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Twist Bioscience Corp (TWST 1.07%)
Q2 2020 Earnings Call
May 8, 2020, 8:30 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Welcome to Twist Bioscience Fiscal 2020 Second Quarter Financial Results Conference Call. At this time all participant lines are on a listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. [Operator Instructions].

I would now like to turn the conference call over to Jim Thorburn Financial -- Chief Financial Officer.

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

All right, thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. First and foremost, we hope each of you is safe and healthy, wherever you are during this time. I would like to thank all of you for joining us today for Twist Bioscience conference call to review our fiscal 2020 second quarter financial results and business progress. We did issue our financial results earlier today, which is available at our website at www.twistbioscience.com.

With me on today's call is Dr. Emily Leproust, CEO and Co-Founder of Twist. Emily will begin with a review of our recent progress of Twist businesses and I will report on our financial and operational performance, then Emily will discuss our upcoming milestones and direction. We will then open the call up for questions.

And as a reminder, this call is being recorded. The audio portion will be archived in the Investors section of our website and will be available for one week. During today's presentation, we will make forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Forward-looking statements generally relate to future events, our future financial or operating performance. Our expectations and beliefs regarding these matters may not materialize and actual results in financial periods are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected.

These risks include those set forth in the press release we issued earlier today, as well as those more fully described in our filings with the Security and Exchange Commission. The forward-looking statements in this presentation are based on information available to us as of the date hereof. And we cannot at this time predict the full extent of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and any results with businesses or economic impact, we disclaim any obligation to update any forward-looking statements except as required by law.

With that, I'll now turn the call over to our Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, Dr. Emily Leproust.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Thank you, Jim, and good afternoon everyone. I'd like to add my wishes that we're finally safe and healthy at this time. The global pandemic has turned our lives substantially, since our last call in February. And at Twist even before the state of California called for a shelter in place, we quickly transitioned a moderate number of employees to working from home. For it we wanted to ensure that our production workers do not have the option of working from home stayed safe and healthy, as we will be able to continue to deliver our products to customer conducting important research.

Despite the -- despite the challenges posed by COVID-19, we reported a record revenues of $19.3 million, for the second quarter of fiscal 2020, resulting from strong NGS sales, significant revenue from income. Initial revenue from biopharma collaborations, as well as the addition of two new COVID-19 products. Order for the current quarter getting strong, opportunity on par with the previous quarter at $24.6 million and resulting in booking rate of about $16 million for the first six months of fiscal 2020. For the first time, we revalued a gross margins of approximately 30% confirming that as we scale our products and revenue building on our established infrastructure, we are able to increase our market.

Turning to specific results buyer, synbio. We shipped more than 88,000 genes during the second quarter. Also, we added two new writers to our capacity and continue with this in our turnaround time. Our synbio revenue includes genes and five months of testament, who are developing vaccines and therapeutics against COVID-19. So we cannot accurately break that revenue out technically, at this time. We've recorded a total of $11 million in synbio revenue, $4 million of that from Ginkgo, which has made a substantial commitment in the fight against COVID-19 and is very [Indecipherable] substantive research. This is a very strong quarter for synbio, so we do see the shelter in place order impacting our academic customers substantially. We have launched a new campaign, where customers can order DNA now, as they are able to contribute design portion of the design built sales cycle from home.

And when their lab reopen, we will sell the product to them immediately. Balancing out the reduction in academic revenue. We see an escalation in order from biotechnology and pharmaceutical company, ramping up their efforts to fight COVID-19, through vaccine and therapeutic development. And overall synbio orders remain strong at $14.1 million as those larger testaments remained opened for essential research. While, we are optimistic about the future, we are closely monitoring the situation as well as across our customer base in all regions. So that we are in the best position to react to any change in market condition. Importantly, on schedule and as planned, which was much more challenging during the pandemic in mid-April we launched a new product to doing larger massive DNA to customers we need [Indecipherable]. These product and extending -- and extended offering of our Twist Clonal Genes is the preferred format for pharma and biotech company. And therefore, expand our serviceable market. These extension of our Clonal genes offering, enables Twist to become more of the one-stop shop for pharmaceutical and biotechnology and research company.

In addition, we are looking at different market opportunity to pursue [Indecipherable] and to forego in the long tail of the market, such as customers that need a fewer genes at a time. Whether that massive order and we remain on track to launch our Clonal-Ready gene fragments in the second half of calendar 2020. Both the new preparation and the Clonal-Ready genes fragment target two very different and important sub-segments, that we do not serve well today. And we believe that over time that we will represent substantial areas of growth for synbio's segment.

For Genomics and Targeted NGS at the end of the second quarter, we introduced two new products to facilitate COVID-19 testing and monitoring of viral evolution. We introduced SARS-CoV-2 synthetic RNA reference sequences, which can be used as positive control for development, validation and verification of diagnostic assays, as well as used in testing. These referenced sequences are also posted on the FDA's website within the reference materials for SARS-CoV-2. We also launched a target enrichment panel for viral detection and characterization of samples for SARS-CoV-2, which can be used for environmental monitoring and surveillance testing, while providing insight into full sequence information to track viral evolution and strain origin.

These new product offerings, our perfect illustration of what Twist does there. We are presented with a new challenge like this global pandemic. And we look at our core strengths and address these problems. We were able to launch this product in just a few weeks, serving our existing facilities and also making the emerging global concern. This products were only available for two weeks at the end of the quarter and in that time, we recorded approximately $400,000 in revenue and we shipped to 231 customers. We are grateful to be in a position, where we are able to help in the global [Indecipherable] combat these virus, while the business remains healthy. This is a tremendous system to the hard work and education of our employees across the organization.

For our overall NGS product, we reported revenues of $7.7 million an increase of 38% year-over-year, as well as strong order of $9.8 million and we had another six customers adopt our products this quarter for a total of 43. During the quarter, one of our customers published results of their liquid biopsy products, which include our customized target enrichment panel. With that [Indecipherable] that their technology is about to detect more than 50 types of cancer, across all stages with a full positive rate of less than 1% through a single blood drop. These data from more than 15,000 participants are extremely impressive and enrolled for blood test on liquid biopsy to date.

As we all know, the ability to identify cancer early remains critical to effective treatment. We are thrilled to play a role in this potential pivotal shift in cancer diagnosis. More broadly to address large liquid biopsy market, we introduced a Targeted Methylation Sequencing solution, during the 2020 [Indecipherable] in February. This product is ideal for customers, focused on liquid biopsy, as it can be used to study methylation pattern changes in a wide range of research fields. Clonal [Indecipherable] the addition and subtraction of domestic group changes, with proteins are made in the cell, which in term has deep indication for cancer, epigenetics and non-invasive prenatal testing. We are working with initial customers and believe it represent an important area accruals for NGS Solution.

Turning to our vertical market opportunities. In addition to our collaboration supply synthesis genes and antibodies for Vanderbilt. Twist Biopharma is working with them to provide custom antibody drug discovery libraries and screening these libraries for potential antibody therapeutics that would treat patients with COVID-19. And in March, as the global pandemic was gaining traction rapidly, we leverage our robust regulatory in 50 antibody discovery libraries, each containing more than 10 billion antibody sequences to identify antibody candidates for the treatment of SARS-CoV-2. We have identified key competitive antibodies, we've put on binding to the receptor binding domain of the S1 protein on the SARS-CoV-2 virus. In addition, we have identified a series of antibodies that binds to be extracellular domain of ACE2 in humans cells.

As a reminder, ACE2 is the receptor that SARS-CoV-2 binds to in order to enter and corrupt human cells. The fact that we were able to go from publicly available reference sequences to competitive antibodies for two different targets in a matter of six weeks demonstrate the power of our biopharma platform, and something that we believe we can repeat for other targets, even ones which are half of it. Apart from our biopharma work against COVID-19, we continue our discussions with a large number of potential partners and very pleased to report that we have signed one partnership with an undisclosed party, which includes milestones and royalties and look forward to announcing additional deals.

As a result, we've reported $600,000 in revenue for our biopharma division this quarter. And while we expect the orders and revenues to be lumpy, we look forward to seeing [Indecipherable] increase, as we continue to derive value from this growing market opportunity, despite near-term and sometimes reported by the COVID-19 pandemic. As we generate additional data and validation for our internally generated target. We expect to move along the spectrum to being a value-added pharma partner, rather than just a reagent provider. We do expect this will time, but we are encouraged by the progress we are seeing today.

As we shared last quarter, we will not given update on data storage due to the length of time it takes for the silicon design, build, test cycle. However, we can say that we have added an additional [Indecipherable] to drive this important product for all. We're extremely concentrating at Twist, that will attracted and retain businesses and resilient employees, who are inspired by our mission to improve health and this is going to, we are being put to the test in the last three months and the challenge continues. And pleased to be the company that is rising to address the global pandemic and also serve our customers with many other important areas of research.

At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Jim to review our financial results for the quarter.

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

All right, thank you, Emily.

Our results for quarter two were strong and proved out our business model in an extremely challenging environment. Revenue was $19.3 million and that's 42% growth year-over-year and 12% sequential growth from the $17.2 million in the previous quarter. Our gross margin for the quarter was 29.7% as compared to approximately 13% in the same quarter last year and up from 20% in quarter one. This reflects the benefit of scaling our revenue and leveraging our fixed costs, before I cover the detailed financials we would like to thank all of our investors for their continued support in the last quarter, as we continue to strengthen our balance sheet with approximately $190 million and a follow-on offering, plus or at the market offering.

In addition, we'd like to thank our customers, suppliers and our incredible Twisters for their loyalty, dedication and commitment during these challenging times. Our operations R&D, logistics and supply chain teams have been adjusting to this challenging environments for launching new products aimed at combating the virus. The commercial team executed well and we're with $24.6 million in orders in the quarter, which includes approximately $10 million of orders in March. A very challenging month as many of the geographies implemented shelter in place. Our Ginkgo business is going well, with $4 million of revenue in the quarter. And we continue to build our broader customer base and we build to approximately 1160 customers during the quarter and 1440 year-to-date.

Our COVID products launched in the middle of March are doing well. In fact they contributed approximately $400,000 in revenue. And our biopharma antibody products continue to gain traction with orders are approximately 700K and revenue of 600k.

Now I'll give you some more detail on our orders in the quarter. Just breaking down our order to $24.6 million and for the year we've now booked almost $50 million, actually $49.4 million and that's approximately 55% year-over-year growth, over the first six months of 2019. Our synbio orders, which are defined as genes libraries Oligo Pools in quarter two are $14.1 million and this includes Ginkgo orders of $3 million. Our genes business is doing extremely well with orders of $11.3 million in the quarter and year-to-date orders of almost $21 million, actually $20.8 million, which is 42% year-over-year growth, primarily from EMEA and the US markets.

NGS orders, our Genomics products, which I'll refer to as our NGS products, continue to perform well. We booked approximately $9.8 million in orders in the quarter, which brings year-to-date orders to $21.6 million for NGS. Although Q2 was lower than Q1, we anticipate fluctuations quarter-to-quarter. We received orders from 357 accounts in the quarter and that's up from approximately 250 in quarter one. Even in these uncertain times, the pipeline for our largest NGS opportunities continues to scale and we're now tracking a 113 customers progressing through the pilot validation and adoption phases with 43 adopting, up from 37 and a total of 17 pilot and validation. We're very encouraged by what we're seeing in these uncertain and challenging times. Our biopharma antibody discovery products are also scaling and we continue to build the pipeline with bookings are of approximately $700,000.

In terms of our progress with our global expansion. EMEA is doing well with bookings of almost $9 million and that includes approximately $4.4 million from NGS with solid orders across industrial biotech, academic and pharma segments in EMEA. In fact we've almost get about 600 customers in EMEA now. APAC bookings were $1 million and as we expected to be impacted by COVID, we saw a weak January, weak February, and a very strong recovery in March. Americas orders for quarter two were approximately $15 million of which $9 million was synbio and $5 million was NGS and biopharma was about $700,000.

Please note, we've provided orders not to directly translate into revenue for the following quarter, but more to provide a trend line for each product group. Additionally, in an uncertain business and economic environment, like the one we are in today, which is possible that these orders will not convert into revenue. While we feel our orders are firm, we are closely monitoring the situation to ensure we're poised to react to any changing market conditions.

Now let me come to our revenue. NGS product revenue for the quarter was $7.7 million versus 10% sequential growth and year-over-year growth of approximately 58%. This brings our year-to-date NGS revenue to $14.7 million, which is a 57% growth in last year.

As noted, we continue to expand our customer base and shipped approximately 340 customers, versus 190 in the previous quarter. Our synbio product revenue was $11 million, up from approximately $10 million in the first quarter and for the first six months of our fiscal 2020, synbio revenue grew to $21 million, compared to $15.7 million in the same period of fiscal 2019, it was about 33% year-over-year growth. Our genes business continues to do very well with quarter revenue of $9.1 million. This is 50% growth year-over-year and 16% sequential growth. Although March was challenging for us all, we shipped 32,000 genes in the month and for the quarter, we shipped 88,000 genes, up from 80,000 in the previous quarter and is worth noting that longer genes accounted for approximately 50% of our revenue -- gene revenue in the quarter.

Our biopharma antibody product revenue was $600,000 for the quarter and we continue to make progress in building pipeline. I'll quickly touch on the geographies. EMEA revenue is $6 million and that brings EMEA revenue to the first half to $12 million, compared to just under $6 million in the same period last year. APAC revenue for the quarter, second quarter declined as expected to $0.9 million and that's compared -- $0.9 million and that's compared to $1.2 million in the first quarter. It's worth noting the APAC revenue for the first half of this year, it was doubled, what it was last year, ie., $2.2 million for the first half of 2019 -- 2020 versus $1.1 million for the first half of 2019. In terms of segment revenue, our largest segments were industrial chemicals $7.5 million followed by healthcare at $5.8 million and academic at $5.5 million.

Now moving down to P&L, gross margins continue to grow as we scaled our business, I mean, very excited to announce we actually hit the 29.7% or nearly 30% gross margin in quarter two and that includes about 300,000 stock-based comp for the quarter and approximately 100,000 in shelter in place compensation for our operations employees. Our operating expense excluding the cost of revenues for the second quarter increased approximately $37.8 million compared to $36.9 million in the first quarter. R&D was $10.6 million compared to $10.3 million in the first quarter, SG&A increased to $27.2 million in the second quarter, reflecting additional commercial costs, mainly marketing and stock-based comp of 600,000. Our net loss for the second quarter was $31.8 million.

In summary, the quarter ended with $230 million in cash. We have proven out our business model, strong revenue growth, gross margin nearly 30% and we're focused on growing aggressively. However, due to the evolving environment, we believe it is prudent to withdraw our fiscal 2020 financial guidance.

And with that, I will now turn the call back over to Emily.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Thank you, Jim. As Jim said, we have the strong first half and now we are monitoring business conditions and the impact of COVID-19 on our customers. While COVID-19 has impacted our business. It has never been a burst, nor boon to our operation. We see a positive impact of COVID-19 in the resilience of our employees and our new and innovative products to meet market needs. Overall orders remain strong. Our team continues to innovate in a challenging environment and we continue to execute our business plan.

Looking ahead, of synbio, we expect continued revenue growth and diversification of customers. We expect to expand our offering for both pharmaceutical companies and for the long therapeutic market. For NGS, we expect to be in our customer base, by offering new products that expands our infectious disease offering over time, we remain focused on pursuing new market opportunities including liquid biopsy on introducing organization currently using [Indecipherable]. For biopharma, we expect to continue to advance our internally generated competitive antibody candidates and assign additional revenues during partnership. We remain on track to sign between 5 and 10 collaboration, some of which we include both milestones and royalties.

With that, let's open up the call for questions. Operator?

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And our first question will come from the line of Doug Schenkel from Cowen. You may begin.

Subbu Nambi -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Hey guys, this is Subbu on for Doug. It seems like things have held up for you pretty well all things considered. And fair to assume that customer activity was most resilient among traditional clinical activities and in COVID-related application maybe less so in synbio customers, how has this evolved over the past few weeks. And were there any stocking behavior late in Q2?

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Jimmy, you want to take this question.

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Obviously, can't comment on what's happened in April. All I can say is that, over the last quarter we're actually very surprised, I mean, our bookings were very strong as we exit March. We had large, large orders from some of the diagnostic companies, we're shipping to them. The overall in Asia, we saw a bounce back in China. Right now, I mean, our view is, although the business very strong. There's a lot of uncertainty about how customers are going to ramp in the next six to eight weeks start to come back to work, but I would say a lot of the large pharma company is still working.

I mean, if you take a look at Twist, we implemented shelter in place policies, the operation staff are working, our R&D staff are working, we're receiving sequences from our customers and we thought it was prudent to pull the guidance and at the same time, the business has been very strong performing really well, which goes back to our platform, strengthening our platform that we are able to scale the business, we're able to innovate and launch COVID products. So we're seeing a lot of demand from the COVID products, we saw a revenue of about $400,000 in the launch of those products in the middle of March. So overall, we are very encouraged by the business and the opportunity.

Subbu Nambi -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

So, along those lines. Are you a key supplier of primers probes for any big COVID diagnostic companies and assuming that's the case, how much of a tailwind would that be in this -- in this quarter?

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

So if you're asking about the primer for RT-PCR test we are not, however we are supplying our synthetic RNA control for a number of people that are developing the RT-PCR test and for the users that are running RT-PCR test in routine mode and that's a very innovative product that we launched like Jim said, in the second half of March only a few weeks, but it came at the right moment where the -- I think we're the only company that sell the full synthetic RNA control and -- and so therefore, we're not speaking of RT-PCR test.

There are some people that are using sequencing -- NGS sequencing, though not only get, yes, answer, but to actually sequence of full viral genome and understand how the virus is evolving. We are selling a kit to do that. And so some -- some people are using our kit for NGS at this time, I think the NGS portion is not -- not as prevalent as an RT-PCR mostly because NGS takes a bit more time. But I think over time there will be a need to -- to track how the virus evolving from -- from months to months from regions to regions, because the virus evolution may inform the types of vaccines that we worked, the types of antibodies that we worked, the types of primers that are needed for RT-PCR test. It may even inform -- how fast people can get out of shelter in place and if people have to go back in.

Subbu Nambi -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Got it. That's helpful. And it is pretty commendable that you have successfully launched a number of COVID-related products and you're helping the wider community and I truly appreciate that. My next question was on the gross margin. They were great this quarter any one-time dynamics that we should be mindful of and how should we think about sustainability considering there was some fixed cost leverage, and probably the volumes might go down. Is there any color you provide would be helpful. And I have one follow-up and that will the last one for me?

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

Obviously, can't comment in the future. All I can say is we've over the last year-and-a-half we've talked about the leverage in our business model and it's really -- it's really satisfying to see in this last quarter that on $19.3 million revenue, our gross margins was approximately 30%, which is consistent with our long-term discussions on where the business going. I -- the higher the revenue, we're going to leverage our fixed costs, we brought two new synthesizers on the quarter that allowed us to really scale the business and -- and we delivered 32,000 genes in the last month, and we're going to bring another two synthesizers on in the court for the next four, five months, and I mean, our goal is to position ourselves to be very stronger for next year.

And I think -- I think if you go back to the model $19.3 million revenue, 30% gross margin, I mean that's almost 100% fall through in terms of revenue from the previous quarter. There wasn't a huge mix change, NGS business and the gene margins come in as we expected and is good to deliver 30% gross margin.

Subbu Nambi -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Got it. A patent was issued as recently as I think day-before-yesterday related to De novo synthesized gene libraries. Any color you could provide on the issued claims and more specifically, if this patent in itself provides any material competitive moat?

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Yes, we continue to invest in our -- in our patent portfolio, we strongly believe in patent as one of the moat that we have, our software that enable us to give some synthesis, our innovation spirit. Also as a moat, if you want to compete with Twist, because we are moving, you don't want to compete, where we are today, but we'll have to compete, where we are going to be in three years. And so that -- this particular patent is -- is quite broad. And it's one more in our -- in our protection and I think there was more than one coming out this year, so there was a stock coming yesterday.

Subbu Nambi -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Got it. Thank you, guys.

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, I mean we have -- we have a 180 patents pending. So we've been -- the team has been very, very innovative and we've been very focused on building the patent portfolio to protect our position. And with a lot of innovative engineers and we're going to keep building our patent portfolio.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question will come from the line Luke Sergott from Evercore ISI. You may begin.

Luke Sergott -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Yeah. Thanks for taking the questions. Stay off on the biopharma customers that you guys signed with the $600 million or $600,000 in revenues. How much of the $600,000 was from that new sign or was this part of it come from the existing biopharma customers?

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

It comes from the existing biopharma customers, we have had about I think it was 4 -- roughly about 4 -- 5 that we had recognized revenue on this last quarter. We keep building the portfolio obviously don't release names, but we get some exciting opportunities in the pipeline.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Yeah.

Luke Sergott -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

That's helpful. I'll come back to that, and I just want to get into the the COVID antibodies before it slips my mind. So the two antibodies that you're talking about yesterday, and everybody got up really excited about it and either used for diagnostic use or an antigen testing mode or used for maybe even a therapeutic. Can you give us an update on where you are in the development stage, what kind of partners -- are you looking for partners and how far along is that project and when can we expect some type of benefits? Thank you.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Thank you, look for the question. We're quite excited about the development and so we -- we actually started late. We started at end of March into the -- the foray against COVID-19 when we thought it was becoming a big issue for the country. As you know, we have libraries that are humanity raised and that are fully human and what that means is that coupled with our high throughput synthesis and high throughput screening abilities in just six weeks, who are able to -- to find very strong binders, [Indecipherable] range against to the targets.

One is the S1 Protein of the Corona virus itself, as well as antibodies against the human receptor ACE2. And so, it kind of shows the platform that's what we can do is very quickly discover a strong bind and again because human-derived and fully human those should get well, in the -- in -- in the clinic and so, now we are at a point, where we have leads and -- and I should say that it's, we have dozens of leads in each category. It's not just one antibody of each. We have many antibodies and so we are opened for business either for people that want to license it and move it on their own or partner with us, the -- and in the area of either research or diagnostics or therapeutics, we are -- we are in discussion with a number of groups and then our self we will also do a bit more characterization. For instance, we don't see it have a, the results of virus neutralization assay. We know it binds well, we know it competes with its natural [Indecipherable] but we don't have yet the -- the virus neutralization data which will seek. So achieving that in six weeks it's just -- just great.

I should say, and should add that, the corona virus is not particularly the hard-to-drug target. And so our platform is especially strong for hard-to-drug, where we have a huge advantage of our orders. In a case like this, where those are platform can also discover antibody, our advantage are two-fold, one is that it's very quick. So are faster we think than others. And then secondly, again it's a -- it's a human-derived than fully human sequences that comes out of the pipeline. Does that answer your question?

Luke Sergott -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Yeah, it does. It's helpful. And I guess we can look for that as the neutralization data coming out in the next couple of weeks. Just to keep you guys moving forward.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Yeah, I think -- I think it's more and more well in the June time-frame.

Luke Sergott -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Okay, that's helpful. And then, so I mean on the turning to the NGS side, you guys added six more customers in production. And can you give us a sense of the applications here, any of the regions -- any of the regions change. And then I guess another offshoot of that would be with BGI and can you give us a sense of how the orders and the revenue trended from BGI as Corona shutdown and through China and then came back online. Just to give us a sense of how we should think about how we could return here?

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

I can't talk specifically about BGI, I can share with you what happened in overall Asia, particularly in China, are their order patterns were very weak -- our orders were very weak in January and February we saw a great bounce back in March and overall in terms of, yes, we expanded the pipeline, we saw a number of additional customers coming from Asia actually and we saw a number of additional customers coming from the U.S. in fact across is all regions. But it's mostly bias toward Asia, we've got some very interesting developments here in the U.S. and going to, but what's very encouraging is the pipeline continues to build. We're adding more -- more adopted and of those that have adopted, the revenue and first half for the customer adopted was roughly about $8 million. So -- so we're tracking in terms of growth and obviously, as we scale the revenue with NGS as well you can see our gross margin came to approximately 30% in the quarter.

Luke Sergott -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Okay, that's helpful, thanks. And I'll follow-up offline on the expanded biopharma partnerships. Thanks, again.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question will come from the line of Tycho Peterson from JPMorgan. You may begin.

Elaine Lyon -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Hey, this is Elaine Lyon for Tycho. Thanks for taking our questions. So firstly in light of the pandemic. And just thinking about the possible impact to conversion of your order book or backlog. Wondering if you could talk a little about how the backlog looks today the current mix and which pieces may be quicker to burn and which may lag?

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

First of all, thanks for the question. Yeah, the backlog, we come into this quarter with a strong backlog, which is extremely encouraging for us, we're seeing in terms of the business, we're seeing strong demand from the larger customers, so pharma large diagnostic on NGS and where we're seeing weakness tends to be academic and some of the smaller customers, although the all volume of orders has gone down in the smaller customers that's been sort of offset by strong broad demand from the larger customers.

And obviously, I mean we're going to continue to evaluate this over the next 6, 12, 15 weeks. It is very difficult to predict how other -- how customers are going to -- to reengage in terms of production. It is true that the design test build cycle. So even though a lot of the designers, a lot of our customers R&D teams are home, they are actually still designing and sending in sequences and at the end of last quarter, we did have some customers, who we actually put is on hold, because it shut down their operations and that was about 400k or 500k if I recall in terms of product we're still shipping and are sitting in our shelves into the quarter. So we are -- we are very encouraged, because we had a lot of customers, a lot of large customers, who placed orders in March time period. Very strong backlog coming into this quarter, however really uncertain, but how the -- they are going ramp back up in terms production, over the next three, four months.

Elaine Lyon -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

That's helpful and then just getting into some of the trends from the academic end market. Just wondering sort of you've already given some color, but what you've seen so far, and if you can talk about April. And can you also remind us of your exposure to academic customer?

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, academic customers is about 25% of our -- of our revenue. I can't share what's going on in April. I can only -- I can only say again that, the end of March is very, very strong. We are encouraged with what we've seen. I think in terms of -- in terms of academic it's really, really broad, some may describe, I mean, Emily maybe you can jump in here, but we would class Vanderbilt, as part of that and we've seen ourselves in terms of using the public release on Vanderbilt, we've build a lot of interesting programs in the pipeline, particularly on the COVID side.

Elaine Lyon -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Okay. Go ahead.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

I think, with that -- what I can add is, I think like Jim really said it perfectly, which is in academic you may have big projects and those big projects by and large seems to be going forward. And then we also have a lot of very small orders. And those are affected significantly, but there are a small fraction of our revenue base. So the number for orders may be down, but the dollar from -- from orders has not as affected because we -- at the end of the day, we don't have a lot of exposure from those -- from the long tail yet, and the long tail, is what we want to get too in the future, because it's a big number, but because we have not yet done a lot of penetration in the long tail, we were somewhat less exposed and -- and what we saw this quarter is -- is the launch of our positive control and COVID products, it's somewhat balanced the outcome.

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Can I just add a couple of. Can I add a couple of comments. I mean, what was interesting for us is we quickly adopted shelter -- shelter in place, we -- we have tremendous team in operation supply and logistics and R&D and what we did at the end of last quarter, was we actually tracked shipments from 15th of March to the end of the quarter, because we are only were concerned about was disruptions supply chain and we made sure that all our shipments got to the customer's destination, and we are very vigorously looking at making sure we continue to monitor our supply chain.

We did increase our inventory at end of the quarter. We do have a lot of raw materials in place, we've built that over time strategically, so and combined with the great work, our logistics and operations team done, we have managed to deliver all the products to the customers they wanted in time. So we are from an operational point of view and market point of view, we're feeling that we're in a strong position.

Elaine Lyon -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

That's helpful. Thank you. And then lastly, just going back to the COVID antibodies. Just wondering if you could help us frame the diagnostic and therapeutic opportunity here. Because you would be partnering with several different bodies, or how should we be thinking about the potential opportunities? Thank you.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Yeah. And so we have -- we have multiple antibodies with strong binding affinity, strong competitive affinity against the natural ligand. So we have multiple shot-term goals, I think we, those we look for partnerships that -- that could or could not be exclusive. And -- and yeah, we will see if, we ultimately end up into -- into something that goes broadly from a diagnostic or therapeutic point of view. However, even if it does not the fact that we are able to generate such great antibodies, so quickly. Is data, that we add to other data package and that data package is what we need to generate more business in general. And so, at the minimum we are getting fantastic data that we can leverage for our marketing purposes. And in addition, we have multiple shot-term goal to -- to participate in the diagnostic or therapeutic application. And this potentially participate in the upside.

Elaine Lyon -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Thank you. And one last one. Here I see that you're planning to scale up those compounds for in vitro functional testing. Just wondering how are your supply chain looks like. And if you've seen any disruption in this quarter? Thanks.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

You mean for the biopharma antibodies?

Elaine Lyon -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Yeah.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Yeah. Now I think like Jim said, we -- we are one of, we are early in sheltering in place, we were to move to working from home before -- before there was a mandate from California. And so, we also anticipated that there could be disruption and our supply chain team has been really proactive in making sure that we had all the supplies that we need at this point, we are on that see any issuance in supply chain. Either for the biopharma or it's really the business broadly.

Elaine Lyon -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Great, thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question will come from Catherine Schulte from Baird. You may begin.

Tom Peterson -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Hey guys, this is actually Tom on for Catherine. Fair amount of my questions have been covered already, just want to cover a few more things, want to -- just want to confirm, I heard you correctly, still expecting 5 to 10 pharma collaborations by the end of the fiscal year. I think you had mentioned that earlier in the call?

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Yeah. That's right. And we are really excited that this quarter we reported our first royalty and milestone bearing contract, it's with a unnamed party at this time. But over time there probably would be public release of who they are, when that partner is ready. So now we have proof point that we can get milestones and royalty based on the data pockets that we've had so far. I mentioned that data package is only enhanced by our work on COVID-19 and so we may get more partnerships around COVID-19, but even outside of the COVID-19 fight, we are still on track for 5 to 10, 5 to 10 contract and partnership this year. Again, some of them, some -- all of them will have milestones and royalty in addition to the one we already disclosed.

Tom Peterson -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Great, that's great color. And then on some of the COVID work you had done around vaccines and therapeutics it's kind of pre to antibody announcement things like Inovio or Vanderbilt, I was just kind of curious if you could speak to some of the structure on these partnerships, anything around time frames or monetization. Just wanted to -- wanted to get your sense or get a sense of how certain stone, these things are?

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

So, when we started Twist initially, we were only vendor, where I would say, it's a great business. Someone comes to us, they have a sequence we make it, we will give the DNA to them and we get paid. And that's where our synbio and NGS market, our business started. And so there is a number of customers that, are now in the fight against COVID-19 that needs access to DNA. So you mentioned Vanderbilt, COVID, Ginkgo is another one that's public and they are, so those and they come to us they purchase and we are vendor to them.

In addition, we have opportunities to do some of the work and that's what our pharma team has done. And when we do some of the -- some of the work that point we are able to discover antibodies that, then we can attempt to monetize for higher economic return. Some of those are done on our own, some of those, are done in -- in partnership with a Vanderbilt. And so, if we do some work, we have an opportunity to get potential and then for monetization and if we are -- if we are "the vendor" that's the nature of the business model, where it's an exchange of payment for reagent.

And so, now that we are -- we are at a sort of pharma business on top of our core business, we have the ability to participate in some upside potential, which we did not have earlier in the -- in the development of Twist as a company.

Tom Peterson -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Great, thanks, and thanks again for all guys have done in the COVID fight. Thanks.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And I'm not showing any questions at this time.

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Thank you, Victor, and thank you all for joining us today, as you heard from our remarks and from the Q&A. Twist has a very strong first half, we are open for business and we continue to innovate and execute. This last quarter has provided all of the Twisters with an important opportunity to do well by doing good, and we remain committed to continuing to doing so moving forward, no matter of the uncertainty or challenges placed in our path. We wish you all well and I hope you remain safe and healthy in the days and months ahead. Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 57 minutes

Call participants:

Jim Thorburn -- Chief Financial Officer

Emily Leproust -- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder

Subbu Nambi -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Luke Sergott -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Elaine Lyon -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Tom Peterson -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

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