Todd Young
Analyst · Chris Scott from JPMorgan. Your line is open
Thank you, Ellen, and good morning, everyone. Today, I'll focus my comments on our third quarter adjusted measures, so please refer to today's earnings press release for a detailed description of the year-over-year changes in our reported results. Starting on slide nine, we delivered $1.028 billion in revenue, a 9% decline or a 4% decline in constant currency, with 3% growth in price. Foreign exchange rates represented a headwind of $61 million in the quarter or 5%, in line with our expectations in August guidance. Slide 10 breaks down our revenue performance by species and slide 11 provides revenue by region in the quarter. For Pet Health, we declined 7% in constant currency for the quarter, with volume declines in our parasiticides portfolio, partially offset by 4% price growth and growth in our pain portfolio. Our US business declined 8% compared to last year, primarily due to competitive and overall retail channel pressure. Our international business declined 5% in constant currency, primarily driven by the economic slowdown in Europe. While the overall 7% decline in constant currency was in line with our second quarter performance, it was significantly lower than our August expectations of approximately flat globally year-over-year for the quarter. The underperformance to our guidance was driven by the accelerating global macro-driven impacts from the economic slowdown in Europe and the continuation of restrictions in China as well as macro pressures impacting the US retail channel. In the third quarter, the Advantage family of products and Seresto declined 13% and 14% in constant currency, respectively, or $15 million and $8 million. In the US, available market data shows the OTC retail market down for the parasiticides overall. We believe there are three key trends driving this; economic-driven consumer behavior moving from prevention to treatment and to lower cost options; retailer inventory management across categories; and broader competition from prescription options. Outside the US, we believe the year-over-year decline is driven by the economic slowdown that has emerged, primarily in Europe from higher energy costs and consumer inflation. On a constant currency basis, we expect stabilization going into 2023 for both Seresto and the Advantage family, driven by price improvement, return of supply from the paper and packaging issues we remediated earlier this year, opportunities for expanded physical availability and introduction of innovations like Advantage XD for cats. We will continue to monitor and respond to the macro dynamics in these important markets. While the pet retail market is experiencing pressure, we believe meeting customers where they want to shop with effective products at multiple price points provides us opportunity for long-term growth and profitability to complement our core business in vet clinics. Our best estimates suggest that manufacturer sales into US retail for OTC products is about a $1 billion market annually, which is approximately 25% of the total US parasiticide market. In the US and globally, we expect prescription products to remain the largest part of our overall Pet Health portfolio, with tailwinds over time from the products Ellen mentioned earlier. On a year-to-date basis, the global Pet Health business declined 4% in constant currency. And while the parasiticides business remains challenged overall, the global Credelio franchise across dog, cat and Credelio Plus grew 16%. Our pain portfolio grew 11% year-to-date, driven by Galliprant dispensing, outgrowing the market in the US in combination with ZORBIUM's continued strong launch. For the quarter, our farm animal business was flat at constant currency, with 3% price growth. Increased demand for poultry products and strength in the aqua portfolio was offset by supply constraint for certain cattle vaccines in the US and a continued decline in swine in Asia. Both our US and international farm animal business was flat in the quarter. Overall, Ruminant’s outperformed our expectations, primarily driven by Rumensin in cattle and a continued strong season for sheep in Australia. Poultry and Aqua also outperformed expectations on a constant currency basis, helping to offset continued challenges in swine in Asia. On a year-to-date basis, Elanco's global Farm Animal business grew 1% in constant currency, with growth in poultry, aqua and cattle and US swine, partially offset by the double-digit decline in international swine, primarily in Asia. Overall, in farm animal globally, Elanco is holding or gaining market share in line with our expectations. Our innovation sales continue to track towards our August expectations of between $100 million and $130 million for the full year. Experior sales more than doubled sequentially in the third quarter compared with the second, and all leading metrics related to commercial uptake, reorder rates and customer negotiations remain positive. Slide 12 further summarizes our financial performance for the third quarter. In line with the decrease in reported sales, gross margin declined 160 basis points to 54.1%, primarily driven by inflation in input costs, freight and conversion costs and unfavorable product mix. These were partially offset by productivity efforts across our manufacturing footprint and improved price. Operating expenses for the quarter were $376 million, a reduction of 14% year-over-year or $60 million. The impact of FX on expenses was approximately $20 million favorable in the third quarter or a 5% benefit year-over-year. Our R&D spend continues to be in a reasonably tight range of about $80 million per quarter this year. With respect to SG&A, we are pleased with the productivity mindset demonstrated by our team as synergies from integration and restructuring actions continued to deliver above expectations. Our execution on the integration of the legacy Bayer Animal Health business into Elanco's own ERP system, business processes and shared service centers is progressing well, and we accelerated the timing of our go-live to early in the second quarter of 2023 from the middle of the year. Adjusted interest expense was $58 million in the quarter, a year-over-year decline of $2 million. The sequential increase from the second quarter of this year was $8 million, driven by higher interest rates on our floating rate debt. I will provide more details on the debt portfolio in a few moments. The non-GAAP effective tax rate was 16.7% for the quarter, lower than our expectations, resulting from multiple discrete benefits in the quarter. We now expect the full year non-GAAP effective tax rate to be between 23% and 24%. Adjusted net income was $96 million and adjusted EPS was $0.20 for the quarter. The $3 million increase in our adjusted net income was driven by the execution of our productivity agenda, more than offsetting the negative impact of a lower topline and stronger dollar as you move down the income statement, plus the lower tax rate. As a reminder, approximately 25% of the $61 million in topline foreign exchange headwinds in the quarter or approximately $15 million falls through to impact net income. Adjusted EBITDA was $205 million in the quarter or about $10 million better than the midpoint of our guidance, with margin expansion of 120 basis points. In the third quarter, our productivity initiatives across Elanco helped our adjusted EBITDA to decline just 3% despite a 9% decline in reported sales and a 12% decline in gross profit. Gross profit declined more than sales as a result of the unfavorable revenue mix from the lower Pet Health sales and higher inflation that we had faced over the last year on cost of goods sold. We believe inflation has stabilized in the third quarter, and we continue to expect it to be in line with the $140 million we shared in August. Now, let's transition to our updated outlook for 2022 on slide 14. As part of our guidance in August, we expect that the fourth quarter would represent a reversal of the constant currency sales decline from the last two quarters. However, because of the worsening macro environmental factors impacting Europe and our US Pet Health retail business, continued COVID lockdowns in China, and the strength of the US dollar, we are reducing our full year revenue guidance by approximately $100 million. The bridge from the August guidance can be found on slide 15, but let me provide context on the pressures that have intensified. In Europe, our business increased 1% in the first half of 2022, but declined 9% in the third quarter as a result of the economic slowdown in the region. We have seen similar sellout data across the Pet Health market in several of our top countries in the region, generally in line with Elanco's results. In August, we expected China to decline 1% for the full year. However, despite a deceleration of the decline of the Swine business in the third quarter compared to the first half of the year, the continued COVID-19 lockdowns, and protein producer profitability pressures are impacting our China business more than our August expectations in the second half, leading us to update our outlook for China to be a 16% to 18% decline for the full year. Finally, in US flea and tick over-the-counter retail channels, available data shows the market, overall, has experienced an accelerated decline year-over-year in the third quarter as consumers have reduced basket sizes and shifted to lower cost treatment options. The rest of our assumptions from our August guidance update remain largely intact. And for the full year, we now expect revenue to be between $4.385 billion and $4.43 billion, reflecting an expected 3% constant currency decline year-over-year at the midpoint. The bridge to 2021 can be found on slide 23. As you can see from the bridge on slide 16, we now expect adjusted EBITDA to be between $1.01 billion and $1.045 billion for 2022, or approximately a $53 million reduction from the midpoint of the range from our August guidance. The stronger US dollar drives approximately $6 million of the reduction, while the rest of the reduction is the net of our third quarter overachievement, offset with the gross margin drop-through from lower expected fourth quarter revenue and operating expense favorability. We now expect adjusted diluted EPS of $1.01 to $1.07 for 2022, which is a $0.06 reduction compared to the midpoint of the range from our August guidance. The stronger US dollar is driving approximately $0.01 of the reduction, while the other $0.05 is driven by the sales reduction, partially offset by a small amount of productivity and the operational overachievement in the third quarter. Our fourth quarter guidance is detailed on slide 17. Finally, we expect to file our 10-Q in the coming days, but let's move to the cash flow and balance sheet metrics on slide 19. In the third quarter, our operating cash flow was $189 million, reflecting the lower reported net loss in the quarter year-over-year and a benefit of a net $73 million from a cash interest rate swap settlement. The swap settlement provides a cash benefit in the third quarter that will create a headwind in operating cash flow over the next four years as this cash acceleration reverses. The volatility in interest rates in both the second and third quarters allowed us to take advantage of our floating to fixed interest rate swaps being in the money to restructure the swaps and accelerate the cash benefit of the financial position, which allowed for greater debt paydown than the third quarter. Excluding the swap benefit, operating cash increased $27 million over the third quarter of 2021. We ended the quarter with $5.51 billion in net debt, a reduction of $121 million compared to the second quarter of 2022. Our net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio at the end of the third quarter was 5.2 time. On slide 20, you can find detail on our current debt profile and interest rate swap positions. On debt paydown, reducing debt is expected to remain our primary capital allocation priority. This year, we expect to repay approximately $500 million to $525 million in gross debt and improve our net debt position by approximately $350 million. Our net leverage is expected to be 5.2 to 5.3 times at the end of this year, down from 5.5 times adjusted EBITDA at the end of 2021. The impact of the stronger dollar has reduced our net cash balance by $49 million compared to the year-end 2021. In 2023, we have roughly $400 million in debt maturities, with limited additional obligations until 2027. We remain confident in the durability and cash generation of the business and our ability to continue to reduce debt and meet our obligations. With that, I'll hand it back to Jeff.