Feb 6, 2018
Executives
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Analysts
Glen Santangelo - Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. Robert Patrick Jones - Goldman Sachs & Co.
LLC Charles Rhyee - Cowen & Co. LLC Kevin Caliendo - Needham & Co.
LLC Erin Wilson Wright - Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC George Hill - RBC Capital Markets LLC Lisa C. Gill - JPMorgan Securities LLC Elizabeth Anderson - Evercore Group LLC Ricky R.
Goldwasser - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC David M.
Larsen - Leerink Partners LLC Brian Gil Tanquilut - Jefferies LLC
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, welcome to the AmerisourceBergen First Quarter Fiscal 2018 Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all phone lines are in a listen-only mode.
Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session, and instructions will be given to you at that time. As a reminder, today's conference call is being recorded.
I'll now turn the conference over to your opening speaker for today, Keri Mattox, Vice President, Corporate and Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Thank you. Good morning, and thank you all for joining us for this conference call to discuss the AmerisourceBergen fiscal 2018 first quarter financial results.
I'm Keri Mattox, Vice President, Corporate and Investor Relations for AmerisourceBergen; and joining me today are Steve Collis, Chairman, President and CEO; and Tim Guttman, Executive Vice President and CFO. On today's call, we also will be discussing non-GAAP financial measures, which we use to assess the underlying performance of our business.
The GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliations are provided in today's press release as well as on our website. During this conference call, we will also make forward-looking statements about our business and financial expectations on an adjusted non-GAAP basis, including but not limited to, EPS, operating margin and income taxes.
Forward-looking statements are based on management's current expectations and are subject to uncertainty and change. AmerisourceBergen assumes no obligations to update any forward-looking statements or information, and this call cannot be rebroadcast without the express permission of the company.
We remind you that there are uncertainties and risks that could cause our future actual results to differ materially from our current expectations. For a discussion of key risk factors and other cautionary statements and assumptions, we refer you to our SEC filings, including our most recent Form 10-K and to today's press release.
I would also like to remind you that we have posted a slide presentation to accompany this morning's press release. You can find it at our website investor.amerisourcebergen.com.
You'll have an opportunity to ask questions after today's remarks by management. We do ask that you limit your questions to one per participant in order for us to get to as many participants and inquiries as we can within the hour.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Steve. Steve?
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Thank you, Keri, and good morning, everyone. Today, I am pleased to discuss our first quarter results as well as AmerisourceBergen's continued execution, the stability we're seeing in the marketplace and our company's strong positioning for long-term growth and shareholder value creation.
Revenues were up 6% to $40.5 billion for the quarter, and our adjusted diluted EPS was $1.55 for the first quarter, an increase of 14% compared to the previous fiscal year period. Importantly, our core Pharmaceutical Distribution businesses are executing extremely well, growing volumes with key customers and segments, and continue to effectively manage operating expenses.
We're very pleased with the strong start for the fiscal year. We are proud of this continued solid execution, and I want to take a moment to again thank our amazing team of 21,000 associates, including those that have recently joined us through the acquisition of H.
D. Smith for their dedication and performance.
As I have said before, it is our associates around the globe, who help shape our culture, power our corporate transformation and drive our growth. So again, thank you.
With one quarter completed in fiscal year 2018, we believe that our consistent ability to execute and achieve more will continue to drive growth and create value in the healthcare market and for our shareholders. My comments today will be focused on three topics: one, AmerisourceBergen's proven continued execution; two, the current market landscape; and three, our strong positioning for long-term growth.
So first, execution. I continue to be extremely proud about how AmerisourceBergen is successfully navigating the healthcare markets.
We are growing our revenue and our gross profit with a diverse portfolio of fast-growing customers. We're successfully servicing the new business and volume from AllianceRx and Rite Aid.
Walgreens has now acquired more than 600 Rite Aid stores, and has said that they'll continue at an increasing pace moving forward. We were fully prepared and are seamlessly adding these stores into our distribution network.
Following on the close of our acquisition in January, we are also integrating new H. D.
Smith customers. As we said at the time of the deal announcement, we're very proud to bring H.
D. Smith, which was the largest independent wholesaler in the U.S., into the AmerisourceBergen family.
It's a best-in-class operation with a diversified customer base and the strategic cultural fit with our own business is very strong. Importantly, we're also continuing to make great progress increasing the purchasing compliance across our existing customer base.
This strategic and focused effort is driving generic product volume growth and helping us to offset what has been higher than historic deflation rates. We also have continued to execute across specialty distribution, oncology and physician-administered product distribution, where AmerisourceBergen has long been the leader.
In the first quarter, we marked our 16th consecutive quarter with 10% or greater revenue growth for this part of our business. I really believe that innovation is a hallmark of AmerisourceBergen.
In the first quarter alone, we supported the launch of virtually all of the new specialty products, and we also convened more than 150 community oncology providers and patient support teams to explore the future of immuno-oncology with our ION Solutions group. Of course, execution is also about successfully navigating through challenges.
We are committed to enhancing PharMEDium's quality assurance and quality control programs and continuing to build its position as the industry's market and quality leader. That includes remediation efforts currently underway at our Memphis facility, where we voluntarily suspended operations in December.
We are working diligently and communicating with the FDA to fully comply with the Agency's 503B regulations and new compounding policy barrings. There will be an impact to our fiscal year 2018 financial expectations for the business, which Tim will talk about in more detail in a few minutes, but this business and its offering is strong and we feel we are best positioned to execute over the long-term, meeting and growing market demand and delivering the highest quality products to our customers.
In our Other segment, Commercialization Services and Animal Health, market leader MWI continues to grow revenue driven primarily by strong U.S. companion animal market.
I just returned from a meeting of our MWI sales associates, and I must say that I've been consistently impressed with their knowledge and passion for the business and the customers they serve. MWI has established itself not only as the market leader, but as a valuable demand-creating extension of our manufacturer partners' businesses.
World Courier also had a very strong first quarter, its position as the leader in global specialty logistics services drove compelling volume growth and overall performance. We are especially proud of its recent designation as the first logistics company to obtain global Good Distribution Practices, or GDP, certification against three major GDP standards and the only provider to hold a GDP certification with such wide and global scope.
As we're continuing to execute at Lash Consulting launching the Fusion platform, which is a game-changer for the industry, the customer migration and onboarding progress has been in its early stages, which is having an impact on the segment, but we are confident that we have the right teams, technology and an unrivaled expertise to make this an important growth driver for our company over the long-term. Second, let's talk about the stability of the current market.
Overall, we're continuing to see a stable market and competitive market. Generic buy-side deflation has been higher than historic norms for several quarters, creating a headwind for us and our business.
That deflation rate, however, has been stable. We continue to see it tracking in the high-single digits in Q1, in line with our expectations.
Brand inflation is also tracking in line with our projections. We have no major contract renewals on the horizon and we are making strong progress on our customer contract rebalancing efforts.
All of these factors are drivers of the market and competitive stability we're currently seeing across our industry. Finally, third, AmerisourceBergen is strongly positioned for long-term growth.
As Tim will talk about in a few more minutes, there are significant benefits for AmerisourceBergen as a result of recent tax reform. As a U.S.
tax payer with primary U.S. income, the new tax rate enhances our ability to invest in our business, to innovate and to deliver value to our shareholders.
Over the long-term, this enables AmerisourceBergen to grow our U.S. business.
In the last two years alone, we've continued our commitment to improving and enhancing our business, investing nearly $1 billion in capital spend to create operational efficiencies, leverage scale and provide best-in-class customer service. We are well-positioned to realize long-term benefits from our state-of-the-art services, distribution network and IT investments.
AmerisourceBergen's innovative platform also differentiates us in the healthcare industry and we continue to build our portfolio of high value services and integrate them into our customers' businesses. For example, we've been able to show that community pharmacy customers (10:42) full line of services and solutions grow faster than their peers and more growth and success for our customers, ultimately means more growth and success for AmerisourceBergen.
I'm happy to report that our highly automated distribution network, now includes six of our planned seven new distribution centers and we are confident that our capacity and capabilities are industry leading. We've also made – are industry leading.
We've also made strategic investments in our IT systems, positioning AmerisourceBergen to realize greater operational efficiency and increased operating leverage. As we've discussed on past earnings calls, in 2017 and 2018, we are rolling out eight new IT systems, including ABC Order, for the Pharmaceutical Distribution business, key systems at (11:37) and World Courier, and new e-commerce platform at MWI and Fusion at Lash, these systems enable us to better run our day-to-day business and, importantly, to quickly and efficiently service our customers and their patients.
Another driver for long-term growth in AmerisourceBergen is our established, undisputed leadership in specialty. We continue to offer one of the industry's broadest ranges of clinical trial support, consulting commercialization services, data analytics and specialty product distribution, with specialty product outpacing the broader pharmaceutical market, which is definitely a growth opportunity for AmerisourceBergen.
Another opportunity for future growth is in biosimilars. With several biosimilars and follow-on biologics now approved by the FDA, we're advancing towards a marketplace where those products have a greater impact on patient care.
AmerisourceBergen has always had a strategic approach to biosimilars recognizing them as a distinct product launch that they are and we feel our market position, particularly our market leadership in specialty and community oncology is a differentiator for us. Our diverse, fast growing portfolio of customers also strongly positions AmerisourceBergen for long-term growth with Walgreens, Express Scripts, Kaiser, CPA and so many others, we have both integrated strategic partnerships that support and accelerate expansion.
Driven by customers' performance and leadership in the fast-growing specialty market, AmerisourceBergen expects to outpace the U.S. pharmaceutical market growth range over the next five years.
We're extremely proud of our customers and the services and value we deliver to them every day. Finally, at AmerisourceBergen we have the talent and the team in place to maximize and realize all of these opportunities.
I'm so proud of the strength of our team and how AmerisourceBergen continues to internally develop and elevate our leaders. They are leading, executing and delivering great results.
In summary, AmerisourceBergen is strong. We are evolving and transforming our business to best meet the needs of our customers, drive value for our shareholders and ultimately serve patients.
We are united in our responsibility to create healthier futures. Now let me turn the call over to Tim for a more in-depth discussion of our quarterly financial results and our financial guidance update for fiscal 2018.
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Thanks, Steve, and good morning, everyone. Consistent with past quarters, my remarks will focus only on our non-GAAP adjusted financial results.
And growth rates and comparisons are made against the prior year December quarter unless otherwise noted. For a discussion of our GAAP results, including one-time adjustments related to tax reform, I'd ask that you please refer to our earnings release.
As Steve mentioned, we had a solid quarter and our focus continues to be on executing across our businesses. Overall, we finished better than we expected, driven by execution in several of our priority areas, despite a couple of headwinds.
Our commitment as we move forward is to always deliver outstanding service, solutions and value to our customers. This morning, I'll provide commentary in two main areas.
First, I will highlight our quarterly consolidated and segment performance. And the second area, I will cover our revised fiscal 2018 expectations, including impacts from tax reform and PharMEDium.
Let's begin with our Q1 2018 results. We finished the quarter with adjusted diluted EPS at $1.55, an increase of 14%.
This included $0.15 from the benefit of the new U.S. tax legislation.
I will provide more color on the impact from tax reform shortly. Our consolidated revenues were $40.5 billion, up a solid 6%.
Operating income – our adjusted operating income was $488 million, up $2 million with our operating margin down 6 basis points. As expected, and as we have previously communicated, we had a much higher growth rate in our operating expenses due to costs associated with new distribution centers, duplicate IT costs resulting from the implementation of new systems and variable costs supporting our higher revenues.
Given the timing of the onboarding of the Walgreens new store business, we expect disproportionate relationships between gross profit contribution and operating expense to continue at least for the next quarter. Moving below the operating income line.
Income taxes. Our adjusted income tax rate was 24.2% and reflects primarily the positive impact from tax reform and the new lower U.S.
corporate income tax rate. Our annualized effective tax rate is based on a blended calculation using the previous corporate federal tax rate for one quarter and the new 21% tax rate for three quarters applied against our U.S.
pre-tax income. For fiscal year 2018, the impact of tax reform will contribute about $0.60 to our adjusted EPS.
During the December quarter, we also had a slightly lower tax rate than expected due to ongoing tax initiatives. Our adjusted net income increased about 13% to $342 million, as a result of our lower tax expense.
Our diluted share count decreased slightly to 221 million shares. In the December quarter, we repurchased a modest amount of shares; given our announced H.
D. Smith acquisition and our subsequent bond offering.
We exited the quarter with $766 million remaining on our current board share repurchase authorization. Moving over to cash flow and our cash balance.
In the December quarter, we are off to a good start, given that we had a very slight negative free cash flow of about $60 million, which is better than we expected. This year, we had the benefit from sales mix and also continued efforts in managing our working capital, including our inventory levels and churns.
Last year, we were still making a working capital investment with our largest customer. We ended the quarter with roughly $3 billion in cash, which includes the proceeds from our November debt issuance.
However, it's worth noting that in January, we used cash to fund and close our acquisition of H. D.
Smith. Of our total cash balance at December quarter-end, we had about $1.1 billion offshore and a majority of this amount was U.S.
denominated cash. This finishes the review of our consolidated results.
Next let me switch and cover our segment results. And we can begin with Pharmaceutical Distribution Services.
Total segment revenues were $38.9 billion, up nearly 6%. The segment continues to benefit from the growth of our largest customer, Walgreens, which includes incremental specialty drug sales to AllianceRx.
We started servicing AllianceRx in the third quarter of fiscal 2017, so we haven't yet anniversaried this new business. During the quarter, we also had very good revenue growth across our existing customers in the independent retail segment.
Our inside sales team is increasingly serving as a resource for our independent customers, focusing on their products and service needs, while helping to ensure customers are optimizing their contracts by reaching and exceeding their generics compliance rates. This creates a win-win for our customers and our business.
Let me highlight year-over-year, we are extremely pleased with the overall decrease in our generic leakage percentage, down roughly 400 basis points. Moving over to specialty distribution, defined as our oncology and physician-administered specialty drugs and consistent with our previous reporting of legacy ABSG, we saw revenues increased 12%.
Volume trends continue to be very good, especially in oncology, led by new innovative drugs, and also ophthalmology and MS. Wrapping up this segment, we did have revenue headwind of about 100 basis points, from lower Hepatitis C revenues again this quarter.
Segment operating income increased about 2% to $388 million. This segment benefited from solid revenue growth, notably from specialty products.
Additionally, we realized the benefits from driving higher-than-expected PRxO Generic revenues. We were pleased with the contribution from PRxO and our overall margins during the quarter.
The segment's first quarter results and year-over-year comparisons were negatively impacted by PharMEDium, where we had lower-than-expected revenues and profit contribution. PharMEDium's 503B outsourcing facilities were inspected by the FDA, beginning in late calendar 2017 and carrying into early 2018.
As a result of these inspections, we voluntarily suspended operations at our Memphis facility. Memphis is our largest 503B production facility and our most highly automated one.
We are engaging an ongoing dialog with the FDA to implement any corrective actions that should be taken and to confirm a clear pathway to full compliance for this facility. We were previously optimistic that Memphis operations would restart in early January.
However, the facility remains closed, and we currently anticipate that operations will resume this quarter. We fully expect to ramp production through the second half of the fiscal year and exit the year at full production.
It's important to note that all of the other PharMEDium inspections are now complete, and our other three 503B facilities have remained operational throughout this process. Because of the time and certain ongoing incremental expenses required to perform remedial measures, PharMEDium's contribution to adjusted EBIT and EPS in fiscal 2018 will be lower than anticipated.
As Steve mentioned, we are committed to continuing to build PharMEDium's position as the industry's market and quality leader. PharMEDium's business fundamentals remain strong and unchanged.
There is certainly high demand for outsourced compounded sterile preparations. Additionally, we believe that FDA's new 2018 guidance will provide further clarity and increase oversight around its 503B standards.
We believe this will be another positive for our business and create new opportunities. Overall, we remain confident that we'll cycle through this remediation period, and ultimately, we will increase PharMEDium's competitive advantage while delivering the highest quality compounded sterile preparations available today.
We can now move to the Other segment, businesses that focus on Global Commercialization Services and Animal Health and include World Courier, AmerisourceBergen Consulting and MWI. In the quarter, total revenues were $1.5 billion, up 12%.
All three businesses contributed to the revenue growth. World Courier had an excellent quarter, with records in both shipment and billable weight.
MWI had revenue growth as a percentage in the low-teens, driven mostly by Alliance shipped that increased in the high-teens. On a comparable basis, we had a 10% growth rate in companion animal revenues.
MWI is benefiting from a growing U.S. market, but they also continue to gain incremental share.
From an operating income standpoint, this group had operating income of $100 million, down about 6%, or $7 million. As I just highlighted, World Courier had strong operating income growth, as a result of the businesses increased in revenues and mix of business.
However, the segment did have lower contributions from both MWI and Consulting. MWI had a tough comparable to last year, when they earned certain manufacturer rebates based on established revenue targets.
These rebates do not repeat in the December 2017 quarter. Additionally, MWI had higher operating costs, primarily associated with a higher number of shipments and revenues.
That said, MWI's operating income growth rate is expected to improve going forward, and we are confident they will meet their full-year contribution target. Finally, our Consulting business was down year-over-year, due primarily to the implementation of Fusion and the cadence for Lash's new business development pipeline.
During the quarter, we made progress converting and supporting manufacturer clients on this new technology platform. However, the conversion process is slower than we previously anticipated, which slows down Lash's ability to onboard new business.
We are excited by the feedback we are receiving on Fusion so far. And despite, the slower-than-anticipated ramp, we remain confident that this new platform will be best-in-class, a unique asset and a long-term value driver.
Now let's turn to our revised full-year fiscal 2018 expectations. Consolidated revenues, we continue to expect growth between 8% and 11%.
This growth rate includes the onboarding of the Walgreens' Rite Aid stores, which will accelerate into our third fiscal quarter. The growth rate also includes nine months of revenue contribution from the new H.
D. Smith business.
Consolidated operating expenses. We are now able to formally adjust for the addition of the H.
D. Smith business.
As a result, we expect our OpEx growth rate will be between 6% and 8%. Let me emphasize, backing out the incremental OpEx impact from H.
D. Smith, we will be right in line with our previous OpEx guidance.
Consolidated adjusted operating income. We now expect to grow between 1% and 4%.
Importantly, without the impact of PharMEDium, our operating income guidance range would have remained unchanged. Let me cover the revised guidance from a segment standpoint.
We expect the following: Pharmaceutical Distribution Services, growth of 1% to 4%, reduced to reflect the impact from PharMEDium. Again, we believe these regulatory initiatives are near-term challenges for the business.
We have the right people and resources mobilized to address these items. We are confident that PharMEDium will remain a trusted partner to our customers for their outsourced compounding needs, and a compelling long-term growth driver for ABC.
On an overall basis, excluding PharMEDium, this segment is executing well. Core fundamentals are strong.
Volumes, generic compliance rates, customer renewal sell-side rates and margins are all performing as expected or even better than we anticipated. Moving on, Global Commercialization Services and Animal Health.
We now expect operating income growth to be between flat and up 2%. Compared to prior guidance, this is a decrease, due in large part to our Fusion technology transformation that I just discussed at our Lash Consulting business.
Moving below the operating income line. Tax rate.
Our guidance assumes a full-year tax rate of 23% to 24%, primarily lower to reflect the ongoing benefit from U.S. tax reform.
We also expect a slightly better than anticipated contribution from the accounting for share-based compensation, and also from continued tax initiatives. Looking forward; so for fiscal 2019, at this point, we expect to see a further decrease in our effective tax rate of 150 basis points to 200 basis points due to the net full-year impact of tax reform.
Interest expense. Although, we did not guide specifically on interest expense, when we provided our initial fiscal 2018 guidance, since we issued debt in connection with our H.
D. Smith acquisition, it's important to highlight that we will have about a 25% increase in our quarterly interest expense beginning in Q2 2018.
Share repurchases. We continue to guide to modest share buybacks generally enough to offset the dilutive impact from employee stock-option exercises.
Adjusted EPS. Our fiscal 2018 range will now be $6.45 to $6.65.
This revised range includes the estimated positive impact from tax reform of $0.60, offset primarily by the change in our expectations for PharMEDium. Switching to our free cash flow.
Our new range which continues to exclude non-recurring items is $1.35 billion to $1.6 billion, and reflects the positive impact from our cash tax savings, as a result of tax reform. Overall, we are pleased with tax reform, not only the lower effective tax rate, but also preserving the LIFO tax deduction.
The benefit from this deduction allows companies like ABC to continually invest in infrastructure, drive scale efficiency and also to carry higher levels of inventory. All of these enable us to better serve our customers.
In closing, this continues to be a dynamic time in healthcare and because of this, AmerisourceBergen is evolving and transforming our business. At the same time, our principles remain strongly in place, financially disciplined and highly focused on execution.
Doing what we do well and doing it consistently, so that our customers can advance their businesses. We're confident that this is a winning formula, and it enables ABC to be the partner of choice, which keeps us on the path of creating long-term value for all of our stakeholders.
We appreciate your interest in ABC. Now here is Keri to start our Q&A.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Thanks, Tim. Operator, we're now ready to move into the Q&A portion of the call.
Operator
Our first question will come from the line of Glen Santangelo of Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Glen Santangelo - Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc.
Yeah. Thanks and good morning.
Tim, I just want to follow-up with some comments you made with respect to the guidance. I think you said that the operating profit growth goal was 4% to 7%, and that was sort of post the H.
D. Smith acquisition.
Now it's 1% to 4%. So, you decreased the guidance by about 3% off the midpoint, and just looking at your operating profit, totals for the year, it looks like to be about a $60 million hit to your guidance.
And I think you said that absent PharMEDium, you would not have changed that guidance. So, are we correct in assuming that PharMEDium is about a $60 million drag on your operating profit numbers this year?
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. Hi Glen.
Good morning. Yeah.
I would say that you're thinking about it correctly. I mean, we were transparent, we gave our new revised guidance.
PharMEDium is – when we purchased PharMEDium high-margin, high-growth, very profitable. So, I would say, as you think about the change in guidance and that midpoint, think about the core business performing really well, probably better than we expected, all the trends that we called out.
So positive from the core business, offset almost all by PharMEDium and a little bit of Lash. So that's – yeah, directionally you're thinking about it right.
Please don't forget about the core performing very well.
Glen Santangelo - Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc.
Yeah. That was going to be my follow-up question.
Steve, you sort of went into it and you talked a little bit about some of the issues in MWI and Lash, maybe being a little bit weaker than expected within this fiscal year. And it kind of sounds like the weakness might be offset within the range of the guidance, or as Tim just sort of pointed out, maybe the core Pharmaceutical Distribution business maybe doing a little bit better than expected.
So, could you just sort of weigh-in on that a little bit?
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. I think on the core business, we carry on hitting on very well on specialty with another record revenue quarters and market leadership there, and new products coming out.
I think we've done very well with launches and participate in our Commercialization Services. As you noted, we did have a tough quarter in MWI but that was more from a comp perspective and not out of the historical norm.
And Mark Shaw and Jim Frary and the team, they are working hard to make their numbers for the year and we've got every confidence they will. And I just would say that we had good trends in utilization.
Our portfolio of customers is excellent, as you know, all growing very well. And we're benefiting a bit from mix, so although we still see higher than anticipated generic deflation rates.
There are lot of other offsetting trends, including specialty, better compliance and some of the rebalancing that we've done, which is a long-term process, but definitely we're seeing that it has benefited us. That discipline that we've observed about two or three years ago is really benefiting as that top line changes even quicker than we expected it would because of deflation in generics.
And then brand inflation trends were pretty much as expected, maybe slightly higher than expected. So overall, we liked the quarter a lot.
We just got control of all issues around our own performance with two businesses that we're working very hard on.
Glen Santangelo - Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc.
Okay. Thanks for the details.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. Thanks so much.
Operator, can we have the next question, please?
Operator
Our next question will come from the line of Robert Jones of Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Robert Patrick Jones - Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC
Great. Thanks for the questions.
Just wanted to go back to PharMEDium. I believe there are four PharMEDium facility locations and I know you said that the others were up and running; but is there any FDA concerns or focus around this particular issue at the other facilities?
And then just trying to put some numbers around the PharMEDium issue. Tim, could you give us just a sense of what percent of total PharMEDium production comes from Memphis?
I know you said it was the highest and most automated facility, but just trying to get a little bit more specific of a gauge of how big that is relative to total PharMEDium?
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. Hey, Bob, Good morning.
Yeah, let me emphasis that there are four facilities. Three, the other three, have their inspections completed, all are operational; and again that's a positive.
Memphis is our largest facility. They're roughly, ballpark, maybe half of our production capacity.
They're highly automated. They're some robotics and some automation equipment there.
So, they're not only large, but they're very efficient. We're confident, we're mobilized, we're on Memphis.
We anticipate it's going to be open this quarter. There will be a glide path to get production back up.
And as Steve mentioned, it's manageable, controllable, there's tremendous demand from customers. The positive is a lot of the production that we – if we put a customer on quota it shifted back to the hospital, we feel confident that we can regain and get that share back in a reasonable amount of time.
So, again, a little bit slower than we anticipated this year, but a positive that we exit the year and get into next year.
Robert Patrick Jones - Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC
No, that's helpful. And then just a quick follow-up on tax.
I just want to make sure I understand the impact from tax reform on the quarter and the full-year. So, I think you're excluding a benefit from reduced tax liabilities in the quarter.
That sounds like it was a result of tax reform, but yet the tax rate on an adjusted basis for 1Q was obviously quite a bit lower than what was expected at around 24%. So, I guess, what drove the lower rate?
And then for the guidance, that $0.60 that you're talking about being a benefit for the full-year, does that include any portion of the lower rate that we saw in 1Q or is that all incremental starting January 1?
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah, Bob, let me – let me – the $0.60 is all tax reform. I mean, that's our estimate of the change in the statutory rate for three quarters over our annualized U.S.
income, again, but we also had a benefit in our tax rate just from different initiatives and, again, with our share price up a little bit higher previously, we saw some stock comps. So clearly the $0.60 is all tax reform, but we continue to work hard to be very thoughtful and plan for our tax rate.
Hopefully that answers your question.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. Thanks, Bob.
Robert Patrick Jones - Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC
Thank you.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Operator, can we move to the next question, please?
Operator
Our next question will come from the line of Charles Rhyee of Cowen. Please go ahead.
Charles Rhyee - Cowen & Co. LLC
Yeah. Hey.
Thanks for taking the question. I'm sorry to keep jumping back to PharMEDium here, but as we expect the ramp and the facility to get back online, and you expect that to ramp up.
Is there any reason not to think that we would recover the EBIT contribution from the Memphis facility? Or is there anything in sort of remediation that would change sort of what the output of that facility would be?
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Essentially, it should get back. It's timing.
We have to ramp production up, build up inventory, get the inventories released, get customers back in the ordering cycling. So, if we are correct that we get back – that we get the facilities inspected and released this quarter, then we should see some impact the next quarter.
Hopefully, we aimed fiscal year 2018 as the full run rate that we would expect, at least from revenue. Some slightly more operating expenses, but nothing serious; maybe 1% or 2% for a higher-margin business than – almost than any other business we have, so.
Charles Rhyee - Cowen & Co. LLC
Okay. And then just a follow-up on the OpEx side, obviously, that ticked up again.
Can you remind me – I'm sorry, I might have missed exactly what that was attributed to. And – should we think of this as – is this sort of a near-term phenomenon?
And then should we expect that also to maybe normalize again later on? Thanks.
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. OpEx, we did change our guidance on OpEx.
It increased and again, that's because of closing H. D.
Smith and having that business for nine months. But again, in the prepared comments, we were very specific; ex H.
D. Smith, excluding that, we would have been right in line with our OpEx that we gave originally.
And then I think the OpEx – the important thing really on OpEx is we're going to create some value in 2019. The OpEx is high; there's a little bit of a mismatch as we take on all the business for the full-year.
As we eliminate some of the duplication in the system, down the road, there's going to be value created on OpEx and better leverage. So again, getting into 2019, OpEx will certainly be a tailwind as that comes in line with where we expect it to be.
Charles Rhyee - Cowen & Co. LLC
Yeah. But the – the H.
D. Smith was included in the original OpEx guidance, too, wasn't it, so?
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
No, it was not. When we gave original guidance at the end of the year, at the end of Q4, that was not contemplated and we never adjusted it when we announced H.
D. Smith.
Charles Rhyee - Cowen & Co. LLC
Okay. That's great to clarify.
Thank you.
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. Thank you.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Thanks, Charles.
Operator
Our next question will come from the line of Kevin Caliendo of Needham. Please go ahead.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Kevin, are you there? You may be on mute.
Kevin Caliendo - Needham & Co. LLC
I apologize. I was on mute.
I apologize. Thanks for taking my call.
Can you talk to what PharMEDium did from an EBIT perspective in fiscal 2017? Just so we have some scope of sort of how big this business is for you?
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. Hey, Kevin, it's Tim.
Yeah, I don't think we want to size PharMEDium. I mean they're a terrific business, high margin.
Like we said, demand is very strong. They're off to a good start this year.
Our October-November, we were off to a really good start, so I don't think we want to call it out. And again, I mean without the impact from PharMEDium this year, we would've been right in line with op income, where we thought we would be.
But again, I think PharMEDium we talked about it and we did the acquisition. We pay that healthy multiple because of the growth and what – and being a market leader and best-in-class, but I think that's as far as we want to go.
Kevin Caliendo - Needham & Co. LLC
No, that's fine. I appreciate that.
Can we just talk a little bit about the Rite Aid onboarding? Obviously, it's in your guidance, but can you just talk a little bit about – I'm assuming that the Rite Aid stores will have a little bit lower margin than your corporate average.
I'm guessing it will be the same as what you get from Walgreens. Is that a fair way to think about it?
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. I mean we have, as we said, about 600 pharmacies that we really have onboard and we expect to be complete by the late spring.
So quarter four will be the first quarter that we have the full run rate benefit. And sure, it's part of – (42:39) Walgreens (42:38) essentially.
So yeah, you could expect it would be slightly lower. But it's still manageable.
Kevin Caliendo - Needham & Co. LLC
Okay. Yeah.
No, I just wanted to make sure we were thinking about the right way.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. Thanks, Kevin.
Kevin Caliendo - Needham & Co. LLC
And just late – oh, I'm sorry.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
No, that's okay.
Kevin Caliendo - Needham & Co. LLC
Just really quick on H. D.
Smith. Very good reputation business.
Can you talk a little bit about how it would be integrated into Good Neighbor Pharmacy product? And if there's anything strategically you do with it, how you operate within the independents or the GPOs.
Is there anything you can take from them? Or is it going to be fully integrated sort of into your business?
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
We just had our first sales integration review last week. Again, confirms that there's a really good cultural fit between the two businesses, they have competed surprisingly well against the Big 3 in an independent sectors.
I would say we've seen some best practices in areas like long-term care, so – where we probably lagged a little bit maybe since we lost PharMerica. I think with PharMerica coming back into WBAD, we could really think about that sector and gain some reasonable market share there.
We've retained – we're not going very fast, Jeff (sic) [Kevin]. I think that the team wants to be cautious.
It's highly prized customer subset and certainly there are customers that were anxious to receive some of the benefits of elevating Good Neighbor Pharmacy and we try to transition those on an expedited basis. But we've kept all the sales force essentially, so far in our distribution centers have been cut down and we're looking at it very closely.
We've just with the Rite Aid onboarding and that, we decided to just slow again. We have the room to do that.
So – and we've had some key executives (44:40) who decided to stay with us and are looking to have their career with AmerisourceBergen. And we've done very well with executives from acquired companies that have assumed senior roles at ABC and contribute a lot.
So, so far we're very happy with it. It's going well.
Kevin Caliendo - Needham & Co. LLC
Great. Thanks so much, and thanks for all the disclosure.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Thanks, Kevin.
Operator
Our next question will come from the line of Erin Wright of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Erin Wilson Wright - Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC
Hey. Thanks.
In MWI, you need to lower rebates, is that a function of a, I guess, less favorable contract being negotiated contracts with a consolidated vendor base? Or is this a change in agency versus buy-sell relationships?
And, I guess, how will that impact or inflate top line versus the margin trend for that business? Or are there any other changes or major changes in contracts in terms of that business going forward?
Thanks.
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. You could say with MWI, I think, I've got everything.
There had been some shifting manufactured dynamics of the Boehringer Ingelheim acquisition of Sanofi, so that changed some things. I think you've had some manufacturers with some competitive overlaps, where there was some different pricing rebate issues.
And we had a very – I wouldn't say we had a bad quarter loss in 2017. It was just really a very good fourth quarter in 2016, exceptionally good.
Maybe more one-time items you could take them in the fourth quarter. So yes, it's something that we were a little bit behind expectations on.
But quite a good plan and the business, the units that they're shipping are very good. The market share is good.
We did a small little acquisition there, which was very important to the East Coast sales force and the East Coast customer base. So, I was at the sales meeting, and we're looking at what we could do better on expense control.
And so, we're confident that MWI will hit their numbers and we've always given them a great target, so (46:48). When we say that we think they're going to hit their numbers for this year that there will be good performance year-over-year.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Great. Thanks, Erin.
Erin Wilson Wright - Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC
Okay. So...
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Operator, can we move to the next question? Sorry, I know we're closing in on only about ten minutes left in the call.
Operator
George Hill, RBC.
George Hill - RBC Capital Markets LLC
Hey. Good morning, guys, and thanks for taking the question.
I guess maybe switch gears a little bit and talk about Lash. You talked about the onboarding issues.
I guess, is there any customer churn risk here? Can we talk about how many – or I guess can you guys talk about how many people have been on-boarded?
And kind of how do we think about risk to the business as it relates to re-platforming?
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah, we did. Hi, George.
Thanks for the question. We did have some customers that got a bit maybe frustrated about the delay or particularly price concerns, but not too many.
We've on-boarded about three or four customers, I'd say. They're happy with the results.
We just have renewed two new customers – well one new customer and renewed a big one. So, we've got solid leadership there, and it's a big project.
If we had our (48:00), we probably would have started earlier. But, we're working with the facts we have and it's a great business for us.
I've had that business reporting to me since 1998 and this is the second year they've had budgetary issues. So, it's, overall, been very stable, very good at managing targets, very good at managing programs.
We were in a busy time of the year there right now with the re-verification processes. So, we've got every bit of confidence that it fulfills a great need in manufacturers and there's also some interesting opportunities to do that sort of work, maybe more for providers, so I think we got lots of interesting strategic opportunities, so we're bullish on Lash, we think it's one of our most important franchise platform businesses.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Great. Thanks, Steve.
George Hill - RBC Capital Markets LLC
Okay.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Operator, can we go to the next question, please?
Operator
Certainly. Our next question will come from the line of Lisa Gill, JPMorgan.
Lisa C. Gill - JPMorgan Securities LLC
Thanks very much, and good morning. Just one clarification and then one question.
On the clarification, when we think about PharMEDium and the Memphis facility and talking about it getting back up online, the way that I understand what you're saying is that the roughly $60 million impact is going to be for the rest of the year, even though things will start to come online, it wasn't specific to the quarter. Number one, do I understand that correctly?
And then, secondly, I just want to understand, Steve or Tim, how you think about the impact of flu on your business as we think about how rampant it's been here in the first quarter.
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. Hi, Lisa.
No. Thanks.
I think it's an important question to clarify. Most of that, as you think about PharMEDium in terms of cadence for the year, I mean, we did have a couple penny impact in Q1 from lower production in December.
Most of that change will be in the March quarter. I think, I mentioned there's a glide path, I mean, so most of the impact will be Q2.
There will be a small impact again in Q3 as we kind of glide back to full production. And then, Q4 less of an impact and really no impact, because we're back to full production.
So, as you think about the cadence, that's the right way of thinking about it.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
And then, flu.
Lisa C. Gill - JPMorgan Securities LLC
That's helpful.
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Flu. I mean, I think flu I saw some early numbers the other day, slight impact in December quarter, but, certainly, as we saw the numbers in January and really picked up in January in terms of revenues.
And so far we haven't had any type of issues in terms of fulfillment or being short product; we're staying pretty current with what we're shipping out to our customers, but flu looks to be fairly strong from a revenue standpoint in January.
Lisa C. Gill - JPMorgan Securities LLC
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Question from the line of Ross Muken of Evercore. Please go ahead.
Elizabeth Anderson - Evercore Group LLC
Hi. This is Elizabeth Anderson in for Ross.
I have a question about biosimilar contracting and you mentioned given that the biosimilar market there have been some products out for a little bit of time now. What changes are you seeing?
And how are manufacturers reacting to your contracting them separately from other specialty products? Thanks.
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Okay. Just repeat the last part of that question, contracting with...
Elizabeth Anderson - Evercore Group LLC
Sure. Yeah.
Just in terms of how you're contracting, the discussions are going with manufacturers, or separately from other specialty products?
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. We've talked about differentiated pricing.
Certainly, as we think about biosimilars, that's a unique class of how we're contracting with a unique price and making sure we get appropriate compensation. So that's an area as we re-contract with customers, that has a specific price and margin and that's how we're going – that's how we're approaching the market.
Again, Steve mentioned in his prepared comments, the rebalancing is really critical. It's going to help us offset lower contribution from generics and the headwind from generic deflation, but we want to make sure we get appropriate pricing on biosimilars, on specialty, on core brand, on generics.
That's a big emphasis of the company and we're making good progress.
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. And most of the margin has to come from buy-side, so services that we provide and the most robust portfolio of services we have is in oncology and specialty area.
It's possible we could have some in U.S. bio, which is a business we're starting to highlight more, we've been very successful in oral oncology, but there's definitely going to be more and more products.
I think it depends on how many products (52:54) changeability. It depends on who the manufacturer is.
Some manufacturers are used to buying more services from us. So, we're trying to educate the market more and I think everyone understands that ABC has some unique capabilities to bring biosimilars to market and establish market share.
We understand reimbursement really well. And I think you've seen – I was just at an oncology meeting we had at end of last week, and definitely a very interested and enthusiastic group in terms of having more choices for their patients.
So, we're bullish about biosimilars in the long-term. We just would like to see more legislative clarity and flexibility and acceleration.
I think acceleration is the keyword. It's probably the number one opportunity is for cost efficiency in the system.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Great. Thanks.
Operator, can we go to the next question, please?
Operator
Certainly. Our next question will come from the line of Ricky Goldwasser of Morgan Stanley.
Please go ahead. And the Goldwasser line is open.
Ricky R. Goldwasser - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC
Thank you. Hi, good morning.
Just a couple of quick clarifications. So, Tim, just to clarify on fiscal year 2018 guidance, I thought that on November 20 you actually did up the EBIT guidance to include H.
D. Smith.
I think the 4% to 7% of Pharma EBIT growth included contributions. I guess, the question is, is what you're seeing in PharMEDium, has there been any – sorry, sorry, not PharMEDium – in H.
D. Smith, has there been any changes to the fundamentals in the business?
Or is it just that the integration might be taking a little bit slower?
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. Hi, Ricky.
It's Tim. Yeah.
We did update the guidance to include H. D.
Smith. It was only the op income guidance but there have been no changes in H.
D. Smith.
We're still very pleased with H. D.
Smith integrating. We've talked about this would be steady-state integrate, keep the customer experience, work on synergy 2019 and 2020, but so far as Steve mentioned, H.
D. Smith is going really well, kept all the customers, no retention issues.
The change in op income clearly on the new guidance and lowering it unfortunately is PharMEDium which is we believe manageable and contained and we're focused on it.
Ricky R. Goldwasser - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC
Okay. And then secondly, just as we think about the signposts to watch for PharMEDium and what's factored into guidance, so does the new guidance assume that the facility is going to reopen at the end of the quarter or when we think about the high to low end of the guidance range, is there also some assumption there that things might take longer to play out?
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
I'll start and Steve can jump in. The new guidance we did our best estimate, we put a lot of time and thought into it and talk to our business, and again our estimate assumes that they're going to be open during the quarter.
And again, we know this is important and we'll update the investor community if that changes but that's our best estimate today that based on, yes, what we know behind the remediation and progress that'll be open during the quarter. I would say certainly the guidance as you think about the guidance, there are a lot of positive trends in the business, to the core business.
So, the volumes turn out to be better. Reps are better.
Generic compliance were chugging along. We're a little bit better on OpEx.
We'll move up on the high end of the range. Certainly, we're optimistic and hopeful that we always are better than the guidance and that's what we're working for.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Okay. Operator, I think we have time for maybe one or two more questions.
Operator
Our next question will be from the line of Mr. David Larsen of Leerink.
Please go ahead.
David M. Larsen - Leerink Partners LLC
Hi. Can you just talk briefly about brand inflation and generic pricing?
With the 7% to 9% generic deflation, what in your mind is a normal range for the buy-side? Is it like minus 3% or so?
And then can you touch on the sell-side environment? Like, how is your spread trending between the buy and sell-side?
Thanks.
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Again, the generic deflation that was all higher than the norm. We didn't have inflation for very long but we did – we were having one or two years where it was net or even slight positive with inflation and that was very helpful to the mix of business.
So we've seen now stubbornly persistent high single digits sort of deflation rate. I think there are signs that it's going to turn with product rationalization, at least announced from the bigger players, so we will see how that turns.
But so far, we haven't seen anything that would change our guidance, and we're more at the higher range of the range. On brand, we were encouraged in light of increases in the high-single digits, and so what we expected, maybe a slightly stronger trend than we expected.
But I think that we would never expect anything more than that. That's a rate that (58:33) sustainable, and of course we see these increases at the growth level, at the net level, (58:43) and depending on the category and the competition and the product maturity.
But that is definitely at the gross level, and that's just how we play. So we see that playing out for a while, but we're managing with it.
Your other question was on the competitive environment. We're lucky we haven't really had a lot of big RFPs out this year.
We went through a stage where we had a lot. We managed through those.
I don't think we lost a big one other than where there was a cut from consolidation which everyone goes through. So the market's pretty stable, and I think we all have very similar economics and all of these came from the successful public company, so there's some natural gates there.
And again, the customers have to be pretty motivated to want to leave us, because AmerisourceBergen does a great job. We're very integrated with the customers, and we try like hell to keep them and enhance the level of services and do a good job for them.
So they're usually not motivated to leave. But I think, Keri, you want to do one more question.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yeah. I think we have time for one more, operator.
Operator
We have a question from the line of Brian Tanquilut of Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Brian Gil Tanquilut - Jefferies LLC
Hey. Good morning.
Just to follow-up on that last question, so as we think about the negative 7% to negative 9% generic pricing comment. So, does that essentially mean flattening of the generic pricing levels at the current level today?
And then how do you view that translating into margins, obviously excluding the drag from PharMEDium and H. D.
Smith?
Tim G. Guttman - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Well, the 7% to 9%, we try to make that up by the unit sales and better compliance from customers, which I'd say in the last few years we've done very, very well on. Occasionally we have an opportunity to make more margin on the buy-side on a generic which could offset some of the inflation.
So a product that's deflated say 10%, we manage to retain a bit more of the gross profit dollars, but it depends on reimbursement and the market. And of course there's been a lot of consolidation in the industry.
Any time we buy a customer like H. D.
Smith – the competitor like H. D.
Smith that does change the dynamics in the market. So, as you get to understanding and processing that, others are enjoying in the market.
So there has been a lot of activity in the market, and I think it's a market certainly where you could describe it as a buyer's market. So we're very active.
Keri P. Mattox - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Operator, thanks. I think this concludes the Q&A portion of the call.
I'll just turn it over to Steve for any closing remarks. And thanks, everyone, for joining us.
Steve?
Steven H. Collis - AmerisourceBergen Corp.
Yes. So, Keri, thank you.
I think we try to be well prepared to explain to you the manageable performance issues we have with PharMEDium and the fact that we see a bright future over there and at Lash as well. We think we've made all the right investments.
Somebody was saying to me that every 483 you get you need to treat it as a learning experience, accept it, prove your standards and prove your qualities. That's what the team at PharMEDium is trying to do.
We are the leader in the industry, so we think that upsetting the standard is the way to go. And then I just would like you to remember that on the 90% of our business we performed very well, and in almost at all cases above expectations and through some very strong trends.
So, we are overall really thrilled with the quarter and feel good about the rest of the year. So thank you for your time and attention, and we look forward to being in touch with you at some conferences and certainly on the next earnings call to update you more.
And also, last thing I'll say is that the tax reform worked out spectacularly well for ABC when you think about preserving LIFO, and such a significant benefit not only to EPS but to cash flow also. So we're very pleased with how that's all worked out, and we think that it's just made it a lot fairer for primarily U.S.-based companies like ourselves to compete internationally.
So I wouldn't want to lose that as a very strong – a lot of you have not heard it already, but it's a very strong change in our business fundamentals, which we are extremely excited about. Thank you.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude our conference call for today. On behalf of today's panel, I'd like to thank you for your participation in today's ABC Earnings Call, and thank you for using our service.
You have a wonderful day. You may now disconnect.