Roland Sackers
Analyst · Berenberg Bank
Thank you, Thierry. Hello, everyone. Thank you as well for me for joining our call. And it was a pleasure to see many of you at our Capital Market Day event. Let me also go through some highlights and provide some perspectives on our performance. As a first point, our results for the second quarter show the improving sequential trend from Q1 2024. And these results put us on the trajectory to achieve the goals we have set for the year. Compared to the first quarter ‘24, there was no material change in our operational results. The adjusted tax rate was at 19% and the share count at 224 million, both in line with our guidance. As a result, adjusted operating income and adjusted net income both grew at the same rate of 4%. Our outperformance in the first half of ‘24 both in terms of sales and profitability played a key role in our updated outlook for the year. For the second half of ’24, we are on track to see an acceleration in the year-on-year sales growth rate along with an improvement in the adjusted operating income margin. Let me dig into some of the highlights now. The adjusted operating income margin rose by one percentage point to 28.4% of sales for the second quarter over the year ago period. This gives us confidence in achieving the target for at least 28.5% for the full year and a step towards our goal for an adjusted margin of at least 31% in 2028. On cash flow trends, free cash flow rose 56% in the second quarter to $129 million over the year ago period and was up an even more impressive 86% to $225 million for the first half of the year. We are seeing the impact of measures to ensure a high level of cash conversion from the rising level of adjusted net income. These actions include upscaling our accounts receivable and accounts payable to teams at our hubs in Wroclaw and Manila. While keeping an eye on inventory levels, we are taking steps to ensure that we have adequate supplies to avoid disruption, especially in light of concerns about the current macro environment and supply chain stability. Let me now give you some additional views on our results for the second quarter. Among the product groups, we saw higher sales in the second quarter on sample technologies, diagnostic solutions, and PCR Nucleic acid amplification over the year ago period. In Sample Technologies, the 1% CER growth came in from consumers and particularly strong growth in kits used in our automation systems. And this comes after the launch of upgraded systems, in particular QIAcube Connect and EZ2 Connect. While we saw some weaker sales transform in manual kits, the increase in automation consumers is a testament to our conversion ability. In Diagnostic Solutions, we were pleased with the ongoing strong performance of QuantiFERON, which sales up 11% CER in marking the fifth consecutive quarter above $100 million in revenues. QIAstat-Dx also rose at a robust pace, growing 12% CER over the second quarter of ‘23 on significant gains in consumables and an ongoing good level of instrument placement. The recent expansion of the U.S. test menu gives us increasing confidence in exceeding the ‘24 sales target of at least US $100 million. In the PCR group product group, QIAcuity delivered robust growth in consumable sales. We continue to see good demand trends for instruments as well. We are especially pleased with the demands for the higher throughput QIAcuity 4 and 8 versions that are popular with biopharma manufacturing customers as well as larger Academica research facilities. We believe this will translate into an even higher consumable proposal. In the Genomics NGS product group, sales of the QIAGEN Digital Insights business holds at the highest single-digit pace and here we saw good sales trends for both the research and clinical portfolios. However, we faced a tough comparison to the strong results in the year ago quarter. At the same time, we anticipate improving demand trends for our NGS portfolio in the second half of the year and for this product group to return to growth as we saw in the first quarter. Let's now move to results for the regions. Sales were 7% CER in the Europe, Middle East, Africa region with a top performance in Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom. QIAstat-Dx sales in this region were robust with double-digit growth in both consumables and instruments. We also saw growth above the global average for QuantiFERON on continued conversion from the tuberculin skin test. In the Americas, sales were stable compared to the second quarter of ‘23 as single-digit consumable growth was offset by the cautious spending environment for instruments. In the Asia-Pacific Japan region, sales declined 3% CER in the second quarter and led by higher sales in Japan, Australia and India. Results for China showed a single-digit CER declined over the second quarter of ‘23 but grew at a significant double-digit rate sequentially from the first quarter of ‘24. We currently anticipate the challenging market conditions in China to continue. Let me just remind you, China makes up less than 6% of our global sales. Let's now review the rest of the income statement. The adjusted gross margin was 67.2% of sales and increase of about 30 basis points from the second quarter of ‘23 on beneficial changes in the product mix towards higher consumable sales. Additional margin benefits came from lower operating expenses in R&D, selling and marketing expenses and administrations in the second quarter over the year ago period. This led to the adjusted operating income margin expansion by one percentage point to 28.4% from the second quarter of ‘23 and a marked step up from the 25.7% margin in the first quarter of ‘24. The favorable trends show the impact of our initiatives on effective cost management while making targeted investments to fuel growth and supports our targets of at least 28.5% for the full year of ‘24. As for NeuMoDx, given that the decision came in June, we did not see any material impact on operational expenses other than the restructuring charges taken in the second quarter that was excluded from adjusted results. The restructuring charge for the second quarter was $351 million, of which 80% was noncash. About $280 million was included in the cost of goods sold and about $70 million in operating expenses. We continue to expect the restructuring charges to total approximately $400 million through the completion of the program in 2025 and with about 75% involving noncash items. As per the third quarter of 2024, we currently expect the charges to total approximately $30 million to $40 million related to this decision. As for adjusted EPS, results at constant exchange rates were at $0.55 and $0.03 ahead of outlook for at least $0.52. The adjusted tax rate was at 19% and the average number of diluted shares at 224 million were both in line with our expectations. Turning to cash flow, results for the second quarter were a continuation of the good outcome seen in the first quarter of 2024. Operating cash flow for the first half was up 63% to $300 million over the same period in ‘23. In terms of work and capital management, account receivables fell by nearly $30 million since the end of ‘23, while our days of sales outstanding was 58 days and has remained within this recent trend. Another contributor was the reduction in inventories by about $80 million since the end of ‘23. This was partially due to the decision to reduce, continue NeuMoDx but also improvements in other areas of the portfolio. Free cash flow also improved in the first half of 2024, rising 86% to $225 million from the first half of ‘23. At the same time, we saw increased CapEx levels for software development, including for the upgrade of our SAP system that is tracking well against our plans. For the second half of ‘24, we anticipate an ongoing strong level of underlying cash flow generation largely in line with levels seen in the first half of the year, excluding one-time cash charges related to restructuring. The same is true for free cash flow levels with similar levels of CapEx spending as in the first half. As for our financing, we had a payment of about $100 million for a German private placement that reached maturity in the second quarter. We also have $500 million of convertible notes reaching maturity in September and anticipate having to repay another $500 million of convertible notes in ‘25 as well. I would now like to hand back to Thierry.