Frank Laukien
Analyst · Jefferies. Please go ahead with your question
Thank you, Miroslava good afternoon, everyone and thank you for joining us on today's call. Bruker had a strong finish to the year with revenue growth and non-GAAP EPS both exceeding our recently increased full year guidance. In the fourth quarter, Bruker's revenues increased 12.8% year-over-year, our 4% organic growth consisted of 3.4% organic growth in our Bruker Scientific Instruments or BSI segment and 11.6% organic growth in our BEST segment net of intercompany eliminations. The stronger Q4 revenue resulted in full year 2017 total revenue growth of 9.6% including 3.6% organic growth. This was compromised of 2.7% organic growth at BSI and 14.5% organic growth at BEST again net of intercompany eliminations. As our core, academic and industrial end markets improved over the course of the year and with BEST benefitting from strong MRI and big science demand. Our 3.6% organic revenue growth rate in 2017 exceeded our expectations. We generated value for shareholders in 2017 as we've returned to positive revenue growth, successfully integrated several strategic bolt-on acquisitions, drove additional operational improvements and invested in our six key high growth, high margin initiatives. We also again delivered on our long-term operating margin expansion targets of 75 to 100 bps per year on average on a multiyear basis. Specifically in 2017 our non-GAAP operating margin improved 80 bps, while absorbing an approximately 45 bps headwind from acquisitions and an additional 20 bps headwind from changes in foreign exchange. Looking more closely at our Q4 2017 results on slide four, we reported revenues of $530.5 million, an increase of 12.8% year-over-year. Acquisitions contributed 3.6% to revenue, while an FX tailwind increased revenues by 5.2% year-over-year on an organic basis, our Q4 2017 revenue was up 4%. In Q4 2017 our non-GAAP gross margin increased 120 bps year-over-year, our non-GAAP operating margin increased 130 bps year-over-year, while our non-GAAP operating profit grew about 20%. Tony will discuss the details behind these results. In Q4 2017 Bruker reported a GAAP net loss of $0.02 per share compared to $0.43 of earnings per share in Q4 2016. The GAAP loss was the result of the effects of the U.S. tax reform in the quarter. On a non-GAAP basis, Q4 2017 EPS was $0.51, an increase of 11% year-over-year. On slide five, our full year 2017 revenue of $1.766 billion increased $155 million or 9.6% year-over-year. Acquisitions contributed 4.8%, while foreign exchange was a 1.2% benefit. On an organic basis, Bruker's 2017 revenue was up 3.6% compared with 2016. As previously noted, this consisted of 2.7% organic growth in our Scientific Instruments business and 14.5% organic growth at BEST net of eliminations. Going forward, we expect continued gradual organic growth acceleration in our Scientific Instruments segment as more and more of our high growth initiatives are expected to contribute meaningfully to our results. Full year 2017 non-GAAP gross margin was consistent with 2016, as the impact of higher BEST revenues, unfavorable mix and FX effects offset volume and operational gross margin improvement elsewhere. In the full year 2017, Bruker delivered non-GAAP operating margin expansion of 80 bps, even with these unfavorable mix effects and after absorbing about 65 bps, operating margin headwind from our recent acquisitions and FX. Our 2017 non-GAAP operating profit grew a healthy 16%. For 2017, Bruker reported GAAP EPS of $0.49 compared to $0.95 in the prior year again the lower GAAP EPS in 2017 was the result of the effects of U.S. tax reform. Our 2017 non-GAAP EPS was a $1.21 a 2% increase from a $1.19 in 2016. This was against a challenging effective tax rate comparison in FY2016, due to the recording of tax valuation and reserve reversals in 2016, as previously reported. Over the course of 2017, we saw further stabilization in our academic and government business, most notably in Europe, as well as improvements in our industrial and applied end markets. Our semiconductor metrology business had an excellent year with a healthy mix of new technology buys and robust semi-market conditions. Our BSI Scientific Instruments order rates showed momentum over the course of 2017 and we expect further gradual improvement in our BSI organic revenue growth rate in 2018. While BEST benefited from softer 2016 comps, and some project accelerations into 2017, we expect BEST revenue to decline in the low single-digit year-over-year on an organic basis in 2018. Please turn to slide six and seven now, where I'll provide further insights and highlights on the 2017 performance of our three Scientific Instrument groups and of our BEST segment on a constant currency basis. BioSpin Group revenue of $572 million was modestly above 2016 levels. Excluding the impact of currency translation, BioSpin operating margins were lower year-over-year as BioSpin product mix included more low-field NMR systems in 2017 with lower gross profit margins versus more high-field systems in 2016. NMR revenue was similar to 2016 level, as a reminder our 2016 results included a 1 gigahertz system and we did not record of anyone gigahertz systems revenue in 2017. Within BioSpin and specifically for NMR, the aftermarket and service business continued to post strong revenue growth year-over-year. We also remain encouraged by the recovery in pre-clinical imaging or PCI markets, as we stabilize performance in our PCI business over the course of 2017. In 2017 PCI exited a non-profitable optical molecular imaging product line and had good success in growing its pre-clinical nuclear molecular imaging business particularly pre-clinical (inaudible). Our CALID Group reported mid-single digits constant currency growth with revenues of $499 million for the year. CALID operating margins improved meaningfully year-over-year on better volume, efficiencies in the 2016 restructuring. Within the CALID Group our Daltonics mass-spec revenue grew in 2017, as European academic markets recovered with strong growth in microbiology, aftermarket consumables and services impart bolstered by our 2017 acquisitions. The Optics business product had a strong year on improved demand from industrial and applied markets, as well as the European recovery. CALID's detection revenue declined year-over-year with a challenging comparison due to large contract in 2016. Finally, CALID also benefited from the InVivo molecular biology consumables acquisition in January 2017. Please turn to slide seven, now Bruker NANO reported low teens constant currency revenue growth with revenues of $513 million for the full year, NANO's results included both strong mid-single digit organic growth and contributions from our January 2017 Hysitron acquisition of Nano indenting products. With the Nano Bruker AXS revenue grew nicely in 2017 following a challenging 2016. AXS growth was fueled by higher industrial revenue, China demand and the European markets recovery. Semiconductor metrology revenues were up strongly in 2017, reflecting the healthy underlying end market as well as new technology by far X-ray metrology systems. As expected, semi recorded a strong finish to the year in the fourth quarter of 2017. Our Nano Surfaces business grew on the contributions from the Hysitron acquisition, which continues to perform well, as part of Bruker. In total the Nano Group had a strong finish to the year with strengthened demand from industrial markets, excellent performance in semi and improved academic markets. Last but not least, our best revenue in 2017 was substantially higher year-over-year, driven by both our November 2016, BOST [ph] acquisition as well as double-digit organic growth with our core BEST business. While BEST delivered on strong demand for MRI superconductors and some accelerated big science projects in 2017 we expect BEST revenues to be lower year-over-year in 2018. Next, let me give you a high level update on our six high growth, high margin initiatives on slide eight. Over the course of 2017 we sharpened our strategic portfolio transformation focus on six initiatives, which we believe can result in faster organic growth and continued multi-year operating margin expansion for Bruker over time. As we had projected we exited 2017 with the five product area, proteomics and phenomics biopharma and applied, microbiology and diagnostics, neuroscience and cell microscopic and next gen nanotechnology tools comprising about a quarter or 25% of Bruker's revenue. The high growth aftermarket initiative in this case excluding the microbiology after market because we list that elsewhere, comprised an additional 15% of revenue. In total our six high growth initiatives delivered high single-digit, constant currency revenue growth and operating margins that are significantly above corporate average. So I think we're on the right track here. Some of these initiatives are already up meaningful scale and are contributing significantly. For example, our microbiology business, our next gen semiconductor metrology tools and our aftermarket initiatives. Others are now becoming meaningful contributors. And for example, our biopharma and pharma and applied product revenues grew very nicely in 2017 to where they will begin to move the needle for us in 2018 and beyond. Finally, some other initiatives are still early on the adoption curve, such as our pathology, proteomics, clinical phenomics and ultra-high-field NMR in our initiative. Looking out over the next five years, we have significant growth opportunities across all of these and we expect continued strong performance from these high growth initiatives also in 2018. Together with a cadence of new product and solution launches M&A investments and more regulatory approvals, these are key elements of our portfolio transformation strategy towards faster growing markets, where we believe we can also achieve sustainably higher margins. On slide nine I show Bruker's key priorities for 2018, I will not read all of them, but for 2018 we obviously aim to position the company for further revenue growth acceleration by continuing the positive momentum in our scientific instruments business, and by driving our six key high growth initiatives. We remain focused on transforming Bruker's portfolio for faster growth and continued multi-year operating margin expansion. I invite you to read the other comments and bullets. In summary, 2017 was a year of continued progress, we returned to revenue growth, we successfully integrated our acquisitions, quite pleased with that and once again delivered on our margin expansion commitments and exceeded our revenue growth and EPS objectives. We look forward to delivering another solid year in 2018. So on that note, let me now turn the call over to our CFO, Tony Mattacchione.