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Sonoma Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (SNOA)·Q4 2018 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q4 FY2018 total revenue was $3.655M, down 9% year over year and sequentially lower versus Q3 FY2018’s $4.843M; gross margin compressed to 36% (vs. 49% in Q3) as higher rebates and wholesaler inventory drawdowns weighed on U.S. dermatology net revenue .
  • U.S. product revenue fell 26% YoY to $1.362M in Q4; Latin America grew 9% to $0.912M, while Europe/ROW declined 12% to $0.995M, reflecting mix shifts and Latin America’s low-margin Invekra supply .
  • Management cited deductible resets, increased rebates, and wholesalers reducing inventory as primary reasons for the Q4 miss, and is shifting distribution toward mail‑order to reduce substitutions and narrow gross‑to‑net leakage; cash was $10.1M at quarter-end .
  • No formal numerical guidance was issued; management expects cash operating expenses to remain fairly flat, moderate price increases, and EBITDA loss to improve as mail‑order penetration rises; Brazil partnership (NC Group/U.SK) adds a potential international growth lever .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • FY2018 revenue rose 30% to $16.658M, with product revenue up 31% to $15.663M; strong growth in the U.S. and international markets underscored the broader portfolio traction .
  • Prescriptions filled grew 25% YoY in the March quarter (17,195 vs. 13,794), demonstrating underlying demand resilience even as wholesalers reduced inventory; management is implementing mail‑order to better align shipments with demand and reduce substitutions .
  • Strategic progress: multiple FDA clearances to add antimicrobial language, UAE approvals, and a Brazil license & supply agreement with NC Group/U.SK covering seven HOCl dermatology products (first three to launch in late summer) .

Quote: “We are pleased to report strong year-over-year revenue growth for all our product categories… The fourth quarter dermatology market was challenging… we are taking steps to reduce the impact on our revenue growth by working with a home delivery pharmacy program and advancing relationships with managed care organizations.”

What Went Wrong

  • Q4 product revenues declined 14% YoY to $3.269M; U.S. product revenue was down 26% as higher rebate utilization and wholesaler inventory reductions drove a sharp drop in dermatology net revenue (to $0.779M) .
  • Gross margin compressed to 36% (vs. 49% in Q3), driven by a higher mix of low-margin Latin America shipments to Invekra and weaker U.S. dermatology margins; operating loss widened to $4.749M and EBITDA loss to $3.717M .
  • Management highlighted a 12% sequential drop in prescriptions from December to March (seasonality), but a much steeper reduction in factory units shipped as wholesalers drew down inventory; rebates (linked to prescriptions filled) inflated as a percent of gross revenue, lowering net revenue .

Financial Results

MetricQ2 2018 (Sep 2017)Q3 2018 (Dec 2017)Q4 2018 (Mar 2018)
Total Revenues ($USD Millions)$4.325 $4.843 $3.655
Gross Profit ($USD Millions)$1.848 $2.368 $1.332
Gross Margin (%)43% 49% 36%
Total Operating Expenses ($USD Millions)$4.705 $5.568 $6.081
Loss from Operations ($USD Millions)$(2.857) $(3.200) $(4.749)
EBITDA (Non-GAAP) ($USD Millions)$(2.263) $(2.383) $(3.717)
Net (Loss) Income ($USD Millions)$(2.870) (cont.) $(3.187) (cont.) $(4.763)
EPS (Continuing Ops, Basic/Diluted, $)$(0.67) $(0.73) $(0.93)
Cash and Equivalents ($USD Millions)$9.983 $8.625 $10.066

Segment (Product Revenue by Geography):

Region ($USD Millions)Q2 2018Q3 2018Q4 2018
United States$2.268 $2.883 $1.362
Latin America$0.754 $0.772 $0.912
Europe & Rest of World$1.122 $0.992 $0.995
Total Product Revenue$4.144 $4.647 $3.269

KPIs (Dermatology):

KPIQ3 2018Q4 2018
U.S. Dermatology Gross Revenue ($USD Millions)$4.647 $2.816
U.S. Dermatology Net Revenue ($USD Millions)$2.207 $0.779
Net Revenue as % of Gross~47% (calc) 28%
Prescriptions Filled (Units)19,660 17,195
Factory Units Shipped (Units)11,729

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Cash Operating ExpensesFY2019 (quarterly)$4.3–$4.6M per quarter excluding June (audit), relatively flat “Expected to remain fairly flat throughout the year on a quarterly basis” Maintained
EBITDA TrajectoryFY2019Loss improving with stable OpEx and revenue growth “Should result in a reduction in our EBITDA as we go through the quarter” Maintained
PricingFY2019Moderate price increases; below competitors on $/gram Moderate price increases, pricing strategy to avoid large one-time hikes Maintained
Mail‑order PenetrationCY2018Program implementation pending, benefits expected Target ~60% of U.S. prescriptions via home delivery by late 2018; 20% in June, 28% in July Raised specificity
Gross Margin OutlookMulti‑yearMargin to rise as low‑margin LatAm supply winds down LatAm Invekra margin mid‑high teens; derm margins 75–80%+ expected to lift blended margin over time Updated (timing extended)
Breakeven Run RateTargetAnnualized ~$26M for breakeven Reiterated breakeven framework (driven by derm script growth and stable OpEx) Maintained

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q2 & Q3 FY2018)Current Period (Q4 FY2018)Trend
Managed care & rebatesChallenges acknowledged; plans to control rebate cost and distribution changes Deductible resets increased rebates; rebate % higher as prescriptions exceeded shipments; shift to mail‑order to control rebates Intensified focus; mitigation underway
Wholesaler inventory dynamicsSeasonality noted; wholesalers manage inventory; some lumpy effects Wholesalers reduced inventory substantially, driving factory units down more than scripts; plan to limit inventory swings via mail‑order Issue acute in Q4; structural change planned
Mail‑order pharmacy programUnder evaluation and rollout Active rollout; 20% of derm units in June, 28% in July; aim for ~60% by year-end Scaling up
International (Brazil, LatAm)Brazil approvals; partner selection in progress; Invekra supply continues (low margin) Brazil license with NC Group/U.SK signed; initial POs above first-year minimums; LatAm sales up 9% in Q4 Positive
Product performance & pipelineCeramax fastest-growing; portfolio expansion (Loyon, antimicrobial labels) Continued FDA/market approvals; added antimicrobial language; preparing U.S. product launches (post-laser gel; facial rinse; Ceramax lotion) Continued expansion
Financial disciplineTarget EBITDA profitability; stable cash OpEx; measured sales-force additions Reaffirmed flat OpEx and EBITDA improvement expectation; moderate pricing strategy Maintained

Management Commentary

  • Prepared remarks emphasized robust full-year growth but acknowledged a “challenging” fourth quarter due to deductible resets and increased rebates; mitigation via home delivery and managed care engagement is underway .
  • CFO detailed the mechanics behind Q4’s miss: wholesalers filled prescriptions from existing inventory (reducing purchase orders), and rebates (linked to scripts filled) increased as a percent of gross revenue, compressing net revenue; mail‑order benefits include lower fees, fewer substitutions, and better rebate control .
  • Strategic message: global HOCl leadership with regulatory wins; Brazil partnership to commercialize seven dermatology products; ongoing U.S. launches (facial rinse, Ceramax lotion) .

Notable quotes:

  • “Bottom-line, we believe that by taking more control of the conversation… we can minimize substitution at the pharmacy counter and maximize insurance coverage for our great products.”
  • “Our operating… cash operating expenses are expected to remain fairly flat throughout the year on a quarterly basis. And this should result in a reduction in our EBITDA as we go through the quarter.”

Q&A Highlights

  • Growth drivers and Brazil: Management confirmed initial purchase orders from NC Group/U.SK “well over the minimums for the first year,” with minimums rising to ~$1M over five years; expects partnership to accelerate breakeven path .
  • Loyon label expansion: Pursuing U.S. psoriasis indication similar to Europe; timing dependent on FDA review; current U.S. classification is a medical device .
  • Pricing strategy: Company prefers gradual price increases over large one‑time hikes; positioned at a lower price per gram than comparables to support payer discussions and patient access .
  • March quarter normalization: Without rebate/deductible reset impacts, CEO suggested revenue would have likely tracked ~10% below Dec quarter ($4.8M) due to seasonality (indicative only) .
  • Distribution shift: Detailed mail‑order benefits (lower fees, reduced substitutions, better rebate economics), with early penetration at 20% in June and 28% in July .

Estimates Context

  • Wall Street consensus estimates (S&P Global) for Q4 FY2018 revenue and EPS were unavailable via our data connection at this time; micro-cap coverage can be limited. As such, we cannot formally benchmark beats/misses to consensus for this quarter [GetEstimates error].

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Q4 miss was driven by structural gross‑to‑net headwinds (rebates, wholesaler inventory drawdown) rather than demand erosion; prescriptions filled rose 25% YoY to 17,195 .
  • Distribution pivot to mail‑order is the key near-term catalyst to narrow gross‑to‑net, reduce substitutions, and stabilize revenue conversion; early traction is visible (20% in June, 28% in July) with ~60% target by year-end .
  • Mix shift matters: Latin America growth supports revenue but at mid‑teens margins, while U.S. dermatology margins are 75–80%+; as mail‑order improves U.S. net revenue, blended margins should recover .
  • Operating discipline persists: cash OpEx expected to stay flat quarter‑to‑quarter, with EBITDA loss improvement as topline conversion stabilizes .
  • Strategic optionality: Brazil partnership with the largest local pharma (NC Group/U.SK) and ongoing U.S. launches (facial rinse, Ceramax lotion) can re-accelerate growth into FY2019 .
  • Liquidity: Cash of $10.1M at quarter-end provides flexibility to execute distribution and launch plans; monitor working capital as mail‑order penetration rises .
  • Near-term trading implication: Watch for updates on mail‑order penetration, U.S. dermatology net revenue recovery, and Brazil launch timing; these should drive sentiment and multiple expansion as gross‑to‑net narrows .