Vascular Solutions shares bloodied, company fails to deliver growth Terry Fiedler Star Tribune
Published Sep 27 2001
Stock in Vascular Solutions Inc. lost 58 percent of its value Wednesday, as investors reacted to another reduced financial projection in what has become a string of disappointments.
The Plymouth-based company said late Monday that it expected third-quarter sales of about $2.5 million instead of the $4.2 million that analysts expected.
At Wednesday's closing price of $1.89 a share, Vascular Solutions now trades well below the value of the company's cash on hand, pegged at about $2.50 per share. The stock is worth a fraction of its $12 initial public offering price in July 2000.
Shares hit a high of $26.06 on Oct. 20, 2000.
Stephens Inc. analyst Robin Young said the news Monday and other recent pre-announcements of reduced sales expectations have 'sorely tested shareholders' loyalty.'
He reduced his sales estimate for all of 2001 to $12 million from $16 million.
'The market is responding,' Young said. 'It's unusual for a company to be trading for less than its cash per share.'
'Frustration is a pretty good word for it,' said Dougherty & Co. analyst Aaron Lindberg.
Lindberg reduced his 2001 estimates from a loss of 79 cents a share on sales of $16 million to a loss of 94 cents on sales of $12.3 million.
CEO Howard Root blamed a 'summer slowdown in catheterization procedures together with the maturing of the vascular sealing market' for the company's difficulty in landing new accounts.
Vascular Solutions' Duett device combines a balloon-catheter delivery system and a blood-clotting compound to seal wounds created in surgical procedures, such as angioplasty.
'Based on performance, it is not a world beater,' Young said of the Duett.
He noted that the company has had difficulty coping with stiffer competition recently, particularly from Little Canada-based St. Jude Medical and its Angio-Seal product, the market leader. Young estimated that Vascular Solutions is fourth in the market, with a 5 percent share.
He said Vascular Solutions has two primary assets -- its cash and a 'pretty strong' sales force.
He projects that if the current trends remain unchanged, the company could burn through 20 percent of its cash within the next 12 months.
Lindberg was more bullish on the Duett's potential but like Young thinks the company faces a decision about its direction.
Lindberg mentioned Boston Scientific and Guidant as possible acquirers, while Young said there were no obvious candidates at this time.
-- Terry Fiedler is at tfiedler@startribune.com .
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