Covalon Technologies Ltd. ($COV)
Earnings Call Transcript · May 21, 2026
Highlights from the call
Covalon Technologies Ltd. reported a strong second quarter for fiscal 2026, with revenue of $8.7 million, representing a 15% increase year-over-year. The company also saw significant improvements in gross margins, reaching 61.5%, and adjusted EBITDA more than doubled to $1.3 million. Management expressed confidence in continued momentum, highlighting a strong balance sheet with no debt and a cash position of $16.6 million. Guidance for the second half of the fiscal year remains optimistic, with expectations for growth across all sales channels.
Main topics
- Strong Revenue Growth: Covalon achieved revenue of $8.7 million in Q2, a 15% increase from $7.6 million in the same quarter last year. Management emphasized that all sales channels experienced positive growth, particularly U.S. Vascular Access and Surgical consumables, which grew nearly 30%.
- Improved Gross Margins: Gross profit increased by almost 30% year-over-year to $5.4 million, with gross margin at 61.5%, up nearly 700 basis points from the previous year. Adjusted gross margin was even higher at approximately 63%, indicating effective operational execution.
- Significant EBITDA Growth: Adjusted EBITDA rose to $1.3 million, a 127% increase compared to the same quarter last year. This growth reflects the company's focus on building scalable and profitable revenue streams.
- Category Creation in Contamination Prevention: Covalon is pioneering a new clinical category focused on contamination prevention in vascular access, anchored by its VALGuard and CovaClear products. Management noted significant traction with major hospitals adopting these solutions, which they believe addresses a critical clinical need.
- Strong Balance Sheet: Covalon reported a cash position of $16.6 million with no bank debt, providing financial flexibility for future growth initiatives. This solid financial foundation supports the company's strategic objectives.
Key metrics mentioned
- Revenue: $8.7 million (vs $7.6 million last year, +15% YoY)
- Gross Margin: 61.5% (up nearly 700 basis points YoY)
- Adjusted EBITDA: $1.3 million (up 127% YoY)
- Diluted EPS: $0.04 (compared to $0.02 last year)
- Operating Expenses: $4.4 million (up 15% YoY)
- Cash Position: $16.6 million (with no bank debt)
Covalon's strong Q2 results and positive outlook suggest a robust investment thesis supported by growing market adoption of its innovative products. The company's focus on operational efficiency and category creation in contamination prevention presents significant growth potential. Investors should monitor the execution of these strategies and the company's ability to maintain margin levels amidst increasing competition.
Earnings Call Speaker Segments
Operator
OperatorGood morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Covalon's Second Quarter Fiscal 2026 Conference and Webcast Call. My name is Angela, and I will be your conference operator today. As a reminder, today's conference is being recorded. [Operator Instructions . At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Mr. Brent Ashton, Chief Executive Officer.
Brent Ashton
ExecutivesHi. Thanks, Angela, and good morning to all of you on the call today. We really appreciate you connecting in. Tim Crooks, our Chief Operating Officer; and Katie Martinovich, our Chief Financial Officer, have both joined me on the call here, and Saleha Assadzada from Covalon is helping to coordinate the conference call and the webcast today. Saleha will now provide us with some instructions.
Saleha Assadzada
ExecutivesThank you, Brent. Good morning, everyone. My name is Saleha Assadzada, and I am the Executive Assistant, Covalon's Chief Executive Officer. I'd like to thank everyone for taking the time this morning to attend our conference call. Before we begin the discussion, I would like to remind participants that this call and webcast are covered by Covalon's safe harbor statement. Please read the safe harbor statement on this slide. This is also available on our website. I will now turn the call back over to Brent Ashton, Covalon's Chief Executive Officer.
Brent Ashton
ExecutivesThanks so much, Saleha. Listen, glad to be able to be with you all today. And as I said, thanks again for everyone on the call taking time out of your morning, probably a busy Thursday morning, afternoon or evening, depending on where in the world you are to hear our update. I'm looking forward to sharing the results and the progress that we're making as we advance forward with our growth journey here at Covalon. During today's call, I'd like to really accomplish a few things. First, we're going to walk through a solid second quarter, including strong revenue growth, excellent gross margins, continuing profitability, more than doubling of adjusted EBITDA from the same quarter last year. Second, I want to spend time on what I believe is a much bigger story for Covalon, which is our work to pioneer and build the contamination prevention clinical category in vascular access. This category is anchored by our VALGuard and our CovaClear cover products. And let me tell you, it is getting real traction with some of the very best hospitals in the United States and beyond. We'll talk about the clinical, the commercial industry momentum that's been building for this solution over the last few months and last few quarters. And then we'll cover some recent highlights, and we'll wrap up by sharing why I believe Covalon is in the midst of a breakout moment. We've got a clean balance sheet, differentiated technologies, growing customer adoption and a med tech category opportunity that really the broader financial markets still don't fully recognize. And after that, we'll open it up for questions. As is typical, we'll prioritize questions submitted through the webcast interface first. So please enter those as we go. Okay. Let's start with the financial results for the second quarter. It was a strong quarter for Covalon. Revenue came in at $8.7 million, up almost 15% from $7.6 million in the same quarter last year. All 3 of our sales channels had positive year-over-year growth in the quarter with both our U.S. Vascular Access and Surgical consumables business and our U.S. Advanced Wound Care business leading the way with each of them growing almost 30% over the prior year. Importantly, the quality of the revenue was strong. Gross profit increased by almost 30% year-over-year to $5.4 million, and gross margin came in at 61.5% -- that's nearly 700 basis points above last year's Q2. Our adjusted gross margin was even stronger at just a shy bit near 63%. Those margin numbers, they matter. They show up in the work that we've been doing around product mix and manufacturing rigor and operational execution, and it's showing up in our financial results. We're not just chasing empty revenue here. We're working hard to build the right kind of revenue, the kind that can scale profitably and create meaningful shareholder value. Operating expenses were $4.4 million, up about 15% from last year's Q2. A large portion of that increase relates to investments and some costs that supported the regulatory and operational foundation of the company. We're being disciplined, but we're also not starving opportunities that can create long-term value. And the impact of that stronger revenue and margin performance, it's very clear. Adjusted EBITDA was $1.3 million, up 127% from the last -- from the same quarter last year. Diluted earnings per share were $0.04 compared to $0.02 last year. So in simple terms, Q2, strong quarter, revenue up, margins up, adjusted EBITDA up significantly and earnings per share roughly doubled. It's a kind of quarter that gives us continued confidence in where we're heading. Now looking at the year-to-date view through the end of March. Revenue for the first 6 months of fiscal 2026 was $15.6 million, essentially flat with the same period last year. We spoke about this on our Q1 call. The first quarter just wasn't reflective of what we were seeing in the business. We had strong line of sight to Q2, acceleration and Q2, delivered exactly that. The -- sorry, the Q1, challenge was largely on the international side. And like most companies that operate in international markets, that revenue can be lumpy at times. We've talked about that here over the last couple of years on several of these calls. It is worth noting that this international sales channel for us, it's one that grew double digits plus last year, and we have line of sight to another double-digit plus growth this year, but inherently can be a little lumpy quarter-to-quarter. On the gross margin side, year-to-date performance is strong. Gross profit was $9.4 million and gross margin was 60%, up about 200 basis points from the first 6 months of last year. Adjusted gross margin was 61.5%, which was up about 350 basis points year-over-year. Operating expenses were $8.4 million, up about 11% year-over-year, similar to the Q2 increased mostly around some onetime costs, including some outsourced product testing for some regulatory work. We continue, though, to be very focused on spending discipline and are making sure that every dollar we spend is tied to value creation. Adjusted EBITDA for the first half was $1.7 million, down from $2.1 million last year, largely really here a function of the softer Q1 and some of the investments and timing of expenses that I just mentioned. EPS was $0.04 for the first half. The important takeaway here, I think, is the year-to-date picture improved meaningfully with Q2 and our second half expectations remain strong. We believe the business is moving in the right direction, and we are seeing the operational and commercial signals that we want to see. And just as important, we continue to operate from a really strong position of financial strength. At the end of March, Covalon had approximately $16.6 million in cash and absolutely no bank debt, very strong balance sheet. And for a company of our size, really gives us the ability to -- gives us flexibility and the ability to execute on the opportunities in front of us. Now I want to shift from the financial results to what I alluded to in the open there around a much bigger strategic opportunity that's developing for Covalon. So Covalon across our entire business has unique products. And in the vascular access space, in particular, these help address some of the most common and most important parts of modern health care. Something like 90% of all hospitalized patients have one or more IV catheters inserted into their body during their stay. Chances are, unfortunately, that most people on this call have probably had one at some point. And if you have it personally, congratulations, but I'm willing to bet many of your family members or friends have. Now these IV lines, they are literal lifelines. They deliver critical medications, nutrition, fluids, often used in connection with diagnostic testing. It's not an unfair statement to say health care simply could not function without them. It would literally shut down. But there's a challenge that really hasn't received enough historical attention. Anytime you create a pathway from the outside world into a patient's bloodstream, you're creating risk. IV connections, access points and dressings sit right in the middle of everyday bedside care. And as any nurse that has worked in a hospital can tell you, bedside care, it can be really messy. Patients vomit, diapers leak, wounds drain, fluids spill. And in all of that real-world care, contamination can happen. It's not theoretical. It's not rare enough to ignore, and it's really part of the daily reality that nurses and care teams manage. And when a vulnerable IV connection or dressing is contaminated, the consequences can be serious. It can lead to disruptive care, unnecessary dressing or line changes, increased nursing time, increased supply costs. And in the worst case, it can be a direct cause of a deadly bloodstream infection. These infections can be devastating for patients and families and incredibly difficult for clinicians who are trying so, so hard to protect the people in their care. This is a very, very significant vascular access problem, and it's exactly the kind of problem that Covalon was built to help solve. So how do we address it? At Covalon, we're pioneering the development of the contamination prevention clinical category in vascular access. This category is anchored by 2 very complementary product lines that we've developed. The first is VALGuard LineGuard. VALGuard is designed to protect IV line connections and access points from contamination. It's a purpose-built solution for a real clinical vulnerability. The second is our CovaClear Cover dressings. CovaClear Cover is designed to protect primary IV dressings from contamination and disruption. This is a very practical solution for a problem that nurses see over and over again, especially in patients where dressings are vulnerable to bodily fluid, spills or other environmental contamination. Together, these products help protect different weak points in the same contamination pathway. One product protects line connection access points, the other protects the primary IV dressing. And together, they create a more complete contamination prevention solution. The customer benefits are really compelling. First, these products can help reduce the risk of patient complications, including serious bloodstream infections. Second, they can reduce reactive nursing time. Every time that a dressing has to be changed unnecessarily or a line component has to be replaced because it was contaminated, well, that takes time -- nurse time away from proactive patient care or interaction with family members. Super important. Third, these products can reduce facility expenses tied to these replacement therapy components, replacement dressings, additional supplies and unnecessary rework. And this is one of the reasons why we're so excited about this contamination prevention category creation. It's not just a clinical story. It's not just a workflow story, and it's not just an economic story. It's all 3. It's -- I call it a triple win, a trifecta, so to speak. And most importantly of all, it's a patient benefit story. And I think that's something we can all relate to. ourselves, personally, our family members, our friends, all patients at one point or many points in our lives. I really wish that every shareholder could spend time in an intensive care unit or an oncology ward or an acute care hospital floor and see what these amazing nurses are having to manage every day. Incredibly skilled, dedicated clinicians working their butts off to protect valuable patients, vulnerable patients as well in environments that are complex and inherently messy. If we can give them a product that helps keep a critical IV connection addressing protected, that matters. It matters to the nurse, it matters to the hospital, and it absolutely matters to the patient and their family. And in a couple of slides, I think I'll be able to get you a better feel from the nurse's view. So this slide here is one of the most exciting slides in the presentation because it shows that the adoption of this solution, this contamination prevention solution from Covalon, it's not just theoretical. It's not just, oh, pie in the sky. It is happening, and it is happening quick. Last quarter, we talked about the recent adoption of one or both of Covalon's contamination prevention solution product lines from world-class medical centers. These included names like the Mayo Clinic, like Memorial Sloan Kettering, Nationwide Children's, Seattle Children's and others. And in just the past few months, the list has continued to grow. You can see additional notable adopters on this -- on the right-hand side of this slide, including Stanford Healthcare, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Johns Hopkins, Ochsner Health. These are not small unknown facilities. These are leading institutions. These are hospitals and health systems with really strong clinical teams, robust value analysis processes and high standards for patient care. For a small med tech company from Ontario to be gaining adoption at this level is really meaningful. Some of the largest med tech companies in the world would be very proud to win these accounts. And Covalon, while we're doing it with a small focused team, differentiated technology and a clinical message that is clearly resonating. And really, we've just barely scratched the surface in terms of penetration. This is a total addressable market in the U.S. alone of over $1 billion. We're still in the single-digit millions here, which translates to a ton of future opportunity between existing account expansion and new customer acquisition. And this is why we're so focused on building the category the right way. Every strong hospital adoption can become a reference point. Every successful trial can become an internal champion story. Every positive nurse experience helps influence broader use. Super, super exciting. So some of you might be sitting here and listening and thinking, wow, hey, Brent is the CEO of the company. Of course, he's going to be super excited about this solution. And I am and for many reasons. But I think it's also helpful to share clinician voice here. Why are they actively choosing to adopt elements of the solution here? Why will they take time out of their incredibly busy lives to champion the change, to get it approved, to bring it on board, to roll it out across different departments. This isn't just sit at your desk, click a button on the laptop, beat done. This is like significant effort. And these clinicians, while they have super, super busy normal day-to-day activities in their role. And we're talking here today about Seattle Children's. It's an incredible hospital. In fact, they were recently recognized by U.S. News & World Report as one of the 10 best children's hospitals in all of the United States. And Megan Stimpson is an amazing clinical nurse specialist who works with some of the most vulnerable patients that enter the hospital. Seattle Children's is a long-time VALGuard customer. And several months ago, they completed their contamination prevention solution bundle by adopting CovaClear Cover. You can see in the quote on the screen here what matters to her and why the Covalon solution is so compelling. These contamination events, they're happening all the time, all around the hospital. What's it driving? It's driving time-consuming costly intervention. It creates real patient risk. The Covalon solution, it's been big for them. They've gained back valuable nursing time. They've saved money on supplies, and they've prevented serious patient complications, including bloodstream infections. The core problem of contamination has always been there, and that doesn't go away. But with Covalon's contamination prevention solution, the prevention aspect has been a huge win for the hospital. This is exactly the type of real-world clinical impact that supports our confidence in our portfolio and its long-term opportunity across pediatric neonatal and adult acute care settings. Now one of the important things to understand is that meaningful med tech categories are not built overnight. They start with a real problem, a significant clinical problem, an economic problem, a workflow problem, rarely all 3, but that is the case here for Covalon. And then the problem gets addressed by a robust solution, which we have, and you get early adopter customers who clearly see the problem, willing to lead. And from there, this flywheel starts to build. Clinical evidence helps validate the solution. Key opinion leaders help educate the market. Scientific meeting presentations elevate the issue. Sales teams become better equipped to explain the value. Early adoption creates real-world outcomes. Strong outcomes create awareness and demand. Single hospitals lead to entire health systems and the flywheel begins to accelerate and accelerate and take on a life of its own. This is really what category creation looks like in med tech, and it's exactly what we're seeing in contamination prevention. We have the problem. It's real, it's common, it's costly. We have the products, VALGuard and CovaClear IV cover are purpose-built to address it. We have early adopter customers, including some of the most respected hospitals in the United States. You heard from one of them a few minutes ago. We have clinical evidence that continues to build. It goes on and on, growing adoption. We're clearly hitting a tipping point here in terms of the category building. And some of you may have experience with other companies that you've invested in that hit a tipping point moment. You might not have seen it right there in the moment, but you saw what it did for the company and you saw what it did for your investment. The flywheel is moving here at Covalon. It's still early, but it's moving forward with a very brisk pace and this tipping point moment is here. Now to put this into context and to answer, you may have a so-what question. I know many of our investors here are and shareholders are not clinically focused. I think it's worth looking at other examples of category creation in Vascular Access and infection prevention. I've been super fortunate to work in the vascular access space dating back about 15 -- a little more than 15 years now. I've seen firsthand how categories developed and evolved. Some easy examples are shown on the slide here. Disinfectant caps became a meaningful category. Catheter stabilization devices became a meaningful category. Single-use CHG skin prep also became a meaningful category. These obviously didn't start as categories with hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue, but they became valuable because they solve real clinical problems gained evidence and adoption and eventually became part of the standard of care of how care is delivered. They followed this a very similar flywheel that is propelling Covalon forward in the present day. Slide shows many examples -- a few examples that many in MedTech know well. Ivera Medical with Curos Disinfecting CAS was acquired by 3M Healthcare. This one, I know very well because I was running 3M's Vascular Access business at the time. I led the acquisition process and the integration into 3M, learned a ton from their founder, Bob Rogers and the team that he assembled. Venitech with Statlock Catheter stabilization, acquired by Bard and then later acquired by Becton Nickinson; Anturia with ChloraPrep. MedTech history doesn't guarantee the future, but it does show us something important. When a company identifies a real clinical problem, develops a differentiated product, builds evidence, earns trust, gains engagement, drives adoption, significant value can be created. And when I look at what we're doing with VALGuard and CovaClear Cover, I see many of those same value creation elements really coming together. Okay. So now let me walk through a few recent highlights and achievements that show the category building work in action and then some others as well. Building upon the contamination prevention theme, we secured a significant new CovaClear Cover win. You saw a couple of slides ago that, in fact, we've won business at more than a dozen other notable institutions that we shared. But what stands out here with this specific account, one of the largest hospitals in the Northeastern United States, they had a very successful evaluation for CovaClear Cover and chose to implement. not just in 1 or 2 departments, but we received word last week that the hospital is placing an initial order to stock more than 30 different supply locations across its main facility and satellite campuses. This is a very strong signal. When a hospital moves from evaluation to broad stocking across that many supply locations, it means the product is solving a real problem, the nurses and clinical teams saw the value, and it means the facility is preparing to support strong broad usage, not just a small one-off implementation. We're seeing this actually more and more with our contamination prevention solution elements. In the past, maybe a strong evaluation might have led to adoption in one department and then over time, that would spread to another department and so on. Past 6 or 9 months, we're seeing a higher frequency of adoptions where it's not just 1 or 2 departments, but 5 or 10 more different ones, a testament to the clinical need and the power of our solution. The momentum for CovaClear Cover has been particularly exciting. In our most recent quarter, U.S. revenue for this product and when we look at our tracings was more than double the prior quarter and more than 6x the same period a year ago. This is the kind of acceleration that tells us the market is really starting to understand the problem and the value of the solution. Second, a new clinical study that included VALGuard was published in the journal on Advances in Neonatal Care. Study was conducted at Children's Hospital Colorado and documented a significant reduction in central line associated bloodstream infection rates following a phased intervention program that included the adoption of VALGuard. This really adds to the growing body of evidence supporting the use of Covalon's contamination prevention products. Third, contamination prevention has been selected for the official education programs at a series of really impactful meeting clinical meetings. So the 2026 Infusion Nurses Society, the APIC meeting, the AIVA Annual Meeting. These meetings reached thousands of infusion nurses, vascular access specialists, infection preventionists and other clinicians who are directly involved in the problems we're addressing. This kind of education program inclusion is meaningful. It really demonstrates that this issue of contamination is gaining recognition and demanding action. And on the next slide, the momentum goes beyond the podiums. In late February, Covalon partnered with the Association for Vascular Access and Dr. Nancy Moureau to host a webinar, continuing education webinar focused on this contamination prevention topic. For those of you that might not know Dr. Moureau, we've talked about her in the past, internationally recognized vascular access expert, incredible educator. When she talks, clinicians listen. The webinar grew more than 600 live clinicians. It's a huge number for this type of event and more than 100 attendees requested direct follow-up. That's a big deal. It means that clinicians aren't just passively listening to the topic, they're asking for more. They want to understand how they can better manage contamination risk in their own practice. We also had a strong Covalon presence at the Infusion Nurses Society Annual Meeting and at the Symposium on Advanced Wound Care. At I&S, we had outstanding engagement with clinicians across hospitals, clinics, home infusion and other settings. The contamination prevention message clearly resonated. Conversations were high quality and the reinforcement from a presentation that Dr. Moureau gave helped further validate the importance of the contamination prevention topic. At SAWC, the Symposium on Advanced Wound Care, we had really productive meetings across the wound care space, including both commercial and clinical leaders. This is important because Covalon isn't just a one-product company. We have a strong advanced wound care platform that joins up with our strong Vascular Access and surgical consumables business, and we have multiple ways to create value from our technology base. Across these conferences at both I&S and SAWC, we absolutely continue to see engagement from industry participants. Companies are paying attention. They see the customer adoption in the wound care side. They see the customer adoption on the Vascular Access side. They're seeing the clinical evidence on both sides start to build. They see the podium activity. They see the differentiated technology. And they're trying to understand how Covalon, the small company from Canada, is gaining traction in areas that matter. Some really productive conversations with many different companies across both ends of the business at these events and beyond. It's a really good place to be. And if you'd like to see more about what Covalon is doing and building towards a plug, make sure to follow us on LinkedIn on X, used to be known as Twitter, Facebook or Instagram. So let me wrap up the prepared remarks here with this summary slide. First, we delivered a solid Q2. Revenue was up almost 15%. Gross margins improved to more than 61%. Adjusted EBITDA more than doubled from the same quarter last year, earnings per share improved, and we continue to have a very strong balance sheet. We told you last quarter that Q1 was an exception, not a trend, and we went out and proved this was true. And we believe the business has meaningful momentum as we move through the rest of fiscal 2026. Our second half growth expectations remain strong for all 3 of our sales channels, the Vascular Access -- the U.S. Vascular Access and Surgical Consumables, the U.S. Advanced Wound Care and our international sales channel. Second, the contamination prevention category, it's advancing with speed. It's an important strategic story. We're not just selling products. We're helping to define a clinical category around a real under-addressed problem in vascular access. This is how meaningful med tech value gets created. And while I would hope you believe me, given my experience and depth in the spaces that Covalon operates in, you heard it loud and clear from an amazing nurse at one of the largest and most well-regarded children's hospitals in the United States. This contamination problem, it's very real and Covalon's products are making a meaningful difference for everyone involved. The upside opportunity is huge. There's an opportunity to penetrate existing accounts more deeply, win a massively high number of new accounts. It's a $1 billion TAM, total addressable market in just the U.S. alone. And finally, I believe Covalon's value is increasing ahead of financial market recognition. I've said before that in my past roles running large global businesses in med tech, part of my job was evaluating companies for potential partnerships, strategic relationships and acquisition activity. When I look at Covalon through that historical lens, the value creation ingredients are very clear. I've seen them in my past, and I see them here today with Covalon. We have differentiated products, strong margins, clean balance sheet, a growing base of high-quality hospital customers. We've got evidence building. We've got key opinion leader engagement, podium activity and important meetings, category creation momentum, and we have a market opportunity across all of our businesses that is far larger than what our current revenue base reflects. This is why I believe that Covalon is building towards a breakout moment. The financial markets might not fully recognize it yet, but nurses are seeing it. Infection preventions are seeing it. Industry participants are seeing it, and our team sees it every day when they wake up super motivated and having conversations with partners, with customers and doing the day-to-day work that keeps our company growing strong. We're proud of the quarter, but we're even more excited about what this quarter represents, progress, momentum and a stronger foundation for the future. And with that, we're going to transition to Q&A.For our questions, we'll start with questions that are typed into the Q&A feature here online. We'll take a 30- to 60-second pause here to take a drink of water and get things in order and then answer your questions. Okay. I think we're back off mute here. I'm more hydrated and ready to take on. Lots of questions here. We'll do our best to work through them. We have a number of questions from Stephen Waldman. Stephen, great to see you on the call today. First is congratulations. And do you have any thoughts on 9 consecutive quarterly profits after 9 consecutive quarterly losses? Thank you. Yes, it's been a great story here at Covalon. Really proud. I'm kind of looking around the room here. We've got a couple of our leaders in here. And later today, we'll be addressing the town hall. And so it's been a lot of hard work to turn that around. And it's really been driving the revenue, improving our margins, being very deliberate on cost and spend, and that's been the turnaround. I'm always bullish. You can probably tell on where I think our future is going. And I'd say the future is very bright, and we're looking forward to delivering on high expectations. Second question from Stephen is around preferred shares. So new classes of preferred shares, any insights for us is the question. And yes, as we were working through with our legal counsel on some updates to our corporate bylaws in advance of the Annual General Meeting that took place a couple of months ago, our bylaws have really been changed since we went public as a company many years ago. And so our attorneys as attorneys tend to, made a number of suggestions to us that were reflected in motions that were put forward at the most recent Annual General Meeting, all of which passed. The preferred shares were one of these suggestions. And really, it was just to give us flexibility as a company should something emerge where we would want to issue preferred shares. So really just a story of much better to have the flexibility here in advance. Third question from Stephen is Vascular Access sequential growth and track record in sequential growth. And yes, that's been a -- we talk about the 3 different sales channels. And the U.S. Vascular Access and Surgical consumables is one that just every quarter, it continues to grow and grow. I think in the last 9 quarters, 7 or 8 of them have been sequential growth, sometimes single digit, oftentimes double-digit sequential growth. And so that's clearly a business. But kind of as I talked about, right, this isn't even about single-digit or double-digit sequential growth. This is about building to an opportunity, and it maybe feeds into your next question, so I'll segue to it feeds into a bigger opportunity. That next question is also from Stephen. He referenced last quarter snowball rolling down a hill analogy. And his question is, can Vascular Access hit $20 million/ $30 million by 2030, as previously stated? I hope you've come away from today's presentation with a resounding confidence that absolutely, when you look at the progress we're making and this category creation, and yes, I gave you 3. I could have picked 3 or 4 others that were equally sizable categories that were created. And yes, we're running full steam ahead with the solution and really anchoring our Vascular Access business. And we see strong opportunity to hit that $20 million, $30 million and beyond. Like that's -- at this point, I would say $20 million, $30 million by 2030 would probably be a disappointment. A disappointment in that we think we can do much better, much better than that. I should have clarified that. I am going to break it up a bit here. Stephen might have set the record for the most questions to get in early. But just in the interest of time, I'll start looking at some of the other ones. We have a question from Rahel Galani. I hope I pronounced that correct, Rahel. Rahel from Keystone Financial. On the Q1 earnings call, you discussed your outlook for the rest of the year and sounded quite bullish. -- still hold the same view regarding your forecast for the remainder of the year. Absolutely. As I kind of close with, we're very excited. We're going to -- this year, we're going to see good growth in all 3 of the sales channels. And the second half, like we talked about, Q1 was an exception, not a trend. And I think we have a solid line of sight to Q3 and Q4 second half much stronger than the first half. We have a couple of questions from Rahel. And I think I saw this with one other person as well, Mark, around similar theme, around medical -- how many medical clinics or hospitals are using Covalon products, tracking client locations? Rahel's question net new hospital wins in Q2. So we can absolutely look at doing that for next quarter. To be honest, we're adding so many accounts where I'm looking across the table at our CFO. We're in the process of really trying to work through our tracing. We're adding so many accounts, and we sell direct to many of our customers. We work through distributors. And oftentimes, you get different hospital names. And so we're working to make sure we can accurately reflect the reality of the growth we're seeing. And it's a good problem to have, right? There's lots of companies out there, I'm sure that only add 1 or 2 hospitals a month or a quarter. That's a little easier to manage manually. And as a small company, we like to kind of automate things where we can. So good problem to have, but one we'll look to incorporate in future meetings. Mark Haas has a question as well. Great quarter, excited for the future. Would love to know the strategy around capital allocation. Is there an intention to acquire with so much cash on the balance sheet and a modest valuation. Why not execute a buyback? Why choose the special dividend over a substantial issuer bid? Would love to see some of this cash being put to use or returned via buybacks. Yes. So we're very fortunate. We're in a great position when we think about our financial balance sheet and whatnot. And I talked to other companies that are that are struggling to make payroll, dealing with adversity. But I like the position that we're in on a financial basis. We've looked for sure at different -- as a Board around different ways to allocate capital. We've talked about a strategy of how do we get bigger quicker or become a part of something bigger, quicker, how do we -- we have this amazing technology. How do we get it in use more and more? We're choosing to invest, as we stated, in ourselves, in our manufacturing to drive greater capacity, greater efficiencies, lower costs. And then specific on -- we've talked about this in past meetings around the buyback versus dividend. Last year, last calendar year, late in the calendar year, we issued, I think it was more than $4 million dividend, special dividend. and we're delighted to do that. We heard from a lot of shareholders that actually took the proceeds from that and actually bought shares back. And so I think that's a bit of a de facto share buyback, but we're always looking at different options, discussing them as a Board. We're fortunate we're essentially back to the same cash position we were before the $4 million plus dividend. And so we've got options going forward. Rahel asked another good question. So thank you, Rahel. Is 60% plus gross margin sustainable? Or should we think about 55% to 60% as a more reasonable level range for the rest of the year? Yes. I mean that number can go up or down a little bit. I think I shared last quarter. So I would say, I guess, to answer the question, we'd like to see gross margins in that kind of 55% to 65% range, high 50s, low 60s. When we look at the industry and you look at other companies, med tech consumable companies, -- our margins are really ahead of many leading companies that we make in the denominator of millions of products per year. A lot of these companies make billions of these consumables per year and have margins well below us. So high 50s, low 60s, and I think is really outstanding for a company with our -- of our size and scale. Arnold [ Seroldlad ] have you on the call again. What's the exposure or strategy for U.S. tariffs? Yes. I mean the U.S. situation is a little interesting at the present time, but I'm not going to comment on Supreme Court decisions or presidential administration side of things. I would just say that at present, there are still some tariffs, especially from China, and I believe still from Europe. For us, in particular, we had very, very low, immaterial really to the bigger scheme of things, tariff exposure last year. I think it was something like 0.5% of our revenue was impacted by the tariffs. It was like $30,000 or $40,000. We don't see that being a meaningful number this year as well. if anything, I still think it remains a competitive advantage for us. The tariff level changes and sometimes difficult to calculate coming out of China, but we do see competition coming there between tariffs there and increased scrutiny for some suppliers that are servicing the U.S. market there, some shifts towards more pro, we'll call it pro North American sourcing. So I think that's benefited us. And then our manufacturing strategy has been very strong. I think it served us very well as we've gone through this. And I'd say 2 things. One, tariffs is one thing, supply chain disruption is another. And I think we've done a really good job. We have a great balance sheet. And so we've chosen to invest to strengthen our supply situation. And I think you're starting to see some other companies that maybe weren't in that great financial position that are struggling a little more on some of those supply chain disruptions. So I think we've got a good approach there. I think I've taken on -- there's some other questions, another one around preferred shares that I feel like I answered. Mark Ha has a question. So last quarter alluded to automation, operating efficiencies on production. Are these fully integrated now and why we're seeing a strong margin? Or is there more to come? Great story. The margins you see today are not, in fact, reflecting of those investments in automation. We're actually in the middle of implementing those, getting the broader space up and running and redesigned to support some really strong workflow. So future benefit to come, we should see that start to -- really, I think '27 will be a full solid year of -- a strong year of benefit there and maybe a little bit into '26, the tail end of '26 here as well. I don't think it will be a meaningful number for '26, but '27 we'll definitely see the benefits for that. So yes, no, the margins, more a reflection of choices we're making in how we promote products that carry higher margins. Okay. So I'm going to go back to some of Stephen's questions here. Stephen also had a question on the item. So I guess I covered 2 birds with one stone there. Stephen's question is, what's your target for total number of acute care hospitals and target for percentage of pediatric hospitals. So really around -- he's talking about market share. I would -- I think I understand this question. I would characterize it as penetration. And I'll be honest with you, I have a lot of personal interactions in my history in the health care space with family members and whatnot, all of you have as well. My target is everyone. There's several hundred children's hospitals in the United States, even more outside the U.S. There's something like 5,500, 6,000 acute care hospitals. Our target is every single one of them. But every -- I am 100% convinced that every single hospital, children's hospital, acute care hospital, and we haven't even talked about beyond the hospital and some big opportunities there. But our target is to get every single one of them. Is that realistic within the next couple of years? Probably not. But the opportunity is huge. From a penetration standpoint, we're in the teens in terms of Covalon penetration of our contamination prevention solution in the children's hospitals end of things and like less than 1% or 2% on the acute care side. So what does that tell you? Hey, work to do for sure, but it gives you a feeling for the upside as well, right? When you start looking at -- we're in a few hundred hospitals out of the, call it, 6,000 or so in the U.S. and even more opportunity outside the U.S. There is a ton of room to grow with new accounts. And that doesn't even include the benefit from existing account expansion, which we see happen with pretty much every account we take on. It's a really exciting trend. I think just looking through here, I think we've covered the questions here. Arnold asked a question about -- so good another question, Arnold. Thank you about where are sales now in Q3. I think the best way to put it is kind of the comments I've already put on the table today. Q1 was an exception. Q2 was much stronger, and we see an even stronger Q3 and Q4 moving forward. So strong second half to the year. Very excited about that. And then Stephen Waldman had a question. This is -- we'll take this -- I'll refresh and see if there were any others, but we'll take this as the last question otherwise. And the question was around like is the competitive landscape getting any less challenging? -- could spend 60 minutes, not going to, could spend 60 minutes talking about the competitive situation in the different segments we play in. But I'll talk about 2 bigger ones. One is, for sure, the wound care space. And I would say there -- that's a big part of our business, obviously. And that's one where we're definitely seeing some changes. So there's direct competitors and indirect competitors, and there's some -- there's -- I'd say the collagen space is a strong one to be in. It's a good spot to be in. Not sure I would say that the competitive situation is getting more challenging or less challenging. Probably the biggest thing we're seeing is a percentage, maybe it's around 15% or 20% of the collagen market is coming in from Chinese suppliers. And certainly, with the tariffs and the supply chain disruptions that we've seen, I think that's been disrupted to a certain degree. And so we've seen that as a bit of a strength. And then just -- I didn't really talk about on the competitive side on the contamination prevention solution, but that's really more of a greenfield type opportunity. We really -- there are some indirect competitors that are not fit for purpose nor clinically indicated to prevent the contamination that we talked through. And so really, from a competitive standpoint, we're leading the way. We're pioneering this category. It's an amazing, exciting activity to be doing. And competition will increase for sure. But I look at those those 3 kind of companies that created different categories. And even as competitors came in, Curos is a great example. They really created the category. There are competition that have existed. They're still many years after the 3M acquisition, as best I understand, still leading the way market share-wise. ChloraPrep was a great example. The last I heard, they still had something like 80% of the U.S. market even as other competitors have emerged. And so that first-mover advantage in med tech is very real, and it's why we are so bullish on how do we keep going, how do we go after every hospital with speed. So I'm going to I don't see any other questions. sorry, last one here. Julie and Hoffman talked about a period of inventory normalization after ownership transition and how is the situation with the customer channel inventories in general? Yes. So I'd say I think we've gotten back to more of a normalized environment. As I indicated, the U.S. Advanced Wound Care business was up close to 30% in the quarter compared to the prior year and strong sequential growth as well. And so I think we're through that kind of period of bumpiness. It will continue, I'm sure, to bounce around as we see a much stronger second half. But the situation with that customer, I think, is pretty stable, and we're going forward from there. And then last question here, Rahel, Again, another good question. Thank you, Rahel. Talking about operating leverage coming into play. Yes, I think coming into play strong second half. I think when you look at our financials, what you see is very clear. When we drive successful revenue growth, that we do so very efficiently. We can add strong levels of revenue at strong gross margins and very low incremental SG&A. And so growth is key. And as we grow, a large, large chunk of that can drop to the bottom line. And so when we think about this contamination prevention solution that could get -- should get to $30 million -- $20 million, $30 million, $40 million, we're not going to have to add $10 million, $12 million of SG&A to operating expenses to attain that. And so we -- as we look at the future state of Covalon, we see some really strong operating leverage. So thank you for that question, Rio. I think we're -- yes, we've got 4 minutes left. And I've got 60 seconds that I'll wrap up. So we'll give you back a couple of minutes here. Listen, thanks again to everyone for joining us today. Thank you for the thoughtful questions. I think this might have set a record for the number of questions, which I'll use as a proxy for shareholder engagement. So thank you very much. What I really hope came through clearly today is that Covalon is not just reporting a strong quarter. We're building something much larger. Q2 definitely showed the operating progress we want to see. Revenue growth, stronger margins, really strong EBITDA growth, remaining strong balance sheet. But even more importantly, the momentum, the clinical momentum, the commercial momentum behind our solution, our contamination prevention solution really continues to accelerate. We're seeing adoption from some of the most respected hospitals in North America and beyond. We're seeing nurses, infection preventionist, vascular access leaders and industry participants engage really deeply with us on the problem that we're solving. This is what gives me a ton of confidence. Yes, we still have a lot of work ahead of us. And we're definitely not taking anything for granted. But the ingredients for meaningful value creation are becoming clearer every quarter. We've got the products. We've got the team. We've got the balance sheet. We've definitely got the customer traction and the market opportunity is massive. I really believe what Covalon that Covalon is entering a super important period in its journey, and I couldn't be more excited for what's ahead. So thank you so much for your time today. I appreciate your continued support, and I wish all of you the best for the rest of the day, the rest of the week. And for those of you in the United States, I hope you have a good Memorial Day weekend up ahead. Thank you, and have a great day.
Operator
OperatorLadies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.
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