Consumer telehealth and wellness brand Hims & Hers wrapped up its merger with special purpose acquisition company Oaktree Acquisition on January 19 and began trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
WHO: Launched in late 2017 by Andrew Dudum, Hims is a men’s wellness direct-to-consumer brand dedicated to millennial men. One year later, the company launched Hers, expanding into female wellness. Hims & Hers currently offers sexual dysfunction, hair loss, dermatology, and anxiety and depression services. It plans to expand to sleep, fertility, diabetes, and cholesterol. The model is completely cash-pay with members paying around $20 a month for access to unlimited online consultations and a supply of generic medications. While the company doesn’t contract with insurance at the moment, that could change in the future.
Oaktree Acquisitions Corp. is a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC), which is an investment vehicle established for the purpose of going public as a shell company with no business operations but the intention of reverse acquiring or merging with another company. The merged company uses the proceeds from the SPAC’s initial public offering.
WHY: The deal has brought the telehealth and wellness business roughly $280 million that it will use for growth and expansion into new product categories.
IN THEIR OWN WORDS: “We drove tremendous progress in 2020 toward our mission of becoming the front door to the healthcare system,” Andrew Dudum, CEO and co-founder of Hims & Hers, said in a statement. “Today’s milestone brings us even closer to making modern, affordable care accessible to more Americans. By providing a seamless patient experience combined with proprietary technology, we intend to transform many of healthcare’s most important categories, including primary care and mental health.”
Hims & Hers markets itself as a one-stop shop for consumers, allowing them to bypass the traditional in-person care delivery pathway. It can be more expensive than other telehealth offerings but is still generally cheaper than the unbundled price of a doctor’s visit and full-price prescription, SVB Leerink analyst Stephanie Davis told Retail Dive.
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