Matthew W. Foehr
Thanks, Kurt. Good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for joining us today on our Q2 call. I'll start now with Slide #4. As I mentioned on our last call, we started the year with strong deal flow, and this continued in the second quarter with a number of new partners added in the first half of the year, setting a pace for one of our strongest years yet. We continue to see a robust pace and quality of deals. And we think this is a testament to our differentiated technology platform, which continues to evolve and expand and to our team's relentless pursuit of innovation that leverages our unique vantage point in the industry. Our partners are actively advancing programs into human trials with the start of a new clinical stage program during the second quarter and several others that are progressing through development. And on the third highlight here on Slide 4, the recent launch of our xPloration Partner Access Program has been very well received with a strong response from existing partners and others. Within weeks of launch, we sold and installed an xPloration system, and we are managing a robust pipeline of leads and business activity for this new technology that's expected to be accretive to the business and to further diversify our sources of revenue. Our platform is attracting new partners and facilitating the addition of new programs. We continue to drive efficiencies in our business through leveraging our technologies, including xPloration and through the streamlining of our business practices, all with the goal of creating long-term and sustainable value for our stakeholders. We've been realigning our staffing needs and recently reduced some costs in our headcount. This is in addition to the staffing realignment we disclosed back in February related specifically to the small-molecule ion channel element of our business. We began 2025 with 114 employees, and our go-forward headcount is at 87 employees. And Kurt will provide some financial details in his remarks. So in summary here, our outlook for 2025 remains very much on track, and we feel we're extremely well positioned to deliver on our strategic goals to expand the reach of our technologies and to execute on our current xPloration launch and the upcoming new technology launches that we're also very excited about. Additionally, we're constantly seeking further workflow efficiencies and technology innovations in what we see as a highly scalable business. So now I'll review some of our business metrics, starting here on Slide #5. We ended Q2 with 100 active partners. During the second quarter, we signed an asset deal with Angelini Pharma for a small-molecule ion channel modulator that targets Kv7.2, which we discussed on our last call. In addition, we executed multiple license agreements, including new deals with Veraxa Biotech, Duke- NUS, University of Strathclyde, University of Maryland, AB-Ray Bio and an undisclosed global CRO. As you see on the slide, we're also providing some updated detail on the distribution of our active partners by type, including discovery, commercial and academic as well as the distribution of our partners on a geographic basis. Although our partners are mostly based here in the U.S., there's been a steady diversification of our partner base as we've been successfully increasing the reach of our platform. Turning to Slide 6. You can see the number of active programs increased to 381 as of quarter end. We've continued to experience positive momentum with a year-to-date net increase of 18 programs. And we're continuing to see the strength in program additions that started late last year. Attrition is obviously a natural and expected element in drug discovery and development generally. And we do continue to see and expect to see attrition, which can be driven by a variety of factors, including partner therapy area focusing and budget decisions and timing of receipt of reports or updates from our partners. That said, the net addition of 18 programs year-to-date shows some significant strength and has more than doubled the number of net additions through the first half of 2024. Slide #7 breaks down our 381 active programs by their license type and summarizes elements of overall contracted downstream economics. Importantly, about 99% of our active programs have potential future economics contractually owed to OmniAb. The 1% that don't are generally linked to legacy agreements with prepaid licenses that were signed years ago by companies that we acquired. 90% of the programs are linked to what we generally refer to as Antibody Standard Licenses and 7% are through what we call Revenue Share License Agreements, where we get a defined portion of whatever form of value our discovery partners get, be that equity, cash or other forms of value. These revenue share deals are mostly with academic institutions that incubate OmniAb-derived assets prior to planned corporate formation events. Our antibody programs have over $3 billion in total remaining contracted potential milestone payments and an average royalty rate of 3.36%. This 3.36% average is an increase from an average royalty rate of 3.2% that we reported in November of 2023. I think the ability to command strong royalties reflects the value of our technologies and their relevance to the industry. It also speaks to the value our team is creating for our partners and for our stakeholders. Here now on Slide 8, we're putting a bit of a spotlight on the continued growth of the post-discovery stage programs in our portfolio as well as the advancement of these programs into and through development. During the quarter, a number of new programs progressed to the preclinical stage of development and another one is recruiting for a Phase III clinical trial, which is Immunovant IMVT-1402 for myasthenia gravis. We're really encouraged by the expanding number of post-discovery stage programs, which have experienced 22% growth from the prior year period. The preclinical programs also have nice diversity of indications and include inflammation, fibrosis, renal, dermatology, CNS diseases and others in addition to the historical strong showing in oncology. Importantly, these 61 programs that are post discovery stage are associated with approximately $1.3 billion in contracted remaining potential milestones to OmniAb. The total potential milestones associated with the later-stage programs has continued to increase, and that increase has been fairly dramatic in the last 8 to 12 months. And you can see here the contribution of $700 million from small-molecule ion channel programs that have now moved into preclinical. We think the growth here demonstrates potential value-creating events in the pipeline, the progress in the pipeline overall as well as our partners' conviction around assets that have been discovered with our technologies. Moving now to Slide 9. The number of active clinical programs and approved products was 32 at the end of Q2. A new OmniChicken- derived program entered the clinic in the quarter from Seismic Therapeutics. This marks the third OmniChicken-derived antibody to enter human clinical trials following programs with Boehringer Ingelheim and Teva. Through Q2, we've had 2 novel programs initiate first-in-human clinical trials in 2025. We've seen attrition or stage of development modification in Phase I assets with a CN1 program returned from Curon to WuXi, that WuXi now characterizes as preclinical. And a Genmab program that entered an initial Phase I trial in Q1 and then exited that trial in Q2. As I've said, and as we often say, attrition is a natural part of drug development. Based on dialogue with our partners, we continue to see potential for a total of approximately 5 to 7 new entries into clinical development for novel OmniAb-derived programs this year. Slide #10 illustrates our clinical and commercial stage partner pipeline for active programs that carry remaining downstream economics. As you see, this pipeline flows from Phase I through to later stages and product approvals from left to right. Placement in this graphic is based on a program's most advanced status in any geography or indication. In the last couple of quarters, it's been great to see the growing number of programs moving to the right on this graphic, the latest of which now includes the recent addition of Immunovant IMVT-1402 shown in Phase III, as I mentioned. Turning to Slide 11. We've highlighted select recent partner updates, including presentations at ASCO from J&J and Merck KGaA. The disclosed J&J data for their trispecific 5322 program is especially notable to us with the 100% response rate that was observed in heavily pretreated multiple myeloma patients. The initial data were described as suggesting a potential paradigm shift for the treatment of these patients. So there's a real opportunity with this program to significantly elevate the standard of care for multiple myeloma. J&J indicated publicly that they look forward to seeing the results from planned Phase II and Phase III studies for the 5322 program. And on their most recent earnings call, they highlighted these data again while saying they are now closer than ever to their ambition of curing multiple myeloma. Other highlights shown here include Teva receiving Fast Track designation for TEV-408 for the treatment of celiac disease. And I want to note that this program is also in clinical development for vitiligo. Teva additionally announced a partnership with Fosun for TEV-278, which is a partnership established with the goal of accelerating clinical development of the compound that's in clinical trials now for the treatment of various forms of cancer, including melanoma. Now to conclude my section here on Slide #12, we've highlighted our recently launched xPloration Partner Access program. xPloration is a high-throughput single B-cell screening instrument that leverages machine learning and AI. It offers 10x more single cell screening throughput versus other instruments, which allows users to screen in a far more efficient fashion. We believe this system has unmatched screening throughput and superior hit recovery, along with exceptional ease of use and reliability. We highlighted xPloration in a presentation at the Boston PEGS Conference in May, where the system was awarded Best of Show honors. Just weeks after launching, we sold and installed xPloration at a global partner, creating a new revenue stream derived from the sale of the instrument as well as recurring revenue from proprietary single-use consumables and subscription services for software with maintenance. It's still early in the launch, but the response from the market has been extremely positive. And we're building a pipeline of sales leads from our growing roster of partners based on new availability of the platform, and we're also getting inquiries from others who are interested in becoming OmniAb discovery partners specifically to get access to xPloration. With xPloration, we're able to further empower partners with the latest technologies to improve their probability of success in a really efficient and scalable manner. That's part of why we see xPloration as a nice complement to our current core business as it supports our mission of enabling the rapid development of innovative therapeutics. The feedback we are getting indicates to us that this is the right time for xPloration as the industry embraces the value of lab automation and instrumentation for Big Data generation to also leverage AI- and ML-aided screening and selection. We're very excited about the prospects of this new offering as it continues to demonstrate our commitment to innovation and to customer service while diversifying our revenue streams. And with that, let me now turn the call back over to Kurt for a discussion of our Q2 financial results. Kurt?