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DATE

Tuesday, May 5, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Jay Mazelsky
  • Incoming Chief Executive Officer — Michael Erickson
  • Chief Financial Officer — Andrew Emerson

TAKEAWAYS

  • Revenue -- $1.17 billion, up 14% as reported and 11% organically, driven mainly by Companion Animal Group (CAG) Diagnostics recurring revenue and instrument placements.
  • CAG Diagnostics Recurring Revenue -- 11% organic growth, including approximately 11% in the U.S. and 12% internationally, supported by nearly 4% global net price improvement.
  • CAG Instrument Revenue -- 28% organic growth, with 1,100 inVue Dx analyzers placed toward the annual target of 5,500 units.
  • Operating Margin -- Comparable margin expanded by 100 basis points from prior year, with reported margins at 63.4%, up 90 basis points on a comparable basis.
  • Earnings Per Share (EPS) -- $3.47, reflecting 15% comparable EPS growth; includes a $0.09 per share benefit from share-based compensation, and a $0.05 negative impact from a loss on an equity investment.
  • Free Cash Flow -- $234 million, with a trailing 12-month net income to free cash flow conversion rate of 99%.
  • Instrument Installed Base -- Premium placements reached 4,650 units, up 12% year over year, contributing to a 12% expansion in the premium installed base.
  • International CAG Diagnostics -- 12% organic growth, driven by both net new customers and increased same-store utilization.
  • Cancer DX Platform -- 20% of Cancer DX customers are non-primary IDEXX reference lab accounts; Q1 saw 7,500 practices ordering since launch, and international expansion into Europe and Australia.
  • Cloud-Native PIMS Installed Base -- Double-digit growth, with almost all new placements being cloud-based.
  • Share Repurchases -- $361 million allocated, reducing diluted shares outstanding by 2.1% year over year.
  • Full-Year Revenue Outlook -- Increased to $4.675 billion-$4.76 billion, representing 8.6%-10.6% reported growth and 7.7%-9.7% organic growth.
  • Full-Year EPS Outlook -- Raised to $14.45-$14.90, up by $0.13 per share at midpoint, reflecting 11%-15% comparable growth.
  • Operating Expense -- Increased 17% as reported and 11% on a comparable basis, impacted by a $5 million equity investment loss, and increased investments in commercial and innovation capabilities.
  • Foreign Exchange Impact -- Added $14 million to operating profit and $0.14 to EPS in the quarter, with a forecasted 90 basis point full-year reported revenue tailwind.
  • Q2 2026 Guidance -- Revenue growth of 7.3%-9.3%, organic growth of 6.7%-8.7%, and CAG Diagnostics recurring revenue growth of 8.5%-10.5%.
  • Water and LPD Business -- Both segments grew 7% organically, with international Water segment facing supply chain headwinds in the Middle East.
  • Clinical Visit Trends -- U.S. same-store clinical visits declined 1%; full-year guidance assumes a 1.5% decline, with non-well visits slightly up, but wellness visits down 3%.

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RISKS

  • Comparable operating expenses rose 11% due to increased investment in global commercial and innovation capabilities.
  • U.S. clinical visits are expected to decline 1.5% for the year, reflecting continued pressure in wellness and discretionary services.
  • "a 1% strengthening of the U.S. dollar would reduce revenue by approximately $12 million and EPS by $0.04 for the remainder of the year," according to Emerson.
  • International Water segment experienced modest revenue pressure due to Middle East supply chain disruptions factored into guidance.

SUMMARY

IDEXX Laboratories (IDXX 0.03%) reported double-digit organic growth across core business segments, underpinned by strong recurring revenue, global instrument placements, and the expansion of veterinary diagnostic innovations. Management raised full-year financial guidance for both revenue and EPS, supported by improved operational performance, enduring customer loyalty, and continued innovation in diagnostic platforms. Capital deployment through share repurchases reduced outstanding shares, while disciplined product launches across geographic markets fueled momentum in both developed and emerging segments.

  • Management directly attributed the updated full-year organic and CAG Diagnostics revenue growth outlook to a 70-basis-point improvement at midpoint from previous guidance, driven by increased industry confidence, and volume expansion.
  • CFO Emerson explicitly stated that "This is all volume driven," tying growth primarily to expanded diagnostic utilization and new product uptake rather than pricing changes.
  • The company maintained a leverage ratio of 0.6x gross, and 0.5x net of cash at quarter-end, providing ongoing flexibility for investment and shareholder returns.
  • CEO Mazelsky announced his transition to Executive Chair, with Michael Erickson assuming the CEO position; Erickson outlined a continued focus on advancing diagnostics, software, and AI integration.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • CAG: Companion Animal Group, IDEXX's primary operating segment for veterinary diagnostics and related products.
  • PIMS: Practice Information Management System, veterinary software for practice workflow and client communication.
  • inVue Dx: IDEXX's premium diagnostic instrument platform, supporting cytology and blood morphology tests.
  • F&A: Fine Needle Aspirate, a cytology test used to evaluate pet lumps and bumps for diagnosis, newly automated in IDEXX's instrument platform.
  • Cancer DX: IDEXX's proprietary oncology diagnostic platform for early cancer detection in companion animals.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Andrew Emerson: Good morning. I'm pleased to take you through our first quarter results and provide an updated outlook for our full year 2026 financial expectations. During the first quarter, IDEXX delivered exceptional financial results through continued execution in our companion animal business with benefits from IDEXX innovations. Revenue increased 14% as reported and 11% organically supported by over 11% organic growth in CAG Diagnostics recurring revenues, reflecting nearly 11% gains in the U.S. and approximately 12% growth in international regions. CAG Diagnostic recurring revenue growth in Q1 was negatively impacted by declines in U.S. same-store clinical visits of approximately 1%, with slightly positive growth in non-well visits more than offset by pressure on wellness visits.

Strong premium instrument placements in the quarter resulted in 28% organic growth of CAG instrument revenues and included 1,100 IDEXX inVue Dx analyzers. IDEXX's operating performance was also excellent with comparable operating margin gains of 100 basis points, supported by gross margin expansion, which benefited from strong reoccurring revenue growth. Strong operating profit gains enabled earnings per share of $3.47 in the quarter, resulting in EPS growth of 15% on a comparable basis. Performance during the first quarter built confidence to increase our full year revenue range to between $4.675 billion to $4.76 billion, an increase of $42 million at midpoint or an outlook for overall reported revenue growth of 8.6% to 10.6%.

Our updated full year overall organic revenue growth outlook is for 7.7% to 9.7% with an organic CAG Diagnostic recurring revenue growth of 8.7% to 10.7%. These organic growth ranges represent approximately 70 basis point increase at midpoint to our previous guidance, supported by strong global execution and modest improvement in our sector outlook for the CAG business. We're also updating our full year EPS outlook to $14.45 to $14.90 per share, an increase of $0.13 per share at midpoint net of a $0.05 negative impact from a loss on an equity investment in Q1, reflecting 11% to 15% comparable EPS growth. We'll provide further details on our updated 2026 financial expectations later in my comments.

Let's begin with a review of the first quarter results. First quarter organic revenue growth of 11% was driven by 12% CAG revenue gains and 7% growth in both our Water and LPD businesses. Strong CAG results were supported by CAG Diagnostics recurring revenue growth of 11% organically, including approximately 50 basis point benefit related to equivalent days, an average global net price improvement of approximately 4%. CAG diagnostics instrument revenue increased 28% organically, with another strong quarter of inVue Dx analyzer placements aligned with our expectations. U.S. organic CAG Diagnostics recurring revenues grew nearly 11% in Q1 including strong volume gains and net price realization aligned with full year expectations.

U.S. same-store clinical visits declined minus 1% in the quarter, reflecting an IDEXX U.S. CAG Diagnostics recurring revenue growth premium to U.S. clinical visits of approximately 1,100 basis points, highlighting outstanding performance by the IDEXX commercial teams. During the quarter, the industry continued to see green shoots from aging pets, with growth in clinical visits for pets 5-plus years old. Non-well visits also continued to show signs of improvement, increasing 20 basis points year-over-year, while wellness visits declined minus 3%. IDEXX benefited from overall quality of clinical visits with increased diagnostic frequency and utilization per visit, demonstrating expansion of diagnostics and care protocols.

International CAG Diagnostics recurring revenues grew 12% organically in Q1, with revenue performance driven by volume gains, including benefits of net new customers and same-store utilization. International regions performed incredibly well with steady growth of CAG Diagnostics recurring revenues through ongoing engagement with customers and expansion of IDEXX innovations while we see similar macro pressures affecting visits in most geographies. IDEXX also delivered strong organic revenue gains in major global testing modalities in the first quarter. IDEXX VetLab consumable revenues increased 15% on an organic basis reflecting double-digit growth in both U.S. and international regions.

Consumable revenue growth included double-digit volume expansion driven by net new customer gains in our premium instrument installed base and expanded testing utilization, including benefits from innovations. InVue Dx utilization continues to track well to our reoccurring revenue estimates previously provided and progression of our controlled rollout of F&A is in line with our expectations. CAG premium instrument placements reached 4,650 units during the first quarter, an increase of 12% year-over-year and the quality of placements remains superb reflected in over 1,000 global new and competitive catalyst placements, including nearly 320 in North America. Globally, we placed 1,100 IDEXX inVue Dx instruments as we track to our full year expectations for 5,500 placements.

Our success in placing instruments while maintaining high customer retention levels supported the 12% year-over-year growth in our premium instrument installed base in the quarter. IDEXX Global Reference Lab revenues increased 10% organically in Q1, driven by solid volume growth across regions with benefits from both net customer gains and same-store utilization each doubling from prior year levels. IDEXX Cancer DX has continued to support these categories, attracting new customers and broadening the use of diagnostics in both sick and wellness panels. As an example, approximately 20% of Cancer Dx customers are non-primary IDEXX reference lab accounts. Global Rapid assay revenues were flat organically.

Rapid Assay results continue to be impacted by customers shifting pancreatic lipase testing to our Catalyst instrument platform, which we estimate to be an approximately 2% headwind to Q1 revenue growth. Veterinary software and diagnostic imaging organic revenues increased 11% driven by recurring revenue growth of 11% during the quarter and strong nonrecurring growth from placements of diagnostic imaging systems, setting a record with approximately 330 installations benefiting from the launch of DR50 PLUS platform. Veterinary software expanded double digits supported by cloud-based PIMS installations and adoption of related reoccurring services. Water revenues increased 7% organically in Q1, with strong growth in the U.S. and low single-digit growth in international regions.

International growth in the business was impacted by supply chain dynamics in the Middle East. Livestock, poultry and dairy revenues increased 7% organically in the quarter, with solid gains across regions. Turning to the P&L. Strong recurring revenue growth enabled 15% comparable operating profit gains in the quarter. Gross profit increased 16% in the quarter as reported and 13% on a comparable basis. Gross margins were 63.4% up approximately 90 basis points on a comparable basis. These gains reflect benefits from strong recurring revenue growth in IDEXX VetLab consumables and Reference Lab volumes along with operational productivity.

Pricing benefits offset inflationary cost pressures and foreign exchange, net of our hedge positions had a negligible impact on reported gross margins in the period. On a reported basis, operating expenses increased 17% year-over-year including both lapping a discrete Q1 2025 expense for concluded litigation matter as well as a $5 million loss on an equity investment in the current period. Comparable operating expenses increased 11% year-over-year as we advance investments in our global commercial and innovation capabilities. Q1 EPS was $3.47 per share, reflecting a comparable EPS increase of 15%.

EPS in the quarter included $7 million or $0.09 per share benefit related to share-based compensation activity, and a $0.05 negative impact related to a loss on an equity investment. Foreign exchange added $14 million to operating profit and $0.14 to EPS in Q1, net of hedge effects. Free cash flow was $234 million in Q1, reflecting normal seasonality. On a trailing 12-month basis, the net income to free cash flow conversion rate achieved 99%. For a full year, we're maintaining our outlook for free cash flow conversion of 85% to 95% of net income, including full year capital spending of approximately $180 million.

We finished the period with leverage ratios of 0.6x gross and 0.5x net of cash and continue to deploy capital towards share repurchases allocating $361 million during the first quarter, supporting a 2.1% year-over-year reduction in diluted shares outstanding through Q1. Turning to our full year 2026. As noted, we're increasing our outlook for overall revenue to $4.675 billion to $4.76 billion. At midpoint, this reflects approximately $32 million in constant currency improvement from our initial guidance, building on strong first quarter performance, including CAG Diagnostic recurring revenue expansion and a modestly improved industry outlook. Our updated reported revenue outlook includes $10 million or approximately 20 basis points growth benefit related to foreign currency changes compared to our prior estimates.

This reflects our revenue growth outlook for 8.6% to 10.6% as reported, including approximately 90 basis points for full year growth benefit from foreign exchange at the rates outlined in our press release. As a sensitivity, a 1% strengthening of the U.S. dollar would reduce revenue by approximately $12 million and EPS by $0.04 for the remainder of the year. Our updated overall organic revenue growth outlook of 7.7% to 9.7% includes an organic growth range of 8.7% to 10.7% for CAG Diagnostics recurring revenue, including approximately a 4% benefit of global net price realization.

At midpoint, we're updating our estimate for U.S. clinical visits to a decline of minus 1.5% after a third sequential quarter of clinical visits trending between minus 1% to minus 2% and aligned with the trailing 12-month average. In terms of key financial metrics, we're updating our reported operating margin outlook to 32.1% to 32.5% for 2026, reflecting increased expectations of 50 to 90 basis points of full year comparable operating margin improvement. Operating margin was impacted by a 30 basis point headwind related to a discrete litigation expense from 2025 and the current year loss on an equity investment. These were offset by a 30 basis point benefit from foreign exchange effects.

Our updated full year EPS outlook is $14.45 to $14.90 per share, an increase of $0.13 per share at midpoint. Our EPS outlook incorporates increased projections for operational performance of $0.13 per share at [ midpoint ] compared to our prior guide as well as a $0.05 negative impact from a loss on an equity investment and a $0.05 benefit from updated foreign exchange rates outlined in our press release. For the second quarter, we're planning for reported revenue growth of 7.3% to 9.3%, including approximately 60 basis point growth benefit from foreign exchange impacts. This operational outlook aligns with an overall organic revenue growth range of 6.7% to 8.7% and CAG Diagnostics recurring revenue growth of 8.5% to 10.5%.

Organic revenue includes a negative 50 basis point impact from equivalent days in the second quarter, and at midpoint, we're planning for the U.S. clinical visit growth in line with the full year estimate. Overall organic revenue growth is impacted by expectations for declines in CAG instrument revenues as we begin lapping significant placements of InVue Dx during 2025 and modest revenue pressure from regional and placement mix. Second quarter reported operating margins are expected to be 33.9% to 34.3%, reflecting expansion of 10 to 50 basis points on a comparable basis as we expect increased spending during Q2 related to timing of projects. That concludes our financial review. I'll now turn the call over to Jay for his comments.

Jay Mazelsky: Thank you, Andrew, and good morning. IDEXX delivered an exceptional start to 2026 with first quarter results reflecting disciplined commercial execution, continued benefits from innovation and expanded diagnostics utilization across a global customer base. These results were achieved despite headwinds from clinical wellness visits, underscoring the durability of our growth model and the importance of diagnostics to excellent veterinary care. The quarter also highlights the strong foundation we have built with strong customer relationships, where a commercial partnership is central to advancing our mission and supporting practice success. The economic value of instruments placed in the quarter, for example, grew double digits year-over-year, reinforcing the long-term value we are creating through our installed base growth.

More broadly, companion animals are seen as members of the family and a large majority of pet owners prioritize their pet's health and happiness, creating pull for higher quality health care. This commitment is reflected in the continued expansion of diagnostics frequency during both well and non-well visits. Customer retention remains in the high 90s reflecting the trust veterinarians place in IDEXX as both a diagnostics provider and long-term partner. This loyalty underscores the strength of our integrated model, combining diagnostic software and medical support. We work alongside veterinarians and practice teams to better integrate diagnostics into everyday care protocols, supporting workflow optimization, increasing clinical confidence and demonstrating the economic value of diagnostics.

When practices engage at this level, diagnostics utilization increases. Testing becomes more seamlessly embedded in care protocols, technicians gain confidence running diagnostics during the visit and clinicians make faster, more informed decisions, driving greater productivity across the practice. All 4 country expansions announced last year were in place at the start of Q1. And as a result of a well-established approach to training and new hire support, we saw initial contributions in line with expected productivity. Momentum with IDEXX inVue Dx continues with another solid placement quarter well on our way to our target of 5,500 placements for the year.

Internationally, we are seeing a solid ramp in the installed base and adoption as awareness builds and commercial team support integration into practice workflow. Customer feedback remains highly consistent across regions, with veterinarians highlighting consistent performance, easy use and workflow productivity gains as key benefits. Utilization across ear cytology and blood morphology remains aligned with expectations, reinforcing the everyday clinical value of the platform. We continue to engage with customers to drive further adoption of these important testing categories through our professional service veterinarians and clinical staff trainings.

At the same time, we are advancing the inVue Dx algorithm with monthly software updates to our installed base, enhancing performance and improved time to results, just another part of our Technology for Life promise. For example, the menu advanced in Q1 for blood morphology, the ability to detect and report [indiscernible]. These are red blood cells associated with severe underlying diseases such as with liver, clinic or kidney disease. We're also pleased with the solid progress of our controlled rollout of F&A. Early customer response to F&A remains very encouraging.

Practices are seeing the value of evaluating lumps and bumps during the patient visit with rapid cytology insights supported by AI analysis and optional expert pathologists review available with a single click. This workflow enables clinicians to evaluate more lumps and bumps by reducing clinical effort and cost of the consumer. We continue to gain insights on customer behavior and experience during the controlled launch. Early adopters are very pleased with the high-quality training experience and follow-up support. These learnings and positive experience and support further broadening of the launch in Q2 as we ran volume and anticipate full volume ramp in the second half.

Overall, F&A utilization is tracking to our planning assumptions, and we remain excited about the potential of F&A as a platform capability that can expand over time beyond mass cell tumor detection. Turning to IDEXX Cancer DX. Momentum continues to build behind this important innovation as veterinarians increasingly incorporated into both diagnostics and screening workflows. During Q1 in North America, nearly 70% of cancer DX tests were run as part of a panel, reflecting the growing clinical relevance of this test. Now with over 7,500 practices ordering since launch, Cancer Dx is a major differentiator for our [ reference ] business, and we believe it is one of the many elements driving competitive lab transitions at IDEXX.

A major milestone this quarter was the international launch of Cancer DX for [indiscernible] and lymphoma in Europe and Australia. This represents an important next step in expanding access to early cancer detection globally and builds on the strong adoption we have seen in North America. Early international interest has been strong and reinforces the global need for accessible oncology diagnostics. Our global field teams are partnering with customers, both independent and corporate to develop wellness protocols. As an example, a large corporate group in Australia recently announced the inclusion of Cancer DX within their senior wellness plan. no additional charge for their members.

We're also seeing continued use in monitoring applications, particularly in cases where serial testing can support treatment decisions. With the addition of mast cell tumor detection for later this year and a third test by the end of '26. Cancer diagnostics will continue to expand its clinical relevance and reinforce IDEXX's leadership in veterinary oncology diagnostics. We continue to expand our Catalyst customer base, adding over 1,000 new and competitive customers in the quarter. In each one of the now nearly 79,000 Catalyst customers have access to our new and expanded menu such as Catalyst pancreatic lipase and Catalyst cortisol.

We continue to see strong adoption and utilization of both these tests as practices incorporate the test into routine real-time workflows to support pancreatitis and endocrine disorder diagnoses. Our software and diagnostic imaging businesses also delivered solid performance in Q1. Our cloud-native PIMS platform installed base grew double digits in the quarter, as we continue to see strong interest with virtually all placements now cloud-based. Practices are looking to software solutions to realize workflow optimization, staff productivity and digital client communications. Vello, IDEXX's pet owner engagement application continues to gain traction, growing double digits from last quarter as practices recognizing the importance of driving client deployments.

Clinics using Vello report improved compliance with recommended diagnostics and treatments reinforcing the connection between engagement and medical outcomes. In our Diagnostic Imaging business, we launched our newest digital radiography system in January, the ImageVue DR50 PLUS combining high definition AI-powered imaging with up to 60% lower dose than premium competitors. Strong customer reception to the DR50 PLUS, coupled with excellent commercial execution, led to an all-time record imaging systems placements for the quarter, the fifth consecutive quarterly placement record. IDEXX Telemedicine also delivered very strong volume growth, supported by modernized integration with IDEXX Web PACS that reduces submission clicks by almost 50% saving time for clinical teams and delivering board-certified expert interpretation directly inside Web PACS.

Software is a powerful enabler of diagnostics growth helping practices translate clinical insight into action and customers who use all of our diagnostic software and imaging solutions experienced faster clinical revenue growth and diagnostics usage. This will be my final earnings call as CEO before I transition to the Executive Chair role following our annual meeting next week. As I reflect on my experience as CEO and the state of the company today, I remain incredibly optimistic about the future of IDEXX and the multi-decade opportunity ahead for the company. The fundamental drivers of this industry have never been stronger. The human animal bond continues to deepen.

That bond drives sustained commitment from pet owners to seek high-quality care, earlier diagnosis and better outcomes for the pets they love. Diagnostics is the foundation of this evolution. As medicine continues to advance the need for clinical insights to guide care decisions will only grow reinforcing the long runway ahead for diagnostics innovation and utilization. IDEXX is in a position of strength with a clear strategy, a powerful innovation pipeline and exceptional people. I believe the company's best days lay ahead. And I'm excited for the next chapter of IDEXX's growth to unfold. I would be remiss if I didn't highlight the role that our people play in the company's success.

Our approximately 11,000 IDEXX employees around the world are purpose-driven and our talent fuels the company's growth. IDEXX is deeply committed to innovation, our customers and their success and operating the company as if it was their own. It has been an honor to lead IDEXX, and I want to thank all employees past and present for their commitment to improving the lives of pets across the world. Now before I turn it over for Q&A, I'd like to give Mike Erickson the chance to say a few words. I've worked with Mike for a long time, and I have tremendous confidence in him as he steps into the CEO role.

He brings deep experience, strong leadership and a clear commitment to our purpose and strategy. With that, I'll turn it over to Mike.

Michael Erickson: Thank you, Jay, and good morning, everyone. I'm humbled by the opportunity to lead IDEXX at such an exciting time in our company's history. As Jay mentioned, the sector remains highly attractive and I see a meaningful opportunity ahead to further accelerate our innovation-driven platform growth strategy. We will continue to focus on diagnostics and software where our platforms empower customers to see more and do more in their practices, uncovering deeper patient insights and driving next level productivity. We will also continue to advance commercial reach through investments to expand our field-based presence in key geographies around the world.

This enables our talented commercial team to work even more closely with customers side-by-side, supporting accelerated adoption of innovations that expand care while driving a reliable return on investment. Another priority for us is AI. We have a well-established AI capability at IDEXX with AI embedded in platforms such as inVue Dx and our ezyVet software. Looking forward, I see advancements in AI as incredibly promising to further accelerate our innovation, expand testing access and utilization and drive deeper patient level insights. I plan to share more on this at our upcoming August Investor Day.

Across these priorities, we're fortunate to have a talented team of IDEXXers globally that wake up every day focused on our customers and shaping the future of diagnostics software and AI in animal health. I want to close by thanking Jay for his leadership and service to IDEXX over the past 14 years. Under Jay's leadership, the organization has accelerated the innovation agenda, launching valuable new platforms like Cancer DX and inVue Dx, growing our cloud-native software platform offerings, significantly expanded customer reach internationally and delivered strong results and shareholder value, all while positioning IDEXX for sustainable long-term growth supported by a robust future innovation pipeline.

I am grateful to have worked with Jay and I look forward to his continued support as he transitions to Executive Chair of IDEXX's Board. I'll now turn it over to the operator for Q&A.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] We'll go first to Michael Ryskin of Bank of America.

Michael Ryskin: Congrats on the quarter, and I [indiscernible] the comments. Jay, congrats. Been a pleasure. I want to kick things off on inVue. You had a lot of comments in the prepared remarks on strong performance. But just that placement number, 1,099. You reiterated the 5,500 for the year, but we would have expected you to do a little bit more in the first quarter. Is there just some pacing dynamics there to think of that maybe the first quarter tends to be a little bit slower. Is there anything in the funnel you can talk about just to give us confidence that these placements will be there for the full year?

Jay Mazelsky: Yes. Michael. The -- we -- Keep in mind, we came off a very strong year in 2025 and Q4. We have a high degree of confidence in the 5,500 number. It tends to be -- you get some choppiness quarter-to-quarter, just based on customer mix of independents versus corporates. But the receptivity we see in the market amongst customers is very strong. So we have a lot of confidence in the overall 5,500 projection for the year.

Michael Ryskin: Okay. Great. And for my follow-up on just sort of underlying market assumptions and what you've seen you had about 2% visit decline in the first quarter was to be expected in a lot of expectations. You talked about, I think, in your prepared remarks, modestly [indiscernible] the industry outlook -- just would be great to drive into that a little bit more. Is that U.S. or OUS? Is that something you're seeing now? Just expectations as you go through the year? Just parse that part a little bit more.

Andrew Emerson: This is Andrew. Yes, so from a clinical visit perspective, we highlighted a minus 1% in the first quarter. So that's about a point better than what our initial guide had laid out from that standpoint. We continue to see positive momentum from the aging pet population, pets that are 5-plus years and older continue to add some positive momentum just to the overall industry. And I think what we're trying to do is capture the multi quarter perspective that we've started to see the green shoots in that area into our outlook. I hear more directly.

I think if you look at the past trailing 12 months, the average is now very similar to what we're anticipating for the full year, which is about minus 1.5% decline in clinical visits. A lot of that is really from the wellness visit area and areas like the discretionary types of categories. We continue to see pressure related to the macro dynamics and consumers making trade-offs, whether they come into the clinic. But the positive side of that is when they are coming into the clinic, we're seeing really strong quality of care within those visits. So diagnostic frequency and utilization continue to expand at really healthy rates.

And so you're seeing the diagnostic care protocols really continue to play out positively from that perspective. So we feel like we've kind of captured the range of outcomes here on the industry, but it is a little bit better than we had anticipated for the full year.

Jay Mazelsky: Yes. Maybe just one comment on those pets 5 years and older. It is modestly positive. This is now the third quarter that we've seen that. So that's very encouraging. The other thing is it's been positive across both non-well and wellness visits. And so that cohort of pets said we know it's a very large cohort are coming into the practice, not just for sick visits, but also for well visits.

Operator: We'll take our next question from Chris Schott of JPMorgan.

Christopher Schott: Jay, Mike, congrats on the new roles. Just -- maybe just two for me. First on ex U.S. dynamics, another very strong quarter there. I'm just curious how much of this is commercial execution on IDEXX's part versus just maybe healthier broader market trends and just how you're thinking about kind of the directional growth for the ex U.S. business? And then maybe the second one for me is just coming back to inVue and the F&A rollout. I know you made some comments in the prepared remarks, but just elaborate a little bit more on how that initial utilization and uptake has ramped relative to your expectations?

And just how we should be thinking about the broader rollout of that offering as we move through this year.

Jay Mazelsky: Sure. Chris, I'll take the international market comment, then I'll ask Mike to handle the F&A rollout and how we think about that. The international markets just from a overall macro impact and performance side, we don't see broad differences between international and our domestic market. There's a macro impact, obviously, on wellness as a whole. Wellness is less a dominant [indiscernible] -- it's at a much lower rate than typically what we see in the U.S. just from a development standpoint. The really solid growth we're seeing in CAG recurring revenue, instrument placements internationally is a function of long-term investments that, as a company, we've made. So it's not just in terms of commercial expansion.

So that's an important part of that, and we've done double-digit expansions over the last 5 years or so, it's building out. Our Reference Lab business, it's localizing software solutions like VetConnect PLUS. It's really building out the entire IDEXX ecosystem so that we can serve our customers at the level of experience, customer experience that they desire, but also making sure that they have full solutions. And if you look at our product road map and what we've rolled out over the last couple of years, a lot of our solutions have been from a design and development standpoint, targeted at these international customers. ProCyte One, for example, though it's been extremely successful in the U.S.

Initially, we saw the opportunity footprint cost and performance to go more from a value standpoint. I think on the Rapid Assay business [indiscernible] is another example, really tailoring solutions for some of our international markets. And we're realizing I think that the success of all those efforts combined, and we've seen sustainable double-digit growth.

We're very optimistic about the long-term opportunity in these international geographies. diagnostics utilization is just at an earlier state and that our experience has been with the right approach, creating awareness and education and working with customers in a [ tight ] partnership model that there's a lot of runway in front of us, and we feel like from a playbook standpoint, we really have a very successful and effective playbook we're executing. I'll hand it over to Mike to talk about F&A's [ controlled launch ].

Michael Erickson: Chris, thanks for the question. We're very happy with the controlled launch process for F&A. It's on track. And in fact, we're broadening it as we head into the second quarter here, we also would move to a more of an unconstrained launch posture later this year. Keep in mind, I mean, we've successfully been launching instrument platforms for many years here at IDEXX. We've done 4 of these just in my time. And this staged control launch process is what enables us to ensure we deliver the kind of outstanding experience that our customers expect from us, not just from the instrument, but from all aspects, end-to-end implementation, training and all of those things.

And F&A, as Jay mentioned, it's really a very exciting platform within a platform, not just what it can do on the instrument with AI and detection of mast cell tumor cells, but also the one-click workflow if a customer wants added interpretation from an IDEXX board-certified pathologists. And we're seeing our controlled launch customers give us great feedback and really make use of all of that functionality. And then the final thing I'll just say here is that, as you know, these products have very long tails.

We want to get it right up front because we know that the value creation really comes over time as we continue to expand what the platforms can do, and that's what customers really love about the solutions that we provide them.

Operator: We'll go next to Erin Wright with Morgan Stanley.

Erin Wilson Wright: So the consumables momentum was strong. It accelerated from the fourth quarter. I guess can you remind us kind of unpack that a little bit for us. I guess remind us what actually would be in view related or directly associated with inVue consumables? Is that really moving the needle yet? Or is this really about you locking in those customers into those IDEXX 360 contracts and having that sort of indirect impact from the inVue launch? And just when should we think about kind of inVue, I guess, moving the needle from a consumables perspective? Like what are you seeing in terms of the consumables flow-through so far relative to your expectations?

Jay Mazelsky: Yes. The inVue consumables is definitely contributing to the strong growth and momentum we see in the VetLab consumables portfolio with ear cytology, blood morphology, we've communicated this before. It's well within expectations. Customers are enjoying it. It represents 100% new growth in the consumables area that we didn't have before. So we think that with F&A, we'll continue to build off that and can help sustain good momentum in that part of the portfolio. The other thing to keep in mind is because we've had very successful high single-digit, double-digit installed base growth across all the premium instruments. Every time we come out with a new slide.

In the case of Catalyst, for example, with pancreatic lipase or cortisol, where we're able to market that into a very large installed base. And customers have grown to trust our solutions and the performance of the solutions and workflow of it is really load and go. So what we're seeing is a rapid uptake of these innovations across a large installed base globally. And these are -- in the case of my pancreatic lipase and cortisol, these are measurements or parameters that customers have been asking for. They see every day, dogs, cats coming into their practices that require these types of measurements. And the same really is true across the portfolio.

We've seen a nice, I think, build in SediVue, for example, internationally, which started a little bit later than when we introduced it in the U.S., hepatology is typically sold as part of a chemistry and hematology suite. So we're benefiting from that focus on placing instruments, creating a seamless experience and continuing to evolve the menu through a Technology for Life approach.

Erin Wilson Wright: Okay. Great. And then just on F&A again. And just on kind of the building a broader launch there. I guess, do you have a backlog or preorders to speak of on that front that customers are waiting for F&A, like what do you hear from the field as kind of you more broadly launched that throughout the year? And then what is your expectation? Or when should we hear more on the next menu expansion for inVue and how meaningful full that could be to the platform? And also just to know kind of thanks, Jay. It's been also great working with you, and thanks for the support over the past few years.

Jay Mazelsky: Yes. Thanks, Erin. Why don't I -- I'll take the commercial aspect of it and then maybe have Mike talk a little bit about the F&A and why we think virtually all customers would be interested in it. From a commercial standpoint, what we launched at what customers, I think, focused on was, obviously, the ear cytology and blood morphology, it felt like from a menu standpoint that, that offered a degree of completeness that supported the placement of the instrument and overall utilization, and that's certainly played out.

And they -- of course, we communicated the fact that we weren't going to stop at that from a menu standpoint that it was kind of -- we were going to broaden it to F&A, first on [indiscernible] and then over time, continue to expand the menu because the architecture and the technology enables us to do that. And I think we've communicated at one of the -- our last Investor Day that there's over 100 million, 150 million cytology done on a global basis, manually. So there's a very, very sizable opportunity still in front of us. Mike, why don't you talk a little bit about the F&A and how customers think about that?

Michael Erickson: Yes. Thanks, Jay. I mean F&A, just like blood morphology and ear cytology, I mean these are all complementary care episodes, applications, if you will, on the inVue Dx platform. And really, every practice that you see is doing all of these things. And so we know there's a lot of excitement out there with fine needle aspirate. It's very common for practices to have pets coming in on a weekly or daily basis, dogs with lumps and bumps that are suspicious.

We know today there are around 12 million of these of F&As being done, but we know that 90% or more of the masses that come in actually don't get investigated because it just takes a lot of work to do it manually with cytology. And frankly, it's pretty expensive. And so we're really excited about F&A on inVue Dx as an opportunity to not only elevate the standard of care, but also expand access to muted care and we see a long runway for doing that. As Jay shared and as I shared previously at our Investor Days, we see 100 million cytologies, beyond what we're talking about already around the world.

And so we see a long road map, a very exciting road map ahead on inVue Dx and we'll continue to share more about that as we move forward.

Operator: We'll go next to Jon Block with Stifel.

Jonathan Block: So -- when I factor in the 2Q '26 guide, the first half CAG Dx recurring looks like it's expected to be about 10.25%. That's the [indiscernible] at. And the midpoint for CAG Dx recurring for the year is now after the raise 9.7%. So slightly below the [indiscernible] in a quarter but the comps get much more difficult in [ 2 age ] and it doesn't look like you're assuming the visits improve off the 1Q number.

So Jay or Andrew, can you just lay out the drivers that allow the CAG Dx recurring call it, 2-year stacks to accelerate into the back part of the year, again, because it doesn't seem like there's a big uplift at least embedded in the visits from the 1Q number.

Andrew Emerson: Yes. So I think from an overall perspective, if you look at the full year guide. We're really planning for solid growth. And we've actually increased the outlook both at midpoint and the overall range on an organic basis by about 70 basis points. That confidence really stems from continued execution that we see on a global basis. Our commercial teams continue to support our customers exceptionally well. We've also seen really strong and solid benefits from the new innovations that we've launched in recent years. Jay highlighted some of those earlier on the call, the contribution between inVue Dx as well as some of the new menu that we've added to our Catalyst platform.

We've certainly seen expanded utilization as well, both in terms of the industry metrics as you highlighted, we are thinking that clinical visits are slightly improved from our initial guide, which is partly playing a role in there. But we continue to see really strong quality of visits. And I think that diagnostic frequency and utilization certainly benefits the overall growth rate that we have outlined as part of our long-term guide. Keep in mind, guidance continues to be a range. I think if you look at the upper bound of the guidance range, certainly more consistent trends with what we have now.

And again, I think that comes back to confidence in our business execution and continuing to maintain strong relationships with our customers. Placement trends on instruments are really positive. We've seen growing benefits from utilization across our key modalities from a business standpoint. So I think we have really captured kind of a range that we feel confident with going forward here. But maybe I'll let Jay talk to a couple of the specifics just from a broader business perspective.

Jay Mazelsky: Yes. One thing we haven't spent a lot of time talking about is the momentum also in the Reference Lab business. It's been very strong. We've seen that globally. Part of it comes down to a lot of differentiation. Cancer DX has given us, obviously, something to go in and talk to customers about, but leveraging that to talk about the broader differentiated portfolio in Reference Labs, not just from a menu standpoint, but from a service standpoint and being able to serve all of our customer needs. And what we've seen is we've been able to grow successfully the entire IDEXX portfolio. So point of care, Reference Lab, software, the integration that provides.

And the business just has a lot of momentum because of that. And we've been, I think, transparent with customers in terms of the innovation agenda around what's coming, the expansion of IDEXX cancer diagnostics as an example, continued to build into more of a full volume posture with inVue Dx F&A in the second half of the year. I think that gives us a lot of confidence in terms of being able to sustain good momentum in the business.

Jonathan Block: Okay. That's helpful. And maybe just a quick follow-up. For inVue, the way you guys frame it makes it seem like you're not yet in that [ 3,500 to 5,500 ] revenue per box band yet. And I guess maybe a couple of parts to the question. One, is that an accurate statement? You're not there yet, you're, I guess, trending to it or however, some of the verbiage is laid out? And then when do you expect to be in that band? And do you need sort of that full launch unrestricted launch of F&A to get there.

Andrew Emerson: Yes. Thanks, Jon. Maybe I'll start and then Mike can add in here. But just from a recurring revenue perspective and utilization of the instrument, I think what we are seeing is very much in line with what we had anticipated as part of our build. Certainly, the range that we've given, again, is a range. I think it wasn't a precise number and it did include the launch of F&A, which we've started while that's in a controlled basis, we continue to ramp. We're within the band that we've highlighted here on a per instrument placement perspective. And I think, again, we'll continue to provide more insights and updates.

We would like to see us more broaden out the F&A launch and then we can continue to identify exactly how that's playing out over time. But I think we're within that band, and we feel confident about the range that we provided.

Michael Erickson: Yes, Jon, Mike here. I'll just underscore. We're well within the range that we've communicated. We're happy with that. And that's really before moving to an unconstrained launch position with F&A. So we see more opportunity ahead. And as I mentioned earlier, only 10% of the masses that come in today get looked at. And so we see -- if you look at it kind of the TAM for F&A, if you will, is very, very large. So we see lots of opportunity ahead of us there.

Operator: We'll go next to Daniel Clark with Leerink Partners.

Daniel Christopher Clark: Just wanted to ask on the updated visit guide. What are you thinking in terms of the macro and in terms of fuel prices? Do you assume sort of no change in that dynamic going forward through the rest of the year? And then I'll ask my follow-up upfront as well. When we think about performance in the first quarter, were there any changes in either visits or diagnostic frequency between January and February and March when we saw fuel prices pick up?

Andrew Emerson: Thanks, Dan, for the questions. Maybe I'll start on this one. So from a visit guide perspective, certainly, fuel could have kind of an impact on consumers. I think obviously, the range that we provide, again, is a bit of a range, the lower end. You may assume that, again, you see continued constraints on the consumer demand side. But I think overall, what we know now is it's a pretty volatile and evolving dynamic in the Middle East and how fuel prices are going to play out and energy costs are going to impact the consumer, a little bit hard to predict that piece of it.

But I think from a longer-term trend perspective, we're calibrated more on where we're -- what we've seen here over the last recent quarters on visits. Certainly, the wellness category and discretionary categories are the predominant driver of declines that we're seeing at this point. In the last 3 quarters, we've been relatively flat on non-well visits, meaning that as pets experience issues that they need to be dealing with. Consumers are willing to prioritize that spending. What we have seen though is that trade-off of consumers maybe not coming in for wellness or discretionary visits that have been more impacting just their overall decision-making here. But again, I think it's a bit dynamic on the fuel side.

We'll see how that plays out. But I think we've captured what we believe is a good range at this point.

Jay Mazelsky: Yes. Just the one thing I would add to Andrew's comments is we've seen very consistent international growth for a long time now. And that's been through Obviously, there's been a war in Europe, and there's been inflation and macro pressures. And we've been able to -- it's not that it's not real. We've been able to out-execute that through innovation and commercial partnership with customers and commercial expansion. So we've got a lot of confidence in the health of the business and our ability to continue to bring innovations to our customers.

Andrew Emerson: And then maybe the second part of your question, just in terms of Q1 performance. We don't typically break out the monthly dynamics just relative to visits. It can be really noisy. There's a lot of factors including things like day accounts, et cetera, that can play out in a month. We just see a lot more variability on a week-to-week or month-to-month basis. So not something that we give too much stock in from that perspective.

But certainly the quarter had a minus 1% decline, majority of that being the wellness side, I think, is pretty consistent with what we would have expected on the wellness side and a little bit better on the non-well side, just in terms of the quarterly results. And again, we're guiding to a minus 1.5% for overall clinical visits for the year. So I think we've captured expectations for continued pressure in those areas.

Operator: We'll go next to Ryan Daniels with William Blair.

Ryan Daniels: Congrats on the leadership changes. Maybe another one just on what we're seeing in the end market. It's interesting, as you said, we've seen somewhat of an inflection towards positive non-wellness visits. I'm curious if you've dug into that any deeper? Does it really relate to this aging pet population, is it anything with maybe some pent-up care demand because of the lack of wellness volume? Just anything you see there and how sustainable that might be would be helpful.

Jay Mazelsky: Sure. Yes. We have seen -- we break it out through different age cohorts. And initially, if you go back some quarters, we have seen it in that 5- to 7-year cohort. So these are pet adoptions that largely occurred during the pandemic, where we had that huge step up. And what we've seen in terms of the type of breeds that were adopted during the pandemic is they're more heavily medicalized. The doodles, for example, frenchies. Dogs just require more care. And that's been -- in talking to customers, especially the corporate customers who track that sort of thing.

They've also validated that, that's a real thing but we're beginning to see the front end of that very big pandemic adoption that we've seen. So we think that's sustainable.

Ryan Daniels: Okay. That's helpful. And then one just clarification. You mentioned some supply chain disruption impacting, I think, international growth. So maybe a multifold question there. Can you go into that? And was it for CAG or for Water and LPD? And then has that abated or how is that incorporated in your guidance looking forward?

Andrew Emerson: Yes. Thanks for the question. So really, that was related to the Water business, specifically, and that was related to the Middle East. The Middle East region certainly have seen some dynamics going on where supply chain has gotten disrupted. We continue to work through that, but there was modest pressure in the water business that we factored into our outlook here.

Operator: Our last question will come from Daniel Grosslight of Citi.

Daniel Grosslight: I wanted to go back to the improved CAG Diagnostics revenue outlook for this year. Something you can maybe bifurcate a little bit more or force rank the contribution from volume, price and innovation on the improved outlook. And as we look to the [indiscernible] top end of the range now, what's the biggest swing factor between those 3 contributors, volume, pricing, innovation?

Andrew Emerson: Yes. So we haven't actually updated anything from a pricing perspective at this point. What we highlighted on our initial guide and certainly in this outlook is approximately 4% net price realization for our CAG Diagnostic recurring revenues. In the U.S., that's modestly lower than we've highlighted before as well. But there's nothing new there in terms of change. This is all volume driven. I think the positive news here is we continue to see an outlook for expanded volumes, and that's largely the 70 basis points. That is a combination just of our overall business performance, the execution against some of the new innovations and our ability to continue to partner with customers to grow the use of diagnostics.

We see, again, the diagnostic frequency or blood work conclusion continue to expand, which benefits the business as well as a modest improvement in the declines that we expected associated with the clinical visit flow through. So those are the components that we've highlighted specifically here but a lot of this comes back to the volume that we're able to drive as an organization for CAG Diagnostic recurring revenues.

Jay Mazelsky: Yes. Just to build off that. It really is a volume-driven growth trend on the point-of-care side, we note that we've been able to grow double digits our installed base over a period of time, that's the flywheel in which customers drive utilization. I referenced that business is very healthy. All the investments that we've made, cancer, IDEXX cancer diagnostics, I think, has put some additional visibility to that business. The ability to really, I think, continue to support double-digit international growth as a result of the investments made in that area as well as commercial expansions, I think, give us confidence that it's a -- we're in an attractive part of the market with good momentum.

And so with that, thank you for your questions. We'll now conclude the Q&A portion of the call. It's been a pleasure to share how IDEXX executed against our organic growth strategy, while delivering strong financial results in the first quarter. Thank you for your participation and engagement this morning, and we'll now conclude the call.