Last week's earnings PR and conference call enable me to refine my estimates of the challenge facing PMTI in its quest for profits:
Expenses
The PR revealed Q4 Sales and Marketing expenses of $2.7 million. This higher than average cost was attributed to the transition to the Coherent partnership, and was expected to be reduced in coming quarters. During the conference call, it was stated that there had been an almost dollar for dollar replacement of sales, marketing and service costs, in switching to Coherent. For the sake of this analysis, I will assume that Coherent can provide this support to PMTI at the same 21 percent it achieved in its own operations in the fiscal year ended 30 Sep 97.
Q4 General and Administrative expenses were $4.1 million dollars. Based on recent quarters, I estimate CTI accounts for $1 million of this. I will allocate $3 million to the laser business.
Q4 R&D cost $4.2 million. This unusually high expense was attributed to the accelerated program to roll-out the Diode Laser System (DLS). I will assume that costs will moderate somewhat to $3 million, which is still a little higher than normal, to allow for introduction of additional new products.
Exclusive of Sales, Marketing and Service, these quarterly expenses add up to a projected $7 million per quarter.
Revenue and Profit Potential
The conference call revealed that 20 Epilasers were shipped between mid-January and mid-February. However, the gross margin was described as very low. Assuming a GP of 20 percent, and the aforementioned allowance of 21 percent for Sales, Marketing and Service, there is zero operating profit on Epilasers. This confirms warnings in recent SEC filings, that despite anticipated higher Epilaser sales by Coherent, margins would not improve.
I was amazed to hear them justify this by seemingly implying that they knew from the outset that Epilaser margins would be low, but that it was necessary to introduuce the cooling hand-piece to the medical community as early as possible. Funny thing is, I don't recall hearing that claim before! In fact I believe I recall assurances in past conference calls that margins were improving significantly. (I will search my tapes for the exact quotes, if anyone is interested.)
PMTI clearly is pinning its future hopes on the Diode Laser System, which it plans to sell for $150,000 per unit. PMTI expressed confidence that it could be manufactured and sold at a GP between 40 and 50 percent. This provides a basis to estimate PMTI's break-even point, at it present price and expense structure.
At 50% GP and 21 percent Sales, Marketing and Service, PMTI would keep 29 percent per laser, or about $43,500. Therefore, to breakeven on the aforementioned $7 million in G&A and R&D expenses, PMTI/COHR would have to sell about 161 units per quarter!
The recent record Epilaser sales are equivalent to 60 units per quarter. I seriously doubt there is a market for 160 Diodes per quarter, and certainly not at $150,000 each! That would be nearly $100 million per annum, or nearly 60 percent of Coherent's total medical laser revenue last year - on its much broader and more diverse product line.
Also, consider that Candela's GentleLase Alexandrite should have its hair-removal FDA-clearance rubber stamped in March, which it plans to introduce at about $60,000. Look for an industry-wide price-war to emerge soon after. ESC Medical, with its huge gross and operating margins seems best able to withstand prolonged price-cutting.
In the unlikely event that a big demand materializes for the Diode Laser System, there is good reason to question Star Medical Technologies' ability to meet demand, especially at the claimed 40 to 50 percent GP. Bear in mind that this five year old R&D company has thus far manufactured only high power diode laser arrays, for the OEM market, revenuing less than $1 million per annum. Clearly, this is a tiny company, which faces a steep learning curve in ramping up production at acceptable GP.
I notice that Coherent did not add its almost obligatory support to PMTI's 29 Jan PR announcing the Diode Laser System. Does this indicate a lack of enthusiasm for the product, or perhaps the timing of its introduction?
All things considered, realistically, I expect PMTI to suffer quarterly losses well in excess of $5 million for the forseeable future. Part of the problem is an unrealistic G&A. I estimate Laser G&A was 55 percent of revenue in 1997, compared with Coherent's 9 percent. Mr. Valente has some very serious cost-cutting to do in the core business, at the same time that he tries to grow revenues.
CTI and Columbia
I did not include CTI in the preceding analysis (accept for its G&A expense), because its revenues have been almost non-existent. Last year at this time, CTI was promoted as the soon-to-be primary core business, but thus far it looks like a bad joke. Frankly, it had company: MEHL, TLZ and CLZR all suffered from puny revenue and high operating expenses in their various revenue-sharing and wholly-owned laser clinics.
In the conference call, as in recent PR's, the name CTI was not uttered by PMTI. CTI CEO Tom O'Brien was not in attendance at the conference call. PMTI did express support for the Columbia/HCA partnership, but admitted that the roll-out would be much slower than suggested in the past. It referred to the existing centres as "beta-sites".
A Multi-Billion Dollar Market?
Unless PMTI can demonstrate that it is serious about selling treatments, then it should cease and desist making reference to the "multi-billion dollar" hair removal market. I say this, because laser hair removal device sales are nowhere close to a $billion market.
Industry analyst and consultant Irving Arons, was quoted in the 15 Dec 97 Mass High Tech, predicting worldwide sales of hair removal lasers of 1,500 units in 1998. Assuming a mean unit price of $120,000, I estimate only a $180 million market. And considering that 1,000 units may already have been sold or placed in various revenue-sharing agreements, and poor treatment cost:benefit, can market saturation be far away?
Arons was bullish about the treatment market, reportedly expressing the belief that treatments would reach 5 million in the near term, creating a market worth $2.5 to $3 billion. I strongly disagree. I sense a drop-off in consumer interest, due no doubt to the extremely high cost of treatment, and the gradual spreading of word about poor treatment outcomes, and false and misleading promotion of treatment outcomes.
Local laser clinics are desperately canvassing electrologists, offering cut-rate laser training, in exchange for fee-splitting deals. Clearly they are failing to attract and keep sufficient clients on their own, so they are turning to electrologists in order to survive. What a contrast to one year ago, when some physicians boasted that they would put electrologists out of business in 5 years. Now electrologists are laughing as many of their erstwhile competitors drown in a sea of a red ink.
In any event, the corporate laser treatment providers have come nowhere close to seeing $billions. The following are almost exclusively treatment related: CTI revenued $900,000 in 1997, but probably lost in excess of $4 million. MEHL revenued perhaps $600,000 with operating losses of $19 million. CLZR revenued $2.2 million, with operating losses of $3.4 million. TLZ revenued $19 million in treatments, with an operating LOSS of about $19 million ($26 million without the one-time foreign licensing fees). TLZ's has suffered back-to-back declining quarterly treatment revenue, of 19 percent and 9 percent, respectively.
Overall, these corporate ventures revenued a mere $22.7 million selling laser treatments, mostly hair removal, and lost $45.4 million, or 200 percent - hardly a propitious start, and not much basis for hope for the future.
Balance Sheet
PMTI's balance sheet is a disaster. Working capital is minus $9 million, and the current ratio is down to 0.60, suggesting potential problems paying their bills. Shareholder equity is MINUS $6.2 million. Cash and equivalents are down to $4.5 million. Even more alarming has been the precipitous decline over the past two quarters. And despite the restructuring fire-sale, huge losses continue, which can only worsen the balance sheet.
There was optimistic talk during the conference call of obtaining access to conventional lending sources, but I suspect that convertible instruments will remain their only option.
There was also talk of equity restructuring, and a reverse-split was not ruled-out. Touts on the Yahoo PMTI board have promoted a reverse-split as a means for PMTI to raise its price above the $5 minimum required to qualify for the NASDAQ national market; however, that is nonsense, because there are other criteria, which PMTI is nowhere close to meeting. The only reason for a reverse-split would be to stave-off delisting from the Small Cap market, should the stock again sink below $1.
Takeover Prospects
Ever since the Coherent LOI, there have been rumours that it would buy out PMTI. I suspect that may eventually happen, but only after PMTI has bled nearly dry. I see it fetching no more than $5 million to $10 million, max!
Ted Molczan molczan@fox.nstn.ca |