Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. As Chairman of the Board of Directors of Recordati, it is my pleasure to extend a warm welcome to all of you joining us today, either in person or through a webcast for the presentation of a three-year plan. Over the decades, I have witnessed the remarkable evolution and growth of the group, and I continue to be impressed by the continuous successes that we managed to achieve, and it continues to achieve. I remain fully committed in my role as Chairman to continue the support and continued development and success of the group in order to create significant value for all our stakeholders. Our journey has been marked by extraordinary achievements, and I'm delighted that our exceptional performance, as you've seen and you will see in the following presentations, is set to continue in the years to come, and even after that.
The new three-year targets we have set forth reflect the continuation of our successful strategy and the strong momentum that the group is going through now, driven by robust organic growth and complemented by strategic business development and M&A. It is also a testament to the proven resilience of our diversified business model, which has shown to be extremely, extremely important all these years. After the presentations, I hope that you will all agree that the future continues to be very bright for the company. I am not going to steal any more time from the presenters, from the team here that is presenting today. I would like to thank you all for your continued support, and I will turn the floor and the meeting to our CEO, Rob Koremans, and the rest of the management team who will take us through these exciting prospects ahead. Thank you very much.
Thank you, Andrea, and thank you all for being here with us this afternoon to go through the three-year plan. It's a real pleasure to do so with my colleagues. I will open it by giving a little bit of an overview of the group. Alberto will walk us through and take us through the plans for our specialty and primary care business. Scott will do the same for the rare disease business. Luigi and I will end with some financial projections for 2025-2027 and some closing words before we then open the floor to Q&A. The planning is that you should have ample time to ask your questions, and we'll definitely make all the efforts to make that possible. Before getting started, I would like to basically take a couple of minutes to set the scene.
As we all know, the world around us is an incredible volatility, macroeconomically, something that in my working life I've not experienced before in this extent, largely driven by measures from the U.S., either already implemented or in the air, uncertain and not clear what's going to happen. That volatility is creating more than ever a challenge to businesses around the world. Today, we will show you that notwithstanding these challenges, we will navigate and deliver and continue to deliver, much like what Andrea said, on our plans, and we have a really exciting opportunity ahead of us. Without having to change our strategy, we will continue to implement what we do, organic growth, and add it to that very targeted and smart business deals and M&A.
The world is evolving quickly, but there's one thing that we will not forget and does not evolve in that sense for us, but stays the same, and that is we are driven by our purpose, our purpose of unlocking the full potential of life for the people we serve. Patients are at the very center of everything we do, and we believe by doing that, we also serve the interests of all of our stakeholders in the best possible way and in a sustainable way. We absolutely remain committed to continue to do that. Now, let me take you into an overview of the company. We are very proud of our rich Italian history of almost now nine, of almost a century, 99 years, where we have evolved from being a local Italian business into a truly international and global group.
With about four and a half thousand employees working globally and serving more than 150 countries, in many of them we have our own presence directly, we can truly claim that we reach the world. We are a fully integrated company from our industrial operations to commercialization to R&D and to all the BD and M&A. As a company, we are in that sense absolutely integrated. Our business has evolved in two very distinct and equally important business units, specialty primary care, where we have about 400 branded originator products, both prescription and OTC, with a very strong equity and a very strong customer loyalty and almost no loss of exclusivity threat, with a direct presence in what you would call Greater Europe.
The second distinct business is rare diseases, which is a global business spanning the entire world from Argentina to Japan, from the U.S. to the Middle East, all of the main countries we have our presence and are building presence further. Also fairly diversified in itself already with over 20 products in the market, focused on three therapeutic areas: endocrinology, hemato-oncology, and metabolic, all aiming to treat big unmet medical needs. With a very strong business presence globally, we're very happy and proud of that, and we're one of the very few rare disease businesses that can call themselves really, truly, truly global. You've also seen already the financial performance of 2024 and probably also have seen the way that 2025 first quarter has started, which will continue with a beautiful momentum.
We are very proud of achieving these figures, and we continue to be committed to that going forward. We are also very proud of achieving on our ESG targets. For us, this is important, doing business in the right way, because we also believe that this is the only way to do sustainable, profitable, top performance, making sure that we deliver on our ESG objectives as well. Through the years, we are known and recognized for delivering excellent performance, and that is largely related to our unique and resilient business model. First, our business is very diversified, unique in that sense of combining a resilient cash-generative specialty and primary care business and also a very high-growth global rare disease business. The diversification is not just true, as you will see, in terms of the two different businesses, but also in other dimensions such as portfolio and geography.
Second, we have an extremely strong financial focus that has made us and enabled us to deliver on all of our promises in the past, driving for very attractive growth, for sector-leading margins, and a very, very attractive return on capital invested. Thirdly, we are de-risked, not just by being diversified, but also we do not have what many of our peer pharma companies would have: a very big exposure to loss of exclusivity or very significant R&D investments. Our business is relatively insensitive to loss of exclusivity going forward in the period of time, and we have very focused R&D expenditure that allows us to continue to drive the organic growth as well.
We're also extremely disciplined, and we have a proven track record of doing deals, of finding the right companies or products to take in, to stick to the discipline of what we pay for, and then to integrate also with big discipline very fast. The discipline is also true in general for cost, and we are very cost-aware and manage our company in a very cost-sensitive way. Last but definitely not least, I'm extremely proud to have the privilege to work with an extremely experienced team of pharma executives with diverse backgrounds, with incredible strong track records that help to continue to deliver the growth that we are showing and also projecting for the future. If I go more into the diversification, geographically we are diversified. Yes, the U.S. is our largest market, but it's 17%.
The vast majority of our sales and growth comes from outside of the U.S. Italy, still the number two market, is still a growing marketplace, actually at a very nice speed, and that's true for just about every market where we operate. We manage to make our business grow in many of these markets. The growing in all those countries is, and I think also the fact that we are in those different countries is sort of a natural hedge to the risks that I think we all are very aware of that are in the rumors around the U.S. Having that natural hedge is for us a very comfortable and good thing to have. On top of the geographic diversification, we also have a diversification across the two businesses, SPC and rare disease, but also in therapeutic areas.
In fact, we do not have one single product that represents more than 10% of our total revenues, and that makes us also very resilient, and the growth is coming from many cylinders in that respect, which helps us going forward. Our brands are also extremely resilient. On the SPC, most of them are beyond loss of exclusivity. There is no further risk of loss of exclusivity there. After what we've seen to be able to do, typically after the entry of the first generic, we have been able to manage the market, keep our brand loyalty based on the brand loyalty, and oftentimes actually expand and grow those markets. Very good, driven by commercial excellence to be able to focus on the commercially sensitive products, promotion-sensitive products where we are able to really drive market share, performance, and continue to get fantastic margins.
That's also true for our rare disease business. By nature, they're often a bit more protected. Many of these products are biologics, hard to make, difficult and expensive to make, and if your total revenue is EUR 200 million, EUR 300 million, there is very little biosimilar threat for these sort of products. Also, and the example is here on Carbaglu, it took six years before the first generic after loss of exclusivity actually came to market, and today we keep as many patients, if not more, on Carbaglu as we had before the generics entered. We are able to continue to manage and maintain this business going forward. All of our products carry a strong resilience independent from the loss of exclusivity there. Next, I'd like to highlight also our R&D capabilities with a focus on very targeted investments to support lifecycle management programs and geographic expansion.
You will have noted the very timely FDA approval for ISTURISA in the U.S. with a label expansion into endogenous hypercortisolemia in patients with Cushing's syndrome. This is really an important step for us, opening a significantly larger group of patients that can benefit from ISTURISA. That was also the reason the label we got was so positive that now for the second time in a row, we've been able to extend and increase our expected peak year sales target, this now being EUR 550 million-EUR 650 million. Truly remarkable for this product, and we're strongly committed to doing that. We've also just recently, and ahead of what we expected and communicated, received in China the approval for SIGNIFOR LAR, where we now have three products available in the market. ISTURISA had already been approved, and also Carbaglu is available in that market.
In terms of R&D lifecycle management, we have a couple of key ongoing programs. One around pasireotide, looking at post-bariatric hypoglycemia, a very, very debilitating and dangerous condition associated with bariatric surgery. The other one around dinutuximab beta or QARZIBA, both expanding into the U.S., but also opening a new indication around Ewing's sarcoma. On ISTURISA and Enjaymo, we're looking at all sorts of opportunities to expand geographically. On top of that, we have a couple of programs under evaluation for potential development. One is on ISTURISA, looking at generating further data for mild Cushing's syndrome, which de facto is already in the label, but we're looking at programs to further support the safe and good use into that indication. The other one around Enjaymo, where we're evaluating the opportunity in what is called ITP.
Business development has always been and will continue to be a very important part of our growth story. We are very proud of the strong track record that we have in executing on strategic deals and effective integration. Over the last 17 years, we've done 36 deals, spent EUR 3.5 billion on that, and had generated about 50% of our growth directly from these deals. If you look at the return on capital employed, you'll see that these are extremely attractive and very good delivering deals altogether. Deals have ranged from single market, single product deals for SPC to a global acquisition of all the rights of Enjaymo, which is the most recent one.
We have been looking for and will continue to look for opportunities that allow us to grow in SPC and bring additional promotion-sensitive products to our range of products or focus on our key areas, which are cardiovascular, urological, or gastroenterological diseases, where we are often seen as the partner of choice to help them bring these products successfully to market or take over and expand further penetration. For rare disease, we look really at always addressing an unmet medical need, which is at the core of every evaluation, and exploiting the now real global network that we have of commercial, excellent people, medical, all of the network that we have in place to be able to bring more products through this network and drive our growth and help our patients globally further.
On top of that, looking at products that have the opportunity to develop additional indications or do geographic expansion as part of the lifecycle management that we continuously do for just about the entire portfolio. We continue to actively and proactively look at deals, at opportunities for both SPC and rare disease. I already alluded to it, but through the combination of organic growth and doing the right deals, we've been able to consistently deliver strong growth, achieving our targets, achieving on the promises that we communicated, and with a strong focus on growth, on profitable growth, on margins, and on cash flow, we have been able to generate between 15%-20% of the return on the capital invested in the last decade.
For this year, we've already communicated our target of achieving at least EUR 2.6 billion in revenues, and as you've seen from our first quarter, we're really well on track to do exactly that. The value creation for Recordati is second to none. We're here in Italy, in the Borsa. We've been listed now, what, over 35 years, and we are the share that has generated the highest return for shareholders in all of Italy, and we're very proud of that fact and very committed to continue to deliver fantastic value to all of our shareholders. Finally, I would like to recognize this team here. They're all present, or most of them are present in the room here. It's a fantastic team with an incredible big background. The diversity, the different backgrounds help us to navigate through difficult times.
The experience is outstanding, and our collective experience, our dedication, our commitment will ensure the stability and guarantee that in this continuously changing world, we are very well positioned to do exactly what we have been doing so far, shaping the future together and growing in the profitable way as we have promised. I would like to hand over to Alberto.
Thank you, Rob. Recordati SPC is a business born in Italy and successfully expanded through both organic growth and very successful inorganic acquisitions over the past decades. You have seen that and heard that from both Andrea Recordati and Rob Koremans. That has resulted in a broad and diversified portfolio of more than 400 brands in both prescriptions and OTC segments. This brand portfolio is unique and is well supported by our very solid and robust supply chain.
We are able to manufacture more than 60% of our volumes in-house, and that clearly ensures, by having those manufacturing facilities mainly in Europe, that reliability and ability to respond to the dynamics in the market. This has also resulted, this expansion over these years into Recordati moving from Italy into Europe, Recordati SPC, and now having direct presence in more than 30 countries, including Europe, CIS, Turkey, and Tunisia. You can see here that around 40% of our business comes from Southern Europe. It's an extremely important region where the brand loyalty means a lot, and that loyalty to those originator brands like Zanidip that was launched and developed by Recordati remains and enables a low to mid-single digit growth that somehow offsets the limited decline that we see in other parts of Europe, particularly in Northern Europe, where there is some erosion of volumes and pricing.
As a result, we have a low single digit growth that is then accelerated by our strong operations in Central and Eastern Europe and in Turkey. Those two regions act as boosters of the growth of SPC and enable the magic mid-single digit growth that consistently this organization has been able to deliver. We talk about a large portfolio of more than 400 brands, but also we see the opportunity and the benefit of having more than 70% of those brands, of those sales being concentrated mainly in three therapeutic areas. Therapeutic areas that are growing thanks to the growing prevalence and treatment rates. Cardiovascular, urology, and gastroenterology are areas where our products are continuing to grow and serving more than 100 million patients every year.
All of that together results in a uniquely diversified business of brand originator products that leverage competitive and cost-effective commercial capabilities to deliver sector-leading growth and unique profitability. Let me share with you the four pillars of our strategy in Recordati SPC. First and foremost is the diversification that Rob alluded to. The diversification is geographic, as I have described. It is also about portfolio, being in both prescription and OTC, and it is also around the different therapeutic areas. All of that enables us to mitigate the risk, to maintain resilient pricing, and also to create synergies because we do not build firewalls between prescription and OTC. We integrate the teams and release the synergies for the benefit of both our customers and ultimately the patients. There is the strong brand equity of our products.
That strong brand equity coming from therapeutic areas where we see growing prevalence and treatment rates results into a very solid and reliable performance. Third, we apply a tailored commercial approach. We focus our resources on promotionally sensitive brands, a few of them, we select those, but also in promotionally sensitive markets. Not one size fits all, different approaches to different markets. We optimize the rest of our portfolio. Ultimately, it's around commercial excellence, a renewed emphasis on that commercial excellence to consistently outperform the competition. That has been the focus from day one, and that is what enables that efficient cost-based and very targeted promotional efforts. Over the past four years, we have undergone a transformation in Recordati SPC with a clear focus on improving the competitiveness and optimizing our portfolio. Let me give you some of the key decisions and key outcomes from that transformation.
First, we've switched the focus from primary more into a specialty care. That has led to bespoke right-sizing in selected markets to ensure our organizations are fit for purpose, are fit to the portfolio, to the opportunities that we have today, which are different from those that we had 10 or 15 years ago. At the same time, we've added new capabilities, capabilities that have enabled us to enhance our customer engagement. Our focus investment has allowed our SG&A, our selling expenses, to be second to none, to be at the very top of the profitability in the sector. When combining this with initiatives like SKU rationalization, rationalization of low-value SKUs that have taken out more than EUR 30 million worth of products from our portfolio over the past couple of years in the interest of ensuring a more efficient supply chain, but also a better profitability.
Ultimately, those actions together result in our EBITDA ratio increasing year on year over the past year from 33% to 35%. That focus on rationalization and focus investment has not prevented a continued growth of very solid 7% CAGR over the last year, more than EUR 200 million added to our business. This is the combination of the magic formula of Recordati, of increasing our competitiveness in the portfolio that we promote, sustaining year on year around 5% above the market, and at the same time, acquiring synergistic products that can leverage our capabilities and supplement the organic growth. All of that together comes into continued growth that we expect to see developing in the coming three years. I'm now going to take you through how in each one of the major therapeutic areas we expect to continue to grow in this period.
Urology has become today the largest franchise within Recordati SPC, and we expect over the coming years to continue to deliver a mid-single digit growth at constant exchange rate. That is driven by both the strength of our brands, Eligard, UroRec, or Avodart/Combodart, but also by being in the right segments. In this case, we have prostate cancer, we have benign prostatic hyperplasia, two diseases that have growing prevalence, that have increasing awareness and better diagnostics. When you combine both, you clearly can have that expectation of continued growth. I think very much over the past four years, Eligard has been in particular the landmark of what Recordati SPC can do. Let me go a bit deeper into the performance of Eligard over the past years. This graph shows the evolution index, the performance of Eligard versus the market over the past four years.
We can see that since Recordati took over Eligard back in February 2021, we have been able to turn around that competitiveness and to deliver well above the market. We have prioritized and focused Eligard across SPC, and we have seen this turnaround happening in each and every market. Last year, we launched a new device for Eligard, and we have seen that launch, which is always a tricky thing to do after a product has been established for many years in the market. That success in adoption of a new device has made the use of Eligard easier for the patients. That's why, despite a more competitive environment in this space, we expect Eligard to continue to deliver good growth in the years to come. Moving from urology to cardiovascular, in our cardiovascular portfolio, we essentially expect the sales to be stable over the next years.
We have a mature portfolio, and clearly here is one of those examples where we can show the tailored commercial approach. These three brands, Zanidip, Lercanidipine, Metoprolol, Seloken, and Pitavastatin, Livazo, represent around 80% of our portfolio. We have an approach where we selectively promote these products in markets where they make the difference. That enables us to sustain the sales throughout the period of these mature brands, combined with, again, growing prevalence and better diagnosis of hypertension and hypercholesterolemia, which are clearly diseases that are in continuous need from therapies like ours. Moving to the rest of the portfolio, the rest of the portfolio is expected to, again, contribute with mid-single digit growth at constant exchange rate. Here, the main driver that will enable that sustained growth is our OTC portfolio.
Our OTC products are, again, a booster of our performance, and we see that, for instance, in gastrointestinal, in the gastrointestinal area, where we see Southern Europe and Central and Eastern Europe really driving the growth. Also in the cough and cold business, where Russia, France, or Italy, our brands in those markets are, again, another booster, or in the rest of the portfolio where we have leading brands like Magnesio Supremo here in Italy that clearly is a booster of the growth of that rest of portfolio, altogether enabling that sustained mid-single digit growth that we see overall in the SPC business. Mid-single digit growth that is accompanied as sustained with sector-leading profitability because we continue to focus on how we can do the right promotional investment behind the right brands in the right geographies, and also taking advantage of the synergistic approach of our prescription and OTC business.
All of that together yields not only a strong volume growth, but also a very solid price resilience in our portfolio of SPC. Talking about growth, I'm really delighted to hand it over to the main growth driver of our company, which is my friend and colleague, Scott Pescatore.
Very kind of you. Thank you very much, Alberto. Welcome, everybody, and good afternoon. I thought I would just start off with a macro overview of the rare disease market space just to give a bit of an understanding in the area that we're discussing today. Rare disease offers a unique opportunity for all of us and for our business for many reasons, primarily because of the strong and high unmet medical need for patients.
Some of you may be familiar with some of these numbers, but there's about 6,000-7,000 rare diseases that are currently known, and only about 5% of those have approved products available. There is a huge opportunity here, not only for us, but for research and for development in this area to treat these terrible diseases. Rare disease products typically also enjoy a bit longer market exclusivity, which is driven by protection that goes beyond the IP expiration. It does have a tremendous market potential, and you can see that the rare disease market's evolving, and it's reaching upwards of EUR 300+ billion by 2030. Traditionally, products and development in rare diseases have had a faster time to market, on average about seven years, which is three to five years faster than some traditional pharmaceuticals.
I have to say that most recently, we've heard some positive comments from the FDA Commissioner around his views on rare diseases and that he would like to bring back a bit faster pathway and conditional approval to orphan products in the U.S. It is good news in that direction that potentially we could get additional products to market faster. What does that mean for us? I mean, we have a long-standing presence in rare disease that goes back to 2008 when we started in the business with a small group of metabolic products, which are still part of our portfolio, and we'll cover that a bit later. We saw moderate growth for quite a bit of time with that portfolio in addition to geographical expansion.
Really, we saw a significant boost and an acceleration in the past three to four years, which were driven off of the back of really the endocrinology acquisition, which brought us ISTURISA and SIGNIFOR. Since that acquisition, we've been able to maximize those products, which will continue to grow in the future, and we'll look at that a bit later in more detail. We also brought oncology into our portfolio with the acquisition of EUSA Pharma in 2022, and then most recently with the acquisition of Enjaymo with our partner Sanofi earlier this year. It has really been a combination of organic growth with our portfolio, geographical expansion, and of course, very, very strong M&A that have allowed us to accelerate that growth over the past few years. That is not all.
I mean, there are strategic pillars that we focus on in order to make sure that we can continue that growth in the future. As Rob had mentioned earlier, we're a global business. We're high growth, high margin, focused on, as I mentioned, high unmet needs. I think it's important to highlight that we have a very diverse portfolio of more than 20 products, which is unique within our peer group in this space. We'll come to that probably in the Q&A a bit more on the diversification of our portfolio and the importance of that. We focus on these four areas, and we strive for excellence in these areas in order to maintain that growth in the future. Patient centricity, as Rob had also alluded to this morning, is core and fundamental to our business.
Maximizing the number of patients that we can put on our products, increasing awareness, diagnosis, and of course, duration of therapy is critical. Executional excellence, getting in front of our customers, our patients, our physicians to demonstrate the value of our products, focusing on our products in markets where there's favorable underlying dynamics. That goes along with the strategic and geographical expansion that we continue to have within the portfolio. Of course, LCM opportunities to really maximize and optimize the potential of the products that we have in our portfolio. Rob highlighted a few of them, and there'll be some more information on some of those activities throughout the presentation. Just a very quick overview and review of our products that we focus on. We are separated into three distinct franchises within rare diseases.
We have our endocrinology portfolio, which is really the cornerstone and the flagship of the portfolio, which is highlighted by ISTURISA and SIGNIFOR. We have our sort of newly named hematology oncology portfolio, which is really led by QARZIBA and now, of course, Enjaymo since January. Our legacy portfolio, our metabolic portfolio, is where I had mentioned where it all began in this business. We continue to focus on Carbaglu, CYSTADROPS, and PANHEMATIN in that portfolio. Let's dig in a bit more deeper into the three franchises. We'll start with endocrinology, which is really, like I said, the lever for growth that we've enjoyed since the acquisition in 2019 of these products and will be really the key growth driver for us moving forward.
We have double-digit growth of that portfolio, which is going to be driven by and continues to be driven by ISTURISA. Rob had also mentioned, I'm sure you're aware of the very positive news that we had recently of the expansion of our label in the U.S. for ISTURISA into Cushing's syndrome. We now are indicated for the treatment of endogenous hypercortisolemia with patients with Cushing's syndrome, which is an important step forward for us to continue to capitalize on the patient population. We do have a differentiated clinical profile, which allows us to treat the comorbidities that are associated with elevated levels of cortisol, including high blood pressure and hypoglycemia or diabetes. We are going to continue growth of this product by increasing our awareness, as I had mentioned, continuing to capitalize on earlier diagnosis and treatment and awareness of this disease.
This is something that we've seen now with also some other products in the market who have been also working in the Cushing's disease space, increasing that awareness and bringing more focus to this disease where in the past it hadn't been such a disease that was looked at so closely. Of course, we'll continue our geographical expansion. Now, we do have ISTURISA available in most markets, but as Rob mentioned, we had the positive approval of China and we're working through now the reimbursement procedures on that and then bringing it to other markets such as Brazil. I won't spend a lot of time on SIGNIFOR, but SIGNIFOR is an important product in the portfolio. We have strong double-digit growth of that product, and we continue to anticipate success again through increasing the awareness of acromegaly, driving new patient uptake, and the duration of treatment.
Maybe we'll just drill down a little bit more into the Cushing's syndrome label and what that means for us in terms of market share within the U.S. As I'm sure you're aware, we have been focused primarily on, because of our label, on Cushing's disease in the U.S. up until a few weeks ago. The majority of our patients have come from the Cushing's disease patient population, but we anticipate more than 15% growth over the planning period and out through 2030 with the additional label that we have just achieved. You'll see that Cushing's disease is still continuing to grow, but there will be a significant portion of the new patients that come on board, which will be Cushing's syndrome patients.
That new label allows us to further grow the brand and to further capitalize on, again, some patients that suffer from the comorbidities associated with elevated levels of cortisol. If I shift gears now into our hematology oncology portfolio, here we have the potential to more than double the revenue in this space, which is including, obviously, now the addition of Enjaymo. We are very proud of the work that has been done, particularly on QARZIBA in this space, and we will continue to grow QARZIBA. We have had tremendous success in this space. It is a very important product for patients that are suffering from neuroblastoma. It is currently not available in the U.S., but it is now available, obviously, in relapse refractory patients in Europe, and we will go into a little bit more detail in just a second.
We're continuing to expand this product in new geographies, and we've spoken a little bit about also our plans to bring that to the U.S., which are currently underway, and expanding also to some of our other international markets such as Mexico, Argentina, and Colombia. We do have programs in place to expand into other lines of therapy with QARZIBA, such as the newly diagnosed induction therapy for chemoimmunocombination. SYLVANT, again, I won't spend a lot of time on this, but this is the only indicated approved treatment for iMCD. The focus for us to grow that product will be to increase the diagnosis and awareness of iMCD. This is a challenge for patients.
Patients spend upwards of four years trying to get a diagnosis of iMCD, so that's something that we're working hard to do to get that diagnosis happening sooner and then to increase the market share within those new patients that are coming on board and to obviously include how we can continue to drive the longer duration of treatment on patients who are receiving SYLVANT. Finally, Enjaymo, and I'll cover this in a bit more detail. We're very pleased about the acquisition that we made from Sanofi on this. It's progressing very, very well for us. It is, again, the only approved treatment for cold agglutinin disease with limited competition in the midterm. We've had success so far. It's very early days, but the first few months of uptake in the U.S. and Japan and Germany in this case have been very positive for us.
Of course, we'll continue to expand into new markets with Enjaymo and also look at potential new indications for that as well. Let's go back to QARZIBA for a minute, and we can sort of look a little bit more closely at where we're currently approved and where we're moving forward with this product to continue the growth. As I mentioned, we're currently indicated in first-line maintenance therapy and in maintenance relapse refractory in Europe and other selected markets. That will continue as we move forward, but we do have plans in place, again, as I had mentioned, to bring this product to the US initially in induction relapse refractory, which is the chemoimmuno space, and then expand to other territories after that.
A new project to bring it to first-line induction therapy chemoimmuno within Europe initially and then expanding to the U.S. and other markets moving down the line. Tremendous opportunity for us in this space. Coming back to Enjaymo, you can see now this is quite an interesting slide, and it shows you the potential that we have with this product. I mean, the growth is going to be driven by, again, the sort of the same three factors, which is increased penetration into the current patient population, expansion geographically, and then, of course, potential new indications. Currently, it's commercialized, as I mentioned, primarily in the U.S. and in Japan and in Germany. We do have some exposure in Israel and Italy as well, but currently less than 30% of CAD patients that are available are being treated.
There is opportunity for us to grow in the CAD patient population. There is also opportunity for us to expand into other European countries and in other geographies such as Russia, China, the Middle East, Korea, and key Latin American markets. The last piece, which is important to mention, is that there are potential new indications that we can expand into. Milan and his team are working hard to put a plan in place for us to look at ITP or immune thrombocytopenia and other potential opportunities that can be seen with C1 or complement inhibitors. Finally, just a few words on our metabolic portfolio, because I mentioned this is the foundation of our business. This is a core franchise for us, which has been and will continue to be important for us, these products. This is a relatively stable product portfolio.
We focus primarily on Carbaglu, on PANHEMATIN, and CYSTADROPS within this portfolio, but our opportunities there are to continue to drive the growth of, for instance, Carbaglu in areas where there are new patients that are available in China and CYSTADROPS in Japan, and to really kind of target our investments there and leverage our infrastructure to sustain the profitability of those products. What does that look like for us in terms of the full business potential? As I mentioned, we have tremendous opportunity to continue to grow this business. We're very proud of the CAGR and the opportunity for growth that we have through the planning period through 2027, between 17%- 20%. I think we can be bullish and say that we're confident that we can get to the higher end of that guidance. How are we going to do that?
All the points that I mentioned earlier, I mean, focusing primarily on the endocrinology portfolio, obviously the Hem-Onc portfolio, continuing to have stable metabolic portfolio. Then really we're trending towards a more than EUR 1 billion business and 40% of the total group. As Rob had mentioned, we're pleased that we're able to upgrade our guidance again for ISTURISA just the other day. This is what it looks like. I mean, we shared these numbers before, but we did increase ISTURISA once again. It's based on the back of our expanded label and the opportunities that I had mentioned that we see in terms of growth and capturing the new opportunities within the Cushing's syndrome space. With that, I'll pause and I'll hand it over to our CFO, Luigi La Corte.
Thank you, Scott.
Hopefully by now everyone is really excited about the prospects for our current portfolio, thanks to the fantastic color and perspective that both Alberto and Scott have provided. Hopefully they have well highlighted the extent to which our very diversified portfolio sets us a very good platform and foundation to continue on this journey of profitable growth for many years to come. You've all seen the targets already, so I'm not going to unveil anything that you haven't seen really. Before doing that though, just a couple of words to really help understand how the targets, how you should think of those targets, particularly for the ones who are newer to Recordati. Of course, this chart is only illustrative, but as we said, we are very, very confident around the growth potential of our current portfolio.
As has always been the case, I mean, BD and M&A has been and will continue to be an integral part of the Recordati strategy, and we're equally confident about our ability to continue to win deals as we have done to date. As such, we include them in our targets. We've always done that. What we've always done is we look at the growth potential of our current portfolio, as has been described, and of course, we look at a range of realistic scenarios around that. You've seen a growth range on SPC, potential different sort of ranges of speed of uptake of the big growth drivers on the rare disease. We overlay on that a view of what we believe we can achieve over the next years through the activity of Gabriele and his team on the BD and M&A side.
Of course, and I'd like to emphasize this, as is sometimes perhaps missed, not all deals are the same. I mean, some could be of marked products which are already on the market and therefore immediately contribute revenue and profits. We'd be really excited if we find another ISTURISA launch asset, which doesn't provide immediate revenue and potentially even dilutive to margins in the short term, but that could be a great value creation story over the mid and long term. We factor all that in and blend that into the range of targets that we provide. Of course, as we've done previously, we also provide and we share on this slide. I will not go bullet by bullet, and this is really for modeling purposes, a list of some of the key assumptions. I'm sure we'll touch on it in the Q&A.
There's a lot of questions and speculation these days around potential tariffs, potential legislation changes. I think once again, we have a very diversified business. U.S. is important. It's only 17% of the business, not 40-50%, as is the case for other companies. There are no current tariffs in place for the sector. Our U.S. business is fully rare disease, which, as Scott illustrated in his first slide, often enjoys a special sort of attention when it comes to regulations. I think all in all, in the end, we're quite confident that even if there were to be tariffs, the impact is something that could be mitigated. Hence, we've not included any impact in our numbers.
We've talked about on the sort of revenue side, very confident about the revenue prospects, and as always, we expect most of the growth to be driven through volumes, which is really at the core of our strategy, but still expect pricing to be a nice small addition to that. You've often heard me comment pricing is usually on average, excluding the outlier of Turkey, net plus 1% or thereabouts every year, which adds to the growth and of course protects the bottom line. Of course, we don't anticipate, as you know, any material impact from loss of exclusivities over the next years. We're equally confident about our ability to continue to expand margins, and you've seen that reflected in the targets that we already disclosed. That is also even allowing for additional investments that we're making in lifecycle management opportunities.
I'm very happy with obviously the successes that we've been able to showcase recently with the approval of the new label for ISTURISA and obviously for the support to the continued geographic expansion of the group and allowing also for inflation. Finally, we're continuing to be very confident around our ability to turn those profits into cash, which then goes to sort of continue allow us to finance new deals, which we'll continue to execute with the same discipline that we've always kept with regards to how we manage the balance sheet. Hopefully all of that is clear and of course happy to take questions at the end. When it comes to the targets, and I'll mention it just for avoidance of doubt, of course we confirm and we reiterate the 2025 targets.
Yes, as some have commented, there is a little bit more of effect said wind, but as you've seen from the Q1 revenue figures, we've started the year well and the targets remain unchanged. Of course, very proud with the targets that we've committed to for 2027, which as you see show pretty much double-digit growth across all lines with revenue of between EUR 3 billion and EUR 3.2 billion, an EBITDA margin of at least 38% and adjusted income of around 25.5%. Finally, from my side, of course, sometimes it's nice to leave slides unchanged. It gives us a clear signal and that is that nothing has really changed around the value proposition of the group.
We'll continue to focus on the organic growth of the business, complement that with BD and M&A, aim to sustain a high level of margins at the top end of the sectors whilst investing behind the growth opportunities that we're pursuing. We're with a very clear and unchanged capital allocation policy, which foresees BD and M&A and keeping the same discipline, as I said, around cash generation and working within the same boundaries that we've historically reiterated around leverage. We're aiming, and all these numbers are aiming obviously to be consistent with each other. The targets that we've read out are consistent, we believe, with a leverage. Of course, there's maybe some volatility there depending on the timing of deals and structure of deals, but with a leverage that we would expect 2027 to be between 1.7 and 2 times.
We said, obviously, we allow for fluctuations up to a maximum of close to 3 times if there were to be opportunities of scale that we think are high quality and make sense for us to pursue. Our track record then of deleveraging if ever we were to do that. That's it from my end, and I'll pass to Rob for some closing remarks.
Maybe you can just. Yeah, before we open the floor to Q&A, I would like to leave you with our ambition for 2030. Recordati has reached a quite significant scale, and we have a fantastic momentum in our business. We have very clear objectives, and our strategy is unchanged and extremely clear. We will maximize our organic growth in both businesses that are equally important and supplement that with BD. Our growth is supported by a resilient and agile organization, and we have a track record of very strong execution. We aspire to double our revenue by 2030 and with all of that also achieve at least 38% margin. This is based on a very solid foundation of a company that has been built over many, many, many years for a group that is second to none, and I'm extremely proud to lead.
Now, along with Luigi, Alberto, Scott, and actually also the rest of the team, we're very happy to take your questions. Thank you.
Just a quick reminder, before you ask your question, it would be helpful if you could just introduce yourself with your name and institution. Thank you.
Good afternoon. Martino De Ambroggi, EQUITA. The first question is on prices. Sorry, you already discussed, Luigi, about it. Just to double check, 17% exposure to the U.S. becomes 19%, 20% including Enjaymo or more or less is the same. In case of price cut, because tariffs seem ruled out, is there any action you can eventually take in order to offset it? Anyway, we do not know what will happen, just to have an idea on this. On Rob, on your last slide, doubling the sales is a big number. The silly question.
Quick one in the last couple of years.
Yeah. Yeah. The silly question is how, in the sense, are you including in the options of the merger, meaning Angelini, for instance, discussed for a long time on newspapers.
I've never heard that name.
I know, I know for sure. Because in case you need to make more acquisitions, in my view, it's not enough the free cash flow you have in the hands today unless you reduce the dividends. This is just my first take looking at this figure. Thank you.
Okay. Let me start at the end. Frankly, I think for what we now focus on is the first three years, so 2027. I also wanted to leave you a little bit with our ambition that goes beyond 2027. When we did our figures, of course, we always look also a bit longer. If I look at our company with our portfolio at the moment, with all that we have done in the past, our track record, doubling our sales by 2030 is a realistic ambition and does not require to do any major big merger or whatever. That's really, frankly, also not something that we're actively pursuing at the moment. If I look at Recordati, we have the portfolio, the capabilities, the competencies, the presence to do what we need to do, and our strategy has allowed us to grow so fast. Going forward, doing exactly that.
Of course, we will have to do some deals, but do not underestimate also the impact for the midterm. In 2027, you do not see a lot of the impact coming from the very focused lifecycle management initiatives that we do. By 2030, this should really start to make some contribution. I do not think that it is in our interest at the moment to look for more scale, expand in, for instance, Europe with an Angelini where we are not in any discussion, neither is CVC. Strategically, for us, that is not needed to achieve the doubling of sales by 2030. Right? We have extreme good opportunity, fantastic portfolio that will continue to grow, we believe, well beyond 2027.
At the moment, we commit to the figures of 2027, and that's what I don't want to do any further commitment than that, but leave you with a notion of our current confidence in the business actually going forward. Does that answer that part of your question?
Yeah.
Maybe from my side, and just to echo Rob and just underline, aspiration and ambition and target are two different things, right? The targets are to 2027. What we're setting up for 2030 is a vision and aspiration. In terms of your question, U.S., yes, the U.S. is growing as a percent of total, but still well below the sort of 40%-50% of most other pharma companies. On the tariffs, in terms of if they were to come, ways to mitigate, they're number one. First of all, as you'd imagine, any company is doing, there's quite a bit of stock at the moment that has gone into the U.S. ahead of anything being done or changed. It's not clear if there were to be tariffs. Again, to me, it's still to be seen. One, does it impact pharma?
Two, will it impact within pharma rare disease? I think there's quite a number of ifs already there. We, and I'm sure many others, are looking to make sure that in the way the sort of intercompany arrangements in the building between other sort of European entities in the U.S., that the way the transfer prices are set potentially give opportunity to reduce the scope for obviously the arms-length way. Of course, pricing is a lever in the U.S. Even though there is a cap to price increases in the sense that anything beyond that would have to be rebated to Medicare, Medicaid, the cap is set on the basis of inflation. Inflation is likely to increase, so that cap will go higher.
Ultimately, of course, if there was to be the case, we would look for secondary sourcing options specifically to address the needs of the U.S., particularly for the bigger products. Again, we feel we're pretty confident about not having to worry about tariffs at this point in time. On pricing, as I said, our planning assumption is what I said, ±1% a year. There's a number of speculations around pricing as well in the U.S. I don't know, Scott, if you want to comment on those.
No, I mean, it's all speculation at this point. I don't think we can really comment accurately. I don't think anybody can because I think right now there's just a lot of things swirling around, but really nothing is landing yet or sticking. Some of the maybe Luigi's referring a bit to some of the reference pricing that may happen in the U.S., so European price, that's something that we've looked at, but we'll have to see what actually comes through when these things get announced.
Hi, James Vane-Tempest from Jefferies. Thanks for taking my questions. Two if I can and then a follow-up. Margins in SPC have increased materially over the last five years. Are we reaching a peak for this segment, and should we think rare diseases will be the mixed driver from here, even with higher investments?
Yeah, we do expect certainly the majority of the accretion to come from the change in the mix. I think it's also fair to say, and I think we've commented in the past, we have made some investments in rare disease over the last years, even just the integration of EUSA, which came in at a slightly lower EBITDA margin. We've expanded our footprint in a number of countries. We said that first part of this year we would be investing a little bit in the U.S. ahead of the expected approval of the broader label. Scott is very committed now to show the yield on those investments.
Yes, I think it's fair to say that we expect, though we don't provide sort of specific guidance by segment, to expect sort of SPC to continue to deliver in line with how it's delivering and for the accretion to come really from the shifting mix and the rare disease side. Again, we will look, we don't manage the company for the next two years, right? I also wouldn't get over, we focus on the long term, and if we see that there's opportunities that make sense for investment, as you've seen, we take them. Hopefully that.
Thank you. My second question actually is for Scott, actually. I guess you mentioned confidence in the upper end of the rare diseases targets in your prepared remarks. Is there a particular segment within rare diseases which gives you the increasing confidence at this stage?
Yeah, as I mentioned, I mean, I think the key growth drivers come from the endocrinology portfolio. There's just tremendous opportunity there for us to continue to grow, and not just in the midterm, but in the long term as well. The label in the U.S. is a big boost to that. Also the geographical expansion and the continued penetration ex U.S. as well is very important. The other piece is Enjaymo. Enjaymo, we're just getting started on Enjaymo. There's opportunity there, as you've seen from the slides, the penetration in the patient pool is still a lot of room to grow there. We see a lot of opportunity in the geographical expansion there as well.
Hi, I'm Sean from Jefferies. Just on Enjaymo, what factors do you need to see in that evaluation process that would give you the green light to pursue Enjaymo and ITP? Could you give us sort of an overview of that evaluation process?
Do you want to?
It starts with value creation.
No, maybe what we look at first of all is really, does this address an unmet medical need? What is the competitive environment? What would be our potential benefit? What is the risk and the reality? What is the success rate? What would be the timeframe? And is there an alternative for our money that would be more attractive? If you combine then all of those things together, you look at how do we do this? We look at a program, and typically what we would always do is try and see whether we can do a pilot if that wouldn't really cost too much time and money and would make no sense. Milan, as our Head of R&D, is evaluating all of this. Milan, you want to add a little bit to that?
No, I very much agree, Rob. I think it starts with the unmet medical need. Then we try to interrogate the available evidence. Clinical evidence is more important than preclinical. Pathway to approval, what could the regulatory landscape look like? Then we factor in, you can say, what does the competitive situation look like? Also, what is our ability to create value in that space? Through that, we have been threading the needle at around, we have looked at quite a high number of different indications, not only within Enjaymo. We have actually interrogated the entire pipeline and portfolio. ITP is one that we continue to like. Once we have all agreed that we like it, we will see how we do the investment. This is how we do it, pretty standard. Thanks.
I think there's a question.
Hi, Charles Pitman-King om Barclays from Barclays. Thanks for taking my questions. Just one quick one on the slide 17, SPC market outlook growth expectations for 2024 to 2027. These seem to be ahead of your individual therapeutic area targets. Just kind of wondering what the key drags to growth are that then lead you to kind of 3.5%-4.5% growth for the division. Just secondly on your BD, M&A and organic growth targets, just wondering if you have a kind of confirmed level of inorganic growth you expect to contribute by 2027? Just if you're assuming inorganic assets to have similar margins to your organic ones.
Maybe I start with the second. Hi, Charles. There's no new BD, M&A included in 2025 targets. As usual, when we set the target for the current year, we don't include any. We would expect to deliver those with the current portfolio. We don't really segment out what exactly, because again, that's not how we do it. This is why we offer a range for the organic growth. Hopefully, and I've seen a lot of estimates from many of you, and they're all quite close to each other. I conclude that we've given you enough of a clue as to what we think the organic portfolio growth can achieve. In terms of the margins that we expect to come from BD, again, we don't really segment that out. You can assume broadly in line, but again, just as a modeling.
If we get, and we also don't want to be constrained by that, right? Again, if we find a fantastic launch asset, I'd like to be able to go after it and not have to worry about the sort of dilution in one year where it's potentially another EUR 500 million-EUR 600 million peak year sales blockbuster. On SPC.
Maybe Alberto can answer that.
Thank you, Charles. I mean, you mentioned 3.5%-4.5% as the overall range. That is very much also the consolidation of the three elements that we have shared. We talk about mid-single digit growth at constant exchange rate for urology, another mid-single digit growth at constant exchange rate for the rest of the portfolio, and stable sales for cardiovascular. When you add them all up, it results into that figure. Clearly, the booster, as I have mentioned, is primarily the OTC business with also some good contribution from the urology portfolio.
I think, Charles, in your question, you were also comparing to the market growth rates on slide 17. Obviously, this is, I think, to credit Alberto, us achieving 3.5%-4.5% growth with an essentially very mature portfolio of products, some of which have been in the market for 20 plus years, is fantastic, right? Driving some of that market growth will be new launches of new products. The right comparison to that would also be to factor in BD and M&A on our side. I think we are very proud of the fact that on many of our promoter products, we're outperforming the relevant categories. I think that slide was to convey confidence that we're operating in good geographies with good fundamentals and also in good TAs with good underlying growth. Yes, we have a mature portfolio.
Yes, good afternoon. Bruno Permutti, Intesa San paolo. A question related to the guidance. Is the major risk you see related to the top line growth, or is there any risk that you are considering in looking at your 2027 guidance? A second question, more general, related to the talks that we hear about the most favored policy, the most favored nation policy, and also about the letter that some CEO wrote to EU legislators. I wanted to understand on the first point, what is the risk for rare disease prices? Is there any risk related to eventual application of the most favored nation policy? On the other side, do you see any opportunity in the appeal that some CEOs are addressing to the EU legislators?
It's all very much speculative, right? That is something that is extremely difficult to start to predict. What we have seen so far is very encouraging from the FDA commissioner that he really singled out rare diseases as a field that we should make sure that is not impacted by anything, that patients can continue to see products come to market and reach them. He will know that this will only happen if also the prices allow for it, right? Ultimately, pharmaceutical companies are not often philanthropic by nature, and this will have to work. I really don't think I want to start a talk for the European pharmaceutical industry or even the industry in general. If I look at Recordati, all of the business that we have in the U.S. is on rare diseases.
All of the products that we currently bring to the market bring very good value and are often really priced below what some of our competitors have done there and benefit patients with a huge unmet medical need. I'd like to believe that going forward, this is something that continues to be there. Speculating on what would happen to prices maybe is something that could, at the earliest, start to impact the outer years of this planning period. It's not something that legislatively is so easy to just enforce. I don't want to speculate any further there. Frankly, the letters from some of our European colleagues, they have different background, different needs, different requirements. I think it's a fantastic job to manage Recordati. We're doing well.
We believe by focusing truly on unmet medical needs, working with our patients and doctors there, and we do the best we can. We are ready to deal with whatever needs to happen, but any speculation at the moment, I do not think is wise, quite frankly. Does that answer your question?
Niccolo?
I think there was a second question around risks. I think, look, we feel very confident about the momentum that we have, our ability to drive margins and to continue to generate cash flow, and also with our ability to continue to win deals. I think I've said this before. I think we play in a nice niche where a EUR 200 million -EUR 300 million peak sales opportunity can make a significant addition to our business and flies well below the radar of some of the bigger pharma groups. I do not think we've ever competed with a big pharma company on any of our deals. The bigger risks are the ones, if you like, the macro one outside of our control, which at the moment are quite speculative, and against which actually the diversification of the group, the significant diversification of the group should help mitigate.
I think there's going to be a lot more, a lot of other companies that have a lot more issues than Recordati if there's something that happened in the U.S. business. I hope that addresses the question.
Maybe just risk assessment, of course, is very much part of the way we presented ultimately the figures, and that leads to the range that we bring, right? If there would be no risk, you could come with one number. We reflect this in the ranges that we provide for.
Hi. Niccolo Storer, Kepler Chevreux. Three questions, please. The first one, if you can please give us a ballpark idea of the additional contribution from ISTURISA and Enjaymo, new indication, if successful, of course, these new indications that are being studied. The second one is on clarification on Enjaymo peak sales, if these are including also potential new geographies targeted. The last one, still on geographical diversification, SPC, you show a map of Europe with some blank spots on former Yugoslavia countries, neighboring countries. Considering that diversification is a growth pillar for the division, is there any opportunity to grow there? If not, where do you see opportunities for further geographical diversification? Thank you.
Thank you, Scott. Would you like to address the first two questions on ISTURISA and Enjaymo?
Sure. With regards to the peak year sales for Enjaymo, this is something that is a work in progress. We are still sort of studying the market there to understand what opportunities we can pull from that. The contribution of Enjaymo, and you saw it in the peak year slides, we are trending towards for that product. I go back, but that was the number that we shared there. That is kind of the contribution. Here we go. The peak year estimate is EUR 250 million-EUR 300 million for Enjaymo. The contribution for CS, the portion of ISTURISA, is really that additional 25% of the patient population that we are expanding into. No specific growth rate number there, but it is really just the expansion of the additional patients that we are able to capture.
To be clear, the EUR 250 million-EUR 300 million peak sales of Enjaymo is what we read out when we did the deal and does not include at the moment any new indication. Those are the sales that we feel we can achieve with the CAD indication. Any work, and we're still evaluating, as Scott has said, would be on top of that.
Regarding SPC, geographical expansion is not a priority. We expect to expand our portfolio in both prescription and OTC business in our core areas, leveraging our capabilities. However, I have to clarify that we do reach with our products some of the geographies that you mentioned, Niccolo. For instance, in the Balkans or in Hungary, Eligard is currently performing extremely well. We do that through our network of partners, distributors in those markets, which also cover other regions like broader Africa or even South America. That business is still an important business. It represents just below 10% of the total SPC revenues and is a growing business. Hopefully, that answered your question.
Hi, good afternoon, everybody. [audio distortion] from Mediobanca. Three questions from my side. The first one is on revenue targets across the two divisions. Could you just elaborate a bit more on which are the forces that may drive you between the high and the lower end of the targeted range? It's just a function of speed to deliver M&A, FX intensity, or what else. Second question is again on the U.S. business. There was an article out today on Bloomberg mentioning the possibility to establish some direct presence in the U.S. I don't know if it is production or what else. Just if you can elaborate a bit more on that, what may drive you to pull the trigger on these investments and in case which is the size of investments needed. Last one is on M&A.
I assume you cannot disclose much, but just a qualitative indication, which is your appetite for M&A right now, considering that Enjaymo looks quite well integrated, I would say, at the current stage.
Thank you for the questions. The appetite for M&A is very healthy. We are actively looking, have a good number of programs and projects in place, but we will remain our discipline as always, right? For both businesses, SPC and rare disease, M&A is very much part of what we want to do, have always been doing, and will continue to do. We have good appetite for that. On the Bloomberg article, what the journalist was referring to, would there be an opportunity or a need even if there would be tariffs and there was a lot of speculation? What I answered was really, we are always evaluating, and this is specifically on the rare disease product, what is the best and optimal supply chain for any given geographical market?
As part of that, and given also our expansion into more biological products with rare disease, we are looking at, independent from the tariffs, what would be the best way forward into the future to guarantee good supply to the U.S. patients at the lowest cost and the highest service levels, and whether we should do something specific also more on biologics. I think she wrote that down as a little bit more tentative that there's no concrete plan to do it. It's really part of what we would standard do in trying to see whether we can make our products available in a better way to patients anywhere in the world. In this case, it was on the U.S. Maybe on the target spread, maybe Luigi, you want to take that first question?
I'm not sure I remember what the first question was on the targets.
Rather across both businesses.
Let's call in Alberto. I think just to be clear, the targets that we show, those ranges of growth, do not include BD and M&A . That is what we believe can be achieved from the current portfolio. As always, each one has distinctive pulls and pushes. I do not know if you want to comment in terms of what could take us to the higher end versus lower end, but I do not know if you want to add color on that.
Yeah, I mean, I think do you see the range there? I mean, there is FX impact that could have an impact there. I mean, obviously, as we're talking here, I mean, we're talking about rare disease patients, which are complicated to find. They don't exactly grow on trees. We do need to have additional investment that could be needed to expand the sales force in the U.S. to find some patients in the community. We are moving outside of the key centers and into the community setting more as we now expand into the Cushing's syndrome. While we're confident in the peak year, I mean, it could take us a little bit longer than expected to then go out and continue to do that. Enjaymo is a new entity for us. There is opportunity there to grow.
CAD is a disease that isn't at the top of the mind of every hematologist. They have what they consider to be more important priorities. These are things that we have to move the needle on. Diagnosis of patients, awareness, these things are all, they take time. There are risks there around that, but we're confident that we're going to get to the guidance that we've shared.
In SPC, there are, I mean, the range has been very, very limited.
Very small.
It's very small. Obviously, there are a lot of factors impacting from Forex, which is particularly relevant to other elements from regulatory pricing, are considerations that obviously need to be taken into account, as well as seasonality of cough and cold and other considerations.
Maybe just a final comment from me. First of all, hopefully you appreciate we probably do more in terms of forward-looking guidance. I think please allow us not to be quite so precise when doing that, particularly when we go into subsectors. Sometimes also there is a small unexpected. Maybe just to say something nice about our operations colleagues here. Sometimes you may have a competitor not able to supply the market. This is one of the beauties of our high degree of vertical integration that we have always been able to respond and supply the market and take those opportunities. Maybe some years we have a little bit more of that or a little bit less, and that can also sort of affect where exactly in the range.
If there are no more questions in the room and we do not see any, do you have a question? Sorry.
Thank you. Giorgio Tavolini from Intermonte. Just three questions on my side. The first one is on cash R&D investments at 7% is pretty stable over time. I was wondering if you see any need to increase this percentage in order to support the reset upgrades in peak sales. The second one is a minor check on capital allocation. You talked about a progressive payout of 50% of net income. I was wondering what changed from the previous guidance was 60%. Sorry about that, but just a minor check. The third one is on Eligard. You talk about a mid-single digit growth despite the new competitive entries. I was wondering if this competition is related to new device.
I have another one on the potential impact on your rare disease business in the U.S. from NIH cuts, budget cuts, in particular both on the R&D side and also on the ability for the federal government to purchase the drugs. Thank you.
Okay, maybe Giorgio, I'll take the first. No, we don't need additional investments to support our current plans in terms of lifecycle management, product development there. The investments are all baked into the forecast, the plans that you see. Maybe Luigi, you want to talk about the capital allocation?
No, thanks for the question. In reality, nothing has changed. The group has gotten bigger. Whilst we've continued to grow the dividend, if you look at what the exact percentage payout has been over the last few years, it actually works to something closer to 50%. We've been pretty consistent in terms of growing. There's not an exact formula that the board goes by, it will depend on some circumstances. There's strong commitment to continue to see the dividend increase year -over -year.
Albert, do you want to comment on Giorgio's question on Eligard?
On Eligard, you mentioned about mid-single digit growth. I mean, just to clarify, that expectation was for the whole urology portfolio, not only for Eligard. Eligard, certainly we expect it to be a relevant contributor, being the largest product, largest brand in that space. It is not related to the new device. It is related to new competitors effectively coming into the market. Actually, one of those competitors was already launched last year, and we have continued to see Eligard performing and gaining market share. We are confident that Eligard will continue to grow and to gain share in the market. Clearly, the space is becoming more crowded and competitive.
I think you were asking about the restructuring of the HHS and the related entities there. That is something where there are budget cuts slated for 2026. I think, as you mentioned, there are pretty drastic cuts that are being proposed across the FDA, the CDC, CMS, NIH, etc. Really, the impact to us is unknown at this time. I mean, for us, we only have very limited exposure to the FDA with dossiers sitting there at the moment. It could result in delays, but we do not have a big exposure to those entities in terms of the workforce and the delays that might occur.
An impact on ISTURISA, we were a little ahead of surgery. So far, we've not seen any impact, but yeah, it is, of course, a potential issue. If there's no FDA employee left, then there will be an issue there, which I don't expect to happen, frankly, given their focus. Again, the FDA's commissioner’s very clear statement in support of rare disease specifically.
Are there any other questions in the room? We do not see any on the line either, so we will turn the floor back to you, Rob, for some closing remarks.
Thank you, Eugenia. I want to thank you all for having joined us here today. You've all been able to follow our company for some years, and you can see that we are really well positioned to continue our growth story, strategy, and continue our performance. I'm very, very excited for the years to come, and I know so are my colleagues here and in front of me. I hope to speak to you again on May 8th when we go into more detail on our quarterly results for the first quarter. Thank you and have a wonderful afternoon.