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Date
Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 8 a.m. ET
Call participants
- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President — Thomas Polen
- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer — Vitor Roque
Takeaways
- Revenue -- $4.7 billion, representing 2.6% FX-neutral growth, with more than 90% of the portfolio delivering mid-single-digit growth, and double-digit growth in biologic drug delivery, Advanced Patient Monitoring, PureWick, and Advanced Tissue Regeneration.
- Adjusted operating margin -- 24.2%, which was ahead of internal expectations and reflects strong operational execution.
- Adjusted EPS -- $2.90, up 3.9%, outperforming initial forecasts, as stated by management.
- Adjusted gross margin -- 54.7%, down 90 basis points year over year, affected by 160 basis points of tariffs offset by 70 basis points of productivity gains and positive mix.
- Free cash flow (YTD) -- $1.1 billion, significantly higher than the comparable prior period, due to improved working capital management and inventory efficiency.
- Capital return -- $2.3 billion returned to shareholders during the quarter, including $2 billion of share repurchases and $0.3 billion in dividends.
- Net leverage -- 2.9x at quarter’s end, following the retirement of $2.1 billion in debt; management reaffirmed the long-term net leverage target of 2.5x.
- Adjusted EPS guidance -- Full-year range raised to $12.52-$12.72, reflecting improved first-half performance and margin visibility.
- Adjusted operating margin guidance -- Company continues to expect approximately 25% for the year, inclusive of tariffs; no adjustment from prior guidance.
- Key segment growth -- Advanced Patient Monitoring grew 12%; PureWick achieved continued double-digit growth; Medical Essentials increased 1.7%; Connected Care rose 3.3%; Interventional grew 5.3%; Biologics now comprise approximately 55% of BioPharma Systems revenue.
- Significant platform launches -- U.S. launch of EnCor EnCompass Biopsy System for breast biopsy, early European launch of Revello Vascular Covered Stent, and expansion of HemoSphere Stream Module in the U.S. and Europe.
- Productivity improvement -- BD Excellence drove about 8% productivity in the quarter and service levels above 90%.
- Cost reduction initiative -- Progress on $200 million cost-out program, with $150 million achieved to date and full target expected by year-end 2027.
- ChloraPrep and PurPrep ship hold -- Products from the El Paso, Texas facility placed on a voluntary U.S. ship hold following an FDA warning letter; testing is ongoing with a resumption of shipments anticipated in approximately three weeks, pending satisfactory results.
- Life Sciences business spin-off -- Completed separation at an approximately 19x EBITDA multiple; prior period results recast for discontinued operations.
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Risks
- Adjusted gross margin declined 90 basis points year over year, negatively affected by 160 basis points of tariffs.
- An FDA warning letter led to the voluntary U.S. ship hold of ChloraPrep and PurPrep, creating risk if final release testing is delayed or results are unsatisfactory.
- Known year-to-date headwinds from Alaris, vaccines, and China continue to impact revenue growth, with a 200 basis points Alaris headwind anticipated in the next fiscal year.
- BioPharma Systems segment declined 1.8%, primarily due to reduced demand for vaccine products, despite double-digit growth in Biologics.
Summary
Becton, Dickinson and Company (BDX +5.87%) announced the permanent appointment of Vitor Roque as Chief Financial Officer following a comprehensive internal and external search. The call detailed multiple product platform launches and significant commercial progress, including year-to-date measurable share gains in the Alaris platform and two new long-term GLP-1 customer contracts. Recent manufacturing network optimization has reduced the global footprint to about 50 sites, with further rationalization underway. Management confirmed that the separation of the Life Sciences business has concluded and discussed operational focus on increasing the weighting of high-growth, high-margin platforms within the broader portfolio.
- Roque specified that $450 million of non-cash asset impairment charges, linked to discontinued activities post-Life Sciences separation, were excluded from adjusted EPS.
- The company continues to prioritize share repurchases as the top capital allocation activity, citing current stock price levels.
- Network restructuring, backed by the BD Excellence initiative, is designed to enhance productivity, quality, and scalability across commercial and R&D domains.
- Polen stated, "Biologics are now expected to represent about 55% of segment revenue," signifying increasing contribution of this high-growth category to BioPharma Systems.
- Share gains in Alaris have reached 150 basis points year-to-date, with the largest competitive funnel in company history underway and zero infusion account losses reported for the quarter.
- Management indicated ongoing investments in AI-enabled patient monitoring and pharmacy automation, with new product launches translating to early competitive traction.
- The impact of value-based procurement in China is reported as contained, with China representing approximately 4% of total company revenue and expected to decline further as other segments outpace this geography.
- Future Alaris headwinds are projected to conclude by fiscal 2028, after which the “underlying performance of the company popping back through,” per Polen.
- Pricing actions, hedging, and productivity measures are being employed proactively to offset raw material cost challenges, specifically in resins and oil-based inputs.
Industry glossary
- APM (Advanced Patient Monitoring): Technology platform enabling patient monitoring with real-time data, used across multiple care settings.
- BD Excellence: Company-wide operational framework focused on enhancing efficiency, quality, innovation, and execution across manufacturing, commercial, and R&D processes.
- Vascular Covered Stent: A minimally invasive device used to treat vascular diseases by covering vessel lesions.
- GLP-1: Glucagon-like peptide-1, a hormone analog class for diabetes and weight-loss therapeutics, relevant to BD’s drug delivery platform.
- Value-based procurement: A purchasing strategy in healthcare markets (notably China) focused on cost-efficiency and clinical value, impacting margin and growth rates for medical device manufacturers.
- Infusion sets: Disposable components used in infusion therapy devices to deliver fluids or medications intravenously.
- Pyxis Pro: BD’s newly launched AI-enabled medication dispensing platform, featuring cloud connectivity and inventory optimization capabilities.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Tom Polen, BD's Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President; and Vitor Roque, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Before we get started, I want to remind you that we will be making forward-looking statements. You can read the disclaimer in our earnings release and the disclosures in our SEC filings on our Investor Relations website. Unless otherwise specified, all comparisons will be made on a year-on-year basis versus the relevant fiscal period. Revenue percentage changes are on an FX-neutral basis unless otherwise noted. Also, references to adjusted EPS refer to adjusted diluted EPS. The financials discussed here and included in the earnings release and 10-Q are presented on a continuing operations basis.
Prior periods have been recast to reflect the spin-off of our Life Sciences business in combination with Waters, which is now accounted for as discontinued operations. Reconciliations between GAAP and non-GAAP measures are included in the appendices of the earnings release and presentation. With that, I will turn it over to Tom.
Thomas Polen: Thank you, Shawn, and good morning, everyone. Before turning to Q2 results, I wanted to take a moment to highlight this morning our announcement of Vitor Roque as CFO. As you know, Vitor has been Interim CFO since last fall and has done a fantastic job serving as a partner to me and the leadership team. Since he stepped into the role, we've delivered 2 solid quarters of performance and closed our transaction with Waters ahead of schedule, enabling us to fully initiate our New BD strategy while also enhancing our capital allocation strategy.
In partnership with a leading executive search firm, management and the Board ran a comprehensive process that evaluated a broad range of external candidates in addition to Vitor. Our goal is to identify the best candidate to lead BD's finance function. We were focused on identifying a CFO with a demonstrated ability to lead sophisticated finance organizations in complex operating environments, deep understanding of our markets and value creation model and a strong track record of driving strategic, operational and financial performance. As we work through the process, it became clear that our best talent was already within the organization with Vitor.
With 25 years at BD across our businesses, regions and segments, he brings the experience and perspective to translate strategy into results, drive consistent execution and create long-term shareholder value. I look forward to working closely with Vitor as we continue to execute on our strategy. Turning now to our Q2 results. We delivered a solid second quarter with revenue, adjusted margins and adjusted EPS all ahead of our expectations. More importantly, performance reflected broad-based execution with more than 90% of the portfolio delivering mid-single-digit growth and tangible progress in operational innovation and commercial performance through BD Excellence.
Reflecting our first half performance and improved visibility into the remainder of the year, we are raising our full year adjusted EPS guidance. This gives us confidence that the New BD strategy is delivering through a dynamic environment. Revenue was $4.7 billion, up 2.6%. As I've discussed, we've been focused on building multiple scaled growth platforms that sit at the center of secular trends that are driving the future of health care. It is in these areas where we're focusing on enhancing our commercial execution and driving product innovation. During the second quarter, we delivered double-digit growth across these key growth platforms, including biologic drug delivery, Advanced Patient Monitoring, PureWick and Advanced Tissue Regeneration.
We also delivered mid- to high single-digit growth in oncology, peripheral arterial disease and Rowa pharmacy automation. As you can see, these platforms are scaling. They're outpacing the broader portfolio and are becoming a more meaningful driver of our long-term growth profile. As expected, results were partially offset by focused pressure in Alaris, vaccines and China. We've been clear about these factors, which represent less than 10% of revenue, and we're managing them with discipline. We delivered adjusted operating margin of 24.2% and adjusted EPS of $2.90, reflecting strong operational execution through BD Excellence and the high quality of our revenue performance. Taken together, the quarter demonstrates the increasing quality, breadth and resilience of New BD.
We're executing against three priorities that define how we're building New BD: compete, innovate and deliver. By expanding BD Excellence into commercial and R&D, we're building a stronger operating system, one that strengthens our competitive position, accelerates innovation in attractive markets and improves the earnings and cash generating power of the company over time. Starting with compete. We're raising the bar on commercial execution with greater rigor, faster decision-making and more disciplined use of data. In Q2, those actions translated into measurable share gains and customer conversions across several key platforms. A few to highlight. Within Connected Care, APM continued to grow above market, driven by strong HemoSphere Alta adoption and a nearly 20% increase in Smart Recovery consumables demand.
With incremental sales force hiring largely complete, we're well positioned in the back half of the year. In Alaris, we drove share gains of approximately 50 basis points in the quarter and roughly 150 basis points year-to-date, with momentum continuing into Q3. In BioPharma Systems, we secured several significant long-term customer wins, including two next-generation GLP-1 programs with leading global pharmaceutical companies. Biologics are now expected to represent about 55% of segment revenue, reinforcing our confidence in the long-term growth outlook for this business. In Interventional, we continue to build competitive momentum across Surgery with strength globally from our synthetic hernia and Advanced Tissue Regeneration portfolio and early contributions from recent launches, including Surgiphor Pulse and Avitene Flowable.
In UCC, we drove continued adoption across the PureWick portfolio, including expanding our PureWick at-home initiative and adoption in the VA. This is a good example of how we're combining innovation and commercial execution to expand both our penetration and our addressable market. What's important here is that these are not isolated wins, they reflect improving commercial discipline and our ability to convert strategy into tangible outcomes. Our second priority is innovate. We're strengthening our pipeline and increasing the pace of launches in high-growth areas that advance BD's leadership in Connected Care and enabling the shift to lower-cost settings and in advancing the treatment of specific chronic diseases.
While we're still in the early innings of applying BD Excellence to R&D, we're already seeing momentum. Year-to-date, we've applied BD Excellence to five development programs, and on average, have reduced the time to launch by over 10 months. This is increasing the cadence of high-impact launches that expand our addressable markets and support sustainable long-term growth. In Peripheral Intervention, we launched the EnCor EnCompass Biopsy System in the U.S., strengthening our position in the $450 million global breast biopsy market. The system simplifies workflow and works across all imaging modalities, enhancing both efficiency and clinical flexibility. We also advanced our peripheral vascular portfolio with the early launch of the Revello Vascular Covered Stent in Europe.
This expands us into new procedural segments within PVD and addresses more complex lesions. The U.S. launch is planned for next fiscal year. In APM, we expanded the launch of the HemoSphere Stream Module in the U.S. and Europe. Stream enables continuous noninvasive blood pressure monitoring with real-time data and extends beyond traditional care settings, significantly expanding our addressable market. Collectively, these launches in the quarter show that innovation at BD is becoming more focused, more disciplined and more impactful in the categories that matter most to our long-term growth. Our third priority, deliver, reflects our focus on quality, operational excellence, margin expansion and cash flow generation.
Our BD Excellence system and operational performance is a significant differentiator for BD and a key source of confidence in our ability to continue investing in growth while expanding earnings power. We're building a simpler, more efficient manufacturing network, reducing our footprint by roughly half to around 50 sites globally today, with actions underway to reduce it further. BD Excellence drove approximately 8% productivity in the quarter and service levels of over 90%. These actions are supporting growth, expanding margins, increasing cash flow and strengthening the resilience of our operating model.
We also made strong progress on our $200 million cost-out program with a run rate of $150 million already completed and clear visibility to fully deliver by the end of next year. Product quality is core to BD, and I want to provide an update on the FDA warning letter we received last Thursday related to our El Paso, Texas facility that manufactures ChloraPrep and PurPrep infection prevention products. In response, we voluntarily placed these products on ship hold in the U.S. while we complete additional final release testing. This additional testing is already performed for products sold in Europe. We expect this testing to take approximately 3 weeks and pending satisfactory results, we would resume shipments at that time.
We are continuing to manufacture product during this period. And importantly, there's been no patient safety signals, and we stand behind the safety of these products. Moving to capital allocation. We remain committed to a disciplined framework, which prioritizes returning capital to shareholders, investing in high-growth opportunities through disciplined tuck-in M&A and driving consistent improvement in return on invested capital. Our capital allocation actions continue to align tightly with our framework. In the quarter, we returned $2.3 billion to shareholders, including $2 billion through share repurchases. We completed the separation of our Life Sciences business at approximately a 19x EBITDA multiple, and our Advanced Patient Monitoring acquisition continues to perform well ahead of our deal model.
In closing, we are pleased with our first half performance and improved visibility into the remainder of the year as we continue to execute across our New BD growth strategy. With that, I'll turn it over to Vitor to provide more detail on our financial performance and updated guidance.
Vitor Roque: Thanks, Tom, and good morning, everyone. I'm honored to step into the CFO role at a pivotal moment for BD as we accelerate our New BD strategy. I appreciate Tom and the Board's confidence. I firmly believe BD's finance function must support the company's strategy to drive shareholder value creation. I see tremendous opportunity ahead as we have clear, well-defined strategy to unlock growth while continuing to be diligent on our cost structure to improve P&L leverage and drive sustainable EPS growth. This must all be paired with a clear capital allocation strategy that will continue to focus on shareholder returns while maintaining a strong balance sheet.
I look forward to continue to engage with the investment community in the weeks and months to come. With that, let me turn to the quarter. We delivered solid second quarter with $4.7 billion in revenue, up 2.6%, reflecting broad-based growth across most of the portfolio, with a stronger contribution from higher-margin businesses and disciplined execution through a dynamic environment. This was partially offset by expected pressure in Alaris, vaccines and China. Medical Essentials grew 1.7%. MDS and Specimen Management delivered solid growth in the U.S., driven by share gains in Vascular Access Management and BD Vacutainer portfolio. This was partially offset by market dynamics in China.
Connected Care grew 3.3%, led by Advanced Patient Monitoring which grew 12% on strength in the U.S. consumables. MMS grew modestly with the difficult prior year comparison in Alaris capital, offset by strong infusion sets performance on increased utilization versus last year fluid supply disruption and pull-through from Alaris share gains. BioPharma Systems declined 1.8%, in line with our expectations. Continued double-digit growth in Biologics led by GLP-1s was more than offset by lower demand for vaccine products. Interventional grew 5.3% with solid mid-single-digit growth across the segment. UCC was led by continued double-digit in PureWick. Surgery performance was driven by double-digit growth in Infection Prevention and Advanced Tissue Regeneration.
PI grew -- growth was led by peripheral vascular disease and oncology, partially offset by China market dynamics. In summary, revenue performance was not driven by one business or one geography, we saw strength across multiple platforms where we have been investing, and that strength more than offset known and focused headwinds. Turning to the P&L. Adjusted gross margin was 54.7%, down 90 basis points versus the prior year. This includes 70 basis points of positive benefit from productivity and mix, offset by 160 basis points of tariffs. Adjusted operating margins was 24.2%, down 110 basis points versus the prior year. This includes 160 basis points of tariffs and increased commercial investments in key growth areas.
Importantly, both adjusted gross and operating margins were ahead of our expectations. Adjusted EPS was $2.90, up 3.9% and ahead of our expectations, reflecting solid revenue performance, better-than-expected margins and strong operational execution. Adjusted EPS excludes approximately $450 million of noncash asset impairment charges recorded in the quarter. Following the separation of our Life Science business and combinations with Water, we exited certain activities that no longer align with the New BD strategy. These actions are part of the work to simplify BD, sharpen our focus and align resources behind the platforms that matter most to the long-term value creation. Turning to cash flow and capital allocation. Year-to-date free cash flow was $1.1 billion, up significantly versus the prior year.
The increase was driven by disciplined working capital management, including improved collections and inventory management as well as continued progress reducing nonoperational cash items. This increases our flexibility to invest in growth and return more capital to shareholders. During the quarter, we returned approximately $2.3 billion to shareholders, including $2 billion in share repurchases and $0.3 billion in dividends. We also retired $2.1 billion of debt in the quarter. We ended the quarter with net leverage of approximately 2.9x and remain committed to our 2.5x long-term net leverage target. Our capital deployment remains aligned with the framework we laid out: return capital to shareholders, invest in focused growth and maintain balance sheet discipline. Moving to our updated fiscal '26 guidance.
While we are reaffirming our full year revenue guidance of low single digits, we expect revenue growth in the second half to be roughly similar to the first half. Based on current spot rates, currency is estimated to be a tailwind of revenue of about 120 basis points. Moving down to the P&L. We continue to expect adjusted operating margins of approximately 25%, inclusive of the impact of tariffs. Our adjusted effective tax rate is expected to remain between 16% and 17%. Given our first half performance, the breadth of growth across the portfolio and continued productivity through BD Excellence, we are increasing our adjusted EPS guidance to $12.52 to $12.72. With that, I'll turn it back to Tom.
Thomas Polen: Thanks, Vitor. Before we open the call for questions, I want to recognize Rick Byrd, President of the Interventional segment, who recently announced his intention to retire after nearly 25 years with BD. Rick has been a strong leader and partner over his career at BD, strengthening our portfolio and helping build a strong foundation across the Interventional business. We're grateful for his many contributions and wish him all the best in his retirement. With that, let's start the Q&A session. Operator, can you please assemble the queue?
Operator: [Operator Instructions] And we'll take our first question from Vijay Kumar with Evercore ISI.
Vijay Kumar: Maybe one on just the performance here in the quarter, both on the top and bottom line. Organic -- headline organic was 2.6%. What was underlying excluding the onetimer headwinds, right, which segments did it impact on the bottom line? Maybe for Vitor on -- it looks like TSA income was a driver. Is TSA income sustainable here in the back half? Like what's that other income that aided here in the second quarter?
Thomas Polen: Thank you, Vijay, and good morning and welcome back. Good to have you back covering BD. We are, as you said, really pleased with the performance in the quarter, and we saw it play out with really those -- our key growth platforms. We had multiple platforms growing double digits in the quarter. We talked about a number of those, BioPharma -- our Biologics business, our Advanced Patient Monitoring business, a number of others there. We're continuing to see also another major portion of our portfolio growing high single digits. And the overall 90% of the company, continuing to grow solid mid-single digits, right around 5%.
And the three areas that we called out in the beginning of the year, right, the China, the vaccine market dynamics as well as Alaris playing out as expected as well, and that's offsetting kind of that mid-single digits in the remaining portion of the portfolio, but we're really pleased with the execution that we're seeing across the team, the up-tempoing on our commercial rigor as well as the pace on innovation and launches. I'll turn it over to Vitor to address the other questions.
Vitor Roque: Vijay, thanks for the question. So as Tom highlighted, we are very happy with our performance, both on the top line and the gross margin. We had strong performance in both of those areas. On the item that you are mentioning, it's not necessarily related to the TSA. What we had was a planned item from the very beginning of the year in a different line of the P&L on the G&A line that on the accounting when we booked, we ended up booking in the other income line. But it's just a reclassification between lines. It's not driven by the TSA. Everything played out as expected on the quarter for us.
Thomas Polen: So there was no benefit on the P&L.
Vitor Roque: No benefit on the P&L from that.
Operator: We'll take our next question from Travis Steed with Bank of America.
Travis Steed: Maybe start with maybe thinking about the cadence of the year, both on revenue and margins. I know you said revenue growth kind of roughly similar first half, second half, but the comps do get tougher. So when I think about how some of the Alaris, China, vaccines headwinds play out to kind of get the similar growth rate in the back half of the top line. And when you think about margins, kind of the same idea how to think about margins over the course of the year and what you're assuming on inflation as well.
Thomas Polen: Sure. I'll turn that to Vitor.
Vitor Roque: Travis, thanks for the question. So starting with the revenue, I think we feel very good about the revenue we have on the back half of the year. We delivered solid performance on the first half over delivering on our internal estimations and expectations and we see good line of sight to deliver on the back half of the year, as we mentioned on the prepared remarks. The comps are pretty much similar in the back half of the year. There is no specific topics there. So we feel confident about the delivery in the back half of the year from a revenue perspective.
From a margin perspective, we also see good performance over delivering the quarter on the gross margin, which makes us increase confidence for the back half of the year. A lot of our ramp in margins in the back half of the year is driven by the execution of our BD Excellence, that has been part of our plan all year long. We are seeing results of that with achieving 8% productivity in Q2, and that's going to generate benefits for us on the later part of the year.
Given our cap and roll, we have good visibility of our margin profile for the back half of the year, which also increases our confidence on delivering the margins in the back half.
Thomas Polen: Yes. And I would just say the other couple of factors there is we do end up lapping a bit vaccines, right? If you recall, that started in the very back end of last year. So we do see that not as significant of those headwinds in the back end of the year versus what we saw in the front part of this year. I think maybe just another one since it's probably on folks' minds, just to address too, as we think about questions around oil and resin and the Middle East. From a business perspective, resins and molded plastic components, they represent about 5% of our COGS. I think we've talked about this many times in the past.
But we've really very effectively, very proud of the work that our teams have done to effectively mitigate any impact this year. That's really done through the hedging actions that we took several years ago, which we're seeing benefit us here as well as obviously the normal cap and roll mechanisms and the very strong top quartile, top decile productivity benefits that we're seeing, right? As we think about next year as well, we obviously have a very focused team, pending where oil prices and resin prices go. Obviously, we continue to drive BD Excellence. We've got multiple resin sources.
And pricing actions are also something that, as you know, that's an area that BD has a lot of focus on. And right, we will make sure from a margin perspective that we seek to protect that as we -- pending where those prices stabilize over time. So thank you for the question, Travis, and we'll look forward to seeing you next week.
Operator: We'll take our next question from Robbie Marcus with JPMorgan.
Robert Marcus: Congrats on a good quarter here. Tom, I wanted to ask on sort of the New BD strategy here and really the priorities for free cash flow. I believe in the past, it used to be predominantly tuck-in M&A to drive growth accretive additions to the business. And now it seems like that's slotted #2 behind share repurchase. So maybe just give a quick overview on how you're thinking about capital allocation here and the priorities, if you don't mind.
Thomas Polen: Yes. Thanks for the question, Robbie. And so as we've communicated, as we look at the New BD, and particularly, right, in this window and given the valuation of the company today, it's -- we believe that the company is substantially undervalued. And we have a very strong focus on cash flow generation, you saw that come forth in the quarter. You can see it in our operational excellence, really operating at a top tier there. So as we think about how we deploy that cash flow, which we're obviously highly focused on continuing to increase today, at current stock price, right?
We have a top priority on buying back shares as we view that as a top form of value creation for our shareholders. . Now with that, we obviously pay a very strong dividend, which is a very high yield rate at -- a very solid yield rate at today's stock prices, again, which we view as undervalued. And we do have an active M&A pipeline. But we -- as we look at those, you've seen us be extremely disciplined in our M&A track record over the last several years. We've been focusing exclusively on deals that accelerate revenue growth, drive margins and improve our return on invested capital, right? We haven't been doing dilutive deals.
And that framework doesn't change from in terms of the types of deals that we look at. But from an allocation, so we do have an active M&A funnel. It is in a focused funnel as we are prioritizing towards share buybacks at the current valuation levels, but I would expect that we would do tuck-ins forthcoming, but again, in a focused way in that order of capital prioritization. So thank you for the question, Robbie.
Operator: We'll take our next question from Larry Biegelsen with Wells Fargo.
Larry Biegelsen: Tom, I thought I'd just ask on the ChloraPrep ship hold, I thought if I heard you correctly. What's assumed in the guidance, how much of U.S. Specimen Management is ChloraPrep? I assume the vast majority. And what gives you the confidence the ship hold will only last 3 weeks and that the testing will be positive?
Thomas Polen: Yes. Thanks for the question, Larry. So just a little bit of background, the ChloraPrep and PurPrep products are primarily within our surgical business with a little bit in our MDS business. And those products are made in that El Paso facility. So as we have put those products on hold from shipping them, we're continuing to manufacture full out. As I said, there's been no patient safety signals, and we stand strongly behind the safety of the products. The testing that we are performing is testing that we've been doing for many years on the product that we ship to Europe. So we have a strong track record with that testing on this exact same product.
We've extended that testing. We've added an additional testing loop -- that testing loop onto the finished goods that are going to be shipped in the U.S. That testing takes approximately 3 weeks. We're beginning that testing this week. And again, pending satisfactory results like we've seen for the product that we've been shipping to Europe. Pending that, we would resume shipment at that time. And in the meanwhile, we're not slowing down manufacturing. So I think that's an update there. Thank you, Larry, for the question.
Operator: We'll take our next question from Rick Wise with Stifel.
Frederick Wise: Look, I'm going to ask, it seems like sort of a soft question, but I'm curious to know what you're charging Vitor with, what you're tasking Vitor with as he steps into the role. Obviously, he's been there a long time. Obviously, he knows the job. Obviously, compete, innovate, deliver, he's going to be integral in making that all happen, Tom. But there's -- he's stepping into the role in a different time in BD's history. What's he prioritizing? What are his financial priorities? Is something -- anything changing or different that you're emphasizing? I'd just be curious to understand how you're both thinking about it and what we should think about it, honestly.
Thomas Polen: Obviously, Vitor and I are highly aligned on the New BD strategy and our focus on execution quarter after quarter on the commitments that we've shared. And again, we're very pleased with this quarter. We're highly focused, obviously, on the continued cash flow generation and revenue growth of the company. Those are reflected in top 2 priorities, which is commercial excellence and innovation excellence, which fuel our revenue growth. And why don't I turn it to Vitor to maybe share his priorities and financial philosophy? And again, it's -- we're joined at the hip on that.
Vitor Roque: Sure. Thanks, Tom, and thanks for the question. Of course, I'm very honored to be taking this position at pivotal moment at BD. New BD, we are very excited about what we can unlock going forward. And I have spent more than 2 decades at BD across different businesses, regions and segments. And I do have a clear view of what drives performance and what is the structural versus cyclical. My focus, it's driving growth in partnership with Tom in the leadership team, but also setting expectations that are confident and sustainable. Communicating transparently, delivering consistently against what we commit. Over time, I think that consistency is what builds trust and drives -- preserves -- builds trust and preserves flexibility.
In terms of priority, I would say, of course, driving growth is going to be the top of our agenda. We are going to continue to drive that, but execute without disruption, making sure that we keep the team focused on delivering the commitments to this moment, maintain a clear and consistent communications so investors and shareholders understand our performance drivers, outlooks without any type of ambiguity. And I think, as Tom mentioned before, stay disciplined with our capital allocation, protect the balance sheet, maximize returning to shareholders and invest on selective growth drivers. It's about continuity. It's not about changing drastically, but it's sharpening the execution and not changing direction. Thanks for the question.
Operator: We'll take our next question from David Roman with Goldman Sachs.
David Roman: Vitor, congratulations on the permanent role here as CFO, I look forward to working with you. Maybe just dive in a little bit deeper on MMS here. Clearly, a ton of focus on the Alaris business. But maybe you could help just frame for us some of the different other pieces in that line item. For example, what are the opportunities on the pump disposable side, especially given the disruption in a competitor? I believe your pump set share, especially sets outside the pump is lower than your pump capital share. You talked a little bit about Rowa and Parata. But maybe help us just break down a little bit further.
Any detail you're willing to provide on sizing the businesses in there and how you're thinking about the growth trajectory, especially in light of the previously disclosed comments around the well-known Alaris headwinds?
Thomas Polen: Yes. Thanks for the question, David. And obviously, you know the business extremely well. As we think about -- so let me start with Alaris and then we can move over to dispensing and pharmacy automation. So within Alaris, as we said, we actually saw Alaris perform modestly better than expected in the quarter. It was another quarter of share gains. As we said, about 50 basis points year-to-date, 150 basis points, which year-to-date, halfway through the year, that's hitting stride even better than we had before historically. That's really good. And we see that momentum in Q3. In fact, we have the largest Alaris competitive funnel in the history of the company today.
And so we're, again, very focused on that. We lost no infusion accounts in the quarter. As we think about the consumables growth, we actually saw and we're seeing -- in the quarter, we saw low double-digit growth in infusion sets in the quarter. And that's driven -- I think we need to recognize, one, there was an easy comp relative to the -- there's the fluid shortage last year that held that back. But it's also driven by, as you referenced, share gain pull-through that's happening there.
And that's a big focus of ours, right, not only on the dedicated sets, but on the non-dedicated sets and pulling all of that through together to help support the customers and with BD solutions. As we think about Pyxis, obviously, we're right in the middle of -- right in the early stages of our next-generation Pyxis launch, Pyxis Pro, which is the first new Pyxis platform in essentially 20 years. So again, bringing really new fantastic breakthrough innovation that's for the first time in a while. And it's a very important step in our Connected Care strategy. The new Pyxis Pro is the first AI-enabled Pyxis, and it's the first future cloud-enabled Pyxis.
Our early customer response has been strong. The launch is translating into competitive traction actually in the first half of the year now. 75% of our wins are competitive conversions which is reinforcing our view that this is really a meaningful share gain platform over time. What we're doing with that platform? So it enhances capacity, it enhances security and durability but it also has our new AI platform, BD Incada.
And under Bilal's leadership, he's really brought in a new team of AI specialists, data specialists who are building out Incada as our solution that all of our devices, whether or not it's Alaris or Pyxis or APM or other software platforms will all feed into this AI model that will help customers improve that end-to-end medication management workflow, improve inventory visibility. And ultimately, that's our platform that we view connecting in our patient monitoring and the drug delivery side to take things to a next level of breakthrough innovation. On the pharmacy automation side, at the same time, we've recently hired in a new President of that business to give it even further focus with -- under Bilal's leadership.
And that's still a subset within MMS, but we brought in another level of leadership there because we do see a significant opportunity both with Parata and Rowa. The trends around automation and labor shortages certainly are not changing anywhere, particularly Europe, right? When you go into hospitals, labor shortages are the #1 topic we hear time and time again, and pharmacy automation is a fantastic solution. The other thing you're seeing in the U.S. is as people are wanting to ship drugs directly to patients' homes from a population health, pharmacy automation and these lights out automated warehouses really become key.
Same thing on the direct consumer, the large direct-to-consumer places that we could be buying our own goods that are now offering pharmaceutical services to deliver those medications for home. They don't have pharmacists counting pills and putting them in amber vials in their warehouses, right? They're using, in many cases, our automation to do that, and then they're shipping those to you, those online retailers. And so again, future growth opportunity because we do see that is a trend which is going to continue going forward, and we see very strong interest from both online retailers but also from hospitals as well as pharmacy providers directly.
So overall, within that MMS business, there are a number of different levers that we're focused on executing against, and we'll continue to drive those. Thanks for the question.
Operator: We'll take our next question from Matt Miksic with Barclays.
Matthew Miksic: Congrats on a really strong quarter here. I wanted Tom, if we could talk just a little bit about some of the initiatives that you mentioned around BD Excellence and excellence in manufacturing. It's one of the areas that it seems like the organization continues to just drive more efficiency, more cost-outs, more back-end fixed asset rationalization and it's kind of in the middle of another big wave currently. So color, strategy, pace, any comments there? And then just a follow-up on your comments on oil to the extent the -- your positioning is around hedges and there's sort of a time window that those hedges work well and then less well.
Just how much protection you have out into the future? And maybe what, if any, options you have in the past, you've pulled -- I don't say pull, but you've made some changes in price and been able to offset some of that in addition to internal mitigation? Any strategies you're putting in place or have after maybe some of the temporary benefits of hedging start to wear off if that's the situation we find ourselves in, say, in 9 or 12 months?
Thomas Polen: Yes. Thanks for the question, Matt. Two great questions. On BD Excellence, so again, BD Excellence, as you know, didn't exist really 3, 3.5 years ago, and it's something that I couldn't be more proud of the teams who are driving that. It's now deeply embedded in the company. This year, we'll do over 2,000 Kaizens across the organization. That's up substantially from last year and last year essentially doubled from the year before. So as you said, it's at significant scale, and it continues to scale with momentum, right? Every one of our plants, every one of our business units has dedicated BD Excellence leadership. Our leadership team is involved in Kaizens directly themselves.
I was just out at plants engaged in those recently. And what we're seeing in every case, right, is we're improving safety in our plants. We're at record safety levels. We're improving quality in our plants. We're improving delivery. We're really pleased from our customer service levels over 90%. I was out with our sales team earlier this week, meeting with a very large customer. And the feedback that we hear from our sales team, right, the best service levels they've seen for our customers. It's allowing them to focus on selling product, not back orders. And that's all a result of that momentum. And obviously, cost, right, what you're seeing.
I think certainly top quartile, perhaps top decile, very likely top decile. Overall, what you're seeing an 8% productivity, which was, by the way, what we delivered last year as well. So it has momentum. And you're seeing that complemented with a very aggressive posture on our network architecture, right? We've cut that in nearly half over the last several years to now about 50 sites, and we still have more underway. That's allowing us to, again, have more scaled facilities where we can also invest in informatics, AI, BD Excellence capabilities that create a flywheel effect. And what I'm really excited by right now, and so our appointment of Mike Feld to Chief Revenue Officer.
He comes with a very strong lean background, and he's applying BD Excellence and he has a team of folks who are helping apply BD Excellence to our commercial processes now, right? That same processes of how do you solve problems, how do you continuously improve every single day on our sales execution, on our funnel management, on how long it's taking us to close deals, on our value propositions, that same problem-solving mindset and continuous improvement, right? We're taking that into our selling organization today. And we're starting to see some early benefits of that. We're also taking it and we have dedicated BD Excellence people who just work in our R&D organization now.
And I talked about the first five projects that this past 2 quarters this year that we applied BD Excellence to. And on average, we pulled the time lines forward 10 months, right? That's on the first five projects that we did. We've got many more planned in the back half of the year. But we see BD Excellence now, and that was -- this was the year that we were going to start expanding it beyond operations as we started getting -- as we kind of have that going. And we're excited about where that can take our commercial side and our innovation side now as well.
As we think about -- and we see it -- the last thing I'll say on that is we see that as a long-term strategic advantage for BD across each of those avenues. When it comes to oil and resin, I mean, you nailed it. Hedging works for this year, it works well for us. As we think about next year, obviously, you've got kind of this 5 to 6 months flow-through of the P&L that we can see. And so the good thing is then you have visibility to mitigate it, right? And we have teams taking actions against those. And that includes teams looking at pricing, right, and those are very active.
We obviously have been monitoring where oil is going to be. I think it's fair to say we are not assuming that oil will reset to a lower price. We're taking the assumption that it will remain high, including into next year and are going to be taking actions accordingly under that assumption. Obviously, if that were to get better, that's great, but that's certainly not a posture that we would take. Maybe, Vitor?
Vitor Roque: No, I think everything you said, Tom, is spot on. We have the hedging programs, especially for the North America resins that we buy, which is approximately 50% of our resin in North America is hedged. And that gives us the flexibility. We also have multisource of suppliers from a resin perspective to also give us flexibility to navigate this cost environment that we have for '26. But as Tom mentioned, we are monitoring the cost, tracking that very closely, given that it's an important part of our raw material component.
But given that our cap and roll timing, we have -- the teams are working to offset these through efficiencies and price is also a very important topic for us heading into FY '27.
Operator: We'll take our next question from Josh Jennings with TD Cowen.
Joshua Jennings: Just thinking about the potential for the portfolio to drive an acceleration in organic revenue growth back into the mid-single-digit range over the next 12, 18, 24 months. I was hoping to just touch on the expectation for the weighted average market growth rate of the portfolio. It seems like the tuck-in M&A strategy has evolved at least for the near term and you guys are making additional investments in some higher-growth segments like biologics, drug delivery, APM and regenerative technologies as well as, I guess, in the urology space adjacencies to PureWick. But I mean, how should investors think about the weighted average market growth rate of the portfolio and the evolution here over the next 24, 36 months?
And is the reacceleration going to be driven by a combination of increase in WAMGR and share gains or primarily stable WAMGR and share gains in your various business units?
Thomas Polen: Yes. Thanks, Josh. So to your point, our view of the long-term New BD growth profile continues to be -- we continue to be very confident in our ability to deliver durable mid-single-digit growth over time. And you can see that in our broader portfolio continuing to perform well, just around 5%. In fact, this quarter, that 90% of the portfolio that we've talked about. As you said, we've built over the last several years a number of scaled growth platforms that we're continuing to double down on. And just as a reminder, in the beginning of this fiscal year, we announced that we were investing about $35 million of incremental selling resources behind those.
And again, you're seeing that pay off, right? We increased the APM U.S. selling organization by 15%. Our peripheral vascular growth focus, we increased the U.S. region PI sales force by 15%. We put more money specifically behind the supporting veterans and getting access and penetrating that category with PureWick for at-home use. In biologic drug delivery, right, we've supported additional resources there as well. And we put more feet on the street, more sales focus on Advanced Tissue Regeneration, right? We have certain claims for tissue reconstruction and cosmetic use in Europe and in Brazil. And we put more resources in those markets to pursue that. That was part of that $35 million investment, right?
So to your point, we're taking a number of these high-growth categories that we've invested in, many of those being tuck-in acquisitions that we've done over the last several years. And we're focused on scaling those as rapidly as we can with commercial investments and making them a higher weighted mix of BD's portfolio, right? And so in fact, again, in the quarter, biologic drug delivery, Advanced Patient Monitoring, PureWick, Advanced Tissue Regeneration, they all grew double digits in the quarter. And then again, we saw that supplemented with a number of other categories growing high single digits. So we'll continue.
We also have a lot of our R&D investments that we've been executing over the last several years, our organic R&D investments. They're fueling into those categories, right? And so we've been putting more money behind next-generation PureWicks, which are coming, next indications and applications in tissue regeneration. We have a number of new solutions coming out in biologic drug delivery as well. And obviously we are hyper-focused on the GLP-1 market and share gains in that category. And same thing in Advanced Patient Monitoring, right? The system that connects with Alaris is advancing really well in our pipeline. That will be a really exciting new opportunity.
So our innovation funnel, as it continues to now drive launches later this year, into next year and beyond, it's going to continue. It's hyper-focused in higher growth, higher WAMGR spaces as well as higher margin spaces. We have a -- our innovation portfolio has a higher gross margin profile than the current gross margin profile of the company, and that's something we've been very purposeful in driving. Higher WAMGR markets, higher profitable markets is what we've comprised our innovation pipeline of. At the same time, right, we're not stopping looking at tuck-in M&A. Again, we've been very clear in what our capital allocation priorities are. And we've been very clear in the use of the term focused tuck-in M&A.
And again, we are active in exploring those right opportunities that fit into our model for focused tuck-in M&A to supplement and drive revenue growth because that is a priority for us, right? But we also recognize the value of the stock today and what we see as undervalued and what gives the best return for shareholders with the use of our capital. But the good news is we have strong cash generation, and we think we can do that in a balanced focused way. So I appreciate the question, Josh, and we look forward to continue to give updates on that as we move forward.
Operator: We'll take our next question from Joanne Wuensch with Citibank.
Joanne Wuensch: A couple of things just looking forward. At the beginning of this, you highlighted pressures which you had already explained previously from Alaris, vaccines and China. And I'm curious how that rolls off or eases over the next couple of quarters. And I know we're way too early to be thinking about fiscal year '27, but I'm sort of curious how you think about sort of the New BD's template for revenue and EPS growth.
Thomas Polen: Yes. Thanks, Joanne, and look forward to hopefully seeing you soon. For the headwinds, first off, our view hasn't changed on those, right? We're focused on executing with excellence through those dynamics, and they are playing out as expected this year. I think that's important that we really spent the time studying those and got those -- they're playing out as we expected. I think as for each of them, obviously, China is going to continue to become a smaller portion of our revenue, around 4% of New BD today and -- we'll probably drop below that just as the rest of the portfolio grows as we go into '27 perhaps into the 3s.
So I think the market dynamics in China, as we've talked before, we do expect the value-based procurement will be -- have gone through the majority of our portfolio. But I think that market, right, continues to just have challenging dynamics. As we think about Alaris, that's a very clear path that we understand. Again, it's a very unique situation where we're actually moving at record share levels and continuing to grow, but it's obviously because of the compare versus that very large upgrade cycle that we went through as part of remediation. So we have 100 basis points of Alaris headwind this year. We've been very clear that, that will move to 200 basis points of headwind next year.
And just as we've completed the remediation this year, and then that will stabilize. So we'll have that headwind in '27. And then in '28, Alaris will no longer be a headwind. And that's -- we're very, very confident that's exactly how that will play out. And then when it comes to vaccines, look, there's been a significant drop in vaccine demand. You see that across essentially every pharma company that's in the vaccine space and in companies that are supplying devices for their use of which we're by far the market leader in. With that drop that occurred this year, I think the question is, are you going to see another subsequent drop next year?
I think many folks would comment that, that's not what is expected. We'll know more about that as we start getting orders from our partners there going into next year. But at this point, our view would not be that there would be a repeat of that at that same scale next year, but we'll have more to come on that. But thank you for the question.
Operator: We'll take our next question from Shagun Singh with RBC.
Shagun Singh Chadha: Just a quick follow-up there on Alaris. When in 2027, would you expect that transition to kind of complete? I'm just trying to figure out when do you return to kind of that mid-single-digit growth? Is it sometime during '27? Or should we think about it in FY '28? And then just a quick follow-up on GLP-1. It seems like you continue to be positive on it, but just wondering if there is any negative impact we should expect given oral GLP-1s, et cetera, to your pharmaceutical business.
Thomas Polen: Yes. I think it's, again, a 200 basis point headwind next year from Alaris. You're looking at -- we're basically 18 months from the end of '27 and those -- that dynamic subsiding and then that underlying performance of the company popping back through. I think that's what we've shared and what you can expect and what we have confidence in. As we think about GLP-1, any other comments on that, Vitor?
Vitor Roque: No, I was just going to mention that the Alaris remediation, we are driving the finish of the remediation this year -- this fiscal year. And we're going to hit a run rate starting next year in '27, but the 200 basis points is driven by the comparison that we have in '26 that are a higher base compare. But '27 and '28 going forward is going to be like a run rate revenue from Alaris. It's just the comparison of '26 that is like higher '26 compared to the '27 number.
Thomas Polen: Yes. And then we'll continue to obviously grow off that '27 base for Alaris. And then essentially, when you start hitting 2031, 2032 and the newest Alaris pumps that we've put out start hitting a 7-, 8-year replacement cycle, right, it will restart again kind of in that window. But it will not have any negative impact on our growth after '27. So that will have completed. And again, the 90% of the portfolio today in BD is growing about 5%. You would expect, again, as that headwind comes off, we'll see that come up.
And we're very confident in that and continuing to drive that underlying business in the ways that we discussed with our portfolio with innovation and commercial execution. On GLP-1s, so how we kind of think about that, our view is unchanged. Oral GLP-1 is expected to be incremental and complementary. It's great to see the progress on that and how it's helping so many people around the world. Injectables expected to continue to remain a backbone of the category for the foreseeable future. And of course, a number of the next-generation treatments that include protecting against muscle wasting are coming out in that injectable format as well. GLP-1s, they remain a strong growth driver for us and a big focus.
As we said, we actually announced on this call, two new significant deals with large pharmaceutical companies for new novel GLP-1 molecules, and that continues to be a focus of ours is ensuring those come into our devices. We also now have over 80 GLP-1 biosimilar deals signed to be in our devices, and those are not just in our syringes, but they also could be deals that we've signed with our auto-injectors or with our pens, which come at higher ASPs, several times higher ASP than when we just sell a syringe, which is really what we're selling today in GLP-1.
So the value opportunity for BD in biosimilars is actually higher per dose than it is with the novel GLP-1s that exist in the market today. And again, we're really pleased with how our commercial team has been partnering with customers there to get that combination of both new novel GLP-1s that are coming to market, but also biosimilars so that we have the broadest exposure to those categories. I'd say the other thing is, and we shared a new update today. I think the last update we shared was that biologics, which, again, not only are GLP-1s growing strong, but biologics are growing strong, which is a larger category.
Last update we shared was biologics had reached 50% of the total pharma systems business unit revenue. Today, we shared that it's now reached 55% -- about 55% of our revenue. And so again, you've got that benefit of a high-growth category become an increasing weight of one of our businesses. And that's a theme that obviously we're focused on across those major growth platforms. So again, we're pleased with the momentum there. Our teams are executing to support ensuring that continues as new molecules come to market and as eventually biosimilars come to market to make sure that BD is a company that has leading exposure to those trends. Thank you for the question.
Operator: That will conclude today's question-and-answer session. At this time, I'd like to turn the floor back over to Tom Polen for any additional or closing remarks.
Thomas Polen: Well, thank you, operator, and thanks, everyone, for your questions and your continued interest in BD. We look forward to connecting with everyone again next quarter.
Operator: Thank you. This does conclude this audio webcast. On behalf of BD, thank you for joining today. Please disconnect your lines at this time, and have a wonderful day.




