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Strata Critical Medical Inc. (SRTA) reported its Q3 2025 earnings, revealing a significant revenue miss against forecasts. The company posted an earnings per share (EPS) of -$0.12, falling short of the expected $0.02, leading to a 700% negative surprise. Revenue came in at $49.3 million, missing the forecasted $61.31 million by 19.61%. Despite these results, the stock rose 7.67% in premarket trading, indicating investor optimism about the company’s strategic moves and future potential.
Key Takeaways
- Strata Critical Medical reported a 36.7% increase in revenue year-over-year.
- The company missed EPS and revenue forecasts significantly.
- Despite the miss, the stock rose 7.67% in premarket trading.
- The company raised its 2025 revenue guidance to $185-$195 million.
- New product launches and strategic acquisitions are key focus areas.
Company Performance
Strata Critical Medical’s Q3 2025 performance showed strong year-over-year growth, with revenue increasing by 36.7%. The company has made significant strides in becoming an end-to-end organ recovery platform, launching new clinical services and supporting innovative technologies. The acquisition of Keystone Perfusion has been a strategic move to enhance its market presence, despite the revenue miss this quarter.
Financial Highlights
- Revenue: $49.3 million, up 36.7% year-over-year
- EPS: -$0.12, compared to the forecast of $0.02
- Medical segment-adjusted EBITDA margin: 15.1%, up from 12.5% in the first half of 2025
- Cash position: $76 million with no debt
Earnings vs. Forecast
Strata Critical Medical’s earnings report revealed a significant miss on both EPS and revenue forecasts. The company reported an EPS of -$0.12, compared to the forecasted $0.02, resulting in a 700% negative surprise. Revenue was $49.3 million, falling short of the expected $61.31 million by 19.61%. This marks a notable deviation from expectations, although the company has shown strong year-over-year growth.
Market Reaction
Despite missing earnings and revenue expectations, Strata Critical Medical’s stock rose 7.67% in premarket trading to $4.77. This movement suggests that investors are optimistic about the company’s strategic direction and potential for future growth, particularly in light of its increased revenue guidance and innovative product launches.
Outlook & Guidance
Looking ahead, Strata Critical Medical has raised its 2025 revenue guidance to $185-$195 million and reaffirmed its adjusted EBITDA guidance of $13-$14 million. The company is focusing on expanding its market share and service offerings, with plans to introduce 2026 financial guidance and medium-term targets at its inaugural Investor Day on November 17, 2025.
Executive Commentary
"We are now truly an end-to-end organ recovery platform," said Melissa Tomkiel, Co-CEO, highlighting the company’s strategic advancements. Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, added, "We see an equally attractive opportunity to consolidate market share in a very fragmented marketplace," emphasizing the potential for growth through market consolidation. Tomkiel also noted the cost-efficiency improvements, stating, "This is an industry first, and we’re thrilled to have a way to make the transplant process more cost-efficient for our customers."
Risks and Challenges
- Revenue and EPS misses could raise concerns about future financial performance.
- Market saturation in the organ transplant industry could limit growth.
- Integration of Keystone Perfusion may pose operational challenges.
- Economic conditions and healthcare regulations could impact business operations.
- Dependence on technological advancements and FDA approvals for new products.
Q&A
During the earnings call, analysts raised questions about the seasonality in transplant volumes and the integration of the Keystone acquisition. The company addressed these concerns by highlighting growth drivers such as new customer acquisitions, market share expansion, and the adoption of new industry technologies.
Full transcript - Strata Critical Medical Inc (SRTA) Q3 2025:
Conference Call Operator: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Strata Critical Medical fiscal third quarter 2025 earnings release conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct the question-and-answer sessions, and instructions will follow at that time. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference call over to Matt Schneider, Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations and CFO of Strata, Keystone Perfusion Subsidiary. Matt, you may begin.
Matt Schneider, Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations, CFO, Strata Critical Medical: Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Strata Critical Medical conference call and webcast for the quarter ended September 30, 2025. We appreciate everyone joining us today. Before we get started, I would like to remind you of the company’s forward-looking statement and safe harbor language. Statements made in this conference call that are not historical facts, including statements about future time periods, may be deemed to constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, and actual future results may differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. We refer you to our SEC filings, including our annual report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC for a more detailed discussion of the risk factors that could cause these differences.
Any forward-looking statements provided during this conference call are made only as of the date of this call. As stated in our SEC filings, Strata disclaims any intent or obligation to update or revise these forward-looking statements, except as required by law. During today’s call, we’ll also discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe may be useful in evaluating our financial performance. A reconciliation of the most directly historical comparable consolidated GAAP financial measures to those historical non-GAAP financial measures is provided in our earnings press release and investor presentation. Our press release, investor presentation, and our Form 10-Q and 10-K filings are available on the investor relations section of our website at ir-stratacritical.com. These non-GAAP measures should not be considered in isolation or as substitutes for financial results prepared in accordance with GAAP. Hosting today’s call are our Co-CEOs, Will Heyburn and Melissa Tomkiel.
I’ll now turn the call over to Will.
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Thank you, Matt, and good morning, everyone. It’s been a very exciting few months as we closed two transformational transactions during the quarter, both the divestiture of our passenger business and the acquisition of Keystone Perfusion, setting us up incredibly well for long-term growth and value creation. We also rebranded the company as Strata Critical Medical and changed our ticker symbol to SRTA to reflect our sharpened focus on healthcare. I’m happy to report that Strata is off to an exceptional start. In Q3, year-over-year revenue growth accelerated to 29%, excluding Keystone, well above our expectation for mid-teens revenue growth in the second half of the year. This resulted in record segment-adjusted EBITDA performance, which saw 80% year-over-year growth, excluding Keystone, this quarter.
This great profit improvement was driven both by volume and significant improvements in aircraft performance as we emerged from a period of particularly heavy maintenance on our own fleet. This resulted in a medical segment-adjusted EBITDA margin increase to over 15% in Q3 2025, excluding Keystone, versus our 10.8% in the prior year period and 12.5% in the first half of this year. Our sequential growth in Q3 2025 versus Q2 2025 is particularly impressive in the context of the seasonal sequential decline in industry transplant volumes, demonstrating the significant impact of Strata’s continued market share gains and our customers’ adoption of new services. We are also encouraged by the positive free cash flow from continuing operations in the quarter, and we expect to consistently generate free cash flow moving forward. Before I walk through the financial results in more detail, I will turn it over to Melissa.
Melissa Tomkiel, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Thank you, Will. It’s an honor to be here as Co-CEO discussing this exceptional first quarter performance of Strata. Our integration of Keystone and our launch of Strata’s new clinical services division is off to a fantastic start. With these new capabilities, we are now truly an end-to-end organ recovery platform, and the team is focused on tailoring solutions that deliver operational efficiencies and cost savings to the transplant community broadly, starting with our existing customers. Our go-to-market strategy uses the same playbook we’ve employed successfully in our core logistics business, locating resources closer to our customers. We are co-locating staff and equipment acquired through Keystone near our existing logistics hubs, enabling us to offer all-in lower costs to deliver these services. We are also rolling out new offerings to reduce the cost of DCD dry-run recoveries, a consistent pain point for our customers.
By utilizing local surgical, NRP, and air resources in strategic service areas, we enable our customers to avoid incurring what can be very significant air transportation costs and wasting their surgeon’s valuable time until we know that the organ will be accepted. This is an industry first, and we’re thrilled to have a way to make the transplant process more cost-efficient for our customers. We hope it will enable centers to go after organs that otherwise may not have been worth the time and expense, increasing transplant volumes. We continue to strategically focus on where the puck is going, and industry data shows the market is heading in our direction. Industry-wide NRP adoption rates continued to increase during Q3, with transplants of organs that have undergone NRP approximately doubling versus the prior year.
This is an encouraging validation of our strategy to increase exposure to the fastest-growing sectors of the transplant ecosystem. It also further aligns our mission with that of our customers, enabling more reliable and lower-cost access to life-saving organs. We’ve also seen great responses from our colleagues across the transplant industry. This was a particularly exciting quarter for our friends at OrganOx, as they received FDA approval to perfuse livers with the Metro device while in flight. We’ve already done the work to support our customers who choose to utilize this technology, all part of our device-agnostic strategy. We still believe that the customer is always right, and we will always do everything we can to support the rapidly broadening set of life-saving technologies driving growth in organ transplant volumes. With that, I’ll turn it back over to Will.
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Thanks, Melissa. I’ll now walk through the financial highlights from the quarter. All financial results discussed during this call reflect continuing operations only, as the results of the passenger business have now been reclassified as discontinued operations for all periods. Revenue rose 36.7% year-over-year to $49.3 million in Q3 2025. Excluding Keystone, revenue increased 29% versus the prior year period. Despite the sequential seasonal decline of industry-wide heart, liver, and lung transplants in Q3 of approximately 6%, our revenue increased 3% sequentially, excluding Keystone. Organic revenue growth in Q3 was driven primarily by strength in air logistics, where both new and existing customers contributed to the strong results in the quarter. We added one new OPO air logistics customer late in Q3. I’d also highlight that organ placement services revenue more than doubled year-over-year, albeit on a small base, as we continue to scale the business and acquire new customers.
During the quarter, we added one new organ placement customer. Revenue growth can be noisy quarter to quarter, but our year-to-date growth rate, excluding Keystone, of 15% reflects strong outperformance relative to the industry transplant volume growth of approximately 4%. Keystone, which closed on September 16, saw only a half-month of revenue contribution during the quarter for a $2.8 million impact. For the full month of September, Keystone’s revenue increased over 40% year-over-year. Moving to margins, as expected, we saw a significant sequential improvement in medical segment-adjusted EBITDA margins to 15.1% in Q3 2025, excluding Keystone, versus 12.5% in the first half of the year, driven primarily by improved performance in our own fleet. Adjusted unallocated corporate expenses of $3.3 million in Q3 2025 are down approximately 40% from our run rate prior to the passenger divestiture, reflecting our significantly reduced corporate overhead as a purely medical-focused business.
This also came in ahead of our guidance for $3.5 million. Turning to cash flow, there’s been a lot of noise this quarter given the unique transactions completed during the period, and accounting that, unfortunately, is not particularly intuitive in our situation. As such, we’ll take a minute to walk through all the nuances, but we’ll start with the most important point. We now expect this business to be solidly free cash flow generative going forward, and if you cut through all the noise this quarter, we generated approximately $2 million of free cash flow from continuing operations in the quarter and $2.7 million of free cash flow from continuing operations before aircraft and engine acquisitions. Now we’ll dive into the details.
Due to the unique nature of Keystone’s capital structure, where employees participated in a phantom equity plan, a portion of the upfront consideration was paid to employees participating in this plan through Keystone’s payroll system post-close. As a result of this structure, accounting rules required us to recognize $44.3 million of the Keystone purchase consideration in operating cash flow instead of investing. While the underlying total cash consideration from the Keystone transaction is unchanged, this accounting treatment resulted in a negative operating cash flow in the quarter. The difference between adjusted EBITDA of $4.2 million in the quarter and cash from operations of negative $37.3 million was primarily driven by this $44.3 million impact from the Keystone acquisition consideration mentioned above and Joby transaction costs of $6 million. This was partially offset by operating cash flow from discontinued operations of approximately $8 million.
Capital expenditures, inclusive of capitalized software development costs, were $3.2 million in the quarter, driven primarily by capitalized aircraft maintenance of approximately $2.5 million and capitalized software development of $0.3 million. We ended the quarter with no debt and approximately $76 million of cash and short-term investments. Before moving to the outlook, there are a few quick housekeeping items to review. First, the Joby transaction closed during the quarter. As a reminder, the total value of the transaction was up to $125 million, consisting of an $80 million upfront consideration in cash or stock, $35 million in two separate earnouts over a total of 18 months that can also be paid in cash or stock, and an indemnity holdback of $10 million. Joby chose to pay the $80 million upfront consideration in stock, and we monetized the shares during the quarter for cash proceeds of approximately $70 million.
The $10 million difference was driven by a significant decline in Joby’s stock price during both the pre-closed VWAP measurement period, which determined the number of shares we received, and immediately after we received the shares. We have clear capital deployment priorities and took a market-neutral view as we liquidated the Joby shares. Lastly, we booked a legal provision during the quarter for ongoing litigation related to our go-public transaction that’s been disclosed in our FCC filings over the last several years. Moving now to the outlook. Due to the strong demand we saw in Q3, which continued into October, we are raising our 2025 revenue guidance range to $185 million-$195 million. We are also reaffirming the adjusted EBITDA guidance range of $13 million-$14 million for 2025.
Medical segment-adjusted EBITDA margins are expected to rise sequentially in Q4 versus Q3’s 15.3%, primarily due to the mixed impact of the Keystone acquisition. Adjusted unallocated corporate expenses are expected to be approximately $3.5 million in Q4. Finally, we are looking forward to Monday, November 17, when we are hosting our inaugural Investor Day at the Nasdaq Markets site in New York City at 2:00 P.M. There has been considerable change at Strata over the last few months, and we are excited to provide a deep dive into the business and share our plans for significant growth and value creation over the coming years. Leaders from across the business will participate in the event and will be on hand to answer questions afterwards. We will also introduce our formal 2026 financial guidance and medium-term financial targets during the event. We hope you can join us next week.
With that, I’ll turn it back over to the operator for Q&A.
Conference Call Operator: Thank you so much. As a reminder, to ask a question, simply press Star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To remove yourself, press Star 11 again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Okay. One moment for one question. It comes from the line of Ben Heyner with Lake Street Capital Markets.
Ben Heyner, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Good morning, folks. Thanks for taking the questions. It sounds like everything’s going quite well. Nice to see the guidance raise here. Could you maybe provide a bit of a disaggregation of where the growth came from in terms of the revenue here during Q3?
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Sure. Happy to do that, Ben. Thanks for being on the call. Look, it was a pretty even mix of new customer acquisition. We continue to take market share and some strength within our existing customers. Some of that strength can also come from customers taking new services from us. We have broadened the suite of services that we offer. Very happy to see all of those things coming together for obviously revenue growth that far exceeds our expectations.
Ben Heyner, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Maybe this is a question for the event next week. Do you see the growth as coming from similar directions in the future? Are the growth drivers similarly weighted as you see it?
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Yeah. Look, we continued to add new customers in the quarter, as we talked about during the call. We see an equally attractive opportunity to consolidate market share in a very fragmented marketplace where we think our offering is significantly stronger, just given our scale and our local service model. We also see a really attractive underlying industry growth trajectory where you have new technology and evolving regulations that are resulting in really attractive growth. That really attractive growth means more people get organs that need them, ultimately resulting in lives being saved. We think everything is aligned to create multiple ways for us to achieve our growth objectives here. We are really excited to talk about that in a lot more detail next week at our Investor Day.
Ben Heyner, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Okay. Great. Looking forward to that. On the heavy maintenance that you performed earlier this year across the fleet, what should we expect in terms of fleet margin, kind of the remainder of the year, downtime impact, any moving pieces that changed because of the maintenance schedule earlier this year?
Matt Schneider, Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations, CFO, Strata Critical Medical: Hey, Ben. This is Matt. Yeah. We did see scheduled maintenance events kind of come down into the third quarter that will continue into the fourth quarter. As we said on the call, prepared remarks, we do expect margins to increase sequentially within the medical segment. We are seeing that benefit. We will talk more next week about the margin expectations moving forward. I think you see that improvement in the first half versus the third quarter, what we’re expecting in the fourth quarter, all kind of in line with how we’ve been talking about it over the last few quarters.
Ben Heyner, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Okay. Great. Lastly, for me, you mentioned the relocation associated things associated with Keystone. Is that relatively de minimis in terms of expenses that that will generate, or is that something that we should kind of factor in?
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Don’t think it’s anything you need to factor into the SG&A. It’s just more about aligning our resources so that we’re not flying people across the country when we don’t have to deliver these services. That’s one of the big advantages here, is putting those things together.
Ben Heyner, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Got it. Great. Thanks for taking the questions, and congrats on the quarter and the guidance.
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Thanks, Ben. Appreciate it.
Conference Call Operator: Thank you. As a reminder to our audience, if you do have a question, simply press Star 11 to get in the queue. Our next question is from John Hickman with Ladenburg Thalmann. Please proceed.
John Hickman, Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann: Yeah. I don’t know who this question is for, but with the Keystone acquisition, could you give us a sense of how many individual separate customers you are serving now?
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Keystone has a number of different business lines, John, we’ll hear. Across both the cardiac care business and the transplant business, there’s almost 250 different customers across the country. It is really great geographic diversity across the country. That is one of the reasons that we liked this model, because the perfusionists that serve those cardiac care customers could also be utilized to provide those NRP services that we provide to transplant center customers. There is this really strong foundation of trained personnel that are based locally across the country for the cardiac care business that can then support the transplant business as well. We see a big opportunity to bring those valuable services to our mutual customer bases, because there’s only about 10% overlap of the transplant customers between the legacy Strata business and Keystone. Great opportunity there.
John Hickman, Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann: Is there any customer that’s, I don’t know, 5% or more now of revenues? Any one customer that’s that large?
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: We don’t break out the customers on a business line-by-business line basis, but it’s a very diversified business, given that 250 customers for the revenue base there.
John Hickman, Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann: Okay. Could you elaborate? You gave us a lot of information pretty quickly. You said you got a new customer right at the end of the quarter?
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Yes. On the logistics business, we added a new customer on the logistics side for an organ procurement organization. If you recall, John, those contracts tend to be a little more focused on the ground than on the air, but they’ll do a little bit of both. Excited to see that continued momentum for new customer acquisition. A lot of that market share gain is what drove our outsized growth in this quarter from customers we added earlier in the year. We also mentioned that we added a new customer for organ placement as well.
John Hickman, Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann: Okay. As far as on the logistics side or the organ transplant side, you were very heavy on the air side, and Keystone had more ground services. Is that my recollection? Are you kind of evening out those two revenue sides now, or is air still predominantly the larger part?
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Air is still a much larger part of the business, John, though you’re correct in a sense that Keystone is weighted more towards some of the organ procurement organization customers, which they do have a lot of ground business that generates. Though Keystone’s revenue is really generated by surgical recovery services and NRP services that they’re providing to those customers. It creates a ground opportunity for us to provide the logistics to those underlying Keystone customers. It won’t create a material shift in the logistics business in terms of the weighting between air and ground.
John Hickman, Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann: Okay. Are you going to get to a point where you’re going to break out the two different logistics versus the perfusionist side?
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Yeah. If you look at our investor deck that we just posted this morning, you’ll see that we’ve added a breakout on a pro forma 2025 basis of what the business mix is, assuming Keystone was acquired on January 1 of this year. That’s sort of the best indicator of what the go-forward business mix is likely to be. I would flag for you that the Keystone business is concentrated in some of these really fast-growing subsectors of the transplant industry. We talked on the call about how it grew more than 40% year over year in the month of September. You will see a little bit of shift towards those services because we do expect, for example, NRP to continue growing as a percentage of the overall DCD recovery.
Some of those underlying industry dynamics—we’ll talk about a lot of it in much more detail next week at the Investor Day—will result in some mixed shifts towards those services.
John Hickman, Analyst, Ladenburg Thalmann: Okay. Thanks. Congratulations on the quarter again.
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Thanks, John.
Conference Call Operator: Thank you so much. As I see no further questions in the queue, I will pass it back to Matt.
Matt Schneider, Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations, CFO, Strata Critical Medical: Great. We got a few questions from investors directly, and we’re just going to address them now. The first question is just a question about the seasonality that we saw in the third quarter where transplant volumes down mid-single digits. Will, why don’t you take that one?
Will Heyburn, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Sure, Matt. This is something that we expected, and we’ve seen it in the industry volumes the last three years or so in a row. At the end of the day, there’s a supply and availability of transplant surgeons factor that drives the amount of volumes that can take place in the industry. And just historically, we’ve seen more vacations, more unavailability of surgeons, and it does, unfortunately, impact the volumes. This year was no different. There could be some other factors that play on the year-over-year. There’s always some lumpiness, as we like to say, in the transplant volumes. But as you can see, given our market share growth, our new offerings, and expanded service lines, we’re growing right through that seasonality, which is where we want to be.
Matt Schneider, Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations, CFO, Strata Critical Medical: Great. Multiple ways to outgrow the industry. We also got a question just, how’s the Keystone acquisition going so far? We closed about seven, eight weeks ago. Melissa, why don’t you handle that one?
Melissa Tomkiel, Co-CEO, Strata Critical Medical: Sure. Thanks, Matt. We’re getting real good positive reaction from our customers on the Keystone acquisition, and it’s really a great team of people that we’re thrilled to have join us. With Keystone’s surgical recovery and NRP capabilities, it truly makes us an end-to-end organ recovery platform. The customers are really excited about having us as a one-call option.
Matt Schneider, Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations, CFO, Strata Critical Medical: Great. We received a few other questions, but we’re going to save those for the Investor Day next week. We’re going to hand it over back to Carmen.
Conference Call Operator: Thank you so much. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes our conference. Thank you for your participation, and you may now disconnect.
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