Jonathan DiVincenzo
Analyst · Nephron Research
Thanks, Ruben, and welcome to the team. Good to have you here, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us. In the first quarter, our teams executed within a dynamic operating environment. We reported Q1 results within our revenue guidance as we navigated several external pressures, most notably associated with the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. This region has been one of Bio-Rad's fastest-growing markets for several years. We haven't highlighted this in the past, but in 2025, the region represented over 9% of our Diagnostics segment, primarily driven by our blood typing franchise. The conflict substantially reduced our first quarter 2026 revenues and depending upon the timing of resolution, will be a significant headwind for revenue and margin for full year 2026. Despite the macroeconomic headwinds, our teams remained focused on executing our strategic initiatives, accelerating innovation and driving further efficiencies across the organization to increase competitiveness. In Life Science, reported net sales were flat, reflecting mixed end market conditions. Academic demand remained constrained, particularly in the Americas, where our customers' budgets have been significantly impacted by changes in funding. While NIH funding increased modestly year-over-year, our voice of customer pulse surveys indicate that behind the scenes, there continues to be considerable disruption, and we continue to see a lag between funding approvals and purchasing activity. In biopharma, we are seeing early signs of stabilization. Early-stage biotech remains cautious. However, activity among later-stage companies is more robust, and we expect gradual improvement through the year. On the commercial side, ensuring that we capture our fair share of demand in a constrained market requires our sales organization to work differently. We have sharpened the focus of our commercial teams on segment level prioritization, directing coverage towards customers with active funding, accelerating conversions from our existing installed base and competing aggressively where competitive displacement opportunities exist. Our digital PCR product area continues to be a strategic differentiator. In the quarter, ddPCR instrument revenue grew 24% over prior year. This is an encouraging leading indicator since new customers typically drive consumable pull-through within 6 to 12 months of purchase and installation. The new QX700 platform is driving both competitive wins and conversion from qPCR, supported by an extensive assay menu and expanding publication base. And ahead of schedule, the team now has enabled over 99% of our digital PCR assays to be available on the new QX700 series, which is driving instrument growth. Looking ahead, we continue to expect a measured recovery in Life Science led by biopharma. In Clinical Diagnostics, we delivered modest reported growth of just under 2%. As I mentioned earlier, performance in the culture -- quarter was impacted by geopolitical disruption in the Middle East, which affected both demand and logistics. While this creates near-term challenges, we expect eventual market normalization once the conflict is resolved. Outside of this region, the segment performed as planned. In particular, demand for our quality systems and immunohematology franchises showed signs of strength. From a margin standpoint, Diagnostics was adversely affected by a disproportionate share of supply chain cost pressures. And in light of these continuing supply chain challenges, we understand the need to rationalize manufacturing capacity and network. We are also addressing these challenges through focused actions in procurement and manufacturing. Turning to our operational priorities. We are executing against a clear agenda focused on improving agility, resiliency and efficiency across the company. In our efforts to become more agile, we are increasing flexibility in our manufacturing footprint. During the quarter, we began manufacture of select life science instruments in China for China, improving responsiveness to local market demand and allowing us to feed in tenders while minimizing tariff exposure. This initiative is indicative of how we are using efficient capital deployment to build operational capabilities for long-term business continuity. In R&D, we have reengineered our innovation engine to deliver improved return on investment. Following our portfolio prioritization decisions, we are concentrating investment in areas with the strongest commercial potential. As I mentioned earlier, one example of this prioritization is the fact that 99% of our digital assays are now supported on the new QX700 platform, again, ahead of plan. As we prioritize our projects, we -- our focus areas are expanding into high-growth clinical applications, leveraging our ddPCR technology, advancing our digital PCR portfolio, including our next-gen system and oncology assays and embedding AI capabilities to accelerate development and enhance platform performance. While it is early, this focus allows us to deliver more consistent, higher-quality growth over time. So in closing, we are executing with discipline in a challenging environment. We are making progress on the operational actions within our control, improving supply chain capability, strengthening execution and focusing investment where it matters most. We remain confident these actions will translate into improved financial performance over time. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Roop.