Stevanato Group S.p.A. (STVN) CEO Franco Moro on Q2 2022 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

Stevanato Group S.p.A. (NYSE:STVN) Q2 2022 Earnings Conference Call August 4, 2022 8:30 AM ET

Company Participants

Lisa Miles – Investor Relations

Franco Stevanato – Chairman

Franco Moro – Chief Executive Officer

Marco Dal Lago – Chief Financial Officer

Conference Call Participants

Paul Knight – KeyBanc

Justin Lin – William Blair

Derik De Bruin – Bank of America

Patrick Donnelly – Citi

Steven Couche – Jefferies

John Sourbeer – UBS

Operator

Good afternoon. This is the Chorus Call Conference operator. Welcome and thank you for joining the Stevanato Group Second Quarter Financial Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Ms. Lisa Miles, SVP IR. Please go ahead, Madam.

Lisa Miles

Good morning and thank you for joining us. With me today is Franco Stevanato, Chairman; Franco Moro, CEO; and Marco Dal Lago, CFO.

A presentation illustrating today’s results can be found on the IR section of our website. Some statements being made today will be forward-looking in nature. Such statements are only predictions. Actual events and results may differ materially as a result of risks we face, including those discussed in Item 3D entitled Risk Factors in the company’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2021 filed with the SEC. We encourage you to review the information contained in our earnings release today in conjunction with our associated SEC filings and our latest 20-F. The company does not assume any obligation to revise or update these forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent events or circumstances, except as required by law.

Today’s presentation may contain non-GAAP financial information. Management uses this information in its internal analysis of results and believes this information may be informative to investors in gauging the quality of our financial performance, identifying trends in our results and providing meaningful period-to-period comparisons. For a reconciliation of the non-GAAP measures presented in this document, please see the company’s most recent earnings press release.

And with that, I will hand the call to Franco Stevanato for opening remarks.

Franco Stevanato

This has been an exciting year for all of us at Stevanato. Last month we celebrated the first anniversary of our IPO and we continue to successfully execute against our long-term strategic plan to drive sustainable organic growth, increase our mix of high-value solutions and expand EBITDA margin.

We are creating a track record of performance that includes meeting or exceeding our financial objectives since we have been reporting as a public company. We are currently operating in an environment of robust demand with attractive end market characterized by durable secular multiyear driver. We have set the stage to capitalize on favorable macro tailwind of aging population, pharmaceutical innovation, the growth in biologic, trend toward outsourcing and self-administration of medicine.

Our business philosophy is rooted in science, technology, a driving constant innovation to support customers and improve patient live around the world through a singular focus on product and service for the pharmaceutical industry. In June, we published our first sustainability report and while we are at the start of this journey, I am proud of what we have accomplished. As a global provider to the pharmaceutical and biotech industry, we are committed to embedding sustainability throughout our policy and practice to make a positive impact for all of our stakeholders around the globe.

Thank you for your continued support. I will now hand the call over to Franco Moro.

Franco Moro

Starting on Slide 7, for the second quarter of 2022, we delivered double-digit revenue growth and expanded gross profit margin. Contributions from high-value solutions reached record levels, accounting for approximately 30% of total company revenue. Our results demonstrate our ability to successfully execute in a challenging environment, and we are pleased to be raising our full year guidance. For the second quarter, new order intake was approximately €252 million, bringing new order intake for the first half of 2022 to €576 million compared to €529 million last year. At the end of the second quarter, our committed backlog increased 37% over last year, topping €1 billion.

Turning to Slide 8 for an update on our priority capital projects, in the United States, the growth in biologics and the upcoming wave of biosimilars helped shape our industrial plans in Indiana. Since our last call, we completed the transition work on our new facility and started construction on the building. We remain on track for commercial operations in late 2023 or early 2024.

In Italy, we are making solid progress on our capacity expansion efforts. Construction is nearly complete on our new building in Piombino Dese. In addition, two of our three plant new lines for 2022 are operational, including 1 EZ-fill line and one line dedicated to our premium Alba syringes. We expect to operationalize another EZ-fill syringe line in the fall. And in China, we are nearing the end of the design phase and still anticipate revenue generation in the second half of 2024. We are firmly focused on the execution of these priority projects as we expand our global industrial footprint to meet the rising demand and the evolving needs of our customers. In our meetings with investors over the last several months, we received many questions on industry collaboration partnerships, which is a standard practice.

On Slide 9, we want to address how we think about our framework for collaboration and partnerships, specifically in drug containment and drug delivery systems. First, the foundation of any framework is understanding our customer needs by fostering customer intimacy, keeping them at the heart of everything we do. We must anticipate market trends and help customers tackle their greatest challenges. This guides R&D, capital investments and partnership agreements, all of which broaden our capability set. Our long-term strategy consider market trends and matching the needs of customers in the decades to come.

In drug containment, Stevanato was the first to market with washed and sterilized ready-to-use vials and cartridges known as our EZ-fill platform. Today only about 5% of the vial market and less than 5% of the cartridge market has transitioned to ready-to-use format. We see a real desire by customers to transition to ready-to-use format to gain efficiencies, improve quality, increase speed to market and reduce total cost of ownership. That customer demand is driving our strategy.

For our market-leading EZ-fill platform, our collaborations include the sales and service agreements. We also licensed our IP and technology to other industry players. This is important to customers because it establishes a good standard in the industrial process with the same technology, platforms and processes for ready-to-use vials and cartridges. It also gives customers the ability to source from multiple suppliers using the same platform, which is also supported by the vast majority of fill and finish line producers. By doing this, we serve as a market enabler to better support our customers’ needs and galvanize the transition. In the drug delivery space, partnerships help us broaden our product portfolio. We can bring the power of our integrated capabilities and value for their money. We believe this approach will help us cement our role as a leading partner of choice for pharma and biotech players for decades to come.

Turning to the current geopolitical crisis and the European gas prices on Page 10. We are monitoring the situation closely, and it is something we must manage. Energy costs have increased in the last 6 months, but we are working directly with customers, keeping them informed and adjusting our prices accordingly. From a supply side, the vast majority of our natural gas usage in Europe is in Italy for our glass conversion operations. As press reports indicate, the Italian government has taken swift action to lower its dependence on Russia by signing gas agreements with other countries to diversify supply. Given our mission-critical role in the pharmaceutical supply chain, we believe that we would be eligible for priority status similar to our designation during COVID.

And lastly on Page 11, I want to commend our team’s efforts in sustainability. Our 2021 sustainability report provides complete and transparent nonfinancial reporting to our stakeholders. Most importantly, it creates the foundation for setting future targets. The report considered the company’s financial results and highlights the ESG performance of the group. Our report is subject to limited assurance and was prepared in accordance with the global reporting initiative standards, which demonstrates our commitment to sustainability.

I will hand the call over to Marco.

Marco Dal Lago

Thanks, Franco. Starting on Slide 13, revenue for the second quarter increased 15% and 11% on a constant currency basis over the prior year to €234.2 million, driven by growth in both segments. Today, we are pleased to be raising guidance based on our year-to-date strong performance in our core business, which is offsetting revenue declines related to COVID, an improved outlook in the engineering segment and favorable currency effects.

For the second quarter of 2022, revenue related to COVID continued to decline and represented approximately 9% of revenue compared to 15% for the same period last year. Excluding COVID and the favorable impact from currency, revenue in the second quarter would have grown approximately 17% compared to the same period last year. Gross profit margin in the second quarter of 2022 increased 60 basis points to 31.8% driven by the favorable mix in BDS segment and expanded gross profit margin in the Engineering segment.

Turning to SG&A, compared to the prior year, increases in G&A expenses reflect investments to support the growth of the business and the cost associated with the public company status. As a reminder, the biggest year-over-year change was due to a onetime benefit in the second quarter of last year for the termination of an equity incentive plan. For the second quarter of 2022, the company recorded approximately €6 million in other income for a contra modification, which reflects a decrease in COVID-19-related business.

We believe that the modification representing fair and equitable arrangement to support the changing needs of our customers and reflects changes in revenues, lost production time, cost incurred and process to reallocate capacity. With the rise of new COVID-19 variants and different pathways of efficacy in various vaccines, customers are making appropriate adjustments to their capacity plans. We believe that customers’ intimacy and offering our customer flexibility is an important element to supporting their effort over the long-term.

For the second quarter, operating profit margin was 18.7%, and on an adjusted basis, 19.6%, excluding certain start-up costs in the U.S. This resulted in a net profit of €30.6 million or €0.12 of diluted earnings per share. As expected the number of weighted average shares outstanding were higher in the second quarter of 2022 compared to last year. Adjusted net profit was €31.9 million and adjusted diluted EPS were €0.12 also. For the second quarter, adjusted EBITDA was €61.8 million and adjusted EBITDA margin was 26.4%.

Please turn to Slide 14 for segment results. Despite the year-over-year decrease in COVID revenue, the Biopharmaceutical and Diagnostic Solutions segment still posted growth. In the second quarter, revenue from external customers in the segment increased 8% to €188.6 million compared to the same period last year and approximately 3% on a constant currency basis. Revenue from high-value solutions increased 46% over the same period last year to €70.1 million and represented approximately 37% of BDS segment revenue. Revenue from other containment and delivery solutions was down 6% to €118.5 million. The favorable mix shift led to higher margins compared to the prior year. For the second quarter, gross profit margin increased 80 basis points to 33.7%, and operating profit margin grew 100 basis points to 23.6%.

The Engineering segment delivered another solid quarter of financial results, driven by strong customer demand and growth in all business lines. For the second quarter, revenue derived from external customers increased 57% to €45.6 million compared to the prior year. For the second quarter of 2022, gross profit margin improved to 22.3% and operating profit margin increased to 15.5%. Margin expansion was driven by contributions from more accretive projects and after-sales activities as well as ongoing business optimization effort to improve operational efficiencies.

On Slide 15, we continue to maintain a strong balance sheet. And as of June 30, we had a positive net financial position of €109.4 million and cash and cash equivalents of €314.9 million. For the second quarter, cash generated from operating activities was €42.2 million. As expected, increased working capital reflects ongoing investment in the business to fund long-term sustainable growth. We continue to keep more inventory on hand for supply security as we aim to prudently balance the needs of the business in the current supply chain environment. We are advancing progress on our global expansion plan, which resulted in a capital expenditure of €77.5 million in the second quarter. As expected, CapEx spend was the main driver behind the negative free cash flow of €33.7 million.

On Slide 16, we are raising our full year guidance, which considers a number of factors. First, we are forecasting a decrease in revenue from COVID. This has been offset by strong demand in our core business, which has allowed us to overcome this headwind. Our full year guidance now assumes approximately 10% of total revenue will be related to COVID, down from our previous forecast in the low teens. Second, our increased full year revenue guidance assumes favorable currency effect of approximately €18 million for 2022. This compares to our initial guidance, which assumes favorable impact of just over €3 million for the year, resulting in a net change to our full year revenue guidance of €15 million from favorable currency impact. Third, an improved outlook for our Engineering segment, we now expect double-digit revenue growth in fiscal year 2022 over the prior year, up from our original guidance of high single-digit.

Lastly, our guidance still considers the effect of inflation. As a result, we now expect revenue in the range of €955 million to €965 million compared to prior guidance of €935 million to €945 million, adjusted diluted EPS in the range of €0.51 to €0.53, up from our prior guidance of €0.49 to €0.51, and adjusted EBITDA in the range of €253.3 million to €258.3 million compared with prior estimates of €248 million to €253 million. Our sum CapEx spending range remains unchanged in absolute dollars.

I will pass the call back to Franco Moro for closing comments.

Franco Moro

In closing, on Page 18, we are operating in an environment of strong demand, growing end markets and multiyear secular drivers. Above all, we are satisfying customer needs by driving innovation and providing a rich set of end-to-end capabilities that support them through the entire drug life cycle. We remain focused on operational excellence and the successful execution of our four strategic and operational priorities, including advancing our global capacity expansion in the U.S., China and Italy, growing the mix of high-value solutions, investing in R&D to advance our premium primary packaging and drug delivery systems. And lastly, building a multiyear pipeline of new opportunities by supporting our customers through scientific innovation to meet their evolving needs.

These priorities are specifically designed to capitalize on market trends to drive long-term sustainable organic growth, expand EBITDA margins and build shareholder value.

And with that, let’s open it up for questions.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] The first question is from Paul Knight with KeyBanc. Please go ahead.

Paul Knight

Hi, Franco Moro, on the engineering growth that we’re seeing this year, should we take that as a leading indicator for more high HVS demand in the future? So what’s your read on this strong engineering growth?

Franco Moro

Hi, Paul. Yes, sure. We see this increase of business in engineering, a signal of what can happen later on for BDS segment. Our customers are investing because we are in a growing environment in healthcare and pharma business. We see amazing initiative of our customers worldwide, mostly linked to biotech and biosimilars that is also good to have more opportunity for our high-value solutions in the future. So I confirm that this trend, and we are matching our customer needs in terms of innovation, in terms of standardization, level of services around the world that is also linked to the expansion of our initiative in the U.S. and China.

Paul Knight

And the last question would be you’re obviously guiding down COVID this year. Do you have any initial thoughts on 2023?

Franco Moro

No. In terms of the business, we see still some level of uncertainty about the future in COVID. We continue to see the transition to single dose vial that you can remember is close to neutral or positive for us in terms of the business. But it’s too early to speculate about next year or the mid and long-term. For sure, the trend is in line with our expectation to see this business landing somewhere in the regular business for vaccine.

Paul Knight

Okay, thank you.

Operator

The next question is from Justin Lin with William Blair. Please go ahead.

Justin Lin

Hi, good morning. On natural gas prices really quick, can you clarify what the priority status means for you? And any way you can quantify the likely impact your margins in the coming quarters if things don’t necessarily go according to your plan?

Franco Moro

Yes. So I start to say that as I told in my commentary, we have the most of our usage in Italy in terms of gas because of our glass converting operations. In Italy, our government is taking a lot of action to mitigate the risk of shortages. And if we look at the past when the pandemic started, we immediately received the vaccination as a special business because we are part of the pharmaceutical supply chain so that we receive a special attention from the government. So in terms of shortages, we are not afraid in terms of gas prices, we monitor the trends regular and we pass on this cost to our customers. It’s a different situation in Germany where the major of our energy consumption is supplied by electricity, more than 95%. And also in this country, there are initiatives on the government to think about pharmaceutical supply chain with a special attention. So we are confident that we will not impact in term of operation, in term of the impact of the utility cost on our COGS. Marco may complement my answer.

Marco Dal Lago

Yes. Sure, Franco. Just to remind that in 2021, utilities on our cost of sales was less than 5%. So we had an increase. It is now above 5%, but slightly above that percentage on our total manufacturing cost. So as Franco say, we are passing higher price to customers, so we don’t expect an impact in our P&L from inflation in 2022.

Justin Lin

Okay, thanks. That’s very helpful. And have you seen any changes in customer ordering patterns? And do you get the sense that customers have been building some inventory in the past 2 years and therefore, we might start to see some impact from customer destocking going forward? Just want to get a sense of that.

Franco Moro

We cannot report about the significant changes. You have seen that our order intake is very strong. The demand is very strong. Obviously, in this environment, customers wanted to have a secure supply. So they continue to look in the mid and long-term. And the intimacy we have with them has helped us shape our progression in capacity that I confirm is mostly focused on high-value solution because the demand in this area is very, very strong.

Justin Lin

Okay, that’s fair. Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from Derik De Bruin with Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Derik De Bruin

Hi, good morning. Thank you for taking my question. I’ve got two. So the first one is the 30% high-value solutions in the quarter was a couple of points ahead of where we were. How do we think about that number exiting 2022?

Franco Moro

Yes, it’s very good news, first of all, because the confirmation that demand and really the customers are pulling us to speed up in providing what they need in terms of benefits coming from a high-value solution. We consider to the possibility to have some quarterly fluctuation quarter-by-quarter because it’s linked to planning of activities also customer demand. But if we look at the next two quarters, we see still a consistent increase in term of absolute value for high-value solution that is partially compensated in terms of shares by the stronger demand also for other product lines that are not high-value solution like engineering we mentioned before. So it’s fair to look at the full year landing somewhere in between 28% to 29% of shares, and we will keep you updated in the next works. In the same time, for the longer run we see consistent additional growth in the next years, landing in the 30s, around 26%.

Derik De Bruin

Great. Thank you. And just on the COVID contribution from this year. Your 10% guide for total revenues essentially implies roughly, I don’t know, €50 million in the back half of the year. So that seems like that would be a step-up from 2Q levels. Am I reading that correctly or – and could you sort of explain the dynamics for COVID demand in the back half of the year?

Franco Moro

Your numbers are accurate. It’s – our guidance is covered basically by our backlog. So the committed orders we can see. This is what we plan today. We don’t expect further contract modification. And so this is what we have in our guidance fully covered by our backlog.

Derik De Bruin

Got it. Thank you very much. Appreciate it.

Lisa Miles

Thanks, Derik.

Operator

The next question is from Patrick Donnelly with Citi. Please go ahead.

Patrick Donnelly

Hi, thanks for taking the questions. Marco, maybe one for you on the margins. Obviously, a lot of moving pieces between the pricing, FX, the supply chain, gas pricing, some of the mix shift with high value. Can you just talk about kind of the gives and takes on the margin piece as we work our way through this year and then kind of the broad setup as we go into ‘23 with some of those factors?

Marco Dal Lago

About the guidance, as we mentioned, we expect the center point in the range of €960 million. We expect double-digit organic growth in both segments and we expect to expand the gross profit margin in both segments compared to 2021. More color about engineering, we can have some quarterly fluctuation depending on project mix. But overall, the trajectory is keeping on improving the gross profit margin. About BDS, the shift into high value solution is helping, as you can see. You mentioned also rightly the fact that for us in been able to pass through our cost in price increase without adding margin is a little bit dilutive for our gross profit margin. If you imagine a 30% gross profit margins we have in BDS segment, 3% inflation is diluting 100 basis points our gross profit margin. So the shifting to high value solution is expected to more than offset this. So we are confident to keep on improving our gross profit margin in both segments.

Patrick Donnelly

That’s helpful. And then maybe one on the high-value solutions continues to be really strong growth there. Can you just talk about the various drivers, whether it’s the product side or certain customer bases that are kind of continuing to drive that elevated growth there?

Franco Moro

Yes. It’s something that is not really new, but the demand of customer is particularly strong in biotech and biosimilars because here, we play with both the pillars of our value proposition in terms of high-value solution because one side, we provide the best answer to the scientific requirements of molecules that are highly sensitive and needs special containment solutions that preserve the integrity of this kind of treatment. And on the other side, this company are more keen to focus on their core business, that is the new molecule, new treatment. And sometimes, they are smaller company, not only big pharma that don’t want or they don’t have internal capacity, and they wanted to limit their expenditure in CapEx. So high-value solution in terms of EZ-fill or ready-to-use format are the best answer in terms of total cost of ownership reduction, flexibility, speed to market. So I cannot mention specific therapeutic area because biological or biosimilar are for many therapeutic areas, and we are focused on the two main needs of the customer, scientific requirements, saving total cost of ownership reduction.

Operator

The next question is from Steven Couche with Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Steven Couche

Hi, this is Steven on for Dave Windley. Thank you for taking my questions. I guess the first one is, I wanted to clean up that €6 million contract modification from the COVID contract. Most of the times, we hear these and their straightforward take-or-pay fees. This sounds like it might be a little bit different. Is that €6 million sort of net of the expenses, and that’s all in the other income or are there costs associated with that modification that might have shown up in BDS?

Marco Dal Lago

Yes. Thanks for the question. First of all, we consider the agreement, a fair agreement. The agreement replaces business we would have had if the contract didn’t change. So it’s somehow compensating the loss revenue, loss production time and cost occurred in the process of reallocating capacity. So it’s not something not related to the business, is tied to the cost we had in this period. And this agreement, we don’t expect this change in relevant way, our full year guidance with respect to profit.

Steven Couche

Okay. And so just to reiterate that, that €6 million fee did not show up either revenue or cost did not show up in BDS or ES for the quarter?

Marco Dal Lago

It is in our BDS segment, but it’s a fair compensation of cost occurred and need to reallocate capacity.

Lisa Miles

That’s correct. They did not come through as revenue, that came through in the other income line.

Steven Couche

Okay. Perfect. Thank you. And then maybe the second one, FX, obviously, helping the full year outlook. Can you maybe give us a framework of the flow-through of FX to the EBIT or EBITDA line? And I guess another way of asking that is, are your expenses on an FX basis relatively matched with your revenue exposure?

Marco Dal Lago

Yes. Thank you for the question. Yes, you are right. We have also a relevant part of costs denominated in U.S. dollar. That is the main driver of the changes, both in the top line, but also in costs. So we estimate an impact in the – favorable impact on the EBITDA. But keeping in mind that it’s modest compared with the top line increase. So we estimate we have about 25% to 30% impact compared to the €18 million EBITDA – revenue, sorry. So the assumption we have in the model is having 100 revenue denominated in dollar and 75 costs denominated in dollars.

Steven Couche

Okay. Perfect. Thank you very much.

Operator

The next question is from John Sourbeer with UBS. Please go ahead.

John Sourbeer

Hi. Thanks for taking the question. Maybe just another one on the HVS, the growth continue to be strong there and maybe specific to the lines that you’re bringing online in Italy. With the three new lines this year, I think two of them are online, one in the fall. Are you starting to see that impact there from those two lines now and that’s why the HVS is approaching that 30%? And then how does the new line in the fall come on accelerate that penetration?

Franco Moro

Yes, putting more capacity in place is something that we started a year ago. So you see this impacting different proportion quarter-by-quarter, depending of not only the availability of the line but also the progress in terms of the validation activity. So I can confirm that we have seen some good impact from the two lines that we have put running in the quarter, and we expect to have a minor impact compared to the total capacity in the last part of the year because we expect to have the line already in the last part of the year. But then the capacity utilization cannot be immediately 100% because we have to run also the validation activities. So – but if you look at the biggest scenario, you can see that our investment in capacity for high-value solutions are matching the demand of the customer that is very high. And we are progressing in our investment accordingly, and we see constant improving our share of high-value solution in the portfolio.

John Sourbeer

Thanks. And just a follow-up on the regional performance. Any color you can provide there? And did you see any impact from the China COVID lockdowns on the business there or with the capacity expansions that you’re building out?

Marco Dal Lago

Yes. In the second quarter, we experienced a slowdown in revenue in Asia Pacific, mainly driven by COVID slowdown. And as you mentioned, the slowdown in the environment also in our customers’ factory. This we consider it obviously as a temporary effect. We continue to count on Asia Pacific for our growth.

John Sourbeer

Okay. Thanks for taking the questions.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Gentlemen and Ms. Miles, there are no more questions registered at this time.

Lisa Miles

Thank you, operator. We can conclude today’s call. And I want to thank everyone for joining us today, and we look forward to talking with you in the future.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*