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Bull of the Day: Penumbra (PEN)

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Penumbra (PEN - Free Report) is a $4.3 billion medical device company focused on minimally-invasive instruments for neurovascular and peripheral vascular diseases.
 
The company leverages its expertise in catheter-based technology to develop access devices for treating strokes, aneurysms, deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, and other patient events caused by blood clots.
 
The company takes its name from the shadow-like effect in pathology and anatomy where the area surrounding an ischemic event such as thrombotic or embolic stroke can become dark. Immediately following the event, blood flow and therefore oxygen transport is reduced locally, leading to hypoxia of the cells near the location of the original insult.
 
Penumbra technologies use proprietary aspiration catheters, tubes and other instruments to essentially vacuum blood clots out of the brain, in the case of stroke.
 
Based in Alameda, CA, Penumbra sells its products to hospitals and clinics primarily through its direct sales organization in the United States, most of Europe, Canada and Australia, and through distributors in select international markets.
 
Strong Q1 Results Affirm the Growth Story
 
On May 7, Penumbra delivered a 77% earnings beat for Q1 2019 with non-GAAP EPS of $0.23 per share vs. the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $0.13 per share. This compares to earnings of $0.06 per share a year ago. 
 
The company also beat on the topline with Q1 revenue of $128.4 million vs. the consensus of $123 million. This represented a year-over-year increase of 25.1%, or 27.2% on a constant currency basis.
 
Revenues were split 64% for the US and 36% international for the quarter. Neuro products sales grew to $81.5 million, an increase of 14.1%, or 16.5% on a constant currency basis from the year ago quarter.
 
Vascular products sales grew to $47.0 million, an increase of 50.2%, or 51.8% on a constant currency basis.
 
Gross profit was $83.9 million, or 65.3% of total revenue, compared to $66.6 million, or 64.8% of total revenue, for Q1 2018.
 
Total operating expenses were $72.8 million, or 56.6% of total revenue. This compares to total operating expenses of $62.5 million, or 60.9% of total revenue, for Q1 2018.
 
PEN management also guided to the high end of their revenue range of $525 to $535 million for 2019.
 
Here's a look at Penumbra's sales growth for the past 3 full years since the company's 2015 IPO...
 
 
And here's what I wrote about PEN last September after the stock came off of new highs near $160...
 
Growth Catches Up with the Valuation
 
The company made a strong swing to sustainable profitability this year on the back of projected 27.5% sales growth from last year's $333 million to over $425 million in revenue.
 
The profit surge -- from last year's loss of 1-cent to a current estimate of +$0.34 -- caught analysts way off guard. We know this because in the last two quarters, the company delivered consecutive 400% EPS beats.
 
And that's why the stock is a Zacks #1 Rank as analysts scrambled to raise full-year 2018 EPS estimates 70%, since the early August quarterly report, from $0.20 to $0.34.
 
Additionally, 2019 top-line estimates are currently looking for over 20% growth to a record $500 million, giving Penumbra a 10X price-to-sales ratio.
 
This sales advance is expected to translate to the bottom line next year with 72% EPS growth to $0.59. At $150 per share, that would put the forward P/E multiple under 300X.
 
That's still rich, but characteristic of med-tech companies with key patents and strong sales growth.
 
PEN Valuation Update: Trading 7X Sales and 100X EPS 
 
As Penumbra continues to deliver strong growth, valuations are getting much more tolerable for investors. Here's the Zacks Detailed Estimates page so you can see the analyst consensus projections for this year and next...
 
 
Another excerpt from my September article will shine some light on the bigger players who may be interested in Penumbra's technologies...
 
Med-Tech in Spotlight After Cardio Conference
 
Today is the last day of the Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutic conference in San Diego, CA. Monday saw a good bit of positive reaction for other "med-tech" (medical technology) companies like Edwards Lifesciences (EW - Free Report) whose shares surged 7.5% on positive data in their transcatheter mitral heart valve technology, an offshoot of their tremendous success and market leadership in aortic valve replacement using catheters instead of dangerous open-heart surgery.
 
But that rally to new highs above $165, which began with a new weekly closing high Friday above $153, got a boost from a Barron's article by Bill Alpert published Monday morning which used a September 16 Wells Fargo research report to suggest that EW could be an M&A target for Johnson & Johnson (JNJ - Free Report) .
 
Lots of speculation there, but Alpert shared important insights by analyst Larry Biegelsen as med-tech device M&A heats up following last week's fold-in of spinal surgery outfit Mazor Robotics (MZOR) by Medtronic (MDT - Free Report) , which already owned about 20% of the company, for $1.64 billion:    
 
"Mergers among device makers will also probably continue. Lately, [Biegelsen] writes, J&J Chief Executive Alex Gorsky has called out the increasing innovation and friendlier regulation of devices, compared with some other products."
 
In the afternoon, Allison Gatlin writing for Investors Business Daily made this astute observation: "Also helping Edwards on Monday, Abbott (ABT - Free Report) announced positive results from a study of its MitraClip device in patients with leaky heart valves. The study showed that using the MitraClip plus traditional medical therapy in these patients is superior to medical therapy alone." 
 
What About Penumbra?
 
I went through all this M&A action and reaction in med-tech for a good reason. If you have trouble wrapping your head around PEN's P/E of 100X (next year's $1.35 EPS into $135/share), then you have to focus on the growth rates, the TAM (total addressable market), and the M&A competition.
 
You may not want to pay 100X, but plenty of large growth investors will when they look at these dynamics.
 
The Wells Fargo analyst Larry Biegelsen cited in the Barron's article about EW and BAX is also the lone voice with the highest "aspirations" for Penumbra, with a $180 PT.
 
On August 9 he put out a note title "JET-ENGINE Ready for Take-Off!" as he described the company's new technologies for aspiration procedures in treating stroke, where a deep vacuum suction is sometimes used to aspirate the clot... 
 
"While new competitors have entered the aspiration market this year with approved devices, we believe that PEN will continue to lead the field with its innovative technology with the new ENGINE pump that launched recently and the JET catheter that is pending FDA approval." 
 
Then on August 17, the FDA cleared PEN’s Jet 7 aspiration catheter for stroke.
 
Following earnings last week, the Wells Fargo analyst reiterated his $180 PT and noted, "While competition in the aspiration stroke market has increased, we believe that PEN has and will continue to stay ahead of the curve. We expect new product launches, including upgrades to the JET/ENGINE aspiration system" as well as other innovations that will highlight PEN’s growing revenue diversification and growth potential beyond 2019. 
 
The PEN is Mightier Than the Scalpel
 
If I learned one thing from my long-term investing in med-tech companies like Edwards Lifesciences (we originally bought EW in 2017 under $100) it's that technology innovation with catheter-based solutions creates less-invasive emergency surgical procedures that save lives without putting patients at greater risk.
 
In the case of EW, the ability for a heart specialist to install a new valve in an older patient who would be too high-risk for open-heart surgery has been a tremendous godsend for many thousands of heart patients and their families.
 
With Penumbra's innovations in neuro procedures, including differentiated solutions for access, stroke revascularization, and embolization for use in the neurovasculature, they are offering brain specialists new avenues for treating and saving patients with severe neuro-vascular events.
 
And the innovation pathways for PEN are expanding in other exciting ways too. On September 4, the company closed on the $20 million acquisition of a controlling interest in its joint venture, MVI Health, which was created to be a leader in virtual reality software and tracking solutions for healthcare applications.
 
The possibilities of advanced surgical and catheter-based procedures using virtual and augmented reality must have even the robot surgeons jazzed!
 
Disclosure: I own shares of PEN, JNJ and EW for the Zacks Healthcare Innovators portfolio.
 
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