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SWK - Q3 2023

November 9, 2023

Transcript

Operator (participant)

Good morning, and welcome to the SWK Holdings Third Quarter 2023 Corporate and Financial Results Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode, and should you need any assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's remarks, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press Star, then one on your touchtone phone. To withdraw a question, please press Star, then two. Please also note that this event is being recorded today. I would now like to turn the conference over to Jason Rando at Tiberend Strategic Advisors. Please go ahead.

Jason Rando (EVP & COO)

Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining SWK Holdings third quarter 2023 financial and corporate results call. Earlier this morning, SWK Holdings issued a press release detailing its financial results for the three months ended September 30, 2023. The press release can be found in the Investor Relations section of swkhold.com under News Releases. Before beginning today's call, I would like to make the following statement regarding forward-looking statements. Today, we'll be making certain forward-looking statements about future expectations, plans, events, and circumstances, including statements about our strategy, future operations, and the development of consumer and drug product candidates, plans for future potential product candidates, and studies and expectations regarding capital allocation and cash resources. These statements are based on our current expectations and should not place undue reliance on these statements.

Actual results may differ materially due to our risks and uncertainties, including those detailed in the Risk Factors section of SWK Holdings's 10-K filed with the SEC and other filings we make with the SEC from time to time. SWK Holdings disclaims any obligation to update information contained in these forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. Joining me from SWK Holdings on today's call are Jody Staggs, President and CEO, and Yvette Heinrichson, Chief Financial Officer. They will provide an update on SWK's third quarter 2023 corporate and financial results. Jody, go ahead.

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Thank you, Jason, and thanks, everyone, for joining our third quarter conference call. During the third quarter, our core finance business generated healthy returns while our entire subsidiary grew revenue, reduced costs, and moved closer to profitability. We achieved a key 2023 strategic goal of improving our balance sheet via the issuance of a $33 million senior note, as well as a $15 million increase in our credit facility to $60 million. We appreciate our underwriters' work to complete the bond offering in a challenging environment. We are also thrilled to partner with our new bank group member, Woodforest, and appreciate the work the Woodforest team undertook to evaluate our business. With the added capital, we have over $60 million of liquidity to deploy into an attractive opportunity set. We believe raising this capital has several benefits.

First, we are able to play offense at a time when other funding sources have pulled back. Second, we believe a larger and more diversified portfolio may lead to a lower cost of capital for SWK. Finally, during our prior strategic review process, we learned that interested parties value a larger and more diversified portfolio, which this financing will allow. Our gross finance receivables totaled $235 million at quarter's end, a 10% increase from the prior year. We closed a $15 million transaction during the quarter, and after quarter end, we closed two term loans totaling $26 million. The new deal pipeline remains strong, with multiple royalty and loan opportunities, and we anticipate closing additional financings in the coming months. We are issuing new proposals at a 15%+ IRR while targeting the biotech risk-reward opportunities.

Our portfolio effective yield was 14%, a 30 basis points decrease compared to third quarter of 2022. Our realized yield in the quarter was 14.7%, a decline from 17.5% in the third quarter of 2022. There were no early prepayments during this quarter. Looking at credit quality, we rate our loans one to five, with five being the highest score. During the quarter, we had two loans rated, scored as a two. The remaining loans were rated three or better. One of the two-rated loans is our financing to Trio Healthcare, which was placed on non-accrual at quarter's end. We are working with management to achieve a satisfactory resolution. Our core business is financing pre-profitability commercial-stage life science companies.

We are regularly speaking with our borrowers to ensure they appreciate the challenging macro and capital markets conditions. We believe our borrower partners understand this dynamic and have taken steps to reduce costs and raise capital to weather the challenging conditions. We rate our royalties green, yellow, and red. The three non-accrual royalties, biotech, Ideal, and Flowonix, are rated as reds. Two royalties are rated yellow, with the remaining royalties rated green, and green-rated royalties account for 55% of the royalty portfolio. Tangible book value per share increased to $19.35 per share, a 6% year-over-year increase after adjusting for the implementation of CECL. Results at Enteris continues to improve, driven by the hard work of the team and support from our strategic partner.

Revenue increased 72% sequentially to 0.3 million, and we expect strong revenue growth in the fourth quarter. Year to date, we have booked $2.7 million of CDMO projects and are bidding on an additional $5 million of projects. The headline bid number is down from the prior quarter as we removed two large legacy opportunities. Neither came from our strategic partner, and while both remain possibilities, they have been delayed, and we thought it prudent to remove them from the count. Through our strategic partnership, we are currently working on approximately 18 projects from a variety of underlying customers.... Third quarter of 2023, Enteris operating expense totaled 1.2 million, compared with 2.6 million in the third quarter of 2022.

We view the third quarter of 2023 Enteris' quarterly operating expense as a reasonable quarterly run rate. Third quarter of 2023, Enteris' EBITDA loss was 900,000, an improvement from a $2.5 million loss in the third quarter of 2022, after adjusting for a 5 million Cara milestone payment in the year-ago-quarter. We are deepening the relationship with our strategic partner and are working with the team and our partner to improve Enteris' profitability and increase subsidiary value. During the quarter, we repurchased 335,000 shares of stock for approximately $1 million. Year-to-date, we have repurchased 361,593 shares, for a total cost of 6.1 million.

We view repurchasing shares at the current discount to book value as an attractive use of capital. To summarize, during the third quarter of 2023, we added capital to our balance sheet at a time when deployment yields are attractive. Our Enteris segment reduced burn and continues to improve its value proposition to our strategic partner, and our financial segment generated healthy returns while closing additional loans. We are focused on prudently deploying the recently raised capital in attractive loans and royalties, while working with our current portfolio of partners to navigate the challenging business environment. With that, I would like to turn the call to our CFO, Yvette Heinrichson, for an update on our financial performance for the quarter. Yvette, the call is yours.

Yvette Heinrichson (CFO)

Thank you, Jody, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our quarterly conference call. Earlier this morning, we reported earnings for the third quarter of 2023. We reported GAAP pre-tax net income of 4.1 million, or 0.36 per diluted share. Our reported Q3 2023 net income of 4.5 million, after income tax benefit of 0.4 million, included a $0.1 million increase in finance receivable segment revenue, primarily due to an overall increase in reference rates, offset by a $4.7 million decrease in our pharmaceutical development segment revenue when compared to the third quarter of 2022.

The $4.7 million decrease in our pharmaceutical development segment revenue was primarily due to the receipt of 5 million milestone revenue related to Enteris' license agreement with Cara Therapeutics in Q2 2022, with no similar milestones occurring in Q3 2023. As Jody mentioned earlier, absent any material unforeseen payoffs, we anticipate finance receivables revenue to slightly increase in Q4 2023, due to the addition of one term loan during the quarter and two additional term loans subsequent to quarter end. Overall, operating expenses, which include interest, pharmaceutical manufacturing, research and development expense, as well as general and administrative expense, were 3.8 million during Q3 2023. That's down 2.4 million from 6.2 million in Q3 2022.

Enteris operating expenses were 1.2 million in Q3 2023, compared to 2.6 million in Q2 2022, and finance receivables segment operating expenses were $2.6 million in Q3 2023, compared to 3.6 million in Q3 2022. The consolidated $1.3 million decrease in our operating expenses was primarily driven by a one-time severance payment of 1.1 million to the former CEO in Q3 of 2022, and a $0.4 million decrease in one-time professional fees related to corporate strategic planning that occurred in 2022. The decrease was partially offset by a $0.2 million increase in board fees and other related expenses due to a revised board compensation plan in 2023.

Finally, our gross finance receivables portfolio decreased by 13.9 million from the first quarter of 2023. This is primarily due to the payoff of one term loan in Q2. However, the addition of a $5 million term loan during the third quarter resulted in provision for credit loss expense of 0.2 million. As a reminder, in Q1 of this year, we adopted the accounting standard known as CECL. Going forward, changes to the size of our finance receivables will result in a corresponding percentage change to our allowance for credit losses, as was the case in Q3 of 2023. Each quarter, management evaluates its underlying assumptions used to establish estimated rates applied, loss rates applied, including whether current finance receivable pools remain appropriate. Any changes in these assumptions will also result in changes to our allowance for credit losses.

We did not have any changes to these assumptions during the third quarter of 2023, but plan to reevaluate these assumptions at year-end, and any future changes to our allowance for credit losses will run through the income statement. I'll now turn the call back over to Jody.

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Thank you, Yvette. To highlight some positives from the quarter, our portfolio generated a 14.7% realized yield. We have liquidity to deploy into an attractive opportunity set. We are buying back stock at a discount to tangible book, and our Enteris subsidiary has reduced its operating burn and is forming a deep relationship with our strategic partner. Operator, let's open the call for questions.

Operator (participant)

We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touch-tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If you would like to withdraw a question, please press star then two. At this time, we will take our first question, which will come from Mark Argento with Lake Street. Please go ahead.

Mark Argento (Co-Founder, Head of Institutional Equities and Senior Research Analyst)

... Hey, Jody, hey, Yvette. Just a quick question. With all the, you know, the updates, the new baby bond debt issuance and then the new facilities, can you just walk us through where you sit right now in terms of, you know, kind of lending capacity, you know, your ability to fund loans? And, you know, how aggressive are you guys going to be in terms of starting to deploy more capital? Looks like you already leaned in pretty good to start off the quarter.

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Yeah. Yeah. Thanks, Mark. Yeah, so Well, to answer your first question, we currently have over $60 million of liquidity, deployable liquidity, and that's after all reserves and unfunded commitments and whatnot. So we have plenty of capital currently, and it's, of course, a good time to have that. So we did have a chunk of financings that we closed shortly after closing our bond and upsizing our ABL. And then we have quite a few deals that we're working now. We've got a couple of term sheets out and you know a number, I think maybe one or two term sheets and kind of five or six proposals.

You know, and proposals typically will turn into term sheets or some portion will. So we feel good about the opportunity set, you know, particularly in our area of the market. And, you know, I think we want to be, we definitely are looking to deploy the capital. You know, it's not burning a hole in our pocket. We want to be disciplined. There is, you know, there are quite a few companies out there that need money, so we're trying to really find the highest quality companies, you know, at an attractive rate. Yeah, I'll pause there and see if that answers your question.

Mark Argento (Co-Founder, Head of Institutional Equities and Senior Research Analyst)

No, that's helpful. So the 60, does that include the 26 you've already deployed, or is that on top of the 26?

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

No, no, no, that's afterwards. That, that's as we stand today.

Mark Argento (Co-Founder, Head of Institutional Equities and Senior Research Analyst)

Okay, perfect.

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

You know, we had 16. I think it's probably closer to $65 million of deployable liquidity as of today.

Mark Argento (Co-Founder, Head of Institutional Equities and Senior Research Analyst)

Got it. All right, no, it's helpful. And then in terms of your current, you know, lending portfolio, I know, you know, a decent number of the companies are, are publicly traded or small, publicly traded. You know, when you guys are thinking about, you know, the the conditions of the equity markets right now, you know, kind of how imperative is it for the equity markets to, you know, open back up for some of these companies to, to, you know, to continue to, to, you know, fund their businesses? Meaning, you know, you know, is that something you guys are spending a lot of time on? Are you guys concerned about the, you know, the condition of the equity, markets at this point with any of your portfolio companies, or just kind of walk us through your thinking around that.

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Yeah. So, you know, it, it's definitely something that we think about and that we're talking to all the borrowers regularly. And I think the messaging has been... And I think it's, it's understood and pretty well received as, you know, "Hey, look, the ability to raise capital may be constrained over the foreseeable future, so you can't assume that that's going to be there. Therefore, you need to do other things to try to get to cash flow breakeven as quickly as possible." And that's going to be, of course, cost cuts.

Perhaps there's, you know, there's revenue partnerships and things like that, but particularly on the cost side, making sure that everyone understands it and that, you know, if there's a need or there's a perceived need to raise capital in the near term, that they also need to be cutting costs aggressively and quickly. Not to the bone, but certainly anything discretionary. So I think, you know, if you look at our portfolio, that's been a pretty common theme, and most folks have done that. You know, I think it's a case-by-case basis. I mean, if the capital markets stay closed forever, then, you know, that will be a challenge.

But I think, you know, the management teams we're talking to have found creative ways to raise some bits of capital along the way.

Mark Argento (Co-Founder, Head of Institutional Equities and Senior Research Analyst)

Helpful. And then just, you know, again, talking about the markets, you guys stocks trading, you know, 15-16, book value is 19 and change. I saw you were active with the buyback. You know, where, where are you in terms of the buyback, and is there ability to get, you know, bigger or more aggressive with that if there's still such a, a, you know, significant disconnect?

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Yeah. So yes. Yes, I agree with all of that. The ability to repurchase shares through our 10b5-1 program is limited by trailing 20-day volume. So, there's not a whole lot we can do on that front. Now, the one change to our program this year is we do have the ability to buy back one block a week. So if block shares, a block of shares comes up, you know, we have the ability now to purchase those. And that occurred. We had some of that occur earlier this year, and we were able to buy three, you know, decently sized blocks. So that would be our primary goal, to source more of those blocks.

If we're doing it through the 10b5-1, we are somewhat limited, you know, just via the 10b5-1, trailing volume and policies.

Mark Argento (Co-Founder, Head of Institutional Equities and Senior Research Analyst)

Got it. And what, how many more dollars do you have authorized under your current buyback program, if you have that handy?

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Yvette, do you know that number off the top of your head? Mark, we-- I have a ballpark idea, but I want to give you the right number. I might need to follow up with you on that unless Yvette has-

Mark Argento (Co-Founder, Head of Institutional Equities and Senior Research Analyst)

Yeah, we can grab it out of the queue or whatever, or offline. Not a problem. Thanks, appreciate it.

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Yes, absolutely. Thanks, Mark.

Operator (participant)

Again, if you have a question or a follow-up, please press Star, then one to join the queue. Our next question will come from Scott Jensen, a private investor. Please go ahead.

Scott Jensen (Shareholder)

Hi, good morning, Jody. So a few of the questions were already answered, on kind of returning capital to shareholders and your restrictions sometimes on the supply, trying to buy back. Have you thought about other ways, such as a dividend, which would obviously open up to more investors as well?

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Yeah, yeah. The board is always considering. I think every quarter we have a discussion about dividends and other, you know, of course, there's other ways to repurchase stock, a tender and things of that nature. So yes. Yes, they're always considering other ways to return capital.

Scott Jensen (Shareholder)

...And then I guess another one is, you know, with the Enteris pipeline, you don't seem to report any of the deals that you get. So how will we gauge the progress of that? And is that restricted in the same way with some of your borrowers? The only way I can find information is by searching, scouring the web for your name. Are you precluded from releasing those loans?

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

So on Enteris, you know, we have a well, a couple of things. So we're gonna I think we're gonna do a better job of giving you the bookings on a periodic basis. So, you know, I think we detailed $2.7 million of bookings year to date, and I think the last time we said it was $2 million. So I would say that's the number really to track, and, you know, hopefully, we can continue to accelerate the bookings. But that would be the number one metric you should track. You know, bookings should turn into revenue over kind of a four- to twelve-month basis. So that would that should be helpful.

In terms of the underlying customers, I don't think that's something we can or really should be disclosing. So we have our one strategic partner who is sending us referrals. We then have to go win the business. So they don't give us business, they give us referrals. The Enteris team then goes and makes bids, proposals, you know, and pitches their services. And then the underlying customer, these biotech, may select Enteris for phase one and phase two CDMO services. You know, and we'll continue to look at what we can disclose and try to make that as clear as possible what the trends and trajectory are there. Did that answer the question, Scott?

Scott Jensen (Shareholder)

Yes. Thank you. My last one is: when you go to buy a royalty today, with all the generic competition constantly coming into markets, as well as new drugs coming to market, which could affect those royalties, how do you price that risk? How do you guys think about that risk?

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Yeah, that's a good question. I mean, I don't think that dynamic has necessarily changed. You know, I think what's probably changed over the past, you know, 10 years is pricing. You know, you used to be able to assume, I don't know, 3%-8%, you know, price increases. And so now, of course, you can't assume that. You probably should be assuming, you know, maybe it's in the early years, 2% increase and then down in the out years. So I don't know that that has changed. I think for us, really the key on the royalties is, one, we have to find really unique setups where there's something a little bit off the run, it's smaller, you know, there's four sellers, maybe it's not a standard royalty.

Because the, you know, the larger, let's call it $30 million-plus royalties in kind of tier A assets are very competitive. And we don't want to be the, you know, the ninth guy at the table, kind of the last option for those people. So the initial focus is the deal dynamic really attractive? If that checks out and we think the product has value, has a runway, then what we're trying to do is make a conservative underwriting case and price that to a mid-teens.

So if, you know, if you look at our two largest royalties, that's what we did, and we've been able to, I would say mid-teens plus, you know, and right now, both of those are trending well versus our underwriting case. So we're trying to do a conservative case, price it in the mid-teens plus with a really good setup, that's somewhat off the run. And the other fallback that we do have is we have done these capped deals in the past where, you know... Because you buy these royalties, and you're buying from a party that's smarter than you. You know, these people have been around the asset for a long time, and they probably know things you don't.

So the bid ask may be quite wide, and one way we've been able to narrow that bid ask is saying, "Hey, look, we're not gonna buy this outright. You know, we're gonna buy—we're gonna give you $10 million, and when we get a two times return, you know, you get the royalty back." And that can be a really interesting way to sniff out if these people believe in the asset. Do they want to keep a residual? And the other positive of that, too, is if they keep a residual, you know, they still have skin in the game, so if there is an IP challenge or there are issues, they're more likely to work with you. So those are a few things we think about.

Scott Jensen (Shareholder)

All right. I thought of one more question, and that is on the buyback. If there's somebody out there that wants to sell those blocks, do they know how or who to call?

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Yeah, I would tell them to call me, you know, and I can put them in touch with our broker. We work through Jones, and so I can put them in touch with Jones.

Scott Jensen (Shareholder)

Thank you. All right. Thanks for that information.

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Thanks, Scott.

Operator (participant)

This concludes our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the conference back over to Jody Staggs for any closing remarks.

Jody Staggs (President and CEO)

Thank you. Thanks, everyone, for joining the call. Thanks to the team of SWK and our shareholders, and hope everyone has a great day.

Operator (participant)

The conference has now concluded. Thank you very much for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect your line.