Comprehensive Analysis
Because the provided historical record is limited to the last two fiscal years, long-term five-year and three-year averages are not available. However, comparing the available timeline shows an aggressive acceleration in commercial activity. Between FY2024 and FY2025, revenue exploded from $15.64M to $32.04M, representing a massive 104.81% year-over-year jump. This indicates strong market momentum and rapid adoption of the company's therapeutic devices in the most recent fiscal year.
Unfortunately, this recent top-line momentum worsened the company's core profitability over this short timeline. While sales doubled, the company's operating income plunged further into the red, dropping from -$24.24M in FY2024 to -$46.37M in the latest fiscal year. This shows that the growth momentum was entirely forced by outsized spending, leaving the company with a deeply negative Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) that only marginally shifted from -138.5% to -122.2%.
Looking closely at the income statement, revenue growth was clearly the most outstanding historical trend, showing successful product placement. Gross profit also doubled from $12.45M to $25.98M, keeping direct product margins healthy. However, the true burden lies in operating expenses, particularly Selling, General, and Administrative (SG&A) costs, which skyrocketed from $32.44M in FY2024 to $65.83M in FY2025. This caused the earnings per share (EPS) to deteriorate significantly to a painful -$54.78. Compared to healthcare technology peers who typically leverage growing gross profits to eventually break even, Mobia Medical’s profit trend signals severe scaling inefficiencies.
On the balance sheet, the company maintains an outwardly stable liquidity profile, but it masks underlying risk. The cash balance surged by 129.73% to reach $33.59M by the end of FY2025, leading to an extremely strong current ratio of 4.54. Long-term debt stayed relatively flat at $7.13M, keeping traditional leverage metrics low. However, the massive accumulation of an accumulated deficit (retained earnings sitting at -$157.79M) reflects profound equity erosion over the company's history. The overall risk signal is worsening; while liquidity looks ample today, the balance sheet relies entirely on external funding lifelines rather than self-sustaining operations.
The cash flow performance further proves a severe lack of operational reliability. Over the available timeline, the company failed to produce consistent positive operating cash flow (CFO), burning -$24.32M in FY2024 and nearly doubling that outflow to -$45.70M in FY2025. Capital expenditures (Capex) were virtually non-existent, maxing out at just -$0.36M, which means the cash drain was entirely driven by day-to-day operating losses rather than long-term infrastructure building. Free cash flow perfectly mirrors these weak earnings, proving that the reported net losses translate into real, severe cash bleed.
Data shows this company is not paying dividends, which is standard for rapidly growing, cash-burning enterprises. Regarding share count actions, the company experienced noticeable equity dilution. The share count underwent a -12.54% buyback yield dilution in the latest fiscal year, indicating that outstanding shares increased. More significantly, the company engaged in heavy preferred stock issuance, bringing in $14.99M in FY2024 and escalating this dramatically to $64.71M in new preferred equity during FY2025.
From a shareholder perspective, these capital actions severely diluted the value of common shares without delivering per-share fundamental improvements. Even though top-line revenue doubled, the 12.54% equity dilution and massive preferred stock issuances meant that existing investors absorbed a heavier share of the deepening net losses, as EPS cratered to -$54.78. Because there are no dividends and operating cash generation is deeply negative (-$45.70M), the capital allocation strategy is purely defensive, focused on funding extreme operating burn rather than returning value. Ultimately, the continuous reliance on issuing preferred equity and common shares hurts per-share value and is not shareholder-friendly.
In closing, Mobia Medical’s historical record does not inspire confidence in its self-sustainability or structural resilience. Performance was highly volatile; the single biggest historical strength was its impressive ability to double its revenue year-over-year, proving its devices have true market demand. However, the glaring weakness is the runaway operational spending and staggering cash burn that heavily outpaced this top-line growth. The historical evidence suggests a highly speculative business that has not yet learned how to grow without penalizing its balance sheet and diluting its investors.