Wetteny Joseph
Analyst · Bank of America
Thank you, Kristin, and good morning, everyone. As Kristin highlighted, our quarterly performance reflects multiple converging dynamics, macro-driven price sensitivity weighing on certain aspects of pet owner spending, ongoing pressure on vet clinic visits and an increasingly competitive landscape in which price continues to be a key differentiator. These dynamics have led to performance that is below our expectations this quarter, but we are confident in our near-term efforts to drive demand and cost discipline as well as our industry-leading portfolio and pipeline, which we believe will continue to drive growth in the longer term. Now I'll walk you through our financial results for the first quarter, which, as a reminder, are reflective of an aligned calendar year. For the first quarter, we reported global revenue of $2.3 billion, growing 3% on a reported basis and flat on an organic operational basis, with 2% growth coming from price, offset by 2% decline in volume. As we previewed last quarter, our Q1 2026 financial results were positively impacted by certain operational changes made in connection with our fiscal year alignment for subsidiaries outside of the United States. As referenced in our press release this morning and now posted under supplemental materials in the Quarterly Results section of our Investor Relations website, we have provided additional information in connection with our fiscal year alignment, including recast financial information on a quarterly basis for 2025 and annually for 2024 and 2025 to help with comparisons. You will note that for most quarters, the overall differences are relatively immaterial. However, I draw your attention to the $128 million revenue decrease on a recast basis from our previously reported Q4 2025 revenue. See the recast information on Page 3 of the supplemental material. As we described last quarter, certain operational changes made in connection with our fiscal year alignment resulted in the acceleration of the timing of sales, which led to an approximate $30 million increase in the sales that we reported for our International segment for Q4 2025. The balance of the $128 million decrease in recast Q4 2025 revenue or approximately $100 million resulted in a corresponding increase in Q1 2026 sales in our International segment. This $100 million difference was driven by the change that we previously referenced in the timing of price increases in certain international markets and the delayed processing of customer orders that we referenced in our full year 2025 results as well as by differences in the performance of the business when comparing Q4 2025 to a stronger Q4 2024. Excluding the approximately $100 million that shifted from Q4 2025 to early 2026 as a result of our fiscal year alignment, globally, we would have seen a 5% organic operational decline in the quarter. Adjusted net income of $646 million grew 2% on a reported basis and 1% on an organic operational basis. Turning to our franchises. Our global companion animal portfolio posted $1.5 billion in revenue, declining 4%. Key dermatology recorded $347 million in revenue, down 11% versus the prior year. Consumer sentiment is pressuring aspects of pet owner spend in several key markets as we are facing increased competition globally for Apoquel and despite our strong label, price has played a larger role in the decision process. While Cytopoint is also impacted by the vet clinic dynamic as a monoclonal antibody with a longer duration of treatment, Cytopoint switching to recent JAKi competitors has been low. Our OA Pain mAbs, Librela and Solensia posted a combined $140 million in revenue, declining 8%. Librela sales were $101 million, declining 13%. Librela trends have stabilized in the U.S., where we saw encouraging signs that our efforts are gaining traction. Solensia posted $39 million in revenue, growing 6%. Our Simparica franchise contributed $385 million globally, declining 1%. Simparica Trio declined 1% on sales of $297 million, while Simparica declined 3% on sales of $88 million. Additionally, we have seen recent generic competition impacting 2 companion animal products, Convenia, an antibiotic treatment for bacterial skin infections and Cerenia, the market-leading small animal antiemetic. While not considered part of our innovative core, these brands are both blockbusters and have lost meaningful share in the quarter due to price-driven generic competition. Our global companion animal diagnostics business posted $113 million in revenue, growing 10%, driven by expansion of our reference lab business as well as growth in chemistry and hematology, driven by our recently launched Vetscan Opticell. Moving on to livestock, which performed well in the quarter on $720 million in global revenue, growing 12% with broad-based growth across geographies and species as well as price and volume. Favorable producer economics drove higher demand, particularly in cattle. Combined with improved product supply and commercial wins, this provides solid foundation for sustained livestock growth, further supported by the long-term secular tailwind of rising global protein consumption. While our performance is driven by the declines in our companion animal business in the U.S. and certain developed markets internationally, this quarter highlights the benefit that having a global cross-species portfolio can have in challenging market conditions. Now let's move on to our segment results for the quarter. U.S. revenue was $1.1 billion in the quarter, declining 8%. U.S. companion animal posted $865 million, declining 11%. Before going into our brand performance, I wanted to highlight some of the broader impacts we've seen across our U.S. companion animal business. The global trends we have mentioned around competition and consumer price sensitivity are very prevalent in the U.S. market. Additionally, distributor and retail channel purchasing patterns were also a headwind this quarter, reflecting the lower end market demand. Historically, Q1 distributor inventories start the quarter higher than they ended as distributors typically buy ahead of price increases and promotions. This quarter, our promotions underperformed expectations and end market demand softened. So distributors and retail partners took longer to work through their opening inventories and engaged in less replenishment activity. As a result, our sales into distributors and retail partners lagged their sales out to customers compared with prior year quarters. These overarching drivers have impacted much of our U.S. companion animal portfolio. Our key dermatology products posted $215 million in revenue, declining 13% in the U.S. Apoquel has continued to face competitive headwinds consistent with our expectations with price remaining the primary differentiator, driving some shifts toward lower-cost alternatives. However, the impact has been more pronounced than we had expected. Share loss is being amplified by a derm market with declining patient volume in the clinic. Unlike prior competitive cycles, we do not currently have the benefit of underlying market expansion to cushion the revenue effect of competitive share shifts, though we do see a path for the market to return to growth over time with significant untreated and undertreated dogs in the space. Cytopoint trends were consistent with the global picture, primarily impacted by the vet clinic dynamics rather than JAKi competition. The U.S. Simparica franchise reported $238 million in revenue, declining 8% in the quarter. Simparica Trio posted $222 million in sales, declining 8%. Despite modest year-over-year declines due to additional entrants, our share has improved sequentially versus the second half of last year when we saw the impact of competitive launch promotions, which pressured our share, but also expanded the triple combination market, the dynamic that is not providing the same market tailwind in the quarter. We continue to see market contraction with softness in the clinics driven by lower flea tick and heartworm visits as well as a slowing of alternative channel sales driven partly by script denials in retail. Our market-leading share in puppies remains stable. In the U.S., our OA Pain mAbs posted $55 million, declining 15%. Librela contributed $37 million, declining 22%. U.S. Librela revenue increased sequentially for the first time in 6 quarters, and vet and pet owner satisfaction ratings remained stable. Additionally, despite declines in the canine OA pain market, our patient share has remained stable since the second half of 2025. Looking ahead, the comparative periods become more favorable as the year progresses. And combined with the stabilization we are seeing, we believe the underlying foundation of the business continues to strengthen. Solensia grew 2% in the quarter on $18 million in sales with feline OA visits holding relatively flat year-over-year. Generic competition in Convenia and Cerenia also contributed to the U.S. companion animal decline. Our U.S. livestock business posted broad-based growth of 7% in the quarter, reporting $225 million in sales. We saw growth across all species, driven primarily by cattle on improved supply of Septicure as well as the impact of strong demand generated from our spring promotions. Poultry and swine also delivered meaningful contributions with poultry growth driven by increased vaccine adoption and disease outbreaks and swine benefiting from improved supply. Moving on to our International segment for the quarter. Revenue grew 17% on a reported basis and 10% on an organic operational basis, posting $1.1 billion in revenue. Excluding the impact of the previously noted $100 million in sales that shifted from Q4 2025 to early 2026 as a result of our fiscal year alignment, our International segment growth was flat for the quarter. International companion animal reported $654 million in sales, growing 7%. The competitive and macroeconomic headwinds we have seen in the U.S. do exist in parts of our international business, but are largely concentrated in developed markets where conditions more closely resemble the U.S. environment. In many of our emerging markets where the standard of care is still maturing, we believe that meaningful market expansion opportunities remain, and that distinction is evident in our international results this quarter. Our international Simparica franchise grew 14% on $147 million in sales. Simparica Trio posted sales of $76 million, growing 29%, driven by key account penetration in major markets and the benefit of our recent launch in Brazil. Simparica reported $71 million in revenue, which was flat on the quarter, impacted by conversion to Trio in Brazil. Partially offsetting our growth in the quarter, key dermatology posted $131 million in revenue internationally, down 5%. For Apoquel, similar to the U.S., competitive pressures and macro price sensitivity, which are more pronounced in developed markets where Apoquel has a larger presence are having a compounding impact on sales. Similar to the U.S., Cytopoint performance is holding up better than Apoquel. Our OA Pain mAbs posted $85 million in sales internationally, declining 2%. Librela reported $64 million in sales, down 7%. As Kristin noted, positive benefit risk findings have helped strengthen our medical education effort around Librela, and we have seen a meaningful improvement in our conversations with veterinarians. Solensia grew 10% on $21 million in sales. Additionally, our international small animal vaccines products grew 13% in the quarter, driven by increased usage of FeloVax in China. International livestock contributed $495 million with growth of 14% with broad-based growth across all of our core species. We saw growth in cattle, swine and poultry, driven by disease outbreaks, commercial wins, especially in vaccines and improved supply. In fish, we continue to benefit from improved pricing on our Moritella vaccine as well as volume growth from market expansion into the Faroe Islands. Now let's move down the P&L. Adjusted gross margins of 71.8% declined approximately 10 basis points on a reported basis. Foreign exchange had an unfavorable impact of approximately 150 basis points. Excluding FX, we saw a 140 basis point improvement in margins due to benefit from price and lower manufacturing costs, partially offset by product and geographical mix. Adjusted operating expenses increased by 3% operationally due to higher compensation-related expenses as well as increased freight and logistics costs. Adjusted net income grew 1%. Adjusted diluted EPS grew 7%, including a 3% benefit from our convertible debt funded share repurchases. Now moving on to guidance for the full year 2026. Our updated guidance is reflective of the current operating environment as well as the presentation of our financials on an aligned fiscal calendar basis. Foreign exchange rates used in our guidance are as of late April. We are revising our full year revenue guidance to a range of $9.68 billion to $9.96 billion, with growth of 2% to 5% based on the current operating environment. It is worth noting that our fiscal year alignment was anticipated to provide approximately 200 to 250 basis points of tailwind to full year revenue growth. However, the challenging operating environment we experienced in Q1 and the expectations that carries for the remainder of the year more than offset that contribution. We now expect adjusted net income to be in the range of $2.87 billion to $2.95 billion with growth of 2% to 6%, reflective of the comprehensive cost and productivity programs Kristin mentioned earlier. Finally, we are updating our reported diluted and adjusted diluted EPS guidance ranges to $6.35 to $6.50 and $6.85 to $7, respectively. While Q1 reflected a more challenging environment than we anticipated, particularly in U.S. companion animal, where the convergence of price sensitivity, lower clinic traffic and intensified competition was more pronounced than expected, our path forward is clear. We are taking decisive action to sharpen commercial execution and drive cost discipline. Looking ahead, while we have appropriately reflected the near-term environment in our updated guidance, we remain confident in the underlying strength of our diversified portfolio and our ability to deliver the next cycle of innovation-driven growth in the years ahead. We remain committed to delivering long-term value for our shareholders. Now I'll hand things back to the operator for your questions. Operator?