BTMD May 6, 2026

Biote Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Recall Headwinds Mask Strong Practitioner Pipeline and H2 Growth Outlook

Summary

Biote’s first quarter results were defined by a self-inflicted supply crisis. The company’s voluntary recall of certain bioidentical hormone pellets created a $1.7 million revenue hit and a $1.5 million cost blow, dragging procedure revenue down 13.2% to $31.3 million. Gross margins contracted sharply to 68.9% as the company leaned on lower-margin third-party suppliers to keep the lights on while its internal manufacturer, Asteria Health, scrambled to catch up. It is a messy quarter, but the underlying engine of the business is still turning. The recall was a distraction, not a structural failure, and management is treating it as a temporary liquidity event rather than a brand-killer.

Beneath the operational noise, the commercial foundation is being rebuilt. Biote expanded its sales force by over 25 reps to hit a target of 120, and trained more than 200 new practitioners, a 16.5% year-over-year increase. This pipeline of new providers is the leading indicator for future procedure volume, and management expects these new practitioners to start contributing meaningfully to revenue once the six-month onboarding cycle completes. The company is guiding for full-year revenue above $190 million and adjusted EBITDA above $38 million, betting heavily that pent-up demand and the newly scaled sales team will drive a strong second-half recovery. The market is being asked to ignore the Q1 scar tissue and focus on the H2 turnaround.

Key Takeaways

  • Biote reported Q1 revenue of $44.9 million, an 8.3% decline from the prior year, driven by a 13.2% drop in procedure revenue to $31.3 million due to a voluntary product recall.
  • The recall caused an estimated $1.7 million in lost revenue and approximately $1.5 million in incremental costs, including $1.1 million in gross margin compression.
  • Gross profit margin fell to 68.9% from 74.3% in Q1 2025, primarily due to the recall costs and a shift toward lower-margin third-party suppliers while internal production scaled.
  • Dietary supplement revenue grew 19.1% to $11.0 million, outpacing procedure sales and highlighting the strength of the e-commerce channel despite procedure headwinds.
  • Biote expanded its sales team by over 25 representatives in Q1, reaching a target of approximately 120 reps, positioning the commercial organization for future growth.
  • The company trained more than 200 new practitioners in Q1, a 16.5% increase from the prior year, signaling strong ongoing demand for hormone optimization solutions.
  • Management expects the supply disruption to persist into Q2 but anticipates a return to normalized inventory levels and full production capacity at Asteria Health by the end of Q2.
  • Asteria Health, Biote’s internal manufacturer, has launched a second production shift to maximize output and rebuild safety stock, though this transition is temporarily impacting gross margins.
  • Clinic attrition remained stable despite the supply constraints, with management noting no significant uptick in practitioner churn, suggesting loyalty to the Biote platform.
  • Full-year guidance remains unchanged: revenue above $190 million and adjusted EBITDA greater than $38 million, with procedure revenue growth expected to resume in the second half of 2026.
  • Net income was $2.7 million ($0.06 diluted EPS), significantly lower than the $15.8 million ($0.37 diluted EPS) reported in Q1 2025, largely due to a smaller fair value gain on earn-out liabilities.
  • Adjusted EBITDA decreased to $8.7 million with a 19.4% margin, reflecting the combined impact of lower sales volume, reduced gross margins, and higher operating expenses from the recall.
  • Management highlighted pent-up demand and a 6-month lag time for new practitioner training to impact financials as key catalysts for the anticipated second-half rebound.
  • Cash flow from operations was $3.9 million, and the company ended Q1 with $5.3 million in cash after fully repaying its share repurchase liabilities in January 2026.
  • The recall affected products compounded and manufactured prior to October 2025, and management emphasized that the issue was an abundance of caution that does not reflect a long-term strategic failure.

Full Transcript

Operator: Good day, and welcome to the Biote 1st quarter 2026 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Samir Srour, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Samir Srour, Investor Relations, Biote Corporation: Thank you for joining us today. This afternoon, Biote published financial results for the first quarter ended March 31st, 2026. This news release is available in the Investor Relations section of the company’s website. Hosting today’s call are Bret Christensen, Chief Executive Officer, and Bob Peterson, Chief Financial Officer. Before we get started, I’d like to remind everyone that management-only statements during this call as to forward-looking statements regarding, among other things, the company’s financial results, future performance growth opportunities, business outlook, strategic plans, anticipated benefits, goals, research and development, manufacturing and commercialization activities, its competitive position, regulatory process operations, benefits of its solutions, anticipated impacts of macroeconomic concerns on its business, results of operations, financial conditions, and other matters that do not relate to historical facts. These statements are not guarantees of future performance.

They are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties, some of which are beyond the company’s control. Actual results could differ materially from expectations reflected in any forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, and assumptions that are based on management current expectations as of today. Biote undertakes no obligation to update them in the future. Therefore, these statements should not be relied upon as representing the company’s views as of any subsequent date. For a discussion of risks and other important factors that could affect our actual results, please refer to our SEC filings available on SEC’s website and the Investor Relations section of our website, as well as risks and other important factors discussed in the earnings release. Management will also refer to adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin for non-GAAP financial measures to provide additional information to investors.

Reconciliation of the non-GAAP to GAAP measures is provided in the earnings release, the primary differences being stock-based compensation, fair value adjustments to certain liabilities, and other non-operating expenses. Please refer to our first quarter 2026 earnings release for a reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to the closest comparable GAAP measures. I’ll now turn the call over to Bret Christensen.

Bret Christensen, Chief Executive Officer, Biote Corporation: Thank you, Samir Srour, and thank you all for joining us. After my remarks, Bob Peterson will review our 1st quarter financial results. We’ll then open the call for your questions. Over the past 12 months, we have made important progress to advance our strategic priorities. We have strengthened our commercial organization, expanded our sales team, and enhanced our capabilities to better support practitioners and their patients. We have also sharpened our focus on maximizing value from our existing top-tier clinics, which remain important contributors to our long-term financial performance. Through these strategic and operational initiatives, we built a solid foundation that we believe supports sustainable, long-term profitable growth. As previously communicated, in January, Biote voluntarily withdrew certain bioidentical hormone pellet inventory from the market. We initiated this recall out of an abundance of caution.

This temporary supply disruption created a headwind to our first quarter performance, resulting in an estimated $1.7 million revenue impact and approximately $1.5 million of incremental costs incurred due to the voluntary recall. We are addressing the supply challenge as efficiently as possible. To mitigate the impact on our practitioners and their patients, we are increasing inventory levels to ensure continuity of care throughout our network. The recall affected our first quarter results and was a significant distraction to our sales force and their growth objectives as they were forced to service accounts versus focusing on growth. While the impacts are expected to continue into the second quarter, we believe this is a temporary issue, and it does not affect our long-term strategy or alter the overall demand environment.

We continue to see a sizable market opportunity across hormone therapy and therapeutic wellness, and we remain focused on building sustainable revenue growth. In our last call, I noted that one of our top priorities in 2026 was to expand our sales personnel from over 90 at the end of 2025 to approximately 120 this year. I’m pleased to report that we are substantially complete with this effort, with over 25 new sales personnel hired in the first quarter. We’ve expanded and strengthened our commercial capabilities and are ready for the future. Despite the distraction caused by the voluntary recall, our commercial team is already beginning to deliver a higher level of service to existing accounts while utilizing our increased sales capacity to grow and scale our practitioner network.

In the first quarter, we trained more than 200 new practitioners, representing a 16.5% increase from the first quarter of 2025. For our top clinics, we have introduced a series of measures aimed at improving retention and supporting stronger lifetime revenue outcomes. We are enhancing our commercial framework to reinforce the value proposition Biote can offer to our leading practitioners. New practitioner training sessions remain at near full capacity, underscoring continued practitioner interest in our bioidentical hormone optimization and healthy aging solution offerings. Because the number of newly trained practitioners is a leading indicator of future procedures and dietary supplement sales, this high level of engagement further strengthens our belief that we are on the right path to restore revenue growth.

As a reminder, once a practitioner is fully trained, it typically takes about six months for that new practitioner to begin to contribute meaningfully to our financial performance. As we continue to invest in our commercial team, one of our key objectives is to elevate the quality of our sales pipeline. Over the past several months, we have seen clear evidence of progress, with higher value OBGYN and general practitioners representing a growing share of our pipeline. This reflects a more disciplined qualification process as well as our focus on recruiting practitioners with greater long-term revenue contribution potential. We believe our efforts to enhance our sales pipeline should translate into more predictable performance as we increasingly support practitioners whose clinical specialties more closely align with our suite of product offerings.

In summary, while our first quarter performance fell short of our expectations due to the voluntary product recall, we continued to move forward on key initiatives that support our long-term strategy. I am confident that our strategic investments and actions are expected to strengthen our capabilities and lay the groundwork for what we anticipate will be a return to growth in the second half of the year. I’ll now turn the call over to Bob to review the first quarter results.

Bob Peterson, Chief Financial Officer, Biote Corporation: Thank you, Bret, and good afternoon, everyone. Unless otherwise noted, all quarterly financial comparisons in my prepared remarks are made against the first quarter of 2025. Revenue decreased 8.3% to $44.9 million, with procedure revenue declining 13.2% to $31.3 million, which included a $1.7 million impact related to the voluntary recall of certain hormone pellets shipped by Asteria Health. Procedure revenue was primarily impacted by the following factors. 1, lower procedure volume in existing clinics, which includes the impact of hormone pellet supply constraints related to the recall. 2, slower productivity from new clinics as our sales reps focused on supporting recall-impacted clinics. dietary supplement revenue grew 19.1% to $11.0 million. The increase was primarily driven by the continued growth of our e-commerce channel.

Overall, we continue to forecast our dietary supplement revenue will grow at mid-to-high single-digit rate for the 2026 year. Gross profit margin was 68.9% compared to 74.3%. The decrease was primarily due to $1.1 million of incremental cost related to the recall. In the first quarter, Asteria Health produced approximately 30% of our shipped pellets as compared to over 50% in the fourth quarter of 2025. As Bret noted, we anticipate fully restoring Asteria Health’s supply continuity by the end of the second quarter. As a result, we expect our second quarter product mix will continue to include an elevated level of third-party supply, which will impact second quarter gross margin. Our goal remains to meet customer needs through the vertical integration of Asteria Health.

Selling, general, and administrative expenses increased 4.1% to $27.8 million. The increase reflected higher legal expense and $0.4 million of SG&A costs associated with the product recall. Net income was $2.7 million and diluted earnings per share attributed to biote Corp. shareholders was $0.06. This compares to net income of $15.8 million and diluted earnings per share attributed to biote Corp. stockholders of $0.37. Net income for the first quarter of 2026 included a gain of $2.1 million due to changes in the fair value of the earn-out liabilities. By comparison, net income for the first quarter of 2025 included a gain of $10.7 million due to changes in the fair value of the earn-out liabilities.

Adjusted EBITDA decreased to $8.7 million with an adjusted EBITDA margin of 19.4% due to lower sales, reduced gross profit, and higher operating expenses. Cash flow from operations in the first quarter was $3.9 million. As of March 31, 2026, cash and cash equivalents were $5.3 million as Biote fully repaid the remaining amount due under its share repurchase liabilities in January 2026. Now turning to our financial outlook for 2026. We maintain our guidance forecasting 2026 revenue above $190 million and 2026 adjusted EBITDA of greater than $38 million. With respect to our 2026 revenue outlook, procedure revenue is expected to return to growth in the second half of 2026, unchanged from our prior guidance.

Based on current trends, we now expect first half procedure revenue growth to be moderately lower than previously forecast due to the temporary impact of the voluntary product recall and related supply constraints. Dietary supplement revenue is expected to grow at a mid to high single-digit rate from 2025. I’ll now turn the call back to Brett for his closing comments.

Bret Christensen, Chief Executive Officer, Biote Corporation: Thanks, Bob. While we continue to address temporary impacts from the recall, we remain focused on the priorities that will strengthen our business for the long term. Our continued investments in commercial talent, technology, and practitioner support are creating a stronger platform for future execution. With this foundation in place, I believe Biote is well-positioned to better serve our practitioners, improve our financial performance, and create value for our shareholders. Operator, let’s now open the call for questions.

Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you’re using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question today comes from Les Zalewski with Truist Securities. Please go ahead.

Jeevan, Analyst, Truist Securities: Hey, this is Jeevan on for Les. Thanks for taking our questions. How did the clinic attrition trend in the first quarter as the recent hires ramp up? Are you seeing some stabilization here if you normalize for the voluntary recall?

Bret Christensen, Chief Executive Officer, Biote Corporation: Yeah. Hey, Jeevan, this is Brett. Thanks for the question. You know, attrition for us has stabilized and been stable now for several quarters. It’s still a little bit higher than we’d like to see it. With the disruption that we had in Q1 due to supply constraints from the recall, it’s hard to draw any conclusions of really any improvement there yet. We did see, however, some positive signs in daily volumes prior to the recall, which is where we get the $1.7 million impact of the recall, which we quoted in the earlier comments. There was some things to be encouraged by and then supply constraints really sort of put a damper on that.

As far as the sales force and sales force expansion, that expansion is new in Q1 going to 120 reps. We have every belief that they’re going to start growing the business now, as we are just weeks away from completely normalizing inventory levels and getting that team back to growth. We should see the impact of that team starting in Q2.

Operator: The next question comes from Jeff Van Sinderen with B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.

Jeff Van Sinderen, Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Hi, everyone. Just wanted to understand a little bit more about the supply constraints. I guess I’m confused by the recall still having an impact in Q2 and why we would still have supply constraints at this point. I would think that Asteria would recover a little more quickly. Maybe you can just talk a little bit about that.

Bret Christensen, Chief Executive Officer, Biote Corporation: Yeah, Jeff, I’ll start with that, then Bob can add some color to everything that’s gone on here. If you remember, we announced the recall at the end of January then began notifying our customers. That was done out of an abundance of caution for a product that was compounded and manufactured prior to October of 2025. That was just a lot of product that needed to come back and be replaced by Asteria and by some of our third-party customers who are helping with the fulfillment of that product. It just put a lot of strain on Asteria. We’ve done a tremendous amount to scale production at Asteria, including adding a second shift, and, you know, asking that team to work very hard to catch up on supply.

It’s been an ongoing struggle. The disruption really comes from you know, two things. Having to allocate inventory to our customers, meaning to give them probably less than what they ordered in some cases. That meant rescheduling a patient and just some uncertainty in the field as to what they could do for scheduling patients and making sure they have enough product to perform those procedures. The distraction in the field was, you know, we asked them to manage that message and in some cases, manage those orders to help us prioritize who should get inventory and when. All of that ate to our safety stock at Asteria, and we’re in the process of building that back up now.

You know, it’s been a, it’s been a process that’s, it’s been longer than we’d like it to be, and we’ve had to ask for help from our third-party pharmacy partners to help fulfill those orders. Again, we are probably just weeks away from a more normalized situation. It’s better today than it was in February, March as well. I’ll say that. Today is a much better situation than it was in the early days of the recall. Bob, do you have anything to add there?

Bob Peterson, Chief Financial Officer, Biote Corporation: Look, I think the, Hey, Jeff. The biggest thing that I would add would be, look, we’re maximizing our production to build safety stock. We intentionally slowed some of the pellets that went out from Asteria so that Asteria could potentially build inventory. As Brett said, one of the biggest steps that we took to potentially build inventory even quicker is the establishment of a second production shift. This will enable us to maximize our production and really prepare for the future growth in the future, but at the same time, increase our stock levels. I think those are the, those are probably the two biggest pieces.

We intend and will return to expanding our vertical penetration in the remainder of the year once we see line of sight into that, as Brett said, in the next several weeks, once we see that safety stock at a solid level.

Jeff Van Sinderen, Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Okay. I’m just kind of, I guess, thinking this through out loud, but you had a shortfall in Q1. You sort of guided down for Q2 in your language as I took it. You kept the year guidance unchanged. I guess I’m wondering what gives you confidence that the second half will be even better than what was previously implied in guidance?

Bret Christensen, Chief Executive Officer, Biote Corporation: Yeah, Jeff. Thanks for the question. You know, like I said in my comments earlier, we just believe this is a temporary headwind to demand because we had these inventory constraints. You know, what makes us optimistic and, you know, confident in the guide that we’re still gonna return to growth in the second half of this year are a couple of things. You know, we saw some positive signs, I said, going into the recall in daily volumes. That’s how we extrapolated this impact of $1.7 million in revenue on the top line. We believe that’s temporary. There’s also surely some pent-up demand from these supply shortages that we’ll recapture in the coming weeks and months.

This team of 120 territory reps that’s new, really didn’t even have a chance to contribute to some of those positive signs we saw going into the recall. We’re optimistic that that team’s going to do just what we hired them to do, which is go out and grow the business once they’re not distracted from these inventory issues. If you remember too, I’ll say one more thing. We’ve had full training classes now for, you know, going on 6 months. That’s the earliest indication of supply, I’m sorry, of production in the field returning to growth. We’re optimistic that those 200+ practitioners that we trained in Q1 are going to start adding meaningfully to growth after they’ve been onboarded here the next 6 months.

There’s a lot to be optimistic about once we get through the supply issues. It’s why we still are confident in a second half return to growth.

Jeff Van Sinderen, Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Okay. That’s helpful. Then just, you know, thinking about some of the doctors who couldn’t get the supply that they needed, they were on allocation, in the moment during Q1 and maybe a little bit in Q2. Was there anything preventing them from maybe sourcing the pellets elsewhere?

Bret Christensen, Chief Executive Officer, Biote Corporation: Well, you know, not really, Jeff, I’ll say this, that the entire industry has been stretched for pellet production. The best partners out there are partners of ours. We very quickly reached out to them, asked for their help in supplying product to our customers, which is why you saw the Asteria mix go down in Q1. That’s a temporary drag on gross margin, those are the most readily available pellets out there. We frankly have strained some of our third-party suppliers because of the demand that we’ve given them. There’s not a ton of places that physicians can go. It’s a very difficult thing to do.

You know, if you remember, 80%+ of our patients are women, since we’re so strong in the OBGYN space. The hardest pellets to produce are the estrogen, estradiol pellets. They’re very manual and can’t be produced at scale in the way testosterone pellets can. That for the most part was the drag on supply and the challenge. That challenge is shared by a lot of the pharmacies out there. We’re in a good spot today, thanks to the help of our third-party pharmacies and the quick work by Asteria to scale production, add a second shift. We think we’re in good shape going forward.

Jeff Van Sinderen, Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Okay. Thanks for taking my questions.

Operator: Again, if you have a question, please press star then one. The next question comes from George Kelly with Roth Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

George Kelly, Analyst, Roth Capital Partners: Hey, everyone. Thanks for taking my questions. First one is just back to the recall. I was curious if you saw much clinic attrition as a result.

Bret Christensen, Chief Executive Officer, Biote Corporation: George, hey, this is Brett. Thanks for the question. Not really. At this point, you know, it’d be anecdotal anyway, but we haven’t seen too much clinic attrition. We clearly saw a reduction in volumes of procedures in the field. You know, it remains to be seen if there was any patient attrition, meaning the patients switched modalities, things like that. We think there’s pent-up demand that we’ll capture in the coming weeks and months. Not meaningfully. We didn’t see any uptick in attrition that we can know.

George Kelly, Analyst, Roth Capital Partners: Okay. With your current status and your sort of inventory build that, you know, your catch-up that you’re doing right now, where are you in that process? You mentioned that you feel like you’re in a good spot now. Is there still a lot of sort of catch-up that needs to happen? Part two of the question is, what have you seen in April? Can you comment on The press release commented that there’s continued pressure. Any kind of detail you can give about procedure volume in April would be helpful.

Bret Christensen, Chief Executive Officer, Biote Corporation: Yeah. Thanks, George. You know, we said it would persist into Q2, which is where we’re at today. At the same time, we’re saying we’re weeks away from probably a fully normal situation. That is tremendous progress. You know, we intentionally are kind of taking it easy on Asteria to allow them to build some safety stock because, you know, we do wanna eventually get to another 2 months or so of safety stock on top of everything they’re currently supplying to our customers. We’re gonna continue to use our third-party partners as much as we can to allow that to happen. And we’ll use them going forward as well. They’ve just been fantastic in this whole process.

You know, we had the management team into the corporate office today, like I can tell you just anecdotally, if it’s not going well, we hear it. The consensus was things are much, much better today than they were weeks and months ago. I think that the team is feeling it, our customers are shortly feeling it. We’re not completely out of the woods only because we’re still allocating inventory, meaning, you know, we’re holding some of our customers to 2 or 3 weeks of inventory when they’re used to having 2+ months sometimes. That just gives them the confidence to schedule a lot of cases in the future. That’s the only thing I would say is, you know, there’s inventory in the field.

It’s not to the level that some of our customers would like to see it to feel confident, but we’ll get there shortly.

Bob Peterson, Chief Financial Officer, Biote Corporation: George, to your first part of the question about Asteria Health. I would just tell you that it does take some time in a regulated environment to make sure that we can get a second shift up and running. Those steps started about a month and a half ago. I can tell you as far as where we are in the second shift, we just recently started that second shift. As you can imagine, the shop at Asteria Health is working even before the second shift around the clock to maximize production. The second shift now would eliminate a lot of the constraints, if you will, that exist with filing and packaging some of these smaller items.

I would tell you in the next, Bret mentioned in a couple of weeks, in the next couple of weeks, we should be in a solid position. I believe that that would be the case primarily because of the advent of this second shift. Probably in a month’s time, in a month, maybe a little bit longer, we should be ahead of our safety stock levels so that we can start looking forward to regaining traction from a vertical integration perspective at Asteria, so we can really start ramping back up to where we once were.

George Kelly, Analyst, Roth Capital Partners: Okay. Thank you.

Operator: This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Bret Christensen for any closing remarks.

Bret Christensen, Chief Executive Officer, Biote Corporation: I wanna thank everyone for joining us today. We appreciate your interest in Biote and look forward to speaking with you on our next conference call. Thanks, everyone.

Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.