DexCom Q2 2024 Earnings Report $67.39 +1.25 (+1.89%) As of 04:00 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast DexCom EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.43Consensus EPS $0.39Beat/MissBeat by +$0.04One Year Ago EPS$0.34DexCom Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.00 billionExpected Revenue$1.04 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$32.90 millionYoY Revenue Growth+15.30%DexCom Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date7/25/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, July 25, 2024Conference Call Time4:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsDexCom's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 1, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 7:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryDXCM ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by DexCom Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 25, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 18 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the DexCom Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Release Conference Call. My name is Abby, and I'll be your operator for today's call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session. As a reminder, the conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:25I will now turn the call over to Sean Christensen. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:31Thank you, Abby, and welcome to DexCom's Q2 2024 Earnings Call. Our agenda begins with Kevin Sayer, DexCom's Chairman, President and CEO, who will summarize our recent highlights and ongoing strategic initiatives, followed by a financial review and outlook from Jeremy Silvane, our Chief Financial Officer. Following our prepared remarks, we will open the call up for your questions. At that time, we ask analysts to limit themselves to one question each, so we can provide an opportunity for everyone participating today. Please note that there are also slides available related to our Q2 2024 performance on the DexCom Investor Relations website on the Events and Presentations page. Speaker 100:01:05With that, let's review our Safe Harbor statement. Some of the statements we will make on today's call may constitute forward looking statements. These statements reflect management's intentions, beliefs and expectations about future events, strategies, competition, products, operating plans and performance. All forward looking statements included on this call are made as of the date hereof based on information currently available to DexCom, are subject to various risks and uncertainties, and actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in the forward looking statements. The factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by any of these forward looking statements are details in DexCom's annual report on Form 10 ks, most recent quarterly report on Form 10 Q and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Speaker 100:01:50Except as required by law, we assume no obligation to update any such forward looking statements after the date of this call or to conform these forward looking statements to actual results. Additionally, during the call, we will discuss certain financial measures that have not been prepared in accordance with GAAP. Unless otherwise noted, all references to financial measures on this call are presented on a non GAAP basis. This non GAAP information should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for results or superior to results prepared in accordance with GAAP. Please refer to the tables in our earnings release and the slides accompanying our Q2 earnings call for a reconciliation of these measures to their most directly comparable GAAP financial measure. Speaker 100:02:27Now, I will turn it over to Kevin. Speaker 200:02:30Thank you, Sean, and thank you, everyone, for joining us. Before we begin discussing Q2 results, let me state that overall category demand remains strong and awareness of the value of CGM across the metabolic health spectrum continues to accelerate. This trend was evident at the recent American Diabetes Association Conference, which featured DexCom's largest evidence to date in the non insulin type 2 space. Dexcom research demonstrated significant A1C reduction in multiple studies as well as real world evidence showing a time in range increase of greater than 4 hours per day for nearly 4,000 customers using DexCom CGM at 1 year. We are leveraging several pathways of evidence generation to ensure that we are maximizing our market opportunity into the future as our CGM systems become increasingly tailored to the unique needs of each customer. Speaker 200:03:19Despite the positive progress on these fronts, we saw 3 near term trends emerge over the course of the Q2 that drove results below our expectations. First, as we've worked through our U. S. Sales force realignment expansion, we have seen our share of new customers fall short of our expectations, despite still strong absolute customer additions. 2nd, our U. Speaker 200:03:40S. Revenue per customer has stepped down faster than expected based on 2 primary drivers, rebate eligibility and channel mix. With G7 coverage emerging faster than expected, we realized greater rebate eligibility relative to initial expectations and compared to 2023 levels. While we believe this enhanced G7 coverage has helped facilitate new customer starts as mentioned above, the pace of these starts did not allow us to offset the temporary impact from this rebate eligibility. We expect the impact of this rebate eligibility dynamic will reach its peak in the Q3 and Jeremy will provide specific color on the Q3 expectations shortly. Speaker 200:04:18Beyond the transitory G7 eligibility dynamic, we also saw revenue per customer impacted by U. S. Channel mix dynamics. U. S. Speaker 200:04:26Customer growth has remained strong in our pharmacy business as we expand our reach into primary care and type 2 diabetes more broadly. However, our growth in the DME channel has trailed our plan. The DME distributors remain important partners for us in our business and we have not executed well this quarter against these partnerships. We need to refocus on those relationships. Finally, our international performance was also lighter than expectations in the quarter. Speaker 200:04:51While we delivered strong performance in some of our core markets such as the UK and France, we saw category growth soften in certain geographies as Type 1 penetration advances in these regions. We continue to see a significant runway ahead across our international footprint, particularly as we drive greater access for people with type 2 diabetes. To account for these trends and appropriately reflect our base assumption, we've lowered our full year revenue guidance to 11% to 13% organic growth. We have higher expectations for our business than what we experienced this quarter. We believe we have an incredible product, an incredible future pipeline and an unparalleled market opportunity. Speaker 200:05:30We also have a great team capable of leading this market. I expect more from myself and more from my team going forward. So what are we doing to enhance our competitive position and reestablish momentum? It starts with our product portfolio, which we continue to strengthen to put our field sales team in a great position with clinicians. In the Q2, we expanded our direct to Apple Watch connectivity with G7, launching in the U. Speaker 200:05:53S. And several additional international markets with this feature that has been among our most requested for several years. We expanded the international launch of the DexCom 1 Plus system now reaching 18 international markets with our smaller G7 form factor for our DexCom 1 users. We've built upon the performance of G7 making it even better. This includes a continuation of our monthly cadence of software updates, which included the Q2 additions of medication logging and the ability to ingest activity data into our G7 app. Speaker 200:06:23We've introduced a stronger adhesive to support our customers into the summer months and we expanded the G7 Bluetooth connectivity range by more than 65%. We advanced DexCom CGM leadership in the ID space with the launches of G7 integrations with Tandem's Mobi system and Insulet's Omnipod 5. We've strengthened our existing products while preparing for the most expansive product launch in our company's history with the upcoming August launch of Stello. We are seeing the demand for CGM build in the non insulin space and consumer use and believe that we've created a unique and engaging system to drive people to better metabolic health outcomes. Our team has worked hard to build a scalable service model for Cello that will be great for our customers, including the e commerce experience, seamless delivery through Amazon Fulfillment, insightful product features, digital support options and much more to come. Speaker 200:07:16We'll offer both single purchase opportunities as well as discounted subscriptions that bring the monthly cost below $100 Stella will be a full launch on stella.com and we continue to expect approximately 1% of revenue contribution in 2024. We are committed to personalized approaches to metabolic health management through updates like these. This is what will enable us to capture greater share and maintain high rates of retention and utilization across our customer base. We feel that our expanded U. S. Speaker 200:07:46Sales force positions us very well to reignite our growth opportunity now and well into the future. We have the ability to dive deep into the technological leadership that DexCom provides for diabetes specialty practices. We have also expanded our reach and ability to highlight the simplicity of our platform and how it fits into a busy primary care practice. We have the advantage of better coverage and the lowest out of pocket costs for the insulin population and soon to be enhanced by the simplicity of the STELLO OTC platform. As we take significant steps to broaden our addressable market well into the future with Stell O and our expanded U. Speaker 200:08:21S. Sales force, we are also working hard to ensure simplified access to our systems in the markets we serve. In the Q2, our team worked with the CDC to create new ICD-ten diagnostic codes for problematic hypoglycemia. These codes, which were published in May and go into effect in October, can simplify the process of documenting hypoglycemic events that qualify non insulin users for CGM coverage. Our international market expansion efforts also progressed into the Q2 as we received coverage in France for people with type 2 diabetes on basal insulin and began serving these customers in June. Speaker 200:08:55We also transitioned to direct sales in Japan at the outset of the quarter and look forward to taking control of our commercial efforts in that crucial market. To summarize, our Q2 performance and 2024 outlook are not up to our standards, and we look forward to better capitalizing on our opportunity as we move forward. With that, I'll turn it over to Jeremy. Speaker 300:09:14Thank you, Kevin. As a reminder, unless otherwise noted, the financial metrics presented today will be discussed on a non GAAP basis. Reconciliations to GAAP can be found in today's earnings release as well as the slide deck on our IR website. For the Q2 of 2024, we reported worldwide revenue of $1,004,000,000 Speaker 400:09:34compared to $871,300,000 Speaker 300:09:37in the Q2 of 2023, representing growth of 15% on a reported basis and 16% on an organic basis. As a reminder, our definition of organic revenue excludes the impact of foreign exchange in addition to non CGM revenue acquired or divested in the trailing 12 months. U. S. Revenue totaled $732,000,000 for the Q2 compared to $617,000,000 in the Q2 of 2023, representing growth of 19%. Speaker 300:10:06As Kevin mentioned, we experienced lower than expected new customer starts in conjunction with our sales force expansion and realignment, particularly in the DME channel, as well as the near term impact from pharmacy eligibility changes, which lowered our revenue per customer relative to our expectation. Together, these dynamics adversely impacted our revenue this quarter by approximately $40,000,000 as compared to our internal estimate. Based on the compounding effect of these lower second quarter new customer starts, we also expect our growth rate in the back half of the year to be impacted. To offset this, our team is working aggressively to improve our execution and deliver the higher market share levels that we believe our product deserves. International revenue grew 7%, totaling $272,000,000 in the 2nd quarter. Speaker 300:10:52International organic revenue growth was 10% for the 2nd quarter. While we anticipated our international growth to slow this quarter as we lapped our very strong performance from Q2 2023, our results came in lighter than expected. Our miss on new customers impacted us by approximately $10,000,000 on the quarter. Our international performance can often ebb and flow based on coverage decision and distributor purchases. But as Kevin mentioned, there remains a long runway ahead for DexCom CGM globally. Speaker 300:11:21We continue to invest in infrastructure to expand our geographical presence, provide compelling evidence to expand market access in new segments of key markets and leverage our product portfolio to meet the unique needs of various customers and health systems. Our 2nd quarter gross profit was $638,100,000 or 63.5 percent of revenue, which was in line with the 63.5% of revenue we delivered in the Q2 of 2023. We continue to see further migration of our customer base from G6 to G7 in the 2nd quarter as we finalize new pump integrations and transition COM1 to the G7 form factor. Between this ongoing customer transition and continued ramp up of our high volume manufacturing facilities in Mesa and Malaysia, we are making steady progress towards our long term cost targets. Operating expenses were $442,700,000 for Q2 of 2024 compared to $395,100,000 in Q2 of 2023. Speaker 300:12:19Operating income was $195,400,000 or 19.5 percent of revenue in the Q2 of 2024 compared to $158,400,000 or 18.2 percent of revenue in the same quarter of 2023. Adjusted EBITDA was $283,900,000 or 28.3 percent of revenue for the 2nd quarter compared to 232 point $6,000,000 or 26.7 percent of revenue for the Q2 of 2023. Net income for the Q2 was 174,300,000 or $0.43 per share. We remain in a great financial position, closing the quarter with greater than $3,100,000,000 of cash and cash equivalents. And based on our strong cash position, consistent free cash flow generation and ongoing growth opportunities, we are announcing an authorization for a share repurchase program of up to $750,000,000 Turning to guidance, starting with full year 2024, we are decreasing our revenue guidance to a range of $4,000,000 to $4,050,000,000 representing organic growth of 11% to 13% for the year. Speaker 300:13:24As mentioned earlier, the compounding effect of our slower than expected new customer growth in the USDME channel and international business, as well as increased pharmacy eligibility resulted in the need to recalibrate the guide. Our updated guidance reflects these dynamics and assumes a longer ramp in productivity in our U. S. Sales force. For margins, we are reducing our non GAAP gross profit margin guidance to approximately 63%, while maintaining our prior guidance on non GAAP operating margin and adjusted EBITDA at approximately 20% 29% respectively. Speaker 300:13:56In addition to our annual guidance, we are providing 2 additional data points to help investors and analysts understand some of the unique elements impacting our revised guidance in 2024. First, the impact to new patients from our sales force initiative combined with our revenue per customer trends that Kevin detailed will change the historical seasonality pattern that we have typically experienced. These impacts are expected to reach their peak in the Q3 with total revenue expected to be between $975,000,000 $1,000,000,000 In conjunction with this revenue outlook, we thought it'd be helpful to provide a midyear update on our global active customer base, which we now estimate to be between $2,500,000 and 2 point $6,000,000 This represents strong growth over where we finished 2023, though the growth percentage has decelerated slightly. Our hope is these updates will provide additional visibility as our team works to implement several of the areas of focus that Speaker 400:14:48we have aligned on over Speaker 300:14:49the past month and as our sales force continues to ramp their efficiency. With that, we can open up the call for Q and A. Sean? Thank you, Jeremy. Speaker 100:14:58As a reminder, we ask our audience to limit themselves to only one question at this time and then reenter the queue if necessary. Abby, please provide the Q and A instructions. Operator00:15:07Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Robbie Marcus with JPMorgan is on the line with a question. Your line is open. Speaker 500:15:36Thanks. I have a lot more than one, but I'll keep it to 1. Guidance moving down about $400,000,000 So I appreciate a few million here or there. But I mean this is such a step change in the business and the outlook and the trends. Med tech companies split sales forces all the time and grow them. Speaker 500:15:57You've done it Speaker 600:15:58multiple times. I'm just kind Speaker 500:15:58of in shock at how on a sales force expansion. I feel like there has on a sales force expansion. I feel like there has to be more going on. Maybe you could give us more color into our basal patients using it less? Are you seeing GLP-one fears pop up and Type 2 patients not starting on therapy as much? Speaker 500:16:23Are you seeing Abbott and Medtronic take a lot more share? I feel like there's just we need more explanation for the 3rd Q4 guidance cut behind it. Thanks a lot. Speaker 200:16:35Thanks, Ravi. I appreciate the question and understand your position. Let me start with let's go back to the numbers and the things we talked about in our script. We're short a large number of new patients as to where we thought we would be at this point in time. And Jeremy can provide you with the numbers as to what the new patient constitutes. Speaker 200:16:56There is a combination of things as far as the new patient shortage. Obviously, disruption on the sales force expansion side. This was a different expansion for us than other ones. In other ones we've done, we literally took territories and just divided them geographically. And this time, we changed roles, we changed physicians, people called on. Speaker 200:17:15It was a much more disruptive expansion than we've had in the past and that did lead to a lot of disruption, particularly at the beginning of the quarter. We saw things getting better towards the end. With respect to the other factors, as far as market share, we said we've lost market share in the DME channel. While we've done well in the pharmacy channel, as you can all see by scripts and scripts are filled in the pharmacy on the DME side, we've lost share and that has hurt us. And again, that is patients, it's including new patients. Speaker 200:17:45That's also as we're losing in that category, we're also losing the customers who have the highest annual revenue per year as a patient. So you're losing those. And then some of those patients, even though we've lost share in the DME channel, have shifted to the pharmacy, but that is at a lower revenue per year number. The last piece of this is rebate eligibility. And again, we expected G7 to have rebate eligibility over schedule that was literally twice as fast as G6. Speaker 200:18:17It's been 3 times faster. G7 got the full rebate very quickly, quicker than we had planned. So all those things added together, while they had somewhat an effect on Q2, they have a longer range effect on the rest of the year. And so we added those all those things together, and that's how we came up with our guide. I'll let Jeremy come up with more. Speaker 200:18:39You want to add to that. Speaker 400:18:40Yes. So give some context to the numbers. You're right, Robbie. At the top end of guidance, it's about a $300,000,000 decline. In Kevin's prepared remarks, we talked about $50,000,000 really impacting the 2nd quarter. Speaker 400:18:52Those end up playing out to be a little bit larger as you expand those over the course of the year. So to give you some context, the new patient miss in Q2, which we expected to drag out into Q3 as we kind of navigate through those changes, both in the U. S. And outside the U. S, We had some new patient misses there. Speaker 400:19:09That's about $125,000,000 on the year of that impact. The channel mix and really the loss of share in DME, that's a big one for us and that's about $100,000,000 over the course of the year, certainly impacted Q2, but we expect it to impact the rest of the year as well as those essentially work into full quarters. And then the rebate eligibility happened again quicker than we would have expected. Again, eventually you get there, it happened quicker than we expected, that's about $75,000,000 So when you add those up, that's about the $300,000,000 that you see, certainly not something we're happy about. But in full transparency, we needed to make sure what we saw as we closed out the Q2, we're transparent about what the impact is for the balance of the year. Speaker 200:19:48Thanks. Operator00:19:50Your next question comes from the line of Larry Biegelsen with Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Speaker 300:19:57Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. That was a super helpful review of the issues. Maybe Kevin, if you could go through kind of what you're doing to address each of those issues, when you think they'll be resolved. It's not clear to me, for example, losing share in the DME channel, why that's happening and how you reverse that? Speaker 300:20:21Just lastly, you have an LRP out there for 25. Is that still valid? Thanks for taking the question. Speaker 200:20:29Yes. Let me start with the LRP for 25%. Yes, we believe our LRP for 25% is valid, but our revenue will probably come in closer to lower end of the range rather than the upper end of the range as we sit here today. But we've achieved incredible progress on the P and L side, operating margin and EBITDA side or gross profit side on that LRP. So from a P and L perspective, we're definitely hitting all our goals on the LRP side. Speaker 200:20:52As far as fixing all these things and what fixes we have in place, obviously, it's going to be a bit of a process. On the rebate eligibility front, we believe that caps out in Q3 and we plan for this to cap out in Q4. It just happened a couple of quarters earlier than we planned. So that is very much a temporary thing and accelerated. With respect to DME market share, one of the factors that has actually happened that created part of this is several of the Medicare Advantage programs went to pharmacy reimbursement. Speaker 200:21:23So patients who were being served by the DME channel shifted to the pharmacy and that is a piece of our lost DME share. I can't quantify exactly how much, but that's some of it. Adding to that, we need to refocus on those relationships. We need to do better. And we will talk with them. Speaker 200:21:41We have some plans and some things in place to start off there. But it's early. We have to implement them. And again, DME data is really the last piece of the puzzle as far as our revenues and as far as where we get by the end of the year, just given the data sources that we all look at. It's not as simple as the scripts on the pharmacy side. Speaker 200:22:00So we're addressing that. We will put more emphasis and time there. We'll send more customers through that channel and do better by those guys. So we'll keep looking. On the international front, another piece to remember, We've got a few things going on there. Speaker 200:22:18Timing of some of the tenders affects the numbers. There are some tenders that kick in July 1 that will help on the international growth, and that will be helpful there. We're also looking for Type 2 expansion, as I said on the call. We just got basal coverage in France that's kicking in. We know some of the other countries are moving towards basal coverage very quickly and we can play there with our DexCom 1 plus product. Speaker 200:22:40DexCom 1 plus is still early in the game and we're seeing that begin to pick up. So there are a number of levers to pull and a number of things we're working on, Larry. I can't quantify each one of them, but suffice to say, we're not just sitting here. Jeremy, you want to add to that? Yes. Speaker 400:22:54And then maybe below the hood a little bit in terms of how we allocate the investment dollars, Larry. We are re prioritizing and reallocating investments to where we know that it ultimately drives the most bang. So the team is working on that diligently in terms of refocusing where those dollars and those efforts go. So not given the specifics, just given the competitive nature of it, but rest assured there are changes being made underlying the business to ensure that we get back on top of our new patients. Thank you. Operator00:23:25Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Johnson with Baird. Your line is Speaker 700:23:32Thank you. Good afternoon, guys. Kevin, maybe following up on your DAB comments, you say you need to maybe work on some relationships there. Any color you can give there? And not to air dirty laundry, but I guess in one of our DME checks here recently, we kind of one off the conversation, but it heard that maybe some of the comments you made about CMS changes and who would bear the brunt of the any kind of reimbursement change in 2026 or 2027 would maybe be borne more by DME than you guys. Speaker 700:24:02Is it things like that that kind of strain some relationships? What else might strained relationships? And have there been any kind of formulary changes or anything in DME where they have just wholeheartedly moved patients to Abbott and it's going to be harder for you to get those patients back going forward? Thank you. Speaker 200:24:20I don't think it's been anything formula or systematic along those lines. I think I need to take you out. I'll let Jeremy take some more details. But let me move you guys back a little bit in time. When we started this journey down pharmacy coverage, we had as a company 0 relationships in the pharmacy channel. Speaker 200:24:37We worked very hard to develop those relationships because as you can all see by our numbers and our largest competitors' numbers, that is where a large portion of the business has moved at this point in time. We put a tremendous amount of effort there because we've never been there before. We didn't have any infrastructure. We didn't have other products there. We didn't have relationships there. Speaker 200:24:57I think in creating and building those relationships, we ignored other relationships that were very important to us more than we should have. And so we need to balance that a little better and make sure that our customers get their product through a source that's easy, efficient and economical for them. We felt to a large extent we were doing that, but we think we need to do more. Jeremy, you want to take some more on? Speaker 400:25:18No, that's it. And Jeff, to your comment on, if there's any CMS changes in terms of reimbursement down the road, we certainly did not say that. I think that was maybe a competitor said that. What we had said was, we're partners. And so if there's any changes in CMS reimbursement as partners, we would look at it as partners. Speaker 400:25:34And that would be our expectation going forward. So that was not how we positioned it. But nevertheless, to the extent that those have called freight relationships, Kevin alluded to, we have to pay more attention to it irrespective. Understood. Thank you. Operator00:25:49Your next question comes from the line of Margaret Andrew with William Blair. Your line is open. Speaker 800:25:56Hey, good afternoon guys. Thanks for taking the question. I guess I just wanted to follow-up and be clear on the dynamics on the guidance increase. The way you described it maybe wasn't super clear at least for me. Are you assuming and continuing to assume lower new patient adds for the rest of the year? Speaker 800:26:14Or was that new patient in Q2 alone driving $125,000,000 decrease for the year? And then continuing on that thread, are you seeing any change in some of those new patient ad dynamics or rep productivity on a month by month basis that would maybe give you that confidence in recovery if that is what you're assuming? Thanks. Speaker 400:26:36Yes. Let me it's a good question. Let me start on that. So Margaret, the answer is we do expect to see disruption continue into the Q3, and that's one of the reasons why you're seeing the impact. It's really a bit of a cumulative impact. Speaker 400:26:51Obviously, Q2 was a big impact. We've sized it in terms of patients. It was a pretty sizable disruption relative to expectation, it was around 70,000 patients. So it was a pretty big number. Obviously, that rolls through the rest of the year, but we do expect it to take a little bit of time to recover that. Speaker 400:27:06And so there will be there we have lowered new patient expectations into Q3. And then into Q4, our expectation is we start to get to back to where we were. But think about it as a quarter delay effectively as a result of some of this disruption on our longer term plan. And so when you run those numbers plus you run some expected numbers here in Q3, in disruption relative to expectation, that's ultimately how you get to the figures. In terms of improvement over the course of time, ultimately, you do expect to see that and we've seen some of that over time. Speaker 400:27:38Now, we always expected perhaps a little bit of disruption and some recovery. I would say the disruption is bigger than we would have anticipated. And the recovery is there, but when the disruption is bigger than anticipated, even as you have some of that recovery, again, you're a quarter behind where you'd expect to be and I expect that to play out as we come next year. So we revised that, we've included that in the guidance. High level, Kevin, I don't know if you have anything to add. Speaker 200:28:01No, I think that's good. Operator00:28:06Your next question comes from the line of Travis Steed with Bank of America. Your line is open. Speaker 900:28:13Hey, thanks for the question. I guess maybe could you just kind of explain what is the rebate eligibility? What it is? What it means? Kind of why it's temporary? Speaker 900:28:21Why it happened? I think a lot of confusion on that aspect. And I don't know if something happened kind of late in the quarter. It's like you guys I think were comfortable with the consensus in June. So I just wanted to ask, is this all kind of come up late in the quarter? Speaker 400:28:37Yes, I can take that. So when you think about rebate eligibility, over time, you kind of get closer and closer to this 100% eligibility and it takes a little bit of time. So planned as they opt into coverage, opt in. So we saw this take place over G6, to a lesser extent G5, but we weren't really in the pharmacy then. We saw it take place over the course of G6. Speaker 400:28:57And when we launched G7, we assumed it happened about as twice as fast as G6. So the assumption is, is more and more folks get access. Therefore, more and more folks are moving through that program. Therefore, you're subject to more and more rebates. And then the offset, of course, is by having more access, you have more volumes. Speaker 400:29:14As you can tell by our new patient numbers, we didn't have the volumes, but also the existing patient base was also subject to rebates. And so effectively is timing of price as you run through this. It's temporal, meaning you can only rebate up to your entire population and eventually it gets there. But that's why it's a timing thing. And it just happened, like Kevin was alluding to, 3 times as fast as G6, not 2 times as fast as G6. Speaker 400:29:38So that's a big piece there. In terms of the understanding of how the quarter was rolling up, you are correct. It did roll up later into the Q2. You can see our results in the Q2, while not up to expectations, did not impact the quarter as much as it impacted the full year. And obviously, that was driven by what you saw the dynamics that played through really the Q2. Speaker 400:29:59Kevin was alluding to DME where there's a big I'm sorry, not big concern, a big change in what I'd say is share and where we certainly missed. And that data comes in a little delayed. That's about a 4 to 6 week delay before we set. So as we've tallied that data as we're moving into really the close of the quarter into the weeks leading into the call, not only did it make us aware of certainly the impact on the quarter, but it was really important for us then to reflect that in the guidance on the year. And so a lot of that data, you're right, it obviously took place over the course of the quarter. Speaker 400:30:29We became aware of it really as we closed out the quarter, But that's why it's really important to get it in front of it for the guidance for the full year. Speaker 1000:30:37Great. Thank you. Operator00:30:40Your next question comes from the line of Matt Taylor with Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 600:30:48Hi. Thanks for taking the question. So I guess I wanted to ask if you could give us a little more color at least qualitatively on when you expect these issues to begin to heal to rebound. I don't know if you want to address them separately or together. You've given the back half guidance, but conceptually, what kind of impact is this going to have on the first half of 2025 when you're comping more normal periods? Speaker 600:31:15And when do you think you're going to see the sales force really find its footing, the rebates kind of flush through? Maybe you could flush that out a little bit more to help us model the future? Speaker 200:31:26Yes, I'll start and again, Jeremy, you can add more color. With respect to the rebates, this really caps in Q3. We had estimated in our own models that we would have full rebate eligibility by the Q4 of this year. It's just happened again a couple of quarters faster than we had planned. With respect to our field sales team and the disruption there, we believe we'll work through that in Q3 and early Q4. Speaker 200:31:48And by the time we start 2025, this group should be clicking on all cylinders and things should go very well there. Another thing that Jeremy talked about is reallocation and really examining where we're going to spend the dollars that we spend and the investments we're going to make to maximize the commercial effect of those. Those programs and those decisions are being made now. We'll roll into Q3 into Q4. And we believe will set us up nicely for 2025. Speaker 200:32:14We're obviously not giving 2025 guidance today, but we feel by the end of the year, the things that we've talked about today, we should have worked through and we should have a very good idea as to where we're going in Speaker 400:32:25the future. Yes. And Kevin alluded to it earlier, we talked about the question was, how do you feel about the 2025 LRP LRP and is it still valid? And again, we said, look, we feel it's still valid, albeit at the lower end of it, Matt. So I think that gives you some context. Speaker 400:32:40Obviously, this year is going to be impacted by these factors. As we work out of those and we work into them next year, Kevin alluded to it, rebates shouldn't be an impact next year. So as we work out of it and as we give as we get to the closer to the end of the year, we'll give 2025 guidance. But that hope to give you some context to our confidence as we move out of this year into next year and getting these things behind us. It shouldn't go unnoticed. Speaker 400:33:04Obviously, we're bullish on the business longer term, clearly not happy with the quarter and certainly not happy with the revised guide. So don't mistake it for that, but we do are bullish on the business longer term, hence the $750,000,000 share repurchase authorization. So hopefully that helps square up how we're at least thinking about 2025. Speaker 1000:33:23Thank you, guys. Operator00:33:25Your next question comes from the line of Danielle Antalffy of UBS. Your line is open. Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Thanks so much for taking the question. Speaker 1100:33:38Just a question on this pharmacy component. And one of the sort of long term risks here has always been that this becomes a more commoditized market. You look at finger sticks and blood glucose meters and they're commoditized at this point. And when we hear things like rebates and pressure in the pharmacy, I just want to make sure I understand, is this a competitive dynamic in the pharmacy as well? What's going on there? Speaker 1100:34:06And why is Q3 the peak? Where's the bottom, I guess, from a pharmacy rebate perspective as you do broaden coverage? Because if this is going to be standard of care, which I still think it is, like does that mean at what price and how should we be thinking about this over the long term? Sorry if that didn't make a ton of sense. Speaker 200:34:30No, no, it made perfect sense to me. With respect to our overall pricing, our pricing within channels, when you look at the prices, remains relatively consistent. What has happened in this quarter and what has happened now is more and more people have become eligible for rebates, hence bringing our value per customer down. This was the price that we assumed we would be targeting at the end of the Q4 and we'd be rolling into 25 with. In other periods, we haven't had anything as severe as we have today, obviously, but our new patient growth number would be so high and our volumes would be so high. Speaker 200:35:05If something like this happened, we grew through it. And so if a plan like this accelerated, our new patient numbers are so big, Danielle, that we manage through it. In this quarter, you combine the 2 of them, the increase in the rebates, which gets again to a net price very near what we'd expected and modeled. That doesn't mean the bottom of the price is falling out on an overall basis in the channel. It just means more people were subject to rebates than we had before. Speaker 200:35:31And we shifted patients from a more profitable DME channel over to that pharmacy through some, Again, as I talked earlier, the 3 largest Medicare Advantage plans adopted pharmacy coverage this year. A lot of the Medicaid plans have gone to pharmacy coverage as well. So those plans moving there necessitated a bit of that move and a bit of those rebates going up. So no, we don't believe we have a price falling out. We believe what we do continues to provide tremendous value to people and does a lot to improve, help save their lives and all the things we've talked about forever. Speaker 200:36:11So this is still a very valuable component in somebody's health and we'll continue to treat it as such. Operator00:36:19Thanks so much. Your next question comes from the line of Joanne Wuensch with Citibank. Your line is open. Speaker 800:36:30Good afternoon and thank you for taking the question. I want to pivot a little bit to Stelo. It was 1% of your 24% revenue at one level and it's still 1% of your 24% revenue, which has been lowered by a couple of 100,000,000 dollars Does this indicate your change in your expectations for the year or anything that we should read into it? I'm just sort of a little curious about that. Anything else that you can share as you think about that as building revenue? Speaker 800:37:01Thanks. Speaker 400:37:02No, it's an integer. And so the whole point there is, yes, while the top has come down 1%, 43% versus 40%. At the end of the day, it was all that kind of general contribution. So there was nothing insinuated by that, Joanne. It's rounded to that integer. Speaker 800:37:24Thanks. Operator00:37:26Your next question comes from the line of Matthew O'Brien with Piper Sandler. Your line is Speaker 1200:37:32open. All right. Afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. And it is one question, but it's long enough and I'll tie it all together, I promise. Speaker 1200:37:40Just clearly, Kevin, your comment about next year staying in the LRP, do you mean the 15% growth or do you mean 4 point $6,000,000,000 at the low end? Because if it's $4,600,000,000 up of $4,057,000,000 that's 12% growth. And then within there, the low end of the range, 15% off of even a 12% number this year is a deceleration versus is it easier comps? So there is a deceleration still factored in there. So what has changed to get us from that kind of 17.5% growth we expect from you guys, typical growth rate guidance to now that it's more like 15% or even lower? Speaker 1200:38:21What's the difference there that we can really anchor on to because that's I think the biggest challenge for the stock as we think about how it will trade tomorrow? Thank you. Speaker 400:38:31Sure. Maybe I can start with maybe the next year question. I don't think we've necessarily guided to a number. What we really tried to do is say, here's our LRP, it's still in play. When I say to the lower end, it's not necessarily the low end or a point estimate within there. Speaker 400:38:47It's really to give some context to as we've already made plans and are looking at next year, we have some there's confidence in meeting that low end number. And so really that's really what the goal here is rather than to set a guide number. Now your question then coming back to which is this year's growth, which the organic growth number obviously 11% to 13% is lower than we've historically seen. Kevin has alluded to it a little bit in the script. This year, a little bit of what I would say is execution where I think we need to execute better on new patients and execute better in various channels. Speaker 400:39:22And so that's something as a team we have to get our arms around. This year was impacted by a quicker, as we mentioned, a quicker rebate dynamic than we expected. And that's a part of it. Obviously, we lap that next year and you can only rebate 100% of your units. So obviously, it stops at some point. Speaker 400:39:40And so that piece of it will be transitory. But I think the big key then is getting back to execution and execution on new patients and executing in the DME channel and making sure we have good partnerships there and executing on our channel mix. That's really the work we have to do. And back to that point, that's one of the reasons we had a little bit of a lapse here and to the extent that we can get back to it, that allows us to get back to what we hope is what our traditional performance has been. Operator00:40:12Your next question comes from the line of Marie Thibault with BTIG. Your line is open. Speaker 1300:40:20Good afternoon. This is Sam on for Marie. Thanks for taking the questions here. Maybe I can ask on the DME channel. I recall when you guys are making that shift a few years ago that volume mix would peak around 20%. Speaker 1300:40:33I guess is the right way to think about it closer to 15% now? And then as we think about more MA plan shifting to pharmacy, I mean, is there any risk that that could go even lower? Thanks for taking the questions. Speaker 400:40:44Yes. We had always kind of got at least in the commercial channels and we talked this is really more about the commercial channels. We had always assumed it'd be about 75, 25. That was kind of our crystal ball. And as we got there, it started to skew a little bit more. Speaker 400:40:59But it was it didn't drift off of that 75.25 all that much. However, this quarter as we started to see really what I would say is loss of share, which for us in that channel is a bit unique and something we got to get our arms around. The split in our business was a little more. It doesn't necessarily mean that the overall market split ultimately ends up that way, but it does mean that the shift of our business certainly shifted that way. And so, does that number shift down to 85, 15? Speaker 400:41:27Well, if we take share, no, and that's really on us. So that gets back to the execution question. We need to execute in that channel. And that channel, it's a very important channel for us and these are very important partners and they serve a very, very important partnership to our customers. And so we've got to get back into that channel and make sure that we're getting our fair share there. Speaker 400:41:46That's really the big driver. Speaker 200:41:47I'd also add though, there has been a shift in government payer activity from the DME channel to the pharmacy. That actually has happened and we have to figure out how much that has impacted our DME mix versus pharmacy mix as well. Speaker 1300:42:04Thank you for taking the questions. Operator00:42:07Your next question comes from the line of Matthew Blackman with Stifel. Your line is open. Speaker 1400:42:14Good afternoon, everybody. Can you hear me okay? Speaker 400:42:17We can. Speaker 1400:42:18Okay, great. Maybe, Jeremy, I think I heard you mentioned that the new patient shortfall was something in the neighborhood of 70,000. Is there any way to tease that out? I'm sure it's challenging by indication. I mean, the DME share, while it sounds like it may be skewed more to basal patients potentially, is that fair? Speaker 1400:42:37And then what about on the sales force dislocation? Just any help on sort of the different pieces of the business? Speaker 400:42:45Yes. So the 70,000, the way to think about it is there's a good chunk of that is OUS. And so there's a portion that's outside the United States. There's a portion that's inside the United States. And it's usually reflective of our patient base in total. Speaker 400:42:57So you kind of have our splits there. In the U. S, really a lot of it is driven by the sales force. Now, one of the challenges, of course, is the sales force services all different indications. And so as you service all in different indications, you could probably imagine if we're not doing well in the DME, gets back to your point, we're not doing wonderful in the basal space. Speaker 400:43:19That's a big piece of the DME, certainly DME Medicare and the patient base that they service. So that's the way it's really hard to parse out by category, but when we look into it and we say, gee, we're not doing we're not taking share in the DME space, you can presume that that a lot of that is in that Medicare space. And I think it is fair to say that really across the board disruption, you can assume there's a little bit really across the board, but the biggest piece there is probably the best way to put it. Yes. Speaker 1400:43:47I appreciate that. Thanks. Operator00:43:50Your next question comes from the line of Jayson Bedford with Raymond James. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:43:58Thanks. Just two quick ones. Appreciate the color on the installed base, but can we assume there's been no real notable change in attrition? And then just on the 3Q guidance, is there not a healthy contribution from Stell O in 3Q or is the $40,000,000 more 4th quarter weighted? Speaker 200:44:18Yes, this is Kevin. The Stell O guidance, the Q3 contribution is not overly large. Most of the Stell O revenue is 4th quarter weighted as we again plan to launch StellO in later August. So that is that's how that one works. With respect to attrition, our retention and attrition by patient category remains similar to what we had in our plans. Speaker 200:44:40We know that our Type 1 patient with an automated insulin delivery system is certainly our stickiest and patient with the highest utilization factors as we go down the acuity curve to people on MDI or basal users or even those who are non insulin users, utilization goes down. But our retention numbers are still industry standard by a very large margin. And so we're still doing very well there. Operator00:45:08Your next question comes from the line of Steve Lichtman with Oppenheimer. Your line is open. Speaker 1500:45:16Thank you. Guys, I wanted to ask again about the Salesforce integration and just where you are today. Are you seeing signs of stabilization now? And what are you assuming on that front for the guide? And then can you remind us what opportunities you see with this larger sales force that obviously can turn this into a positive ultimately? Speaker 200:45:43We are seeing things beginning to stabilize, but we're also seeing things slower than we had projected in our own internal models at the start of the year. And as we developed our guidance earlier, hence, as Jeremy said, the guidance coming down a bit. So we are seeing things begin to stabilize and they're stabilizing across different categories and geographies. I think the biggest thing to anticipate for us and one of the things for us we missed in our plans, we've sent a whole bunch of new reps into offices we've never called on before. And there's a get to know you period that we probably didn't estimate being long enough. Speaker 200:46:17And so we're taking steps to assist our team and better actions with those physicians and getting to know them and getting them to trust and use DexCom. Somebody hasn't prescribed DexCom, they've got to prescribe one to see how it goes. And we've been going through that cycle during this quarter and we should able to increase the prescription patterns of those new physicians a lot more going forward. But there was a lot of getting to know you, for lack of a better word, going on here in the second quarter as this group got out there. We'll have a lot more data at the end of Q3. Speaker 200:46:51We saw better interactions in May June and we'll see how things go from here on out. Thank you. Operator00:47:01Your next question comes from the line of Mike Polark with Wolfe Research. Your line is open. Speaker 600:47:10Hey, thank you. I want to ask on your relationship with distributors and the concept of stocking. Last year, obviously, was a big year with the G7 launch and the basal coverage expansion and there's always a lot of stuff going on OUS. Is there any as you look back at 2023 as the baseline for building 24, would you frame any of kind of this setback as stocking last year that kind of caused a snafu in your modeling? Or this year, if you can comment on inventory levels with key partners, is there are you observing a drawdown of inventory? Speaker 600:47:41If there's anything to frame around that, I'd appreciate the color. Speaker 400:47:45Yes. If anything, usually you have these challenges when you launch a product given inventory levels of the old and inventory levels of the new. In all fairness to our partners last year, they did a pretty good job of balancing G6 and G7 inventory levels as they went through their transition. So we didn't have a whole lot in the prior year. This year, it's pretty normal. Speaker 400:48:08And we have inventory levels that generally range in between pretty normal levels. We keep an eye on what's in the channel. And they always stay within this really relatively tight band. And when we keep it in that band intentionally. And so we've been in that band now and we hope we generally stay in that band. Speaker 400:48:26I don't recall the time we've been outside that band, quite frankly. And so nothing to call out specifically. The bigger issue and I get what you're getting at, the bigger issue would have been say last year, during a window when you had a launch of G7 and folks were gearing up given not sure how much demand would come in. We didn't really have that last year and again, kudos to everybody that was holding inventory. They did a nice job. Speaker 600:48:49Thank you. Operator00:48:51Your next question comes from the line of Shagun Singh with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 1600:48:59Great. Thank you so much for taking the question. Just to follow-up on the sales force disruption here. You said it was more disruptive than historically because you changed roles. So can you elaborate on that? Speaker 1600:49:11And then you talked about physicians, changed physicians people are calling on. So is this are you referring to the PCP channel? And then you also referred to longer time to productivity. Can you give us a sense of how long does it take to get fully productive? It sounds like about 2 quarters or so because you said you expect them to be fully productive getting into 2025. Speaker 1600:49:36So is that the case? And then just finally, can you give us an update on the extended wear? Thank Speaker 200:49:43you. I was waiting for a science question, so I'll start with extended wear. We've been committed to launching a 15 day product in 2025 and we intend to. Things are progressing well on that front. Stella will be a 15 day product as well. Speaker 200:49:58We will learn a great deal from Stella with our launch and how that goes. With respect to the sales team, again, that reorganization is much different than what we've done in the past. What we've done in the past is we would look at an area and this total sales volume in an area and the physicians there and kind of just divide it up geographically and make various sub areas. So the reps in those areas would call an endocrinologist and primary care physicians and primarily their efforts were focused on those that were the highest prescribers in the territory. What we did this time is we took our territories and we said, okay, we are going to have specialty reps and one for us who calls primarily on the high prescribing physicians, endocrinologists and high prescribing primary care doctors who are very familiar with the product and service them more in that type of a role. Speaker 200:50:45And that's one group of our sales force. Then we have more people who are prospecting, who are going down and talking to more of PCPs who don't prescribe as much product, places where we have not been before. Because what we've noted in our data is we obviously don't win in offices, we don't call on. And so we needed to get into those offices and develop relationships. A lot of the time that has been spent in the first in this Q1 and going forward in Q3 is beginning to develop and cultivate those relationships, so we can get prescriptions from those healthcare professionals. Speaker 200:51:19They need to learn to trust us and they need to learn to have some experiences with our products. So that is how that is going and that is why this is different. So we really did things differently than we've done in the past. We believe over the long term, it's absolutely the right thing to do. And we have confidence in this team that they'll work through this. Speaker 200:51:39We believe it will start to turn near the end, starting into Q4 and be in a very good position by 2025. And that is the timeframe that we are looking at. If things go faster, great, but that's how we model our business. As Jeremy said earlier, we've decelerated our new patient number from what we had in our original models for Q3 as to what we have now. And we see things picking back up in Q4 as the group gets more involved. Speaker 200:52:05So that's where it is. Operator00:52:07Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Bill Plovanak with Canaccord Genuity. Your line is open. Great. Speaker 1000:52:18Thanks for taking my question. Just wanted to ask, so the pharmacy is good, DME is slowing. Do you think this is potentially a slowdown in penetration into the Type 1 and Type 2 markets? You're hitting about 60% Type 1, 40% Type 2 in the U. S. Speaker 1000:52:40I mean, are you just starting to get a saturation point where each incremental market share or market penetration is just that much tougher to come by? Or do you think this so it's a broader challenge? Or is this purely specific to sales force and DME and what have you? Thank you. Speaker 400:52:57Yes. It's a good question. In the U. S, we don't think so. There's still quite a bit of one way and we're still seeing the growth patterns relatively steady there. Speaker 400:53:07If you look at the overall total market growth in the Q2, I think what you can see is, if you add up all the various players, it's still a very robust growth. I think in our case, certainly in the DME channel, it was a share loss. And I think we just held our own in the retail channel this quarter. And so that I don't necessarily know that I would say that I think it's more about us getting in charge of really our go to market and making sure with our leading technology, we're getting our fair share there. As you zoom outside the U. Speaker 400:53:40S, as Kevin alluded to a little bit in his script, outside the U. S, it's really chunks of coverage and chunks of approval. And while we got a bit of a chunk here in France, Basil, there are some chunks we are waiting on. And so it can slow a bit as an overall market. I think you see it when you compare when you combine results globally, there is a bit of a slowdown outside the U. Speaker 400:54:01S. We don't think that it's a long term issue because as chunks of approvals come in, you find that there's still certainly pent up demand. So really it's about coverage. And we are working on coverage in various different areas, both type 2 intensive, certainly in basal. There's even some countries where we're still working on type 1 coverage in some of the more emerging markets. Speaker 400:54:22So maybe outside the U. S, you see a temporal slowdown, but not in the U. S. I think the U. S. Speaker 400:54:27Is still a very robust market. We're still seeing basal grow at the same rates that we expected as a total category, still seeing the intensive insulin category still growing well and obviously with non insulin opportunities with Stell O and the OTC products, I think it's a market that can continue to grow for some time. Speaker 200:54:47Yes, I'll add to that. You talked about a 60% penetration. I said several years ago, 80% for Type 1 insulin users and I believe the same with type 2 intensive insulin users. There is no reason somebody shouldn't be on a CGM. It's up to us to create the experience and the access structure whereby everybody can get to it. Speaker 200:55:08And those are the things we have to take on, Bill. And I agree with Jeremy's comments. Our efforts this quarter focus on our execution a lot more than a market slowdown. It's up to us to be better. Speaker 1700:55:21Great. Thanks. Operator00:55:24Your next question comes from the line of Chris Pasquale with Nephron. Your line is open. Speaker 600:55:31Thanks. I wanted to just clarify 2 points. 1 on the rebate issue. Do you need to anniversary that before revenue per patient becomes less of a drag? In other words, is that a period impact or is it a resetting the bar then you have to lap before you get back to normal? Speaker 600:55:47And then, Jeremy, you touched on international briefly in the last question. Most of the focus thus far has been on U. S, but OUS also disappointed. Am I right in interpreting you think that the slower growth there is more normal until you get some of these new coverages to come through? That's really going to be the catalyst for a reacceleration. Speaker 400:56:06Yes. So in terms of your rebate dynamic, I think we talked about it coming faster and because it's coming faster, certainly here into Q2 and to a lesser extent Q1, you lap it pretty darn early next year. So we're going to lap it pretty darn quick. Obviously, it's going to impact us at a more acute number. We expected it to be gradual over the course of this year into next year, which still would have been faster than G6. Speaker 400:56:28So to that point, it does help for next year's comps, because we will lap it pretty darn quick. In terms of the question on OUS, one of the things we've done historically there is, it's a market where we've taken share and obviously it's been growing. And this quarter, I would say we didn't take share and that's the that's part of it. The other part then is in the chunks. And so there's 2 opportunities there. Speaker 400:56:52Certainly, there's chunks of reimbursement, which would help accelerate it. But our expectation with the product launches we've had and the quality of product that we have is to take share. And so I think there's 2 opportunities. One's within our control, which is taking share and then the other is within the industry's control, which is coverage and we're going to execute on that, which we can control and certainly aid in helping the industry coverage as well. Speaker 600:57:16Thanks. Operator00:57:18Your next question comes from the line of Matt Miksic with Barclays. Your line is Speaker 1700:57:26open. Hey, thanks so much for taking the question. So there's a couple of things that I think investors are trying to pin down here and understand, given the announcement and the just slight change in trajectory here in the back half. And the first is around this the channel mix, indication mix and their impact on pricing, maybe given that you're building out of field force that's growing into areas where you haven't traditionally called, as you talked about, potentially maybe the margin impact of that. But is that something where channel mix is and these pricing factors have sort of set off on a new trajectory that we now have to think about in the equation of like patient growth and price mix. Speaker 1700:58:21What does that translate into growth over the next couple of years? Should we be thinking differently about that? And then I guess the other, just to you cross it off the list, it doesn't sound like it's a factor is it's just around competition. Is there any shift given the places where you're going into new accounts in the PCP channel or elsewhere? Is there are you feeling like you're into slightly tougher competitive challenges? Speaker 1700:58:50It didn't sound like it, but just if you could maybe cross that off the list and provide any color on the first, that would be terrific. Thanks. Speaker 400:58:57Yes. So I'll maybe go with the crossing off the list. There's always competition. And certainly, as we go into all of these categories, you're always going to have that we've always had competition. So this is an area that's been we've been competing for some time. Speaker 400:59:11So I don't think that's necessarily a new dynamic. When you expand the sales force, clearly your first call points, you've got to go through that. But this is no different than what we had in 2021 last time we expanded the sales force. We went into new locations, it's building familiarity. And yes, there's always competition, but that's not a new thing. Speaker 400:59:29So I think you can cross that off the list. To your question then Speaker 600:59:33on mix, Speaker 400:59:33I'd say this in the U. S, I don't think the market has moved all that much. I think it gets back to our performance within that market and we have to perform in those areas. And so when you talk about, is this a new price year over year pure price, it hasn't really changed all that much. Certainly in the DME channel, it hasn't changed all that much and we talk about that often. Speaker 400:59:54But when you have less performance in your highest reimbursed channels and better performance in a lower reimbursed channel, I we've always talked about DME being higher than pharmacy, And then you don't outperform on new patients, you kind of combine all those up, that's what you really saw. So the opportunity is for us to get out there and get the new patients and get the new patients in all of the channels, in the channels that we've been in and get our fair share in those channels. So I think that's the best way to think about it is, we can do it. It's within our purview to go do so as opposed to necessarily a shifting in the market itself. Speaker 1701:00:31Thanks so much. Operator01:00:34This concludes the question and answer session. I will turn the call to Kevin Sayer for closing remarks. Speaker 201:00:41Well, thanks everybody for participating today. This is a tough call for us. I know it's a tough call for all of you who supported us. We've provided the best view that we have going forward. We obviously will work hard to do better and provide you with more color and more things going forward. Speaker 201:00:59We are extremely excited for our STELLA launch later this quarter, and we certainly expect to hear from you as we do that. I just want to also point out, we talked a lot about our commercial team today. They're fabulous. They've done very well, and they will rebound Speaker 601:01:16from this. I have every confidence they will. Speaker 201:01:16When you have something like this, it's on everybody in the company, it's not just on those guys. We're all going to put our heads down and focus more. So you can count on that. Thank you very much for being with us today, and we'll see you all soon. Operator01:01:33Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's conference. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect. Speakers, please stand by for your debrief.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallDexCom Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) DexCom Earnings HeadlinesDexCom price target lowered to $107 from $120 at BTIGApril 14 at 7:37 PM | markets.businessinsider.comBTIG Remains a Buy on Dexcom (DXCM)April 14 at 7:37 PM | markets.businessinsider.comWhy War with China Start in 128 DaysThe clock is ticking. Those who aren't prepared could lose everything. I've identified 43 investments we believe are in immediate danger.April 14, 2025 | Behind the Markets (Ad)BTIG Adjusts DexCom (DXCM) Price Target Ahead of MedTech Q1 Results | DXCM Stock NewsApril 14 at 9:37 AM | gurufocus.comDexCom (NASDAQ:DXCM) Rating Increased to Strong-Buy at MizuhoApril 12 at 2:09 AM | americanbankingnews.comWhat to Expect From DexCom's Next Quarterly Earnings ReportApril 11 at 4:50 PM | msn.comSee More DexCom Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like DexCom? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on DexCom and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About DexComDexCom (NASDAQ:DXCM), a medical device company, focuses on the design, development, and commercialization of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) systems in the United States and internationally. The company provides its systems for use by people with diabetes, as well as for use by healthcare providers. Its products include Dexcom G6 and Dexcom G7, integrated CGM systems for diabetes management; Dexcom Share, a remote monitoring system; Dexcom Real-Time API, which enables authorized third-party software developers to integrate real-time CGM data into their digital health apps and devices; and Dexcom ONE, that is designed to replace finger stick blood glucose testing for diabetes treatment decisions. It has also submitted FDA review for Dexcom Stelo for people with type 2 diabetes. The company has a collaboration and license agreement with Verily Life Sciences LLC and Verily Ireland Limited to develop blood-based or interstitial glucose monitoring products. It markets its products directly to endocrinologists, physicians, and diabetes educators. The company was incorporated in 1999 and is headquartered in San Diego, California.View DexCom ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Why Analysts Boosted United Airlines Stock Ahead of EarningsLamb Weston Stock Rises, Earnings Provide Calm Amidst ChaosIntuitive Machines Gains After Earnings Beat, NASA Missions AheadCintas Delivers Earnings Beat, Signals More Growth AheadNike Stock Dips on Earnings: Analysts Weigh in on What’s NextAfter Massive Post Earnings Fall, Does Hope Remain for MongoDB?Semtech Rallies on Earnings Beat—Is There More Upside? 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There are 18 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the DexCom Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Release Conference Call. My name is Abby, and I'll be your operator for today's call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session. As a reminder, the conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:25I will now turn the call over to Sean Christensen. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:31Thank you, Abby, and welcome to DexCom's Q2 2024 Earnings Call. Our agenda begins with Kevin Sayer, DexCom's Chairman, President and CEO, who will summarize our recent highlights and ongoing strategic initiatives, followed by a financial review and outlook from Jeremy Silvane, our Chief Financial Officer. Following our prepared remarks, we will open the call up for your questions. At that time, we ask analysts to limit themselves to one question each, so we can provide an opportunity for everyone participating today. Please note that there are also slides available related to our Q2 2024 performance on the DexCom Investor Relations website on the Events and Presentations page. Speaker 100:01:05With that, let's review our Safe Harbor statement. Some of the statements we will make on today's call may constitute forward looking statements. These statements reflect management's intentions, beliefs and expectations about future events, strategies, competition, products, operating plans and performance. All forward looking statements included on this call are made as of the date hereof based on information currently available to DexCom, are subject to various risks and uncertainties, and actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in the forward looking statements. The factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by any of these forward looking statements are details in DexCom's annual report on Form 10 ks, most recent quarterly report on Form 10 Q and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Speaker 100:01:50Except as required by law, we assume no obligation to update any such forward looking statements after the date of this call or to conform these forward looking statements to actual results. Additionally, during the call, we will discuss certain financial measures that have not been prepared in accordance with GAAP. Unless otherwise noted, all references to financial measures on this call are presented on a non GAAP basis. This non GAAP information should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for results or superior to results prepared in accordance with GAAP. Please refer to the tables in our earnings release and the slides accompanying our Q2 earnings call for a reconciliation of these measures to their most directly comparable GAAP financial measure. Speaker 100:02:27Now, I will turn it over to Kevin. Speaker 200:02:30Thank you, Sean, and thank you, everyone, for joining us. Before we begin discussing Q2 results, let me state that overall category demand remains strong and awareness of the value of CGM across the metabolic health spectrum continues to accelerate. This trend was evident at the recent American Diabetes Association Conference, which featured DexCom's largest evidence to date in the non insulin type 2 space. Dexcom research demonstrated significant A1C reduction in multiple studies as well as real world evidence showing a time in range increase of greater than 4 hours per day for nearly 4,000 customers using DexCom CGM at 1 year. We are leveraging several pathways of evidence generation to ensure that we are maximizing our market opportunity into the future as our CGM systems become increasingly tailored to the unique needs of each customer. Speaker 200:03:19Despite the positive progress on these fronts, we saw 3 near term trends emerge over the course of the Q2 that drove results below our expectations. First, as we've worked through our U. S. Sales force realignment expansion, we have seen our share of new customers fall short of our expectations, despite still strong absolute customer additions. 2nd, our U. Speaker 200:03:40S. Revenue per customer has stepped down faster than expected based on 2 primary drivers, rebate eligibility and channel mix. With G7 coverage emerging faster than expected, we realized greater rebate eligibility relative to initial expectations and compared to 2023 levels. While we believe this enhanced G7 coverage has helped facilitate new customer starts as mentioned above, the pace of these starts did not allow us to offset the temporary impact from this rebate eligibility. We expect the impact of this rebate eligibility dynamic will reach its peak in the Q3 and Jeremy will provide specific color on the Q3 expectations shortly. Speaker 200:04:18Beyond the transitory G7 eligibility dynamic, we also saw revenue per customer impacted by U. S. Channel mix dynamics. U. S. Speaker 200:04:26Customer growth has remained strong in our pharmacy business as we expand our reach into primary care and type 2 diabetes more broadly. However, our growth in the DME channel has trailed our plan. The DME distributors remain important partners for us in our business and we have not executed well this quarter against these partnerships. We need to refocus on those relationships. Finally, our international performance was also lighter than expectations in the quarter. Speaker 200:04:51While we delivered strong performance in some of our core markets such as the UK and France, we saw category growth soften in certain geographies as Type 1 penetration advances in these regions. We continue to see a significant runway ahead across our international footprint, particularly as we drive greater access for people with type 2 diabetes. To account for these trends and appropriately reflect our base assumption, we've lowered our full year revenue guidance to 11% to 13% organic growth. We have higher expectations for our business than what we experienced this quarter. We believe we have an incredible product, an incredible future pipeline and an unparalleled market opportunity. Speaker 200:05:30We also have a great team capable of leading this market. I expect more from myself and more from my team going forward. So what are we doing to enhance our competitive position and reestablish momentum? It starts with our product portfolio, which we continue to strengthen to put our field sales team in a great position with clinicians. In the Q2, we expanded our direct to Apple Watch connectivity with G7, launching in the U. Speaker 200:05:53S. And several additional international markets with this feature that has been among our most requested for several years. We expanded the international launch of the DexCom 1 Plus system now reaching 18 international markets with our smaller G7 form factor for our DexCom 1 users. We've built upon the performance of G7 making it even better. This includes a continuation of our monthly cadence of software updates, which included the Q2 additions of medication logging and the ability to ingest activity data into our G7 app. Speaker 200:06:23We've introduced a stronger adhesive to support our customers into the summer months and we expanded the G7 Bluetooth connectivity range by more than 65%. We advanced DexCom CGM leadership in the ID space with the launches of G7 integrations with Tandem's Mobi system and Insulet's Omnipod 5. We've strengthened our existing products while preparing for the most expansive product launch in our company's history with the upcoming August launch of Stello. We are seeing the demand for CGM build in the non insulin space and consumer use and believe that we've created a unique and engaging system to drive people to better metabolic health outcomes. Our team has worked hard to build a scalable service model for Cello that will be great for our customers, including the e commerce experience, seamless delivery through Amazon Fulfillment, insightful product features, digital support options and much more to come. Speaker 200:07:16We'll offer both single purchase opportunities as well as discounted subscriptions that bring the monthly cost below $100 Stella will be a full launch on stella.com and we continue to expect approximately 1% of revenue contribution in 2024. We are committed to personalized approaches to metabolic health management through updates like these. This is what will enable us to capture greater share and maintain high rates of retention and utilization across our customer base. We feel that our expanded U. S. Speaker 200:07:46Sales force positions us very well to reignite our growth opportunity now and well into the future. We have the ability to dive deep into the technological leadership that DexCom provides for diabetes specialty practices. We have also expanded our reach and ability to highlight the simplicity of our platform and how it fits into a busy primary care practice. We have the advantage of better coverage and the lowest out of pocket costs for the insulin population and soon to be enhanced by the simplicity of the STELLO OTC platform. As we take significant steps to broaden our addressable market well into the future with Stell O and our expanded U. Speaker 200:08:21S. Sales force, we are also working hard to ensure simplified access to our systems in the markets we serve. In the Q2, our team worked with the CDC to create new ICD-ten diagnostic codes for problematic hypoglycemia. These codes, which were published in May and go into effect in October, can simplify the process of documenting hypoglycemic events that qualify non insulin users for CGM coverage. Our international market expansion efforts also progressed into the Q2 as we received coverage in France for people with type 2 diabetes on basal insulin and began serving these customers in June. Speaker 200:08:55We also transitioned to direct sales in Japan at the outset of the quarter and look forward to taking control of our commercial efforts in that crucial market. To summarize, our Q2 performance and 2024 outlook are not up to our standards, and we look forward to better capitalizing on our opportunity as we move forward. With that, I'll turn it over to Jeremy. Speaker 300:09:14Thank you, Kevin. As a reminder, unless otherwise noted, the financial metrics presented today will be discussed on a non GAAP basis. Reconciliations to GAAP can be found in today's earnings release as well as the slide deck on our IR website. For the Q2 of 2024, we reported worldwide revenue of $1,004,000,000 Speaker 400:09:34compared to $871,300,000 Speaker 300:09:37in the Q2 of 2023, representing growth of 15% on a reported basis and 16% on an organic basis. As a reminder, our definition of organic revenue excludes the impact of foreign exchange in addition to non CGM revenue acquired or divested in the trailing 12 months. U. S. Revenue totaled $732,000,000 for the Q2 compared to $617,000,000 in the Q2 of 2023, representing growth of 19%. Speaker 300:10:06As Kevin mentioned, we experienced lower than expected new customer starts in conjunction with our sales force expansion and realignment, particularly in the DME channel, as well as the near term impact from pharmacy eligibility changes, which lowered our revenue per customer relative to our expectation. Together, these dynamics adversely impacted our revenue this quarter by approximately $40,000,000 as compared to our internal estimate. Based on the compounding effect of these lower second quarter new customer starts, we also expect our growth rate in the back half of the year to be impacted. To offset this, our team is working aggressively to improve our execution and deliver the higher market share levels that we believe our product deserves. International revenue grew 7%, totaling $272,000,000 in the 2nd quarter. Speaker 300:10:52International organic revenue growth was 10% for the 2nd quarter. While we anticipated our international growth to slow this quarter as we lapped our very strong performance from Q2 2023, our results came in lighter than expected. Our miss on new customers impacted us by approximately $10,000,000 on the quarter. Our international performance can often ebb and flow based on coverage decision and distributor purchases. But as Kevin mentioned, there remains a long runway ahead for DexCom CGM globally. Speaker 300:11:21We continue to invest in infrastructure to expand our geographical presence, provide compelling evidence to expand market access in new segments of key markets and leverage our product portfolio to meet the unique needs of various customers and health systems. Our 2nd quarter gross profit was $638,100,000 or 63.5 percent of revenue, which was in line with the 63.5% of revenue we delivered in the Q2 of 2023. We continue to see further migration of our customer base from G6 to G7 in the 2nd quarter as we finalize new pump integrations and transition COM1 to the G7 form factor. Between this ongoing customer transition and continued ramp up of our high volume manufacturing facilities in Mesa and Malaysia, we are making steady progress towards our long term cost targets. Operating expenses were $442,700,000 for Q2 of 2024 compared to $395,100,000 in Q2 of 2023. Speaker 300:12:19Operating income was $195,400,000 or 19.5 percent of revenue in the Q2 of 2024 compared to $158,400,000 or 18.2 percent of revenue in the same quarter of 2023. Adjusted EBITDA was $283,900,000 or 28.3 percent of revenue for the 2nd quarter compared to 232 point $6,000,000 or 26.7 percent of revenue for the Q2 of 2023. Net income for the Q2 was 174,300,000 or $0.43 per share. We remain in a great financial position, closing the quarter with greater than $3,100,000,000 of cash and cash equivalents. And based on our strong cash position, consistent free cash flow generation and ongoing growth opportunities, we are announcing an authorization for a share repurchase program of up to $750,000,000 Turning to guidance, starting with full year 2024, we are decreasing our revenue guidance to a range of $4,000,000 to $4,050,000,000 representing organic growth of 11% to 13% for the year. Speaker 300:13:24As mentioned earlier, the compounding effect of our slower than expected new customer growth in the USDME channel and international business, as well as increased pharmacy eligibility resulted in the need to recalibrate the guide. Our updated guidance reflects these dynamics and assumes a longer ramp in productivity in our U. S. Sales force. For margins, we are reducing our non GAAP gross profit margin guidance to approximately 63%, while maintaining our prior guidance on non GAAP operating margin and adjusted EBITDA at approximately 20% 29% respectively. Speaker 300:13:56In addition to our annual guidance, we are providing 2 additional data points to help investors and analysts understand some of the unique elements impacting our revised guidance in 2024. First, the impact to new patients from our sales force initiative combined with our revenue per customer trends that Kevin detailed will change the historical seasonality pattern that we have typically experienced. These impacts are expected to reach their peak in the Q3 with total revenue expected to be between $975,000,000 $1,000,000,000 In conjunction with this revenue outlook, we thought it'd be helpful to provide a midyear update on our global active customer base, which we now estimate to be between $2,500,000 and 2 point $6,000,000 This represents strong growth over where we finished 2023, though the growth percentage has decelerated slightly. Our hope is these updates will provide additional visibility as our team works to implement several of the areas of focus that Speaker 400:14:48we have aligned on over Speaker 300:14:49the past month and as our sales force continues to ramp their efficiency. With that, we can open up the call for Q and A. Sean? Thank you, Jeremy. Speaker 100:14:58As a reminder, we ask our audience to limit themselves to only one question at this time and then reenter the queue if necessary. Abby, please provide the Q and A instructions. Operator00:15:07Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Robbie Marcus with JPMorgan is on the line with a question. Your line is open. Speaker 500:15:36Thanks. I have a lot more than one, but I'll keep it to 1. Guidance moving down about $400,000,000 So I appreciate a few million here or there. But I mean this is such a step change in the business and the outlook and the trends. Med tech companies split sales forces all the time and grow them. Speaker 500:15:57You've done it Speaker 600:15:58multiple times. I'm just kind Speaker 500:15:58of in shock at how on a sales force expansion. I feel like there has on a sales force expansion. I feel like there has to be more going on. Maybe you could give us more color into our basal patients using it less? Are you seeing GLP-one fears pop up and Type 2 patients not starting on therapy as much? Speaker 500:16:23Are you seeing Abbott and Medtronic take a lot more share? I feel like there's just we need more explanation for the 3rd Q4 guidance cut behind it. Thanks a lot. Speaker 200:16:35Thanks, Ravi. I appreciate the question and understand your position. Let me start with let's go back to the numbers and the things we talked about in our script. We're short a large number of new patients as to where we thought we would be at this point in time. And Jeremy can provide you with the numbers as to what the new patient constitutes. Speaker 200:16:56There is a combination of things as far as the new patient shortage. Obviously, disruption on the sales force expansion side. This was a different expansion for us than other ones. In other ones we've done, we literally took territories and just divided them geographically. And this time, we changed roles, we changed physicians, people called on. Speaker 200:17:15It was a much more disruptive expansion than we've had in the past and that did lead to a lot of disruption, particularly at the beginning of the quarter. We saw things getting better towards the end. With respect to the other factors, as far as market share, we said we've lost market share in the DME channel. While we've done well in the pharmacy channel, as you can all see by scripts and scripts are filled in the pharmacy on the DME side, we've lost share and that has hurt us. And again, that is patients, it's including new patients. Speaker 200:17:45That's also as we're losing in that category, we're also losing the customers who have the highest annual revenue per year as a patient. So you're losing those. And then some of those patients, even though we've lost share in the DME channel, have shifted to the pharmacy, but that is at a lower revenue per year number. The last piece of this is rebate eligibility. And again, we expected G7 to have rebate eligibility over schedule that was literally twice as fast as G6. Speaker 200:18:17It's been 3 times faster. G7 got the full rebate very quickly, quicker than we had planned. So all those things added together, while they had somewhat an effect on Q2, they have a longer range effect on the rest of the year. And so we added those all those things together, and that's how we came up with our guide. I'll let Jeremy come up with more. Speaker 200:18:39You want to add to that. Speaker 400:18:40Yes. So give some context to the numbers. You're right, Robbie. At the top end of guidance, it's about a $300,000,000 decline. In Kevin's prepared remarks, we talked about $50,000,000 really impacting the 2nd quarter. Speaker 400:18:52Those end up playing out to be a little bit larger as you expand those over the course of the year. So to give you some context, the new patient miss in Q2, which we expected to drag out into Q3 as we kind of navigate through those changes, both in the U. S. And outside the U. S, We had some new patient misses there. Speaker 400:19:09That's about $125,000,000 on the year of that impact. The channel mix and really the loss of share in DME, that's a big one for us and that's about $100,000,000 over the course of the year, certainly impacted Q2, but we expect it to impact the rest of the year as well as those essentially work into full quarters. And then the rebate eligibility happened again quicker than we would have expected. Again, eventually you get there, it happened quicker than we expected, that's about $75,000,000 So when you add those up, that's about the $300,000,000 that you see, certainly not something we're happy about. But in full transparency, we needed to make sure what we saw as we closed out the Q2, we're transparent about what the impact is for the balance of the year. Speaker 200:19:48Thanks. Operator00:19:50Your next question comes from the line of Larry Biegelsen with Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Speaker 300:19:57Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. That was a super helpful review of the issues. Maybe Kevin, if you could go through kind of what you're doing to address each of those issues, when you think they'll be resolved. It's not clear to me, for example, losing share in the DME channel, why that's happening and how you reverse that? Speaker 300:20:21Just lastly, you have an LRP out there for 25. Is that still valid? Thanks for taking the question. Speaker 200:20:29Yes. Let me start with the LRP for 25%. Yes, we believe our LRP for 25% is valid, but our revenue will probably come in closer to lower end of the range rather than the upper end of the range as we sit here today. But we've achieved incredible progress on the P and L side, operating margin and EBITDA side or gross profit side on that LRP. So from a P and L perspective, we're definitely hitting all our goals on the LRP side. Speaker 200:20:52As far as fixing all these things and what fixes we have in place, obviously, it's going to be a bit of a process. On the rebate eligibility front, we believe that caps out in Q3 and we plan for this to cap out in Q4. It just happened a couple of quarters earlier than we planned. So that is very much a temporary thing and accelerated. With respect to DME market share, one of the factors that has actually happened that created part of this is several of the Medicare Advantage programs went to pharmacy reimbursement. Speaker 200:21:23So patients who were being served by the DME channel shifted to the pharmacy and that is a piece of our lost DME share. I can't quantify exactly how much, but that's some of it. Adding to that, we need to refocus on those relationships. We need to do better. And we will talk with them. Speaker 200:21:41We have some plans and some things in place to start off there. But it's early. We have to implement them. And again, DME data is really the last piece of the puzzle as far as our revenues and as far as where we get by the end of the year, just given the data sources that we all look at. It's not as simple as the scripts on the pharmacy side. Speaker 200:22:00So we're addressing that. We will put more emphasis and time there. We'll send more customers through that channel and do better by those guys. So we'll keep looking. On the international front, another piece to remember, We've got a few things going on there. Speaker 200:22:18Timing of some of the tenders affects the numbers. There are some tenders that kick in July 1 that will help on the international growth, and that will be helpful there. We're also looking for Type 2 expansion, as I said on the call. We just got basal coverage in France that's kicking in. We know some of the other countries are moving towards basal coverage very quickly and we can play there with our DexCom 1 plus product. Speaker 200:22:40DexCom 1 plus is still early in the game and we're seeing that begin to pick up. So there are a number of levers to pull and a number of things we're working on, Larry. I can't quantify each one of them, but suffice to say, we're not just sitting here. Jeremy, you want to add to that? Yes. Speaker 400:22:54And then maybe below the hood a little bit in terms of how we allocate the investment dollars, Larry. We are re prioritizing and reallocating investments to where we know that it ultimately drives the most bang. So the team is working on that diligently in terms of refocusing where those dollars and those efforts go. So not given the specifics, just given the competitive nature of it, but rest assured there are changes being made underlying the business to ensure that we get back on top of our new patients. Thank you. Operator00:23:25Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Johnson with Baird. Your line is Speaker 700:23:32Thank you. Good afternoon, guys. Kevin, maybe following up on your DAB comments, you say you need to maybe work on some relationships there. Any color you can give there? And not to air dirty laundry, but I guess in one of our DME checks here recently, we kind of one off the conversation, but it heard that maybe some of the comments you made about CMS changes and who would bear the brunt of the any kind of reimbursement change in 2026 or 2027 would maybe be borne more by DME than you guys. Speaker 700:24:02Is it things like that that kind of strain some relationships? What else might strained relationships? And have there been any kind of formulary changes or anything in DME where they have just wholeheartedly moved patients to Abbott and it's going to be harder for you to get those patients back going forward? Thank you. Speaker 200:24:20I don't think it's been anything formula or systematic along those lines. I think I need to take you out. I'll let Jeremy take some more details. But let me move you guys back a little bit in time. When we started this journey down pharmacy coverage, we had as a company 0 relationships in the pharmacy channel. Speaker 200:24:37We worked very hard to develop those relationships because as you can all see by our numbers and our largest competitors' numbers, that is where a large portion of the business has moved at this point in time. We put a tremendous amount of effort there because we've never been there before. We didn't have any infrastructure. We didn't have other products there. We didn't have relationships there. Speaker 200:24:57I think in creating and building those relationships, we ignored other relationships that were very important to us more than we should have. And so we need to balance that a little better and make sure that our customers get their product through a source that's easy, efficient and economical for them. We felt to a large extent we were doing that, but we think we need to do more. Jeremy, you want to take some more on? Speaker 400:25:18No, that's it. And Jeff, to your comment on, if there's any CMS changes in terms of reimbursement down the road, we certainly did not say that. I think that was maybe a competitor said that. What we had said was, we're partners. And so if there's any changes in CMS reimbursement as partners, we would look at it as partners. Speaker 400:25:34And that would be our expectation going forward. So that was not how we positioned it. But nevertheless, to the extent that those have called freight relationships, Kevin alluded to, we have to pay more attention to it irrespective. Understood. Thank you. Operator00:25:49Your next question comes from the line of Margaret Andrew with William Blair. Your line is open. Speaker 800:25:56Hey, good afternoon guys. Thanks for taking the question. I guess I just wanted to follow-up and be clear on the dynamics on the guidance increase. The way you described it maybe wasn't super clear at least for me. Are you assuming and continuing to assume lower new patient adds for the rest of the year? Speaker 800:26:14Or was that new patient in Q2 alone driving $125,000,000 decrease for the year? And then continuing on that thread, are you seeing any change in some of those new patient ad dynamics or rep productivity on a month by month basis that would maybe give you that confidence in recovery if that is what you're assuming? Thanks. Speaker 400:26:36Yes. Let me it's a good question. Let me start on that. So Margaret, the answer is we do expect to see disruption continue into the Q3, and that's one of the reasons why you're seeing the impact. It's really a bit of a cumulative impact. Speaker 400:26:51Obviously, Q2 was a big impact. We've sized it in terms of patients. It was a pretty sizable disruption relative to expectation, it was around 70,000 patients. So it was a pretty big number. Obviously, that rolls through the rest of the year, but we do expect it to take a little bit of time to recover that. Speaker 400:27:06And so there will be there we have lowered new patient expectations into Q3. And then into Q4, our expectation is we start to get to back to where we were. But think about it as a quarter delay effectively as a result of some of this disruption on our longer term plan. And so when you run those numbers plus you run some expected numbers here in Q3, in disruption relative to expectation, that's ultimately how you get to the figures. In terms of improvement over the course of time, ultimately, you do expect to see that and we've seen some of that over time. Speaker 400:27:38Now, we always expected perhaps a little bit of disruption and some recovery. I would say the disruption is bigger than we would have anticipated. And the recovery is there, but when the disruption is bigger than anticipated, even as you have some of that recovery, again, you're a quarter behind where you'd expect to be and I expect that to play out as we come next year. So we revised that, we've included that in the guidance. High level, Kevin, I don't know if you have anything to add. Speaker 200:28:01No, I think that's good. Operator00:28:06Your next question comes from the line of Travis Steed with Bank of America. Your line is open. Speaker 900:28:13Hey, thanks for the question. I guess maybe could you just kind of explain what is the rebate eligibility? What it is? What it means? Kind of why it's temporary? Speaker 900:28:21Why it happened? I think a lot of confusion on that aspect. And I don't know if something happened kind of late in the quarter. It's like you guys I think were comfortable with the consensus in June. So I just wanted to ask, is this all kind of come up late in the quarter? Speaker 400:28:37Yes, I can take that. So when you think about rebate eligibility, over time, you kind of get closer and closer to this 100% eligibility and it takes a little bit of time. So planned as they opt into coverage, opt in. So we saw this take place over G6, to a lesser extent G5, but we weren't really in the pharmacy then. We saw it take place over the course of G6. Speaker 400:28:57And when we launched G7, we assumed it happened about as twice as fast as G6. So the assumption is, is more and more folks get access. Therefore, more and more folks are moving through that program. Therefore, you're subject to more and more rebates. And then the offset, of course, is by having more access, you have more volumes. Speaker 400:29:14As you can tell by our new patient numbers, we didn't have the volumes, but also the existing patient base was also subject to rebates. And so effectively is timing of price as you run through this. It's temporal, meaning you can only rebate up to your entire population and eventually it gets there. But that's why it's a timing thing. And it just happened, like Kevin was alluding to, 3 times as fast as G6, not 2 times as fast as G6. Speaker 400:29:38So that's a big piece there. In terms of the understanding of how the quarter was rolling up, you are correct. It did roll up later into the Q2. You can see our results in the Q2, while not up to expectations, did not impact the quarter as much as it impacted the full year. And obviously, that was driven by what you saw the dynamics that played through really the Q2. Speaker 400:29:59Kevin was alluding to DME where there's a big I'm sorry, not big concern, a big change in what I'd say is share and where we certainly missed. And that data comes in a little delayed. That's about a 4 to 6 week delay before we set. So as we've tallied that data as we're moving into really the close of the quarter into the weeks leading into the call, not only did it make us aware of certainly the impact on the quarter, but it was really important for us then to reflect that in the guidance on the year. And so a lot of that data, you're right, it obviously took place over the course of the quarter. Speaker 400:30:29We became aware of it really as we closed out the quarter, But that's why it's really important to get it in front of it for the guidance for the full year. Speaker 1000:30:37Great. Thank you. Operator00:30:40Your next question comes from the line of Matt Taylor with Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 600:30:48Hi. Thanks for taking the question. So I guess I wanted to ask if you could give us a little more color at least qualitatively on when you expect these issues to begin to heal to rebound. I don't know if you want to address them separately or together. You've given the back half guidance, but conceptually, what kind of impact is this going to have on the first half of 2025 when you're comping more normal periods? Speaker 600:31:15And when do you think you're going to see the sales force really find its footing, the rebates kind of flush through? Maybe you could flush that out a little bit more to help us model the future? Speaker 200:31:26Yes, I'll start and again, Jeremy, you can add more color. With respect to the rebates, this really caps in Q3. We had estimated in our own models that we would have full rebate eligibility by the Q4 of this year. It's just happened again a couple of quarters faster than we had planned. With respect to our field sales team and the disruption there, we believe we'll work through that in Q3 and early Q4. Speaker 200:31:48And by the time we start 2025, this group should be clicking on all cylinders and things should go very well there. Another thing that Jeremy talked about is reallocation and really examining where we're going to spend the dollars that we spend and the investments we're going to make to maximize the commercial effect of those. Those programs and those decisions are being made now. We'll roll into Q3 into Q4. And we believe will set us up nicely for 2025. Speaker 200:32:14We're obviously not giving 2025 guidance today, but we feel by the end of the year, the things that we've talked about today, we should have worked through and we should have a very good idea as to where we're going in Speaker 400:32:25the future. Yes. And Kevin alluded to it earlier, we talked about the question was, how do you feel about the 2025 LRP LRP and is it still valid? And again, we said, look, we feel it's still valid, albeit at the lower end of it, Matt. So I think that gives you some context. Speaker 400:32:40Obviously, this year is going to be impacted by these factors. As we work out of those and we work into them next year, Kevin alluded to it, rebates shouldn't be an impact next year. So as we work out of it and as we give as we get to the closer to the end of the year, we'll give 2025 guidance. But that hope to give you some context to our confidence as we move out of this year into next year and getting these things behind us. It shouldn't go unnoticed. Speaker 400:33:04Obviously, we're bullish on the business longer term, clearly not happy with the quarter and certainly not happy with the revised guide. So don't mistake it for that, but we do are bullish on the business longer term, hence the $750,000,000 share repurchase authorization. So hopefully that helps square up how we're at least thinking about 2025. Speaker 1000:33:23Thank you, guys. Operator00:33:25Your next question comes from the line of Danielle Antalffy of UBS. Your line is open. Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Thanks so much for taking the question. Speaker 1100:33:38Just a question on this pharmacy component. And one of the sort of long term risks here has always been that this becomes a more commoditized market. You look at finger sticks and blood glucose meters and they're commoditized at this point. And when we hear things like rebates and pressure in the pharmacy, I just want to make sure I understand, is this a competitive dynamic in the pharmacy as well? What's going on there? Speaker 1100:34:06And why is Q3 the peak? Where's the bottom, I guess, from a pharmacy rebate perspective as you do broaden coverage? Because if this is going to be standard of care, which I still think it is, like does that mean at what price and how should we be thinking about this over the long term? Sorry if that didn't make a ton of sense. Speaker 200:34:30No, no, it made perfect sense to me. With respect to our overall pricing, our pricing within channels, when you look at the prices, remains relatively consistent. What has happened in this quarter and what has happened now is more and more people have become eligible for rebates, hence bringing our value per customer down. This was the price that we assumed we would be targeting at the end of the Q4 and we'd be rolling into 25 with. In other periods, we haven't had anything as severe as we have today, obviously, but our new patient growth number would be so high and our volumes would be so high. Speaker 200:35:05If something like this happened, we grew through it. And so if a plan like this accelerated, our new patient numbers are so big, Danielle, that we manage through it. In this quarter, you combine the 2 of them, the increase in the rebates, which gets again to a net price very near what we'd expected and modeled. That doesn't mean the bottom of the price is falling out on an overall basis in the channel. It just means more people were subject to rebates than we had before. Speaker 200:35:31And we shifted patients from a more profitable DME channel over to that pharmacy through some, Again, as I talked earlier, the 3 largest Medicare Advantage plans adopted pharmacy coverage this year. A lot of the Medicaid plans have gone to pharmacy coverage as well. So those plans moving there necessitated a bit of that move and a bit of those rebates going up. So no, we don't believe we have a price falling out. We believe what we do continues to provide tremendous value to people and does a lot to improve, help save their lives and all the things we've talked about forever. Speaker 200:36:11So this is still a very valuable component in somebody's health and we'll continue to treat it as such. Operator00:36:19Thanks so much. Your next question comes from the line of Joanne Wuensch with Citibank. Your line is open. Speaker 800:36:30Good afternoon and thank you for taking the question. I want to pivot a little bit to Stelo. It was 1% of your 24% revenue at one level and it's still 1% of your 24% revenue, which has been lowered by a couple of 100,000,000 dollars Does this indicate your change in your expectations for the year or anything that we should read into it? I'm just sort of a little curious about that. Anything else that you can share as you think about that as building revenue? Speaker 800:37:01Thanks. Speaker 400:37:02No, it's an integer. And so the whole point there is, yes, while the top has come down 1%, 43% versus 40%. At the end of the day, it was all that kind of general contribution. So there was nothing insinuated by that, Joanne. It's rounded to that integer. Speaker 800:37:24Thanks. Operator00:37:26Your next question comes from the line of Matthew O'Brien with Piper Sandler. Your line is Speaker 1200:37:32open. All right. Afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. And it is one question, but it's long enough and I'll tie it all together, I promise. Speaker 1200:37:40Just clearly, Kevin, your comment about next year staying in the LRP, do you mean the 15% growth or do you mean 4 point $6,000,000,000 at the low end? Because if it's $4,600,000,000 up of $4,057,000,000 that's 12% growth. And then within there, the low end of the range, 15% off of even a 12% number this year is a deceleration versus is it easier comps? So there is a deceleration still factored in there. So what has changed to get us from that kind of 17.5% growth we expect from you guys, typical growth rate guidance to now that it's more like 15% or even lower? Speaker 1200:38:21What's the difference there that we can really anchor on to because that's I think the biggest challenge for the stock as we think about how it will trade tomorrow? Thank you. Speaker 400:38:31Sure. Maybe I can start with maybe the next year question. I don't think we've necessarily guided to a number. What we really tried to do is say, here's our LRP, it's still in play. When I say to the lower end, it's not necessarily the low end or a point estimate within there. Speaker 400:38:47It's really to give some context to as we've already made plans and are looking at next year, we have some there's confidence in meeting that low end number. And so really that's really what the goal here is rather than to set a guide number. Now your question then coming back to which is this year's growth, which the organic growth number obviously 11% to 13% is lower than we've historically seen. Kevin has alluded to it a little bit in the script. This year, a little bit of what I would say is execution where I think we need to execute better on new patients and execute better in various channels. Speaker 400:39:22And so that's something as a team we have to get our arms around. This year was impacted by a quicker, as we mentioned, a quicker rebate dynamic than we expected. And that's a part of it. Obviously, we lap that next year and you can only rebate 100% of your units. So obviously, it stops at some point. Speaker 400:39:40And so that piece of it will be transitory. But I think the big key then is getting back to execution and execution on new patients and executing in the DME channel and making sure we have good partnerships there and executing on our channel mix. That's really the work we have to do. And back to that point, that's one of the reasons we had a little bit of a lapse here and to the extent that we can get back to it, that allows us to get back to what we hope is what our traditional performance has been. Operator00:40:12Your next question comes from the line of Marie Thibault with BTIG. Your line is open. Speaker 1300:40:20Good afternoon. This is Sam on for Marie. Thanks for taking the questions here. Maybe I can ask on the DME channel. I recall when you guys are making that shift a few years ago that volume mix would peak around 20%. Speaker 1300:40:33I guess is the right way to think about it closer to 15% now? And then as we think about more MA plan shifting to pharmacy, I mean, is there any risk that that could go even lower? Thanks for taking the questions. Speaker 400:40:44Yes. We had always kind of got at least in the commercial channels and we talked this is really more about the commercial channels. We had always assumed it'd be about 75, 25. That was kind of our crystal ball. And as we got there, it started to skew a little bit more. Speaker 400:40:59But it was it didn't drift off of that 75.25 all that much. However, this quarter as we started to see really what I would say is loss of share, which for us in that channel is a bit unique and something we got to get our arms around. The split in our business was a little more. It doesn't necessarily mean that the overall market split ultimately ends up that way, but it does mean that the shift of our business certainly shifted that way. And so, does that number shift down to 85, 15? Speaker 400:41:27Well, if we take share, no, and that's really on us. So that gets back to the execution question. We need to execute in that channel. And that channel, it's a very important channel for us and these are very important partners and they serve a very, very important partnership to our customers. And so we've got to get back into that channel and make sure that we're getting our fair share there. Speaker 400:41:46That's really the big driver. Speaker 200:41:47I'd also add though, there has been a shift in government payer activity from the DME channel to the pharmacy. That actually has happened and we have to figure out how much that has impacted our DME mix versus pharmacy mix as well. Speaker 1300:42:04Thank you for taking the questions. Operator00:42:07Your next question comes from the line of Matthew Blackman with Stifel. Your line is open. Speaker 1400:42:14Good afternoon, everybody. Can you hear me okay? Speaker 400:42:17We can. Speaker 1400:42:18Okay, great. Maybe, Jeremy, I think I heard you mentioned that the new patient shortfall was something in the neighborhood of 70,000. Is there any way to tease that out? I'm sure it's challenging by indication. I mean, the DME share, while it sounds like it may be skewed more to basal patients potentially, is that fair? Speaker 1400:42:37And then what about on the sales force dislocation? Just any help on sort of the different pieces of the business? Speaker 400:42:45Yes. So the 70,000, the way to think about it is there's a good chunk of that is OUS. And so there's a portion that's outside the United States. There's a portion that's inside the United States. And it's usually reflective of our patient base in total. Speaker 400:42:57So you kind of have our splits there. In the U. S, really a lot of it is driven by the sales force. Now, one of the challenges, of course, is the sales force services all different indications. And so as you service all in different indications, you could probably imagine if we're not doing well in the DME, gets back to your point, we're not doing wonderful in the basal space. Speaker 400:43:19That's a big piece of the DME, certainly DME Medicare and the patient base that they service. So that's the way it's really hard to parse out by category, but when we look into it and we say, gee, we're not doing we're not taking share in the DME space, you can presume that that a lot of that is in that Medicare space. And I think it is fair to say that really across the board disruption, you can assume there's a little bit really across the board, but the biggest piece there is probably the best way to put it. Yes. Speaker 1400:43:47I appreciate that. Thanks. Operator00:43:50Your next question comes from the line of Jayson Bedford with Raymond James. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:43:58Thanks. Just two quick ones. Appreciate the color on the installed base, but can we assume there's been no real notable change in attrition? And then just on the 3Q guidance, is there not a healthy contribution from Stell O in 3Q or is the $40,000,000 more 4th quarter weighted? Speaker 200:44:18Yes, this is Kevin. The Stell O guidance, the Q3 contribution is not overly large. Most of the Stell O revenue is 4th quarter weighted as we again plan to launch StellO in later August. So that is that's how that one works. With respect to attrition, our retention and attrition by patient category remains similar to what we had in our plans. Speaker 200:44:40We know that our Type 1 patient with an automated insulin delivery system is certainly our stickiest and patient with the highest utilization factors as we go down the acuity curve to people on MDI or basal users or even those who are non insulin users, utilization goes down. But our retention numbers are still industry standard by a very large margin. And so we're still doing very well there. Operator00:45:08Your next question comes from the line of Steve Lichtman with Oppenheimer. Your line is open. Speaker 1500:45:16Thank you. Guys, I wanted to ask again about the Salesforce integration and just where you are today. Are you seeing signs of stabilization now? And what are you assuming on that front for the guide? And then can you remind us what opportunities you see with this larger sales force that obviously can turn this into a positive ultimately? Speaker 200:45:43We are seeing things beginning to stabilize, but we're also seeing things slower than we had projected in our own internal models at the start of the year. And as we developed our guidance earlier, hence, as Jeremy said, the guidance coming down a bit. So we are seeing things begin to stabilize and they're stabilizing across different categories and geographies. I think the biggest thing to anticipate for us and one of the things for us we missed in our plans, we've sent a whole bunch of new reps into offices we've never called on before. And there's a get to know you period that we probably didn't estimate being long enough. Speaker 200:46:17And so we're taking steps to assist our team and better actions with those physicians and getting to know them and getting them to trust and use DexCom. Somebody hasn't prescribed DexCom, they've got to prescribe one to see how it goes. And we've been going through that cycle during this quarter and we should able to increase the prescription patterns of those new physicians a lot more going forward. But there was a lot of getting to know you, for lack of a better word, going on here in the second quarter as this group got out there. We'll have a lot more data at the end of Q3. Speaker 200:46:51We saw better interactions in May June and we'll see how things go from here on out. Thank you. Operator00:47:01Your next question comes from the line of Mike Polark with Wolfe Research. Your line is open. Speaker 600:47:10Hey, thank you. I want to ask on your relationship with distributors and the concept of stocking. Last year, obviously, was a big year with the G7 launch and the basal coverage expansion and there's always a lot of stuff going on OUS. Is there any as you look back at 2023 as the baseline for building 24, would you frame any of kind of this setback as stocking last year that kind of caused a snafu in your modeling? Or this year, if you can comment on inventory levels with key partners, is there are you observing a drawdown of inventory? Speaker 600:47:41If there's anything to frame around that, I'd appreciate the color. Speaker 400:47:45Yes. If anything, usually you have these challenges when you launch a product given inventory levels of the old and inventory levels of the new. In all fairness to our partners last year, they did a pretty good job of balancing G6 and G7 inventory levels as they went through their transition. So we didn't have a whole lot in the prior year. This year, it's pretty normal. Speaker 400:48:08And we have inventory levels that generally range in between pretty normal levels. We keep an eye on what's in the channel. And they always stay within this really relatively tight band. And when we keep it in that band intentionally. And so we've been in that band now and we hope we generally stay in that band. Speaker 400:48:26I don't recall the time we've been outside that band, quite frankly. And so nothing to call out specifically. The bigger issue and I get what you're getting at, the bigger issue would have been say last year, during a window when you had a launch of G7 and folks were gearing up given not sure how much demand would come in. We didn't really have that last year and again, kudos to everybody that was holding inventory. They did a nice job. Speaker 600:48:49Thank you. Operator00:48:51Your next question comes from the line of Shagun Singh with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 1600:48:59Great. Thank you so much for taking the question. Just to follow-up on the sales force disruption here. You said it was more disruptive than historically because you changed roles. So can you elaborate on that? Speaker 1600:49:11And then you talked about physicians, changed physicians people are calling on. So is this are you referring to the PCP channel? And then you also referred to longer time to productivity. Can you give us a sense of how long does it take to get fully productive? It sounds like about 2 quarters or so because you said you expect them to be fully productive getting into 2025. Speaker 1600:49:36So is that the case? And then just finally, can you give us an update on the extended wear? Thank Speaker 200:49:43you. I was waiting for a science question, so I'll start with extended wear. We've been committed to launching a 15 day product in 2025 and we intend to. Things are progressing well on that front. Stella will be a 15 day product as well. Speaker 200:49:58We will learn a great deal from Stella with our launch and how that goes. With respect to the sales team, again, that reorganization is much different than what we've done in the past. What we've done in the past is we would look at an area and this total sales volume in an area and the physicians there and kind of just divide it up geographically and make various sub areas. So the reps in those areas would call an endocrinologist and primary care physicians and primarily their efforts were focused on those that were the highest prescribers in the territory. What we did this time is we took our territories and we said, okay, we are going to have specialty reps and one for us who calls primarily on the high prescribing physicians, endocrinologists and high prescribing primary care doctors who are very familiar with the product and service them more in that type of a role. Speaker 200:50:45And that's one group of our sales force. Then we have more people who are prospecting, who are going down and talking to more of PCPs who don't prescribe as much product, places where we have not been before. Because what we've noted in our data is we obviously don't win in offices, we don't call on. And so we needed to get into those offices and develop relationships. A lot of the time that has been spent in the first in this Q1 and going forward in Q3 is beginning to develop and cultivate those relationships, so we can get prescriptions from those healthcare professionals. Speaker 200:51:19They need to learn to trust us and they need to learn to have some experiences with our products. So that is how that is going and that is why this is different. So we really did things differently than we've done in the past. We believe over the long term, it's absolutely the right thing to do. And we have confidence in this team that they'll work through this. Speaker 200:51:39We believe it will start to turn near the end, starting into Q4 and be in a very good position by 2025. And that is the timeframe that we are looking at. If things go faster, great, but that's how we model our business. As Jeremy said earlier, we've decelerated our new patient number from what we had in our original models for Q3 as to what we have now. And we see things picking back up in Q4 as the group gets more involved. Speaker 200:52:05So that's where it is. Operator00:52:07Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Bill Plovanak with Canaccord Genuity. Your line is open. Great. Speaker 1000:52:18Thanks for taking my question. Just wanted to ask, so the pharmacy is good, DME is slowing. Do you think this is potentially a slowdown in penetration into the Type 1 and Type 2 markets? You're hitting about 60% Type 1, 40% Type 2 in the U. S. Speaker 1000:52:40I mean, are you just starting to get a saturation point where each incremental market share or market penetration is just that much tougher to come by? Or do you think this so it's a broader challenge? Or is this purely specific to sales force and DME and what have you? Thank you. Speaker 400:52:57Yes. It's a good question. In the U. S, we don't think so. There's still quite a bit of one way and we're still seeing the growth patterns relatively steady there. Speaker 400:53:07If you look at the overall total market growth in the Q2, I think what you can see is, if you add up all the various players, it's still a very robust growth. I think in our case, certainly in the DME channel, it was a share loss. And I think we just held our own in the retail channel this quarter. And so that I don't necessarily know that I would say that I think it's more about us getting in charge of really our go to market and making sure with our leading technology, we're getting our fair share there. As you zoom outside the U. Speaker 400:53:40S, as Kevin alluded to a little bit in his script, outside the U. S, it's really chunks of coverage and chunks of approval. And while we got a bit of a chunk here in France, Basil, there are some chunks we are waiting on. And so it can slow a bit as an overall market. I think you see it when you compare when you combine results globally, there is a bit of a slowdown outside the U. Speaker 400:54:01S. We don't think that it's a long term issue because as chunks of approvals come in, you find that there's still certainly pent up demand. So really it's about coverage. And we are working on coverage in various different areas, both type 2 intensive, certainly in basal. There's even some countries where we're still working on type 1 coverage in some of the more emerging markets. Speaker 400:54:22So maybe outside the U. S, you see a temporal slowdown, but not in the U. S. I think the U. S. Speaker 400:54:27Is still a very robust market. We're still seeing basal grow at the same rates that we expected as a total category, still seeing the intensive insulin category still growing well and obviously with non insulin opportunities with Stell O and the OTC products, I think it's a market that can continue to grow for some time. Speaker 200:54:47Yes, I'll add to that. You talked about a 60% penetration. I said several years ago, 80% for Type 1 insulin users and I believe the same with type 2 intensive insulin users. There is no reason somebody shouldn't be on a CGM. It's up to us to create the experience and the access structure whereby everybody can get to it. Speaker 200:55:08And those are the things we have to take on, Bill. And I agree with Jeremy's comments. Our efforts this quarter focus on our execution a lot more than a market slowdown. It's up to us to be better. Speaker 1700:55:21Great. Thanks. Operator00:55:24Your next question comes from the line of Chris Pasquale with Nephron. Your line is open. Speaker 600:55:31Thanks. I wanted to just clarify 2 points. 1 on the rebate issue. Do you need to anniversary that before revenue per patient becomes less of a drag? In other words, is that a period impact or is it a resetting the bar then you have to lap before you get back to normal? Speaker 600:55:47And then, Jeremy, you touched on international briefly in the last question. Most of the focus thus far has been on U. S, but OUS also disappointed. Am I right in interpreting you think that the slower growth there is more normal until you get some of these new coverages to come through? That's really going to be the catalyst for a reacceleration. Speaker 400:56:06Yes. So in terms of your rebate dynamic, I think we talked about it coming faster and because it's coming faster, certainly here into Q2 and to a lesser extent Q1, you lap it pretty darn early next year. So we're going to lap it pretty darn quick. Obviously, it's going to impact us at a more acute number. We expected it to be gradual over the course of this year into next year, which still would have been faster than G6. Speaker 400:56:28So to that point, it does help for next year's comps, because we will lap it pretty darn quick. In terms of the question on OUS, one of the things we've done historically there is, it's a market where we've taken share and obviously it's been growing. And this quarter, I would say we didn't take share and that's the that's part of it. The other part then is in the chunks. And so there's 2 opportunities there. Speaker 400:56:52Certainly, there's chunks of reimbursement, which would help accelerate it. But our expectation with the product launches we've had and the quality of product that we have is to take share. And so I think there's 2 opportunities. One's within our control, which is taking share and then the other is within the industry's control, which is coverage and we're going to execute on that, which we can control and certainly aid in helping the industry coverage as well. Speaker 600:57:16Thanks. Operator00:57:18Your next question comes from the line of Matt Miksic with Barclays. Your line is Speaker 1700:57:26open. Hey, thanks so much for taking the question. So there's a couple of things that I think investors are trying to pin down here and understand, given the announcement and the just slight change in trajectory here in the back half. And the first is around this the channel mix, indication mix and their impact on pricing, maybe given that you're building out of field force that's growing into areas where you haven't traditionally called, as you talked about, potentially maybe the margin impact of that. But is that something where channel mix is and these pricing factors have sort of set off on a new trajectory that we now have to think about in the equation of like patient growth and price mix. Speaker 1700:58:21What does that translate into growth over the next couple of years? Should we be thinking differently about that? And then I guess the other, just to you cross it off the list, it doesn't sound like it's a factor is it's just around competition. Is there any shift given the places where you're going into new accounts in the PCP channel or elsewhere? Is there are you feeling like you're into slightly tougher competitive challenges? Speaker 1700:58:50It didn't sound like it, but just if you could maybe cross that off the list and provide any color on the first, that would be terrific. Thanks. Speaker 400:58:57Yes. So I'll maybe go with the crossing off the list. There's always competition. And certainly, as we go into all of these categories, you're always going to have that we've always had competition. So this is an area that's been we've been competing for some time. Speaker 400:59:11So I don't think that's necessarily a new dynamic. When you expand the sales force, clearly your first call points, you've got to go through that. But this is no different than what we had in 2021 last time we expanded the sales force. We went into new locations, it's building familiarity. And yes, there's always competition, but that's not a new thing. Speaker 400:59:29So I think you can cross that off the list. To your question then Speaker 600:59:33on mix, Speaker 400:59:33I'd say this in the U. S, I don't think the market has moved all that much. I think it gets back to our performance within that market and we have to perform in those areas. And so when you talk about, is this a new price year over year pure price, it hasn't really changed all that much. Certainly in the DME channel, it hasn't changed all that much and we talk about that often. Speaker 400:59:54But when you have less performance in your highest reimbursed channels and better performance in a lower reimbursed channel, I we've always talked about DME being higher than pharmacy, And then you don't outperform on new patients, you kind of combine all those up, that's what you really saw. So the opportunity is for us to get out there and get the new patients and get the new patients in all of the channels, in the channels that we've been in and get our fair share in those channels. So I think that's the best way to think about it is, we can do it. It's within our purview to go do so as opposed to necessarily a shifting in the market itself. Speaker 1701:00:31Thanks so much. Operator01:00:34This concludes the question and answer session. I will turn the call to Kevin Sayer for closing remarks. Speaker 201:00:41Well, thanks everybody for participating today. This is a tough call for us. I know it's a tough call for all of you who supported us. We've provided the best view that we have going forward. We obviously will work hard to do better and provide you with more color and more things going forward. Speaker 201:00:59We are extremely excited for our STELLA launch later this quarter, and we certainly expect to hear from you as we do that. I just want to also point out, we talked a lot about our commercial team today. They're fabulous. They've done very well, and they will rebound Speaker 601:01:16from this. I have every confidence they will. Speaker 201:01:16When you have something like this, it's on everybody in the company, it's not just on those guys. We're all going to put our heads down and focus more. So you can count on that. Thank you very much for being with us today, and we'll see you all soon. Operator01:01:33Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's conference. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect. Speakers, please stand by for your debrief.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by