BioLife Solutions, Inc.
Q4 2020 Earnings Call Transcript

Published:

  • Operator:
    Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the BioLife Solutions Q4 and Full Year 2020 Earnings Call. I would now like to hand the conference over to your host, CFO, Rod de Greef. Sir, please go ahead.
  • Rod de Greef:
    Thanks, Latiff. Good afternoon, everyone and thank you for joining this call. Earlier today, we issued two press releases. The first was our announcement of the signing of a definitive merger agreement to acquire Global Cooling Inc., better known as Stirling Ultracold, a leading U.S. based developer and manufacturer of ultra-low temperature freezers. The second press release detailed our Q4 and full year 2020 financial results and operational highlights.
  • Mike Rice:
    Thanks, Rod and good afternoon everyone. Thank you for joining our call. We are very pleased to present the background, strategic rationale and synergies as well as the potential financial impact of our just announced acquisition of Stirling Ultracold, a company that’s been in the news quite a bit these last few months due to their support of COVID-19 vaccine distribution and point-of-care storage. Before I get to Stirling, I would like to give some color on how we finished last year. I’ll provide some quantitative data, but I’ll leave most of the detailed revenue presentation to Rod. To set the context, it’s important to review how active the cell and gene therapy space is right now. In 2020, total funding for companies participating in the space was nearly $20 billion, a 50% increase over 2019. Industry-sponsored clinical trials increased by 154 over 2019 and several therapeutic candidates could get approved this year. 2020 was a banner year for BioLife with total revenue of $48 million, up 76% over 2019. 2020 media revenue grew 32% over the prior year. We gained over 200 new direct customers with new end users across the portfolio, including media, thaw, evo Cold Chain, CBS freezers and SciSafe storage services. Additionally, our two largest distributors sold and shipped our preservation media products to nearly 3,500 different customers. This is truly remarkable and speaks to how well our direct sales team and distribution partners are planting seeds for future growth. Further to our media franchise, since 2016, we processed nearly 300 cross-reference requests for our U.S. FDA master files to support media use in human clinical trials. In 2020, we added 63 new media customers, and we also added 75 new customer clinical trials using our media, including 30 in the fourth quarter alone. It’s not a perfect data match up, but if we take the ARM data of 154 new clinical trials in 2020, it’s possible our market share is nearly 50% of these, considering we added 75 new trials last year.
  • Dusty Tenney:
    Thanks Mike. This is a great day for Stirling’s team members, customers and shareholders. For my time at Brooks Automation and more recently at Stirling Ultracold, I followed the progress that Mike and the BioLife team have executed to broaden their tools portfolio and provide more value to customers and shareholders. Each of the assets BioLife acquired, were targets of my own M&A list. When Mike reached out to me last fall to start a conversation about putting Stirling and BioLife together, I immediately saw the strategic fit. And I’m really looking forward to joining BioLife as its President and COO and doing my part to further the growth of the company and build into an even bigger and more trusted supplier of critical bioproduction products and services. Let me give you a little background on Stirling. The company was spun out of Sunpower, Inc. in 1996 to capitalize on an IP estate related to the use of Stirling engines in various industrial applications. Since that time, the company developed a family of mechanical freezers and to date has shipped more than 10,000 systems worldwide. I joined Stirling in March 2020 after a very successful time at Brooks Automation, where I was President of its Life Science division and oversaw rapid growth and the completion of several acquisitions. We grew Life Science’s revenue from $65 million to over $300 million over 5 years. At Stirling, we operate a 50,000 square foot manufacturing facility, southeast of Columbus, in Athens, Ohio, and have an inside sales and marketing team that works in Downtown Columbus. We currently employ 160 team members and have been flat out running with the pedal down hard since last August when our upright, under counter and portable Stirling freezers were recognized as key enabling technologies for the distribution and point-of-care storage of COVID-19 vaccines.
  • Rod de Greef:
    Thanks, Dusty. I’ll start off with a review of our 2020 financial performance. Revenue for the fourth quarter totaled $14.7 million representing a 78% increase over 2019’s fourth quarter revenue of $8.3 million. Media revenue for the fourth quarter of 2020 was $8.2 million, a 58% increase over the fourth quarter of 2019. This quarter’s revenue also included $662,000 of sales related to the automated thaw product line, $469,000 of evo Cold Chain-related revenue and $3.6 million in freezers and accessories at CBS. We also reported $1.8 million in biostorage revenue related to our acquisition of SciSafe, which closed on October 1 last year. Revenue for the full year ended December 31, 2020, totaled $48.1 million, an increase of 76% over 2019. Media revenue for the full year of 2020 increased 32% to $31 million compared to 2019. We believe that the full year comparison is the best reflection of how media revenue is currently growing as it smooths out the quarterly lumpiness we witnessed throughout 2019 and 2020, and which we expect to continue to see in 2021. Our adjusted gross margin for the fourth quarter was 54% compared with 65% last year. For the full year of 2020, adjusted gross margin was 58% compared to 69% in the same period in 2019. The decrease in adjusted gross margin for both periods reflects the gross margin profile of the product lines we acquired in 2019 and 2020. In addition, based on expected growth in these product lines in 2021, we increased our fixed manufacturing overhead at our evo and freezer operations. Adjusted operating expenses for Q4 of 2020 totaled $8.2 million compared with $4.9 million in Q4 of 2019. For the full year of 2020, adjusted operating expenses totaled $27.6 million compared with $16.8 million in 2019. The increase in both periods was primarily driven by additional operating expenses related to the acquisitions made in 2019 and 2020 as well as increased head count and stock-based compensation expense necessary to support our overall growth objectives. The adjusted operating loss for the fourth quarter of 2020 was $255,000 compared with operating profit of $437,000 in 2019. Our adjusted operating income for the full year of 2020 totaled $293,000 compared to $2.1 million in 2019. Our adjusted net loss for the fourth quarter of 2020 was $256,000 or negative $0.01 per diluted share compared with adjusted net income of $527,000 or $0.02 per diluted share in 2019. For the full year of 2020, adjusted net income was $351,000 or $0.01 per diluted share compared with adjusted net income of $2.6 million or $0.13 per diluted share in 2019. Adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter of 2020 increased 47% to $2.5 million compared with $1.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2019. For the full year of 2020, adjusted EBITDA increased 41% to $8.3 million compared with $5.9 million in 2019. And our cash balance at December 31 was $90 million. Now I’d like to make a few comments on our just announced acquisition of Stirling. This is an all-stock deal, whereby BioLife will issue 6.6 million shares of common stock in exchange for 100% of the outstanding shares of Stirling. Based on Friday’s closing share price of approximately $39, the transaction has an imputed value of approximately $258 million, including the assumption of $8.7 million of debt. When you combine fourth quarter 2020 revenue for BioLife and Stirling, the annualized revenue run rate is approximately $115 million. Stirling’s margin profile is not dissimilar to our CBS freezer business with gross margins currently in the low 30s and a modest adjusted EBITDA expectation this year. However, during diligence, Dusty and his team did a good job of articulating a clear and what we believe to be an achievable plan for significant margin improvement over the next 12 to 36 months. We expect the gross margin expansion to result from the introduction of new and higher ASP products and increased plant automation, which we expect will move gross margins into the mid to high 40s. So while we will see some near-term margin erosion, particularly at the gross margin level, we believe that the combined entity can achieve our adjusted EBITDA margin target of 30% in the next 24 to 36 months and with materially higher absolute numbers. In addition, we expect the transaction to be accretive to adjusted net income per share next year and beyond. In summary, we are issuing 19.9% of our outstanding shares, which is 16.5% on a pro forma basis, to acquire a business, which is a great strategic fit and which we will expect will contribute in excess of 30% of projected pro forma revenue and EBITDA of this year and in the following years. I will conclude my remarks with our revenue guidance for 2021. So for ‘21, we expect to report revenue in 3 product categories
  • Mike Rice:
    Thanks, Rod. I would like to summarize with three key points of our investment thesis
  • Operator:
    Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Paul Knight of KeyBanc. Your line is open.
  • Paul Knight:
    Hey, guys. Thanks. Nice seeing again.
  • Mike Rice:
    Hi, Paul.
  • Paul Knight:
    Hey, Mike. First question on the core business pre-Stirling and that is with your talk about a 50% share, what does the rest of the market do? Is it homebrew? Could you talk to that share estimate?
  • Mike Rice:
    Right on, Paul. Yes, we believe it remains homebrew. We have yet to see really any entrance of either pre-formulated preservation media products from any suppliers, distributors or anybody else that’s out there. So, it really is a – it’s a BioLife versus homebrew battle and we are doing great taking share, we believe, every quarter.
  • Paul Knight:
    And then regarding Stirling with existing ops, what do you have in terms of distribution meaning your move in the direct sales? Do you have direct sales? What’s the headcount there? What’s the plan there? And who are your key distributors?
  • Mike Rice:
    Sure. Paul, yes, we have, in the current pre-Stirling organization, about 10 folks who are involved in sales and that’s a mix of inside folks and field folks, I’ll call it about 10 with a couple of openings. The current distributors look like this. On the media side, again, it’s the big four, as always, it’s Fisher, VWR, MilliporeSigma and STEMCELL Technologies and there are perhaps 30 or so other regional in-country distributors that do a decent job on media. With CBS Freezers, we did inherit a fairly well-known and diverse distribution team around the world with good presence. So we will have a great time just rationalizing this. And from our perspective, it’s just more feet on the street. So, it’s all about a force multiplier to leverage the story.
  • Paul Knight:
    And what’s the overlap in perceived synergy with CBS, what temperature was CBS operating in for customers and what do you see as the positives of those two together?
  • Mike Rice:
    Yes, great question, Paul. So with CBS, the products are, pardon me, limited to liquid nitrogen operating temperature range, which is minus call it 196, right. It’s the coldest extreme for the complete station of metabolism of biologic material. Now, this combined sales team has in their bag, in their arsenal, the ability to offer any freezer that meets whatever the customer’s temperature range might be from minus 20 all the way to minus 196.
  • Paul Knight:
    Okay. And then lastly, regarding the COVID benefit at Stirling, Dusty, what’s your thought there? Does it dissipate as we move into the year? Do we have it visible into ‘22? What’s your thought on the duration of COVID?
  • Dusty Tenney:
    Yes. Paul, I think first of all great to reconnect and thanks for the question. I think Mike provided some context there that we are not really at liberty at this point in time just given some of the nature of the placements that we have had with COVID to really get into the mechanics associated with that question. So we will have to defer on that one.
  • Paul Knight:
    Yes, thank you.
  • Operator:
    Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Chris Lin of Cowen. Your line is open.
  • Chris Lin:
    Hi, thanks for taking my questions. Mike, just to start…
  • Mike Rice:
    Hi, Chris.
  • Chris Lin:
    Hey, Mike. Just to start, so investors have been attracted to BioLife Solutions because of the favorable mix of highly sticky consumable revenue and just the strong margin profile. Stirling Ultracold appears to be a largely instrument-heavy business that is also dilutive to overall margins. So with this in mind, could you just elaborate why you believe BioLife Solutions is the right owner of Stirling Ultracold?
  • Mike Rice:
    Definitely. I will start and then I will ask Rod to reiterate some of the points in my remarks. So Chris, for us, this is about the novelty and the disruptive potential of the Stirling portfolio and then our ability to leverage the sticky media customers to expose them to this really cool new equipment offering to solve even more of their problems. And we believe obviously with Dusty and Rod on the ops and the margin side that we will definitely get that back to something a lot more attractive. It’s really hard to find bolt-on acquisitions, Chris, as you know, that would enjoy the margins from the media program that we have had for the last several years, but nevertheless, we believe that we are on the right track here and customers want to buy from us. So Rod, you might want to expand a little bit on that, if you could?
  • Rod de Greef:
    Yes, sure. I can. Chris, as I mentioned on the call in my prepared remarks, the gross margin profile of Global is not much different than CBS, so currently in the low 30s. But again, as I stated, there is a pretty clear plan that we vetted as well as we could to take those margins into the 47%, right. And once we have done that, then I think you are going to be looking at blended margins overall for the company a few years out of mid-50s at a gross level. And based on the modeling that we have done and we have done quite a bit, both internal and using an independent source, we believe that the EBITDA margin target – adjusted EBITDA margin target that we have set for 30% is absolutely achievable with the combined entity. And in fact, as I mentioned, it’s going to be at a much higher absolute number of adjusted EBITDA.
  • Chris Lin:
    Got it. Just another question on Stirling Ultracold, could you say what Stirling Ultracold revenue was in 2019, so pre-COVID times? And then in terms of the revenue guidance, $35 million to $37 million, could you clarify if that’s a gross or net revenue figure that needs to be adjusted for potential intercompany eliminations of SciSafe purchases, Stirling freezers?
  • Rod de Greef:
    Yes, that’s a good question, Chris. So, $39 million is a preliminary unaudited number for Global last year in 2020. The base number this year is $60 million. There might be $1 million or $2 million here of RAC revenue that’s sold by CBS to Global and the balance of it is going to come in the form of CapEx, reduced CapEx on the SciSafe side when they have the move those freezers into the SciSafe operations.
  • Chris Lin:
    Okay. Last question for me, Mike you referenced in your prepared remarks that there are potential therapies – well therapies that could potentially receive FDA approval this year. As we think about your 2021 media revenue guidance, does that explicitly include contributions from these new product approvals and commercial scale manufacturing volumes associated with those launches or would that be largely upside or the 2022 dynamic?
  • Mike Rice:
    Farther out, Chris, yes, good question. We would expect from most customers, just the sort of pre-approval clinical trial phase revenue we’ve been seeing and continuing on to that. And the big step changes will come obviously, 12 to 24 months post-approval, once they have done what we’ve been articulating now for many of these calls, which is to establish a reimbursement strategy that’s going to be palatable to the payers to get their manufacturing, operations fully scaled up and probably equally as importantly is to get the clinical centers trained up to administer their particular dose because they all have their own nuances. So think about it on a 12 to 24-month ramp post-approval for us to see the large step-up changes in revenue from those, hopefully soon to be approved therapies.
  • Rod de Greef:
    And Chris, it’s Rod here. I want to try to provide a little additional clarity because I’m not sure I fully answered your question. So you asked 2019 revenue – sorry, 2020 revenue, $39 million. Expected Global revenue for the full year of 2021 is $60 million. We have it in terms of contributing to the BioLife fiscal 2021 revenue, $35 million to $37 million based on the fact that we’re not closing the transaction until April 30, May 1.
  • Chris Lin:
    Okay. Could you just share what 2019 revenue was for Stirling?
  • Rod de Greef:
    2019 revenue...
  • Mike Rice:
    Dusty, if you’ve got it, go for it.
  • Rod de Greef:
    Dusty, if you have that handy?
  • Dusty Tenney:
    Yes. It’s $35 million, Chris.
  • Chris Lin:
    Okay, great. Thanks for taking my questions.
  • Mike Rice:
    Sure.
  • Operator:
    Thank you. Our next question comes from Jacob Johnson of Stephens. Please go ahead.
  • Jacob Johnson:
    Hey. Good afternoon everybody and congratulations on all the news.
  • Mike Rice:
    Thanks, Jacob.
  • Jacob Johnson:
    Yes. Hi, Mike. Maybe starting on the evo side and congratulations on the customer news there, is there anyway to give any color on the revenue potential for evo shipping a commercial therapy? I know it’s a little bit different business model but is there anyway to frame up the impact on that relationship?
  • Mike Rice:
    Not yet, Jacob. Once we get a few more of these commercial therapies, allocating or splitting their shipments, then we would hope to be in a position to do that, but this is the first one, so too soon to try to prognosticate on that.
  • Jacob Johnson:
    Got it. That makes sense, Mike. And maybe just try and ask it a little bit different way, just on the guidance, given in 2021 for the services revenue stream, $13 million to $16 million, I guess, kind of a wide range, given the size of those revenues. Maybe if Rod wants to just talk about what are the kind of key swing factors for the low end and the high end of that guidance of evo versus SciSafe?
  • Rod de Greef:
    Sure. It’s two things. One on the evo side, it’s how quickly the large commercial customer that Mike identified earlier, how quickly they ramp up through the year because remember that the business model is a monthly rental program, so the number of doers that go out in a particular month if it’s delayed by 90 days, it does make an impact. And the other is that what we’ve seen in SciSafe for the last 6 months is that the orders that carry over there is wrestling with are very significant orders. And so whether you get one or whether you get half of one or how much of it gets into this year versus next year based on the timing of close, there is a lot of variability in that, which is the other reason we have such a relatively large range.
  • Jacob Johnson:
    Got it. Thanks for that, Rod. And maybe last one for me and maybe sticking with you, Rod. Just on gross margins, you talked about 50% longer term, but obviously, a few moving pieces in the near-term. Can you give us any kind of color on your thoughts about gross margins as we think about modeling 2021?
  • Rod de Greef:
    Yes. I think you’re going to see something in the neighborhood of low 50s.
  • Jacob Johnson:
    Okay, got it. Thanks for taking the questions.
  • Rod de Greef:
    You bet.
  • Mike Rice:
    Thanks, Jacob.
  • Operator:
    Thank you. Our next question comes from Suraj Kalia of Oppenheimer & Company. Your question please.
  • Suraj Kalia:
    Good afternoon everyone. Mike, can you hear me, alright?
  • Mike Rice:
    Hi, Suraj. Again, hi, Suraj.
  • Suraj Kalia:
    Hey. Congrats on the deal, Dusty, Mike and Rod. So a lot of information provided, Mike. And maybe if I could just parse it a little more, Rod, you were kind enough – and Dusty, you were kind enough to give the numbers from 2019, ‘20 and ‘21 for ULT. How much – if I see from 2020 through ‘21, there is a significant jump. How much of that is COVID related? And I guess to the extent that you can, what was the expected growth trajectory of ULT versus if I may consider organic BioLife, everything that is non-ULT as you looked at the company? I guess what I’m just trying to understand is, is ULT faster growing than what your BioLife was originally?
  • Rod de Greef:
    I think in the near-term, Suraj, the answer to that is yes. I think that the organic growth that we would look at is, again, in that sort of 25% to 30% range, excluding Stirling. And so there is going to be a bump in the Stirling revenue this year, in part related to COVID, but also in part related to just an increase in demand. And we do expect that increase in demand, irrespective of any future COVID activity to continue. And so therefore, there’ll be a significant contributor, and we expect them to grow at that – at the lower end of that range.
  • Suraj Kalia:
    Got it. And Rod, for ULT, this would be a point-of-sale model, not a recurring revenue base, correct, for ULT?
  • Rod de Greef:
    That’s correct.
  • Suraj Kalia:
    And you guys are not comfortable at this stage sharing the incremental contribution from COVID-related revenues, right?
  • Rod de Greef:
    Correct.
  • Suraj Kalia:
    Okay. Fair enough. Rod, I know this has been beaten to death. Maybe I’ll just belabor it a little more. Since 2019, you all have made a determined strategy to acquire a bunch of companies. And gross margins of the different businesses, when you look at the composite gross margins, they have taken a hit. When you will integrate ULT, this thing needs to reverse pretty significantly from 30% to 55%. Maybe you can give us some additional color. I’m just going to piggyback on the prior person’s question. Give us some color what gives you the confidence level in the midterm, you can turn the tide around to get to an adjusted 30% EBITDA margin?
  • Rod de Greef:
    So again, it’s driven by two things. One is that the current Stirling gross margins are in the low 30s, right? And those are expected to expand to the mid- to high 40s, which would then, at that point, give an overall blended – again, we’re looking in the crystal ball a bit. So it depends on how much of the revenue is comprised of media, thaw etcetera. But the point being that, if they get into the mid to high 40s, then the blended gross margin for the company would be somewhere in the mid-50s, okay. It could be a little bit better, but that’s what we are thinking now. And so when you then adjust out all the things that we adjust out, we feel very strongly that we can attain the 30%. And if you recall, Suraj, the narrative for the last 18 months for BioLife has been that, yes, we recognize that the trade-off was to remain a one product pony that had a great margin profile but had serious risk with respect to customer order patterns and perhaps ultimate customer growth, right? And so we wanted to mitigate that by embarking on the acquisition strategy we did, fully understanding that in the near-term, and that’s defined as 12 to 24 months from the time we started that strategy, we would have declining margins until the point where the revenue scale and now my stated goal of $250 million. At that point in time, we are very comfortable talking about a 30% adjusted EBITDA margin that has mid-50s gross margin associated with it.
  • Suraj Kalia:
    Got it. Hey, Mike, one last question for you. The evo commercial win, would love to get additional color on that? Is – should we – would we be too far off in thinking about the two commercial – key commercial players that you’ll have bagged at least one of them maybe on a different product line?
  • Mike Rice:
    Yes. Good question, Suraj. I think rather than answer that directly, I think I’ll just refer to our previous response, which is, this company understands how material important this is, significant this would be for us to be able to disclose the relationship. We’re not quite there yet working through their multi-layer approval process, but I’m confident perhaps at some point, we will get that approval. But before then, out of respect for relationship, we’re just not going to disclose the name.
  • Suraj Kalia:
    Got it. Gentlemen thank you for taking my questions.
  • Mike Rice:
    Thanks, Suraj.
  • Operator:
    Thank you. Our next question comes from Jason McCarthy of Maxim Group. Your question please.
  • Michael Okunewitch:
    Hey, this is Michael Okunewitch on the line for Jason. Thanks for taking the question and congratulations on the announcement, seems like a pretty big add to your overall business. But I’d like to ask a bit generally. You invested pretty heavily into the Ultracold freezing and the cold chain logistics. So I’d like to touch on what you anticipate to be the key drivers for growth in this business area? Obviously, COVID-19 kind of thrust Ultracold chain into the public consciousness, but it’s really – it’s just the first mRNA vaccine, a lot more in the pipeline. So what are the areas where you expect to really drive growth in this respect?
  • Mike Rice:
    Yes, Michael, good question. I think in a nutshell, sticking to our knitting within cell and gene therapy, it’s going to be about the pace of approvals, right. So we all know the ARM data. We know how many clinical trials are out there. We’ve now been really clear about our estimates of how many clinical trials our media is used in. I articulated on the call in my remarks a little earlier today that we believe that the decision by this large pharma company to split off their commercial shipments and to award parts of the business to more than one logistics partner and to use more than one container. So they have got some risk mitigation. We believe will be the norm over the next few years. So it won’t be a winner-take-all scenario and we are really, I think strongly configured to compete into take a decent amount of share of those shipments. So in a nutshell, it’s really going to be about the pace of approvals and then our ability to see the evo adoption increase based on this key win and also through the great work that our courier partners are doing.
  • Michael Okunewitch:
    Alright. Thank you. And then I have one more on the actual Stirling freezers themselves. So how does the energy requirement compare for Stirling versus a more traditional compressor-based freezer? And how does that kind of translate into operational cost savings?
  • Mike Rice:
    Yes, great question. Dusty, why don’t you take that one?
  • Dusty Tenney:
    Yes. I think to frame it out, Michael, the basis of our savings, which is an energy star rating, an important element in terms of the strategy that the business was born roughly about 10 years ago. And what that does, it provides a material benefit as it compares to our compressor systems anywhere between 10% and 50% less energy being used. So when you start to think about the application of our freezers versus a traditional compressor-based freezer, the infrastructure that many of our partners have realized is the fact that they can eliminate a lot of HVAC, i.e., more cooling to offset some of the heat but also they are getting a material benefit associated with the less energy use. And when you start to multiply that, especially with multiple different systems, there is a significant benefit that many of our customers are parenting by virtue of using the Stirling freezer system.
  • Michael Okunewitch:
    Alright. Thank you. And I just want to ask one more, if you don’t mind. How does the target use case vary for the Stirling Ultracold that, that 80 – that 20 to 86C range compared to the CBS nitrogen based?
  • Mike Rice:
    Go ahead, Dusty?
  • Dusty Tenney:
    Well, I think there is two applications that basically cover the entire cold chains here, Michael. So when you start to think about minus 20 to minus 86, our system, unlike any compressor a system can be tuned to any temperature between those respective temperature ranges. So we basically cover every single temperature point between minus 20 and minus 86. And traditionally, when you take a look at the workflows, especially in the end markets that Mike and Rod talked about, there are a lot of biological materials that basically are mandated to support that in addition to the vaccines that are more prominent with regards to the temperatures that we just highlighted. When you start to think about the even colder temperatures, so the deep temperatures, a key temperature point, of course, is minus 135C. At minus 135C, that’s the glass transition temperature. Mike noted this in terms of the fact that biological activity is stopped. And typically, this is the temperature range in which cell and gene therapies are most noted to ensure that, that biologic coactivity, especially when it gets to researchers and the cell and gene therapies that are being developed ultimately meet the efficacy requirements that are being driven from the manufacturers. So those two temperature ranges basically are all focused on biological material, but each of those respective temperatures provides a biological benefit that customers use in the markets today, whether that be clinical trials, cell and gene therapy, biobanking, etcetera. And the fortunate aspect that we have here is combining those two, now we, as Mike said cover the entire cold chain temperature range that’s ever so critical for every single biological material in the world today.
  • Michael Okunewitch:
    Alright. Thank you very much.
  • Mike Rice:
    Thanks, Michael.
  • Operator:
    Thank you. Our next question comes from Thomas Flaten of Lake Street Capital. Your line is open.
  • Thomas Flaten:
    Hi, good afternoon guys. Thanks for taking my questions.
  • Mike Rice:
    Hi, Thomas.
  • Thomas Flaten:
    Just a quick one on SciSafe, during the last quarterly call, there was a suggestion there was some upside to that $2.7 million COVID deal, and you’ve obviously raised your guidance from $9 million to $12 million. Is that all COVID deal or is there other business expansion that’s nestled in that increase in guidance?
  • Mike Rice:
    Yes. Good question. And probably just best to stick to our line that we’re just not going to talk about COVID revenues just based on the guidance we received from a bunch of federal agencies. So I would like to answer and give that kind of detail, but it’s a little early for us to do that.
  • Thomas Flaten:
    Sure. If you can’t quantify it, but if at least we could do kind of a qualitative answer. If you look – if you think about the Venn diagram of customer overlap, I know there is some names that were thrown out during the prepared remarks. But could you help us understand what the overlap is in customers between Stirling and the legacy BioLife businesses?
  • Mike Rice:
    Sure. Somewhat qualitatively, I can say that there are some customers that do use our media and also contract with SciSafe for storage. But I don’t want to get into how many or who they might be.
  • Thomas Flaten:
    Okay. Fair enough. And then, Rod, I was wondering if you could help us a little bit with how to think through the middle of the P&L this year? Obviously, there is going to be a big change to the middle for the second quarter, but could you help us think about because you’re not going to be EBITDA – or sorry, accretive until next year. Can you just help us think through what that looks like from a spending perspective?
  • Mike Rice:
    Well, I think that – here’s what I can say because we purposely chose not to give guidance below the revenue and a little bit of gross margin. We’ve got a lot of moving parts. And so what I will say is that if you looked at the operating expenses for Q4 that while we may have somewhat of – some growth in 2021 based on both activity and just gearing up to become a larger entity, it’s probably not going to be the same growth that you saw from 2020 to 2019.
  • Thomas Flaten:
    Okay.
  • Mike Rice:
    And that’s ex Stirling, right? That’s just the BioLife at the end of the year kind of thing.
  • Thomas Flaten:
    Understood. Understood. Alright guys. Thanks so much for taking the questions.
  • Mike Rice:
    Thank you.
  • Rod de Greef:
    Thanks, Thomas.
  • Operator:
    Thank you. Our next question comes from Marc Wiesenberger of B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.
  • Marc Wiesenberger:
    Thank you. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions and congrats on the deal.
  • Mike Rice:
    Thank you.
  • Marc Wiesenberger:
    I’m wondering if you could talk about the demand from non-vaccine-related players in terms of biostorage? And has there been maybe a rush to secure space with the increase in demand from vaccines?
  • Mike Rice:
    Yes. I don’t think we want to go there, Marc. I think we’re going to just going to stick right to it and say, we’re just not going to give any granularity on SciSafe other than how Rod has articulated how we’re going to report that in 1 of the 3 buckets going forward this year.
  • Marc Wiesenberger:
    Got it. Understood. In the prepared remarks, you did talk about expansion in the U.S. and Europe related to Biostorage. Could you talk about maybe some color on the location and level of investment we can expect?
  • Mike Rice:
    Definitely not. Based on the guidance from the federal agencies, there is one thing we’re definitely not going to talk about, and that is where we’re going to be and what might be stored in those facilities. We’d like to, but that’s the guidance. So we’re going to respect that.
  • Marc Wiesenberger:
    Okay. You made an interesting investment in December in PanTHERA CryoSolutions. Can you talk about what attracted you to that opportunity? How their preservation media compares to the – your current formulation? And with kind of worldwide marketing and distribution rights, what’s the strategic opportunity there going forward?
  • Mike Rice:
    Yes. Good one. Thanks for asking. So PanTHERA has a particular synthetic molecule that can inhibit the formation of ice on inside of cells during the freezing process, which is really damaging. That whole ice formation and then water flowing out, water flowing back in can cause the membranes to go crazy and rupture and then you have no cells left because they are dead. So this particular molecule that the Panthera folks have identified and gained access to could be seen as a potential additive to our CryoStor family of freeze media, although we have to be clear that CryoStor works really, really well. So there could be some upside with certain cell types, but nevertheless, it could be something we would spike CryoStor with to make it work even better. But I think, Marc, think about this as an offense/defensive play. While we have the opportunity to help them finish the work and then to commercially exploit it, we also have the opportunity to make sure that it’s not in anybody else’s hands where they could simply spike a homebrew with this particular molecule and come up with something that might ultimately based on the performance, disrupted as large CryoStor hold in the cell and gene therapy space. So we think we have total optionality based on how it goes, and we’re looking forward to seeing how the rest of the experiments go.
  • Marc Wiesenberger:
    Awesome. Great color. And then just one more for me, can you talk about the expectations for the preservation media growth in the first quarter, given that there was some pull forward last year at the onset of the pandemic and maybe just more broadly, the cadence throughout the year for the respective business lines? Thank you.
  • Mike Rice:
    Yes. We don’t – as you know, we don’t give any quarterly color. But Rod, you can chime in if you like.
  • Rod de Greef:
    Yes. I mean the only thing I was going to say, Marc, really is that the Q1 is going to be a tough comp on the media side because we probably pulled in $1.5 million to $2 million in Q1 of ‘20 from the COVID, which was then kind of trailed off throughout the rest of the year. So we did conclude that it was demand pull forward as opposed to some permanent safety stock on the part of our customers. So I think Q1 will be what it is, but certainly, on the media side, it’s a tough comp.
  • Marc Wiesenberger:
    Got it. Thank you very much.
  • Mike Rice:
    Thanks, Marc.
  • Operator:
    Thank you. Our next question comes from Paul Knight of KeyBanc. Your line is open.
  • Paul Knight:
    Thanks for the redo. Hey, Dusty, who are your competitors in your business?
  • Dusty Tenney:
    Paul, we’ve got probably two primary competitors that I’ll denote. I think Thermo is probably one and Panasonic is the second.
  • Paul Knight:
    Okay. Where do you rank in share? Do you know?
  • Dusty Tenney:
    I think share, by geography, is a little bit mixed. I would say that we’re hovering around the number two position in the market.
  • Paul Knight:
    Okay. And then, Rod, I missed the breakout on the number on Astero for 4Q?
  • Rod de Greef:
    Sorry?
  • Mike Rice:
    We lost you.
  • Rod de Greef:
    Yes. You broke up. Can you repeat?
  • Paul Knight:
    What was the Astero number in the CBS revenue for Q4?
  • Rod de Greef:
    Okay. Astero was – let me find my commentary. Astero was $662,000 and freezer business was $3.6 million.
  • Paul Knight:
    Okay. Thank you very much.
  • Rod de Greef:
    You bet.
  • Operator:
    Thank you. Our next question comes from Carl Byrnes of Northland Capital Markets. Your line is open.
  • Carl Byrnes:
    Hey, thanks for the question. Congratulations.
  • Mike Rice:
    Thanks, Carl.
  • Carl Byrnes:
    With respect to Stirling, in addition to the obvious COVID opportunity and considering the Stirling has been growing, do you see any material opportunity from stockpiling related to contracts from DoD or other government energies like BARDA? Thanks.
  • Mike Rice:
    Yes. Well, Carl, if you’re asking specifically to the COVID, we wouldn’t answer that, if you mean just generally, then definitely, sure.
  • Carl Byrnes:
    Fair enough, thanks.
  • Operator:
    Thank you. At this time, I would like to turn the call back over to CEO, Mike Rice, for closing remarks. Sir?
  • Mike Rice:
    Thanks, Latif and thanks again everyone for your interest in BioLife. We are all really inspired to share this good news, and BioLife is now even better configured for even more continued growth. We have a very strong team here that executes every day to satisfy our customers and the performance of this team is simply amazing. I wish all of you and your families good health and safety, and we look forward to speaking with you when we report our first quarter results. Good night.
  • Operator:
    Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.