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ORAMED PHARMACEUTICALS INC. (ORMP)·Q3 2022 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2022 delivered a narrower loss per share ($0.18) versus prior year ($0.21) on stable, recognition-based revenue ($0.682M), with improved quarterly net loss versus Q2 and Q1 as R&D spending moderated .
- Cash and investments totaled approximately $160.0M at quarter-end (cash $33.196M, short-term deposits $121.119M, marketable securities $5.234M), supporting Phase 3 oral insulin trial milestones and runway for multiple programs .
- Strategic and clinical updates: positive Phase 2 NASH data, initial positive Phase 1 oral COVID-19 vaccine results, and a definitive distribution license with Medicox in Korea (up to $18M milestones, up to 15% royalties) during the quarter’s window .
- Key catalyst: topline data from the first Phase 3 oral insulin trial expected in January 2023; management emphasized strong positioning and upcoming milestones as stock reaction drivers .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “Strong quarter filled with important milestones” per CEO, including positive Phase 2 NASH data and initial positive oral COVID-19 vaccine Phase 1 results; cash and investments ~$160M provide runway through pivotal Phase 3 trials .
- Quarterly R&D expense decreased 12% YoY to $5.347M, with sequential moderation versus Q2’s peak, as Oravax-related R&D spending declined in Q3 .
- Strategic footprint expanded: definitive distribution license with Medicox for Korea (up to $18M milestones, up to 15% royalties), building potential commercialization pathways .
What Went Wrong
- Continued operating losses: Q3 net loss of $7.253M and net loss attributable to stockholders of $7.060M; revenue remains limited and recognition-based (HTIT license) rather than product sales .
- Elevated non-cash expenses: stock-based compensation increased materially in G&A ($1.977M in Q3 vs $0.644M YoY) and contributed to higher OpEx mix, posing dilution optics .
- HTIT milestone dispute persists (from prior filings), indicating ongoing uncertainty around a portion of licensing consideration and future milestone timing in China .
Financial Results
Income Statement and EPS (Quarterly)
Operating Expense Breakdown (Quarterly)
Liquidity and Cash
Note: Total includes cash, short-term deposits, and marketable securities; Q3 figure corresponds to ~$160.0M detailed in the press release .
Segment Breakdown
- Not applicable; revenue is primarily recognition under the HTIT license agreement; no reportable operating segments disclosed .
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We had a strong quarter filled with important milestones, including positive Phase 2 NASH data and initial positive results from our Phase 1 oral Covid-19 vaccine trial… topline data from our first Phase 3 oral insulin trial expected in January.” – Nadav Kidron, CEO .
- “Oramed remains in a strong financial position with approximately $160 million in cash and investments… giving us sufficient runway to complete our pivotal oral insulin Phase 3 trials.” – Nadav Kidron, CEO .
Q&A Highlights
- NASH endpoints: Discussion on MRI-PDFF versus biopsy as gold standard; clinicians acknowledged FDA’s current biopsy standard while noting active debate and future potential for imaging endpoints .
- Path forward in NASH: Company indicated intent to design a trial demonstrating statistical significance; exploring third-party collaborations; updates to be provided as plans mature .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q3 2022 EPS and revenue was unavailable at time of analysis due to data access limits; accordingly, estimate comparisons cannot be provided. Values would be retrieved from S&P Global if accessible.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term catalyst: Phase 3 oral insulin topline efficacy readout in January 2023 is the primary driver of stock trajectory; strong cash reserves mitigate financing risk into catalysts .
- Clinical breadth: Positive Phase 2 NASH data and initial Phase 1 oral COVID-19 results diversify pipeline narratives beyond diabetes, potentially expanding addressable markets .
- Commercial optionality: The Korea licensing agreement with Medicox creates a defined regional path to market, with milestone/royalty economics that could validate platform value if clinical data succeed .
- OpEx discipline and mix: R&D spend moderated in Q3 versus Q2, but stock-based compensation remains elevated, especially in G&A; monitor dilution optics and cost controls into the Phase 3 readout .
- Revenue base remains recognition-driven and modest; fundamental valuation is likely to hinge on binary Phase 3 outcomes and subsequent regulatory guidance rather than near-term P&L .
- Ongoing HTIT dispute in China is a watch item for longer-term licensing economics; a resolution could unlock additional milestone flows and revenue clarity .
- Tactical positioning: Into the catalyst window, any company-led data updates (NASH program, Oravax progress) and ex-U.S. business development may serve as interim sentiment supports .