Profound Medical Corp.

NasdaqCM:PROF 株式レポート

時価総額:US$238.9m

Profound Medical 将来の成長

Future 基準チェック /56

Profound Medicalは、54%と35.1%でそれぞれ年率54%で利益と収益が成長すると予測される一方、EPSはgrowで57.6%年率。

主要情報

54.0%

収益成長率

57.57%

EPS成長率

Medical Equipment 収益成長16.1%
収益成長率35.1%
将来の株主資本利益率n/a
アナリストカバレッジ

Low

最終更新日26 May 2026

今後の成長に関する最新情報

Recent updates

Seeking Alpha Aug 04

Profound Medical Q2 GAAP EPS beats, revenue in-line

Profound Medical press release (NASDAQ:PROF): Q2 GAAP EPS of -$0.28 (vs. -0.35 Y/Y)  beats by $0.12. Revenue of $2M (-24.0% Y/Y) in-line. Shares +0.25%.
Seeking Alpha Jul 10

Profound Medical Lacks Conviction To Overthrow Macro Headwinds

Profound Medical Corp. is at an inflection point in its growth engine, set to recognize first meaningful revenue from its TULSA-PRO segment in FY22. Nevertheless, investors have shied away from top-line growth and are rewarding bottom-line fundamentals with a premium instead. Hence, even with its first turnover, the market is likely to overlook PROF in the medium term as investors step up in quality and liquidity. The TULSA-PRO procedure is effective and potentially offers patients a better quality of life after prostate surgery, that's not up for debate. We've priced PROF at $4.91 and demonstrate there's low probability it will re-rate in the medium-term. Investment Summary Longs of Profound Medical Corp. (PROF) have endured a 54% markdown in their positions over the past 12 months. Those buying into the weakness will have recognised even larger paper losses. After running PROF through a series of fundamental, simulative and statistical tests, findings suggest that it lacks conviction to overthrow various macroeconomic headwinds looming on the horizon. Exhibit 1. PROF 12-month price action. Price action has been bearish since July 2021 with shares trading below its EMA across the period Crosses above the EMA have been accurate sell signal for PROF since July 21' with strong base (hit) rate on backtesting, per HB Insights data. Image: HB Insights. Data: Updata Analytics Things were boiling up well for PROF back in FY20 when we had sized into the stock [note– Entry: $12.13, 12/6/20'; Profit: $20.05, 24/3/21']. Its TULSA-PRO procedure looked to penetrate an underexploited segment, and clinical trial data held up extremely well at the time. Make no mistake, PROF is a TULSA-PRO story. We firmly stress: the TULSA-PRO procedure is effective and potentially offers patients a better quality of life after prostate surgery – that's not up for debate. The incision-free ablation procedure has stacked up well in numerous clinical trials, and it's received strong surgeon support per management. It is a step up from the previous standard of care by removing targeted prostate tissue, as opposed to the entire prostate itself. If you know anything about prostate cancer/surgery, it's fraught with negative outcomes. These extend to urinary/bowel control, pain, and sexual dysfunction. But the removing the prostate has a 90%+ success rate of survival past 10-years, and is therefore offered as 1 of 3 standards of care. So it's a catch-22. Hence, a big sell for TULSA-PRO is the quality of life for patients post-op. It is improved due to the lower risk of urinary and faecal incontinence, plus all of the other issues associated with prostate cancer surgery. However, the tide has shifted in 2022, and there are new themes dictating equity returns – not just growth narratives. Indeed, the macro-thematic has turned to that of inflation, central bank tightening, geopolitical instability and numerous supply-chain shortages. Contrast this to the past two years, where the focus has been on top-line growth, rapid expansion and 'innovation' across all sectors. Now, the distribution of outcomes for the economy includes the probability we'll enter a recessionary world within the next 2 years. Investors have increasingly begun to price in these risks accordingly. In that vein, this analysis demonstrates why PROF fails to meet the criteria needed to justify its inclusion into a long-only, equity-focused portfolio. We illustrate that investors have shifted away from unprofitable names in medtech. The premia driving forward equity returns has also re-shaped. Alas, PROF is a high beta, low quality name that opposes our current investment strategy to identity long-term cash compounders with high degree of operating and earnings leverage. Without a directional view on the market, we rate PROF neutral on a $4.91/share valuation. Macro-headwinds underline the case In order to illustrate our thesis, we first need to grasp the current investment landscape. The valuation spread traditionally enjoyed by value strategies returned in FY22, with value stocks exhibiting pricing premium to growth into June. However, after the June roll-down, both value and growth premia have caught a bid and have curled back to May levels. With US nonfarm payrolls printing at 372,000 in June, well ahead of an estimated 268,000, yields at the long-end of the UST curve crept back up above 3% overnight. This brings nonfarm employment to just 0.3% below pre-pandemic levels, and yields back to a crucial level. How the value-growth spread pans out for here is integral to gauging equity allocation for H2 FY22. Exhibit 2. Valuation spread for value-strategies returned, but short-duration curling up amid spike in yields as well With the market agreeing with the value factor, PROF should ideally provide some evidence of 'value' in the investment proposition. Image: HB Insights. Data: Updata Analytics Essentially what's happened in FY22 is investors have shifted focus away from top-line growth onto bottom-line fundamentals. Factors of profitability are paramount as investors have stepped up in quality and liquidity in search for defensibility and resilience throughout their portfolios. The market's rewarding of these factors corroborates with the data above and in Exhibit 3. Investors have shifted away from high-beta growth to low-beta quality, seeking tangible value instead of future cash flows. As such, correlation structures between risk-assets and defensible asset classes have shifted up, compounding losses. Exhibit 3. Investors have shifted focus away from top-line growth onto bottom-line fundamentals, looks set to continue This is key to our PROF thesis as it fails the litmus test on profitability and fundamental momentum. We can't expect to rate higher if the market isn't rewarding 'the narrative' but looking to earnings/cash flow quality instead. HB Insights quantitative equity premia model [medtech], June FY22' Image & Data: HB Insights Investment Strategy For PROF, this is best seen in its performance alongside long-duration UST's. It was incumbent on the market continually rewarding the growth trade. When this reversed in late 2021, it was no surprise to see PROF retrace most of its prior year's gains. The long-end of the curve has caught a bid lately, probably as investors weigh up the future economic outlook versus the near-term (future looks brighter). The PROF share price has followed suit. With inflation pressures still well in situ, the rate-hiking trajectory likely to remain in situ as well, by estimate. Hence, there's higher probability PROF will de-rate further. Exhibit 4. Covariance structures between risk-assets and UST's continues to shift up, a key risk to PROF High-beta names continue to get punished and offer little upside premium as long as Fed looks to 75bps next cycle. PROF correlation to long-dated treasuries - price, inversion of yield Image: HB Insights. Data: Updata And what of inflation? With S&P earnings set to print higher in FY22 this suggests some pricing elasticity within most markets. Nevertheless, the debate on inflation is central to equity returns looking ahead. Both Brent Crude and Copper (Sep 22 Futures) have retraced from March highs at pace. Copper in particular has faltered to trade well below 2021 levels. Meanwhile, Brent Crude recently broke trend having tested resistance in an ascending wedge. Around the same time, US TIPS also underwent a reversal and are at 52-week lows, as seen in Exhibit 5, to trade at 2018 levels. These are all key indicators of industrial and consumer pricing activity and suggest expectations for inflation are lower. Moreover, the US 5y5y breakevens are priced at ~2.6%, in line with historical averages. Exhibit 5. Brent Crude and Copper each consolidating off March highs Key indicators of industrial/consumer pricing activity, suggesting inflation expectations are lower. Image: HB Insights. Data: Updata Analytics It is no surprise therefore to see low-beta, quality names flourishing in FY22 as the market rewards idiosyncratic risk once again. In other words, the market is no longer the sole driver of equity returns – factor premia and company-specific drivers are. Balanced portfolios have therefore outperformed in FY22 by capturing upside in commodities and alternatives. Empirical evidence tells us why. Traditionally, there's a diversification benefit offered by holding equities and fixed income. However, historical data shows that in times of inflation, this relationship breaks down and correlations between the 2 asset classes head to 1. When equities are down and in times of inflation, commodities tend to outperform, being the cause of and most reasonable hedge against inflation risk. Alternatives have emerged onto the scene as a way to capture this premia, and/or maintaining equity exposure, albeit with uncorrelated equity returns. As seen in Exhibit 6., balanced portfolios constructed with an alternatives and commodity weighting have offered wide diversification benefits to traditional stock/bond portfolios in 2022. Losses incurred by the latter's correlations have been more than offset by positioning in the former. Exhibit 6. A weighting to alternatives and commodities has been key differential for capturing risk-adjusted alpha and minimising drawdown in FY22 Skew and kurtosis improved too. Hammers in the point that low equity beta continues to outperform in 2022. Note: GSG (black); DBMF (red); IEI (sky blue); 60/40 (green/blue) Image: HB Insights. Data: Updata Analytics For PROF, it doesn't lend us any of these statistical benefits. As such, it has lost relative strength against the SPX in FY22, all whilst the benchmark itself has been sliding. As PROF has lost relative strength, it's equity-beta to the benchmark has been gradually shifting up, as seen below, corroborating the thesis laid out in this report. Again, PROF is a high-beta, low-quality play that goes against the characteristics investors are currently paying a premium for. The question is, what does this spell for the company and investors moving forwards? A deeper dive into its fundamentals reveals more. Exhibit 7. PROF continues to lose relative strength vs. the benchmark all whilst equity-beta shifts upwards Corroborates to the underlying thesis laid out in this report. Image: HB Insights. Data: Updata Analytics Fair view of fundamentals Unfortunately PROF doesn't beat the watermark at this level either. Our findings show there's been a lack of tangible value creation for shareholders, and that predictability of future cash flows is weak. Hence, valuations are likely to remain compressed, by estimate. We first must turn to FCF as profitability at this level is integral to equity returns looking ahead. With a series of losses at the FCF level, there's no momentum heading into H2 FY22. The loss on CFFO has been increasing since Q2 FY20 and came in at -$7.86 million in Q1 FY22. FCFF has therefore been abysmal and looks set to remain negative into the coming 3-years at least. Exhibit 8. Nil profitability above, at or below the bottom line to report of Clear divergence from factor premia investors are paying for in FY22. Image: HB Insights. Data: PROF SEC Filings Noteworthy however is that OPEX has remained relatively flat in this time, whilst its cash balance has slowly worked its way south. It's also failed to print any meaningful revenue in the last 3-years to date – and with investors shying away from top-line growth, what is there left on an income/cash flow basis to grab onto now that it is set to recognise first revenue from TULSA-PRO in FY22? R&D expenditure is still narrow on an annualised basis, and the global installed base on TULSA-PRO is now 30. Q1 revenue was primarily on the installed base, with ~$1 million in recurring revenue in that mix. The installed base is set to finally produce revenue, as mentioned, and the impact should be recognised from Q2 downstream. It has another 10 agreements yet to be installed in FY22 and management point to a potential doubling in utilisation across the base, so we'll see at earnings time. Exhibit 9. PROF is at an inflection point as income from its installed TULSA-PRO base finally set to come through as booked revenue But investors are agnostic to top-line growth at present. The path to profitability is far more important right now. Image: HB Insights. Data: PROF SEC Filings The booking of revenue is essential for PROF finally deliver a return on capital that may help guide its path to profitability. But it won't be turnover investors are rewarding. Moreover, sales growth could even be an issue, given PROF's revenue model. First, it anticipates the cadence of utilization on TULSA-PRO placements to uptick for H2 FY22. This, it sees "as the newly installed sites get up their learning curves and increase utilization," per last earnings call. In fact, utilisation is critical for TULSA-PRO, as the business model relies on patient turnover for recurring and scalable revenue. Despite the fact it's a medical device company, PROF books revenue by charging on a per-patient basis in the US. It does this for bundled services that include device usage, a one-time disposable, and supplementary services. To be clear: it recognized no revenue from the installation of its TULSA-PRO systems, as opposed to what's conventional in the sector. So it makes no money on the installation, but see's a recurring-like revenue stream due to the per-patient usage. It therefore relies on patient-turnover to drive sales volume, which could present as a high risk amid increasing competition and a slowing hospital capital budgeting cycle. According to CEO Dr. Arun Menewat last earnings call: We believe that this is the winning [revenue] model as it creates a true partnership between us and the healthcare provider. In the first quarter of 2022, we continue to see that our -- physicians are using TULSA for whole gland, partial gland or focal therapy, and salvage cases. Exhibit 10. Finally booking revenue from TULSA-PRO will see some tangible value to invest in, other than the growth story PROF's per-patient revenue model could pose a risk if patient turnover recedes en masse again Image: HB Insights. Data: PROF SEC Filings Valuation Shares are trading at ~14x forward sales, well above the sector median's 4.75x, but below PROF's 5-year average of 43x P/S. PROF also trades at ~3x book value and ~16.5x cash flow. With its lack of profitability, a firm valuation is hard to derive for PROF, especially as our forecasted cash flows signal further operating-net losses into FY24. It's no wonder then to see PROF's multiples de-rate against the S&P 500 health care equipment and supplies index (Exhibit 11). More importantly, the trend had been in situ since mid-2021, as seen below. Hence, on a relative basis, PROF's valuation is weakening, and looking ahead, the case for a re-rating is weak. Exhibit 11. PROF's multiples have been weakening in relative strength against the healthcare equipment and supplies index since mid-2021

業績と収益の成長予測

NasdaqCM:PROF - アナリストの将来予測と過去の財務データ ( )USD Millions
日付収益収益フリー・キャッシュフロー営業活動によるキャッシュ平均アナリスト数
12/31/20287315N/AN/A1
12/31/202744-29N/AN/A5
12/31/202626-31N/AN/A5
3/31/202619-39-39-39N/A
12/31/202516-43-38-38N/A
9/30/202514-39-38-38N/A
6/30/202512-41-35-35N/A
3/31/202512-32-27-27N/A
12/31/202411-28-23-23N/A
9/30/20249-31-25-25N/A
6/30/20247-28-22-22N/A
3/31/20247-28-21-21N/A
12/31/20237-28-23-23N/A
9/30/20236-29-22-22N/A
6/30/20237-29-23-23N/A
3/31/20237-27-24-24N/A
12/31/20227-29-26-26N/A
9/30/20226-29-24-24N/A
6/30/20227-30-24-23N/A
3/31/20228-31-24-24N/A
12/31/20217-31-23-22N/A
9/30/20219-28-26-25N/A
6/30/20218-28-25-24N/A
3/31/20217-26-20-20N/A
12/31/20207-22-21-21N/A
9/30/20207-18-19-19N/A
6/30/20205-17-17-17N/A
3/31/20204-16-20-20N/A
12/31/20194-15N/A-15N/A
9/30/20193-15N/A-13N/A
6/30/20193-14N/A-14N/A
3/31/20193-14N/A-13N/A
12/31/20182-15N/A-13N/A
9/30/20182-16N/A-14N/A
6/30/20183-16N/A-12N/A
3/31/20184-15N/A-11N/A
12/31/20174-15N/A-12N/A
9/30/20172-15N/A-12N/A
6/30/20171-14N/A-12N/A
3/31/20170-12N/A-11N/A
12/31/2016N/A-12N/A-11N/A
9/30/2016N/A-11N/A-9N/A
6/30/2016N/A-10N/A-8N/A
3/31/2016N/A-14N/A-7N/A
12/31/2015N/A-12N/A-5N/A
9/30/2015N/A-12N/A-5N/A

アナリストによる今後の成長予測

収入対貯蓄率: PROFは今後 3 年間で収益性が向上すると予測されており、これは 貯蓄率 ( 3.5% ) よりも高い成長率であると考えられます。

収益対市場: PROF今後 3 年間で収益性が向上すると予想されており、これは市場平均を上回る成長と考えられます。

高成長収益: PROF今後 3 年以内に収益を上げることが予想されます。

収益対市場: PROFの収益 ( 35.1% ) US市場 ( 11.9% ) よりも速いペースで成長すると予測されています。

高い収益成長: PROFの収益 ( 35.1% ) 20%よりも速いペースで成長すると予測されています。


一株当たり利益成長率予想


将来の株主資本利益率

将来のROE: PROFの 自己資本利益率 が 3 年後に高くなると予測されるかどうかを判断するにはデータが不十分です


成長企業の発掘

企業分析と財務データの現状

データ最終更新日(UTC時間)
企業分析2026/06/09 05:11
終値2026/06/09 00:00
収益2026/03/31
年間収益2025/12/31

データソース

企業分析に使用したデータはS&P Global Market Intelligence LLC のものです。本レポートを作成するための分析モデルでは、以下のデータを使用しています。データは正規化されているため、ソースが利用可能になるまでに時間がかかる場合があります。

パッケージデータタイムフレーム米国ソース例
会社財務10年
  • 損益計算書
  • キャッシュ・フロー計算書
  • 貸借対照表
アナリストのコンセンサス予想+プラス3年
  • 予想財務
  • アナリストの目標株価
市場価格30年
  • 株価
  • 配当、分割、措置
所有権10年
  • トップ株主
  • インサイダー取引
マネジメント10年
  • リーダーシップ・チーム
  • 取締役会
主な進展10年
  • 会社からのお知らせ

* 米国証券を対象とした例であり、非米国証券については、同等の規制書式および情報源を使用

特に断りのない限り、すべての財務データは1年ごとの期間に基づいていますが、四半期ごとに更新されます。これは、TTM(Trailing Twelve Month)またはLTM(Last Twelve Month)データとして知られています。詳細はこちら

分析モデルとスノーフレーク

本レポートを生成するために使用した分析モデルの詳細は当社のGithubページでご覧いただけます。また、レポートの使用方法に関するガイドYoutubeのチュートリアルも掲載しています。

シンプリー・ウォールストリート分析モデルを設計・構築した世界トップクラスのチームについてご紹介します。

業界およびセクターの指標

私たちの業界とセクションの指標は、Simply Wall Stによって6時間ごとに計算されます。

アナリスト筋

Profound Medical Corp. 5 これらのアナリストのうち、弊社レポートのインプットとして使用した売上高または利益の予想を提出したのは、 。アナリストの投稿は一日中更新されます。11

アナリスト機関
David KideckelBeacon Securities Limited
Jason MillsCanaccord Genuity
Prakash GowdCIBC Capital Markets