Electromed - Earnings Call - Q4 2025
August 26, 2025
Executive Summary
- Record quarter: Q4 FY2025 net revenue $17.39M (+17.3% YoY), operating income $3.04M (+30.2% YoY), diluted EPS $0.25 (+25% YoY); 11th consecutive quarter of YoY revenue and operating income growth.
- Beat vs S&P Global consensus*: Revenue $17.39M vs $16.51M (+$0.89M; +5.4%); EPS $0.25 vs $0.215 (+$0.035) — driven by higher referrals/approvals, larger direct sales force, and higher net revenue per approval.
- Gross margin expanded to 78.3% (+210 bps YoY) on higher net revenue per device; operating margin improved to 17.5% from 15.7% YoY.
- Execution catalysts: continued sales force expansion (55 direct reps at year-end), CRM rollout in FY26, manufacturing optimization to increase capacity, Russell 2000/3000 addition in June; new $10M repurchase authorization on Sept 9 (prior authorization exhausted).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Double-digit top-line growth with margin expansion: revenue +17.3% YoY; gross margin 78.3% (+210 bps YoY); operating income +30.2% YoY to $3.04M.
- Direct homecare strength: revenue +14.8% to $15.4M on incremental referrals/approvals, larger direct sales team, and higher net revenue per approval.
- Strategic execution and positioning: CEO highlighted “banner year” with record revenue and profitability, progress on manufacturing optimization (capacity) and CRM deployment, and ongoing expansion of direct sales coverage and bronchiectasis awareness initiatives.
What Went Wrong
- OpEx growth matched scale-up: SG&A +17.0% YoY in Q4 to $10.28M as staffing and incentive comp grew to support higher referral volumes (kept operating leverage but limited further margin expansion).
- Mix data granularity: Q4 disclosure gave direct homecare detail but less visibility on quarterly hospital/distributor/other; company notes quarterly timing can drive non-homecare fluctuations (context from prior quarters).
- Guidance visibility: No formal quantitative guidance provided; investors must anchor on long-term objectives (double-digit revenue growth, operating leverage) and execution milestones rather than explicit ranges.
Transcript
Speaker 4
Today, and welcome to the Electromed Fourth Quarter Fiscal Year 2025 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mike Cavanaugh, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Speaker 2
Good afternoon and thank you for joining the Electromed earnings call. Earlier today, Electromed, Inc. released financial results for the fourth quarter and fiscal 2025. The press release is currently available on the company's website at smartvest.com. Before we get started, I would like to remind everyone that some of the statements that management will make on this call are considered forward-looking statements, including statements about the company's future operating and financial results and plans. Such statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual performance or achievements to be materially different from those projected. Any such statements represent management's expectations as of today's date. You should not place any undue reliance on those forward-looking statements, and the company does not undertake any obligation to update or revise forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.
Please refer to the company's SEC filings for further guidance on this matter. Joining me on the call today are Jim Cunniff, Electromed's President and Chief Executive Officer, and Brad Nagel, Chief Financial Officer. As on previous calls, Jim will provide operational highlights from the quarter. Brad will then review the financials, and we will close with a question and answer session. With that, I will now turn the call over to Jim Cunniff, President and Chief Executive Officer of Electromed. Thank you, Mike, and thank you to everyone who's joining our call today to review our results for the fourth quarter and fiscal year 2025. As I complete my second year as Electromed's President and Chief Executive Officer, I'm thrilled to share that the company had another exceptional quarter and year.
As I look at our results, I'm reminded of a quote that captures our progress: "Success is not a destination; it's a continuous journey of excellence." That is exactly what we delivered: our 11th consecutive quarter of year-over-year revenue and profit growth, proving that our focused strategy and unwavering commitment to helping patients breathe easier continue to drive remarkable results. As usual, Brad will provide a thorough review of our financials, but I'd like to start with some of the numbers that tell our story. We achieved record quarterly revenue of $17.4 million, representing a robust 17% year-over-year growth, which brought our net revenues for the year to $64 million, also a record. This performance was driven by growth across all key markets in the quarter.
Our core home care segment grew 15%, hospital surged 60%, and our distributor channel delivered 76% growth, fueled by strong demand from our carefully selected DME partners. While home care remains the core of our business, we believe the hospital and DME segments can add meaningful incremental revenues and contribute to overall profitability. Our profitability metrics are equally impressive. Operating income reached $3 million in Q4, marking a 30% increase year-over-year, with improved operating leverage of 174 basis points over Q4 last year. Net income of $2.2 million was 21% higher than the same quarter last year, translating to a diluted earnings per share of $0.25, a 24% increase versus the prior year. Once again, during the fiscal year, our strong cash position enabled us to return excess capital to our shareholders.
I'm pleased to report that in Q4, we successfully completed our second $5 million stock repurchase program of fiscal year 2025, demonstrating our confidence in the company's future and our commitment to enhancing shareholder value. We also achieved a significant milestone with the addition of our common stock into the Russell 2000 and 3000 indexes, which we believe should provide our stock with improved trading liquidity through broader institutional exposure. Closer to home, we were honored to be recognized by the Minneapolis St. Paul Business Journal as the seventh fastest growing public company in Minnesota, a notable achievement in a state known for its impressive roster of public companies, including many that are well-known medical technology leaders. Our growth initiatives are delivering exceptional results.
A key component is the careful expansion of our direct sales team, and we ended the year with 55 representatives, up from 53 in the prior year, ensuring we can capitalize on the growing market opportunities ahead of us. Besides adding headcount, we also realized incremental revenue growth through productivity gains from our reps. During the year, productivity exceeded $1 million per rep, which was at the high end of our target range at the beginning of the year. Just three years ago, productivity was in the $850,000 range, which shows a meaningful improvement. Also, to support our rapid growth during the year, we bolstered our team with new leadership roles in marketing, payer access, and information technology. As we have mentioned many times in the past, one of the opportunities for Electromed is penetrating the large, unrecognized market for bronchiectasis treatment.
It is estimated that today in the U.S., there are approximately 923,000 patients diagnosed with bronchiectasis, and of those, only 148,000 are using HFCWO therapy, which suggests a patient opportunity of nearly 800,000 patients with bronchiectasis who could benefit from our SmartVest. Even more eye-opening, it is estimated that over 4 million more people have bronchiectasis but are undiagnosed. To address this knowledge gap, our Triple Down on Bronchiectasis campaign is designed to bring awareness of both the disease and the important role HFCWO therapy can play in improving the quality of life for patients with bronchiectasis. The campaign has already generated over 31,000 views to our dedicated landing page and is succeeding in not only raising awareness about bronchiectasis but also highlighting how our SmartVest therapy plays a crucial role in successful long-term disease management.
This is done through a three-pronged treatment approach of airway clearance, infection treatment, and inflammation reduction. We're also targeting industry events for medical professionals who diagnose and treat bronchiectasis through the generation of clinical evidence supporting the use of SmartVest as a key component of effective treatment. An example is our recent presentation at the World Bronchiectasis Conference in Australia, which showcased compelling data from the Bronchiectasis Research Registry, demonstrating the clinical value of HFCWO therapy and suggesting opportunities for earlier intervention in the disease process. Specifically, the study analyzed a cohort of 5,673 bronchiectasis patients, and while only 9% of patients had been prescribed HFCWO at baseline, 58% of non-HFCWO users at baseline met CMS guideline criteria for HFCWO therapy. This analysis suggests the need for education on HFCWO prescribing indications and guidelines earlier in the disease process.
We're actively working on the manuscript now, with anticipated completion in Q1 of fiscal year 2026. We also continue to raise the bar on our operational performance. As a U.S.-based company with 99% of our revenues generated domestically and all manufacturing operations located in the United States, we feel we are well insulated from tariff-related turbulence and are therefore well positioned to maintain our strong track record of on-time delivery and preserve our healthy mid-70s gross margins. However, tariffs are a fluid situation, which we're continuing to monitor with our primarily domestic suppliers who may have exposure within their upstream supply chains. In Q4, we maintained zero back orders with a first pass yield of 99%, while inventory levels remain lean.
We initiated our manufacturing optimization plan to add new capacity with completion expected in early fiscal year 2026 and just implemented a new CRM system in July, which we expect will enhance sales productivity while providing incremental market insights. Another important effort is supporting our prescribing clinics by moving them from the dark ages of inefficient order submission to our fulfillment team via fax and into the new age of submitting orders via our Smart Order ePrescribe solution. This significant efficiency enhancement for our clinic seamlessly provides Electromed with complete prescription documentation, enabling us to ship SmartVest to our patients sooner so they can breathe easier. In Q4, 38% of the orders we received were via our Smart Order ePrescribe solution. As we look ahead, I'm optimistic about our prospects to deliver meaningful results.
As the only pure-play HFCWO therapy provider with a convenient direct-to-patient model, we're taking market share and expanding our reach through sales team growth, improved productivity, investments in clinical education, and innovation. Our focus remains on helping patients with bronchiectasis breathe easier while delivering exceptional value to our shareholders. That concludes my prepared remarks, and I'd now like to turn the call over to Brad Nagel for a review of our financials. Brad, over to you.
Speaker 0
Thanks, Jim. All amounts I'm about to review are for the 12 months ended June 30, 2025, fiscal year 2025, and compared to the 12 months ended June 30, 2024, fiscal year 2024, unless otherwise noted. Net revenues for Q4 grew 17.3% to $17.4 million, bringing net revenues for our full fiscal year 2025 to a record $64.0 million, or 17.0% growth from $54.7 million last year. Revenue in our direct home care market increased year over year by 15.7% to $57.3 million, from $49.5 million in the prior year. The increase in revenue was due to an increase in direct sales representatives and higher net revenues per approval. The annualized home care revenue per weighted average direct sales representative in fiscal year 2025 was $1,058,000, exceeding Electromed's target range of $900,000 to $1,000,000 per rep.
With our strong performance in fiscal year 2025 and continued efficiency expected in fiscal year 2026, we are increasing our expectations for fiscal year 2026 home care revenue per rep to a range of $1,000,000 to $1.1 million. Jim mentioned that we closed out fiscal year 2025 with 55 home care field sales reps. In fiscal year 2026, we expect the number of sales reps to continue to rise as we hire to expand into as many as 61 home care sales territories across the U.S. Revenue in our non-home care business grew 28.8% to $6.7 million in fiscal year 2025. The increase was primarily due to increased distributor and hospital revenue, which grew 58.1% and 23.9%, respectively. Gross profit increased to $50.0 million, or 78.1% of net revenues, from $41.7 million, or 76.3% of net revenues in fiscal year 2024.
The increase in gross profit and gross margin was primarily due to increased revenue and higher net revenue per device. Selling, general, and administrative, or SG&A, expenses were $39.3 million, representing an increase of $4.8 million, or 14.0% from $34.5 million. The increase in the current year was primarily due to the accelerated recognition of share-based compensation associated with the vesting of performance-based equity awards and salaries and incentive compensation related to the higher average number of sales, sales support, marketing, and reimbursement personnel to process higher patient referrals. Operating income this year was $9.7 million, or 15.1% of net revenues, compared to $6.6 million, or 12.0% of net revenues last year. The growth of 46.8% in operating income was primarily due to an increase in net revenues and gross profit.
When putting these full-year results together, we're excited to have delivered a record year with pre-tax income of $10.3 million, net income of $7.5 million, and full-year EPS for our shareholders of $0.85 per diluted share. As of June 30, 2025, Electromed had $15.3 million in cash, $24.7 million in accounts receivable, and no debt, achieving a working capital of $34.6 million and total shareholders' equity of $43.2 million. The cash balance reflects a decrease of $0.8 million for the year ended June 30, 2025, compared to an increase in cash of $8.7 million in the same period in the prior year.
The decrease in cash in fiscal year 2025 was driven by share repurchases of $10.0 million and $2.3 million of taxes paid from net share settlement of vested stock, offset by $11.4 million of cash generated from operating activities, which represents an increase of $2.3 million over the prior year. I'll close by saying Jim and I are excited by the passion the Electromed team has for bringing our innovative SmartVest technology to an underserved patient population. It is fun to see how this passion for the patients and physicians we serve has translated into strong financial performance throughout fiscal year 2025 for Electromed and our shareholders.
As we look forward into fiscal year 2026 and beyond, we continue to see the opportunity to leverage the investments we've made to drive both our mission and our financial commitments forward, delivering double-digit top-line growth, expanded operating leverage, and strong operating cash flows in the new year. With that, we'd like to move to the Q&A portion of the call. Operator, please open the call to questions.
Speaker 4
Thank you. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star, then two. The first question comes from Kyle Royal Bauser with ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.
Speaker 3
Hello, great Jim and Brad. Thanks for taking the questions and really nice results wrapping up the fiscal year here. Maybe just on the really strong margins in the quarter, I think, Brad, you mentioned some of the gross margin strength was attributed to just higher net revenue per device. Can you provide a little bit more color there? Is that just a change in the mix from different payers or different, you know, points of care? Just kind of curious a little bit more on Kyle.
Speaker 0
Hey, Kyle, thanks for the question. You are right on. We had really strong growth in our home care revenue, which is a really strong margin channel for us. The mix within that channel was really favorable. We have different sort of payer targets across commercial versus Medicare, and it worked in our favor this quarter and really for the full year, putting up over 78% gross margins for the year.
Speaker 3
Okay, got it. Maybe just related, obviously really strong hospital and DME revenue. I know it's a small portion of overall sales, but Jim, you'd mentioned that's kind of a growth area. Can you call out anything there? Was there anything in particular that, you know, caused the hospital channel in particular to be so strong?
Speaker 2
It's a great question and good to hear from you, Kyle. Basically, when we take a look at other revenue sources for us, our primary focus continues to be in the home care market. That's where our strength is. That's where we're continuing to invest. I think we've talked about this in the past. One of the other areas that we think is a gateway to the home is in the hospital. In the past fiscal year, one of the investments that we've made is to bolster our hospital-focused sales reps. Today we've got three people that are really focused on that market. We feel like it's kind of untapped, predominantly because one of our competitors is distracted, who's had a strong presence in that market. Fundamentally, the market dynamics in purchasing are different there. Whereas in the home, you basically get a prescription from a provider.
We're able to convert that to revenue pretty quickly. In the hospital market, the sales cycle is a lot longer because it's a capital equipment sale. We do believe that it's just a terrific opportunity. If a patient uses our technology in a hospital and has bronchiectasis and needs to continue that therapy at the home, we feel like the hospital is a gateway for them to get used to our technology, get comfortable with it. When they get discharged, hopefully we get the prescription for them to then use it at home if they don't already have a device.
Speaker 3
Right, got it. That makes sense. I appreciate that. Just a couple quick ones. Obviously, a couple new entrants in the market most recently around the bronchiectasis drug and previously a new device entrant. Are you seeing increased awareness around bronchiectasis? Just trying to understand the puts and takes here and if those could actually be a tailwind, looking forward. I know it's a little bit early.
Speaker 2
Yeah, we think so as well on the tailwind. For everybody that's on the call, basically what Kyle's referring to is Insmed just introduced the first drug that has specifically been approved by the FDA for bronchiectasis. The drug does not clear the airways. One of the things that they have done, which has been fantastic, is they've brought awareness to this under-served, under-diagnosed disease state. We appreciate that. We feel like the drug is part of the care modality. You know, if you've got bronchiectasis, typically you've got mucus that's built up in your airways. You need to clear the airways first. Part of the protocol also is those patients typically have an infection, and so they're being treated with antibiotics. That's been kind of the norm. With the new drug that's hit the market, that's really targeted on inflammation. This is a chronic, irreversible condition.
What we're seeing and what we're expecting with that drug that just came out is that it's really going to help those patients not get further exacerbations or flares that they have today. There's some other devices that have been approved by the FDA, but in one instance specifically, the product is, I think they're slow rolling the introduction of that product here in the U.S. That's mainly due to the fact that they don't have reimbursement. They've got the device FDA approved, but they don't have reimbursement, which is a key hurdle. It's difficult for a patient to get prescribed our technology or any other airway clearance type technology in this market if there isn't reimbursement. That's mainly because the device's value is so high, and the patient would then have a very high out-of-pocket expense.
Speaker 3
Got it. I really appreciate that color there. Lastly, the manufacturing optimization plan that's expected to be completed in this next fiscal year, can you just remind me how this expands upon current capacity and maybe even how margins might be impacted by that? Thank you.
Speaker 2
Yeah, no, it's a great question. Thanks, Kyle. We're really excited about it. We actually believe that the team in operations has done a fantastic job on our facility expansion and really reimagining our assembly process here in New Prague. We don't believe it's going to really be a margin play because one of the offsetting factors is wage increases and any potential impact from tariffs. Although, as I mentioned in my comments, we feel like we're pretty well insulated from any tariff impact on the components that we buy. The play there is to expand our opportunity to grow. Through the changes that we've made, we're really reducing a lot of the movement we've had in our manufacturing operations. We feel like that's going to enable us to grow within our existing footprint really for the next three years comfortably.
Speaker 3
Sounds great. Great finish to the year. I'll jump back in queue. Thanks for taking my question.
Speaker 2
Hey, thanks.
Speaker 4
The next question comes from Anderson Schock with B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.
Speaker 5
Thank you for taking the questions and congrats on a really strong quarter and year. First, on the hospital revenue growth, is this just early results from the expansion of your hospital focus team? Should we expect to see continued sequential growth in the coming quarters here?
Speaker 2
Yeah, we do have a focus there. I do anticipate that, much like our overall revenue growth, because this can be somewhat lumpy, Anderson, on the hospital side because it is a capital equipment sale. We do expect that we're going to have broader than double-digit growth in our hospital market, albeit on a much lower base than our home care space. We feel like there's plenty of runway for that. Hospitals are replacing existing equipment that they have right now. We do believe that one of the key players that had a really strong presence in that market is internally distracted and has an older product. I think that that's really opening us up to opportunities that heretofore we might not have had.
Speaker 5
Okay, got it. Do you plan any further expansion in this team in fiscal 2026?
Speaker 2
We want to be conscious of adding reps in the space too quickly. We want to make sure that we've got an algorithm for success to perpetuate what we've already done in really the last two years in the hospital market. Provided that's the case and we have the demand, absolutely. We think that that is, as I mentioned on the previous questions from Kyle, we feel like that's really a nice, not only revenue opportunity for us and exposure to our technology to a broader range of patients, but also we feel like that's a gateway to get the patients that are entering the hospital when they get discharged to then use our product in the home. Good question.
Speaker 5
Okay, got it. On your new Salesforce CRM system you implemented in July, how have you structured the implementation to avoid a learning curve that could negatively impact the salesforce productivity?
Speaker 2
We are really excited about the CRM system that we just introduced. It was introduced on time. It was introduced on budget. I think part of the secret sauce there was the fact that it wasn't done within a vacuum with just a few people on the team. It was really a cross-functional effort with both our sales team as well as our reimbursement team, because this is the first time, Anderson, that we're really going to be able to tie together the systems that our reimbursement team uses with our sales team so that they can both see the same data at the same time. We just had our sales meeting, just as an example, in August. The feedback, when I started, the feedback with our previous CRM system was so negative.
As we were doing additional training at our sales meeting with the team at this most recent annual sales meeting with the same folks, it was a joy to see what kind of information they now have access to. It's a very, we're on Salesforce CRM. It's a very intuitive system. I think that, you know, day by day, as people become more and more comfortable with the system, it's going to become more and more a stronger asset to how we can leverage what they do on a daily basis. Thus far it's been fantastic.
Speaker 5
Okay, got it. Thank you for taking our questions, and congrats again on the great finish to the year.
Speaker 2
Appreciate it. Thank you.
Speaker 4
The next question comes from Ben Hayner with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Speaker 1
Good afternoon, gentlemen. Thanks for taking the questions. First, kind of following up on the question earlier about the Insmed drug, obviously raising awareness when you have a large undiagnosed population and certainly an under-treated patient population is great. I was just wondering if there are any kind of historical examples you might be able to point to where that really led to the acceleration of a market, and all of a sudden folks that hadn't known about the condition or hadn't been diagnosed really, really took off, obviously exempting Viagra or something like that.
Speaker 2
Yeah, I don't really have a proxy I can give you for that. What we have seen is that—can you hear me okay? I think we're getting some static on the line. I think what we're seeing though is, to their credit, when you show up at a trade show, if you look at some of the different foundations that are involved in this space and some of the providers that are in this space, when I started, albeit this was just a couple of years ago, when you'd go to one of these conferences, the big topics people were talking about were COPD, asthma, and obviously COVID. That has since pivoted. Part of it is the work that we've done on market development. Part of it is what Insmed has done. Because they couldn't sell anything, they're just basically seeding the market.
I think a consequence of that is this is now in the forefront of what people are thinking about when they see a patient. In the past, a patient enters a pulmonologist's office and everybody they look at, they believe might have COPD or asthma, and they're now looking at other disease states. I think that's going to be a great catalyst really for this market.
Speaker 1
That's very helpful, Kalle. I appreciate that. Secondly, for me, on kind of the e-prescribe availability, what have you seen anecdotally, if anything? Does that change folks' habits when prescribing? Do you see a boost automatically? Is it a certain cohort of folks that change their habits? What kind of changes is having that available?
Speaker 2
It's going to be a big focus. It was a focus for our team this past fiscal year. It's going to continue to be a focus this year. It's like any type of change that anybody goes through, there's resistance initially until you show them how much easier it is for them to process the prescriptions that they have to pull all the documentation together for and send to us. That also translates into a benefit in getting the technology to the patient sooner because we have most of the documentation in a really clean format that we can then peruse to make sure that it's going to meet reimbursement coverage. The first point of entry is you've got to get people to try it.
Once they try it and they see how it's going to benefit them personally in the clinic and how they're doing their work, I think they then start to adapt it. The key thing for us too is we don't want it to be a one-and-done. We want to make sure that we're cultivating that behavior so that this is something that we sustain. It's just been a great benefit, I think, to the clinics that have really adopted it. For us internally, it's been a really good boon as well because now today we can get our average days to ship go down almost in half and the same thing for the time to approve a prescription.
Speaker 1
Great. Lastly for me, just looking for an update, and I apologize if I missed this in the prepared remarks, what's kind of been the response that you've seen from some of the VA-specific marketing efforts that you've done here over recent periods?
Speaker 2
Yeah, buried within our hospital numbers, and I don't have those in front of me. I think when you take a look at our hospital revenue, I believe last year over $1 million of our hospital revenue was generated out of VAs that we called on. What's nice about the VA is when we get a, quote unquote, prescription from them, it acts like capital equipment. This has been a big benefit to us. We're going to continue to push on that because there's a lot of folks that are within that market segment that can utilize our technology.
Speaker 1
Great. Thank you for the call, gentlemen, and congrats on all the progress.
Speaker 2
Hey, thank you.
Speaker 4
That's all the time we have for questions today. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Jim Cunniff for any closing remarks. Please go ahead.
Speaker 2
Thank you for your continued confidence in Electromed and for being on the call today. I would say we're just getting started, and I couldn't be more excited about what lies ahead for us in fiscal year 2026. Thanks, everyone.
Speaker 4
The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.