Thomas Szlosek
Analyst · Derik De Bruin from Bank of America
Thank you, Michael, and good afternoon, everyone. Slide 6 shows our organic revenue growth by end market and product group for the quarter. Biopharma, representing approximately 50% of our revenue, experienced double-digit growth in the first quarter. Our biopharma production business grew over 30% in Q1, driven by strong contributions from both chemicals and single-use technologies. Our lab products business also experienced strong growth in chemicals, consumables and equipment, driven by positive trends in R&D activity. Health care, which represents approximately 10% of our revenue, also experienced double-digit organic revenue growth. Strength was driven by continued COVID testing momentum and a strong rebound of elective procedures. As Michael mentioned, we saw our medical implants business for elective procedures return to pre-pandemic levels in Q1. Education and government, representing approximately 15% of our revenue, experienced mid-teens organic revenue growth in the first quarter. Growth was driven by strength in government COVID-related sales and an incremental improvement in education as more university research activities resume. Advanced technologies & applied materials, representing approximately 25% of our revenue, declined by about 1% in the first quarter. This business continues to show modest signs of improvement, and we are encouraged by macroeconomic signals pulling us to a broader industrial recovery. We saw strong contributions in the quarter from both our AMEA industrial sector and our microelectronics business, offset by weakness in other sectors, including food and beverage. By product group, all our product categories experienced double-digit revenue growth, including our proprietary materials and consumables, driven by strong demand for our biopharma production platform. Notably, Equipment & Instrumentation experienced a significant recovery to double-digit growth, consistent with industry trends and reflecting an increase in CapEx investments as lab activities resumed. Let's move to Slide 7. Looking at growth from a regional perspective, Americas, which represents approximately 60% of global sales, reported 14.6% organic revenue growth and sequential improvement in daily rate of sales from the fourth quarter. Highlights were double-digit growth in biopharma, including approximately 40% growth in biopharma production and greater than 20% growth in health care, driven by hospital and clinical reference lab customers as well as a rebound in medical implants used in elective procedures. Education and government grew double digits, driven by COVID-related government purchases and education growth from COVID diagnostic demand. Europe, which represents approximately 35% of global sales, reported 10.1% organic revenue growth. Growth was driven by biopharma with biopharma production growing double digits. We also experienced continued COVID diagnostic tailwinds, given ongoing COVID challenges in the European region. Health care and education and government both experienced double-digit growth, supported by a recovery in elective procedures and strong consumable sales. AMEA, representing approximately 5% of global sales, reported 27.2% organic revenue growth driven by biopharma as well as a moderate comparable, given the early impact of COVID in the region in 2020. Our biopharma production business in AMEA grew nearly 70% in the quarter, and our order book has grown significantly, reflecting strong demand for both chemicals and single-use products. On the right-hand side of the slide, you can see the expansion of our core growth rate, meaning organic growth less the estimated COVID tailwinds versus Q1 last year, rising from approximately 4% to approximately 7% this quarter. As Michael noted, this represents the third consecutive quarter of acceleration. This trend reflects positive end market trends as well as the resilience of our business model and relevance of our market position. Slide 8 has our segment results. Americas reported 24.3% in adjusted margin rate, approximately 320 basis points higher as compared to the prior period. Key drivers include strong volume and productivity, ongoing favorable mix, driven by growth in proprietary materials and consumables and commercial excellence. Europe recorded a 20.2% adjusted EBITDA margin rate, approximately 330 basis points higher as compared to the prior period. We continue to experience favorable margin impacts from strong volume, productivity and commercial excellence. AMEA reported a 22.7% adjusted EBITDA margin rate, approximately 500 basis points higher as compared to the prior period, driven by strong volume growth in proprietary biopharma materials and productivity. Turning to Slide 9. Let me start with our first quarter adjusted EBITDA. We achieved approximately 34% growth in adjusted EBITDA, a 300 basis points of margin expansion. As I indicated on the prior slide, all 3 regions achieved strong margin expansion, reflecting volume growth, productivity, commercial excellence, discretionary cost containment and modest mix tailwinds. These mixed tailwinds are tied to strong growth in biopharma production and proprietary consumables as well as return to growth in our biomaterials offering, partially offset by strong equipment and instrument growth. Regarding earnings per share, we achieved approximately 101% growth in our adjusted EPS for the quarter. Primary drivers were strong operating performance, ongoing reduction in interest expense from our deleveraging and refinancing and improvement in our income tax rate to 22.4%. We continue to forecast a 24% tax rate for the full year. Turning to free cash flow. As Michael mentioned, we generated $112 million of free cash flow in the first quarter compared to $240 million in the first quarter of 2020. The year-over-year difference primarily relates to the timing of interest payments, investments in working capital and CapEx to support our growth strategy and higher incentive compensation payments related to our strong 2020 performance. We are reiterating our full year free cash flow guidance of over $800 million. Moving to Slide 10. As Michael indicated, we are raising our guidance for the full year to reflect strong Q1 performance, improving end markets and COVID-19 dynamics. Based on the outlook for our core business, together with COVID-19 tailwinds of approximately $350 million to $450 million, we are now guiding to 6% to 9% organic growth for 2021 as compared to the original 4% to 7% guidance. Reported growth guidance is approximately 8% to 11% for the year. Growth in April has kept pace with the first quarter, but we do expect moderation in growth rates in the second half of 2021, given the extraordinarily strong comparables in the second half of 2020. We are also increasing our adjusted EBITDA margin expansion expectations to be approximately 75 basis points versus the original 50 basis points. This improvement reflects our strong first quarter results, continuation of higher growth in our proprietary offerings, productivity and commercial excellence. Also, as global economies begin to open up, we are including in our outlook a return of certain operating costs, such as travel and entertainment, in the second half of 2021 that were previously put on hold due to global pandemic. We now anticipate adjusted earnings per share growth of approximately 40%, up from our previous guidance of approximately 30%. This guidance reflects our strong first quarter results continued operational improvement, lower interest expense from deleveraging and refinancing and an effective full year tax rate of 24%. We also maintain a flat share count for guidance purposes. As stated before, we are reiterating our full year free cash flow guidance of over $800 million. Our full year outlook is based on ongoing EBITDA growth and lower interest payments with some modest offsets from increased working capital needs to support our growth. Michael mentioned the leverage ratio improvement we achieved in Q1 to 3.5x EBITDA and an expectation that we'll remain under 4x EBITDA even after funding the Ritter acquisition. On debt pricing, we are pursuing opportunities to further reduce the cost of our term loans, enabled in part by our credit rating improvements and leverage reduction. We expect to share more details about these repricing actions as well as about the Ritter acquisition financing in the coming weeks. Please note that we have not reflected the impact from the Ritter acquisition in this guidance commentary. This concludes my prepared remarks. I will now hand the call back over to Michael.