New Research Partnership With Horizon Therapeutics Could Be the Next Revenue Catalyst for Xeris

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Technology-based biopharma company Xeris (US:XERS) is set to boost its revenue with an upfront cash payment from a research collaboration and option agreement that was secured with mid-cap pharma Horizon Therapeutics (US:HZNP).

XERS opened 12.6% higher at $1.43 on the news before traders banked profits, with the stock drifting lower and closing with a 3.9% gain at $1.32 on Wednesday afternoon.

The agreement will see Xeris use its proprietary formulation technology platform called Xeriject to develop an “ultra-concentrated, ready-to-use, subcutaneous injection of teprotumumab” and will give Horizon an option to licence XER’s technology.

Teprotumumab is currently the first and only treatment currently approved by the FDA to treat Thyroid Eye Disease (TED), a progressive visual autoimmune disease.

As part of the terms of the deal, Horizon will pay Xeris an upfront payment that has not been disclosed to the market. In addition to the upfront payment, Xeris may also be entitled to receive further payments for: development milestones, regulatory milestones, sales-based milestones and royalties on future sales if the commercial licence option is exercised.

Chairman and CEO Paul Edick commented on the partnership highlighting “This partnership demonstrates the potential value of our technology to enable large molecule subcutaneous injections that provide a more patient friendly regimen that is effective, safe, and more convenient, with potential for improved adherence.”

XERS has risen 7 ranks this week and is currently the 69th most held security among retail investors. To gain access to retail trade flow data for free, click here.

Earlier in November, Xeris provided its third quarter update to investors with the company growing revenues by 31% over the year to $29.6 million. The result came in marginally ahead of consensus forecasts of around $29 million.

Xeris reduced its net loss from -$26 million in 2021 to -$21.8 million in 2022, equating to EPS of -16 cents per share. The net result came in broadly as expected by the street.

The firm ended the quarter with $84.1 million in cash and $9.3 million in short-term investments, as well as $27 million in net receivables.

A chart from the Fintel financial metrics and ratios page for XERS shows the growing level of sales over time with net income expected to track towards 0 in the coming year.

At the time of the result, CEO Paul Edick narrowed full year guidance expectations to generate $105 to $110 million in next product revenue, from $90 to $110 million prior with increased visibility of sales for the final quarter of the fiscal year.

The company also raised its year-end cash balance guidance to $110-120 million and reaffirmed its guidance to generate $50 million of synergies, driving its ability to reach break-even profitability by the end of 2023.

Analysts Glen Santangelo and Peter Warendort from Jefferies investment bank reiterated their ‘buy’ recommendation and $4 target on the stock to investors following the result.

The firm believes that XERS stock warrants a valuation premium because of the significant market opportunity and the expectation they will not need to raise capital before reaching break even. Jefferies thinks there is a significant opportunity to gain further market penetration in the next few years.

On average XERS has a consensus ‘buy’ recommendation with an average $5.25 target price.

This article originally appeared on Fintel

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