Liminal BioSciences Inc.
Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript
Published:
- Operator:
- Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Liminal BioSciences, Inc. Fourth Quarter 2022 Results Conference Call. This call is being recorded on Thursday, March 16, 2023. I would now like to turn the conference over to Shrinal Inamdar. Please go ahead.
- Shrinal Inamdar:
- Thank you, operator. Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Iâm the Associate Director of Investor Relations and Communications at Liminal, and Iâd like to welcome you to our fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2022, results conference call. This recorded webcast will be accessible from the Investor Resources page on the Liminal BioSciences website and will be available for replay later today. For those of you dialing in, you can find a copy of our presentation slides on the webcast section of the website or via the conference call portal. Moving on to Slide 2. Iâd like to remind everyone that we will be making forward-looking statements today during the webcast, including remarks or current expectations concerning future developments of the pipeline, the properties of our product candidates and the timing of initiation or nature of preclinical and clinical trials and potential therapeutic areas, all potential of our programs to address significant unmet medical needs, our regulatory plans, financing plans, our company, our financial position, including our expected cash runway, our ability to actively seek and closing opportunities to monetize noncore assets or to continue or comply with Nasdaq listing rules and possible changes in the industry and competitive environment. These forward-looking statements are based on our current expectations and beliefs and on information currently available to us. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, including those contained in our updated reports that we file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission or SEC and Canadian securities commissions from time to time, including our annual report on Form 20-F and 6-K containing our press release of the results of the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2022, each of which we have filed with the SEC and on SEDAR that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements. Please note that these forward-looking statements made during the webcast today speak only of our expectations as of todayâs date. And Liminal BioSciences undertakes no obligation to update these statements to reflect subsequent events or circumstances, except to the extent required by law. As stated on Slide 3, during this morningâs webcast, Liminal BioSciences Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Bruce Pritchard, will provide a brief summary of our recent achievements and upcoming expected milestones. Ms. Nicole Rusaw, Chief Financial Officer, will then present the financial and operational highlights for the fourth quarter and the year ended December 31, 2022. We will then follow with an executive summary and a short question-and-answer period for financial analysts only. Iâd now like to hand over the call to our Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Bruce Pritchard. Bruce, over to you.
- Bruce Pritchard:
- Thatâs great. Thank you very much, Shrinal, and good morning, everyone. We begin 2023 in an exciting position having met all of our previously disclosed milestones for our GPR84 and OXER1 antagonist development programs. If you could all move now to Slide 4 in the presentation, Iâd like to recap some of our key achievements since our last update. So Iâm very pleased to be updating you today on all of the continued progress weâve made during the last quarter and subsequently to deliver our objectives and accelerate the development of our pipeline. At the end of December 2022, we delivered on our objectives to monetize noncore assets by completing the sale of a noncore real estate asset for a purchase price of CAD 3.175 million paid in cash at closing. In January, we held a special meeting of shareholders to vote on a 10
- Nicole Rusaw:
- Thank you, Bruce. Slide 6 is a quick reminder that this part of todayâs webcast is based on the audited consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2022. All figures are prepared under International Financial Reporting Standards or IFRS. And the full annual report and other important information can be found online at sec.gov and sedar.com. Our financial information is presented in Canadian dollars, and all references during the webcast to dollars means Canadian dollars unless otherwise specified. For simplicity, some numbers being discussed have been rounded. As mentioned on the slide here and as disclosed in the companyâs annual report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022, the company has restated the companyâs interim financial statements for the period ended March 31, 2022; June 30, 2022; and September 30, 2022. On Slide 7, Iâd like to review selected information from our results from continuing operations. Given the companyâs divestment of its former plasma-derived therapeutics segment, the company has presented results from discontinued operations in the current and comparative periods. These comprise of revenues and expenses of most of the former plasma-derived therapeutics segment activities and net assets divested in 2021 with the exception of some remaining noncore assets and liabilities, which the company intends to sell or extinguish. Research and development expenses from continuing operations was $15.3 million for the year ended December 31, 2022, compared to $18.3 million for the year ended December 31, 2021. The net decrease of $3 million was mainly attributable to decreases in clinical trial costs, depreciation expense on intangible assets and reduced consulting fees. The decrease in R&D expenses was partially offset by increases in preclinical studies expense relating to our GPR84 and OXER1 antagonist programs. Administration expenses from continuing operations decreased $14.1 million from $31.9 million in the comparative period to $17.9 million for the year ended December 31, 2022. The decrease in admin expenses was primarily attributed to a decrease of $9.2 million in insurance expense as a result of reduced D&O insurance premiums resulting from the change in the companyâs registered office from Quebec to Ontario in the later part of 2021. Admin expense decrease is also due to reductions in share-based payment expenses and salaries and other benefits of $2.7 million and $1.7 million, respectively. Finance costs from continuing operations decreased by $5.3 million from $6.3 million in the comparative period compared to $1.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2022. Decrease in finance costs resulted from the repayment of our long-term debt earlier in the year. Net loss from continuing operations, net of taxes, decreased by $16.1 million during the year ended December 31, 2022, compared to the corresponding period in 2021. Reduction in net loss from continuing operations was mainly driven by the reductions in admin expenses of $14.1 million reflecting the reduction in insurance expense, a decrease in finance costs of $5.3 million due to the termination of all long-term debt and an increase in foreign exchange gains of $1.6 million. These decreases were partially offset by a reduced gain resulting in change in fair value of financial instruments measured at fair value through profit and loss of $8.2 million. Total income from discontinued operations, net of tax, decreased by $27.1 million during the year ended December 31, 2022, compared to fiscal 2021. During 2021, income from discontinued operations included the results from the sale of our Ryplazim business and the priority review voucher of $138 million as well as a gain on the sale of our plasma collection centers of $2.5 million, offset by relevant operational expenses of the discontinued operations of $83.1 million. Income from discontinued operations in the current year is comprised of the decrease in expenses due to the termination of the CDMO agreement and the resulting reversal in the associated ownerâs provision and lease liability totaling $27.8 million as well as a gain from the disposal of our facility in the amount of $2.3 million. Net income was $0.6 million for the year ended December 31, 2022, compared to net income of $12.2 million for the year ended December 31, 2021. Moving to Slide 8, Iâd like to walk through the major elements that impacted our cash and cash equivalents throughout fiscal 2022. These cash flows include cash flows from both continuing operations as well as discontinued operations. We started 2022 with $108.5 million of cash and cash equivalents. During the first quarter, the company repaid its secured first and second term loans of $39.6 million, thereby terminating both the consolidated loan agreements and royalty stream agreement with Structured Alpha LP or SALP, canceling outstanding warrants held by SALP issued pursuant to the 2019 restructuring agreement and releasing the security granted in favor of SALP over the companyâs assets, including our intellectual property. During the third quarter, the company paid $11.2 million for the termination of the CDMO agreement, leaving 2 remaining payments of $3.4 million each. The first payment of $3.4 million was made in January 2023, and the final payment will be made in January 2024. During the fourth quarter, the company completed the sale of our Labrosse facility, a noncore real estate asset for a purchase price of $3.2 million. The company has used $31.8 million of cash on operating activities during fiscal â22, all of which were incurred to support the small molecules business segment. At December 31, 2022, the company had $37.1 million in cash and cash equivalents. As stated on Slide 9, I will now turn the call back to Bruce for some closing comments.
- Bruce Pritchard:
- Thatâs great. Thanks very much, Nicole. So on Slide 10, to recap on expected milestones, our drug discovery engine and expertise in G protein-coupled receptor pathways has resulted in a pipeline made up of 3 development programs, which we believe have the potential to provide us with commercial opportunities in several metabolic, inflammatory and fibrosis-related therapeutic areas. Our pipeline is poised to deliver on some key milestones in the next few months. I mentioned earlier, for LMNL6511, ongoing in vivo experiments are expected to allow us to select a lead clinical indication in the coming months. And subject to continued satisfactory results in ongoing clinical trial application-enabling work, we expect to seek approval to commence a first-in-human Phase I clinical trial of LMNL6511 during the second half of 2023. We aim to follow on with nominating a preclinical candidate for our OXER1 antagonist program in the first half of 2023 for further development as a potential therapy for eosinophil-driven diseases and are aiming to commence a first-in-human clinical trial in 2024. Our GPR40 antagonist development program is currently in the discovery stage, and we look forward to providing further updates on all of our programs as data becomes available. So finally, on Slide 11 to wrap up on key takeaways, we closed December 31 with just over CAD 37 million in cash, which is anticipated to support our near-term development goals into early 2024. We also continue to identify potential opportunities to expand our cash runway with the monetization of remaining noncore assets. Today, weâre a debt-free company with global rights for novel compounds all under the control of Liminal BioSciences. In addition to our pipeline, we have the ability to explore other development opportunities from our GPCR drug discovery platform to discover and develop differentiated GPCR targeted therapies for unmet medical needs. And with confirmation from Nasdaq that weâve regained compliance with the Nasdaq listing rules, our continued listing on the Nasdaq Capital Markets allows us the opportunity to raise capital to continue the development of our novel compounds. Weâre excited for the next few months, given the important clinical milestones expected for GPR84 and candidate selection for OXER1 and believe our GPCR drug discovery engine allows us opportunities for both raising capital and business development as weâve seen in recent months in this space. So weâd now like to address any questions that any of our financial analysts may have. And operator, if I can hand over to you for the Q&A section, please.
- Operator:
- Your first question comes from Antonia Borovina with Bloom Burton.
- Antonia Borovina:
- So my first question is for Bruce. So you now have a GPR84 antagonist in your pipeline, and you just announced the GPR40 agonist. So my question is, you did have an earlier drug, fezagepras, in your pipeline. And this mechanism is proposed to be dual GPR40 agonism and a GPR84 antagonism. And it produced mixed or underwhelming results in clinical studies. But as far as I know, it didnât have a safety signal. So Iâm just wondering like why you think having these 2 specific drugs targeting these mechanisms of actions, specifically why they will fare better in the clinic? And then I have a couple of follow-up questions for Nicole.
- Bruce Pritchard:
- Sure. Thatâs great. Thanks, Antonia. Well, let me tackle the question on the drug compound first. So youâre right. Originally, the fezagepras asset had a stated mechanism of combined GPR84 and GPR40. But I think as you probably remember, as we went further with clinical activity, we looked at the activity on those receptors and actually felt that the activity was actually on different receptors, not GPR84 and GPR40 but looking more at PPAR-alpha and GPR84. That particular asset, as you know, once we went into additional clinical work in single-ascending and multiple-ascending dose studies did not provide us with a PK profile that we felt was suitable for taking forward for further development. The GPR84 selective antagonist and the GPR40 selective agonists are being specifically designed from the ground up as just that single-receptor candidates. And our approach for doing this is really very much based upon not only the literature around both of those receptors and the kind of the biological arguments for antagonism or antagonism of those receptors, but also from work that has already been done by others in the space who have looked at these receptors for commercial purposes before. Now we believe, as I mentioned in the presentation, that with our in-house medicinal chemistry capability and the capabilities of the rest of our group be able to design structurally different compounds that can engineer out some of the challenges that those individual drugs have seen historically. And so weâre quite excited about the opportunity to take these new chemical entities designed by our in-house team forward in programs for individual receptors that have already been kind of well elucidated, both in the literature and by others targeting them. Hopefully, that answers your question?
- Antonia Borovina:
- Yes. Thatâs helpful. And then just following up from a cash management perspective, just wondering, do you anticipate that you could have the GPR84 Phase I data in hand prior to any planned raise? And then what other noncore real estate assets do you still have that you think you could sell to extend the cash runway? And thatâs it for me.
- Bruce Pritchard:
- Perhaps, Nicole, Iâll start off on this and if thereâs anything...
- Nicole Rusaw:
- Yes, thatâs fine.
- Bruce Pritchard:
- You could jump in. But in terms of the runway, Antonia, it really very much depends upon the pace at which we can get through the remaining sort of CTA-enabling activity and into the clinic. But the reality is that the data from any study is likely to come in early 2024. So the data is going to come very close to the point where we would be based on current guidance out of cash. Obviously, if we can extend that runway through incremental use of the noncore real estate assets, then that changes that position. In terms of the specific assets that weâre talking about here, these are the remaining assets that we hold from the acquisition of Telesta that the company did several years ago.
- Operator:
- There are no further questions at this time. Please proceed.
- Bruce Pritchard:
- Okay. Thank you, operator. So thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen, for taking the time to join our call this morning. Weâre excited by the progress that weâve made so far and indeed are further excited by whatâs in the -- on the slate for the coming months ahead. And we look forward to updating you our progress over the coming quarters. Thank you for joining the call this morning, and I wish you all good day.
- Operator:
- Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating and ask that you please disconnect your lines.