Fisher & Paykel Healthcare Corporation Limited (NZE:FPH)
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35.72
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Apr 28, 2026, 5:00 PM NZST
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Earnings Call: H1 2026

Nov 25, 2025

Operator

Please note this conference call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Marcus Driller, VP Corporate.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thank you, Lisa. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the conference call for Fisher & Paykel Healthcare's first half results for the 2026 financial year. On the call today are Lewis Gradon, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer; Lyndal York, Chief Financial Officer; Andy Niccol, Chief Operating Officer; Justin Callahan, VP Sales and Marketing; and Andrew Somerville, VP of Products and Technology. Lewis and Lyndal will first provide an overview of the results, and then we'll move on to questions. We'll be discussing our results for the six-month period ended 30 September 2025. Earlier today, we provided our 2026 interim report, including financial statements and commentary on our results to the NZX and ASX. These disclosures can be accessed on our website. With that, I'd now like to turn the call over to Lewis.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Okay, and thank you, Marcus. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us here this morning. I'm going to be referring to the investor presentation pack that we released to the NZX and the ASX earlier today. We will start on page two with a recap of some of the recent highlights. I'm pleased to note that the company has achieved NZD 1 billion in first half revenue for the first time, and we really appreciate the contributions of our people right around the world during this half. Thank you, everyone. We continue to roll out our latest Nova Nasal OSA mask during the period, and this is now available in New Zealand, Australia, and major markets in Europe. At our investor event in Royal Melbourne Hospital in Australia this year, we showcased the complexity involved in how clinical practice changes.

One way we contribute to that journey is hosting clinical forums, and that's where interested healthcare professionals can get together, compare their clinical practice, compare their results with clinical data, and the clinical practice guidelines. Over the last half, we hosted over 100 of these forums globally. Our US team was honored to be recognized with a Zenith Award from the American Association for Respiratory Care, and we got the construction of our fifth building at our East Tamaki campus here in Auckland, New Zealand, underway, and they're making good progress as we speak. Turn now to page three. Operating revenue for the first half was NZD 1.089 billion, up 14% on the prior period, or that's 12% in constant currency terms. Net profit after tax was NZD 213 million, and that's up 39% on the prior period, or 28% in constant currency.

Lyndal's going to unpack the financial results in more detail shortly. We'll move on to the hospital product group on page five. Operating revenue was NZD 692 million. That's up 17% on the first half last year, or 15% in constant currency, and that's come from a broad-based strength right across the hospital consumer business. New applications consumers' revenue was up 18%, or 16% in constant currency, and when we consider the robust growth that we're lapping from the first half last year, we think this result probably does reflect a consistent ongoing change in clinical practice. Hospital hardware revenue grew 21% in constant currency, and as you will know, hardware revenue can be quite variable on a month-to-month basis, and we do anticipate that the full-year hardware result will probably moderate down from this first half-year result. Turn now to page seven for home care.

Home care operating revenue was NZD 396 million, up 10% on our first half last year, or 8% in constant currency. OSA mask growth was 8%, or 6% in constant currency. Our latest range of OSA masks has performed well, and the Solo range and the Nova Micro range are available in most major markets, and as I mentioned earlier, our Nova Nasal is in the early stages of its rollout, with a U.S. launch planned for later in our second half. Our home care result also has a strong contribution from OSA hardware growth, which we're not expecting to repeat in the second half, and if anything, we feel it might be a pull forward of demand from the second half. I'll pause there for now and hand over to Lyndal.

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Lewis, and good morning, everyone. On page eight, our gross margin was 63% for the half. This is an increase of 110 basis points, or 60 basis points in constant currency, over the same period last year. The range of margin improvement efforts across our business, including manufacturing efficiency and other efficiency gains, continued making a positive impact. U.S. tariffs on hospital products sourced from New Zealand impacted our gross margins by 32 basis points in this half. If the current global tariffs remain in effect as they currently are, our gross margin would be impacted by approximately 130 basis points on an annualized basis, with approximately 75 basis points impacting in the 2026 full financial year.

Our ongoing improvement efforts are anticipated to more than offset this, to provide an overall gross margin improvement for the full-year FY 2026 of roughly 50 basis points in both constant currency and reported currency using end-of-October exchange rates. Moving on to page nine, total operating expenses grew 8%, or 6% in constant currency, compared to the prior period. This reflects the higher investment made over the last few years and modest increase in people in the last financial year. Operating margin was 26.3% for the half, an increase of 335 basis points, or 296 basis points in constant currency over the same period last year. This reflects the improvement in gross margin as well as our operating expenses growing below revenue growth. R&D expenses grew 4% to NZD 114 million and were 10% of revenue for the half.

We continue to estimate that about 60% of our R&D spend is eligible for the 15% R&D tax credit. SG&A expenses were NZD 285.5 million this half, an increase of 10%, or 7% in constant currency. Moving to page ten, operating cash flow this half was NZD 245.8 million, up 5% from last year. Tax payments this half of NZD 119.6 million were up from NZD 53.8 million in the same period last year. Capital expenditure, which includes purchases of intangible assets, was NZD 61.8 million for the half, up from NZD 55.1 million in the same period last year. This includes the progress on the construction of the fifth building at our East Tamaki campus in New Zealand. Capital expenditure for the full 2026 financial year is expected to be approximately NZD 210 million. Within this is around NZD 125 million on land and buildings, including the next payment on our Karaka land purchase.

Looking at the balance sheet, debtor days were largely in line with last year at 43 days. Net cash at the 30th of September 2025 was NZD 237.8 million, and our gearing ratio was -13.5%. Interest-bearing borrowings were NZD 55 million, all of it being current. Turning to page 11, we have declared a fully imputed interim dividend of NZD 0.19 per share. This represents a 52% payout of our first half profit and is an increase on the interim dividend declared last year. It will be paid on the 16th of December. Looking now at foreign currency on page 12, foreign currency movements positively impacted our net profit after tax by NZD 19 million compared to the same period last year. This largely reflects the movements in spot rates and hedging results when compared to the same period last year.

In this half, hedging losses were NZD 6.2 million after tax, and foreign exchange losses on balance sheet translations were NZD 1 million after tax. At end-of-October rates, we would have an overall positive impact on net profit after tax of approximately NZD 10-15 million for the full financial year FY 2026 when compared to the full financial year FY 2025. This includes hedging losses in FY 2026 of NZD 20 million after tax and losses on balance sheet translations of about NZD 500,000 after tax for the full 2026 financial year. Now, back over to you, Lewis.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Okay, thanks, Lyndal. Turning now to our outlook on page 13. At 31 October exchange rates, we now expect full-year operating revenue to be in the range of approximately NZD 2.17 billion-NZD 2.27 billion, and net profit after tax to be in the range of approximately NZD 410 million-NZD 460 million. This revenue guidance revision is driven by currency movements since our last update in August. Our hospital consumables second half growth can be influenced by year-on-year variations in the northern hemisphere winter respiratory season, and we do not have any additional insights into that potential impact at present. The available data does indicate that last winter was a historically strong season, and a similar season this year would be pushing our result towards the top end of our guidance. Conversely, a lower season would be tending to push us towards the lower end of guidance.

Net profit after tax guidance incorporates this FX-driven revenue update, a 75 basis point impact to gross margin due to tariffs, good progress on gross margin improvements achieved during the first half, and maintaining our operating expense growth below our long-term aspirational revenue growth. I'll end my remarks there so that we can open the line to questions.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Lewis. Lisa, if I could ask you to please open up the lines for questions, and can I please ask everybody to limit your questions to two? This is to ensure that everybody has an opportunity to participate, and then you can rejoin the queue for any additional questions.

Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. If you wish to register a question, please press star followed by one on your phone, and if you wish to cancel your registration, you may remove yourself from the queue by pressing star followed by two on your phone.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Okay, so the first question comes from the line of Lyanne Harrison at B of A . Please go ahead, Lyanne.

Lyanne Harrison
Healthcare Equities Analyst, Bank of America

Hi, good morning, Lewis. Good morning, Lyndal. Congratulations on hitting that NZD 1 billion revenue for the first half. I might start with guidance and a question for Lyndal. I know you mentioned that FX is driving that increase or upgrade in guidance that you provided today, but for the NPAT level, you mentioned FX tailwinds of about NZD 10-NZD 15 million, but from a guidance perspective, your range increased by about NZD 20 million. Can you talk to what else might be in that?

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Yeah, Lyanne, that's sort of what Lewis mentioned in terms of the gross margin improvement activities continuing on through the second half and growing our operating expenses below that long-term revenue aspiration to aim for some continued modest growth there.

Lyanne Harrison
Healthcare Equities Analyst, Bank of America

Okay, and then on the gross margin, can you talk a little bit more? Obviously, got very good gross margin expansion this half on a constant currency basis. Can you talk about what aspects contributed most to that gross margin expansion?

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Yeah, look, it's really everything that we do in the business. We've been back to sort of business as usual across our business with everything playing a role there. It's our manufacturing teams getting the manufacturing efficiencies, doing all their continuous improvement projects, getting really strong improvement out of that, a bit of pricing through the sales team that we typically get, and just sort of all of that playing a role into the gross margin improvement. As we anticipate, pre-COVID, we're able to improve gross margin about 100-150 basis points on average per year, and we're sort of delivering that.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Maybe one other little bit of color, Lyanne, the complexity in that answer is in the operations and manufacturing space. Typically, that's over 3,000 improvement projects per year, all individually relatively small, but all adding up.

Lyanne Harrison
Healthcare Equities Analyst, Bank of America

Great, thank you very much. I'll leave it there. That's very helpful.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Lyanne. Next question comes from Dan Hurren at MST .

Dan Hurren
Healthcare Analyst, MST

Oh, good morning, everyone. Thanks very much. Look, thanks for the guidance on the tariff impact and that color there, but I was hoping you could help us understand how that tariff experience is playing out on the ground with price efficiencies.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

I'm sure, Dan. We're thinking of it as just another cost, just like all other costs, and it's in the bag of just business as usual costs. We're running the business as we normally would. We're running our continuous improvement projects as we normally would. Today, I'd say really no material impact on the ground at all.

Dan Hurren
Healthcare Analyst, MST

Look, a follow-up then. If you have a look around, it appears that Fisher & Paykel Healthcare have probably been more gentle on price compared to other tariff-impacted companies in broadly the same channel. Is there potential that price becomes more of a lever over time as the world gets used to these tariffs?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Could look at that two ways, Dan. I mean, we've got wonderful opportunities with every single customer we have to improve clinical practice. We don't have a single hospital anywhere in the world, let alone the United States, that's fully penetrated using all of our therapies for every patient they could. We think we get a much better result spending our time talking about improving clinical practice, improving care and outcomes. We think that gives us a better result in the short term and the long term, gives the customers a better result. That's where our focus is at present.

Dan Hurren
Healthcare Analyst, MST

Okay, thanks, Lewis.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Dan. Next questions come from Stephen Ridgewell at Craigs Investment Partners.

Stephen Ridgewell
Senior Research Analyst, Craigs Investment Partners

Yeah, good morning and great result, guys. Well done. Just had a couple of questions on the hospital business performance, particularly during the first half and perhaps what you're seeing going to the second half. Hospital devices were a standout with constant currency growth of 21% in the period. I recall back in May, I think the indication was you weren't expecting too much from Airvo 3 or the Airvo 3 NIV in terms of being a material driver. I'm just wondering, with that 21% growth we've seen, does that include a strong contribution from those products or otherwise could you just give us a little bit of color as to perhaps what's driven that strong result from hospital devices in the first half, please?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Yeah, sure. First caveat, Stephen, is if you've been following us for more than a year or two, you've seen that that hospital hardware result's very lumpy. It can be lumpy year on year, certainly lumpy half on half. Kind of where we're going with that first half result, I mean, it's a great result, 21%. Looks like a very positive lump. We would not be surprised if it's followed by a negative lump for our second half and kind of reverting to more traditional growth for the full year. In fact, that would be our pick. The contribution, very consistently in our business, pretty much forever, is a mixture from one generation of product to the previous one. Right now, you're seeing that from 850 hardware to 950 hardware, and you're seeing that from Airvo 2 to Airvo 3. That's certainly a contributor.

Probably not much more than normal would be my pick. It's always happening.

Stephen Ridgewell
Senior Research Analyst, Craigs Investment Partners

Sorry, just a follow-up to that. I mean, have you seen within that 21% more of a tilt towards growth from the Airvo product suite or pretty consistent with the humidifier controllers?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

I'd go for consistent out of that choice. I mean, there are different stages, there are different evolutions, but nothing unusual, mate.

Stephen Ridgewell
Senior Research Analyst, Craigs Investment Partners

Okay, all good. The second question is still in the hospital business. Again, probably another surprise versus where the market was at was on kind of core consumables, which have come in, again, a bit stronger, which given I know it's not a period of the year where the respiratory data has a big influence, but we've sort of seen 9% constant currency growth in core. Just curious, is that sort of more market share gains? Have you entered some new markets or won some contracts? Just a bit of color there would be helpful to understand. Is that growth sustainable into the second half in the core consumables business?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Yeah, so what we think is going on there is during COVID, an awful lot of these fully functional ventilators went out that could do invasive, noninvasive, and nasal high flow. We think over time, people are using those ventilators across the range, and they're using them for noninvasive and nasal high flow in some markets. That does mean that then for us, it looks like they're using an invasive circuit. We think some of the noninvasive, shall we say, growth, and maybe even a little bit of the Optiflow nasal high flow growth in circuits, a little bit sleeped into what looks to us and looks to you like that traditional consumables or invasive consumables.

Stephen Ridgewell
Senior Research Analyst, Craigs Investment Partners

Great, that's all from me. Thank you.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Stephen. Next questions come from Davin Thillainathan at Goldman Sachs.

Davin Thillainathan
Healthcare Equity Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Yes, thanks, Marcus. Morning, team. Just want to understand the guidance upgrade for the full year a little bit better. Just want to make sure we understand the moving parts here. Part of it is clearly FX that is helping, but if I look at your first half result, you have come ahead of your guidance for the half, clearly indicating there's underlying momentum in the business because my understanding is your FX for the half hasn't really changed relative to when you set that guidance. Could you help us understand where the business outperformed in the half and perhaps why you don't expect that outperformance to flow through for the full year if my understanding is right that your guidance upgrade is largely FX-driven? Thank you.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Absolutely right and good question. Thank you. There are two components to that. The first one is hospital hardware, which we kind of just spoke to. It's quite lumpy. That performed pretty well in the last couple of months, and we think probably doesn't flow into H2 like that. In fact, maybe even goes the other way. The other one is also hardware, but OSA hardware. This is CPAP machines where we've had a customer in a market where 3G is being turned off accelerate the CPAP replacement cycle. That's in our home care result. Once again, that hardware's probably come out of the second half.

Davin Thillainathan
Healthcare Equity Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Okay. Then thinking about the consumables part of your business in the hospital segment, there's a whole range of new products that have, I guess, been released progressively over the last few years. One particular sort of therapy that seems to be getting a bit more attention from a product launch perspective is in the NIV part of your franchise. Could you perhaps help us understand that a little bit better? How does NIV sort of help the business, particularly given you are focused on changing clinical practice with the high flow part of it? Perhaps just the overlap between those therapies and how you expect that part of the franchise to grow over the next few periods. Thanks.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Sure. I think overall, we are building a respiratory care business that covers all respiratory care applications and usages in the hospital, whatever the requirement and wherever the patient is. NIV plays a role in that. The leading clinical change in that space is nasal high flow for respiratory support, but another component of that is more and more usage of NIV, and another component of that is humidified NIV. Probably still less than 20% of the market would be humidifying NIV. The way we tend to think of it is our driver is a change in clinical practice towards nasal high flow. Once a customer is using that therapy to some extent, it makes a lot more sense for them to move to humidification and non-invasive therapy as well, or to move to our non-invasive therapy offering.

We see it as kind of following along behind the change in clinical practice.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks for your questions, Devin. Next questions come from the line of Vanessa Thomson at Jefferies.

Vannessa Thomson
Healthcare Analyst, Jefferies

Morning. Thanks very much for taking my question. I just wanted to ask about the respiratory season. You mentioned that last year it looked like it was a strong season. I think when we look at all respiratory illness combined, my understanding was it looked moderate. Is that wrong, or is it that flu requires more support, introducing more of your products than the other viruses? Thank you.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

I'd kind of like to restate that if you don't mind. Our assessment of last year, second half, was that was the biggest flu season data in 15 years. We think that was the biggie. You've got a COVID component and other components in there. Over time, you'd expect COVID to probably be coming down. We've kind of moved away from classifying them as high, moderate, and low, and all that kind of thing. It's just too murky. What we've done last year, what we're trying to do this year, is really just confine our analysis to this year versus last year and not categorize them. We've just found it too confusing. When we go down that route, last year, H2, had biggest flu season in 15 years. COVID was still relatively material.

Vannessa Thomson
Healthcare Analyst, Jefferies

Okay. Thank you. Okay. Then my second question, just wanted to ask if you had seen any impacts from the shutdown. I think it was around six weeks, and we've seen some of the distributor companies talk to some slowdown. I wondered if that had affected you at all. Thank you.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Shutdown. I would say I'm looking around the room, not from hospitals, not from FDA, not from reimbursement. We're all shaking our heads on that one.

Vannessa Thomson
Healthcare Analyst, Jefferies

Okay. Thank you.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Vanessa. Next questions come from Matt Montgomerie at Forsyth Barr.

Matt Montgomerie
Senior Equity Analyst, Forsyth Barr

Hi guys. Good morning. Well done on a solid result. Just on home care for the second half, I was wondering if you could give us a feel for where you see growth rates. Would that be roughly consistent with the first half?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

I think probably the case for us is you'd expect a similar result to the first half under similar conditions, certainly for masks. I've spoken to the hardware component of that. We think our first half growth's probably come out of the second half.

Matt Montgomerie
Senior Equity Analyst, Forsyth Barr

Thanks, that's useful. Secondly, on the anesthesia business, are you able to give us color for where that's at in terms of growth or as a share of new apps in the first half?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Growth's still pretty solid. It's still got a 40% odd, something like that, off that low base. That low base has become a bit over 10% of new apps consumables this half.

Matt Montgomerie
Senior Equity Analyst, Forsyth Barr

Thanks.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Matt. Next questions come from Craig Wong-Pan at RBC.

Craig Wong-Pan
Director and Equity Research, RBC

Thanks and good morning. Just looking at the full year guidance ranges, if I look at what that implies for the second half growth, I calculate the midpoint would imply 6% revenue growth, but actually NPAT declining by 1% in the second half. Just wanted to understand, is there anything we should be aware of in thinking about NPAT, either in the PCP or in this coming second half, to explain why there might be a decline in NPAT?

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

I'll take that. It's really a case of the revenue that Lewis has spoken about, the hardware likely coming back from the second half into the first half. Margin, we're still expecting improvements, but we get the full half of impact of tariffs in the second half, so there's quite a headwind related to that. OpEx still managing to grow that below our long-term revenue aspiration. What that ends up being will depend on where we land from a revenue perspective.

Craig Wong-Pan
Director and Equity Research, RBC

Okay, thanks. That's helpful. I just wanted to understand the clinical forums. I mean, Lewis, you called out 100 hosted events this kind of period. Just trying to understand, is that sort of a similar level to usual, or is this going to be something kind of going forward to help you change clinical practice?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Our business is based on a change in clinical practice. That's what we do for a living. It's pretty much what we've always done, and it's relatively unique in our space. It's a relatively unique thing to be doing. We had an investor day in a hospital in Melbourne earlier this year, and we went through some of the complexities in changing clinical practice. What I thought I'd do this time is just following up on that theme, giving people more of an understanding of what changing in clinical practice, what that really means. I'd follow up with giving you some insight into the forums that we run. Now, having said all that, that is actually pretty normal to us. We generally do over 100 once every half.

Craig Wong-Pan
Director and Equity Research, RBC

Right. Okay. Thank you.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Just trying to give some insight to that whole process.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Craig. Next questions come from Saul Hadassin at Barrenjoey.

Saul Hadassin
VP and Equity Analyst, Barrenjoey

Yeah, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. First one is on OpEx. I think at the full year 2025 results, the guidance was for around 10% growth in operating costs in FY 2026. Clearly, it's a lot lower in the first half. Maybe Lyndal, just if you can talk about where you think OpEx growth will land for the full year and what's embedded in that impact guidance range.

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Yeah, look, probably sort of high single-digit growth would be anticipating for the full year in OpEx.

Saul Hadassin
VP and Equity Analyst, Barrenjoey

Okay, thank you. Lewis, just your comments about sort of pull forward of sales on home care, flow generators, but also that commentary around hospital hardware. You've had two months almost of the second half. Can you comment on what you're actually seeing on the ground in terms of those hardware sales? Is that what is giving you the guide as it relates to second half? Is it what you're already seeing, or is that just still effectively an estimate, and you don't actually have insights yet into second half performance?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

It's just an estimate. I mean, when we look at our hospital hardware numbers on a six-monthly basis, you can see they're pretty lumpy. There's nothing to read into it. On a month or two, I wouldn't read much into it. I guess our pick is we probably wouldn't expect to see that first half again in the second half, that kind of volume.

Saul Hadassin
VP and Equity Analyst, Barrenjoey

Great. Thank you. That's all I had.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Saul. Next questions come from Marcus Curley at UBS.

Marcus Curley
Managing Director and Co-Head of ANZ Research, UBS

Good morning. Just on the home care business, you reported 6% in masks. It's probably a touch below market. Could you just talk a little bit about what you think is happening there? Maybe it reflects weakness in the full face category again. Just some color would be useful.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Okay, sure. I think the fundamental is lapping 14% growth this half last year. This half last year, we had the Solo Nasal, Solo Pillows were launched. That drove 14%. In the second half, we had Nova Micro launch. In the second half, we also had three or four launches from competitors in that half. That still drove 9%. I think the H1 story is more about what we're lapping, and it's about no new introductions for us materially during the half.

Marcus Curley
Managing Director and Co-Head of ANZ Research, UBS

Have you seen any impact in those growth rates in the install base or resupply part of your business, or is it too difficult to tell in terms of your visibility into that?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

As far as we can tell, I'd say no. We haven't seen any unusual impact in resupply at all.

Marcus Curley
Managing Director and Co-Head of ANZ Research, UBS

Yeah.

On home care, competitive bidding, most likely kicking off next year. Do you have a view on how that would affect the industry and yourselves?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Justin White.

Justin Callahan
VP Sales and Marketing, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Yeah. Hey, Marcus. Justin here. Yeah, I think, I mean, at this stage, the final rules and requirements around competitive bidding have not been really disclosed. We expect the market to sort of react in a reasonable way. We are not reading too much into it at this stage. It is still pretty early.

Marcus Curley
Managing Director and Co-Head of ANZ Research, UBS

Justin, your base view would be reimbursement levels in the U.S. relatively stable. You wouldn't be expecting a material decline?

Justin Callahan
VP Sales and Marketing, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

I think we'd be expecting whatever the adjustment is, it would be sort of a lot more reasonable. There's a lot more sort of experience in that space now from our customers. I think we're not expecting anything too major.

Marcus Curley
Managing Director and Co-Head of ANZ Research, UBS

Okay. Thank you.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Marcus. Next questions come from Andrew Paine at CLSA.

Andrew Paine
Healthcare Research Analyst, CLSA

Yeah, morning. Thanks for taking my question and congrats on the results. Just looking at your full year guidance of NZD 460 million at the top end of the range for NPAT. Just kind of working down, looking at that at the top end of the range, you've done NZD 213 million in the first half. You need NZD 247 million in the second half to hit the top end of the range. If we back out FX there, bringing that down to NZD 237 million constant currency, that would imply just 6% growth year over year in NPAT. Obviously, you've got the tariff impact in there, which if I'm right, that's about 120 basis points annualized. That adds another 4%. OpEx is also performing better than expected.

Just trying to get a bit of color around that growth rate at the top end of the range, it looks somewhat achievable, even with maybe a slightly worse flu season year over year.

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Maybe one thing, Andrew, that I'll just clarify first. Currency is actually a headwind in our second half compared to the second half of last year. These numbers, instead of it being a tailwind of the 10 that you were talking about, it's actually a headwind of close to that. Because if you remember, the first half, we've got a NZD 19 million benefit at NPAT, and we said for the full year, probably NZD 10-15 million. That means the second half itself has got quite a tailwind. Sorry, headwind. Sorry. Yes. That's really the main. It's pretty much revenue dropping down, the tariff coming in, but still getting some good improvements, excluding that tariff for gross margin and OpEx in that sort of high single-digit growth.

Andrew Paine
Healthcare Research Analyst, CLSA

Yeah. Okay. Even with the FX kind of moving favorably, I assume that's just impacted by the hedging that you have in place.

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Yeah. Look, it's a range of things. The biggest mover in the currency half compared to the second half last year is actually in the balance sheet translations, where we had a gain of about NZD 7 million last year in the balance sheet translations. Not expecting much this year. There's a large part of that headwind.

Andrew Paine
Healthcare Research Analyst, CLSA

Okay. Sure. Yeah. Okay. That makes sense. Obviously, it's difficult to really kind of talk to this, but there's the ongoing tariff investigation. I don't know if you can provide any clarity around if a similar tariff was applied in Mexico, what that would mean in terms of margin impact to the business.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

No. We haven't really gone there. I mean, I think our thinking about tariffs is somewhat colored, maybe compared to most. Anything we think about to do with tariffs or to manage tariffs or to change things because of tariffs, that's time and effort that we're not putting into growth. That's always, I'd say, front of mind for us, actually, when tariffs are the topic.

Andrew Paine
Healthcare Research Analyst, CLSA

Okay. No problem. That's all I had. Thanks.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Andrew. Next questions come from Adrian Allbon at Jarden.

Adrian Albon
Analyst, Jarden

Good morning, team. Maybe just a clarification question. Maybe this is for you, Lyndal. Just on your interim report, and as you get to the bottom of the comments from Neville and Lewis, there is a discretionary bonus of NZD 9 million to be shared amongst the employees. Just to understand that, is that a normal feature, and you've just called it out this time? How is it sort of accounted for?

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Yeah. We've been doing this. This is a profit share payment that we make to all employees globally. We've been doing it since we were formed, basically.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Since before listing.

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Since before listing. We do normally show that amount in our annual report every year and in our interim report. Nothing's changed, nothing out of the ordinary there.

Adrian Albon
Analyst, Jarden

Would that have been accrued into the first half anyway, just as per normal?

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Correct. Yes.

Adrian Albon
Analyst, Jarden

Or was it a full year payment?

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

No, no. Each half we make payments. Yeah.

Adrian Albon
Analyst, Jarden

Okay. All right. No problem. Sorry about that. Just a second question. Also in that sort of interim report, you make a call out on the RENOVATE study, which I guess in the theme of this one, you're sort of putting a bit of emphasis on the changing clinical practice. As my sort of read of that, that's sort of quite it's a large sort of clinical trial that sort of you're presenting some useful results in terms of for hypoxic cases using high flow as a triaging type product. Is that the right way to think about the output from that study and how you might be using it to sort of educate?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

I think the thing about that study is the number. I think it's towards 2,000 patients. It's a large number of patients and covers COVID and not COVID as well. It's a comparison against non-invasive inhalation, if memory serves me correctly, which is kind of a step up. It finds nasal high flow, the word they use is not inferior.

Adrian Albon
Analyst, Jarden

Inferior.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Sorry, we're saying yeah. Yeah. You've got a therapy that the user would rather use. You've got a therapy that the patient would rather have, and it's not inferior to NIV. That would be the short version.

Adrian Albon
Analyst, Jarden

Right. Obviously, that also dovetails nicely into the Airvo 3 being wider use across the hospital as well and simpler to use as you go down the staff levels.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Yeah. I mean, I want to be careful. We've called out one. It had a lot of press at the time it was released. It's unusual. It's big numbers. It's very elegantly done and analyzed study, but it's one of hundreds. Probably more compelling is how it fits into clinical practice guidelines around the world. That's really stepped up, the issuing of clinical guidelines from the different professional bodies.

Adrian Albon
Analyst, Jarden

Okay. Thank you.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Okay. The next questions come from David Bailey at Morgan Stanley.

David Bailey
Equity Research Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Yeah. Thanks, Marcus. Morning. One for Lyndal and one for Lewis. Lyndal, 50 basis points in gross margin this year, including 75 basis points from tariff. If you strip out tariffs, you're doing 125 basis points. You sort of said on a full year run rate, full year tariff impact is 130 basis points. As I look at fiscal 2027, should we be thinking that all else equal, there's an incremental 65 basis point tariff impact to come through? The underlying will give you a sort of yeah, sort of 60 basis points. Just trying to understand the incremental change from the tariff impacts in 2027, given that we know that the underlying should be around 125 basis points or so.

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Yeah, David, look, you're spot on that there's another top-up of that headwind of tariffs coming into FY 2027. You're right. The 65 basis points. Anywhere from 100-150 basis points on average a year, we try to do as underlying improvements.

David Bailey
Equity Research Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Yep. Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. And just for Lewis, I mean, there's some commentary here around clinical adoption. There's clinical evidence that comes through. There's a sales and marketing effort as well. Just wondering if you can sort of talk to a little bit about how those two have progressed. And then in terms of the utilization of hardware and asset turns, how is that sort of driving more consumables used per device, if you can?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Yeah. That's what I was double-banging on. I'll answer the second one first. Because our therapies are used across such a diverse range of hospital situations, from EDs to recovery rooms to general wards to ICUs, we don't really have a utilization versus consumable turns per device model or predictor because there's so much variation in there. We can't do it. We've kind of abandoned that measure. In terms of clinical evidence, sales and marketing effort, the big mover there is clinical practice guidelines. Once we have clinical practice guidelines from a reputed clinical body, our approach is generally to use the clinical practice guideline. I think I'm looking at Justin, I don't think we've got any hospital anywhere on the planet perfectly implementing clinical practice guidelines on every patient they could.

Justin Callahan
VP Sales and Marketing, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Not yet.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Is there a comment?

Justin Callahan
VP Sales and Marketing, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Correct.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Yeah. At this stage of the nasal high flow evolution anyway, it's about the clinical practice guidelines, and that's what we utilize in our sales efforts more than anything else.

David Bailey
Equity Research Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Yeah. Understood. Okay. Maybe just a different way to ask it then is, do you think the devices are being used more broadly across the hospital?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Yeah, we do. Yep. Absolutely.

Yep.

David Bailey
Equity Research Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Okay. Thank you.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, David. Next questions come from Christine Trinh at Macquarie Bank.

Christine Trinh
Senior Equity Research Associate, Mcquarie Bank

Morning, everyone. Have you got me?

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Got you, Lance.

Christine Trinh
Senior Equity Research Associate, Mcquarie Bank

Great. Congratulations again on a strong result. Just two quick questions from me on the consumable space. Firstly, new apps growth of 16%. Constant currency was ahead of our expectations. Can we expect a similar level of growth going forward? On the U.S. launch of the Nova in the second half, can we just get your expectations for contributions to growth there? We're thinking kind of double digits like we saw in the first half of 2025.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

US Nova, let me talk to that first. Probably late in H2, so I wouldn't be making any material contribution at this stage. It's probably later in our second half. New apps at 16%. When we think about second half, we're moving into the seasonal hospitalization zone. You would think that if we had a similar seasonal hospitalization this second half compared to last year, you should probably get a similar growth rate in the second half to what you saw in the first half. This time around, because of the very high flu season numbers from last year and also COVID probably decreasing, we would characterize last year as probably really high and probably top end of range. If we had a similar season this year, we'd expect we'd be at top end.

Christine Trinh
Senior Equity Research Associate, Mcquarie Bank

Great. Just on that Nova piece, if it's in the first half of 2027, can we just get your thoughts on growth expectations for that half?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Yeah. Maybe we're a bit too far out for us at the moment, Christine.

Christine Trinh
Senior Equity Research Associate, Mcquarie Bank

Okay. No worries. Thank you.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Thanks.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Next question comes from Marcus Curley at UBS. Please go ahead, Marcus.

Marcus Curley
Managing Director and Co-Head of ANZ Research, UBS

Thanks for the follow-ups. Could you just talk a little bit, maybe Lyndal, about the trajectory on R&D? Obviously, 4% in half is low for the business. Is that just reflecting some lumpy projects, or are you genuinely starting to see lower percentages of R&D for the business in the next, say, 12 to 24 months?

Lyndal York
CFO, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Yeah. Marcus, what that is, is really reflecting the higher than sort of our normal revenue aspirational growth over the past number of years. It is just sort of writing that as a sort of average over time. We would probably expect that to remain a little bit on the lower side, sort of low to mid-single digits for probably another year or two.

Marcus Curley
Managing Director and Co-Head of ANZ Research, UBS

Great. Just on anesthesia, could you provide any color in terms of any noticeable difference between trace and switch? Specifically, is it sedation or GA driving it or both? Just can you get a bit of color in terms of the different components of the market?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

It kind of depends on the release track we've taken. Places where we've had trace and switch from day one, probably comparable contributions. At least in the U.S., we led with trace, and we're still leading with trace. That's the bulk of it in the U.S. The answer to your question, it varies depending on what we lead with and when we lead with it.

Marcus Curley
Managing Director and Co-Head of ANZ Research, UBS

Switch is in the U.S. these days?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

It's approved in the U.S. We are still following up all the trace opportunities in the U.S at present.

Marcus Curley
Managing Director and Co-Head of ANZ Research, UBS

Are different to a switch opportunity?

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

Yes. Yep. That's right.

Marcus Curley
Managing Director and Co-Head of ANZ Research, UBS

Okay. Thank you.

Marcus Driller
VP Corporate, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

Thanks, Marcus. We do not have any more questions in the queue. I will now turn over to Lewis for some concluding comments.

Lewis Gradon
Managing Director and CEO, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare

All right. Thanks, Marcus. Hey, thanks to everybody for your questions today. As always, I'd like to conclude by thanking all of the people at Fisher & Paykel Healthcare for your contribution this half. We'd like to acknowledge the support of our customers, suppliers, clinical partners, and shareholders. Thank you, everybody, and enjoy the rest of your day. Thank you.

Operator

This concludes our call today. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.

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