Matthias Evers
Analyst · RBC. Please go ahead
Great. Thank you very much, Laetitia. Good morning, good afternoon, also from my side. Basically, as information about the developments in Q4 materialized, we launched this structured performance review, looking closely at the external environment as well as our inner workings. Let me share with you the top level results today in form of a SWOT analysis. And I will basically walk from the bottom to the top. So I start with the more external-oriented dimensions, opportunities and threats, and then to the strengths and weaknesses. Opportunities. And I start, therefore, for hopefully an obvious reason, because we face very strong demand and opportunities in terms of expanding our human data-centric multiomics approach to R&D. Here, I mentioned the molecular patient database, which is at the heart of our PanOmics efforts. Clearly, and it has been behind the numbers, and my colleague Laetitia mentioned it, we have seen the commercial validation of Just-Evotec Biologics. We have seen an increasing demand. We have fully capitalized on it. We have a full sales order book. We are quite careful to describe the U.S. BIO-SECURE bill as an opportunity. We just want to signal we are here for the partners in the U.S. to collaborate with them with our global footprint. When it comes to threats, we describe the market at this point of time as a bias market with more challenging dynamics. I will go later in the presentation a little bit into the drivers, but it’s fair to say that particular for biotech companies, 2023 and now 2024 has been a difficult environment. So we see a market recovery towards 2025, and that is, of course, as stated a threat. Let me move to our strengths. And here I want to be very clear that our scientific expertise combined with our track record, our differentiating capabilities on our integrated end-to-end platform lead to very strong demand that has led to double-digit growth has led to an expansion of our sales pipeline. We see a demand for this, including and leading to customer retention rates north of 90%. There is clearly a weakness identified, and I will come also in this presentation with our response against it. But to put plainly, we have found an internal complexity and operational inefficiencies that we are targeting now head on. When it comes to our capacity, there’s a temporary mismatch because we have seen the softening in the more transactional parts of our business. So we have to call it temporary, something that we can repair quite quickly and we have a plan for that. With that, let me move to the next chapter of this presentation, which is about the priority reset we are introducing here today. And then Laetitia will continue later on guidance and outlook. As we talk about new priorities, I think it’s very important we put those into external context. As promised, I want to talk a little bit more about how we see the market today. Clearly there is demand, but we have seen cost containment on the biotech side, on the big pharma side, and what is for us relevant to say, we have less Series A, Series B events, and so roughly 40% of our business sits in biotech, and that share has gone down a bit, because there are simply less new starts in the biotech segment. Overall, I think the market summary is that the effort towards conversion and towards winning business is higher, and we have seen that also in our peer group performance. In summary, I would conclude that we see green shots in the market, like competitors, we see that more towards the end of the year into 2025, and see this type of market environment as a context for the priorities I’m now introducing. We as an organization clearly commit to three priorities under the header towards profitable growth. So we are clearly a company growing at double-digit following this demand, but this growth has to be profitable. Priority number one, clearly, and I will detail it in a second, deals with our focusing on what we are good at and driving smart partnering. Secondly, we are now adjusting our organization and footprint. And number three, we put the strongest possible team in place for today focusing on the management board, but of course going beyond. Now, indeed, let me double click a little bit into the first priority. You see here two illustrative analyses of where the money is going in deal making: one by therapeutic area; one by modality. And in short, it’s fair to say we have massive opportunities as we are well aligned against these areas, let’s say, in oncology, neurology, cardiovascular, or in the core modalities. What we are doing here is doubling down. And I would call these actions our growth program, because it’s a careful alignment. So to become a little more specific, an example is for instance, metabolic obesity, that we align our efforts in R&D, our strengths against where the market demand is, we clearly double down on key modalities. And that has to be seen also in the context of Just-Evotec Biologics, where we have a fantastic offering for complex biotherapeutics. And we focus on what we get very strong feedback on, our flexible partnering that we offer win-win models from our partners from foundation to biotech to big pharma, but clearly prioritizing that our models where we cover our R&D funding and generate upsides. With that, let me hand over to you, Laetitia, to detail the restructuring parts of our priorities.