Believes InMode's Cash Balance of Roughly 55% of its
Market Cap is Grossly Inefficient
Asserts the Current Valuation Offers an Unprecedented
Opportunity to Create Shareholder Return
MIAMI, July 25,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- DOMA Perpetual Capital
Management LLC today sent a letter to the Board of Directors of
InMode (NYSE: INMD) urging the Board to execute a 40% tender
offer of the stock.
The letter can be downloaded here.
The full text of the letter follows:
July 25, 2024
To the Board Members of InMode:
DOMA Perpetual Capital Management is an asset manager focused on
generating long-term value for its investors. DOMA is one of the
largest shareholders of InMode (the "Company").
Over the last few months, we have communicated privately with
the Board of Directors of the Company (the "Board") about our
concerns regarding the Company's capital allocation strategy and to
urge the Company to prioritize finding new ways to make the
equipment acquisition process more efficient for its clients.
During this period, InMode's stock price has continued to decline,
as market participants are losing faith in the capacity of the
Board and the Company's management to generate returns for
shareholders and allocate capital in an efficient way. We believe
this Board needs a strong independent voice that will advocate for
the interests of the Company's shareholders.
Early this year, we brought to the Board's attention the
misguided and financially-uninformed comments of InMode's CEO and
former Chairman, Moshe
Mizrahyi. These comments, made on
multiple occasions, evinced a lack of understanding of the basic
tenets of share buybacks and capital allocation. Shortly
thereafter, the Board announced a new Chairman, Dr. Michael Anghel. Dr.
Anghelii possesses a background in finance
and seemed to understand that issuing a dividend at the lowest
valuation in the history of a company is a significant capital
allocation mistake and sends the wrong message to investors. The
Board also announced a share buyback, reversing course on Mr.
Mizrahy's prior statementsiii. However, the
announced buyback falls short as it amounts to less than the
Company's free cash flow in a normalized year.
InMode's stock price is plummeting, along with its valuation.
InMode holds nearly $800 million in
cash and marketable securities, which is approximately 55% of the
Company's current market capitalizationiv. In
addition, the business possesses a large and healthy free cash
flow, no debt, approximately 80% gross
marginv, as well as a moat around its
intellectual property, preventing new market entrants. We believe
InMode completely dominates its sector.
The Board has spent significant time looking for companies to
acquire, yet we believe it has failed to consummate any attractive
acquisitions due to valuationsvi. In the
current market, where valuations are stretched, the task of finding
a quality company with valuable intellectual property at a
reasonable purchase price is exceedingly challenging. By contrast,
InMode, a company with margins and return of equity superior to
those of any potential acquisition, has experienced a significant
valuation contraction. We challenge the Board to find an
acquisition target in the minimally invasive or non-invasive
cosmetic procedure market with better financial returns, margins,
and intellectual property assets than InMode, which has an
irrationally depressed valuation. We believe that it does not
exist.
In order to create proper and material shareholder return,
InMode's Board should immediately approve a tender offer of 40% of
the Company's stock, to be followed by the already announced
buyback.
The Company's shareholders have been made to endure subpar
performance for too long. We believe the Board is destroying value
with an inefficient and ineffective capital allocation strategy.
There is ample, unused flexibility to generate shareholder return.
Keeping roughly $800 million
dollars on the balance sheet of a Company with 80% margin
and no debt, with the hope that an attractive acquisition will
magically appear, is wishful thinking and is detrimental to
shareholders. While the Board is buying back stock in "eye
dropper" amounts, the opportunity to buy back 40% of the Company at
its current, irrationally depressed valuation could quickly vanish.
The tender must be approved immediately. We believe that a decision
not to proceed with the tender will prove the Board is either
unable to understand the massive return opportunity in front of it
or that the Board is unwilling to uphold its fiduciary
responsibility to shareholders. Doing nothing at this critical
moment will demonstrate that the board lacks independence and the
Company needs shareholder-led change on the board, with focused,
aligned directors who are accountable to its owners.
The tender offer we are suggesting will only use about
$600 million dollars. InMode would
still have close to $200 million in
cash as well as all its debt capacity. Assuming 3x of next year's
debt and EBITDA, we estimate that the Company would have another
approximately $500 million of debt
capacity that could be used for a potential future acquisition. If
the Company needed to execute a large acquisition that required use
of its debt capacity, it could stop the regular buyback after the
tender and de-leverage quickly, due to its large and healthy free
cash flow. Again, InMode possesses net income margins of roughly
40%. The Board is fundamentally mismanaging the balance sheet by
ignoring shareholder returns.
It is clear that a potential acquisition in neuromodulators or
fillers is the right long-term move for the Company to diversify
its intellectual property, but there are many years ahead before
InMode's patents expire. Private markets do not deviate much from
public valuations and generous valuations in the sector – shown by
publicly traded companies like Galderma or Evolus – mean that
acquisitions cannot be made in the current market without
overpaying. This is not a buyers' market and maintaining so much
cash on the balance sheet with the hope of finding an acquisition
is hurting shareholders. Compared to InMode's business, the
barriers of entry in neuromodulators or fillers are lower and the
margin profile of these companies is inferior. We believe InMode's
moat is superior to any potential acquisition that the Company
could execute. There are many years ahead to diversify the
Company's intellectual property. An M&A deal does not have to
be done now, next year, or ever, as InMode continues to have an
incredible R&D department capable of pushing the boundaries and
developing new intellectual property internally.
The current slowdown in equipment leasing is due to macro
factors and it will likely dissipate in coming quarters, as central
banks around the globe continue to lower rates. In the US, the
market is predicting multiple rate cuts this
yearvii. As such, the opportunity to buy back
40% of the Company could disappear. In our view, InMode's free cash
flow will continue to grow as the Company expands internationally
and its customers begin a cycle of capital equipment replacement in
the US, all while the pricing power of the Company remains
untapped. We believe InMode's best years are ahead; its cash flow
will continue to grow, creating more opportunities for hoarding
large cash at hand for future M&A execution.
The strategies laid out below represent a sensible and
thoughtful capital allocation program for InMode:
- Continue to invest organically in R&D. To avoid the
same fates experienced by medical laser companies when their
patents expired, InMode should focus on constant innovation and
developing new intellectual property internally. The belief that
intellectual property diversification can be acquired from M&A
opportunities could prove wrong. To control its own destiny, InMode
should expand its R&D and focus on innovation, pushing more
boundaries. At this moment, we view InMode's R&D productivity
as unparalleled and believe that the Company must continue
investing in the development of internal intellectual property. We
believe this should be the tentpole of the capital allocation
strategy, especially when there are no great companies at rational
prices to acquire.
- Buy or invest in new and promising developing technologies
in the sector. This is a venture capital-like strategy of
capital allocation, in which the Company invests small sums into
promising start-ups in their early stages. This is a smaller but
crucial component of capital allocation strategy.
- Approach large M&A deals with even more patience. In
future M&A, InMode must take its time. We sense the Company is
rushing to find something at a moment when valuations are very high
and there are no clear candidates with margins comparable to
InMode's or large contributors to earnings growth. InMode should
take a multi-year approach to this process and, when ready, should
use its debt capacity for future acquisitions.
In recent remarks, Mr. Mizrahy and InMode's CFO, Yair Malca, stated they have yet to find any
businesses with margins similar to InMode's and are looking at an
acquisition target that should be accretive to EPS after twelve
monthsviii. Setting the bar this low is a
huge mistake. Every company produces the same thing: cash. From Mr.
Malca's statements, it sounds like the InMode's management and the
Board are proposing spending hundreds of millions of dollars to buy
a business that would need to cut executives and salespeople to be
able to even approach breakeven EPS after a
yearix. What is the return of invested
capital of this deal? What is the cash production and the
predictability that competitors will not enter the market or choose
to outspend you in marketing? In neuromodulators and fillers, there
are several players with new products coming to market; the
business is not a monopoly. Compare the results on EPS and ROE of
executing this M&A deal versus the execution of a 40% tender
offer for InMode's stock.
M&A should be part of the Company's capital allocation
strategy, but always in competition with other alternatives at
hand. We believe that the opportunity cost of such an M&A
transaction would be way too high, especially when compared to
using capital for a large tender offer when InMode's valuation at
an all-time lowx.
Choosing to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to close what
sounds to us like an unfavorable, unprofitable M&A deal instead
of executing a large, opportunistic tender would make it obvious to
shareholders that board-level change is needed.
- Rethink dividends. Companies with low returns on equity
– including those with no competitive advantage, selling an
undifferentiated product and suffering from the competitive
dynamics of capitalism – should return all free cash flow to
shareholders in the form of dividends. Reinvesting in a business
with low or no returns does not serve the interest of shareholders.
In contrast, companies with high returns of equity and the
potential to enjoy high returns of capital invested should show a
low dividend or no dividend at all. When a dividend is issued, the
company imposes tax on its shareholders. If the nature of the
shareholder is short term and they are looking for cash from their
investment, they can always sell their shares and cash out.
InMode's returns of capital and equity are so high and its patents
are so far from expiring that there is no reason for the Company to
pay dividends at the present time, nor in the coming years. The
business is growing, and we understand that InMode has a strong
potential to develop new intellectual property and the opportunity
to acquire great complementary businesses in the future. We believe
that paying a dividend, a strategy the Company appears to prefer
over issuing large buybacksxi, is a huge
mistake. Certainly, if patents were near expiration, and if the
Company has failed to diversify its intellectual property, then
there may arise a moment when a large dividend could be appropriate
use of capital. This is not that time. If Board members are
interested in obtaining cash, they are free to sell some of their
own stock at the tender offer. Of course, one could argue it does
not make a lot of sense to sell stock when InMode's valuation is so
low.
- Strategically execute tender offers and buybacks. We
believe that any tender offer or buybacks should only be executed
at a value-accretive price. This occurs when the price paid for the
stock is low enough that the value generated, when compared with
using that same cash for M&A or internal growth, is still a
superior return. At this moment in time, we would challenge the
Board to find an M&A opportunity with higher returns of
capital, equity and assets, higher margins with less competition,
better intellectual property and superior free cash flow growth
characteristics than InMode possesses – and do so at a lower
valuation than InMode. Outstanding businesses at attractive
prices are very scarce. There are many years before InMode's
patents expire but the opportunity to buy 40% of the Company with a
tender offer of stock at this depressed valuation might not last.
We believe that InMode will still have plenty of cash in the future
for M&A activities and about half a billion in current untapped
debt capacity for an opportunistic M&A deal.
It appears the Board thinks it has done enough by issuing a
small buyback in relationship to the cash at hand, debt capacity
and free cash flow of the firm. We believe the Board is mistaken.
It is our view that InMode could be at significant risk of a
hostile takeover from leverage buyout players due to its depressed
valuation, high margins, superior intellectual property and the
fact that the Company is full of cash and possesses no debt. This
Board needs to act quickly. It must return cash to its shareholders
with a large tender offer, thus taking advantage of InMode's
valuation opportunity in public markets. The Board has legal and
fiduciary responsibility to its shareholders and the path to
honoring that responsibility is clear.
Sincerely,
Pedro Escudero
CEO & CIO
DOMA Perpetual Capital Management LLC
i InMode Q1 2024 Earnings Call
ii InMode Q1 2024 Earnings Call
iii InMode Q3 2023 Earnings Call
iv InMode Q1 2024 Earnings Release, DOMA Perpetual
Internal Calculations
v InMode Q1 2024 Earnings Release & Call
vi InMode 23rd Annual Needham Virtual
Healthcare Conference Presentation 04.09.2024, InMode Jefferies
Global Healthcare Conference 2024 Presentation 06.05.2024
vii Melloy, J. (2024, July
16). Traders see the odds of a fed rate cut by September at
100%. CNBC.
https://www.cnbc.com/2024/07/16/traders-see-the-odds-of-a-fed-rate-cut-by-september-at-100percent.html
viii InMode 23rd Annual Needham Virtual
Healthcare Conference Presentation 04.09.2024, InMode BNPP Exane
2nd Annual Aesthetics Day 05.21.2024
ix InMode BNPP Exane 2nd Annual Aesthetics Day
05.21.2024, InMode 23rd Annual Needham Virtual
Healthcare Conference Presentation 04.09.2024
x DOMA Internal Calculations, Bloomberg
Database
xi InMode 23rd Annual Needham Virtual
Healthcare Conference Presentation 04.09.2024
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