Christian Wojczewski
Analyst · Warburg Research. Please go ahead
Good afternoon and thank you for taking the time to dial in. During our last call on April 17th we shared our revised strategy, we talked about our value creation levers, we explained the components of our mid-term plan and we provided guidance for 2025. The latter based on our understanding of the current underlying market dynamics and Evotec specific business development. Today we will focus on Q1 results. Our group performance in Q1 was in line with our expectations and along what we indicated three weeks ago. Therefore, we’ll keep today’s presentation short. Nevertheless, we have earmarked sufficient time for the dialogue with you after the presentation. So let me start giving you an overview of the first quarter. Over the past couple of months, we have been able to close a few exciting deals. We are particularly proud of the news around our protein degradation collaboration with BMS which has made further progress. We’re expanding the number of high value molecular glue degraders. I will get back to this topic a bit later since this collaboration is an excellent showcase for how our strategy of technology leadership translates into superior business opportunities. Another highlight to mention is the reception of a grant from the Korean Government to develop novel antibody treatments for lung fibrosis. The signing of new expanded programs is a strong testament of our differentiated capabilities in drug recovery and will contribute to future revenue streams. Short-term and as outlined in April, the market in Shared R&D remains soft resulting in revenue decline versus Q1 2024 and the overall revenue development of the first three months stays slightly below expectations. In contrast Just - Evotec Biologics has again delivered strong growth against an already outstanding Q1 2024 result. We see a growing customer list which is extending from generic providers and smaller biotech to big pharma and biotech. The revenue development in the first three months is slightly ahead of our expectations and shows a very encouraging trajectory for the future. Three weeks ago I spoke about our new strategic direction. At Evotec we strive for technology and science leadership in everything we do. We’re pioneers in drug discovery. Together with our partners we accelerate the journey from concept-to-cure. We achieve this by leveraging cutting edge technology, disruptive science and AI driven innovation. We’re focusing on two business pillars drug discovery and preclinical development, as well as Just - Evotec Biologics. Following our conversation from last call let me share some insights on how technology leadership leads to superior business opportunities. Not in theory but in real life. In Shared R&D our scope is sharply defined from early-stage target ID to IND. We offer essential CRO services to our clients such as synthetic chemistry, in vitro biology, protein sciences, DMPK services and others. We provide the services on a standalone transactional basis. This is shown in the upper blue part of this chart. In our more advanced commercial model, exemplified in the lower part of this chart, we help our customers to accelerate the journey of drug discovery to improve probabilities of success and to reduce risk. We provide access to our proprietary tools, next-generation technology, disease expertise and mass data to support a selected number of partners in strategic collaborations. These CRO essentials then become a strong supporting element of those collaborations. When it comes to our next-generation platforms, I would like to highlight four, which are shown on the right side. Our molecular patient database, iPSC, PanOmics, and PanHunter. First, E.MPD, our molecular patient database, has been built over years and is constantly expanded. It not only covers clinical data, phenotypic data, biopsies, but in particularly also multi-omics data, such as genome, transcriptome, protein -- proteome data. Based on these data sets, Evotec is uniquely positioned to identify and validate disease signatures and novel targets to intervene very effectively with disease processes. Our iPSC platform enables us to take insights out of the E.MPD, forward into the drug discovery process, and builds disease relevant models directly based on patient cells and tissues. Our high performance PanOmics platform seamlessly allows us to profile patient samples at high throughput and to comprehensively profile compounds in vitro and in vivo models using omics technologies. And finally, our PanHunter platform is a unique AI supported analytics tool to effectively process and analyze these multi-dimensional data sets. The amount of data that our platforms generate is huge. For example, we’ve gathered over 500 billion data points from over 20,000 patients. This represents the most complete data set for quite a large number of patient cohorts. Our iPSC platform allows us to model diseases in over 25 cell types. Within these cell types, we can cover over 250 genetic disease models. Finally, using our PanOmics platforms, and here in particular, our transcriptomics and proteomics platform, we have generated over 3 million transcriptome and over 500,000 proteome profiles. All three platforms operate at an unprecedented industrial scale and are made accessible to our strategic partners. Of course, we’re applying AI supported state-of-the-art data analytics to separate real signal from noise and thus to support our customers in the drug discovery journey. So how are we generating value with this technology? For example, both of our BMS collaborations are originally based on these platforms and they continue to thrive. We launched a strategic partnership in the field of neurology almost 10 years ago. For this partnership, molecular patient data and the iPSC platform have and continue to be an important driver. In the beginning of March, we announced significant progress in this collaboration, which triggered a US$20 million payment. While our neurology partnership originate from molecular patient data and the iPSC platform, our oncology collaboration, shown here on this page, hinges more on our omics platform. It is progressing very successfully. Just recently, we announced key scientific achievements, expanding the pipeline of high value molecular glue degraders. The performance-based payments amount to €75 million. Furthermore, in the second half of last year, we announced a further expansion of the collaboration into a new area. In summary, our technology and science leadership in drug discovery is giving us access to business opportunities beyond the essential CRO services. It broadens our addressable market and it provides superior value generation potential since Evotec not only is paid for services but also participates significantly in the successful development of programs by milestones and royalties. Let me now hand over to Paul who will speak about our Q1 results.