Check, check. So my name's Phil Cooper. I'm part of David Roman's U.S. med tech team. We're pleased to be joined by Enovis, and we have with us Ben Berry, the CFO. Thank you for coming.
Thank you.
I thought we'd start, for those less familiar with the story, a bit of an overview, the history, the spin of ESAB and Enovis separating out, rebranding from Colfax would be great.
Yeah, sure. We've been through quite a bit of transformation over the last several years. We were a company called Colfax, which was essentially a company that was founded by the Danaher brothers and really formed as an industrial company under the same playbook as Danaher to continue to build and shape the company through acquisition over time. R eally went through its own transformation over a period of time and in 2019 acquired a company called DJO Global and divested some air and gas handling businesses to where it became then Colfax, as two-thirds of a welding business called ESAB and then one-third of a med tech business called DJO. It's pretty clear over time that having two-thirds industrial, one-third med tech was a little bit of a confusing story.
We went through a process while we were building and improving DJO through that acquisition in 2019 to thinking the best thing to do was to separate the company and spin out ESAB as its own public company back in 2022 and then rename the remaining co as Enovis. From that period, from call it 2022 to where we are right now, we have taken the company from a little over $1.2 billion of revenue and 14% EBITDA margins to now over $2.1 billion of revenue and closer to 18% EBITDA. We have been really building the business and shaping it through both organic and inorganic means. We have done a lot of acquisitions, particularly on what we call our reconstructive business, several acquisitions to take that into a more diversified global player, about a billion-dollar business, now a little over $2 billion company.
We have another billion-dollar part of our business called Prevention and Recovery where we are the market leader. Overall, we've been through a lot of change in a short period of time, but overall feel like the company's continued to be strengthened along the way.
That's great overview. Fantastic. Maybe we can start with the strategy that underpinned the acquisitions that you made and sort of the bigger picture strategy you had for recon when going through these processes. Maybe highlight Mathys and then Lima, we can dive into a little bit more as well.
Sure. We were really, I'd say, like I said, market leader on the P&R side, so had a pretty well-entrenched business there. We had a very fast-growing and I'd say emerging portfolio on the reconstructive side. We had some really [audio distortion] innovations that we had launched with the AltiVate shoulder, which really was a bit of a pioneer with regards to reverse shoulders in the U.S. market that made a name for ourselves. We also launched a product in the knee called the EMPOWR 3D Knee, which created further differentiation for us. We were still a pretty small player and growing double digits for a long period of time. We saw a lot of opportunity in the recon markets where there was a lot of big total addressable market, but we were still a small share player with meaningful innovation that was coming into the market.
We saw a lot of opportunities to really aggressively grow and accelerate that business both organically with these foundational innovations that we had launched, but also because there were a lot of assets out there for us to go acquire. We built the business in foot and ankle through about five acquisitions. We diversified our business externally by acquiring a company called Mathys and then further additional international expansion with Lima last year. Over the course of a period of a few years, we went from about a $300 million business on the recon side to over $1 billion.
Of that billion, can you provide some kind of framework for where you are in terms of market share and your major markets that you play in as well as kind of the geographic mix of the business now today?
Yeah, sure. So we have a foot- and- ankle business where we're a little over a $100- million business. So we're probably in the call that high single to low- double- digit market share. On the shoulder side, we're in the teens globally. We're number three in shoulder, number two outside the U.S., a nd then hip and knee, we're only about a two or three market share player.
Okay. M&A has been a cornerstone of the strategy and the vision. Is that still the vision moving forward? What would be the kind of complexion of deals that you're looking to do on the forward if that's the case?
You know, we've really worked hard to now build a portfolio that we feel has filled a lot of gaps in terms of the M&A agenda. I think our view of we've been now transitioning out of a build mode to more of an enhanced mode. As we look at M&A right now, I think our view is how do we continue to strengthen and improve the company through means that can help us drive towards higher- growth, higher- gross- margin- type attractiveness.
If I look across the portfolio today and given the heavy investments that we've done already with all the M&A that we've done, our key focal point right now is to really finish the integration of Lima, execute against those synergies that are still out in front of us, and then to drive our debt leverage down and increase our cash flow as we drive this now portfolio that we've put together.
Okay. I think that's a good transition back to Lima. Maybe we can start with an overview of what that asset brought you, strategic rationale, and then some of the financial targets that you talked about, how it's gone so far, and then remind us on that $40 million-plus by year three target.
It's gone really well. One of the main things that we were attracted to with Lima was their portfolio. They were about 40% extremity. So they brought a strong shoulder business for us outside the U.S. They were also very complementary to the other acquisition that we did of Mathys. Where Lima was strong, Mathys generally was not as strong from a country and geography perspective. That was very much the same case vice versa with regards to where Mathys was strong, Lima was not as strong.
We really loved the fact that we got good extremities capability with their shoulder business, strong geographic coverage that further diversified our ability to grow, and then some meaningful capabilities that they brought to bear as well, not only from a talent that we were able to retain, but from a product line and from a manufacturing capability standpoint, from an R&D development, 3D printing capabilities, a lot of new things that we're able to leverage and bring into our portfolio. All of that was exciting and something that we could build to our further growth model that we were building. Also, the other benefit of Lima is they come with strong margins, energy capture opportunity. Bringing them in, you saw us improve our EBITDA margins by close to 200 basis points last year. That's partly just because they were a higher- gross- margin company.
We were able to get after these synergies of the $40- million run rate over a three-year period, we got a little over $15 million in year one. We're on pace to get more this year and then the next tranche coming in 2026, but clear line of sight to that $40 million plus here within three years.
Okay. Maybe a bigger picture question if I can on how you differentiate from your large competitors, particularly on the large joint side. You said you have an in-hip offering. What does the P&R business afford you? How have you kind of strategically positioned yourself now to be able to go to market and compete with those much larger players in a lot of aspects?
P&R helped us get our name out there with regards to the credibility standpoint, being able to work on getting on contracts in hospital systems, knowing who we were based on leveraging our bracing products or our rehab products. We have been able to continue to leverage those relationships that we have had, not only because we are in a lot of the hospital settings and clinics within the United States. That gives us a target list of where to go after in terms of certain volumes. As we have continued to build out our recon capabilities and portfolio, we are able to leverage some of those relationships as we start to have some of that dialogue about why Enovis products could be good for those various settings.
On the recon side, it's really been about leveraging some of these foundational innovations that we've launched, building strong capabilities and advocacy around that through key opinion leaders, through data that's published around some of the benefits and the outcomes that our products generate, and then building around that portfolio and adding more portfolio depth over time. If you think about part of the expansion capabilities that we've built, it is having a more comprehensive portfolio into different philosophies, revision capabilities, thinking about where emerging trends in the market are going, starting to think about positioning ourselves well for ASC settings where a lot of volumes are going, trying to be more modernized with some of our implants because they're a bit younger in terms of how long they've been on the market. When we go into some of these care settings, thinking about being efficient.
There's a lot of things that go into our go-to-market approach, but it starts with building an innovative portfolio and then building around that with advocacy, clinical evidence and data, medical education, all of those types.
Okay. You hit on a lot of the aspects I think already, but for those that are less familiar, when you win a knee share or new knee doctor or new hip doctor, I know you have a new hip product that's coming to market, but how do you win? Why do you win over these entrenched competitors?
You know, it's still around just highlighting your capabilities and your innovation at the end of the day. I mean, I think we try to leverage what our products do. If you think about the shoulder, which really helped to transformation, a shift of the market to reverse shoulders, it was really about mobility and outcomes, less impingement, better mobility, better patient outcomes at the end of the day. Same thing in the knee. We've got a differentiated product. We've got what we call a Dual Mobility knee, which kind of pivots in two different ways depending on if you're squatting or walking, and that's more mimicking how the traditional knee works. It is a unique advantage knee that allows us to get our foot in the door, highlight that innovation, get people to try it.
Once they try it, they see that the patient satisfaction levels are really good compared to what they were doing in the past. That just creates ability for us to create momentum over time, build a portfolio around that, leverage key differentiators to build upon that discussion and dialogue. At the end of the day, once you get surgeons that are starting to embrace that innovation, you have the ability to penetrate them deeper with new product offerings.
Okay. On the knee side, it sounds like that sort of an offering would lend itself to younger patients that are also probably more likely to be in an ASC setting. Is that a fair kind of summary of what you're targeting or the low-hanging fruit that you can go after?
We think that applies. I mean, we think this is a product that's really attractive to a more demanding and younger patient that wants to get back out and be very mobile and active and part of their lifestyle. That goes into the equation of being more competitive in environments like the ASC.
Okay. If you had to summarize on the hip side, you have a new launch, but what's sort of the go-to-market? How are you differentiated on the hip side now at this point?
You know, I think hip was continuing to build out that portfolio offering to where you could anticipate where the market was going to shift to. I think we had gotten a little bit behind, frankly, there with the direct anterior approach. We have products that compete there, but the industry trend was to have a stem and an impactor device. We had that gap in our portfolio over the last several quarters. We have just launched that here at the end of first quarter. That gives us a more robust hip offering in the U.S. Therefore, you can go to people that have converted to our knee that have not converted to our hip and go back and have those conversations now that you have a more robust portfolio.
You can go out to new accounts with both your hip and your knee portfolio and say, "Here's the offering that we have to try to drive some of those competitive conversions." It is different a little bit that I would say outside the U.S. One of the things that I mentioned earlier is one of the really important things that we've tried to do is diversify our growth. We are not only reliant on one geography or one anatomy. Part of our building the recon business the way that we have is to try to create these different verticals of growth, be it in the foot and ankle side or in different geographies where I'd say our hip business has been performing really well internationally ever since we acquired Mathys and put Mathys and Lima together.
O.U.S. we've got some strong products and capabilities that even lend itself to further innovation that can come into the U.S. market over time. We see this as a compounding thing with regards to innovation now that we've put all these assets together and we've created these new capabilities because now we can think about innovating with not only material and mechanical innovation, but we can think about how do we attach that with enabling technology, planning systems, looking through the patient journey and workflow, and how do you continue to bring offerings to the market that can give you points of differentiation that can pull that whole portfolio through.
Okay. All right. That's great. The extremity side, it's a bit of a less concentrated market in general. I think more opportunity to differentiate, all the huge success. You have another product coming on, Reverse Glenoid that was, I think, last year that came on. What's sort of the state of the shoulder market at this point, your opportunity to continue to grow into it? Maybe you can also layer in the situation with robots coming to the market and how you plan to differentiate with that setup.
Yeah. Our shoulder business has done well, but one area where we got a little bit behind and where Stryker did really well was with regards to these augments. These augments are really addressing probably about 15% of cases where it's more complex and it's a little bit more of bone loss that you're treating. We didn't have a unique solution to treat that. We launched a product called our ARG or augmented reverse glenoid at the end of last year. We're building that over the course of the year in terms of the launch velocity and momentum. It's going well so far and will help continue to strengthen the offering that we have on the AltiVate side just for more complex cases that we had a gap in the portfolio.
We also think that with Lima and Lima bringing in a history of innovation on shoulder with their SMR system and now launching a new product called Prima outside the U.S., we can bring that product into the U.S. market and further add robustness to our shoulder portfolio in the U.S. When you think about robotics- enabling tech, we think that the shoulder is a challenging procedure when it comes to visibility. It is really important to have really strong planning and navigation. We are taking what we already had, a pretty market-leading planning system. We are enhancing that. We are connecting it with navigation and guidance. We are putting that in a package with regards to our Arvis system, which is an augmented mixed reality system that is starting to be used in shoulder cases. We started that near the end of last year.
That's going to continue to further develop over the course of this year. We'll add features. We'll continue to look at how do we make that planning navigation system talk with just kind of that whole patient workflow and then create good assistance to the surgeons that are using it. That's going to evolve over time, but we feel like with both the portfolio that we've created on shoulder and some of the things that we're working and developing on the enabling tech side, that's going to continue to give us competitiveness in this market as we see the competitors really start to come up with more offerings with regards to robotics.
Okay. I'd be remiss if I didn't ask an overarching recon question about volume and price. What's sort of the nature? I think we had a pretty sizable uptick post-COVID. Where are we in terms of kind of normalizing volume levels and what's the nature of price from your perspective?
It's one where, to me, you got to look at it in two different lenses. One, you have to look at it on what is the underlying mixed pricing dynamic into the market and how is that going to evolve over time in terms of your market growth projections. When I look at those in that context, I'd say that the market will continue to shift volume towards clinic-based outpatient settings, which will come with price pressure. That will be offset by, I'd say, positive price momentum with things like revision and enabling tech. There'll be some offset there. If you're looking at pricing in a macro sense in the market level, you would say that pricing will be slightly down and maybe not as much down as it used to be because you've got more revision and more enabling tech price that's reading through.
If you look on a component-to-component basis, pricing did get better over the course of post-COVID because of all the inflation that came into the system. Will that revert back over time just due to competitiveness and trying to take market share? I think our planning assumption would be we would expect that to revert more to what historical patterns looked like over time. We're not seeing it yet, but our planning assumption would be the market will generally get back to more competitive pricing, which would be kind of down year- over- year on a like-to-like basis.
Okay. But you generally think more in a blended price mix dynamic than just pure price given the evolution of the company in that.
I think it's appropriate to look at it both ways, honestly, but I think the one that matters most is kind of the macro, which is what does the market that you're playing in look like and how do you really capitalize on that?
Right. Okay. I haven't emphasized the ASC point, but you're over-indexed there. It's a significant growth part of the market. What's the strategy? Where are you in relation to your peers in terms of ASC exposure and sort of what are you trying to drive in that setting moving forward?
It's one where we want to win in that setting because we think that's where volume continues to accelerate over time. I think it's an area where, again, with the implant systems that we have that are seen to be more modernized, being able to drive efficiency in the instrumentation, which we've been able to do on the ASC side, thinking about some of the more fit-for-purpose enabling tech for those types of settings like the Arvis can be lower capital, more mobile, more efficient as we think about leveraging our P&R business, which is in a lot of clinic settings and can really help with the patient journey both on the pre-op side and the post-op side.
There are a lot of things that we're doing to try to build out what our competitiveness looks like in the ASC setting, not only just having good products, but then having good solutions for our customers. I think there's more for us to build out there. We are about 25% of our knees go through ASCs today, about 10% of our shoulders. We're probably a little bit more indexed than the market is when it comes to our ASC performance, but it's an area where we want to continue to develop solutions that will be attractive to that setting because we think it's going to be one that's going to continue to drive growth.
Okay. On the P&R side, we haven't really hit on much yet, but high single-digit recon growth this year, low single-digit P&R growth. It kind of begs the question. You've been mixing towards recon over time. From a capital allocation standpoint and an investment standpoint, what's the big picture comment on the investments you make in P&R and deciding to put those incremental dollars to recon versus P&R?
You know, P&R for us has been an area where we've continued to what we call shape and improve. As we think about shaping and improving P&R, that's how do we build a portfolio that has more reliable growth trajectory, which I think you've seen us do over the last several quarters being in the 4% growth range in P&R, but do it in a way that is continuing to step up towards higher growth, higher gross margin areas within that business. We've been shaping it in a way through small bolt-on acquisitions, through new product launches to get it towards higher growth, higher gross margin. If you look at our performance like we did in Q1, you see some of the benefits of that to where we grew more underlying mid-single digit.
Now, we continue to see opportunities there to lean into areas that can grow at a faster rate, but that market grows probably in that 3% range, 2%-3%. I think our view is to continue to shape it towards a little bit more towards mid-single digit growth. One of the things that we really like about P&R is that it's got opportunities both to improve its margin performance and also it's a strong cash generator. It's not very capital intense. One of the things that makes us a little bit unique as a mid-cap player in the space is our P&R business is generating enough cash to reinvest in all of this growth opportunity that we have on the recon side.
As you think about our strategy, aggressively grow and expand recon, which we've done both internally and externally, and then shape and improve P&R, which we've been doing, but still maintaining that strong cash performance that can reinvest in the business.
Is price a good guy or a bad guy in P&R?
It's been a good guy. I mean, we're the market leader there. So we are the price leader. As we went through the post-COVID inflationary period, we were a little bit more aggressive with regards to recapturing some of that inflation through pricing action. We have softened on that through, I'd say, the last 12 months. Now that tariffs are coming into frame, now it's back to leveraging some of those capabilities that we built in that post-COVID area inflationary period to help offset some of that pressure.
We'll come back to tariffs in a second. I wanted to touch on the software side of P&R and the investments you've made, the Motion MD, the Motion iQ. What does that afford you? Is it financially beneficial? How do you think about software integration into that side of the business?
It's been a leading platform for us over several years now with regards to making, think about workflow improvement and making clinics more efficient. It's about in half of the U.S. clinics now in some capacity. In certain settings, we are the ones that are helping on the clinic's behalf run the business for them through Motion MD. It's just, I'd say it's another solution that is giving a good customer experience through the ability to manage that lifecycle of the patient, not only from managing through their insurance and payments and all of that, but then the fitting of the brace [audio distortion] of what to do from a rehab standpoint.
There's a lot of things that go into that platform, but it's one of the areas where we've been the leader and it creates a bit of a moat around our business to protect our market share as the market leader.
All right. That's great. I was going to transition into financials, but I want to see if anybody in the audience has anything before we go that route. Get you on mic, David. One sec.
Thanks. I know you also touched a little bit on the dynamics with respect to the shoulder replacement market and the robotic launches from the two larger players, but both of them are really slow playing it quite a bit when you compare it to the rollout in large joints. Maybe just could you go maybe expand a little bit more detail about how you kind of see the shoulder replacement market unfolding, both from could robotics actually have an impact in accelerating market growth? Secondly, given the extent to which shoulder continues to move into the ASC, how the interplay between robotics and manual approaches might influence performance? Thirdly, how you kind of how you see yourself further differentiating yourself.
It's one where I think if you look at the enabling technology workflow, I think robotics can mean different things to different people. I think our view on the shoulder is given that it's a ball and socket joint and given that you're navigating with low visibility through lots of different muscle groupings to make sure that you get precision with regards to finding the glenoid vault where you're making the implant position. It's one where we feel like you have to have a really good plan that can be navigated intraoperatively. When you think about robotics, a lot of people think about the actual physical replacement of a shoulder or of a surgeon's manual incision or performance of that surgery. There could be various types of mechanisms that are used for that.
Our focus in the near term has been on making sure that our planning, navigation, and guidance can be applicable there. We have been leveraging our machine or our augmented and mixed reality product of Arvis to do that. Again, that does not have to be on a headset. That can be through a tablet, but it is really taking that preoperative plan, thinking about navigation, thinking about guidance so you can get that repeatability and precision. Now, when it comes to robotic performance, be it a burr or some sort of cutting that is used from an assistant standpoint, we think that will develop over time. It might be like what is done in the hip with impactor-type devices. It could be something that could be more like what is done traditionally in the knee.
We think that's going to take some time to develop because it is a more complex procedure, but it's something that we can't be naive to with regards to how that market will develop over time. We also know that the care settings, both in the U.S. and O.U.S., are shifting. To answer your question about how that evolves through outpatient procedures in the ASC, small footprints, flexibility, and portability, again, we think having a device like we are currently developing within Arvis can play well there, but we also think there's other tools that can be developed over time that can help across that workflow of enabling technology, which we're working on internal development programs around. Overall, we think that market will continue to evolve. I'd say it's early days.
Once we find solutions that really work and help generate outcomes, again, do not add a bunch of time and cost to the procedure, but actually help assist with strong outcomes, then I think you'll see more movement there.
Great. On the financial side, a really strong 1Q. I know there's a little bit of a day rate dynamic that everyone's talked about, but big picture, 6%-6.5% this year, I believe, constant currency. C an you help us understand what's happening this year versus your LRP and kind of walk us and bridge us to that?
It's one where I think we're trying to be a bit cautious and conservative with our outlook. I think if you look at the start that we got off to in the first quarter, a really solid start for the company. We did get the benefit of some additional selling days in the first quarter, but our underlying performance adjusted for that was still a high single-digit start to the year. We're building a portfolio that's capable of consistent 7%+ growth. We feel like we're still in the midst of building that mix and portfolio with some of the new products that are going to be building over the course of the year. Our guidance outlook as we started the year was trying to be more conservative, thinking that some of that's going to take some time to scale up.
Based on the start of the year, I think we're pretty optimistic that we're on a good trajectory with regards to our LRP.
Okay, great. The tariff side, maybe open it up to you to update your comments. I believe it was a $20- million headwind in the back half of the year.
Yes.
Spread across. Do you have any update with the current environment?
Yeah. When we gave the update on first quarter call, we said we had $40 million of exposure, $20 million of impact, and that that would be less than $20 million of impact as we roll into 2026. So improving versus getting worse. That was with assumptions that were based on China at 145% tariff and then all of the reciprocal tariffs having a 90-day pause, but then going back to the stated rates, which were a little bit more elevated than where they currently are from a pause standpoint. Things have gotten better since then. Mexico is under a 90-day, 30% delay, I would say, in terms of what we're seeing there. If that continues, that's good for us because 75% of our total exposure was China.
As long as China gets settled in a way that is more productive than that 145%, which so far so good, we would see upside to the guidance that we gave. Given that there have been no agreements in place, we think it's still a very volatile situation, so there's no need for us to give an update right now. Hopefully, some things will get settled so on our Q2 call, we can give some updated guidance there, but overall, things have gotten better for us, not worse.
Okay, great. Gross margin longer term, you have a structural mix benefit over time. You have signaled 50 basis points annually. Are there other elements that are embedded in that besides just your structural mix towards recon over time?
You know, I think from our standpoint, there are several things that we're doing to drive profitable growth mix within each business unit, as I described a little bit. The corporate mix will improve. You have additional synergies from Lima that we're still able to execute against over the course of the next few years. You have pure leverage and productivity that you can lean on by growing high single digits, driving some improvements in your cost structure. There are some opportunities to drive more efficiency through now a broader set of capabilities that we have through all these acquisitions that we've done. We see a nice runway in front of us in terms of margin expansion, both in both of our business segments, but then even as we think about additional things at the corporate level that can drive efficiency over time.
We were pretty excited about our margin expansion capability.
I believe you called for positive free cash flow this year. That is a pretty considerable ramp throughout the year. Can you maybe walk us through that and then talk about it in terms of your longer-term comment about the 70-80% free cash flow conversion?
Yeah. Knowing that we were bringing Lima in, which was a transformational acquisition for us at the beginning of last year, it was an area where we knew that we'd be taking a step back when it came to our cash flow generation. Prior to the Lima acquisition, we had started up our journey in terms of that 70-80%. I think we were 40-50% in the prior year of free cash flow conversion before we did the Lima acquisition. We're spending heavily right now on integration costs. Last year was extremely heavy. It's another heavy year there. We are in the last year of heavy investments around the European Medical Device Regulation remediation. That is going to go away as we step into 2026. We're in heavy investment mode to get after the operational synergies that come with Lima from a CapEx standpoint.
Those step down as we get into 2026. If you think about reasons to believe our ability to step up towards that 70-80%, we get a lot of things that soften quite considerably as we step into 2026. It is about driving efficiency and working capital, CapEx, paying down debt, which reduces interest. All of that creates that compounding value towards that 70-80%.
A lot of very visible levers.
That's right.
Okay. All right. Great. Maybe we can leave it there. Thanks, everybody, for your interest. Thank you for being here.
Thank you.
Appreciate it.
Appreciate it.