Lindon Robertson
Analyst · Needham
Thank you, Steve. I now refer you back to the slide deck available on our website. Turning to Slide 3. As Steve highlighted, it's exciting times here at Azenta with many transformational changes and landmark events to touch on as we enter fiscal 2022. Amidst all of these events, the team continued to execute solidly on our commercial and financial objectives. We started the fiscal year strong with Q1 revenue of $140 million, up 18% year-over-year. Growth was driven by strength in the Services segment, up 24% year-over-year. Non-GAAP earnings per share from continuing operations was $0.12, up 1% sequentially, supported by 60 basis points of operating margin expansion. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 14.2% and is net of roughly 200 basis points of a headwind from overlapping G&A structure. And now that we closed the sale on February 1, you should expect to see these costs substantially come out of Q2. In Q1, we also held our Investor Day and presented a new 3-year target model for fiscal 2024. We outlined expectations with significant color in the underlying segments for a 3-year revenue CAGR of 16% to 20%. As you can see, we began with a fast start at 18% year-over-year growth this quarter. As we walk through the results, you will see the earnings profile is also on track. With the completion of the sale, which was subsequent to our Q1 close, you will see the semi assets in today's report are still in the assets held for sale category on the balance sheet and the P&L results in discontinued operations. But I can confirm the transaction is complete, and we are indeed currently in possession of the cash proceeds. After fees and taxes are completely settled, we expect net proceeds of approximately $2.4 billion, which brings us to approximately $2.6 billion in net cash available to deploy for strategic investment. Moving to Slide 4. Reviewing the GAAP basis on the left side of the page, you see the revenue was up 2% sequentially and up 18% year-over-year. Total GAAP earnings per share was a profit of $0.58, which includes $0.54 classified as discontinued operations. The GAAP earnings per share from continuing operations was $0.04 for the quarter. The significant sequential improvement of $0.34 on a GAAP basis primarily reflects the onetime impairment of trade name assets as we rebranded the life sciences company and portfolio to the Azenta name. In addition, we had lower professional fees supporting the company's separation in this quarter. Now let's look into the non-GAAP P&L on the right side of the page for additional color on the performance. We started off fiscal 2022 strong with $140 million of revenue and 18% growth year-over-year. Breaking that down, organic growth was 16% with an additional 2-point contribution from M&A while FX had little effect on the top line this quarter. COVID-related revenue remained relatively stable, generating approximately $10 million in the quarter, again, primarily in the consumables business. Normalized for COVID this year and last, our business grew 20% year-over-year. Gross margin was 49.3%, lower by 40 basis points quarter-over-quarter. This was due to lower margins in the Products business, partially offset by higher Services gross margin. If you look at the operating income, the margin is up 60 basis points quarter-over-quarter driven by leverage over the operating expense. Within operating expense, we added some planned structure, both commercial and corporate, as we separated the company. But it was offset this quarter by lower performance-based variable compensation, including stock comp. To update you on the overlapping corporate G&A structure, this was approximately $3 million for this quarter, a little less than we had sized previously but still applying about 200 basis points of pressure. Since we closed the transaction last week, we see the G&A overlap dropping off quickly to approximately 50 basis points in Q2 and then falling away completely. By Q3, you will be able to see a full quarter without trailing effective cost. Adjusted EBITDA margin in the quarter was 14.2%, down 130 basis points quarter-over-quarter. The other expense line is burdened with a little more this quarter primarily with FX losses. It may also be worth pointing out that the stock compensation is excluded from our measure of adjusted EBITDA. So the help it brought to the operating income does not translate to help in this EBITDA margin line. Importantly, we continue to project that by Q4, we will be performing with an adjusted EBITDA margin in the range of 22%. Turning to Slide 5 for a review of our Life Sciences Products segment results. The Products business generated $50 million of revenue, 6% lower than the fourth quarter but up 10% year-over-year and on our expectations for the quarter. As we described at our Investor Day, the Products business was expected to start with lower growth rates in the first half of 2022 and then strengthen with higher growth rates as we complete the year. This reflects the height of COVID demands on consumables in the comparative periods of the first half of 2021 as well as our line of sight to revenue in the second half of 2022. I would like to provide additional clarity around the growth results here. For Products in total, the growth rate was 10% year-over-year. And if we exclude the estimated COVID revenue in both years, that growth rate would be 14%. The strength came through in the store systems business, which grew 42% led by continued strength in shipments of our automated cryo stores, which continues to see strong adoption in cell and gene therapy applications. The business portfolio has continuous growth drivers, including a solid base of consumables business, unique infrastructure offerings to the largest of customers and a growth engine in the cell and gene therapy space with the automated cryo store. Life Science Products Q1 gross margin was 45.9% with a 20 basis point improvement year-over-year. Gross margin was softer 200 basis points quarter-over-quarter coming off the higher stores margin in Q4, but partially offset by stronger C&I margins in Q1. Q1 operating margin of 8.8% declined 40 basis points over last year driven by investments in the operating expense line, including commercial investments and the increased corporate expenses referenced earlier and which are allocated to each segment. On a quarter-over-quarter basis, we have pressure on operating margin, reflecting the softer gross margin and the effect of lower revenue. The Products business executed to our expectations for the quarter and remains on track for the year, including a healthy pipeline for revenue expansion in the second half and the leverage that will come with the growth. Next, please turn to Page 6 for a review of our Life Sciences Services segment results. The Services business with a continuous stream of demand in Genomic Services and an expanding recurring revenue stream in Sample Repository Solutions generated revenue of $90 million, an increase of 24% year-over-year. This was an increase of 7% on a sequential basis, accelerating above our expectation. The Genomic Services business grew 23% year-over-year with both NGS and Synthesis delivering year-over-year growth in excess of 20%. Sequentially, Genomics expanded 8% quarter-over-quarter driven by NGS up 13% driven by strong year-end demand. Sample Repository Solutions also delivered strong growth, up 26% year-over-year, led by storage, where customers entrust us to hold their research samples. Sequentially, SRS revenue for the first quarter was up 6%. The Services business delivered 51.2% gross margin, lower than a year earlier when we saw very high utilization during the initial global recovery, an improvement of 40 basis points sequentially driven by stronger margins in the Genomics business. Operating margin was 8.8%, up 360 basis points quarter-over-quarter due to higher gross margins and sharp leverage from 7% expansion of revenue. On a year-over-year basis, operating margin declined 80 basis points, reflecting the moderation in gross margin, significantly offset by the positive leverage from the revenue growth. As a portion of the improvement comes from a reduction in stock comp, not all of the benefits dropped through to the adjusted EBITDA. Let's turn to Slide 7 for the summary of cash flow for the quarter. Our operating cash flow is shown on a consolidated basis, including results from discontinued operations. We generated operating cash flow of $16 million in the quarter. We made necessary working capital investments for both continuing and discontinued operations. And as a reminder, we pay out our annual variable pay inside the December quarter, traditionally putting some pressure on the quarter's cash performance. Capital expenditures for the quarter totaled $18 million, including approximately $2 million for semi. $10 million of the spend was for the new building in China. We continue to expect to complete our move by the June time frame. We did pay out $7 million of dividends in the quarter. This brings our total dividends paid to shareholders since its inception in 2011 to more than $0.25 billion. As we announced previously and now that we have closed the sale of the semiconductor business, we will discontinue the quarterly dividend. Going forward, we plan to use all excess cash for strategic investment and expect we will optimize returns in that way for our shareholders. Turn to Slide 8 to review the balance sheet. As a reminder, the semi assets were moved to the net assets held for sale line in Q4. We closed with $232 million of cash, restricted cash and marketable securities, along with approximately $50 million of debt, providing $182 million of net cash. The PP&E line of $147 million increased $17 million quarter-over-quarter, reflecting the $10 million on the China building project and the balance significantly driven by lab and sample storage equipment. As noted, the recent completion of the divestiture for $3 billion will contribute, when all is done, an estimated $2.4 billion debt proceeds of cash. The cash is in hand today, and you will see it in next quarter's statement. We have applied $50 million to eliminate our debt, and we also have closed our revolving line of credit. Let's turn to Slide 9 for our guidance on the second fiscal quarter of 2022. Revenue from continuing operations is expected to be in the range of $137 million to $147 million with a midpoint of supporting growth of approximately 10% year-over-year. This softer year-over-year guidance reflects this challenging compare we have in the Products business with the COVID environment with an expectation to be lighter in revenue there by approximately 3% year-over-year. The Services business continues to show growth at approximately 18% at the midpoint. Adjusted EBITDA is anticipated to be $18 million to $24 million. And non-GAAP earnings per share is expected to be $0.07 to $0.15 per share. As I said earlier, we continue to expect the stand-alone business to return to around 22% adjusted EBITDA margin by the fourth quarter of fiscal 2022. As we have concluded the divestiture, I would like to take a moment to point you to resources readily available to you to understand and analyze our business. Our recent Investor Day, held on November 16, featured our business leaders and provided a deep dive into our capabilities. We continue to receive great feedback on the insights and transparency our leaders provided, and you can still view this on the Investors section of our Azenta website. You will also find there our 3-year target model describing our financial objectives for fiscal 2024, supported with the goals from each of our business leaders. For those of you newer to our story, this is a practice we have followed for many years. We hold ourselves responsible to these metrics and have a history of delivering on these metrics as well. In addition, in the appendix of this deck, we have included quarterly historical financial information back to the first quarter of 2020. I encourage investors and analysts to refer to these materials, which are all posted on our website for your reference as you build out your models. As I reflect on where we stand today, we are now fully on our life sciences stand-alone path. We have had a strong start to fiscal 2022, and we have $2.6 billion in cash available to deploy for strategic investment. The team is incredibly excited about the reception Azenta has seen in the marketplace and is going full speed to address the many opportunities to support our customers across the industry. So this concludes our prepared remarks. I will turn the call back over to the operator to take your questions. Question-and-Answer Session