NYSE:BAX Baxter International Q2 2024 Earnings Report $49.95 -1.25 (-2.44%) As of 04/16/2025 04:00 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast Triumph Financial EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.68Consensus EPS $0.66Beat/MissBeat by +$0.02One Year Ago EPS$0.55Triumph Financial Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$3.81 billionExpected Revenue$3.75 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$57.18 millionYoY Revenue Growth+2.80%Triumph Financial Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date8/6/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, August 6, 2024Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsBaxter International's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 1, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 8:30 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)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Baxter International Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 6, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Baxter International's Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Your lines will remain in a listen only mode until the question and answer segment of today's call. As a reminder, this call is being recorded by Baxter and is copyrighted material. It cannot be recorded or rebroadcast without Baxter's permission. If you have any objections, please disconnect at this time. Operator00:00:34I would now like to turn the call over to Ms. Claire Trachtman, Senior Vice President, Chief Investor Relations Officer at Baxter International. Ms. Trackman, you may begin. Speaker 100:00:47Good morning, and welcome to our Q2 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Joining me today are Joel Maeda, Baxter's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Joel Grade, Baxter's Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. On the call this morning, we will be discussing Baxter's Q2 2024 results along with our financial outlook for the Q3 and full year 2024. With that, let me start our prepared remarks by reminding everyone that this presentation, including comments regarding our financial outlook for the Q3 and full year 2024 the status and anticipated timing of our ongoing strategic actions, including the proposed kidney care separation and the potential impact of our recent pricing actions, regulatory matters and the macroeconomic environment on our results of operations contain forward looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. And of course, our actual results could differ materially from our current expectations. Speaker 100:01:50Please refer to today's press release and our SEC filings for more detail concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. In addition, on today's call, non GAAP financial measures will be used to help investors understand Baxter's ongoing business performance. A reconciliation of the non GAAP financial measures being discussed today to the comparable GAAP financial measures is included in the accompanying investor presentation and also available in our earnings release issued this morning, which are both available on our website. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Joe. Joe? Speaker 200:02:27Thank you, Claire, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. Our Q2 reflect the continued progress and momentum of our ongoing strategic transformation. Our performance in the quarter was strong reinforcing the benefits of our redesigned operating model fueled by the commitment and hard work of our outstanding Baxter team. I will start the call today with some brief commentary on our strong second quarter performance before turning the call over to Joel to provide more detail on our results as well as our outlook for the rest of the year. Speaker 200:03:04Then as always, we'll open up to your questions. As you saw in this morning's earnings release, Baxter's 2nd quarter results exceeded our previously issued guidance on both the top and bottom line. This performance further enhances our confidence in our ability to continue executing against our strategic priorities and build upon this underlying momentum. As such, we have increased our full year sales outlook and adjusted EPS guidance accordingly. Our 2nd quarter performance provides further evidence that the steps we have taken to date to centralize and streamline our operating model are yielding results. Speaker 200:03:47These actions allow for improved visibility both externally and internally to our markets as well as increased accountability for our segment leaders. These benefits coupled with enhanced operational rigor have enabled our teams to better identify opportunities to accelerate innovation to drive growth and expand margins. Turning to some of the highlights from the quarter. 2nd quarter sales from continuing operations grew 3% on a reported basis and 4% at a constant currency rates. As a reminder, continuing operations exclude the impact of our biopharma solutions business, PPS, which we divested at the close of the Q3 of 2023, in line with our strategic transformation roadmap. Speaker 200:04:37Sales growth was broad based with all 4 Baxter segments delivering growth above our expectations, reflecting positive demand and improved pricing for products across much of the portfolio. On the bottom line, adjusted earnings per share from continuing operations were $0.68 These results were driven by our top line performance combined with our continued emphasis on operational efficiency across the company with ongoing contributions from our integrated supply chain network. Our strong operational performance more than offset a negative impact from foreign exchange and a higher than expected tax rate in the quarter. Now looking at performance by segment. Medical Products and Therapies, our MPT, delivered 2nd quarter sales growth of 4% at reported rates and 5% at constant currency rates. Speaker 200:05:31Growth was fueled by demand across the segment and results include the 1st U. S. Sales of our leading edge Novum, IQ large volume pump with Doze IQ safety software. Customer interest is high for the Novum platform, including both large volume and syringe pumps with their ability to advance connectivity and intelligent infusion therapy. These pumps are already live and in use at multiple sites, making a difference for caregivers and the patients they serve. Speaker 200:06:04We have a healthy funnel of opportunities and anticipate continued strong, steady uptake from Novum across the balance of 2024 and beyond through the upgrades of existing customers and conversions of new customers. Our Pharmaceuticals segment grew 9% at reported rates and 11% at constant currency rates. Performance was driven by double digit growth in our specialty injectables portfolio, reflecting the recent launches of a range of new differentiated injectables as well as significant growth in our drug compounding business. Growth in the segment was partially offset by lower sales of inhaled anesthetics. Healthcare Systems and Technologies or HST performance advanced 1% at both reported and constant rates. Speaker 200:07:00Our Care and Connectivity Solutions division delivered mid single digit growth, reflecting positive market demand and strong U. S. GAAP orders, which increased meaningfully both sequentially and year over year. Growth in the quarter was partially offset by an expected decline in the Front Line Care division, primarily due to a difficult comparison to the prior year period and continued softness in the U. S. Speaker 200:07:28Primary care market. Overall, HST results in the quarter benefited from the operational improvements that we are in process of implementing to enhance ongoing performance. As we discussed last quarter, we expect to see these efforts continue to yield positive results as 2024 continues and going forward. Finally, kidney care was flat year over year at reported rates and grew 3% at constant currency rates. Performance continues to be fueled by demand for our acute therapies portfolio plus strong growth for peritoneal dialysis products due to positive volume and pricing globally. Speaker 200:08:09Growth was partially offset by an expected decline in sales of in center hemodialysis products due to select product and market exits. Looking ahead, we remain confident and excited about the future of our company and our potential to continue to accelerate sales growth, expand our margins and drive innovation that will deliver benefits to our customers, shareholders and many other stakeholder communities. As you all know, we launched our strategic transformation in January of 2023 to recast Bagsd as a more simplified, more agile and more focused company, passionate in its commitment to operational excellence and better positioned to accelerate growth through customer inspired innovation. Among the elements, central to our plan was a separation of the Kidney Care business from Baxter in order to provide both companies with improved strategic clarity and greater flexibility to pursue the unique investment priorities. We are continuing to make steady progress toward the separation and while the ultimate pathway has not yet been determined, we currently expect the separation will occur in late 2024 or early 2025 with the separation of kidney care, we have a unique opportunity to redefine ourselves while also remaining firmly grounded in what has powered our success for nearly a century. Speaker 200:09:37Our life sustaining mission, our focus on essential health care, our commitment to innovation and at the heart of it all, our employees, whose unparalleled dedication turns our aspirations into impact. Together, we are united, energized and eager to take Baxter into a future of sustained health care leadership. With that, I will pass it over to Joel to provide more detail on our results for the quarter and outlook for the balance of the year. Speaker 300:10:07Thanks, Joe, and good morning, everyone. As Joe mentioned, we are pleased with our 2nd quarter results, which came in ahead of our expectations and further reinforce our goal of consistently meeting and exceeding our financial objectives. 2nd quarter 2024 global sales of $3,800,000,000 increased 3% on a reported basis and 4% on a constant currency basis, and as mentioned, compared favorably to our previously issued guidance. Our performance in the quarter benefited from better than expected sales in many product categories and particularly in patient support systems, infusion therapies, peritoneal dialysis and drug compounding. As compared to the prior year period, sales excluding Kidney Care increased approximately 5% on a constant currency basis. Speaker 300:11:04On the bottom line, adjusted earnings from continuing operations totaled $0.68 per share, increasing 24% versus the prior year period and ahead of our prior guidance of $0.65 to $0.67 per share. Results in the quarter were driven by strong operational performance with continued momentum commercially, partially offset by negative impact from non operational items totaling $0.05 per share due to foreign exchange and a higher than anticipated tax rate. Now I'll walk through our results by reportable segments. Commentary regarding sales growth will reflect growth at constant currency rates. Sales in our Medical Products and Therapies or MPT segments were $1,300,000,000 increasing 5%. Speaker 300:11:58Within MTT, 2nd quarter sales from our infusion therapies and technologies division totaled $1,000,000,000 and increased 5%. Sales in the quarter benefited from strong growth internationally across the division, particularly for our IV Solutions and Infusion Systems products, which benefited from both volume and pricing gains. Solid demand for Nutrition globally also contributed to growth in the quarter. Sales from Advanced Surgery totaled $277,000,000 and grew 4%, reflecting solid growth internationally. For our Healthcare Systems and Technologies or HFC segment, sales in the quarter were $748,000,000 and increased 1% coming in ahead of our expectations. Speaker 300:12:53Within the HST segment, sales in our Care and Connectivity Solutions or CCS division were $452,000,000 growing 4%. Performance rebounded in the quarter driven by significant growth in orders both sequentially and year over year for our CCS products. As Joe mentioned, the actions we are taking to enhance our operational rigor and improve execution are yielding results. These factors contributed to orders growth across our CCS division of more than 40% compared to the prior year and over 60% sequentially. Results in the quarter included upgrades to both existing customers and competitive gains within our patient support systems business. Speaker 300:13:43We are very encouraged by the growth of orders in the U. S. This quarter, which will be phased in over the course of the second half of this year and into 2025. Overall, we believe the initiatives we're implementing to improve commercial execution will continue to lead to improved performance both in the second half of this year and beyond. Frontline Care sales in the quarter were $296,000,000 declining 4% in line with our expectations and represented a double digit improvement sequentially. Speaker 300:14:21Growth in the quarter continued to be impacted by a difficult comparison to the prior year as backlog reductions positively contributed to growth in the prior year period. Performance in the quarter was also impacted by ongoing softness in the primary care market, which negatively impacted growth in both our connected monitoring and intelligent diagnostics product portfolios. The timing and release of government orders in the U. S. Also impacted growth in the quarter. Speaker 300:14:51We expect this division to return to growth in the second half of the year as growth for products in other settings such as cardiology and acute is anticipated to more than offset the continued softness in primary care and lower government orders. The anniversary of the prior year impact from the backlog reduction will also benefit performance in the second half of the year. Moving on to Pharmaceuticals. Sales in this segment were $602,000,000 increasing 11%. Performance in the quarter reflects double digit growth in our U. Speaker 300:15:29S. Injectables portfolio, driven by new product launches as well as strong demand for services in our drug compounding portfolio internationally, which has benefited from supply constraints for certain customers that are expected to ease in the second half of the year. Performance in the quarter was partially offset by lower sales of inhaled anesthetics globally. Sales in the quarter for our Kidney Care segment totaled $1,100,000,000 increasing 3%. Within Kidney Care, global sales for chronic therapies were $917,000,000 increasing 1%. Speaker 300:16:12Strong PD growth in the quarter was partially offset by the expected negative impact from certain product end market exits in our in center HD business as well as lower sales in China due to government procurement initiatives. We estimate that these items negatively impacted sales by just over $50,000,000 in the quarter. Sales in our Acute Therapies business were $201,000,000 representing growth of 9%, driven by strong demand and competitive conversions in the United States. Other sales, which represents sales not allocated to a segment and primarily include sales of products and services provided directly to certain of our manufacturing facilities were $22,000,000 and declined 5% during the quarter. Now moving on to the rest of the P and L. Speaker 300:17:10Our adjusted gross margin totaled 41.2% and represented an increase of 80 basis points over the prior year. The year over year improvement in gross margin primarily reflects the strong operational efficiencies we are realizing within our integrated supply chain network, resulting from execution of the margin improvement programs we were implementing and the anniversary of the negative margin impacts from inflationary pressures that drove higher cost of goods sold in the prior year period. Pricing initiatives in select markets also positively contributed to margin improvement in the quarter. Product mix and foreign exchange partially offset margin expansion in the quarter. Adjusted SG and A totaled $873,000,000 or 22.9 as a percentage of sales, an increase of 10 basis points from the prior year period as we are making select investments to support our growth objectives and new product launches. Speaker 300:18:14SG and A leverage is expected to continue to improve as sales ramp over the course of the year. Adjusted R and D spend in the quarter totaled $175,000,000 and represented 4.6 as a percentage of sales, an increase of 10 basis points compared to the prior year period and reflects our continued investments in advancing new products across the portfolio and bringing innovation to patients across our segments. These factors resulted in an adjusted operating margin of 13.7%, an increase of 50 basis points versus prior year driven by the factors above, which more than offset a negative impact on operating margins of approximately 70 basis points due to foreign exchange. Net interest expense totaled $85,000,000 in the quarter, a decrease of $39,000,000 versus the prior year period, driven by debt repayments in the Q4 of 2023 associated with the proceeds of our BPS divestiture. We plan to continue to repay debt in 2024 consistent with our stated capital allocation priorities. Speaker 300:19:30During July, Baxter finalized a bank finance bridge loan in the form of a delayed draw term loan or DTTL in lieu of a public bond financing with a total size of $2,050,000,000 The DTTL provides certainty of ability to fund debt maturities coming due in the Q4 in the event we haven't completed the Kidney Care separation by that time. We expect to utilize proceeds from the separation to repay the loan if outstanding. We felt this is a better option as compared to bond financing, given the more temporary nature of the cash and the high cost of issuing new term debt in current markets. Adjusted other non operating income totaled $20,000,000 in the quarter compared to an expense of $22,000,000 in the prior year period, which included losses on both foreign exchange and marketable securities. The adjusted tax rate for the quarter of 23.9% came in higher than expectations and increased as compared to the prior year tax rate of 17.8%. Speaker 300:20:43The year over year increase is primarily driven by the geographic mix of earnings, decreased utilization of foreign tax credits in the current year period and a non recurring foreign tax incentive in the prior year period. And as previously mentioned, adjusted earnings from continued operations totaled $0.68 per share and increased 24% versus the prior year, primarily driven by improved commercial performance and a reduction in interest expense, offset by the impact of foreign exchange and higher tax rate. Let me conclude my remarks by discussing our outlook for the Q3 and full year 2024, including some key assumptions underpinning the guidance. For full year 2024, Baxter now expects total sales growth of approximately 3% on both reported and constant currency basis, which is an increase from prior guidance of 2% to 3% on a constant currency basis. This increase reflects the outperformance we realized in the Q2 and continued momentum for our businesses. Speaker 300:21:58Cost of currency sales guidance for the full year by reportable segment is as follows. For MPT, we now expect sales growth of approximately 5%. This is an increase from the prior guidance of 4% to 5% and reflects the outperformance year to date and continued momentum for our Noble platform. Sales in our Healthcare Systems and Technologies segment are expected to be approximately flat to the prior year, consistent with prior guidance. This guidance reflects improved performance in the second half of the year, but also assumes the installation of some CCS orders are phased to 2025. Speaker 300:22:41In addition, our guidance assumes FLC performance also improves in the second half of the year, but that both primary care and government orders declined in 2024, neither of which we believe represent market share losses. We expect both the primary care market and orders from the government will improve in 2025. We now expect pharmaceutical sales growth of approximately 7%, which compares favorably to prior guidance of 6% to 7% and reflects the strong start to the year and continued momentum for our new product launches as well as increased contribution from drug compounding. The contribution from drug compounding is expected to meaningfully slow in the second half of the year as supply constraints for certain hospital customers ease and the business focuses on driving more profitable growth. Collectively, sales for these 3 remaining Baxter segments are now expected to increase approximately 4% in 2024 and exit the second half of the year at the higher end of our prior expectation of 4% to 5%. Speaker 300:23:56For Kidney Care, we now expect sales growth of 1% to 2% as compared to 2023. This also compares favorably to prior guidance and reflects the underlying momentum of this business. Now turning to our outlook for other P and L line items. We continue to expect adjusted operating margin to increase by more than 50 basis points in 2024. We expect our non operating expenses, which include net interest expense and other income and expense to total approximately $330,000,000 in aggregate during 2024. Speaker 300:24:38We now anticipate a full year adjusted tax rate of approximately 23%. We expect our diluted share count to average 511,000,000 shares for the year. Based on all these factors, we now anticipate full year adjusted earnings, excluding special items of $2.93 to $3.01 per diluted share, which also compares favorably to prior guidance of $2.88 to $2.98 per diluted share and reflects the outperformance we realized in the Q2 and expect for the remainder of the year and includes an incremental headwind from non operational items totaling approximately $0.02 per share. Specific to the Q3 of 2024, we expect global sales growth of 3% to 4% on a reported basis and 4% to 5% on a constant currency basis. And we expect adjusted earnings excluding special items of $0.77 to $0.79 per diluted share. Speaker 300:25:51With that, we can now open up the call for Q and A. Operator00:25:55Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer So that we may be respectful of everyone's time, please limit your comments to one question and one follow-up question if necessary. We appreciate everyone's patience and would like to provide as many of you as possible the opportunity to ask a question. We will pause for a moment while the list is being compiled. I would like to remind participants that this call is being recorded and a digital replay will be available on the Baxter International website for 60 days at www.baxter dotcom. Operator00:26:37Our first question comes from Robbie Marcus of JPMorgan. Your question please. Speaker 400:26:44Great. Thanks for taking the questions and congrats on a nice quarter. 2 for me. Wanted to start with the revised guidance And it looks like it's pretty much going higher from the 2nd quarter beat and then 3rd quarter upside versus The Street. So you gave a lot of detail, but I was hoping you could just walk us through the underlying drivers and did I get the raise and impact correct? Speaker 400:27:12Thanks. Speaker 300:27:13Hi, good morning, Robbie. It's Joel. Thank you for the questions. Yes, I think certainly the new guidance is actually starts with the performance we had in Q2. We had a strong operational quarter and obviously that's part of what's carried through to the rest of the year. Speaker 300:27:30What I would just say in general, though is that our businesses continue to have strong momentum in them. And so I think when you think about this from a sales perspective, it's the recovery it's continued recovery over the course of the year sequentially in HST. Again, we've raised the guidance for MPT as well from a sales perspective as well as pharma. And so I think the and all those businesses again are continuing to improve from a sales perspective. So on the top line that's part of the really key driver. Speaker 300:28:03From a margin perspective, we continue to expect a positive progress from a pricing standpoint, from an ISC standpoint. I think the our margin improvement programs and the continued work there are also a part of obviously what's driving ultimately the bottom line beat as well. The offset to some of that from an operating margin perspective, we do make we're making continued investments in our business from a sales and marketing standpoint, from an R and D perspective, from new product launch perspective. And so those things continue to impact the opposite direction as well as we've got an MSA in pharma that I think you're aware of was related to BPS sales. So that's an offset. Speaker 300:28:48And then finally on the bottom line from a we do have a headwind from an FX and a tax rate perspective. But again, punch line here, continued sales momentum, margin expansion with a couple of the offsets I talked about. Speaker 400:29:05Thanks. And maybe just a quick follow-up here. The HST had a tough first quarter. It looks like it improved sequentially in Q2. Frontline Care is still negative year over year. Speaker 400:29:19Maybe just speak to the underlying trends you're seeing in the two businesses there and your confidence in a reacceleration and return to positive growth in the second half of the year? Thanks. Speaker 200:29:33Hi, Robbie. Good morning. We feel that a great deal of the operational issues are being addressed behind us. We still are addressing them and will be throughout the 2024 calendar year, Primarily, the one involved in one of our plants transfers is being addressed and is in really, really good shape at the moment. I want to make sure that we also have our sales force is doing fantastic job. Speaker 200:30:06We did a significant amount of revamping there. So we see that going well. We also see a very positive trend in capital. And the positive trend in capital allows us to have very strong one of the strongest quarters we ever had in orders before the Q2. So we see that going extremely well. Speaker 200:30:28This is in the CCS business, which is our beds and nurse call systems. FLC completely different dynamic that has to do with the primary care market that has significant shift during 2024 with Big players coming in and out. We believe our market share is still growing in debt slightly, but it's very high. And we feel that business is going to come back into normality towards the end of the year as well as government orders, which has been very, very low. And the most important factor was the comp versus last year. Speaker 200:31:08All in all, I think, HST has turned the corner. We see some very interesting dynamics on the market with our product offering, gaining ground and stable market share and possibly growing into Q3 and Q4. Speaker 400:31:26Great. Thanks a lot. Operator00:31:30Travis Steed of Bank of America Securities is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 500:31:36Hey, thanks for taking the question. I wanted to ask about the kidney co separation. I think that it was new that you added early 2025, so I wanted to ask about that. And has your thinking changed at all on spend versus sell? And also noticed in the impairment charge on that business, so wasn't sure if there's anything to kind of read into that impairment charge this quarter. Speaker 300:31:58So a couple of things on this. First of all, thanks for the question, Travis. From a timing perspective, again, look, we're continuing to make progress and continue to move forward in a dual path to ensure that we're ready for both from a sale and a spin process. And so we're obviously doing that in a way that's going to maximize our again, I just look at it as we've continued to evolve the process, again, I just look at it as we've continued to evolve the process and move it forward. Again, we're in a good place from the perspective of both, but the timing has shifted a little bit as we continue to move through the year. Speaker 300:32:42And so our plan is to still continue to get it done by the end of 2024, but it could move into the early part of 2025, which is why we put the guidance out that it did. From a goodwill perspective, the way I would take that is we've had a now a process where we actually have had bidders put a value into what the goodwill is. And so as we assess that relative to obviously the value of the books, there's a negative impact there from a goodwill perspective. I would say this, in the event that there was a sale moving forward, we would be recognizing a gain on that sale. So there's a little bit of a timing issue from that perspective. Speaker 300:33:28But this is part of a normal process to reassess our goodwill. And now that we have an actual kind of what we call market value for that so to speak and that's where that came from. Speaker 500:33:39Great. Thanks a lot. I wanted to ask a follow-up on the margins. So first of all, the second half total company, you got a couple of 100 basis points second half margin ramp. So I wanted to ask about the confidence and kind of what's driving that. Speaker 500:33:52But also if you think about the segment margins in the first half of the year, all the margin expansion for the total company was more on the renal side and the core Baxter business down year over year. Wanted to kind of think about how we get confidence that ex the Renalco longer term like the RemainCo Baxter business is going to be expanding margins kind of the 50 basis points or so a year that you've kind of set out in the past? Speaker 300:34:18Sure. Let me start by taking what I call some of the drivers of our margin perspective and then I'll get to the second part of your question. Our margin drivers continue to be from a couple of different things. 1 is, again, our top line obviously, our top line growth and some of the new product launches that are coming into play. That's both short term and something over the longer term that's going to be a driver from a margin perspective. Speaker 300:34:42Pricing, we continue to see upside opportunities from a pricing perspective. In the current year, it's been primarily outside the U. S. We look for some of that inside in the U. S. Speaker 300:34:53Next year as again some of the GPO contracts take hold etcetera, etcetera, but we continue to take pricing. ISC continues to be an area where we expand our margins. Again, both the margin improvement programs, just the efficiencies we continue to gain from some of our investments in automation, etcetera, etcetera. And so that's where the kind of the really key drivers and why we feel continued with confidence in our ability to actually drive our margins going forward. I think the from an ex kidney perspective, there's a couple of things that I would just say. Speaker 300:35:29Number 1, as we move to a vertical structure in this company, we've continued to refine the process of allocations. So some of this from an ex kidney perspective is an impact again as we continue to refine our allocation methodology and you see some of that again impacting where the difference between kidney and some of them margins ex kidney. The other part to it, Pramod, just as I mentioned in some of my comments in the earlier question, we are continuing to invest in R and D. We are continuing to invest in new product launches and things that ultimately are going to again drive growth that are impacting operating margins in general. So that's the that answers your questions. Speaker 500:36:14Yes. Thanks a lot. Appreciate that. Operator00:36:19David Roman of Goldman Sachs is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 600:36:25Thank you and good morning everybody. I wanted just to start on the revenue outlook for the balance of the year and recognizing the comment on exiting the year at the higher end of the 4% to 5% on the core Baxter business. But if you look at the sort of guidance that you've provided for Q3 and the balance of the year, I think that implies revenue growth in Q4 below 1%. Can you maybe just help us understand the drivers of the phasing of revenue for the balance of the year? And then I have one follow-up on the strategic capital allocation side. Speaker 300:36:57Sure. Thanks for the question. Yes, the primary driver of some of the movement there in terms of, I'll call it, squeeze ramp in the Q4 is really product mix impact and it starts with compounding in pharma. And we've had some again, that's been a significant driver of some of the upside in addition to the other parts of the business. And that actually starts to slow down in the second half of the year, but in particular in the Q4. Speaker 300:37:25And so I would say that's really one of the key drivers of some of the little bit of the phasing from what you call a 3rd quarter perspective in the squeeze math on the 4th quarter. Speaker 600:37:40Got it. And then maybe just a follow-up, if you look at kind of the increases in discretionary spending on the SG and A and R and D side, Could you maybe go into a little bit more detail about the internal capital allocation priorities, where those incremental dollars in SG and A and R and D are being deployed? And maybe any early look you can give us into some of the either product launches or geographic expansion initiatives that may come out the other side of these investments? Speaker 200:38:10Good morning, David. How are you? Well, Joe, Speaker 300:38:14thank you. Speaker 700:38:14It's nice to talk to you. Speaker 200:38:16Likewise. Listen, just adding a bit to Joe's previous answer is compounding, we had a customer in Australia, which had maintenance planned into their hospitals. And we took a great deal of that volume. So you see their volume dwindling down in the 3rd Q4, which we knew about it. So when you do this squeeze method in the Q4, you get what you get, but primarily driven by that part of the business having a specific event in the 1st and second quarter. Speaker 200:38:54Moving to the capital allocation. Our capital allocation now putting kidney care on the side is driven by innovation. So what is the highest innovation drivers for the company is going to be in infusion technologies. So we have more investment to do into new categories of pump, more software. We have intelligent software coming out in 2025 with artificial intelligence that attaches to the pump. Speaker 200:39:24We also have 5 new product launches that we're planning in the next 12 months for HST significant ones, really good ones. We need to put the money behind to close the gap in the research and development, regulatory affairs as well as the commercial launch. So that is where we allocate the money and we have some molecules. So in Pharmaceuticals, so you're talking about infusion systems, specifics into PSS and Care Communications and what we call the injectable specialty drugs, primarily via flow style that we have coming out of one of our facilities. So all the capital allocation is going to products that have higher margin and higher contribution to the company plus associated to that is the spending that goes along. Speaker 200:40:17So it's a good spending, spending put for good use. We did a lot of work internally to understand the major drivers of shareholder value to be able to achieve that. Speaker 600:40:29Very helpful. Thank you for taking the question. Operator00:40:34Larry Biegelsen of Wells Fargo is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 700:40:40Good morning. Thanks for taking the question and congrats on the nice quarter here. Joel, I was hoping you could just give us a refresher on the key assumptions for KidneyCo sale or spin, the tax basis, how might it look different from the BPS sale, Just the margins for KidneyCo, first half was 10.9%, which is much higher than in prior year. So when we're trying to estimate the dilution, what should we think about for margins and the stranded cost assumptions and use of proceeds would be helpful? Any color on that. Speaker 700:41:18Thanks for taking the question. Speaker 300:41:21Sure. Thanks for the question. Let me just start with the again a little bit from a margin perspective. Again, our Q1 with kidney, you'll recall, was had some substantial one time impacts that drove that margin that what I'll call a disproportionately high level. So I think as we've talked about kidney in general, the think about that I think as a high single digit sort of low double digit margin profile at this point. Speaker 300:41:53And again, that was somewhat inflated, though particularly in Q1, will be the way I would answer that question. From a stranded cost perspective, look, this is an area we haven't specifically given that type of guidance yet on it. What I will tell you is that that's one of the key initiatives that I'm driving personally in terms of our ability to reduce the dilutive impact on that. And so I think that's something we're going to you'll hear more about as we go forward. But that's really we haven't come out yet and given that type of information. Speaker 300:42:36And we have plans already underway and again, starting the execution of that to get way ahead of it. Certainly from a sale versus spin perspective, obviously the overarching goal is to maximize shareholder value. And so we're going to do what is best in order to accomplish that. And if I weigh the puts and takes on some of that kind of stuff, obviously, all of the evaluations being equal, so to speak, there are certain advantages of the sale from the perspective of more cash earlier, from the perspective of valuation certainty, etcetera. But obviously, there's lots of parts to play in that. Speaker 300:43:15And then from a tax perspective, I guess, to answer your final question, I think I look at that as a part of the overall economics of what we're going to do. I think there's been a lot of questions on tax leakage, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. But in the end, it really is about economics in terms of what we end up with from a net tax proceeds and then again, what maximizes shareholder value. Speaker 700:43:40All right. I'll leave it at that. Thanks for taking the question guys. Speaker 300:43:44Thank you, Mark. Operator00:43:46Vijay Kumar of Evercore ISI is on the line with a Speaker 800:43:52question. Joe, I just want to go back on the 4th quarter implied sort of 1% organic. And if I heard you correctly, is the only thing that's changing is drug compounding. So should the exit rates for NPT, HST, kidney code, should all be in that sort of annual range rate in the low to mid singles for MPT, HST, kidney code in the 1% to 2 percent and only thing that changes for Q4 is drug compounding. Is that correct? Speaker 300:44:28It's primarily that in some kidney, But I think the drug compounding is the main part of it. We have talked about the fact that though our ex kidney exit range for the year, it will be in the 4% to 5% range. So I think the but yes, it's primarily compounding and then some slowdown in kidney. Speaker 200:44:48So Vijay, the kidney part is primarily driven by value based procurement in that specific business. So as we await the inclusion or not, we look at our forecast and we look that is the biggest impact that we're going to have in kidney is VBP. Of course, that associated with compounding have muted the good growth and results of the rest of the businesses of Baxter. Speaker 800:45:25Understood, Joe. And maybe, Joe, a bigger picture question for you. If I just go back the last 18 months, it's been a lot of moving parts challenges, a lot of questions raised on is backs losing share. When I look at your order commentary within HS and P in some of the performance in the core business, it looks like we're back to 4 plus. When we look at the sort of the forward trajectory here, right, the implied exit rate, is that 4% plus organic sustainable? Speaker 800:45:58Any one offs we should be aware of? I know this year we had China VBP and some product exits. Any other noise factors that we need to Speaker 500:46:06be aware of as you look Speaker 800:46:07at the outlook and your comments on share losses? Speaker 200:46:13Let me start from the beginning from the end of your question. On VBP, VBP is a factor in Kidney Care. It is a very muted factor in the rest of Baxter because our presence in China is quite different. Kidney holds the vast majority of profitability in China for Baxter in the product offering as well. So with that aside now, so VBP Baxter ex kidney is a non event at the moment. Speaker 200:46:43Moving to share, We had a tough Q1 for HST. And that greatly was self inflicted. We had execution issues, which are behind us. As you could see, we had really good performance in PSS. Our orders are significantly up, and we're back on the settle on that without any hesitation. Speaker 200:47:09I see us moving forward into Q3 and Q4 with possibility of share gains in that space due to our offering and our ability to bring Baxter together, okay. We have a great offering that actually underscore our mission to save and sustain lives and that is becoming more clear to hospital customers and IDMs when we present them and we've seen a movement towards Baxter, what we call the Baxter accounts. The other portion of the market share, which has been spoken as of lately in some of the other calls is on the pump. Baxter will continue to gain 1% plus the Novum can get up to 2% market share points on a yearly basis and hopefully more as we continue to see great opportunities. Baxter has converted some really large and important accounts from the competition with our Novum pump. Speaker 200:48:08So I want to make sure that we are a really strong company competing in the marketplace and we're having some successes as you can see by our guidance going into Q3 and Q4. And in Q4, just to close the loop on that is depressed primarily by kidney care going into negative growth territory for sales and the reduction into compounding sales. Speaker 800:48:36Fantastic. Thanks guys and congrats on the execution. Speaker 200:48:40Thank you. Operator00:48:43Danielle Antalffy of UBS is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 900:48:48Hey, good morning, everyone. Thank you so much for taking the question. Congrats on a good quarter here. Speaker 100:48:54Joe and Joe, I wanted Speaker 900:48:56to ask a high level question and that was really you've been undertaking a sort of a restructuring over the last few quarters here. I'm just curious about, Joe, where you think you guys are? Have you completely turned the corner? This is obviously quite a good quarter, relatively speaking, and even not on an absolute basis. So have you guys turned the corner? Speaker 900:49:19Where are there still more areas for improving execution that you see going forward? Or are we past a more consistent improvement from here? And I'll leave it at that. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:49:32Thank you, Danielle. Listen, one of the things I want to underscore has been Baxter's capability bringing together a life saving portfolio of products. And we have made significant progress in the last 2 years in our enterprise accounts and how Baxter connected products now is starting to show to our customers and how interested they are. So I feel that commercial execution, not by segment or division only, but as a company has been very successful as of late and we starting to see that coming around. 2nd thing is now moving down from the sales into the ISC, we have turned the corner. Speaker 200:50:19Our colleagues in supply chain and our presidents of the segments have worked very, very closely and have devised and are implementing and executing really good plans in terms of cost optimization. And we can see that in our margins is starting to turn the corner and we have made great changes to accomplish that. Going down more level, SG and A is all about what Joe spoke about, is our stranded cost associated with other efficiencies, primarily in G and A. This is where the recipe is for the next 12 to 24 months is to optimize the Baxter shared services organization even further and there's great opportunity there as well as contain and offset the stranded costs, so we can show progressively in the next year, 2, 3 consistent improvements in operating income margins. Operator00:51:28Matt Miksic of Barclays is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 1000:51:34Hey, thanks so much. And congrats on a really strong quarter here. Wanted to just touch on a couple of things that I don't know where in height words are framed out yet in the call. One was just where you are in terms of the pricing sort of resets that you talked about a fair amount? And then also just any sense that you can get from the sort of patient support side of the business or call it the capital equipment side of the business that maybe speaks to overall demand in the market that you're seeing around investment in infrastructure and capacity as that's come up a few times this earnings cycle. Speaker 1000:52:23And again, congrats and thanks so much for taking the questions. Speaker 200:52:27Thank you. As we had previously disclosed, we have negotiated 2 very large GPO agreements and conversations now have moved to the IDN level. As expected, customers are being thoughtful and thorough about evaluating their options. We believe now with the novel launch and our ability to provide product, our supply chain resilience, by the way, is second to none. We have proven that over the years. Speaker 200:52:59And that resonates with our customers tremendously. The association of that and the ability to have a large volume parenteral pump as well as a syringe pump on a novel platform on the market, it makes a huge difference. So I feel optimistic that we're going to close those negotiations in the next 4 months and be able to move on, on 2025 with these things behind us. And by the way, pricing has been a contributor to Baxter in Q2 2024 was about 100 basis points and expect to be roughly 100 basis points for the full year. Speaker 300:53:45And then I'll just take that from a capital perspective. You'd asked about investments in capacity and other types of things. I mean, I think the way I think about this obviously is as we contemplate our world post separation, this certainly is an opportunity from to reevaluate the our, if I'll call it, our overall network. Yes, there's a lot of things that are intertwined, while kidney is part of our company and the ability to actually really reevaluate that once again that separation does happen is really going to be a key driver is how we think about our network, how we think about our manufacturing, how we think about our distribution network, etcetera. So again, as we think about our capital spend moving forward, and again, with now the ability to allocate capital, if you will, in a way that's really focused on both companies do, to where both companies can really focus their capital on their highest priorities. Speaker 300:54:41Again, that's really how we're going to think about the way we evaluate our capital investments and our infrastructure moving forward. Operator00:54:54Rick Wise of Stifel is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 1100:54:59Good morning to you both. Joe, I was just hoping you would expand on your Novum comments. Where are we in the rollout? Is this is you talked about the positives about high customer interest and the healthy backlog or funnel of orders. Does adoption, does growth accelerate in the second half and into 2025? Speaker 1100:55:29Is that the right way to think about it? And are you seeing more orders than you were expecting last quarter or sort of in line? Speaker 200:55:39Good morning. We found as a matter of fact, we have sales of Novum in the second quarter, which we did not expect to have, but we're a little faster in having the product ready for the market. What we're seeing is great interest. It plays well for our ability to compete. As you know, Xpector is a great product, but it does not have a syringe pump and having a syringe pump makes a huge difference. Speaker 200:56:06So we're very happy with the momentum that we're getting in Novum. We've been showing that to very large hospital systems and is small as well. Our team is very hard at work and we feel confident in the technology, so we have Speaker 300:56:21the ability to take market share. Speaker 200:56:23I think that is an important thing. This is about providing our patients and our customers with the best technology on the market, not a reengineered technology from many, many years ago. Speaker 1100:56:37Got you. And Joel, maybe just one for you. You obviously you and Joe highlighted multiple times in multiple ways, frontline care and your optimism that things improve from here. And I was hoping you'd just dig in a little deeper on the turnaround. So will patient care and government, is that potentially going to get better? Speaker 1100:57:05And maybe talk about that transition to cardiology and acute, I think those are two areas you mentioned. What do you need to do to get there and how soon can it have a positive impact? Thank you both. Speaker 200:57:20You're welcome. So Rick, let me break up a little bit, breakdown FLC for our frontline care to all listening to the call. Primary Care is one segment, one division of that business. We have other divisions such as cardiology and monitor. Those are going very well. Speaker 200:57:44We have no issues in the acute care space. So let's focus on specific, the patient, the primary care physician office. We believe this market has 2 dimensions. 1 is the amount of backlog we had in 2020 3 that we're able to catch up and ship and sell and fulfill orders that were outstanding. The second one is the slowdown in churn that we've seen due to several of these large primary care outfits exiting the market and moving. Speaker 200:58:27The demand is still there. Primary care demand is still there. We're number 1 shareholder gaining a slight share with 80 plus percent of market share already. So we see that coming back because the demand is not going anywhere. The demand is high. Speaker 200:58:44So is the churn due to the changes on the market as well as what we saw last year, we're catching up with the backlog. Government orders is a complete different thing altogether. So eventually the government will need to buy the products that are needed for the government. And when that happens, we'll see the orders come in. We are a very large supplier of the government and I feel comfortable that those problems that we've seen in 2024 with the decline in primary care This year, we'll turn the corner in 2025. Speaker 200:59:26The business has solid footing, good technology. On the other side of frontline care, we have technology that will be launched in early in mid-twenty 25 to compete into monitoring. And we are very happy with new launches that will happen in the med surg monitoring products that we have coming out in mid-twenty 25. So technology launches will fuel FLC in 2025 as well as the comp between 2024 and 2025, a reemerging of the primary care and probably resuming orders with the government. Speaker 1101:00:10That's a great overview. Thanks, Joe. Speaker 201:00:12You're welcome. Operator01:00:15Pito Chickering of Deutsche Bank is on the line with our final question. Please state your question. Speaker 1201:00:21Hey, good morning guys. Nice quarter and thanks for fitting in here. Looking at the infusion pumps, what do you think the market is growing sort of in 2024? And are you guys sort of picking up or sort of losing share this year? And with all the RFPs out for 'twenty five and beyond, do you guys see yourselves as market share gainers or sort of market share maintainers? Speaker 1201:00:44And then on the strong pricing gains for infusion that you talked about, as you think about pricing in 2025, should we see an acceleration of this pricing for next year? Speaker 201:00:56Peter, can you repeat the last part of the question on the pricing, please? Speaker 1201:01:01Yes. So like you talked about like 100 basis points of pricing sort of this quarter and that continued into that half of the year. Shouldn't that be accelerating in 2025 as you think about the GPO contracts? Speaker 301:01:13Yes. So this is Joel. Let me take that. I think the way I would think about that is we talked about some pricing of maybe 100 basis points this year as part of the game that was again mostly outside the U. S. Speaker 301:01:26Across our portfolio. We think about that same pricing bump for next year as we think about as we move into the GPO contracts that come through and again that's primarily U. S. Pricing. So I think that's the way I would interpret that. Speaker 301:01:42I don't know, I'd call it accelerating necessarily, but I would call it consistent with what our expectations were for this year heading into next year. Speaker 201:01:50And Peter, answering the question on the infusion pump, first of all, we are market share gainers and have been for a long time, just about 100 basis points a year. This will accelerate and is accelerating with Novo and we're going see Q3, Q4 and into 2025. So we find that we have great interest in our pump. I think there is a churn a natural churn of the market in terms of number of pumps that need to be replaced. And our objective is to be in every competitive account with our new technology. Speaker 1201:02:28And then a quick follow-up to David's question, not asking for 2025. But the correction in the year with revenues growing under sort of 1% with compounding slowing due to competitors issues lapping, Speaker 301:02:42I guess how should Speaker 1201:02:43we model revenue growth compounding in the Q4? And then what are the headwinds and tailwinds that we should be thinking about for 2025 revenues? Speaker 301:02:54Yes. Can you just repeat that? So your phone was going in and out during that question. I apologize. Do you mind repeating that one more time, please? Speaker 1201:03:02Yes. So apologies. So a follow-up to David's question just about the Q4 revenues. We're exiting the year growing less than 1% with compounding becoming a headwind in the Q4. So I guess the question number 1 is how should we model compounded growth in the Q4? Speaker 1201:03:18And number 2, with the compounding slowing, how should we think about headwinds and tailwinds for 2025 revenue growth? Speaker 301:03:28Yes. I mean, look, I think the main thing here is really we're going to continue to see again improvements in HST. So that's where I'm going to start with. In other words, we've seen that over the course of this year as that HST business has continued to accelerate and then we think there will be a strong exit rate for that business And that will continue to accelerate into 2025. I think as we talked about from a pharma perspective, again, compounding is going to be a portion of that that's going to drag it. Speaker 301:04:04I don't know that we've specifically guided the actual compounding business, but that is something that is again going to be a continued it's slow as Joe talked about for various customer reasons that that's happened. From an NPT perspective, again, we continue to believe we've got some really solid momentum going into 2025, certainly coming out of 2024. And then obviously, so just to kind of summarize all that, I think the while there is a bit of a squeeze map from the we talked about the kidney and the compounding, that's the reality of it is that we have a 4% to 5% growth ex kidney that we're heading into the exiting the year with and heading into next year. So that momentum is really strong ex kidney and that's the part that we feel really excited about as we head into 2025. Speaker 201:05:00Peter, just reinforcing and underscoring, Our exit rate is 4% to 5%. If you're comfortable with that, that's where Baxter is taking into 2025. And we tend to think that our business and innovation can drive even further going into 2026 and 2027. Speaker 1101:05:23Great. Thanks so Speaker 301:05:25much. Thank you. Operator01:05:27Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call with Baxter International. Thank you for participating.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallBaxter International Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Triumph Financial Earnings Headlines6TFIN : A Glimpse of Triumph Financial's Earnings PotentialApril 15 at 3:19 PM | benzinga.comTriumph Financial (TFIN) Expected to Announce Earnings on WednesdayApril 9, 2025 | americanbankingnews.com[Action Required] Claim Your FREE IRS Loophole GuideThis shouldn't surprise anyone who's been paying attention, but... Pres. 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It operates through Banking, Factoring, and Payments segments. The company offers deposit products, including checking, savings, money market and certificates of deposit; and loan products, such as commercial real estate, land, commercial construction and land development, residential real estate, commercial agriculture, and consumer loans, as well as commercial and industrial loans, equipment loans, asset-based loans, business loans for working capital and operational purposes, and liquid credit loans. It also provides electronic banking services, debit cards, insurance brokerage services, mortgage warehouse facilities, and transportation factoring services, as well as payments services offered through TriumphPay platform, a payments network for the over-the-road trucking industry. The company was formerly known as Triumph Bancorp, Inc. and changed its name to Triumph Financial Inc. in December 2022. 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There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Baxter International's Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Your lines will remain in a listen only mode until the question and answer segment of today's call. As a reminder, this call is being recorded by Baxter and is copyrighted material. It cannot be recorded or rebroadcast without Baxter's permission. If you have any objections, please disconnect at this time. Operator00:00:34I would now like to turn the call over to Ms. Claire Trachtman, Senior Vice President, Chief Investor Relations Officer at Baxter International. Ms. Trackman, you may begin. Speaker 100:00:47Good morning, and welcome to our Q2 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Joining me today are Joel Maeda, Baxter's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Joel Grade, Baxter's Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. On the call this morning, we will be discussing Baxter's Q2 2024 results along with our financial outlook for the Q3 and full year 2024. With that, let me start our prepared remarks by reminding everyone that this presentation, including comments regarding our financial outlook for the Q3 and full year 2024 the status and anticipated timing of our ongoing strategic actions, including the proposed kidney care separation and the potential impact of our recent pricing actions, regulatory matters and the macroeconomic environment on our results of operations contain forward looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. And of course, our actual results could differ materially from our current expectations. Speaker 100:01:50Please refer to today's press release and our SEC filings for more detail concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. In addition, on today's call, non GAAP financial measures will be used to help investors understand Baxter's ongoing business performance. A reconciliation of the non GAAP financial measures being discussed today to the comparable GAAP financial measures is included in the accompanying investor presentation and also available in our earnings release issued this morning, which are both available on our website. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Joe. Joe? Speaker 200:02:27Thank you, Claire, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. Our Q2 reflect the continued progress and momentum of our ongoing strategic transformation. Our performance in the quarter was strong reinforcing the benefits of our redesigned operating model fueled by the commitment and hard work of our outstanding Baxter team. I will start the call today with some brief commentary on our strong second quarter performance before turning the call over to Joel to provide more detail on our results as well as our outlook for the rest of the year. Speaker 200:03:04Then as always, we'll open up to your questions. As you saw in this morning's earnings release, Baxter's 2nd quarter results exceeded our previously issued guidance on both the top and bottom line. This performance further enhances our confidence in our ability to continue executing against our strategic priorities and build upon this underlying momentum. As such, we have increased our full year sales outlook and adjusted EPS guidance accordingly. Our 2nd quarter performance provides further evidence that the steps we have taken to date to centralize and streamline our operating model are yielding results. Speaker 200:03:47These actions allow for improved visibility both externally and internally to our markets as well as increased accountability for our segment leaders. These benefits coupled with enhanced operational rigor have enabled our teams to better identify opportunities to accelerate innovation to drive growth and expand margins. Turning to some of the highlights from the quarter. 2nd quarter sales from continuing operations grew 3% on a reported basis and 4% at a constant currency rates. As a reminder, continuing operations exclude the impact of our biopharma solutions business, PPS, which we divested at the close of the Q3 of 2023, in line with our strategic transformation roadmap. Speaker 200:04:37Sales growth was broad based with all 4 Baxter segments delivering growth above our expectations, reflecting positive demand and improved pricing for products across much of the portfolio. On the bottom line, adjusted earnings per share from continuing operations were $0.68 These results were driven by our top line performance combined with our continued emphasis on operational efficiency across the company with ongoing contributions from our integrated supply chain network. Our strong operational performance more than offset a negative impact from foreign exchange and a higher than expected tax rate in the quarter. Now looking at performance by segment. Medical Products and Therapies, our MPT, delivered 2nd quarter sales growth of 4% at reported rates and 5% at constant currency rates. Speaker 200:05:31Growth was fueled by demand across the segment and results include the 1st U. S. Sales of our leading edge Novum, IQ large volume pump with Doze IQ safety software. Customer interest is high for the Novum platform, including both large volume and syringe pumps with their ability to advance connectivity and intelligent infusion therapy. These pumps are already live and in use at multiple sites, making a difference for caregivers and the patients they serve. Speaker 200:06:04We have a healthy funnel of opportunities and anticipate continued strong, steady uptake from Novum across the balance of 2024 and beyond through the upgrades of existing customers and conversions of new customers. Our Pharmaceuticals segment grew 9% at reported rates and 11% at constant currency rates. Performance was driven by double digit growth in our specialty injectables portfolio, reflecting the recent launches of a range of new differentiated injectables as well as significant growth in our drug compounding business. Growth in the segment was partially offset by lower sales of inhaled anesthetics. Healthcare Systems and Technologies or HST performance advanced 1% at both reported and constant rates. Speaker 200:07:00Our Care and Connectivity Solutions division delivered mid single digit growth, reflecting positive market demand and strong U. S. GAAP orders, which increased meaningfully both sequentially and year over year. Growth in the quarter was partially offset by an expected decline in the Front Line Care division, primarily due to a difficult comparison to the prior year period and continued softness in the U. S. Speaker 200:07:28Primary care market. Overall, HST results in the quarter benefited from the operational improvements that we are in process of implementing to enhance ongoing performance. As we discussed last quarter, we expect to see these efforts continue to yield positive results as 2024 continues and going forward. Finally, kidney care was flat year over year at reported rates and grew 3% at constant currency rates. Performance continues to be fueled by demand for our acute therapies portfolio plus strong growth for peritoneal dialysis products due to positive volume and pricing globally. Speaker 200:08:09Growth was partially offset by an expected decline in sales of in center hemodialysis products due to select product and market exits. Looking ahead, we remain confident and excited about the future of our company and our potential to continue to accelerate sales growth, expand our margins and drive innovation that will deliver benefits to our customers, shareholders and many other stakeholder communities. As you all know, we launched our strategic transformation in January of 2023 to recast Bagsd as a more simplified, more agile and more focused company, passionate in its commitment to operational excellence and better positioned to accelerate growth through customer inspired innovation. Among the elements, central to our plan was a separation of the Kidney Care business from Baxter in order to provide both companies with improved strategic clarity and greater flexibility to pursue the unique investment priorities. We are continuing to make steady progress toward the separation and while the ultimate pathway has not yet been determined, we currently expect the separation will occur in late 2024 or early 2025 with the separation of kidney care, we have a unique opportunity to redefine ourselves while also remaining firmly grounded in what has powered our success for nearly a century. Speaker 200:09:37Our life sustaining mission, our focus on essential health care, our commitment to innovation and at the heart of it all, our employees, whose unparalleled dedication turns our aspirations into impact. Together, we are united, energized and eager to take Baxter into a future of sustained health care leadership. With that, I will pass it over to Joel to provide more detail on our results for the quarter and outlook for the balance of the year. Speaker 300:10:07Thanks, Joe, and good morning, everyone. As Joe mentioned, we are pleased with our 2nd quarter results, which came in ahead of our expectations and further reinforce our goal of consistently meeting and exceeding our financial objectives. 2nd quarter 2024 global sales of $3,800,000,000 increased 3% on a reported basis and 4% on a constant currency basis, and as mentioned, compared favorably to our previously issued guidance. Our performance in the quarter benefited from better than expected sales in many product categories and particularly in patient support systems, infusion therapies, peritoneal dialysis and drug compounding. As compared to the prior year period, sales excluding Kidney Care increased approximately 5% on a constant currency basis. Speaker 300:11:04On the bottom line, adjusted earnings from continuing operations totaled $0.68 per share, increasing 24% versus the prior year period and ahead of our prior guidance of $0.65 to $0.67 per share. Results in the quarter were driven by strong operational performance with continued momentum commercially, partially offset by negative impact from non operational items totaling $0.05 per share due to foreign exchange and a higher than anticipated tax rate. Now I'll walk through our results by reportable segments. Commentary regarding sales growth will reflect growth at constant currency rates. Sales in our Medical Products and Therapies or MPT segments were $1,300,000,000 increasing 5%. Speaker 300:11:58Within MTT, 2nd quarter sales from our infusion therapies and technologies division totaled $1,000,000,000 and increased 5%. Sales in the quarter benefited from strong growth internationally across the division, particularly for our IV Solutions and Infusion Systems products, which benefited from both volume and pricing gains. Solid demand for Nutrition globally also contributed to growth in the quarter. Sales from Advanced Surgery totaled $277,000,000 and grew 4%, reflecting solid growth internationally. For our Healthcare Systems and Technologies or HFC segment, sales in the quarter were $748,000,000 and increased 1% coming in ahead of our expectations. Speaker 300:12:53Within the HST segment, sales in our Care and Connectivity Solutions or CCS division were $452,000,000 growing 4%. Performance rebounded in the quarter driven by significant growth in orders both sequentially and year over year for our CCS products. As Joe mentioned, the actions we are taking to enhance our operational rigor and improve execution are yielding results. These factors contributed to orders growth across our CCS division of more than 40% compared to the prior year and over 60% sequentially. Results in the quarter included upgrades to both existing customers and competitive gains within our patient support systems business. Speaker 300:13:43We are very encouraged by the growth of orders in the U. S. This quarter, which will be phased in over the course of the second half of this year and into 2025. Overall, we believe the initiatives we're implementing to improve commercial execution will continue to lead to improved performance both in the second half of this year and beyond. Frontline Care sales in the quarter were $296,000,000 declining 4% in line with our expectations and represented a double digit improvement sequentially. Speaker 300:14:21Growth in the quarter continued to be impacted by a difficult comparison to the prior year as backlog reductions positively contributed to growth in the prior year period. Performance in the quarter was also impacted by ongoing softness in the primary care market, which negatively impacted growth in both our connected monitoring and intelligent diagnostics product portfolios. The timing and release of government orders in the U. S. Also impacted growth in the quarter. Speaker 300:14:51We expect this division to return to growth in the second half of the year as growth for products in other settings such as cardiology and acute is anticipated to more than offset the continued softness in primary care and lower government orders. The anniversary of the prior year impact from the backlog reduction will also benefit performance in the second half of the year. Moving on to Pharmaceuticals. Sales in this segment were $602,000,000 increasing 11%. Performance in the quarter reflects double digit growth in our U. Speaker 300:15:29S. Injectables portfolio, driven by new product launches as well as strong demand for services in our drug compounding portfolio internationally, which has benefited from supply constraints for certain customers that are expected to ease in the second half of the year. Performance in the quarter was partially offset by lower sales of inhaled anesthetics globally. Sales in the quarter for our Kidney Care segment totaled $1,100,000,000 increasing 3%. Within Kidney Care, global sales for chronic therapies were $917,000,000 increasing 1%. Speaker 300:16:12Strong PD growth in the quarter was partially offset by the expected negative impact from certain product end market exits in our in center HD business as well as lower sales in China due to government procurement initiatives. We estimate that these items negatively impacted sales by just over $50,000,000 in the quarter. Sales in our Acute Therapies business were $201,000,000 representing growth of 9%, driven by strong demand and competitive conversions in the United States. Other sales, which represents sales not allocated to a segment and primarily include sales of products and services provided directly to certain of our manufacturing facilities were $22,000,000 and declined 5% during the quarter. Now moving on to the rest of the P and L. Speaker 300:17:10Our adjusted gross margin totaled 41.2% and represented an increase of 80 basis points over the prior year. The year over year improvement in gross margin primarily reflects the strong operational efficiencies we are realizing within our integrated supply chain network, resulting from execution of the margin improvement programs we were implementing and the anniversary of the negative margin impacts from inflationary pressures that drove higher cost of goods sold in the prior year period. Pricing initiatives in select markets also positively contributed to margin improvement in the quarter. Product mix and foreign exchange partially offset margin expansion in the quarter. Adjusted SG and A totaled $873,000,000 or 22.9 as a percentage of sales, an increase of 10 basis points from the prior year period as we are making select investments to support our growth objectives and new product launches. Speaker 300:18:14SG and A leverage is expected to continue to improve as sales ramp over the course of the year. Adjusted R and D spend in the quarter totaled $175,000,000 and represented 4.6 as a percentage of sales, an increase of 10 basis points compared to the prior year period and reflects our continued investments in advancing new products across the portfolio and bringing innovation to patients across our segments. These factors resulted in an adjusted operating margin of 13.7%, an increase of 50 basis points versus prior year driven by the factors above, which more than offset a negative impact on operating margins of approximately 70 basis points due to foreign exchange. Net interest expense totaled $85,000,000 in the quarter, a decrease of $39,000,000 versus the prior year period, driven by debt repayments in the Q4 of 2023 associated with the proceeds of our BPS divestiture. We plan to continue to repay debt in 2024 consistent with our stated capital allocation priorities. Speaker 300:19:30During July, Baxter finalized a bank finance bridge loan in the form of a delayed draw term loan or DTTL in lieu of a public bond financing with a total size of $2,050,000,000 The DTTL provides certainty of ability to fund debt maturities coming due in the Q4 in the event we haven't completed the Kidney Care separation by that time. We expect to utilize proceeds from the separation to repay the loan if outstanding. We felt this is a better option as compared to bond financing, given the more temporary nature of the cash and the high cost of issuing new term debt in current markets. Adjusted other non operating income totaled $20,000,000 in the quarter compared to an expense of $22,000,000 in the prior year period, which included losses on both foreign exchange and marketable securities. The adjusted tax rate for the quarter of 23.9% came in higher than expectations and increased as compared to the prior year tax rate of 17.8%. Speaker 300:20:43The year over year increase is primarily driven by the geographic mix of earnings, decreased utilization of foreign tax credits in the current year period and a non recurring foreign tax incentive in the prior year period. And as previously mentioned, adjusted earnings from continued operations totaled $0.68 per share and increased 24% versus the prior year, primarily driven by improved commercial performance and a reduction in interest expense, offset by the impact of foreign exchange and higher tax rate. Let me conclude my remarks by discussing our outlook for the Q3 and full year 2024, including some key assumptions underpinning the guidance. For full year 2024, Baxter now expects total sales growth of approximately 3% on both reported and constant currency basis, which is an increase from prior guidance of 2% to 3% on a constant currency basis. This increase reflects the outperformance we realized in the Q2 and continued momentum for our businesses. Speaker 300:21:58Cost of currency sales guidance for the full year by reportable segment is as follows. For MPT, we now expect sales growth of approximately 5%. This is an increase from the prior guidance of 4% to 5% and reflects the outperformance year to date and continued momentum for our Noble platform. Sales in our Healthcare Systems and Technologies segment are expected to be approximately flat to the prior year, consistent with prior guidance. This guidance reflects improved performance in the second half of the year, but also assumes the installation of some CCS orders are phased to 2025. Speaker 300:22:41In addition, our guidance assumes FLC performance also improves in the second half of the year, but that both primary care and government orders declined in 2024, neither of which we believe represent market share losses. We expect both the primary care market and orders from the government will improve in 2025. We now expect pharmaceutical sales growth of approximately 7%, which compares favorably to prior guidance of 6% to 7% and reflects the strong start to the year and continued momentum for our new product launches as well as increased contribution from drug compounding. The contribution from drug compounding is expected to meaningfully slow in the second half of the year as supply constraints for certain hospital customers ease and the business focuses on driving more profitable growth. Collectively, sales for these 3 remaining Baxter segments are now expected to increase approximately 4% in 2024 and exit the second half of the year at the higher end of our prior expectation of 4% to 5%. Speaker 300:23:56For Kidney Care, we now expect sales growth of 1% to 2% as compared to 2023. This also compares favorably to prior guidance and reflects the underlying momentum of this business. Now turning to our outlook for other P and L line items. We continue to expect adjusted operating margin to increase by more than 50 basis points in 2024. We expect our non operating expenses, which include net interest expense and other income and expense to total approximately $330,000,000 in aggregate during 2024. Speaker 300:24:38We now anticipate a full year adjusted tax rate of approximately 23%. We expect our diluted share count to average 511,000,000 shares for the year. Based on all these factors, we now anticipate full year adjusted earnings, excluding special items of $2.93 to $3.01 per diluted share, which also compares favorably to prior guidance of $2.88 to $2.98 per diluted share and reflects the outperformance we realized in the Q2 and expect for the remainder of the year and includes an incremental headwind from non operational items totaling approximately $0.02 per share. Specific to the Q3 of 2024, we expect global sales growth of 3% to 4% on a reported basis and 4% to 5% on a constant currency basis. And we expect adjusted earnings excluding special items of $0.77 to $0.79 per diluted share. Speaker 300:25:51With that, we can now open up the call for Q and A. Operator00:25:55Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer So that we may be respectful of everyone's time, please limit your comments to one question and one follow-up question if necessary. We appreciate everyone's patience and would like to provide as many of you as possible the opportunity to ask a question. We will pause for a moment while the list is being compiled. I would like to remind participants that this call is being recorded and a digital replay will be available on the Baxter International website for 60 days at www.baxter dotcom. Operator00:26:37Our first question comes from Robbie Marcus of JPMorgan. Your question please. Speaker 400:26:44Great. Thanks for taking the questions and congrats on a nice quarter. 2 for me. Wanted to start with the revised guidance And it looks like it's pretty much going higher from the 2nd quarter beat and then 3rd quarter upside versus The Street. So you gave a lot of detail, but I was hoping you could just walk us through the underlying drivers and did I get the raise and impact correct? Speaker 400:27:12Thanks. Speaker 300:27:13Hi, good morning, Robbie. It's Joel. Thank you for the questions. Yes, I think certainly the new guidance is actually starts with the performance we had in Q2. We had a strong operational quarter and obviously that's part of what's carried through to the rest of the year. Speaker 300:27:30What I would just say in general, though is that our businesses continue to have strong momentum in them. And so I think when you think about this from a sales perspective, it's the recovery it's continued recovery over the course of the year sequentially in HST. Again, we've raised the guidance for MPT as well from a sales perspective as well as pharma. And so I think the and all those businesses again are continuing to improve from a sales perspective. So on the top line that's part of the really key driver. Speaker 300:28:03From a margin perspective, we continue to expect a positive progress from a pricing standpoint, from an ISC standpoint. I think the our margin improvement programs and the continued work there are also a part of obviously what's driving ultimately the bottom line beat as well. The offset to some of that from an operating margin perspective, we do make we're making continued investments in our business from a sales and marketing standpoint, from an R and D perspective, from new product launch perspective. And so those things continue to impact the opposite direction as well as we've got an MSA in pharma that I think you're aware of was related to BPS sales. So that's an offset. Speaker 300:28:48And then finally on the bottom line from a we do have a headwind from an FX and a tax rate perspective. But again, punch line here, continued sales momentum, margin expansion with a couple of the offsets I talked about. Speaker 400:29:05Thanks. And maybe just a quick follow-up here. The HST had a tough first quarter. It looks like it improved sequentially in Q2. Frontline Care is still negative year over year. Speaker 400:29:19Maybe just speak to the underlying trends you're seeing in the two businesses there and your confidence in a reacceleration and return to positive growth in the second half of the year? Thanks. Speaker 200:29:33Hi, Robbie. Good morning. We feel that a great deal of the operational issues are being addressed behind us. We still are addressing them and will be throughout the 2024 calendar year, Primarily, the one involved in one of our plants transfers is being addressed and is in really, really good shape at the moment. I want to make sure that we also have our sales force is doing fantastic job. Speaker 200:30:06We did a significant amount of revamping there. So we see that going well. We also see a very positive trend in capital. And the positive trend in capital allows us to have very strong one of the strongest quarters we ever had in orders before the Q2. So we see that going extremely well. Speaker 200:30:28This is in the CCS business, which is our beds and nurse call systems. FLC completely different dynamic that has to do with the primary care market that has significant shift during 2024 with Big players coming in and out. We believe our market share is still growing in debt slightly, but it's very high. And we feel that business is going to come back into normality towards the end of the year as well as government orders, which has been very, very low. And the most important factor was the comp versus last year. Speaker 200:31:08All in all, I think, HST has turned the corner. We see some very interesting dynamics on the market with our product offering, gaining ground and stable market share and possibly growing into Q3 and Q4. Speaker 400:31:26Great. Thanks a lot. Operator00:31:30Travis Steed of Bank of America Securities is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 500:31:36Hey, thanks for taking the question. I wanted to ask about the kidney co separation. I think that it was new that you added early 2025, so I wanted to ask about that. And has your thinking changed at all on spend versus sell? And also noticed in the impairment charge on that business, so wasn't sure if there's anything to kind of read into that impairment charge this quarter. Speaker 300:31:58So a couple of things on this. First of all, thanks for the question, Travis. From a timing perspective, again, look, we're continuing to make progress and continue to move forward in a dual path to ensure that we're ready for both from a sale and a spin process. And so we're obviously doing that in a way that's going to maximize our again, I just look at it as we've continued to evolve the process, again, I just look at it as we've continued to evolve the process and move it forward. Again, we're in a good place from the perspective of both, but the timing has shifted a little bit as we continue to move through the year. Speaker 300:32:42And so our plan is to still continue to get it done by the end of 2024, but it could move into the early part of 2025, which is why we put the guidance out that it did. From a goodwill perspective, the way I would take that is we've had a now a process where we actually have had bidders put a value into what the goodwill is. And so as we assess that relative to obviously the value of the books, there's a negative impact there from a goodwill perspective. I would say this, in the event that there was a sale moving forward, we would be recognizing a gain on that sale. So there's a little bit of a timing issue from that perspective. Speaker 300:33:28But this is part of a normal process to reassess our goodwill. And now that we have an actual kind of what we call market value for that so to speak and that's where that came from. Speaker 500:33:39Great. Thanks a lot. I wanted to ask a follow-up on the margins. So first of all, the second half total company, you got a couple of 100 basis points second half margin ramp. So I wanted to ask about the confidence and kind of what's driving that. Speaker 500:33:52But also if you think about the segment margins in the first half of the year, all the margin expansion for the total company was more on the renal side and the core Baxter business down year over year. Wanted to kind of think about how we get confidence that ex the Renalco longer term like the RemainCo Baxter business is going to be expanding margins kind of the 50 basis points or so a year that you've kind of set out in the past? Speaker 300:34:18Sure. Let me start by taking what I call some of the drivers of our margin perspective and then I'll get to the second part of your question. Our margin drivers continue to be from a couple of different things. 1 is, again, our top line obviously, our top line growth and some of the new product launches that are coming into play. That's both short term and something over the longer term that's going to be a driver from a margin perspective. Speaker 300:34:42Pricing, we continue to see upside opportunities from a pricing perspective. In the current year, it's been primarily outside the U. S. We look for some of that inside in the U. S. Speaker 300:34:53Next year as again some of the GPO contracts take hold etcetera, etcetera, but we continue to take pricing. ISC continues to be an area where we expand our margins. Again, both the margin improvement programs, just the efficiencies we continue to gain from some of our investments in automation, etcetera, etcetera. And so that's where the kind of the really key drivers and why we feel continued with confidence in our ability to actually drive our margins going forward. I think the from an ex kidney perspective, there's a couple of things that I would just say. Speaker 300:35:29Number 1, as we move to a vertical structure in this company, we've continued to refine the process of allocations. So some of this from an ex kidney perspective is an impact again as we continue to refine our allocation methodology and you see some of that again impacting where the difference between kidney and some of them margins ex kidney. The other part to it, Pramod, just as I mentioned in some of my comments in the earlier question, we are continuing to invest in R and D. We are continuing to invest in new product launches and things that ultimately are going to again drive growth that are impacting operating margins in general. So that's the that answers your questions. Speaker 500:36:14Yes. Thanks a lot. Appreciate that. Operator00:36:19David Roman of Goldman Sachs is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 600:36:25Thank you and good morning everybody. I wanted just to start on the revenue outlook for the balance of the year and recognizing the comment on exiting the year at the higher end of the 4% to 5% on the core Baxter business. But if you look at the sort of guidance that you've provided for Q3 and the balance of the year, I think that implies revenue growth in Q4 below 1%. Can you maybe just help us understand the drivers of the phasing of revenue for the balance of the year? And then I have one follow-up on the strategic capital allocation side. Speaker 300:36:57Sure. Thanks for the question. Yes, the primary driver of some of the movement there in terms of, I'll call it, squeeze ramp in the Q4 is really product mix impact and it starts with compounding in pharma. And we've had some again, that's been a significant driver of some of the upside in addition to the other parts of the business. And that actually starts to slow down in the second half of the year, but in particular in the Q4. Speaker 300:37:25And so I would say that's really one of the key drivers of some of the little bit of the phasing from what you call a 3rd quarter perspective in the squeeze math on the 4th quarter. Speaker 600:37:40Got it. And then maybe just a follow-up, if you look at kind of the increases in discretionary spending on the SG and A and R and D side, Could you maybe go into a little bit more detail about the internal capital allocation priorities, where those incremental dollars in SG and A and R and D are being deployed? And maybe any early look you can give us into some of the either product launches or geographic expansion initiatives that may come out the other side of these investments? Speaker 200:38:10Good morning, David. How are you? Well, Joe, Speaker 300:38:14thank you. Speaker 700:38:14It's nice to talk to you. Speaker 200:38:16Likewise. Listen, just adding a bit to Joe's previous answer is compounding, we had a customer in Australia, which had maintenance planned into their hospitals. And we took a great deal of that volume. So you see their volume dwindling down in the 3rd Q4, which we knew about it. So when you do this squeeze method in the Q4, you get what you get, but primarily driven by that part of the business having a specific event in the 1st and second quarter. Speaker 200:38:54Moving to the capital allocation. Our capital allocation now putting kidney care on the side is driven by innovation. So what is the highest innovation drivers for the company is going to be in infusion technologies. So we have more investment to do into new categories of pump, more software. We have intelligent software coming out in 2025 with artificial intelligence that attaches to the pump. Speaker 200:39:24We also have 5 new product launches that we're planning in the next 12 months for HST significant ones, really good ones. We need to put the money behind to close the gap in the research and development, regulatory affairs as well as the commercial launch. So that is where we allocate the money and we have some molecules. So in Pharmaceuticals, so you're talking about infusion systems, specifics into PSS and Care Communications and what we call the injectable specialty drugs, primarily via flow style that we have coming out of one of our facilities. So all the capital allocation is going to products that have higher margin and higher contribution to the company plus associated to that is the spending that goes along. Speaker 200:40:17So it's a good spending, spending put for good use. We did a lot of work internally to understand the major drivers of shareholder value to be able to achieve that. Speaker 600:40:29Very helpful. Thank you for taking the question. Operator00:40:34Larry Biegelsen of Wells Fargo is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 700:40:40Good morning. Thanks for taking the question and congrats on the nice quarter here. Joel, I was hoping you could just give us a refresher on the key assumptions for KidneyCo sale or spin, the tax basis, how might it look different from the BPS sale, Just the margins for KidneyCo, first half was 10.9%, which is much higher than in prior year. So when we're trying to estimate the dilution, what should we think about for margins and the stranded cost assumptions and use of proceeds would be helpful? Any color on that. Speaker 700:41:18Thanks for taking the question. Speaker 300:41:21Sure. Thanks for the question. Let me just start with the again a little bit from a margin perspective. Again, our Q1 with kidney, you'll recall, was had some substantial one time impacts that drove that margin that what I'll call a disproportionately high level. So I think as we've talked about kidney in general, the think about that I think as a high single digit sort of low double digit margin profile at this point. Speaker 300:41:53And again, that was somewhat inflated, though particularly in Q1, will be the way I would answer that question. From a stranded cost perspective, look, this is an area we haven't specifically given that type of guidance yet on it. What I will tell you is that that's one of the key initiatives that I'm driving personally in terms of our ability to reduce the dilutive impact on that. And so I think that's something we're going to you'll hear more about as we go forward. But that's really we haven't come out yet and given that type of information. Speaker 300:42:36And we have plans already underway and again, starting the execution of that to get way ahead of it. Certainly from a sale versus spin perspective, obviously the overarching goal is to maximize shareholder value. And so we're going to do what is best in order to accomplish that. And if I weigh the puts and takes on some of that kind of stuff, obviously, all of the evaluations being equal, so to speak, there are certain advantages of the sale from the perspective of more cash earlier, from the perspective of valuation certainty, etcetera. But obviously, there's lots of parts to play in that. Speaker 300:43:15And then from a tax perspective, I guess, to answer your final question, I think I look at that as a part of the overall economics of what we're going to do. I think there's been a lot of questions on tax leakage, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. But in the end, it really is about economics in terms of what we end up with from a net tax proceeds and then again, what maximizes shareholder value. Speaker 700:43:40All right. I'll leave it at that. Thanks for taking the question guys. Speaker 300:43:44Thank you, Mark. Operator00:43:46Vijay Kumar of Evercore ISI is on the line with a Speaker 800:43:52question. Joe, I just want to go back on the 4th quarter implied sort of 1% organic. And if I heard you correctly, is the only thing that's changing is drug compounding. So should the exit rates for NPT, HST, kidney code, should all be in that sort of annual range rate in the low to mid singles for MPT, HST, kidney code in the 1% to 2 percent and only thing that changes for Q4 is drug compounding. Is that correct? Speaker 300:44:28It's primarily that in some kidney, But I think the drug compounding is the main part of it. We have talked about the fact that though our ex kidney exit range for the year, it will be in the 4% to 5% range. So I think the but yes, it's primarily compounding and then some slowdown in kidney. Speaker 200:44:48So Vijay, the kidney part is primarily driven by value based procurement in that specific business. So as we await the inclusion or not, we look at our forecast and we look that is the biggest impact that we're going to have in kidney is VBP. Of course, that associated with compounding have muted the good growth and results of the rest of the businesses of Baxter. Speaker 800:45:25Understood, Joe. And maybe, Joe, a bigger picture question for you. If I just go back the last 18 months, it's been a lot of moving parts challenges, a lot of questions raised on is backs losing share. When I look at your order commentary within HS and P in some of the performance in the core business, it looks like we're back to 4 plus. When we look at the sort of the forward trajectory here, right, the implied exit rate, is that 4% plus organic sustainable? Speaker 800:45:58Any one offs we should be aware of? I know this year we had China VBP and some product exits. Any other noise factors that we need to Speaker 500:46:06be aware of as you look Speaker 800:46:07at the outlook and your comments on share losses? Speaker 200:46:13Let me start from the beginning from the end of your question. On VBP, VBP is a factor in Kidney Care. It is a very muted factor in the rest of Baxter because our presence in China is quite different. Kidney holds the vast majority of profitability in China for Baxter in the product offering as well. So with that aside now, so VBP Baxter ex kidney is a non event at the moment. Speaker 200:46:43Moving to share, We had a tough Q1 for HST. And that greatly was self inflicted. We had execution issues, which are behind us. As you could see, we had really good performance in PSS. Our orders are significantly up, and we're back on the settle on that without any hesitation. Speaker 200:47:09I see us moving forward into Q3 and Q4 with possibility of share gains in that space due to our offering and our ability to bring Baxter together, okay. We have a great offering that actually underscore our mission to save and sustain lives and that is becoming more clear to hospital customers and IDMs when we present them and we've seen a movement towards Baxter, what we call the Baxter accounts. The other portion of the market share, which has been spoken as of lately in some of the other calls is on the pump. Baxter will continue to gain 1% plus the Novum can get up to 2% market share points on a yearly basis and hopefully more as we continue to see great opportunities. Baxter has converted some really large and important accounts from the competition with our Novum pump. Speaker 200:48:08So I want to make sure that we are a really strong company competing in the marketplace and we're having some successes as you can see by our guidance going into Q3 and Q4. And in Q4, just to close the loop on that is depressed primarily by kidney care going into negative growth territory for sales and the reduction into compounding sales. Speaker 800:48:36Fantastic. Thanks guys and congrats on the execution. Speaker 200:48:40Thank you. Operator00:48:43Danielle Antalffy of UBS is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 900:48:48Hey, good morning, everyone. Thank you so much for taking the question. Congrats on a good quarter here. Speaker 100:48:54Joe and Joe, I wanted Speaker 900:48:56to ask a high level question and that was really you've been undertaking a sort of a restructuring over the last few quarters here. I'm just curious about, Joe, where you think you guys are? Have you completely turned the corner? This is obviously quite a good quarter, relatively speaking, and even not on an absolute basis. So have you guys turned the corner? Speaker 900:49:19Where are there still more areas for improving execution that you see going forward? Or are we past a more consistent improvement from here? And I'll leave it at that. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:49:32Thank you, Danielle. Listen, one of the things I want to underscore has been Baxter's capability bringing together a life saving portfolio of products. And we have made significant progress in the last 2 years in our enterprise accounts and how Baxter connected products now is starting to show to our customers and how interested they are. So I feel that commercial execution, not by segment or division only, but as a company has been very successful as of late and we starting to see that coming around. 2nd thing is now moving down from the sales into the ISC, we have turned the corner. Speaker 200:50:19Our colleagues in supply chain and our presidents of the segments have worked very, very closely and have devised and are implementing and executing really good plans in terms of cost optimization. And we can see that in our margins is starting to turn the corner and we have made great changes to accomplish that. Going down more level, SG and A is all about what Joe spoke about, is our stranded cost associated with other efficiencies, primarily in G and A. This is where the recipe is for the next 12 to 24 months is to optimize the Baxter shared services organization even further and there's great opportunity there as well as contain and offset the stranded costs, so we can show progressively in the next year, 2, 3 consistent improvements in operating income margins. Operator00:51:28Matt Miksic of Barclays is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 1000:51:34Hey, thanks so much. And congrats on a really strong quarter here. Wanted to just touch on a couple of things that I don't know where in height words are framed out yet in the call. One was just where you are in terms of the pricing sort of resets that you talked about a fair amount? And then also just any sense that you can get from the sort of patient support side of the business or call it the capital equipment side of the business that maybe speaks to overall demand in the market that you're seeing around investment in infrastructure and capacity as that's come up a few times this earnings cycle. Speaker 1000:52:23And again, congrats and thanks so much for taking the questions. Speaker 200:52:27Thank you. As we had previously disclosed, we have negotiated 2 very large GPO agreements and conversations now have moved to the IDN level. As expected, customers are being thoughtful and thorough about evaluating their options. We believe now with the novel launch and our ability to provide product, our supply chain resilience, by the way, is second to none. We have proven that over the years. Speaker 200:52:59And that resonates with our customers tremendously. The association of that and the ability to have a large volume parenteral pump as well as a syringe pump on a novel platform on the market, it makes a huge difference. So I feel optimistic that we're going to close those negotiations in the next 4 months and be able to move on, on 2025 with these things behind us. And by the way, pricing has been a contributor to Baxter in Q2 2024 was about 100 basis points and expect to be roughly 100 basis points for the full year. Speaker 300:53:45And then I'll just take that from a capital perspective. You'd asked about investments in capacity and other types of things. I mean, I think the way I think about this obviously is as we contemplate our world post separation, this certainly is an opportunity from to reevaluate the our, if I'll call it, our overall network. Yes, there's a lot of things that are intertwined, while kidney is part of our company and the ability to actually really reevaluate that once again that separation does happen is really going to be a key driver is how we think about our network, how we think about our manufacturing, how we think about our distribution network, etcetera. So again, as we think about our capital spend moving forward, and again, with now the ability to allocate capital, if you will, in a way that's really focused on both companies do, to where both companies can really focus their capital on their highest priorities. Speaker 300:54:41Again, that's really how we're going to think about the way we evaluate our capital investments and our infrastructure moving forward. Operator00:54:54Rick Wise of Stifel is on the line with a question. Please state your question. Speaker 1100:54:59Good morning to you both. Joe, I was just hoping you would expand on your Novum comments. Where are we in the rollout? Is this is you talked about the positives about high customer interest and the healthy backlog or funnel of orders. Does adoption, does growth accelerate in the second half and into 2025? Speaker 1100:55:29Is that the right way to think about it? And are you seeing more orders than you were expecting last quarter or sort of in line? Speaker 200:55:39Good morning. We found as a matter of fact, we have sales of Novum in the second quarter, which we did not expect to have, but we're a little faster in having the product ready for the market. What we're seeing is great interest. It plays well for our ability to compete. As you know, Xpector is a great product, but it does not have a syringe pump and having a syringe pump makes a huge difference. Speaker 200:56:06So we're very happy with the momentum that we're getting in Novum. We've been showing that to very large hospital systems and is small as well. Our team is very hard at work and we feel confident in the technology, so we have Speaker 300:56:21the ability to take market share. Speaker 200:56:23I think that is an important thing. This is about providing our patients and our customers with the best technology on the market, not a reengineered technology from many, many years ago. Speaker 1100:56:37Got you. And Joel, maybe just one for you. You obviously you and Joe highlighted multiple times in multiple ways, frontline care and your optimism that things improve from here. And I was hoping you'd just dig in a little deeper on the turnaround. So will patient care and government, is that potentially going to get better? Speaker 1100:57:05And maybe talk about that transition to cardiology and acute, I think those are two areas you mentioned. What do you need to do to get there and how soon can it have a positive impact? Thank you both. Speaker 200:57:20You're welcome. So Rick, let me break up a little bit, breakdown FLC for our frontline care to all listening to the call. Primary Care is one segment, one division of that business. We have other divisions such as cardiology and monitor. Those are going very well. Speaker 200:57:44We have no issues in the acute care space. So let's focus on specific, the patient, the primary care physician office. We believe this market has 2 dimensions. 1 is the amount of backlog we had in 2020 3 that we're able to catch up and ship and sell and fulfill orders that were outstanding. The second one is the slowdown in churn that we've seen due to several of these large primary care outfits exiting the market and moving. Speaker 200:58:27The demand is still there. Primary care demand is still there. We're number 1 shareholder gaining a slight share with 80 plus percent of market share already. So we see that coming back because the demand is not going anywhere. The demand is high. Speaker 200:58:44So is the churn due to the changes on the market as well as what we saw last year, we're catching up with the backlog. Government orders is a complete different thing altogether. So eventually the government will need to buy the products that are needed for the government. And when that happens, we'll see the orders come in. We are a very large supplier of the government and I feel comfortable that those problems that we've seen in 2024 with the decline in primary care This year, we'll turn the corner in 2025. Speaker 200:59:26The business has solid footing, good technology. On the other side of frontline care, we have technology that will be launched in early in mid-twenty 25 to compete into monitoring. And we are very happy with new launches that will happen in the med surg monitoring products that we have coming out in mid-twenty 25. So technology launches will fuel FLC in 2025 as well as the comp between 2024 and 2025, a reemerging of the primary care and probably resuming orders with the government. Speaker 1101:00:10That's a great overview. Thanks, Joe. Speaker 201:00:12You're welcome. Operator01:00:15Pito Chickering of Deutsche Bank is on the line with our final question. Please state your question. Speaker 1201:00:21Hey, good morning guys. Nice quarter and thanks for fitting in here. Looking at the infusion pumps, what do you think the market is growing sort of in 2024? And are you guys sort of picking up or sort of losing share this year? And with all the RFPs out for 'twenty five and beyond, do you guys see yourselves as market share gainers or sort of market share maintainers? Speaker 1201:00:44And then on the strong pricing gains for infusion that you talked about, as you think about pricing in 2025, should we see an acceleration of this pricing for next year? Speaker 201:00:56Peter, can you repeat the last part of the question on the pricing, please? Speaker 1201:01:01Yes. So like you talked about like 100 basis points of pricing sort of this quarter and that continued into that half of the year. Shouldn't that be accelerating in 2025 as you think about the GPO contracts? Speaker 301:01:13Yes. So this is Joel. Let me take that. I think the way I would think about that is we talked about some pricing of maybe 100 basis points this year as part of the game that was again mostly outside the U. S. Speaker 301:01:26Across our portfolio. We think about that same pricing bump for next year as we think about as we move into the GPO contracts that come through and again that's primarily U. S. Pricing. So I think that's the way I would interpret that. Speaker 301:01:42I don't know, I'd call it accelerating necessarily, but I would call it consistent with what our expectations were for this year heading into next year. Speaker 201:01:50And Peter, answering the question on the infusion pump, first of all, we are market share gainers and have been for a long time, just about 100 basis points a year. This will accelerate and is accelerating with Novo and we're going see Q3, Q4 and into 2025. So we find that we have great interest in our pump. I think there is a churn a natural churn of the market in terms of number of pumps that need to be replaced. And our objective is to be in every competitive account with our new technology. Speaker 1201:02:28And then a quick follow-up to David's question, not asking for 2025. But the correction in the year with revenues growing under sort of 1% with compounding slowing due to competitors issues lapping, Speaker 301:02:42I guess how should Speaker 1201:02:43we model revenue growth compounding in the Q4? And then what are the headwinds and tailwinds that we should be thinking about for 2025 revenues? Speaker 301:02:54Yes. Can you just repeat that? So your phone was going in and out during that question. I apologize. Do you mind repeating that one more time, please? Speaker 1201:03:02Yes. So apologies. So a follow-up to David's question just about the Q4 revenues. We're exiting the year growing less than 1% with compounding becoming a headwind in the Q4. So I guess the question number 1 is how should we model compounded growth in the Q4? Speaker 1201:03:18And number 2, with the compounding slowing, how should we think about headwinds and tailwinds for 2025 revenue growth? Speaker 301:03:28Yes. I mean, look, I think the main thing here is really we're going to continue to see again improvements in HST. So that's where I'm going to start with. In other words, we've seen that over the course of this year as that HST business has continued to accelerate and then we think there will be a strong exit rate for that business And that will continue to accelerate into 2025. I think as we talked about from a pharma perspective, again, compounding is going to be a portion of that that's going to drag it. Speaker 301:04:04I don't know that we've specifically guided the actual compounding business, but that is something that is again going to be a continued it's slow as Joe talked about for various customer reasons that that's happened. From an NPT perspective, again, we continue to believe we've got some really solid momentum going into 2025, certainly coming out of 2024. And then obviously, so just to kind of summarize all that, I think the while there is a bit of a squeeze map from the we talked about the kidney and the compounding, that's the reality of it is that we have a 4% to 5% growth ex kidney that we're heading into the exiting the year with and heading into next year. So that momentum is really strong ex kidney and that's the part that we feel really excited about as we head into 2025. Speaker 201:05:00Peter, just reinforcing and underscoring, Our exit rate is 4% to 5%. If you're comfortable with that, that's where Baxter is taking into 2025. And we tend to think that our business and innovation can drive even further going into 2026 and 2027. Speaker 1101:05:23Great. Thanks so Speaker 301:05:25much. Thank you. Operator01:05:27Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call with Baxter International. Thank you for participating.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by