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spk03: Good morning, and welcome to the IDEXX Laboratory's second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. As a reminder, today's conference is being recorded. Participating in the call this morning are Jay Mazelski, President and Chief Executive Officer, Brian McKeon, Chief Financial Officer, and John Ravis, Vice President, Investor Relations. IDEXX would like to preface the discussion today with a caution regarding forward-looking statements. Listeners are reminded that our discussion during the call will include forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties, that could cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed today. Additional information regarding these risks and uncertainties is available under the forward-looking statements notice in our press release issued this morning, as well as in our periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which can be obtained from the SEC or by visiting the investor relations section of our website, IDEX.com. During this call, we will be discussing certain financial measures not prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles or GAAP. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is provided in our earnings release, which may also be found by visiting the investor relations section of our website. In reviewing our second quarter 2022 results, please note all references to growth, organic growth, and comparable growth refer to growth compared to the equivalent period in 2021, unless otherwise noted. To allow broad participation in the Q&A, we ask that each participant limit their questions to one, with one follow-up as necessary. We appreciate you may have additional questions, so please feel free to get back in the queue and if time permits, we'll take your additional questions. I would now like to turn the call over to Brian McKeon.
spk09: Good morning and welcome to our second quarter earnings call. Today I'll take you through our Q2 results and review our updated financial outlook for 2022. In terms of highlights, continued high levels of IDEX execution drove solid organic revenue growth in Q2 compared to strong prior year results. Overall IDEX revenues increased 6.5% organically, supported by 7% organic growth in CAG diagnostic recurring revenues. Key execution metrics were excellent, reflected in 18% gains in premium instrument placements, continued strong double-digit growth in veterinary software and service revenues, and a nearly 1,100 basis point U.S. CAG diagnostics recurring revenue growth premium to same-store clinical visit levels. For the first half of 2022, overall organic growth was 7.2%, slightly below our expectations for first half growth at the low end of our 7.5% to 10% full-year guidance range. These results reflect relatively increased headwinds from lower year-on-year US clinical visit levels and increased macroeconomic impacts in international regions. Profit results were in line with our expectations, supported by sustained high gross margins. EPS was $1.56 per share in the quarter, including 72 cents of impact from discrete R&D investments and 6 cents of net year-on-year impact from the stronger U.S. dollar. As planned, EPS results reflected high operating expense growth, including the impact of $80 million in discrete R&D investments in the quarter and carryover effects from prior commercial investments. As we look forward to the second half of 2022, we're targeting continued solid organic revenue growth building on the significant expansion of IDEX's business through the pandemic. We've updated our four-year overall organic growth outlook to 5.5% to 8% for 2022, reflecting 6.5% to 9% four-year organic growth in CAG diagnostic recurring revenues. The midpoint of this updated range reflects an outlook for continued solid organic gains in the second half, aided by strong IDEX execution trends and benefits from incremental price increases. As we'll discuss, vet practices continue to work through capacity constraints and the lapping of high 2021 demand levels supported by the significant growth in new pets during the pandemic. Given these factors and a challenging global economic climate, our midpoint organic growth outlook incorporates expectations for continued pressure on clinical visit levels in the second half of 2022. At the low end of our updated growth range, we've also incorporated an additional 2.5% organic growth risk estimate in the second half related to higher potential macroeconomic impacts on demand. Our EPS outlook of $7.77 to $8.05 reflects our updated organic revenue growth estimates and new estimates for foreign exchange effects based on the continued strengthening of the U.S. dollar. It also reflects expectations for sustained strong four-year operating margins, flat to 50 basis points below prior year levels, adjusting for foreign exchange effects, and $80 million in discrete R&D costs in 2022. We'll walk through the details of our updated P&L outlook later in my comments. Let's begin with a review of our second quarter results. Second quarter organic revenue growth of 6.5% was supported by 7% organic gains in our CAG business, and 9% organic growth in our water business. These gains were moderated by a 5% organic decline in LPD revenues, driven primarily by year-on-year impacts related to reduced African swine fever testing in China. CAG diagnostic recurring revenues increased 7% organically in Q2 compared to strong prior year levels, reflecting 8% gains in the U.S. and 5% growth in international regions. Q2 CAG gains were also supported by 8% organic growth in CAG instrument revenues and 14% organic growth in veterinary software and diagnostic imaging revenues, in addition to benefits from the EasyVet acquisition. In terms of U.S. CAG sector demand drivers, sustained healthy trends supporting increased utilization of diagnostics were moderated by relatively increased year-on-year pressure on clinical visit growth. In Q2, same-storey clinical visits were an estimated 3.1% below strong prior year levels. This compares to an updated estimate of 1.4% declines in Q1 and 2.5% to 3% increases in the second half of 2021. Our analysis points to two primary factors driving the recent change in U.S. clinical visit growth trends. Reduction in vet clinic capacity from peak pandemic levels and the continued lapping of the significant step-up in demand for pet healthcare during the pandemic. including benefits from the 10% increase in the pet population in 2020 and 2021. Historically, U.S. clinical visits per practice have grown at approximately 2% to 3% annually, supported by steady vet practice capacity expansion. Between Q1 2020 and Q1 2021, U.S. average clinical visits per practice jumped nearly 13%, and these higher absolute visit levels sustained through 2021. Extraordinary efforts by vets and their staff during the pandemic supported the significant increase in demand for clinical services, including diagnostics. In 2022, U.S. clinical visit capacity pulled back from these high levels, impacted by staffing challenges, reflected in a 2% contraction in average clinical visit levels in the first half of 2022. This has brought implied vet clinic capacity metrics more in line with longer-term expansion trends, while still being below the strong demand in the sector implied by the pet population expansion. We see these specific dynamics as improving over time. However, given the recent pullback in clinic capacity, which continues to be affected by near-term staffing challenges and the lapping of strong underlying demand levels throughout 2021, we believe it's appropriate to plan for continued year-on-year pressure on U.S. clinic visit growth in the second half of this year. Offsetting these near-term growth headwinds is the continued expansion of diagnostics revenue per visit at the clinic level, supported by IDAC's innovation and engagement. While year-on-year clinical visits declined 3% on a same-store basis in Q2, diagnostics revenue per visit expanded nearly 9%, consistent with strong Q1 trends. IDAC's U.S. CAG diagnostics organic recurring revenue growth of 7.6% in Q2 continues to outpace solid sector growth trends, reflected in the 1,070 basis point premium to clinical visit gains. Jay will talk more about how we're driving sustained strong performance on this front in his comments. Globally, IDEXX achieved solid organic revenue gains across our modalities in the second quarter. IDEXX VetLab consumable revenues increased 8% organically, reflecting solid gains across U.S. and international regions. Consumable gains were supported by 15% year-on-year growth in our global premium instrument install base, reflecting double-digit increases across our Catalyst, premium hematology, and CW platforms. CAG premium instrument replacements increased 18% in Q2, reflecting 8% gains in the U.S. and 25% growth internationally, as clinics showed continued confidence in investing towards support of increasing demand for diagnostics globally. The quality of instrument placements continues to be excellent, reflected in 9% growth in new and competitive catalyst placements. ProSite 1 momentum continues to build, supported by our global expansion efforts, reflected in a 64% year-on-year increase in premium hematology placements in the quarter. Rapid assay revenues expanded solidly in Q2 compared to high prior year demand levels. Global rapid asset revenues increased 6% organically, supported by solid volume gains in the U.S., and benefits from net price increases. Global lab revenues increased 6% organically in Q2, as high single-digit growth in the U.S. was moderated by flat organic revenue growth in international regions, reflecting pressure on same-store clinic visit growth in Europe, including increased macroeconomic impacts. Reference lab new business momentum and customer retention remain strong globally. We achieved continued solid net price gains in the quarter globally, with an average 4% growth benefit to U.S. and worldwide CAG-diagnostic recurring revenues in the first half. Our updated outlook includes benefits from additional U.S. CAG price increases implemented in August, reflecting product and service enhancements and inflationary impacts. We estimate incremental price changes will provide an additional 1.5% to 2% and growth benefit to worldwide CAG diagnostic recurring revenues in the second half of 2022. In other areas of our CAG business, veterinary software and diagnostic imaging revenues increased 14% organically and 27% on a reported basis, including benefits from the EasyVet acquisition. Results were supported by double-digit organic gains in recurring software and digital imaging revenues and continued strong momentum in cloud-based software placements. Water revenues increased 9% organically in Q2, reflecting strong performance across regions, including benefits from net price improvements. Livestock, poultry, and dairy revenue decreased 5% organically in Q2. Tough comparisons to high priority revenue levels for African swine fever and core swine testing in China offset moderate overall organic revenue gains in other areas of our LPD business. We've now worked through these comparison impacts and are targeting positive growth in LPD in the second half of this year. Turning to the P&L, Q2 profit results were supported by solid gross profit gains. Gross profit increased 5% in the quarter as reported and 7% on a comparable basis. Gross margins were 59.7% in line with high prior year levels on a comparable basis. Benefits from net price gains, lab productivity initiatives, and improvement in software service gross margins helped offset inflationary effects and impacts from lower LPD revenues. Operating expenses increased 46% year-on-year as reported in the second quarter, and 48% on a comparable basis, including a 35% OPEX growth impact related to $80 million in discrete R&D investments. Operating expense increases reflect carryover impacts from investments advanced in recent quarters related to our expanded global commercial capability. We're planning for moderated operating expense growth in the second half, particularly in the fourth quarter, as we gain leverage from these investments and LAT more favorable year-on-year comparisons. EPS was $1.56 per share, a decrease of 30% on a comparable basis, including a 32% growth impact related to the discrete R&D investment. EPS results included tax benefits of $3 million, or 3 cents per share, related to share-based compensation, which was down 4 cents per share from high prior year levels. Foreign exchange reduced operating profits by $6 million and EPS by 6 cents per share in Q2, net of $6 million in hedge gains. Free cash flow was $36 million in the second quarter. On a trailing 12-month basis, our net income to free cash flow conversion rate was 66%. For the full year, we continue to estimate free cash flow conversion of 65% to 70%. This outlook reflects approximately 5% of free cash flow conversion impact from the discrete R&D investments, modestly higher inventory levels to sustain high levels of product availability, and higher deferred tax assets. We're maintaining our full-year outlook for capital spending of $180 million, including approximately $50 million for our new manufacturing warehouse expansion project. Our balance sheet remains in a strong position. We ended the quarter with leverage ratios of 1.4 times gross and 1.3 times net of cash. We allocated $314 million of capital to repurchase 809,000 shares in Q2. We intend to continue to support our share repurchase program and leverage our strong balance sheet as appropriate on this front. Our financial outlook assumes capital allocation to share repurchases aligned with a consistent net leverage ratio, supporting a projected 2% full-year reduction in share count. Turning to our 2022 full-year P&L outlook, we're lowering our full-year organic revenue growth range by 2% to reflect first-half performance, recent CAG sector trends, and to incorporate potential additional impacts from macroeconomic factors at the lower end of our guidance range. We're also adjusting our reported revenue growth outlook for the recent strengthening of the U.S. dollar and updating our EPS outlook to incorporate current expectations for foreign exchange impacts and projected changes in interest rates. Our updated full-year revenue growth range of $3.305 million to $3.385 million reflects an $80 to $85 million reduction compared to earlier estimates. This includes a $20 million adjustment related to the recent strengthening of the U.S. dollar. We now project foreign exchange will reduce year-on-year revenue growth by 3% to 3.5% for the full year, with approximately 4.5% of year-on-year headwinds expected in Q3. As noted, we've updated the full-year organic revenue growth outlook to 5.5% to 8%. This reflects a full-year CAG-diagnostic organic recurring revenue growth outlook of 6.5% to 9%. Our updated CAG-diagnostic recurring revenue outlook implies second-half organic gains of 5% to 10%. The midpoint of our outlook for H2 reflects CAG-diagnostic organic recurring revenue growth of 7.5%, or 8% normalized for equivalent days' effects, which we estimate will reduce Q3 revenue growth by approximately 1%. Supporting this outlook are benefits from price increases we're advancing in the second half of 2022, which we estimate will provide 1.5% to 2% of additional benefit to worldwide H2 CAG diagnostic recurring revenue growth, building on first half gains of approximately 4%. Net of this incremental price benefit, the midpoint growth outlook for the second half of 2022 is consistent with the global sector growth trends exiting Q2, and reflects expectations for sustained high IDEX CAG growth premiums supported by continued strong IDEX commercial execution. The lower end of our second half growth outlook factors in an additional 2.5% organic growth risk estimate related to higher potential macroeconomic impacts on demand. A 5% second half growth rate for CAG diagnostic recurring revenues would align with the low end of growth impact seen in the last recessionary period. The higher end of our growth outlook for the second half targets improved 10% CAG diagnostic recurring revenue growth supported by strong IDEX execution and price increase benefits, but will require an improvement in recent clinical visit growth trends. At our updated revenue growth rates, we're now planning for full-year operating margins of 26.4% to 26.9%, an adjustment of approximately 50 basis points from our last outlook. This reflects a projected 210 to 260 basis point decrease on a reported basis compared to strong 2021 performance, including approximately 230 basis points of margin impact related to discrete R&D investments. Adjusted for the discrete R&D investments and approximately 20 basis points of year-on-year net margin benefit from foreign exchange hedges, the high end of this outlook reflects updated goals for relatively flat, operating margin gains in 2022 compared to strong prior year levels. The four-year operating margin outlook has supported the goals to deliver solid comparable operating margin gains in H2. We're targeting flat to modest comparable operating margin increases in Q3 and higher levels of improvement in Q4 as we benefit from higher net price realization, cost management efforts, and the lapping of prior year stepped up investment levels. Our updated EPS outlook is $70.77 to $8.05 per share, including the 72-cent impact from the discrete R&D investments. This represents a decrease of 32 cents per share at midpoint, including 5 cents of impact from higher projected interest rates and 3 cents of additional headwind related to FX. For the full year at our midpoint outlook, we estimate foreign exchange will reduce full-year operating profits by $23 million and EPS by 21 cents per share. This is net of an estimated $26 million or 23 cents per share benefit from projected 2022 hedge gains. We provided details on our updated estimates in the tables in our press release and earnings snapshot. That concludes our financial review. I'll now turn the call over to Jay for his comments.
spk06: Thank you, Brian, and good morning. IDEX delivered another quarter of solid growth supported by excellent execution by our global IDEX teams. Demand for pet health care remains high, building on the step function and sector growth of pets and patient visits during the pandemic. IDEX is a diagnostics and software partner of choice of veterinary clinicians. This was reflected in record second quarter premium instrument placements, continued high growth in cloud-based PIMS placements, and a sustained IDEX CAG diagnostics recurring revenue growth premium to clinical visit growth. Our products support veterinarians by creating an integrated clinic-wide solution that helps them expand capacity and grow their businesses while providing diagnostic insights that support high levels of pet healthcare. The solid results that IDEX delivered in the quarter, despite some headwinds from near-term clinical visit growth and international macro factors, reinforce our confidence in the durability and long-term growth potential of our business, aligned with increasing care standards for companion animals. Today, I'll discuss our performance and progress in the context of current sector trends in advancing key innovation and commercial initiatives that position us for continued solid growth and financial performance. Let me start by providing some updated context on trends in the companion animal sector. Cag sector trends continue to reflect strong global demand for veterinary services, building on a significant step up in the number of pets and patient visits observed during the pandemic. U.S. diagnostics revenue per practice grew 6% during the second quarter against a very strong prior year base as veterinarians used diagnostics to deliver best care standards while benefiting from profitable clinical services growth. IDEX grew U.S. CAG diagnostics recurring revenue nearly 8%, two points faster, validating the value we bring with differentiated solutions and an excellent customer experience. Specifically, diagnostics remains one of the faster-growing areas of the veterinary clinic, continuing to outpace both total practice revenue growth and clinical revenue growth on a same-store basis. U.S. diagnostics revenue growth per practice of 6% in the quarter, as noted, was once again driven by positive contribution from both diagnostics frequency and utilization. Diagnostics frequency and utilization gains were both above pre-pandemic trends, even off a much higher base. As highlighted in the airing snapshot, clinical use of diagnostics per visit expanded by revenue nearly 9% in the quarter, offsetting headwinds from lower clinical visits. We continue to make progress on initiatives that drive future diagnostics recurring revenue. We saw increased adoption of our U.S. preventive care program, where we provide a turnkey diagnostic solution to wellness care with approximately 225 new enrollments. the largest quarter of enrollment since late 2020. We're also seeing continued momentum across global regions related to the adoption of IDEXX platforms, reflected in 25% growth in international premium instrument placements, including the successful expansion of our ProSciOne platform. These strong areas of progress have been moderated by year-on-year pressure on clinical visit trends. reflects a combination of impacts from pullback and capacity levels following a period of significant demand expansion, including the step-up in visits related to the 10% expansion of the pet population during the pandemic. In the U.S., for example, clinics were open around 50% of weekend days in Q2, compared to an average of almost 60% pre-pandemic. We're also seeing some impacts from macroeconomic pressures, particularly in Europe. We think it's prudent to plan on continued year-on-year growth impacts on these fronts in the second half of 2022. Recent research we performed in the US and Germany shows that a majority of veterinarians indicate staff capacity is a major or moderate issue, while also indicating they see continued higher demand for appointments. As Brian indicated, we are well positioned with clinics in working through these dynamics over time to address what is likely underserved demand for pet health care in a significantly expanded global pet population. As we work through these near-term headwinds, we're targeting solid organic growth overall in the second half, building momentum that will keep us on track towards our long-term growth goals. Let's now discuss our ongoing progress in key areas of our growth strategy. A key factor in enabling IVICs to drive strong utilization of diagnostics within the sector Zydex's decades-long focus on building and supporting a world-class commercial team to execute our high-touch model. These capabilities, along with significant new product introductions over the last several years, help our customers grow faster and continue to support strong commercial results. This is reflected in record instrument and software placements, strong EVI gains, sustained solid net new business gains, and very high customer retention levels. These results demonstrate the market development benefits of pairing commercial capabilities with highly relevant innovative products. Our sales professionals have shown an ability to maintain and leverage their deep relationships with customers to support these performance levels, despite challenges related to staff capacity. U.S. account manager in-person visits are now over 70% approaching desired in-state goals. International access was also excellent at close to 70%. where international growth is a strategic priority, and we're applying the successful U.S. playbook to drive strong placements and new business gains. The second quarter represented continued progress against this strategy, with solid year-over-year growth in customer adoption across modalities in Europe. Meanwhile, onboarding and integration of the six country-level commercial expansions have been completed and have gone extremely well. We look forward to ongoing future benefits from these expansions. as we work through macro-driven headwinds in regions like Europe, which are constraining near-term organic gains. The international opportunity to drive diagnostics utilization is tremendous and largely underpenetrated, as shared at last year's Investor Day. Our advancing global commercial capability and product innovations that fit the requirements of these regions are positioning us to realize significant opportunities over long horizons. Putting the right products in the hands of our capable sales professionals drives continued growth in instrument placements with the resulting highly profitable future consumable streams. Customers, on a global basis, have never been hungrier for technology that supports care workflow optimization, excellent clinical performance, and friction-free use. A key piece of our in-house analyzer portfolio is ProSciOne, the innovative, customer-friendly hematology analyzer which launched last year and has already surpassed an installed base of over 5,000 units. Reception and adoption of ProSite1 has been exceptional, particularly in international regions where many veterinarians were trained to run hematology diagnostics first when doing a basic workup on a patient. We had excellent growth in ProSite1 placements across regions in the second quarter and continued high levels of customer satisfaction and retention. supporting the expansion of our global premium hematology installed base aligned to the approximately 4,000 placements annually as shared in last year's Investor Day. This progress is integral in addressing the estimated opportunity for 200,000 worldwide premium instrument placements. In addition to these targeted investments in enhanced commercial capabilities, technology and product innovation is another key pillar of IDEXA's growth strategy. as we endeavor to add value to our product and service offerings. In Q2, we announced three upcoming laboratory tests and service launches. We have a shared mission with our customers to deliver a higher standard of pet health care, and these new products and services support that care delivery through timely and highly accurate diagnostics insights. These innovations also enable our customers to do so in an efficient way by using the IDEX reference lab as an extension of the veterinary clinic. which is a key benefit given the current capacity constraints within our sector. These innovations include, number one, expanding fecal BX antigen testing to include the detection of flea tapeworm, the most common type of tapeworm to infect dogs and cats. With this addition, IDEX's fecal BX antigen test detects up to five times more common and prevalent parasites than fecal flotation alone and provides customers with earlier diagnostic insights. This will drive even greater progress towards the goal we shared at Investor Day in 2018 of an incremental $120 million in fecal antigen revenues by 2023. Number two, the addition of FGF23, a kidney disease management biomarker that will provide clinicians, along with the use of SCMA, not only earlier diagnostic signs of chronic kidney disease, but will deliver more confident recommendations for targeted therapy during earlier stages of chronic kidney disease. And number three, a new service of PCR direct testing, which provides U.S. reference lab customers with crucial, timely access to next-day PCR results, enabled by a new PCR laboratory at our Louisville reference labs. The addition of these tests and services support our customers in delivering improved pet health care, and ways in which an IDEX partnership adds long-term increasing value for our customers. In addition to the development of highly relevant, accurate new testing products, IDEX's innovation focus is also on our broad portfolio of software services, including multiple cloud-native PIMs and a variety of tools to manage clinic workflow, like FatRadar, TechConnect+, payment processing solutions, and WebPACs. When combined, these products can create a powerful, connected ecosystem within the veterinary clinic, which not only improves access to and communication of diagnostic insights, but also provides efficiency benefits around the clinic and at each step of the patient visit process. The rapid uptake of IDEXX cloud-based solutions is a reflection of this. Customers understand that modern software tools reduce manual work and increase capacity for clinic staff to focus on higher-order patient-centered tasks. This higher standard of care is further supported by clinical decision support on VetConnect Plus, which leverages machine learning to offer suggested next steps aligned with care protocols. A great example of this is our enhanced 40X Plus introduction, where we not only improved upon our gold standard anaplasma assay, but added a vector-borne disease clinical decision support module and made significant enhancements to workflow by doubling product shelf life and room temperature storage. We're also seeing incremental follow-up tests for customers engaging with clinical decision support, and we'll share with you at the upcoming Investor Day promising early results. Customers clearly appreciate these benefits, as we saw another quarter of record PIMS global placements, supported by continued strong demand for cloud-based offerings. EasyVet, in particular, continues to experience strong growth since joining the IDEC software family. with second quarter placements consistent with the prior quarter at 28% higher than the previous year. These cloud-based solutions enable customers to shift their focus from maintaining on-premise hardware to providing excellent patient care, while also benefiting IDEX through growth of a highly profitable recurring revenue stream in the future. We continue to be very pleased with the advancement of our long-term strategy to integrate diagnostics and software that help IDEX customers grow faster. Underpinning our growing commercial and technology capabilities is a commitment to providing world-class levels of service to our customers, which is integral to earning our customers' business every day, especially given the high levels of demand within the sector. Strong execution against this commitment takes many forms, from consistently high product availability rates to reliable turnaround times at our reference labs. The high service levels IDEX delivered in the second quarter, including greater than 99% product availability, demonstrates the benefit of our long-term focus on building supply chain capabilities in highly scaled manufacturing centers. Our recently communicated U.S. mid-year price increase reflects higher costs to run the business, including investments in our supply chain to ensure excellent levels of product continuity and future network resiliency. Given this, IDEX is well-positioned to manage through supply chain and inflationary dynamics while building on our strong long-term financial performance. This concludes our review. IDEXX's execution levels remain strong and align towards our significant and enduring long-term growth potential. We're well positioned to deliver solid growth and financial results as we advance our mission to create a better future for animals, people, and our planet. I'm thankful to our more than 10,000 colleagues for their ongoing dedication to our efforts. They are integral in delivering strong financial performance for the company and creating long-term value, while also supporting the advancement of animal care globally. To those listening in on the call, I'd like to extend a heartfelt thanks in making a meaningful difference to the world. Before we open the line for Q&A, I'd like to remind you that my senior management team and I will provide more information on the IDEC strategy and long-term potential at our upcoming Investor Day. After two years of holding the event virtually, we look forward to hosting the event at our global headquarters in Westbrook, Maine, on Thursday, August 11th from 8 to noon. while also live streaming and recording the event via IDEXX.com for those who cannot make it in person. Participating will be members of my senior management team, including Dr. Tina Hunt, Executive Vice President and GM for Point of Care Diagnostics and Worldwide Operations, Julie Gelden, Vice President and GM for Global Rapid Assay, Mike Lane, Executive Vice President and GM for Reference Laboratories and Information Technology, Michael Schreck, Senior Vice President and GM of veterinary software and services, Jim Polowacek, Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer, and Brian McKean, Executive Vice President and CFO. We're also excited to host a live customer conversation led by George Fennell, Senior Vice President and GM of the Americas CAG customer-facing organization to discuss recent trends at the clinic level and how IDEX has supported their business during these dynamic times. The event will last approximately four hours. and we'll conclude with a Q&A session and an investor lunch with the extended management team. So with that, we'll end the prepared section of the call and open the line for Q&A.
spk04: Thank you. We will now begin our question and answer session. If you have a question, please press 0, then 1 on your touchtone phone. If you wish to be removed from the queue, please press 0, then 2. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up the handset first before pressing the numbers. Once again, if you have a question, please press zero, then one. And we have our first question from Michael Riskin with Bank of America.
spk02: Great. Thanks, Drew.
spk04: Pardon me, sir. You're drifting from the mic. We cannot hear you.
spk02: Is that better? Hello?
spk04: There you go. Thank you.
spk02: Okay. Great. Thanks. Sorry about that. I want to ask on the pricing side of things first, just because we've got a lot of questions on that. Am I understanding correctly that the incremental price you're taking that you called out in August, the 1.5% to 2%, that's on top of the 4% you took in the first half? And then just sort of how much price do you think you can take until you start seeing a little bit of a pushback? Is this some price you're pulling forward from 23 in a sense? Just wondering the dynamics there, especially as you talk about weak macro and just uncertain conditions elsewhere.
spk09: Thanks for the question, Mike. Just on the first part, that's correct. So we had approximately a 4% increase in the U.S. and worldwide in the first half, and the 1.5% to 2% we anticipate will be an incremental worldwide benefit, so that would apply 5.5% to 6%. for the second half. I'll let Jay talk to the customer dimension.
spk06: Yeah, so, you know, qualitatively, as Brian indicated, the price increase was really, I think, a reflection of higher costs of running the business. And, you know, to your question around pet owner, you know, pushback, we don't think that that's been a driver to date. You know, in fact, you know, pet owners – have traditionally prioritized pet healthcare spend relative to other things. It's a small percentage of total consumable consumer expenditures, so it's a relatively small piece, and we know the human pet owner demand has been strong and growing, and we don't expect that to change.
spk02: And can I ask a follow-up on the The vet visit growth he talked about, obviously we're all tracking a lot of the same indicators and we're seeing how 2Q came in relative to the first quarter. He talked about all the gains in terms of capacity for vet visits in 2020 and 2021. After, you know, first of all, what's your assumption for vet visit for the rest of the year? If I'm backing into the numbers correctly, you're assuming gradual improvement from 2Q, but still sort of like negative for the second half of the year. I want to make sure that's correct. And then at the end of this year, are we normalized then for the gains we made in 21? Or is there more headwinds in 2023? Is there, you know, are we back to a normal level and then can grow next year off of this in terms of vet visits? Or is there still some more digesting of this capacity next year? Thanks.
spk09: So Mike, why don't I walk you through kind of how we're thinking about the outlook analytically and can try to link that back to the underlying sector trends. But just as a grounding, in Q2, the clinical visits year on year were down 3%. The revenue per clinical visit was very strong, was up 8.5%, and that's a very positive indicator we think we can build on. But I think the clinical visit levels, as you pointed out, were down relatively to Q1, and were, I would say, modestly softer than that at the end of the quarter. So as we looked at the midpoint for the second half, If you take the 7.5% midpoint on CAGDX recurring, there's a day's headwind of 1% in Q3. So if we normalize for that, that's 8%. And then if you back off the 1.5% to 2% incremental pricing, it comes out to 6% to 6.5%. So we're basically forecasting that the underlying trends in the sector coming out of Q2 are similar in the second half and that we get incremental benefit from pricing. And the underlying assumptions there are that we're still working through the pullback in capacity that occurred with fed clinics earlier this year. As I mentioned in my comments, there was a big step up from Q1 2020 to Q1 2021, 13%. That sustained throughout 2021. And then we saw about a 2% pullback in the average visit level in the first half of the year. So that is something that We, given just ongoing staffing challenges, we think we're still going to be working through that this year. And we're still working through the very strong demand compares to the step up last year, including the benefits from the pet population expansion. So to the latter part of your question, we do think we'll be working through those headwinds, you know, through this year. And those should improve, those specific factors should improve as we head into 2023, but we're we're trying to be realistic on kind of just the near-term trends and the headwinds given the dynamics that we continue to see through P2, and we think that's prudently reflected in our outlook.
spk06: Yeah, the other thing I would add to that, Mike, is if you take a look at the net expansion in the number of pets through the pandemic, I mean, I think there's some evidence that there's a potential underserved demand given this 10% growth. If you take a look at just extrapolate out the 2% to 3% clinical visit trend we saw pre-pandemic and add in the number of pets. The clinical visits should be higher just based on pet population. So I think as the profession works through some of the capacity constraints that we've talked about, I think we'll see a recovery from there.
spk04: We have our next question from Chris Schott with J.P. Morgan.
spk10: Great. Thanks so much. I was just trying to get a little bit of clarification on the guidance change as we're trying to dissect, I guess, this vet visit growth dynamic versus some of the softening demand you referenced in Europe. So can you just maybe quantify how much of the 200 basis point or so change in organic guidance is from those two factors? And maybe just then elaborating on the macroeconomic side, where are you seeing the greatest impacts here? Is this kind of broadly across Europe or are you seeing specific markets that are seeing It's greater pressures than elsewhere. Thanks so much.
spk09: Chris, thanks for your question. The adjustment that we made is principally to reflect the more recent trends we're seeing both in the U.S. and in Europe, principally around the visit trends. I think our execution levels have remained quite strong. We feel good about that. I think the underlying revenue per visit utilization dynamics, as you can see in the metrics, are are holding up well, and we think we can build on that. But the adjustment is principally to reflect the more recent trends, which were more aligned with the lower end of the outlook. Going back to our earlier guidance, we had talked about the lower end reflecting that some of the pressures continue on visits, and that's what we've seen through the second quarter, and we think we're Adjusting for that appropriately, I think we're reflecting in the full range that there's some opportunity for improvement in the second half. I think that, to Jay's point, I think there's underlying demand that we believe is out there, and that if the clinics can adapt and improve the capacity dynamics, I think that that could be a positive factor. And, of course, we're trying to highlight that there's some potential for additional macro risk that's more difficult to calibrate, but I think we're... cognizant that that could be a factor as well. So on balance, I think we think we're appropriately adjusting the outlook and reflecting the more recent trends.
spk06: Yeah, let me just, you know, maybe directly address your question around geographic balance. So we've done a number of different surveys, both in the U.S. and in Germany as our largest country in Europe. And what we're seeing is the majority of veterinarians indicate that staff capacity is a major or moderate issue. Not to say the macro effects, especially in Europe, we're seeing some impact from that, primarily more so on the reference labs than in clinic testing. And not surprising when you consider some of the factors that our European sector and regions are dealing with in terms of inflation and energy and the Ukraine-Russian war is much closer to that.
spk04: Our next question is from Erin Wright with Morgan Stanley.
spk01: Great, thanks. Another question on the macro. If I heard you correctly here, I guess you mentioned that the lower end of the guidance embeds a growth expectation similar to what you experienced during the prior economic downturns here, but what's the difference across your business now versus, for instance, 08-09 that would make you I guess, more or less insulated from a more challenging economic backdrop here. And as I think about what was going on during that time, for instance, the Catalyst DX launch, those initiatives may be leaving you differently positioned than maybe you would going into a tougher economic backdrop, particularly here in the U.S.
spk06: Thanks. Good morning, Eric. Thanks for the question. Yeah, I think we're in a much stronger position than we were back in 2008, 2009. And a couple, I think, very important dimensions. Our sales shadow, we worked through distributors over a decade ago, and now we have a direct presence in a 99% loss from a revenue standpoint. So we have those direct relationships with customers. Our portfolio, from an innovation standpoint, is much more robust across the board, both reference labs, in clinic, software for example so I think we offer veterinarians a lot more tools and technology to help manage their practices I think if anything that head owner pet bond has grown and is stronger than it was you know a decade ago and I think the industry itself the profession itself is more sophisticated in managing food cycles I think they're you know they are have adopted a number of, I think, business practices, whether it's individual practices or the corporately-owned practices in terms of managing care. So I think we're overall in a much stronger position than we were.
spk01: Okay, great. Thanks. And then can you give us an update on innovation? And I'm sure we'll hear about this at the Investor Day, but How do you think about the recent discrete R&D investments that you made as well as the innovation that you called out in your prepared remarks here? And when will these efforts generate material contributions for you, and will this ultimately help bridge the gap between the macro capacity kind of headwinds that you could see and continue to see in your historical long-term growth rate? Thanks.
spk06: Yeah, so from an innovation standpoint, I think we've never been – you know, more productive if you look out over the last couple of years and the, you know, the type of innovations really across the board from instrumentation, testing, services, software. So if you take a look at the instrumentation piece, you know, ProSite 1 has just been an incredible success. Our customers, I think, have responded exceptionally well to it. They love the fact that it's very easy to use. The performance is very high and it's priced from an economic standpoint. in the sweet spot of the marketplace. So we've seen really dramatic uptake in our international regions, which is not surprising. A lot of those countries or regions are really hematology-first marketplaces. And the nice thing about hematology is it's hard to do. It's really hard to do well, and there's a multiplier impact. Typically, we sell with chemistry increasingly with SETI view. as part of in-clinic suites. And then on the software front, I think we're all familiar with the challenges that practices are facing from a workflow and staff productivity and client communication standpoint. So I think practices which have traditionally relied on on-premise software solutions are looking at contemporary cloud-based solutions as a way to address some of those challenges, and we've seen really rapid uptake in our cloud-based PIMS portfolio, whether it's EasyVet or DL or Anima in some of our country and regions internationally. From a testing standpoint, we continue to, as I mentioned in my remarks for reference lots, we've had a number of important introductions over the last couple of months, and especially in fecal antigen. with fleet tapeworms, expanding the portfolio for that. It's a fast-growing, I think, very important franchise that we have. It detects up to five times as much compared to flotation or OMP. So it's an important part of the overall reference labs because customers, when they use preventive care panels, a fecal is a piece of it, but an important piece of it. I think testing is either anchored or driven by the need for fecal. So overall, we're very excited. We're excited by the licensing agreements that we struck, and we'll continue to provide updates on that over time, including at Invest Today. So look forward to being able to talk more about that.
spk04: Thank you. As a reminder, if you have a question, please press 0, then 1 on your touchtone phone. Our next question comes from John Block with Stifel.
spk07: Thanks, guys. Good morning. Both questions might be centered around price in some way, but when I think about the DX recurring growth XPRIZE, for 2022, it looks like it's shaking out around 300 BIP. So, in other words, the 8% CAG DX recurring midpoint guidance is Less roughly 500 basis points a full year price, Brian, if I've got that correct. And historically, it had been closer to 1,000 BIPs, give or take. You'd been growing CAGDX recurring around 12%, and price was closer to 200 to 300 BIPs. So maybe some color on that compression of call it growth X price. Is there anything to call out other than comps such as less incremental contribution or from innovation or maybe what you're even seeing from a market share perspective for that rate of compression?
spk09: John, I'm trying to follow your map, but I think that we're not signaling a fundamental compression and the underlying kind of growth in excess of kind of visit levels, excluding kind of price changes. I think we've got a benefit this year. We're roughly 1,100 basis point premium in the U.S. in the first half, with 4% pricing, that would imply, you know, kind of closer to the higher end of that 900 to 1,000 basis point range that we saw pre-pandemic. And our outlook for the year, you know, underlying it, we're not specifically forecasting clinical visit growth, but it's more of the trends that we saw coming out of Q2 would imply consistently kind of high levels, and we're not trying to signal a compression on that front. So I think we're You know, that's something that we need to continue to execute well against. You know, I think that that can be impacted by consumer factors at the margin, so I don't want to say that those are, you know, things that we're not, you know, considering, but I think our midpoint outlook signals that we think we can continue to deliver well on that front and get some additional benefit from some pricing, and that'll support our solid four-year numbers and second-half numbers.
spk07: Okay. And maybe just to clarify, you know, Brian, it might be the same answer, then we can move on. But I'm not talking about, you know, I guess maybe for once, I'm not talking about the premium to underlying clinical visits. I'm just looking at your CagDx recurring midpoints around, you know, 8% growth. You've got a 500 basis point contribution from price. So CagDx X price is around 300 basis points. And previously, it had been 900 basis points or 1,000, right? Your CAGDX was growing 12%. Your price was 200 to 300 basis points. So why, if we normalize for the contribution from price and we throw that out, the growth just looks like a fraction this year versus prior years? And I'm guessing some of that's attributable to the comps is sort of where I'm going with it. But are there other components to it where, you're getting less of an incremental contribution from innovation or less market share gains. That's sort of where I was going with it, just to clarify. And again, it might be the same answer. We can move on, but hopefully that was a better question, if you would.
spk09: Yeah, John, it's personally the swing in the clinical visit growth. I mean, we're growing 3% and declining 3% in Q3. So that's 600 basis points. I mean, I think our underlying execution and Delivery has been quite good. And the swing in that is, as we mentioned, two factors. It's the pullback in the clinic capacity after a significant period of expansion that, in retrospect, the clinics couldn't sustain. And, you know, I think we believe can adapt to that over time. And I think that we've got, you know, we are lapping some of the step up on the you know, the big step up in demand we saw in the pandemic, including the benefits from the new patient expansion. So I think for 2022, that's kind of the key factor that we've been working through. That's the key adjustment in our four-year outlook this year. We obviously had to make some changes, and this is the change in trend from the second half of 2021, but that change in the visit level is the clinical visit growth level is the key. difference in terms of where we're going.
spk07: That's helpful. I've got that swinging 400 BEPS plus two to minus two and X price compressing six to 700 BEPS, but it gets me a lot closer and I could follow up offline. So that's why I was asking about market share and innovation. Maybe just to shift gears and the second question still in and around price. I'm just curious, Brian, is it uniform across all your CAG modalities in terms of consumables, lab, And more importantly, are your competitors following on price for both the point of care and reference lab? And if they're not, you know, what does that say, if anything, about your ability to take the same rate of price increase, the same magnitude into 2023? Thanks.
spk06: Yeah, John, this was across consumables and reference up, not capital. And it was a, you know, primarily a U.S. driven change.
spk07: sorry, Jay point of K not, I didn't ask capital point of care in the reference lab. So across all your, your modalities of CAG DX recurring and have your competitors followed suit the best of your knowledge. And if not, what does it say about your ability to take president?
spk06: We don't have any, we don't have any insight in terms of, you know, what competitors are competitive, you know, landscape is up to. Okay.
spk09: It is reflective of the, the overall inflationary environment. So I think that, um, That's a broader factor that I think everyone in the industry is dealing with. Fair enough. Thank you.
spk04: We have our next question from Elliot Wilber with Raymond James.
spk05: Thanks. Good morning. I understand granularity on XUS visit trends is a little bit more difficult to attain, but just wondering if you could comment in general whether or not seeing the same level of deceleration in in clinic visit trends, ex-US versus US, any perspective on that? And then more specifically on the performance or relative performance, US versus ex-US in the reference lab business, differential in growth rate, is this purely just a function of difference in clinic visit trends or are there other factors that continue to lead to the substantial overperformance in the U.S. versus international, such as price and utilization. Thanks.
spk06: Yeah, to your point, to your question, you know, visibility internationally. So we don't have the same size PIMs installed base, you know, across the different, you know, regions. So we don't have that type of pinpoint accuracy. We do In North America, you know, I would say that we're seeing similar trends based on, you know, other data. I think it's, you know, a reflection of some of the same capacity challenges in the practices because we know during the pandemic, we saw the same pet boom in countries like, you know, UK, Germany, Australia, you know, what have you. You know, I think the, you know, I think the overall effect factor we see internationally, specifically in Europe, is we do see some of the macro impacts that does impact reference labs more so than point of care, not surprisingly. There's not as big a wellness or preventive care business internationally, but it's probably 20% or so of the visits, and that's primarily a reference lab modality. So we do see some headwinds connected to that.
spk04: We have our last question from Ryan Daniels with William Blair.
spk08: Yeah, thanks for taking the question, guys. I want to take a little bit of a different approach and get any insights you have on what type of IT investments you can make in the near or intermediate term to help your customers increase capacity. So I'm thinking things like digital intake platforms or self-service billing, et cetera. Is that... a high priority for you, and do you think that's something that can actually help with throughput for your customers and alleviate some of this pressure?
spk06: Good morning, Ryan. We see pretty much across the board, whether it's independent practices or corporate practices, an incredible hunger for those type of IT tools, not just PIN systems, but PIN systems which provide the PIN or engagement modules which allow them for – If you take a step back, about 15%, what practice owners tell us, about 15% of their staff time is focused on just that patient intake piece and administration of the patient. And a lot of that can be automated. A lot of that could be done virtually like it's done in other industries. So the ability to use and deploy these software tools for client communications, for workflow optimization in every step of the patient visit is a high priority for these practices. And we're seeing that in our software business, where we've seen very rapid growth. And I think historically, practices have been somewhat hesitant to move away from PIM systems because their data and nets, they've been trained on it. They have all the reports on it, but they're willing to make that switch now because they see the benefits of what a modern software suite can bring. I think that's only going to get stronger over time as they work to address some of the capacity challenges. With that, I'd like to thank everybody on the phone for their participation. this morning and IDEX employees listening. I'd like to just say thank you for your continued devotion to our purpose, your unwavering engagement to enable us to continuously execute at a very high level and support our customers despite the unpredictable and evolving dynamics in our sector and around the world. I'm thankful for your excellent effort and look forward to continuing our strong momentum through the rest of 2022. And so with that, we'll conclude the call. Thank you.
spk04: Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes our conference. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
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