Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to Sun Pharma's Q4 FY2025 Financial Results Conference call. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during this conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star, then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Dr. Abhishek Sharma, Vice President and Head of Investor Relations and Strategic Projects. Thank you, and over to you, Dr. Sharma.
Thanks. Thank you. Good evening and a warm welcome to our fourth quarter FY25 earnings call. I'm Abhishek from the Sun Pharma Investor Relations team. We hope you have received the Q4 financials and the press release that was sent out earlier in the day. These are also available on our website. We have with us Mr. Dilip Shanghvi, Chairman and Managing Director; Mr. C. S. Muralidharan, CFO; Mr. Abhay Gandhi, CEO North America; and Mr. Kirti Ganorkar, CEO India Business. Today, the team will provide an update on the financial performance and business highlights for the quarter, pipeline updates, and respond to any questions that you may have. We will refer to the consolidated financials for management comments. The call recording and call transcript will also be put up on our website shortly.
The discussion today might include certain forward-looking statements, and these must be viewed in conjunction with the risk that our business faces. You're requested to ask two questions in the initial round. I also request all of you to kindly send in your questions that may remain unanswered today. I will now hand over the call to our CFO, Mr. C. S. Muralidharan.
Welcome, and thank you for joining us for this earnings call after the announcement of financial results for the fourth quarter of FY25. Our full year and Q4 financials are already with you. The full year FY25 sales were at INR 520,412 million, a growth of 9% over last year. Material costs answered 20.7% of sales, lower than last year and offered a better product mix, including a higher share of sales from specialty business. Stock costs answered 19.2% of sales, flat year on year. Other expenses are at 32.2% of sales, flat versus FY24. Product gain for the year was INR 1,855 million, compared to gain of INR 361 million last year. EBITDA for the year was INR 152,717 million, a growth of 17.3%, with the resulting EBITDA margin of 29%. Adjusted net profit for the year was INR 119,844 million, up 19%.
Reported net profit for the year was INR 109,290 million, compared to INR 95,764 million for FY 2024. Let us now discuss the Q4 FY 2025 performance. Q4 FY 2025 sales were at INR 128,156 million, a growth of 8.5% over Q4 FY 2024. Material costs for the quarter were 20.6% of sales. Stock costs came in at 19.4% of sales. Other expenses were lower year on year as a percentage of sales and higher on Q o Q due to higher sales and distribution expenses across geographies. Forex gain for the quarter was INR 2,012 million, compared to a loss of INR 564 million in Q4 FY 2024. EBITDA, including other operating revenues, was at INR 37,161 million, higher by 22.4% over Q4 last year. EBITDA margin for the quarter was 28.7%, compared to 25.3% in Q4 FY 2024 and 29.3% in Q3 FY 2025. We had a few exceptional items in Q4 FY 2025 amounting to INR 3,617 million.
A major portion comes from an impairment of investment in Linara Therapeutics, INR 2,597 million. Adjusted net profit, excluding the exceptional items for Q4 FY25, was INR 28,890 million, representing a growth of 4.8% over Q4 FY24. Reported net profit for Q4 FY25 stands at INR 21,499 million. The effective tax rate for Q4 FY25 was 19.8%, compared to 5.1% in Q4 FY24. Tax rate for the full year is 16.6% versus 12.4% in FY24. Going forward, we expect the tax rate to continue to go up on a full-year basis, mainly on account of exhaustion of tax losses. Reported EPS for the quarter was INR 9 per share. As of 31st March 2025, net cash was $3.1 billion at the consolidated level. The board has proposed a final dividend of INR 5.50 per share for the year FY25.
This is in addition to the interim dividend of INR 10.50 per share, taking the total dividend for FY 2025 to INR 16 per share, compared to INR 13.50 per share for FY 2024. Over to Kirti Ganorkar, who will share the performance of our India business.
Yeah, thank you, Murali. I shall take you through the performance of our India business. Our India formulation sales for the full year FY2025 were INR 169,230 million, recording 13.7% growth over previous year. For Q4, the sales of formulation in India were INR 42,130 million, recording a growth of 13.6% over Q4 last year. India formulation sales accounted for 32.9% of total consolidated sales for the quarter. Sun Pharma is ranked number one and holds 8.3% market share in over INR 2,259 billion Indian pharmaceutical market as per AIOCD- AWACS MAT March 2025 report. Corresponding market share for the previous period was 8%. For the quarter ending March 2025, we grew higher than IPM, and we have done well across all major represented therapy areas, primarily led by volume growth and new product introductions.
As per SMSRC MAT November-February 2025 report, we continue to be number one brand company based on the prescription volumes. Sun Pharma is also ranked number one by prescription with 13 different doctor categories. For quarter FY25, the company launched 10 new products in India. There are new products planned for future launch in diabetes and weight management space. During this month, Sun Pharma launched a corporate branding campaign. This is for the first time that we have launched a corporate branding initiative at this scale. The campaign underscores Sun Pharma's roles in the lives of patients, caregivers, doctors, pharmacists, and communities, reaffirming its leadership in India. Now, I will hand over call to Abhay.
Thank you, Kirti. I will update on the performance highlights of our U.S. business. Our overall U.S. business grew by 3.6% to $1,921 million for the full year FY2025. The growth is driven by specialties, with all our growth products contributing like ILUMYA, CEQUA, WINLEVI, and ODOMZO, but offset by a decline in generics for the full year. In Q4, our overall sales in the U.S. were $464 million, lower by 2.5% over Q4 of last year, with growth in specialty offset by a decline in generics. The generics business declined due to additional competition in certain products. The U.S. accounted for over 31.4% of consolidated sales for the quarter. In Q4, we launched two generic products in the U.S. I will now hand over the call to Mr. Shanghvi.
Thank you, Abhay. I will now provide an update on the performance highlights of our other businesses, as well as give you an update on our R&D initiatives. Our branded formulation revenues in emerging markets were INR 1,114 million for the full year, up 7% year on year. For Q4, sales in emerging markets was INR 261 million, up 6.3% over Q4 last year. The underlying growth in constant currency terms was 11.5% year on year for Q4. Emerging markets accounted for 17.6% of total consolidated revenue for Q4. Amongst the larger markets in local currency terms, Romania, Russia, and Brazil have done well. Formulation revenues in the rest of the world were $847 million, up 4.5% over last year. For Q4, the rest of the world sales were INR 200 million, up 2% over Q4 last year. The rest of the world markets account for approximately 13.5% of consolidated revenue.
In FY25, our global specialty sales were up 17.1% to reach INR 1,216 million in Q4 financial year 2025. Our global specialty sales were up 8.6% to reach INR 295 million. Global ILUMYA sales for the year were up 17% to INR 681 million. This figure does not include end market sales of our partners. We continue to invest in building an R&D pipeline for both the global generics and the specialty businesses. Consolidated investments towards R&D for Q4 FY25 stand at INR 8,116 million, or 6.4% of sales. The specialty R&D accounted for 36% of our total R&D spend for the quarter. Moving on, an update on global specialty, there are few changes in our clinical pipeline. We are now seeking a partner for future development and commercialization of MM-II in certain geographies. This change is due to the strategic reassessment of our pipeline.
We continue to believe in the potential of the product. The other change is that we are now planning a trial of GL0034 in type 2 diabetes as its first indication. Sun Pharma has agreed to acquire Checkpoint Therapeutics, a company specializing in immunotherapy and targeted oncology. We are awaiting approval of that transaction and subsequent closing. Checkpoint has recently received approval from US FDA for UNLOXCYT for metastatic or locally advanced cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma, and we look forward to leveraging our presence to accelerate patients' access to UNLOXCYT. Lastly, on the guidance of FY2026, we expect mid to high single-digit consolidated top-line growth for FY2026. For the current year, we are looking to invest approximately $100 million additionally on commercialization of new specialty products. This investment will enable us to significantly strengthen our specialty business for the future.
We now expect our FY 2026 R&D spend to be 6%-8% of sales for the next year.
Okay, that's the end of our readouts. We can go to Q&A, please.
Thank you very much. We'll now begin with the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touchstone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. Participants, you may press star and one to ask a question. First question is from the line of Kunal Damesha from the Macquarie Group. Please go ahead.
Hi, good evening. Thank you for the opportunity. First question is the global specialty sales growth for the quarter. This is after many quarters we have seen a single-digit top-line growth in this business. I think the quarter four base from last year was also a little lower because of the issues at UnitedHealthcare. Is there any one-off why we are seeing this kind of lower growth in this quarter? Sometimes branded companies do see some rebate adjustment, etc., which could lead to this kind of growth. Any color there would be helpful.
Abhay, you will respond?
Sure. I can only speak for the US, Kunal, but January and February typically are lighter months in the US because of change in the way the insurance resets happens. Otherwise, when I look at the prescription trends and the inventory trends that are there in the market, I'm comfortable that our key brands will continue to grow. Clearly, no one else.
Okay, but any particular product like being weaker than other?
Kunal, sorry to interrupt you. We are losing your audio.
Hello, Kunal. Can you please come in a better reception area, please?
Yeah. Can you hear me now?
Yes.
Yeah, I can hear you. Yeah, sorry for that. Yeah, so any particular product that you want to call out, or is it a broad base you said is more like a seasonality than February, which would have paid off?
No, it's not really a seasonality, Kunal. It's more to do with insurance resets. So no particular product that I can call out.
Okay. Okay. Sure. Second one on the INR 100 million additional spend that we are expecting this year to spend, the whole idea of getting more dermatology product was to kind of reduce, gain more synergies of our front-end infra, which is already in the place, right? Yeah, I'm just a little bit confused as to why do we need such a big amount, even if we launch two products in dermatology and derma- onco, which is something that we have already been doing for quite some time.
There are specific products.
Abhay, I think.
No answer.
I think it's a question of looking at how other companies, even very large companies, have a significant launch cost for new products. Once you study, I think this actually is a conservative number.
Okay. And sir, this is launch cost. In the future, it should basically moderate, right? That's the way we should look at it?
Which is what I said, is that we do not actually look at this as a cost. We look at this as an investment, and we expect this to further help us strengthen our specialty business.
Okay, sir, thank you. I have more questions. I'll join back with you. Thank you.
Thank you. Next question is from Damayanti Kerai from HSBC. Please go ahead.
Hi, thank you for the opportunity. My question is on Leqselvi. So now, what are the plans for launch of this product in the US? If you can give us some timeline there.
I think in the quarter two, we will be launching this product in the U.S.
Second quarter of this fiscal.
Yeah.
Okay. Okay. My second question is on your generic business in the US, where you mentioned there were some price pressure, etc. Two things. Has it worsened compared to recent quarter in the base portfolio? Also, if you can comment, in the fourth quarter, was REVLIMID a significant contributor?
I'll start with your latter question. I mean, REVLIMID's sales in Q4 were similar to Q3, and that was not very significant. On pricing, I think we have consistently said that it's a product-specific thing, and nothing which I can speak to on a generalized basis. So product-specific, we continue to see pressure on price.
Okay. Okay. It's product to product, and nothing we should read as part of the change in industry which might have happened on the pricing side.
There is not much which has changed as far as overall industry dynamics is concerned. Basically, it remains the same as what we have seen in the past.
Okay. Thank you again.
Thank you.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Neha Manpuria from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks for taking my question. Abhay, first question on the Checkpoint asset. What should we think about from a timeline perspective for the launch of the product? Will we first obviously, the deal needs to be completed. Will that be launched probably in the later part of the year?
I think we have to wait for the launch to, I mean, for the acquisition to go through all the clearances. Before that, it will not be fair to give an answer when we will launch. I think we will have to wait for the processes to get over before I am able to answer that question. Maybe on the next call, I will be able to.
Fair enough. That's clear. My second question is on the India business. We saw a fantastic growth this year given what the industry has been doing. Kirti Sir, when we think about next year, do we need to invest more in MR? Should the growth momentum that we've seen this year continue? Any color that we can provide on how we are thinking about the India business and the investments there?
Sure. No, no. What I mean, I have been telling for the last couple of calls, we want to grow higher than the market, and that's the effort we are continuously putting quarter after quarter. This year, our growth is at least 3%-4% higher than the market, and the growth is coming from volume and new product. I strongly believe we have a good base, and then the momentum should continue, but we can't predict what this growth will be in coming years. It's very difficult.
Any MR expansion plans for the growth?
No, it's like a strategic lever, what we said. Whenever we are done expansion, it has helped us to grow. Depending on the opportunity which may come, we will decide on the expansions.
Got it. Thank you so much.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Anubhav Agarwal from UBS Group. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, guys. One, just trying to understand this $100 million additional spend. It will be multiple areas that we'll be spending on, but just checking, is there a dominant part that you guys will be spending on? What I'm trying to ask is, you guys not being doing TV ads right now, would you start doing TV ads for the new one? Or how much of this, let's say roughly, is going in expanding the infrastructure on the ground, let's say more sales force versus more promotion? What will be a rough split of sales force expense versus the promotion expense out of this $100 million?
The products that we are talking about are niche areas, Anubhav. So they do not lend themselves to TV advertising clearly. The promotion will be more with the HCPs as well as the patient advocacy groups. Later on, as we evolve, we will keep evaluating what works best for the product.
Abhay, the spend will be largely more tilted towards the promotion rather than adding more people on the ground?
It will be a combination. There will be certain expenses related to optimizing the field force, looking at the target audience that we need to cover, and also looking at competitive dynamics and how the competitors are structured. That part will, of course, be the variable promo spend.
Understood. Just a last clarity on this in the line of the second question. This is largely for the new products, right? For the existing business, that's—
Sorry, sorry, I missed you. Can you repeat?
The question is, this $100 million spend is largely for the new products that we'll be launching, the two products that we'll be launching. The existing specialty business is on business as usual?
That's correct. This is only for the new launches.
Okay. That's helpful. Second question for Dilip Bhai. I'm just trying to understand one thing: that current manufacturing for the branded product is out. Sun doesn't manufacture directly, most of them, and gets them contract manufactured. Let's say the tariff, no one knows what numbers will come out or tariffs, but just trying to understand that how much—just as a process, how much time does it take if you need to shift manufacturing from outside US to US from one contract manufacturer to the other contract manufacturer? The question one is on time. Secondly, what's the harm in Sun Pharma already starting the process now, given what US wants to do it, etc.? In terms of doing it later versus doing it now as a backup mechanism, just your thoughts on that.
No, I think it's a good suggestion. You have to keep one thing in perspective: that ILUMYA is a biological, and transferring a biological product and giving the kind of quantities that we require is not something that is easy to identify a CDMO who can do that in the U.S. We are looking at—because it's not a question of where we do fill finish. We will have to manufacture the full product in the U.S., starting with the active substance.
Sorry, one part of the question was that if you were to do it, how much time does it take if you want to transfer the full product?
I think both cost and time. I think my view is that it will take at least two and a half, three years before the new source is approved by the agency. It costs a lot of money.
Okay. Thank you very much.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Shashank Krishnakumar from Emkay Global. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for taking my question. My first question was on ILUMYA. I think our partner in Europe has commercialized the 200 mg version there. Just wanted to understand the thought process and if we have plans to also sort of commercialize this in the U.S. market.
Abhay, you want to respond?
I think on the Europe part, you can answer. In the U.S., we are evaluating for refining and then subsequently launching the product, but it will take some time.
Got it. Secondly, on MM-II, I think we are past phase two, and I think we also have a fast-track designation here. Just wanted to understand why we are looking to sort of enter into a partnership to commercialize this. Is it largely because it doesn't fall within a broader Oncoderma framework, or why this pain to the commercialization strategy there?
No, I think your saying is right, is that it doesn't kind of fit immediately into a special, I mean, focus in the U.S. Because I think we've further strengthened our presence in the dermatology. We are continuing to look at opportunities in ophthalmology, so.
Got it. Thank you. That's it from me.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Vivek Agarwal from Citig roup. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. Sir, question is related to the launch seems to have been delayed by, I think.
Vivek, sorry to interrupt you. Your audio is not clear.
Sorry. The question is related to Leqselvi, the launch seems to have been delayed by three, four quarters because of the litigations, etc. Does anything change from this delay, let's say, your expectations from this competitive dynamic, or are your expectations from the product more or less the same, let's say you would have launched the product last year?
Okay. We still believe we have a competitive product. However, since the launch is delayed by, as you said, three quarters, I think the time to our expected peak will move a little, but I think the attempt of the team will be to try and make up for that lost time by increasing the focus on the product and the investment on the product to try and mitigate it to the extent that we can.
Thanks. Second question is related to the recent acquisition on the website.
If I was looking at some of the competitive products, right, the UNLOXCYT has a bit longer incision, around 60 minutes, do not have other indications, etc. While if you look at some of the other competing products like Libtayo well entrenched with the market, longer clinical history, wider indication. Just trying to understand why the prescribers would shift to the new therapy UNLOCYT, If you can help us understand. Thank you.
I mean, we are looking at the whole thing, while you're right that your competitors will have multiple indications, and we will end up with only one indication. That also means that we'll be able to give our attention and time to one single indication and try and be the best we can in the arena that we compete in. It helps us focus also better.
You can look at it either way. We look at it, of course, clearly that it helps us focus better. Also, do not forget in the same indication, or rather with the same customer group, we have two other products that we go to. We have similarity with the customer groups. Some, of course, will be new to us, but we understand the space, and that also helps.
Understood. Just a related question here. Although you did not launch the product yet, is pricing going to be one of the key differentiators? This is what I think Checkpoint also indicated earlier, that the product can be priced much lower compared to some of the other products that are in the market and can help a better market share question.
How do you expect me to answer a pricing question when I haven't even decided the time of launch exactly? The transaction is not yet completed.
Understood, sir. Thank you. Yeah. That's all my side.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Bino from Elara Capital. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good evening. First question on Leqselvi. The patent litigation, as I understand, is ongoing. To that extent, if we launch in coming second quarter, it would be sort of at risk of any damages if at all we lose the patent litigation. Am I right in thinking so?
Yeah, that's true.
Okay. Second, this $100 million additional spend that you would do, how should we look at it? You will have a normal selling SG&A expense on which you will have a normal increase, which happens every year. On top of that, there will be an additional $100 million. Is that the way we can model it?
That's correct. I think we don't want only the normal expenses. We want to understand that there are significant launch-related costs for these products, and it needs to be factored. We don't want to negatively surprise investors afterwards.
Good. Finally, there's a tax rate which has gone up significantly compared to the last few years at 19% this year, consolidated level. Is that a new range we should look at for tax, or is there some reason why it is high this year?
We have indicated earlier communications also that the tax rates continue to inch or go up, mainly due to this year. We have also said that the appreciation of the past losses we exhausted. That's one of the primary reasons for the increase in tax rate.
Okay. So practically, this is roughly the range that we should expect going forward. Okay. Thank you very much.
Oh, Bino, just one second. What I said is that it will inch up, I said, compared to last year. If you see, our full year was 16.6. This year is 19.8. That's because of the exponential tax losses. It could inch up from the current level.
Got it. Thank you very much.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Girish from Orbi Med. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for taking my question. Abhay, just going back to Checkpoint, actually. I know the transaction is yet to close, but what's the key difference between the competition, particularly Libtayo, for this asset?
I think broadly, our understanding is that in the class, it has possibly the safest side effect profile.
Okay. Dilip Bhai, if I just actually ask a very general question here, given this is PD-L1, others are PD-1. Is there a difference for clinicians? I don't know if it has been observed in a clinical setting or in other cancers. Does that give a material edge to your asset?
We believe it does.
Okay. Okay. That's helpful. Second question was on the psoriasis market. I mean, I know ILUMYA is going strong, but FY 2027-2028, given there'll be full steam Humira, full steam Stelara biosimilar, what's your thought on, let's say, three years down the line to this asset?
It's an evolving situation. We keep evaluating. Yeah, I mean, my expression, which you can't see, it's similar to Dilip Bhai, but whatever modeling we have done so far, there will be an impact, but we think it will be a small impact. The product can continue to be a growth driver in the existing therapy as well as with the new indication that we will get.
Would biosimilars, let's say, impact differently in a medical channel versus commercial, do you think?
It's a narrower competitive field. To that extent, it helps. How much is something that we need to continuously evaluate? Because there is only so much that you can estimate with a great degree of certainty.
Right. Abhay, do you have any number, like how much biosimilar transition should there be, let's say, three years down the line from both these products?
I mean, I can't have a number which I can share with you.
Fair enough. Thank you so much.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Tushar Manudhane from Motilal Oswal. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thanks for the opportunity, sir. Just with respect to, firstly, on the R&D spend guidance of 6%-8%, does this factor the R&D spend, additional or higher R&D spend on the existing projects, or are we building new projects for the R&D spend? That's my first question.
It does everything. It does not include transactions that we have not done. If there is a transaction that we do in future during the year, then that can change the guidance. This includes whatever that we have in the pipeline.
Got it. Secondly, with the growth in, let's say, branded markets of India, emerging markets, and the specialty, and at the same time, spending on the specialty product, how to think about the EBITDA growth compared to revenue growth for FY 2026?
I mean, generally, we don't give margin guidance. That is why, because we felt that analysts would not have clarity about increased cost of launching the product, we give a specific number which helps them model, but we don't give margin guidance.
Okay, sir. Thank you.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Anubhav Agarwal from UBS Group. Please go ahead.
Yes. Thank you. Just trying to understand the impact of new MFN laws on Sun Pharma here. Please help me understand if this is an important metric to look at. On the Medicare side, would they look at price difference between ILUMYA in the US and Ilumetri in Europe, and then try to compare the two and ask you guys to, let's say, match those prices? One, that's the first part of the question. Second, is there a material difference between the price of ILUMYA and Ilumetri?
No. I think we have to wait for greater clarity on finally how this, because as I read it, it is kind of currently at a voluntary level. So we have no idea as to how it plays out. We have to wait for greater clarity before we respond. To the question of the price difference between the US and Europe, I think all the branded products will have significant difference in the prices between US as well as Europe. I mean, this is not only our product, all the products. The only thing we have to keep in perspective is that, and for any reason, I do not understand, but stock prices of big pharma companies have not changed.
Just one technical clarity on this. Sun is selling ILUMYA in the US, but Sun technically is not selling in Europe. So does it?
There are many issues that go into it. Till the time we have clarity on finally how the law, because this is just a, what you call, guidance document without specific how it will be implemented and on what condition, what provision. If you see the IRA, when they wanted to implement, they gave a significant amount of time and very great level of detail as to how, what, what is negotiation, how it will be done. That level of clarity does not exist here.
Okay. Thank you, Dilip Bhai. Second question is on R&D. So I'm talking not on the specialty, but on the generic R&D here, on the non-specialty side. The absolute amount for Sun Pharma is large similarly in the last four years, somewhere about $230 million. Based on the focus of the company on the specialty side, how do you think about this absolute amount that the company is spending on the generic side? Would this absolute amount remain flattish, go down from here because the focus on generic is reducing as well as opportunities in the market are reducing?
I mean, generally, I have said that there would be increase in the specialty R&D. However, since we spend money as a percentage of our turnover, I am not expecting the absolute money spent on R&D for generics to go down.
Okay. Can I ask one more question? I just ran by my field.
Yeah. Okay.
One question is about cash. The company is carrying $3 billion cash within and almost generating more than $1 billion free cash flow. All the acquisitions that you made so far in the last few years, they were less than the free cash flow companies were generating. You are not using the cash pile. Just trying to understand here, what is eventual use? Someday, you will end up doing a very large acquisition, so you will use the cash. Otherwise, your free cash flow is so large that you are not acquiring to that extent.
No, I think we've always consistently maintained that we continue to look at acquisitions, which will help us create value. Because any business that we acquire, we should be able to run it significantly better than the current owners, or we should have significant potential synergies. Otherwise, it will not justify the acquisition premium.
Would you be looking out for a large acquisition at some point of time? Not the timeline, but if you get an opportunity like that, even if it's a large platform, you would be able to.
Yeah. I mean, with our NVAXE experience, we will also look at our ability to manage. Because anything that we do, we should then be able to manage and manage it well. Size is not something which would kind of put us off. We are open to do it. More important, it has to be strategic and multiple other what I would call checklist it needs to go through.
Sure. Thank you very much for your responses.
Thank you. Participants, you're going to press star and one to ask the question. Next question is from the line of Kunal Dhamesha from the Macquarie Group. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for the opportunity again. A couple of questions on UNLOXCYT. Abhay, would you say that ILUMYA's current prominent sales channel in the US could also be the primary channel for UNLOXCYT?
Sorry, I'm not clear on the question. ILUMYA and UNLOXCYT are in two different spaces.
Right. But the payer channel, let's say there are payer channels like Medicare Part B, commercial, Medicaid, right? Would you say that ILUMYA's prominent channel could also be the UNLOXCYT's primary channel for sale, given the.
There could be some overlap, since I would not want to characterize it as a same channel at all because it will be a combination. There is a buy-and-bill component that is where you are going, but that will not be the only one.
Sure. Sure. And secondly, since we have Levolin in the portfolio, which is for actinic keratosis, which is a precursor condition for the squamous cell carcinoma, do you think does that also help us synergistically identify patients versus maybe competition?
Which is what I said when I answered the prior question by another of your peers. Understanding the space and knowing the customers and the condition will help us definitely. That is why we are looking at more products in that space to strengthen our franchise as a whole.
Sure. Thank you and all the best.
Thank you.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Saion Mukherjee from Nomura. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Good evening, sir. One question I have on the specialty pipeline. This is regarding SCD-044 for atopic dermatitis and psoriasis. Are we expecting the top-line data, which is mentioned as first half of this calendar year? That means in the next one month or so?
Sorry, which product? SCD-044.
SCD-044.
Yes. That's right.
Okay. My second question would be on R&D spend. Assuming this data is good and you want to start the phase three, when do you expect phase three trials for this product to start? Have you sort of factored that sort of expense for phase three in the R&D guidance for fiscal 2026, or you think that comes up in fiscal 2027?
You're talking now, continue to talk of SCD-044?
Yeah. That's right, sir. I mean, assuming, I mean, once we get the data.
I think as a process, what we've done is we've been in, what you call it, evaluated all potential studies that we will either we have ongoing or which we will start during the year and how much we can spend during the year as a part of the guidance.
All right, sir. Just, I mean, are these phase three studies very expensive? I mean, can you give some color? Or if you can give some idea about the quantum of spend if you have to do phase three studies for these assets?
No, these are, I mean, general answer would be these are long studies and expensive studies. Specific number till we have the negotiate because we have to power the study. For that, we have to understand the phase two data with a view to understand how to power. All of that will help us in designing the study and that. Till we have that clarity, we will not, we would have taken some indicative number for all potential studies which are likely to be started. Some of them will be, and that is the reason why we have this 6%-8% guidance.
Got it, sir. Okay. Thank you.
Saion, do you have any follow-up question?
No, I'm done. Thank you.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Vivek Agarwal from Citig roup. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. Now, if you look at the current U.S. administration is talking and also focusing a lot on reducing the role of middlemen, CDMOs, etc. How do you see this move? Do you see improvement in access of some of the products like ILUMYA, CEQUA, etc., where still I think there's a lot of scope as far as the improvement in commercial segment? Thank you.
I think the answer will be similar to what Mr. Shanghvi answered when it comes to MFN. There are no specifics at this moment. So on the ground, no changes.
Understood, sir. Thank you. That's all my part.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Kunal Lakhan from CLSA. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks. Good evening. Just on the MFN again, I know you said there's no clarity there on how it will be implemented. Just in the event that it does get implemented, what proportion of the U.S. business would be impacted by this? Will it be the entire U.S. specialty portfolio or some part of it?
I mean, there is no clarity on whether it will apply to Medicare, Medicaid, or it will apply to commercial. When there is no clarity, how can we give any idea?
Okay. All right.
I mean, there is a statement if you say which says that patient can get access. I don't know how a patient will get access. Still, there is a method by which a patient can claim reimbursement from the insurance company because doctors have a way by which they can claim reimbursement for products in the formulary. How will this process work? There has to be some clarity.
Understood, sir. On the investment option for this launch of new products, what would this number have been in FY 2025?
We are guiding for extra cost.
I get it. But is there a similar number in FY 2025 that was embedded which you have not separately indicated?
No, we didn't launch any important product last year.
Sure. Understood. Also, any color on or any expectation that you have on the tariff side, where those discussions are heading?
We have no idea. I think we have to wait for clarity to emerge.
All right. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you. Next follow-up question is from the line of Damayanti Kerai from HSBC. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you for the opportunity again. My question is for ILUMYA for psoriatic arthritis indication. In your release, it mentioned top-line data expected in second half of this calendar year. I just want to check. Earlier, you mentioned there were some delays in patient recruitment, etc. Have all those been covered, and you are now on track to release data?
Yeah. That's the disclosure. Correct.
Okay. And.
Yeah. It's only if you see it took a long, long time. From a typical phase three study, we should have done this much earlier.
Okay. And this data, will that be sufficient for you to file to the US FDA for this indication?
Yeah. That's the idea.
Okay. Okay. That's helpful. My second question is on emerging markets. Again, the business is above $1 billion. Can you comment on its profitability? How does it look compared to the corporate average?
I mean, what is the question?
I just want to understand the profitability profile of your emerging market business in comparison to the corporate margin labels. How does it look? Better, lower, or broadly on par?
No, I think it's a very profitable business.
Okay. You have a few big markets which you read out in your comment earlier. Those are the focus markets for you, or do you have plan to look into some newer markets as well?
No, those are the we have one or two additional focus markets, but otherwise, these are the major markets.
Okay. Thank you. That's helpful.
Thank you.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Kunal Dhamesha from My Macquarie Group. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you for the opportunity again. Just one on the Nidlegy, after AminoR48 with the Checkpoint, is there any change in thinking about this product for the U.S. market? Because it kind of fills the gap on the melanoma skin cancer.
No, I think we are evaluating its attractiveness for the US because they are doing two separate studies, one for Europe and one for US, with different timelines.
One follow-up question on the ILUMYA pricing, where you suggested that any branded product, the pricing in the US would be higher than the other developed markets. Let's say average out-of-pocket cost for ILUMYA in the US would be meaningfully lower than the other developed market prices for ILUMYA, or out-of-pocket cost would be higher than the other developed market prices for ILUMYA?
Your question is whether out-of-pocket in the US is higher than the market price of the other countries, or what is the question?
Yes. That is the question.
How can that be? There will be no sale in case if people have to pay that kind of money in the U.S. However, I think you can clarify, but that's my understanding.
I mean, it cannot be in the U.S.
Except an uninsured patient, that kind of money, nobody pays out of pocket. Otherwise, for a particular product, that is the scenario. When doctors and physicians switch to something else.
Sure. Sure. Then practically, MFN in its current form is only for uninsured patients, is what we can conclude, right?
No, we can't conclude anything. I think that's the reason. I think let's not try to read more than what it is. I think there will be greater clarity as time progresses.
Sure. Sure. Thank you, sir. Thank you.
Sure.
Thank you. Next follow-up question is from the line of Tushar Manudhane from Motilal Oswal. Please go ahead.
Thanks for the opportunity again. Just with respect to this, the charge of $37 million with respect to national prescription opiate litigation. Is that what the overall amount will be paid, or is there something more to be done in the coming quarters?
This is the substantial amount that has been provided on the books.
Okay. If you could just clarify this $11 million, while small amount, but still that has gone for the integration and restructuring of operations in the US, if you could just elaborate a bit on this.
$11 million, you're talking about the exceptional item? That is regarding the Taro and concert integration related expenses .
Okay. Okay. Thank you, sir. That's it. Thanks.
Thank you. Thank you. Next question is from the line of Dhawal from Jefferies India. Please go ahead.
Hi, sir. Thank you for taking my question. Just wanted to check on UNLOXCYT. Does Keytruda patent expiry in coming years, will that significantly impact the market dynamics once that event occurs? That's the first question. Second, on the guidance, for past several years, we have done high single to low double digit. For this year, it's lower than what we have done. India, clearly, we have sort of we are doing well, and we are looking to outperform the market. It kind of indicates that there's a slowdown in the global specialty or the ROW and EM markets. Would that be the correct interpretation?
No, I think the correct interpretation is high level of global uncertainty. Because today, if you look at currency fluctuations of rates in different geographies, it's very difficult to predict. We disclose part of it in constant currency growth, which sometimes is significantly different from actual growth that financially we are able to show. I think overall, we are operating from a view that businesses are well-positioned to continue to grow.
Dhawal, do you have any follow-up question?
I think, Abhay, would you answer about Keytruda and UNLOXCYT? What will be the impact?
Yes, sure. I mean, what I would say is that our indication is only one of the indications for Keytruda. In acquiring the product and building up our business skills, the patent expiry of the competition has been factored in. We still feel that the product can become a meaningful contributor to our specialty business in the U.S.
Thank you.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Saion Mukherjee from Nomura. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thanks for the follow-up. Is there any update on Mohali and Halol's side as far as FDA issues are concerned? Have the supplies from Mohali completely normal at this point?
I think we've disclosed that we've requested FDA to audit Alone. They have to decide. I think most likely this may be a surprise audit. We don't know when they are likely to audit. Mohali, as well as Dhadra, I think we have not yet requested them because some of the ongoing remediation, they have to be completed, our view, so that we can then request for an audit. When we will do that, we will disclose.
Invited, sir. My second question on the specialty product FibroMone for soft tissue sarcoma and glioblastoma, can you give us some timeline as to what we should sort of look forward to over the course of the next year or next two years? What are the key milestones and timeline around that?
At this point, I don't want to give something this, but I understand that there is an interest in trying to get a greater clarity. We will try and see what we can share.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Vishal from Systematix Group. Please go ahead.
Good evening, and thanks for the opportunity. On MM-II, wanted to understand whether this is a device or a drug, and what would be the phase three timeline, like how long that can take for it to be commercialized?
No, it is treated as a drug in many geographies. In Europe, it is treated as a device. The typical timeline would depend on what kind of studies the regulator will ask and whether there would be a requirement at least to cover a large number of subjects. It is all a function of finalizing the protocol with the agency to decide on the time required for completing the study.
Assuming if this is, as you said, it's a device for European regulators, does that mean the size of the trial can be lower or the duration of the trial can be lower? Or that doesn't matter?
No, size of the trial would be lower in case if it's treated as a device. I think our interest would be to register it as a—I mean, my understanding is that the product attractiveness comes on if it's approved as a drug in some of the geographies.
Okay. And just one final one. On Semaglutide, would we look to commercialize that in our focus emerging markets?
Yeah, I think that's the plan.
Thank you. That's all from me.
Thank you.
Thank you. Next question is from Vivek Agarwal from Citig roup. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks. Most of the questions have been answered. Just on generic business, in FY 2025, we have seen a decline. How to see the generic business panning out in 2026 to still affect to grow this business in 2026? Thank you.
I think when we are able to get our launch in compliance, that will help in gradually improving the profile of the generic business.
Yeah, but otherwise, our overall guidance is factoring all the potential for all our businesses.
Understood, sir. On revenue side, the product was not there in this—not significant in this quarter, previous quarter. Do you expect this product to reflect in some of the upcoming quarter, or is it more or less done for you?
No, I think it is included like what I said in our overall guidance.
Okay, sir. Thank you. That's from my side.
Thank you.
Thank you. Next question is from the line of Madhav from Fidelity International. Please go ahead.
Hi. First question is on the CS group guidance. I think you all said the mid-single digit to high single digits. We're being a bit conservative because of global uncertainty, and it seemed like it was linked more to the forex volatility potentially that may happen. Is that what we are referring to, or is it some other uncertainty that we are referring to?
No, I think so many open issues. If you see FDFN, if you see tariffs, you see fluctuations in global currency rate fluctuations. All of that, I think it's better to be realistic about our ability to manage and our getting impacted by things which are not in our control. Our effort is not to kind of get into a situation where we give justification of what we can't achieve.
Like you yourself mentioned that on the tariff, MFN, there is actually lack of clarity. I don't think anybody knows how it finally comes in. This seems like we've been just conservative rather than knowing any actual impact, right? Is that how we should think about it?
No, I think what you should think is that it is wise at this point of time not to take a stretch objective.
Okay. Got it. I thought the second question was just on the $100 million spend for the new specialty launch in FY 2026. Given it seems like it's more of a launch expense, is this something which is a recurring expense, or this is the kind of spend we usually have when we launch the product and then it reduces, or this is going to be more of a recurring expense in the future years as the product scales up?
Abhay, can you respond, or?
I think you have to look at it in two ways. The year also will be a partial year for launch of the two products. Some are very initial upfront expenses, and some will be recurring. Now, I have not done the budgeting for next year, so I do not know how it will shape up. Any launch will have an upfront and then a certain recurring also. For example, if you take a field course, if I have X number of people, that is a recurring expense. For the year, it will be only reflected partially. It is a combination. How the next year will shape up, I think we will give probably a new number when we reach that stage if there is a requirement.
I think specifically this $100 million, we are calling out so that it can go into your factoring, your modeling, because it is not something that we have seen in the past.
The expense is related not to the sales force, but I think you mentioned FCP and patient advocacy group related spend, so.
What I said was it's a combination of all of them.
Combination. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Understood. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. As there are no further questions, I will now hand the conference over to Dr. Abhishek Sharma for closing comments.
Before we conclude the call, we would like to share an organizational update. Ms. Jayashree Satagopan has joined Sun Pharma and will assume her role as Global Chief Financial Officer effective from 1st of July. Concurrently, Mr. C. S. Muralidharan will be superannuating from this role. On this occasion, we extend our sincere appreciation to Mr. Muralidharan for his unwavering commitment and distinguished leadership throughout his tenure with Sun Pharma. Thank you and have a good day.
Thank you very much. On behalf of Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.