructuring and reorganization costs, primarily in the first half of the fiscal year. These costs are associated with elevated accounting fees related to the delayed filings and auditor changeover, legal costs related to a recent shareholder activism settlement and severance costs from the previously announced reduction in workforce. In terms of quarterly performance for fiscal fourth quarter 2024, Lifecore's revenue followed the prior guidance on quarterly cadence with approximately 43% recognized in the first two quarters and 57% in the second two quarters of fiscal '24, including 29% in fiscal '24 fourth quarter. This distribution aligns with the company's expectations and reflects its strategic approach to managing revenue growth throughout the fiscal year. Shifting to our fiscal '25 outlook, we are introducing revenue guidance in the range of $126.5 million to $130 million, which implies a growth rate of minus 1.4% to plus 1.4% and is consistent with our fiscal year '24 revenues at the midpoint of the range. This flat revenue outlook for the upcoming year is influenced by several factors. Primarily, one of our key customers is undertaking a global initiative to reduce and rebalance their inventories, which will temporarily limit our revenue growth. However, we anticipate more stable and sustainable order patterns in the future as their order patterns should begin to align more closely with a robust anticipated sales cadence. Next, we do not currently expect new commercial launches from our development pipeline in fiscal year '25 as we did in fiscal year '24 due to the timing of FDA approvals. Additionally, a small commercial customer who contributed approximately $3.2 million in revenue during Q2 and Q3 of fiscal '24 has moved their production in-house. This revenue will not be repeated in fiscal '25. We also finalized a $5 million development services project at the end of the fourth quarter of fiscal '24, which will not contribute to fiscal '25 revenues. While we anticipate slower revenue growth in fiscal year '25 due to these factors, we remain confident in the improvement of both our revenue growth and margins beyond this period. And we plan to share more details on our long-range strategy during our Investor Day in November 2024 and we'll provide further scheduling details when available. From an adjusted EBITDA perspective, we are guiding to a range of $19 million to $21 million, excluding stock-based compensation costs of $9 million to $10 million, which is an increase in stock-based compensation costs from $6.2 million in the prior year. The forecasted adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to be between 15.3% to 16.2%. We anticipate gross margins to decline by approximately 225 to 275 basis points due to a mix shift towards more commercial revenues and increased depreciation costs for new equipment purchases. Additionally, we expect operating expenses after excluding restructuring and reorganization costs and stock-based compensation costs in both fiscal years '25 and '24 to decrease by approximately 200 to 250 basis points. This decrease is primarily due to cost savings from the reduction in force. As previously reported, in early July, we implemented a strategic reduction in our workforce, affecting 46 employees or 9% of our employee base. From a total compensation perspective, the reduction resulted in approximately $4.7 million in annual salary and benefit savings, of which approximately 65% is in direct and indirect labor, which we expect to provide a benefit to gross margin in future periods as the lower cost inventories are sold through. The balance of the estimated savings or 35% is expected to be reflected in selling, general and administrative expenses. With respect to quarterly cadence, we expect fiscal year '25 revenues to follow the seasonal trends observed in fiscal year '24. Specifically, Q1 is projected to being our lowest revenue quarter of the year at about 17% to 19% of our annual revenues, which is customary given the scheduled downtime to recertify our clean rooms. This results in an overall revenue split of approximately 42% in the first half and 58% in the second half of the fiscal year. Adjusted EBITDA is also expected to follow the fiscal year '24 seasonal trends with 85% to 90% of our adjusted EBITDA occurring in the back half of the fiscal year. Now turning to our balance sheet. Net term and revolver debt on a reported basis for fiscal year '24 was $175.2 million, including $8.5 million of cash, which compares to net bank debt at the end of fiscal '23 of $147.9 million. The $27.7 million increase in net debt is due to $14.8 million in noncash PIK interest on the term debt, $2.9 million additional borrowings under the revolver, $600,000 payments under the sale leaseback and a cash balance decrease of $10.6 million. The debt derivative liability recorded at the commencement of the term debt declined by $42.1 million to $22.8 million due to the completion of the strategic alternatives review process where probabilities of a change in control, embedded derivatives significantly declined, resulting in a noncash other income in the statement of operations. Moving to CapEx. Cash used for capital expenditures totaled $17.9 million for fiscal year '24 as compared to $21.5 million in fiscal '23, focused on supporting Lifecore's long-term growth initiatives, primarily related to the new isolator fillers and the associated formulation and process support equipment. For fiscal '25, we expect capital expenditures to decline to approximately $10 million to $14 million, depending on the timing of payments as compared to capital expenditures of $17.9 million during fiscal year 2024. The fiscal '25 CapEx spend is primarily related to finalizing payments on the new fillers, including final installation costs of the 5-head filler and maintenance CapEx. From a cash flow's perspective, we expect to generate slightly negative free cash flow for fiscal year '25 with our guidance announced today, including our CapEx spend and estimated restructuring and reorganization costs. And that concludes my financial review. I'll now turn the call back over to Paul for an overview of operations for the period.