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Schrödinger, Inc. (SDGR -2.24%)
Q1 2022 Earnings Call
May 04, 2022, 4:30 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Welcome to Schrodinger's conference call to review first quarter 2021 financial results. My name is Charlie, and I'll be your operator for today's call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session.

[Operator instructions] Please be advised that this call is being recorded at the company's request. Now I would like to introduce your host for today's conference, Ms. Jaren Madden, senior vice president of investor relations and corporate affairs. Please go ahead.

Jaren Madden -- Senior Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Affairs

Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to today's call during which we will provide an update on the company and review our first quarter 2022 financial results. Earlier today, we issued a press release summarizing our financial results and progress across the company, which is available on our website at www.schrodinger.com. Here with me on our call today are Ramy Farid, chief executive officer; Jenny Herman, senior vice president of finance and corporate controller; and Karen Akinsanya, president of R&D Therapeutics.

Following our prepared remarks, we'll open the call for Q&A. I'd like to remind you that during today's call, management will make statements related to our business that are forward-looking and are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including, without limitation, statements related to our future financial performance, including our outlook for the full year 2022 and for the quarter ending June 30th, 2022, our strategic plans to accelerate the growth of our software business and advance our collaborative and wholly owned drug discovery programs, the timing of potential IND submissions and initiation of clinical trials for our wholly owned drug discovery programs, risks related to the COVID-19 pandemic, our expectations related to the use of our cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities, as well as other operating expenses. These forward-looking statements reflect our views about our plans, intentions, expectations, strategies and prospects, which are based on the information available to us and on assumptions we have made. Actual results may differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements and are subject to a variety of assumptions, uncertainties, risks and important factors that are beyond our control, including the demand for our software solutions, our ability to develop our computational platform, our reliance upon our drug discovery collaborators and other risks detailed under the caption risk factors and also in our most recent Securities and Exchange Commission filings and reports.

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Except as required by law, we undertake no duty or obligation to provide any update on our forward-looking statements discussed on this call, as a result of new information, future events, changes in expectations or otherwise. These forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing our views as of any date subsequent to today. And with that, I'd like to turn the call over to Ramy.

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Jaren, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. At Schrodinger, we have developed a computational platform that is transforming the way therapeutics and materials are discovered. We license our platform to biopharma materials companies, as well as government and academic institutions around the world. We are continuing to see a shift in how our software customers are incorporating digital chemistry into their research, and we're excited about our leadership role in advancing a new discovery paradigm.

We are very pleased with the strong start we've had to the year. We reported first quarter software revenue of $33.1 million, a 26% increase over the prior year. We are also seeing nice progress across our collaborative programs. We recognized multiple milestones during the first quarter, which helped drive drug discovery revenue of $15.6 million.

The strong revenues across both aspects of our business led to total revenue of $48.7 million for the first quarter. We believe this momentum positions us for continued success this year. We've built a highly differentiated company that we believe enables us to continue to innovate, while providing a solid foundation of growing revenue. We ended the quarter with approximately $529 million in cash, and we believe we have sufficient runway to fund our operations for the foreseeable future, including advancing our wholly owned programs into clinical studies.

As you'll hear from Karen, we are also continuing to make progress across our wholly owned pipeline, our MALT1 inhibitor SGR-1505 is expected to enter the clinic later this year. We are also pleased to see continued progress across our collaborative programs, including the initiation of a Phase 2a study for one of Morphic Therapeutic's programs, which further demonstrates the impact of our platform. Today, we are announcing that we recently entered into a three-year collaboration with Eonix to accelerate the discovery and design of materials for safer and energy dense lithium ion batteries. As part of the agreement, we received an equity stake in Eonix.

This is our first equity-based collaboration within our materials science business, and we're excited to work with the Eonix team. We see several parallels between this collaboration and our collaboration with Nimbus, which is a clinical stage company, founded in 2009. Nimbus has since progressed a deep pipeline and played a key role in validating our drug discovery platform. Before we review our first quarter financial results, I would like to introduce Jenny Herman, our senior vice president of finance and corporate controller.

Jenny joined Schrodinger in 2002, the same year I joined the company. She has played a key role in executing our financings, including our 2020 IPO and in building our global finance team. I will now turn the call over to Jenny.

Jenny Herman -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller

Thank you, Ramy, and hello, everyone. I am pleased to discuss our financial results for the first quarter of this year. Total revenue was $48.7 million, up 51% compared to the first quarter of 2021. Software revenue was $33.1 million, representing 26% growth compared to the first quarter of 2021.

As in prior quarters, the growth in software revenue was primarily driven by increased adoption of our software solution by existing customers, as well as the addition of new customers during the quarter. Drug discovery revenue was $15.6 million compared to $5.8 million in the first quarter of 2021. Drug discovery revenue for the quarter included $4 million in revenue recognized from our ongoing collaboration with Bristol-Myers Squibb, as well as $9 million of revenue from preclinical milestones related to two of our collaborative programs, which were recognized earlier in the year than expected. Gross profit was $28 million in the first quarter of 2022, up 73% over the first quarter of 2021.

Software gross margin was 77% in the first quarter of 2022 compared to 78% for the same period in the prior year. We continue to make investments to support the rollout of large-scale deployments of our platform. Operating expense was $56.6 million compared to $40.1 million for the same quarter last year. This reflects our continued investment in R&D to advance the science underlying the platform and to progress our internal drug discovery programs, as well as infrastructure costs and the addition of staff and G&A functions to support our business.

We recorded a net loss of approximately $34.5 million for the first quarter of 2022, compared to a loss of approximately $0.5 million for the same period in the prior year. As we mark-to-market the equity stakes we hold in our collaborators each quarter, we can experience significant fluctuations in the value of our holdings. We recorded a $6.2 million loss on our equity holdings in the first quarter of 2022, compared to a $24.8 million gain in the first quarter of 2021. We ended the quarter with cash equivalents, marketable securities and restricted cash balances of approximately $529 million compared to approximately $579 million on December 31st, 2021.

Cash expenses included the purchase of XTAL, the structural biology company we acquired in January and several annual expenses that we paid in the first quarter. In February, we provided our financial outlook for the full year, and today, we are reaffirming that guidance. We expect total annual revenue to be in the range of $161 million to $181 million, corresponding to 17% to 31% growth over 2021. We continue to expect software revenue to range from $126 million to $136 million, representing 11% to 20% growth over 2021.

Consistent with prior years, we expect that our first and fourth quarters will be our largest revenue quarters with the greatest proportion of the annual revenue coming in the fourth quarter, as was the case in each of the last two years. For the second quarter specifically, we expect software revenue to range from $28 million to $30 million. This reflects approximately 21% growth over the second quarter of 2021 at the midpoint. We continue to expect drug discovery revenue to range from $35 million to $45 million, reflecting 42% to 82% growth over last year.

Drug discovery revenue fluctuates from quarter to quarter, largely based on the timing of achieving certain milestones within our collaborative programs. Finally, we continue to anticipate that operating expense growth will be slightly lower than the 42% annual growth rate we saw in 2021, as we invest in advancing our internal programs into the clinic. We expect our software gross margin percentage to be in the mid-70s. We are very pleased with the progress we've made so far this year, which we believe positions us for continued momentum, as we look ahead.

I'll now turn the call over to Karen for an update on our drug discovery programs.

Karen Akinsanya -- President, R&D Therapeutics

Thank you, Jenny, and good afternoon, everyone. We are continuing to make important advances on many fronts across our portfolio of collaborative programs and our internal drug discovery pipeline. We are pleased to see a growing number of programs advance through discovery, preclinical and clinical development. As highlighted earlier, multiple collaboration programs advance through discovery ahead of schedule, which underscores the impact of our platform.

A total of seven collaborative programs are in the clinic. In March, Morphic Therapeutic announced initiation of the Phase 2a clinical trial of MORF-057 and oral alpha-4-beta-7 integrin inhibitor. Today, I will highlight the progress made on our three most advanced wholly owned programs, starting with SGR-1505, our MALT1 inhibitor. MALT1 has emerged as a potential therapeutic strategy to treat certain B-cell lymphomas, including relapsed or resistant B-cell lymphomas and mantle cell lymphoma.

Pre-IND interactions with the FDA are complete, and we remain on track to submit our IND in the first half of this year. Subject to regulatory clearance, we expect to initiate our first Phase 1 clinical study of SGR-1505 in the second half of 2022. We are planning a multicenter dose escalation study in patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell malignancies in which we will evaluate the safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics and early signals of antitumor activity of SGR-1505. We plan to pursue expansion cohorts once we have determined the recommended dose.

This will be the first clinical study within our internal pipeline, and we look forward to reaching this important milestone. Moving to our Wee1 program, last month, we presented very encouraging preclinical data at the American Association of Cancer Research. We have identified differentiated Wee1 inhibitors that demonstrate antitumor activity with desirable pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties in multiple preclinical models, including models of lung, ovarian and breast cancer. The representative molecule from our lead series showed that antitumor effects were maintained during dosing holidays, a feature that we think may be clinically beneficial given the known on-target hematological effects of inhibiting Wee1.

Our compounds also showed no detectable CYP3A4 time-dependent inhibition, while maintaining potency, selectivity and antitumor activity. We believe this is an important feature for enabling Wee1 inhibitors to be used as part of combination regimens. We are excited to see Wee1 continue to progress as a clinically validated target based on data from other groups working on this mechanism. We believe we have a highly selective and differentiated molecule and the totality of our preclinical data underscore the opportunity for us to advance a potential best-in-class Wee1 inhibitor into the clinic.

We expect to submit an IND to the FDA next year. Now, I'll turn to our CDC7 program. Our CDC7 development candidate has demonstrated strong antitumor activity in preclinical models of AML in combination with venetoclax and other marketed agents. IND-enabling studies are progressing.

And as we have previously stated, we expect to be able to submit an IND to the FDA for this program in early 2023, enabling a Phase 1 study next year. As our wholly owned programs progress, we are continuing to add new programs to our discovery pipeline. Last year, we added two new programs, one in oncology and the other in immunology. In addition to these five wholly owned programs, we are initiating additional precision oncology and immunology programs this year.

Our growing portfolio reflects our strategy to select targets with substantial human validation and solve key design challenges with our platform, positioning us to selectively advance first-in-class and differentiated programs. We maintain a high bar for what we will progress beyond the lead optimization stage. Our focus is on projects with a strong line of sight to value-inflecting data in discovery or in Phase 1 to support potential partnering or that merits continued internal development. In summary, our diverse portfolio of programs is advancing and activities to support expansion of our pipeline are well underway.

We are excited about the progress that we and our collaborators are making and look forward to providing updates on our R&D activities throughout the year. I will now turn the call back over to Ramy.

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Karen. We are excited about the strong start to 2022 and expect continued momentum this year. Our exceptional team is committed to transforming the way therapeutics and materials are discovered, and we look forward to providing updates on our progress throughout the year. At this time, we'd be happy to take your questions.

Operator?

Questions & Answers:


Operator

[Operator instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Vikram Purohit with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Vikram Purohit -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking the question. The first one for me was on the Eonix collaboration. Could you speak a bit about the rationale for this transaction? And what source of internal capabilities do you think this is going to help you build out?

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Sure. Yes. As we said -- this is Ramy. As we said, thanks for the question, Vikram.

As we said in our remarks, this is our first equity-based collaboration with a goal of developing better batteries to put it very simply. And when we look back at impact that doing that on the life science side had on the business, we're pretty excited about the opportunity here. So with Nimbus, we obviously learned a lot about the technology and what needed to be -- and that played a big role in helping to guide scientific development of the platform, but of course, it also provided a really excellent way of validating the platform. And we expect to see the same thing here.

We have developed technology that we think today can have a really huge impact on developing better batteries, but we also expect to learn from the collaboration and help them, and we should -- certainly expect that to help to advance the science and apply that to continued -- continuing to improve battery technology.

Vikram Purohit -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Got it. And as a follow-up on a separate item. So for drug discovery revenues, how should we think about the cadence of quarterly revenues 2Q through 4Q for the rest of this year?

Jenny Herman -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller

Sure. I can take that. This is Jenny. So for 2022, we have guided to drug discovery revenue of $35 million to $45 million for the year.

We are not guiding to quarterly revenue for our drug discovery because the timing of the milestones can vary quarter-to-quarter. We did see 2 large milestones come in earlier this year. We were able to recognize them earlier than expected. So we recognized $15.8 million in revenue this quarter, which was -- which was a little earlier than anticipated, but our revenue guidance of $35 million to $45 million, it still stands for the year.

Vikram Purohit -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

And if I could ask a final follow-up on that topic. So as you move through your collaborations, do you feel like you're getting an increasing level of visibility into specific -- decision triggers that may lead to greater milestones. And as you look toward 2023, and I know you've guided to a floor of drug discovery revenues there, but do you feel like that visibility is increasing from your standpoint? Or are most of those decisions and most of those triggers still kind of in the hands of partners.

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Karen, do you want to...

Karen Akinsanya -- President, R&D Therapeutics

Yes. I can answer that. So the way our collaborations are set up, we obviously have existing collaborations, where the programs have essentially run the course of discovery and the assets are now in the hands of the collaborator and they are the ones progressing them through the clinic. Obviously, when a program is in discovery, we actually have a lot of visibility into what's going on.

But once they move over into discovery, especially in our publicly traded companies, as part of our portfolio, Nimbus and Morphic and other companies, who are pursuing programs in the clinic, we have less visibility. Now the more recent programs that have kicked off are obviously still in discovery, and we are responsible for those, as they move through to development candidate. And that means that for programs that are part of deals that were signed more recently, whether it's milestones and actually more substantial and read into the guidance we gave for next year, we have a lot of visibility into those, and we keep a very close track obviously of all the upcoming milestone events. And as Jenny alluded to the revenue opportunities.

Does that answer your question?

Vikram Purohit -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

It does. It does. That's helpful. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of David Lebowitz with Citi. Please go ahead.

David Lebowitz -- Citi -- Analyst

Thank you very much for taking my question. Actually, a similar question, different line item. Given the software number for the quarter, but guidance remained unchanged for the year. Or -- I guess, was that number incorporated into the original guidance? Or is that more of a commentary on how revenues can be lumpy from quarter to quarter?

Jenny Herman -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller

Yes. I can say that we're really pleased that we had guided to software revenue of $28 million to $30 million. We were pleased to have an even stronger quarter than we anticipated. We reported Q1 revenue of $33.1 million.

We did see some larger-than-expected renewals as customers scale up the use of the platform, which is very encouraging. And we believe this positions us for the continued momentum, as we deliver on the expectations that we have laid out for the year.

David Lebowitz -- Citi -- Analyst

Thank you very much for that. And also on the partnership, it really seems to be the most public, I guess, move forward in the materials science space that we have seen. And toward that end, what do we expect to see as far as evolution in that direction going forward? For example, on the software side, is there a point in time, where we start to see what the breakdown is between life sciences and material sciences and on the drug discovery, well, on the other side of things, should we expect to see more partnerships that focus on this.

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. We don't have any immediate plans to report material science, software revenue separate from life science revenue, obviously, that's something we're thinking about, but no plans to do that. But the more important part of your question, I think, is sort of what does this signal something? And where do -- where do we see this going forward? And I think I would just point back to what happened following the success -- the incredible success really of Nimbus and how that led to the formation or us getting involved in the formation of Morphic and a number of other companies, the way it accelerated our learning of the -- of what's possible and helping to guide the direction that the science goes in is really something that it can't be overstated. And so certainly, we'll continue to explore other collaborations, and we expect that success in this particular, the collaboration with Eonix, will in the same way that Nimbus did catalyze more interest from the large number of companies that are obviously in the space.

So this is certainly not our last collaboration material science.

David Lebowitz -- Citi -- Analyst

Thank you for answering my questions.

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Absolutely, David.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Do Kim with Piper. Please go ahead.

Unknown speaker

Hey. Good afternoon, everyone. This is EK on for Do. Congrats on the excellent quarter.

I have a question on the -- my pleasure. On the XTAL collaboration, what are some of the kind of early learnings that you're getting there, and how you'd be able to incorporate it into your platform? If you can just provide some early commentary on that, that would be great?

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Of course, yes, and that's the acquisition of XTAL, although I like that you're calling it a collaboration as well because in some sense, everything is inside the company. We're really excited about how -- first of all, how smoothly that transition has gone, and we now have fully integrated that team into Schrodinger. We've already -- and we had already been doing this actually even before the acquisition. I have been working with them to solve structures of important proteins.

And obviously, having that capability internally is having a really very nice impact on our internal efforts. And the other thing that we're -- and we've talked a lot about this, as we've said many times, crystal structures in and of themselves aren't that valuable. There is a significant amount of refinement that has to be done. And then, of course, it's what you do with that structure.

And obviously, using it as input to our physics-based methods, it's where the value really comes. And so now having in one company, the experimentalists working closely with the computational chemists, who are working on the technology to essentially convert, let's call it, a raw experimental structure into input to physics-based methods is obviously helping to also advance the science. So we're excited about both aspects. And we actually see a future that I think is sooner than one might sort of think or imagine, where a very significant fraction of targets that the industry is working on are structurally enabled.

And we think that's extremely important, and we're very happy to be leading that field and that concept of structurally enabling targets. And again, combining the experimental capabilities with the computational capabilities is the key to realizing that vision.

Unknown speaker

OK. I appreciate the fulsome answer there. One more question, this might be for Karen. You just mentioned how you guys will be looking to start getting busy on some oncology targets beyond the five programs that you mentioned a few years ago.

Would you be able to provide us some type of guidance into what those targets might be? Are they still going to align with the at least preclinically or clinically validated targets? Or will it be a little bit more white space?

Karen Akinsanya -- President, R&D Therapeutics

That's a great question. Thank you for that. We actually are pursuing targets, as you stated, where we believe they are significantly biologically derisked, and that means also either clinical or genetic information that gives one some great confidence that these are going to translate in the clinic or they indeed have clinical data, but there's an opportunity to come up with a next-gen inhibitor or a differentiated inhibitor. But I do also want to acknowledge and connect with the comments that Ramy was just making that there are some high-value targets for which there have been no crystal structures or Cryo-EM structures, and indeed no chemical matter, but we believe we have an opportunity to be the faster drug.

That's a much smaller fraction of what we're working on. But we think those are going to be exciting programs in the future.

Unknown speaker

Excellent. It sounds -- sounds very exciting. I appreciate that, Karen. Congrats again, on the quarter and thanks for taking my questions.

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks a lot.

Karen Akinsanya -- President, R&D Therapeutics

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Michael Yee with Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Andrew Tsai -- Jefferies -- Analyst

OK. Hi, everyone. It's Andrew Tsai on for Mike. First question is, I kind of wanted to ask your visibility, your confidence on the software business in Q2.

It seems like it might be tracking well compared to your expectations, you're guiding the revenues a little bit of a consensus. I believe you said before, renewals tend to be skewed a little bit toward the end of each quarter. And if that's the case, so if you're guiding to Q2 with these numbers with this range, is that due to a function of renewals happening a little bit earlier or more frequently? Or are you seeing larger customer adoption or an uptick in usage a little bit more color, would be nice?

Jenny Herman -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller

Sure. We believe we have good visibility into the anticipated software revenue for the second quarter based on ongoing engagement, our account managers, have with our customers. We've guided to $28 million to $30 million in Q2. We believe that, that we are set up to deliver on that.

As a reminder, our Q1 and Q4 software revenue are the largest quarters, and we expect that to be the case this year with the largest proportion of our annual revenue will come in, in Q4 again this year, as it has the prior two years.

Andrew Tsai -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Noted. And I guess a corollary to that, I guess, it speaks to your full year software guidance. I mean, traditionally, you've maintained it each quarter, and you've done so this time as well. So I guess, I'll ask this another way, is there a scenario, where you would consider raising your full year software guidance revenue? And if so, what would that entail?

Jenny Herman -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller

We've just completed a Q1 that we are very pleased with. I think as we get through the year, and as we see what revenue looks like at this time, we are reaffirming our guidance. But at a point, where we feel that we are confident we could deliver on guidance, as updated, then we would -- we would definitely do that.

Andrew Tsai -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Noted. OK. Very last one is for Karen. The MALT1 on track for IND submission.

Can -- I think you mentioned a little bit about the Phase 1 trial design. I guess my question would be, what do you think good data will look like in terms of perhaps CR or response rates? And could we actually expect the low dose of 1505 to show efficacy later in 2023, perhaps. Thanks.

Karen Akinsanya -- President, R&D Therapeutics

So thank you, Andrew. I would say timing-wise, we are too early to start to speculate, I think, about CRs and PRs. What I will say is that we are looking forward to learning more about the PK, that's the target engagement, the biomarkers for MALT1, as an inhibitor in B-cell lymphomas. And we will keep you updated if that data comes in, and we're ready to share it.

We are -- we remain very excited about the mechanism based on the preclinical data. I think you saw at ASH, we were seeing pretty complete responses, at least preclinically in combination with BTK, and we hope and look forward to seeing that kind of data in the clinic. So that, that will be something we'll be updating you on over the course of next year, I would say.

Andrew Tsai -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Right. Very good. Thank you, guys.

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Karen Akinsanya -- President, R&D Therapeutics

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Michael Ryskin with Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Wolf Chanoff -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Hi. This is Wolf Chanoff on for Mike. So I appreciate the commentary around seeing your kind of typical 4Q heavy software revenues. I'm just wondering are there any other shifts around seasonality or pacing of expenses that we should be considering as we update our models?

Jenny Herman -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller

No. I think the seasonality for our software revenue looks to be following the trends that we have laid out for you. And for opex, we saw that the Q1 increase in expenses of just over 41%, which is right in line with what we guided to and is what we expect for the remainder of the year.

Wolf Chanoff -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Great. Thank you very much. And then maybe just a bit more big picture. Can you provide any update on the CFO search? Maybe any rough idea for when we should be on the lookout for announcement?

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. We're not prepared to make any announcements now. We are pleased with the candidates we're seeing. We're -- but nothing to announce today.

Wolf Chanoff -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

All right. Thank you very much.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Gary Nachman with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Unknown speaker

Hi. Good evening. This is Denis, on for Gary. Congrats on the quarter.

Thanks for taking the questions. Just a couple. So you've got some solid cash on the balance sheet. Could you highlight one or two initiatives on how you plan to use that cash? You're going to be more investing in the sales force, platform-oriented or internal pipeline or maybe more acquisitions? And then now that all the contracts have been done, can you just talk about the retention rate you saw this year? Was it still sitting high above 95%?

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. With regard to retention, that's something that we report on an annual basis. So as you pointed out, it was 99%, two years ago, 98% last year. We're seeing absolutely no indications of that changing, but we'll report it at the end of the year.

But obviously, looking very, very good so far. With regard to use of our cash, we obviously, and we talked about this are continuing to invest in our platform. We've made incredible breakthroughs in the underlying science, but there's a lot more to do, and we continue to invest in that. We think that's going to have a really big impact on our ability to continue to accelerate drug discovery, produce better molecules, but also helping our customers do that.

And obviously, that leads to continued growth in the software business. We're obviously excited about our internal pipeline, our wholly owned pipeline, I should say. And as you can see, we're planning to take these compounds into the clinic to value inflection points, and that's obviously something that we're investing in. With regard to acquisitions, that's not something, that is a particular strategy.

We'll be opportunistic about it. We are always -- there are many companies reaching out to us and looking for potential partnerships on that way. We assess the fit and -- the strategic fit and the technology. And you can see what we did.

I think the XTAL acquisition is a really fantastic example of how well that works. And if things like that come up, certainly, we're open to that. But it's not -- it's not a major strategy.

Unknown speaker

Great. Thanks so much. Congrats on the quarter again.

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Karen Akinsanya -- President, R&D Therapeutics

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Matt Hewitt with Craig-Hallum Capital. Please go ahead.

Lucas Baranowski -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

This is Lucas on for Matt Hewitt. First off, could you give us an update on how many sales reps you have on staff and whether you're planning to hire any more over the remainder of the year?

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

We are continuing to grow our sales team and the scientists that help support our sales team. We feel that, that's obviously something that happens as the business grows, in particular, in new territories. So for example, we recently expanded and have an office in South Korea. So we're growing the team there.

There are new opportunities in various regions -- in other regions, and we're continuing to expand the team there. I can't tell you exactly the number of account managers, but that's something that we can get back to you on. So continue to invest in that team for sure.

Lucas Baranowski -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

Yes, not a problem. And then secondly, in the past, many of your wins have been related to small molecule opportunities. Have you now started to gain more traction with large molecule customers?

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes, that's a great question. We have been advancing our platform in both areas and actually other modalities, but certainly in small molecules and peptides and antibodies and antibody design and -- on large molecule. So we do have a number of customers that are using our technology to advance their biologics programs, but there's more science to be done there. There's more basic research.

And it's an area that we're focusing more and more on. As we learn more from collaborations we've had, we've actually announced our collaboration with AstraZeneca around biologics. We're learning from that, learning what works, what doesn't work, and that helps guide the science, and that will certainly lead to more advances and more usage of the software around biologics design.

Lucas Baranowski -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

Thank you very much. That's all I had. Right.

Operator

[Operator instructions] Your next question comes from the line of Gaurav Goparaju with Berenberg Capital. Please go ahead. Pardon me, your next question comes from the line of Gaurav Goparaju. Your line is now open.

Gaurav Goparaju -- Berenberg Capital Markets -- Analyst

I'm sorry. I just muted. Sorry about that. Just a quick one on the software side of the business.

Regarding your push for existing customers to adopt more software, right, how are your growth prospects in getting your larger top pharma customers to consume more versus increasing existing consumption from those with smaller ACVs, maybe close to the 100,000 benchmark. Just really trying to get a sense of what group of existing customers has maybe more or less attractive potential to fuel the segment's growth? Or do you feel bullish on both on an even playing field. Any color on that would be great?

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. We're seeing growth across the board with large customers, and that's happening through relationships that are now extending to heads of research in those companies. I think that's a really important progress So obviously, as the amounts that they're spending are increasing and as the platform becomes a larger sort of strategic component of their drug discovery processes, we continue to have -- those are relationships that are important, and we're seeing growth there. But we're also seeing growth across the full spectrum of size of companies from large biotech companies, medium-sized biotech companies, small biotech companies, and we are actually focused on all of those different kinds of companies, and we have account manager, salespeople and the scientific support that focus on -- that have expertise in all of these different, different areas.

Gaurav Goparaju -- Berenberg Capital Markets -- Analyst

And then just one quick follow-up on that right now regarding getting new customers on board, are you seeing -- I guess, how sticky are the other top customers, right? Are you still getting new big spenders, let's say, on the software business? Or is that ceiling relatively, I don't want to say capped out. But relative to bringing on more smaller biotechs, medium-sized biotechs, I guess, just the growth potential on -- or just the growth split between, again, the demographics, but on --the ACV cohorts, but on the -- yes.

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. On the life science side, of course, all the large companies are already customers. But as we've said, they are still utilizing our software on a scale that is significantly lower than the scale that we're using it in our collaborations and our wholly owned programs. So that's where the source of growth there.

And we are far, far, far from fully realizing the potential from that sector. And again, on the life science side, we do see with smaller biotech companies that we do see growth coming from new biotech companies becoming customers. On the material science side, we do see both existing customers scaling up. That's a great sign, of course, because it's same thing, right? Retention, it mean -- and obviously, it means that the software is working, it's having an impact.

It keeps scaling up. But of course, since that's an earlier business on the material science side, we're seeing a larger proportion of the growth coming from new customers. And that's a really active -- a much more an area that's benefiting significantly for -- sort of from more awareness and a heavier sort of marketing or dependence on marketing campaigns. So we put a lot more effort on the material science side with regard to that and awareness.

Obviously, that's not required in the life science side since everybody already knows about Schrodinger. And as I said, the large majority of companies that are doing research are already using our software, and the growth, again, comes from just scaling up their usage.

Gaurav Goparaju -- Berenberg Capital Markets -- Analyst

Great. That's it for me. Thanks for coming and congrats on the court.

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks a lot.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 45 minutes

Call participants:

Jaren Madden -- Senior Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Affairs

Ramy Farid -- Chief Executive Officer

Jenny Herman -- Senior Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller

Karen Akinsanya -- President, R&D Therapeutics

Vikram Purohit -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

David Lebowitz -- Citi -- Analyst

Unknown speaker

Andrew Tsai -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Wolf Chanoff -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Lucas Baranowski -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

Gaurav Goparaju -- Berenberg Capital Markets -- Analyst

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