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XAIR Beyond Air, Inc.

XAIR: Don't Miss Beyond Air's Key Investor Conferences!

XAIR: Don't Miss Beyond Air's Key Investor Conferences!

Company Overview and Upcoming Catalysts

Beyond Air, Inc. (NASDAQ: XAIR) is a commercial-stage medical device and biopharmaceutical company focused on harnessing the power of nitric oxide (NO) to improve patients’ lives (www.globenewswire.com). Its CEO, Steve Lisi, is slated to present at two key investor conferences in early February 2026: the BTIG MedTech, Digital Health, Life Science & Diagnostics Tools Conference (Feb 9–11 in Snowbird, UT) and the Noble Capital Markets Emerging Growth Virtual Conference (Feb 4–5) (www.globenewswire.com). These events offer Beyond Air a platform to update investors on its progress, including the commercial rollout of its FDA-approved LungFit® PH system for neonates with hypoxic respiratory failure (persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn) and developments in its pipeline of nitric oxide-based therapies.

Operationally, Beyond Air’s revenues are just beginning to scale. It reported $3.7 million in sales for fiscal 2025, a 220% increase from $1.2 million in 2024 (www.globenewswire.com). This growth reflects early U.S. adoption of LungFit PH (launched mid-2022) and initial international shipments after securing a CE Mark in Europe and other approvals in late 2024 (www.globenewswire.com) (www.globenewswire.com). However, the company remains far from breakeven, and investor focus at the upcoming conferences will likely center on commercial traction and financial sustainability. Management has guided to $8–$10 million in revenue for fiscal 2026 (year ending March 2026) (www.globenewswire.com) – a target that was revised down from earlier projections, indicating a more gradual ramp in LungFit PH adoption than initially hoped. With these conferences on the horizon, investors have a timely opportunity to gauge Beyond Air’s strategy to accelerate growth and address its funding needs.

Dividend Policy and Yield

Beyond Air is a growth-oriented, R&D-stage company and does not pay any dividends. In fact, the company has never declared or paid cash dividends on its stock, opting to reinvest all available funds back into product development and commercialization (www.sec.gov). Management has explicitly stated that they do not intend to pay cash dividends for the foreseeable future (www.sec.gov). This policy is typical for early commercial biotech/medtech firms, which prioritize using cash to achieve market penetration and advance their pipeline rather than returning capital to shareholders. Consequently, XAIR’s dividend yield is 0%, and traditional income metrics like FFO or AFFO are not applicable in this context. Investors in Beyond Air are betting on share price appreciation driven by successful commercialization, rather than any near-term dividend income.

Leverage and Debt Maturities

Leverage Profile: Beyond Air’s balance sheet has undergone significant changes in the past two years as the company sought to fund its commercialization while managing debt obligations. In June 2023, it secured a credit facility of up to $40 million in senior secured term loans (www.sec.gov). An initial $17.5 million tranche was drawn at closing, with two additional tranches ($10M and $12.5M) contingent on hitting certain LungFit PH revenue milestones and lender approval (www.sec.gov). The loan was scheduled to mature on June 1, 2027, and was structured with monthly principal repayments beginning January 2025, subject to possible deferral if fiscal 2025 product revenues reached $40 million (www.sec.gov). In reality, actual FY2025 revenues (~$3.7M) fell far short of that threshold, meaning debt amortization would have kicked in as of 2025 under the original terms.

Refinancing and Maturities: To avoid a cash crunch from looming debt payments, Beyond Air executed a major refinancing in late 2024. In September 2024, the company extinguished the entire $17.5 million Avenue Capital term loan via a one-time payment of $17.85 million (www.sec.gov). This repaid the outstanding principal and eliminated roughly $12 million of scheduled interest and principal payments that would have come due from Q4 2024 through mid-2026 (www.sec.gov). The payoff was funded by a dilutive equity raise (detailed below in the valuation section) and was done on favorable terms: the lender (Avenue Capital) even participated as an equity investor in the financing round (www.sec.gov).

In place of the bank debt, Beyond Air entered into a more flexible $11.5 million royalty-based loan provided by an insider-led group of board members (www.sec.gov). Importantly, this new debt carries no cash interest or principal payments until July 2026 – interest accrues as payment-in-kind (PIK) at 15% until that date (www.sec.gov). Starting July 2026, the company will service this loan through a royalty of 8% on LungFit PH net sales, with those payments applied toward interest and then principal until the obligation is fully repaid (www.sec.gov). This structure ties debt repayment to the company’s revenue ramp, alleviating fixed debt service in the near term. The trade-off is a high PIK interest rate and potential long-tail payments if sales are slow, but it significantly pushes out Beyond Air’s debt maturity burden to beyond mid-2026. As of early 2026, Beyond Air’s direct financial debt consists primarily of this $11.5M insider loan, since the prior bank term loan has been retired.

Overall, Beyond Air’s leverage is relatively modest for a company of its size – roughly $11.5 million of debt versus $22.9 million in pro forma cash on hand as of September 30, 2025 (after the refinancing) (www.globenewswire.com). In effect, the firm was in a net cash position after that capital raise and debt swap. However, ongoing operating losses (detailed below) mean that cash is steadily being consumed, which could change the net debt picture over time.

Debt Service Coverage

Because Beyond Air is not yet profitable and has arranged to defer its debt service for the next couple of years, traditional coverage metrics are currently less meaningful. The insider royalty loan was specifically designed to require no cash interest payments until mid-2026 (www.sec.gov). Thus, near-term interest coverage (EBIT/Interest) is effectively moot – the company is paying 0 cash interest through July 2026. Instead, the coverage ratio will hinge on future sales: after mid-2026, 8% of LungFit PH revenue will go toward servicing the debt (www.sec.gov). For example, if Beyond Air achieves $10 million in annual LungFit PH sales, about $0.8 million would be paid toward the loan per year, which would cover the 15% PIK interest (approximately $1.7 million annually on $11.5M principal) only partially – implying the balance of interest would continue to accrue until revenue grows further. This underscores that full debt repayment is contingent on significant sales growth in coming years.

It’s worth noting that prior to refinancing, Beyond Air did incur interest expense that strained its coverage ratios. In fiscal 2024, interest and financing expenses were about $2.9 million (www.sec.gov), with no earnings to cover those costs. The 2024 refinancing alleviated this burden by eliminating scheduled principal+interest payments through June 2026 (www.sec.gov), effectively suspending the need for coverage out of operating cash flow in the interim. However, unless Beyond Air’s commercialization efforts accelerate dramatically, the company will likely need to tap additional funding or refinancing by 2026 to manage the eventual debt service and continuing R&D investment – a point acknowledged by management in stating they will require further capital before achieving profitability (www.sec.gov). In summary, current debt coverage is being achieved not through operating earnings but via financial engineering, buying the company time to scale its revenue.

Valuation and Comparable Metrics

Valuing Beyond Air is challenging given its early-stage losses, but a few metrics can be considered. The stock’s market capitalization in early 2026 is roughly in the mid-teens of millions of dollars. This low absolute valuation reflects the significant dilution and selloff the stock experienced in 2024–2025. Notably, the company undertook a 1-for-20 reverse stock split in July 2025 to cure a Nasdaq bid price deficiency (www.tipranks.com), and it issued a substantial amount of new equity via private placements. In September 2024, Beyond Air raised $20.6 million by selling ~40.4 million shares (pre-split) at $0.51 per share with five-year warrants attached (www.sec.gov). More recently, in January 2026, it raised another $5.0 million by issuing ~3.93 million shares at $1.272 per share (with equal number of warrants at $1.147 exercise price) to an institutional investor (www.santelog.com). These financings roughly doubled the share count (even after accounting for the reverse split) and have kept the company’s enterprise value relatively low.

Price-to-sales (P/S): Using management’s FY2026 revenue guidance of $8–$10 million (www.globenewswire.com), XAIR trades at approximately 1.5–2.0 times forward sales – a ratio derived from the ~$15 million enterprise value divided by expected sales. This is corroborated by third-party analyses that estimate Beyond Air’s EV/Sales for 2026 at about 1.8× (sa.marketscreener.com). Such a multiple is quite modest for a medtech/biopharma company, reflecting skepticism in the market. For context, more mature medical device companies often trade at higher sales multiples, but they also typically have positive earnings or a clearer path to profitability. In Beyond Air’s case, the low P/S suggests that investors are heavily discounting its future potential due to the company’s high cash burn and unproven commercialization trajectory.

Traditional earnings-based metrics are not meaningful as Beyond Air remains deeply unprofitable (no P/E can be computed, or it appears as a negative number). On a cash flow basis, if one hypothetically compares to REIT-like metrics (FFO/AFFO) – which don’t truly apply here – the company would also screen very expensive or “N/A” because cash from operations is negative. Thus, investors are essentially valuing XAIR on revenue growth and pipeline progress, with an implicit expectation that if LungFit PH and pipeline products succeed, current valuations could prove cheap, whereas failure to scale sales could render even the low absolute valuation justified.

When comparing Beyond Air to peers, there aren’t many direct pure-play competitors publicly traded, as the inhaled nitric oxide market is dominated by larger players (discussed below). Micro-cap medtech/biotech companies with a single FDA-approved product and similar revenue scale often trade at low single-digit sales multiples as well, unless there is clear visibility to a large market opportunity. Beyond Air’s addressable market for LungFit PH is significant (the company estimates ~$350M U.S. and $700M global potential (beyondspx.com)), but capturing that will depend on displacing entrenched incumbents and expanding indications. The bottom line on valuation: at roughly $15 million enterprise value (~1.8× forward sales) (sa.marketscreener.com), XAIR may appear cheap relative to its revenue opportunity – but this likely reflects the substantial execution risks and capital needs that investors see ahead.

Risks, Red Flags, and Open Questions

Beyond Air faces a number of risks and red flags that investors should weigh, even as the company presents at upcoming conferences:

- Continued Losses and Need for Capital: The company has a history of large net losses – $46.6 million in fiscal 2025 alone (www.globenewswire.com) – and cash burn is expected to continue for the foreseeable future. Even after aggressive cost-cutting (R&D and SG&A were reduced by over $18 million combined in FY2025) the business is nowhere near breakeven. Management openly acknowledges that, with only one product on the market, they will need to raise additional funding before achieving profitability (www.sec.gov). This implies future dilution or debt is likely. Indeed, frequent capital raises have already significantly diluted existing shareholders (share count ballooned via offerings in 2024–2026 (www.sec.gov) (www.santelog.com), and a reverse split had to be implemented). Investors should be prepared for the possibility of further equity dilution or strategic partnerships to fund operations if revenue growth falls short.

- Nasdaq Compliance and Share Price Volatility: A red flag in 2024–2025 was XAIR’s struggle to maintain the Nasdaq minimum bid price. The stock price fell below $1 in 2024, prompting a 180-day extension from Nasdaq to regain compliance by August 4, 2025 (www.nasdaq.com) (www.nasdaq.com). Ultimately, Beyond Air had to enact a 1-for-20 reverse stock split in July 2025 to cure this issue (www.tipranks.com). While the split lifted the per-share price, such actions can sometimes signal distress and can reduce liquidity. The post-split share price has remained low (in the $1–$2 range as of Jan 2026), so volatility and the risk of future compliance issues remain – particularly if there are setbacks that cause the stock to decline again. This volatility can impact the company’s ability to raise capital on favorable terms.

- Single Product Dependence & Market Challenges: Beyond Air is heavily dependent on LungFit PH, its sole commercial product, for near-term revenue (www.sec.gov). The success of LungFit PH is critical, yet it faces intense competition from well-established players. Mallinckrodt’s INOmax® (inhaled nitric oxide) has long been the standard therapy for neonates with respiratory failure, marketed in the U.S. and key international markets (www.sec.gov). The Linde Group offers a competing NO delivery system (NOxBOX®) in Europe, and Air Liquide’s subsidiary markets a similar product (KINOX™/SoKINOX™) for neonatal pulmonary hypertension in Europe (www.sec.gov). These incumbents have entrenched relationships with hospitals and NICUs, plus significant resources. Beyond Air must convince clinicians and administrators that LungFit PH’s advantages – on-demand NO generation from air (no high-pressure gas tanks), potentially lower cost and easier logistics – are worth switching vendors. Gaining market share from competitors can be slow and expensive, requiring hospital trials, education, pricing incentives, and strong customer support. If adoption is slower than expected (as evidenced by the tempered 2026 revenue guidance), Beyond Air’s growth and cash flow could disappoint. A related risk is limited diversification – any issue with LungFit PH (regulatory, safety, manufacturing, or commercial) would severely impact the company’s prospects.

- Regulatory and Execution Risks: As a medtech/biopharma firm, Beyond Air faces typical industry risks. Regulatory approvals in new markets or for new indications can take longer or be costlier than planned. The company is also pursuing new uses of its NO technology (e.g. LungFit PRO for respiratory infections, LungFit GO portable system, and an oncology program via its majority-owned subsidiary Beyond Cancer, Ltd.). These pipeline projects are in early stages (some in pilot or Phase 1 trials (beyondspx.com) (beyondspx.com)) and carry scientific and clinical trial risks. Setbacks in the pipeline could diminish future growth drivers beyond LungFit PH. On the commercial side, executing an international launch is challenging for a small company – Beyond Air relies on distribution partners in Europe, Australia, the Middle East and other regions (www.globenewswire.com), which introduces dependency on those partners’ performance. Supply chain or production issues with the LungFit devices could also pose risks, though none have been publicized so far.

- Financial Red Flags: Beyond the need for external funding, some financial red flags include the company’s accumulated deficit and potential balance sheet constraints. Even after the recent financings, the cash runway extends only into mid-2026 by management’s estimates (www.sec.gov). If revenues do not ramp up substantially, the company may face a cash shortfall. The royalty-based debt, while easy on near-term cash flow, will start to siphon off a portion of revenue in 2026, effectively acting like an 8% sales royalty (which could pressure margins). Additionally, shareholder dilution has been and remains a red flag: the private placements in 2024 and 2026 were done at low share prices (pre-split $0.51 and $1.27, respectively), indicating constrained bargaining power and diluting existing holders (www.sec.gov) (www.santelog.com). Future raises could further dilute shares if done at depressed prices. All these factors make financial modeling uncertain and pose downside risk if performance lags.

- Open Questions – Strategic Moves: An open question is how Beyond Air will manage or monetize its non-core programs to unlock value. Notably, in late 2025 the company disclosed a letter of intent with XTL Biopharmaceuticals to potentially sell Beyond Air’s 85% stake in its NeuroNOS subsidiary (which is developing neurological NO synthase inhibitors for autism and brain conditions) (www.stocktitan.net). The proposed terms would give Beyond Air a minority equity stake in XTL (19.9%), $1 million cash, and up to $31.5 million in milestone payments (www.stocktitan.net). If this deal is finalized and approved, it could offload development cost of the NeuroNOS program and provide some non-dilutive capital (via the $1M cash and any future milestones). However, as of the latest filings the agreement was not yet definitive (www.stocktitan.net). Investors will be watching for updates on this transaction: Will Beyond Air indeed divest NeuroNOS? If so, will it pursue similar partnerships or spinoffs for its Beyond Cancer unit or other pipeline assets to focus on its core respiratory business? Such strategic moves could reshape the company’s portfolio and financial situation. Another question is whether Beyond Air might seek a larger commercial partner for LungFit PH if uptake remains gradual – a partner could bring marketing muscle in exchange for a share of revenues. Finally, given the small size and niche technology, M&A is an ever-present subplot: might Beyond Air itself become a takeover target for a bigger respiratory device or gas therapy company if LungFit gains traction? These are speculative, but they underscore the range of paths the company’s future could take.

Conclusion: Beyond Air offers a high-risk, high-reward profile. The upcoming investor conferences should shed more light on the company’s execution on LungFit PH and whether management’s strategy can bridge the gap to sustainability. With no dividend cushion and reliant on external funding, XAIR is fundamentally a bet on successful innovation and market penetration. Investors shouldn’t miss management’s commentary at these conferences – key updates on sales momentum, partnerships, or regulatory progress (or lack thereof) could be pivotal in determining whether Beyond Air’s current depressed valuation represents a deep value opportunity or a value trap. All eyes will be on the CEO’s presentations to gauge how the company plans to navigate its liquidity needs and competitive landscape in 2026 and beyond.

Sources: The information above is grounded in Beyond Air’s SEC filings, official press releases, and credible financial media. Key references include the company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for fiscal 2024 (filed June 2024) for details on debt and risk factors (www.sec.gov) (www.sec.gov) (www.sec.gov), GlobeNewswire releases for financial results and corporate updates (www.globenewswire.com) (www.globenewswire.com), and Nasdaq/TipRanks news on compliance and corporate actions (www.tipranks.com) (www.nasdaq.com). These sources provide authoritative insight into XAIR’s financial policies, capital structure changes, and strategic direction. All data and quotes are cited inline for verification.

Disclaimer

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions.

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