BI
BioCardia, Inc. (BCDA)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 EPS was ($0.24), a slight miss vs Wall Street consensus of ($0.23); revenue was $0 and in line with estimates, while net loss improved year-over-year and sequentially on lower SG&A and reduced R&D vs Q2 . EPS and revenue estimates from S&P Global; values marked with an asterisk are sourced from S&P Global.
- Liquidity strengthened materially: BioCardia closed a $6.0M financing (net $5.2M), lifting quarter-end cash to $5.3M and extending runway into Q2 2026; management also sold ~304K shares via ATM during the quarter .
- Clinical execution advanced: first patients were enrolled at University of Wisconsin (Oct 30) and Henry Ford Health (Nov 10) in the CardiAMP HF II Phase 3 trial; four centers are actively enrolling, with additional sites onboarding .
- Regulatory catalysts near-term: positive preliminary PMDA consultation in Japan for CardiAMP HF and an FDA meeting request on CardiAMP approvability planned for Q4 2025; Helix transendocardial delivery De Novo 510(k) submission timing shifted to Q4 2025 (from Q3) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strengthened balance sheet and runway: cash rose to $5.3M with runway into Q2 2026 following $6.0M gross financing, $5.2M net proceeds; ATM activity added further liquidity .
- Clinical progress in CardiAMP HF II: four centers actively enrolling; publicized first enrollments at University of Wisconsin and Henry Ford Health, reinforcing momentum and physician engagement .
- Japanese regulatory engagement positive: “positive preliminary clinical consultation” with PMDA; company anticipates next consultation soon that could enable submission for approval in Japan. CEO: “These next two quarters promise to be truly transformative…” .
What Went Wrong
- Minor EPS miss and limited P&L scale: Q3 EPS ($0.24) modestly missed consensus by $0.01; revenue remained $0, emphasizing reliance on external financing and grants . EPS estimate from S&P Global; values marked with an asterisk are sourced from S&P Global.
- Helix device submission timing slipped: Helix De Novo 510(k) submission pushed from Q3 2025 to Q4 2025, modestly delaying a potential enabling device approval .
- Disclosure discrepancy: press release states Q3 net cash used in operations was $1.7M vs $2.6M prior year, while CFO remarks indicated $1.5M vs $1.7M prior year—flagging inconsistency that may require clarification .
Financial Results
YoY comparison (selected items):
Consensus vs actual (Q3 2025):
Estimates marked with an asterisk are values retrieved from S&P Global.
KPIs and operating metrics:
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “This quarter’s $6 million financing is actively supporting approvability discussions of CardiAMP… and our actively enrolling in our CardiAMP HF II phase 3 confirmatory trial. These next two quarters promise to be truly transformative for our business…” — Peter Altman, CEO .
- “We anticipate requesting a meeting on the approvability of the FDA Designated Breakthrough CardiAMP System in the fourth quarter of 2025.” — Peter Altman, CEO .
- “Cash currently on hand is expected to provide runway into the second quarter of 2026 without additional financing.” — David McClung, CFO .
- “The CardiAMP HF II confirmatory phase III… four centers are actively enrolling, three have randomized their first patients, and additional centers are actively being onboarded.” — Peter Altman, CEO .
Q&A Highlights
- CardiAMP CMI roll‑in cohort: management confirmed 5 patients at six‑month primary endpoint; results “pretty compelling” vs prior disclosure; preparing for publication .
- HF II enrollment dynamics: dosing flexibility approved by FDA to include patients with fewer available cells; main constraint is internal bandwidth, not site or patient hurdles; trial designed with delay to mitigate Hawthorne effect .
- NIH non‑dilutive funding: management expressed high probability of NIH support for BCDA‑03 in Q1 2026, contingent on government operations .
- Japan PMDA: formal clinical consultation is key hurdle; PMDA fully apprised of Phase I–III data; decision will assess sufficiency of combined datasets for safety/efficacy in Japan .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 EPS missed by $0.01 vs S&P Global consensus (estimate $(0.23)* vs actual $(0.24)); revenue was in line at $0 (estimate $0.00* vs actual $0.00) . Estimates marked with an asterisk are values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Prior quarters’ consensus EPS tracked deeper losses: Q2 $(0.50)* and Q1 $(0.39)*, while actual EPS improved sequentially to $(0.24) in Q3, suggesting models may need to reflect lower SG&A and moderated R&D spending as HF II ramps and device submission prep continues . Estimates marked with an asterisk are values retrieved from S&P Global.
Estimates marked with an asterisk are values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Liquidity improved and dilution risk moderated near term: $6.0M financing ($5.2M net) and ATM activity boosted cash to $5.3M with runway into Q2 2026, supporting regulatory and trial execution .
- Near‑term catalysts: PMDA clinical consultation (Q4 2025), FDA meeting request on CardiAMP approvability (Q4 2025), and Helix De Novo 510(k) submission (Q4 2025) provide multiple regulatory event paths that could re‑rate the stock .
- Clinical narrative strengthening: high‑profile centers (UW, Henry Ford) enrolled first patients in HF II; dosing flexibility and CMS reimbursement support enrollment throughput and cost mitigation .
- Device pathway could enable therapeutics: Helix device approval would validate and de‑risk the delivery platform underpinning CardiAMP/ALLO programs, potentially facilitating subsequent therapeutic approvals .
- Watch for NIH non‑dilutive funding for CardiALLO: management’s high confidence in Q1 2026 funding could accelerate parallel development with limited dilution .
- Model considerations: maintain minimal revenue trajectory; incorporate sequential EPS improvement from lower SG&A and moderated R&D; account for timing shifts in Helix submission and manuscript publication .
- Risk checklist: regulatory acceptance in Japan/U.S., enrollment pace for 250‑patient HF II trial, funding cadence, and any reconciliation of cash flow disclosure discrepancies between press release and call .