HI
HARROW, INC. (HROW)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue was $47.8M, up 38% YoY but down sequentially versus Q4’s seasonally strong $66.8M; GAAP EPS was -$0.50, and Adjusted EBITDA was -$2.0M .
- VEVYE revenue accelerated to $21.5M, +35% QoQ from $16.0M, driven by the late‑March launch of the VEVYE Access for All program (VAFA); management highlighted quadrupling of new prescriptions and prescribers seven weeks post‑launch .
- TRIESENCE received CMS transitional pass‑through status effective April 1, unlocking separate reimbursement in ASC/HOPD and materially expanding market access; management expects adoption to accelerate through 2025 .
- Harrow reaffirmed 2025 revenue guidance of “more than $280M,” citing momentum in VEVYE, normalization in IHEEZO buying patterns, and improved TRIESENCE reimbursement; debt refinancing targeted by late summer/early fall 2025 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- VEVYE momentum and VAFA impact: “Both new prescriptions and weekly VEVYE prescribers at PhilRx have quadrupled” seven weeks post‑launch; refill rates remain strong, with the average covered patient receiving nine refills .
- Record operating cash flow: Cash flow from operations reached $19.7M in Q1 2025, aided by AR collections from Q4 distributor term extensions .
- TRIESENCE market access: CMS approved pass‑through (J3300) with ASP+6% reimbursement in ASC/HOPD; management sees accelerated account openings and adoption across retina/cataract use cases beginning in Q2 .
What Went Wrong
- Seasonal softness and destocking: Sequential decline from Q4’s record results; IHEEZO shipments were impacted by year‑end stocking, with management noting normalization and April units more than doubled vs Q1 monthly average .
- Specialty Branded volatility: Gross‑to‑net volatility reduced recognizable revenue in Q1; management intends to revisit strategy and expects improvement from the depressed Q1 baseline .
- Higher OpEx: SG&A rose to $40.5M vs $28.8M in Q1 2024, including ~$3.7M of seasonal audit/special project costs and investments in sales/marketing headcount .
Financial Results
Consolidated Performance vs prior periods (oldest → newest)
Segment and Product Revenue
Notes:
- IHEEZO Q1 shipments were impacted by Q4 stocking; April unit sales more than doubled vs Q1 monthly average, indicating normalization and strengthening demand .
- Branded “Other” declined YoY on gross‑to‑net dynamics, while VEVYE/IHEEZO both surpassed 10% threshold and were disclosed individually .
KPIs and Costs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are very well positioned to achieve—and hopefully exceed—our 2025 directional revenue guidance of more than $280 million.”
- “Both new prescriptions and weekly VEVYE prescribers at PhilRx have quadrupled… These are still early days, but the VAFA program’s early momentum is surpassing our expectations.”
- “In April, [IHEEZO] unit sales more than doubled compared to the monthly average in the first quarter… indicating strengthening demand as downstream inventory levels rebalance.”
- “TRIESENCE… pass‑through status… effectively unlocking about 40% of the overall market; the number of accounts ordering TRIESENCE has more than doubled since the beginning of the year.”
- “We expect to finalize [debt refinancing] by late summer or early fall… delivering a lower cost of capital and increased financial flexibility.”
Q&A Highlights
- Pricing: “We did not do much for price increases… IHEEZO list price stayed the same.”
- Project “Beagle/Eagle”: Transition of Klarity‑C patients to VEVYE—“even at $59 cash pay, profit would be more than 2x Klarity‑C,” with broader pipeline of compounding‑to‑branded opportunities; no plan to exit compounding .
- IHEEZO normalization: Destocking from Q4 impacted Q1; April shipments more than doubled vs Q1 monthly average; focus on managing ASP compliantly .
- TRIESENCE adoption: Early ASC/HOPD use with reimbursement outside bundled fee; “dabblers” becoming dense users over 2025 .
- VEVYE ASP: Expected to moderate from Q1 levels and stabilize “at a very attractive level”; NRx growth and refills are the key drivers .
- Tariffs: Internal analysis estimates ~50 bps gross margin impact; muted going forward as mix shifts to branded and inputs diversify .
- Debt refi: Active lender discussions; targeted completion late summer/early fall 2025 .
Estimates Context
- Result vs estimates: Revenue missed by ~$9.2M; EPS missed meaningfully on a GAAP basis; management points to seasonality, Q4 stocking, and VAFA’s late‑quarter start (with strong early Q2 momentum) to explain the setup .
- Disclaimer: Values with asterisk (*) retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- VEVYE is the principal upside driver in 2025; VAFA appears to deliver both access and economics, with accelerating scripts and durable refill behavior—watch Q3/Q4 for compounding revenue effects .
- IHEEZO’s Q1 headwinds were transitory; April rebound and robust pipeline suggest unit growth resumption—monitor ASP and reorder rates .
- TRIESENCE’s pass‑through is a structural positive, unlocking ASC/HOPD demand; expect sequential growth through H2 as accounts scale .
- Operating leverage should improve as revenue ramps; SG&A includes one‑time items; cash generation was strong in Q1 .
- Debt refinancing is a near‑term catalyst; lower cost of capital and flexibility could support acquisitions and growth initiatives .
- Risk flags: Removal of IQVIA reporting may reduce third‑party visibility on VEVYE scripts; gross‑to‑net volatility in Specialty Branded; leverage sensitivity until refi completes .
- Near‑term trade: Positive skew from VAFA adoption data points and TRIESENCE reimbursement ramp; medium‑term thesis anchored on VEVYE’s trajectory to 9‑figure annual revenue and retina penetration for IHEEZO .