Aaron E. Alt
Thank you, Jason, and good morning. I am delighted to share more details on our Q4 financial results and the significant year that we have had at Cardinal Health. Here are some of the key financial headlines. At the enterprise level, we grew operating earnings 19% in the quarter and 15% on the year. We grew EPS by 13% in the quarter and over 9% on the year. We delivered $2.5 billion of adjusted free cash flow in the year, $500 million ahead of our increased expectations from Investor Day. We invested nearly $550 million in CapEx, returned to shareholders nearly $500 million for our growing dividend, repurchased $750 million of shares at an average price of $117 per share and completed 4 strategic acquisitions, 3 in Specialty and 1 in at-Home Solutions to drive our future growth. And we got all of this done in parallel with the previously announced customer contract expiration, a significant focus on cost mitigation, the onboarding of new customers and managing through regulatory uncertainty and the implementation of tariffs. Let's go through the Q4 results. Total company revenue was relatively flat at $60.2 billion on a reported basis. Adjusting for the contract expiration, revenue at the enterprise level increased 21% versus the prior year, led by strong demand across Pharma and for growth businesses in Other. Gross profit grew 17% to $2.2 billion, with rate improving by approximately 50 basis points, reflecting favorable product, customer and business mix. Gross profit growth again outpaced consolidated SG&A growth, which increased 16% to $1.5 billion in the quarter, primarily driven by the inclusion of our acquisitions of ION, GIA and ADS in our results. On an organic basis, SG&A increased a more modest 4%, reflective of both our investing for the future and our continued focus on efficiency, with GMPD and Pharma in particular successfully executing against significant cost improvement projects. Overall, our efforts resulted in total company operating earnings of $719 million, up 19% versus last year. Below the line, interest and other increased by $34 million versus prior year to $44 million due to acquisition-related financing costs. Interest and other finished better than our expectations due to several factors, including the strong cash performance and the quarterly revaluation of our company's deferred compensation plan, which as a reminder is offset as an expense in corporate SG&A above the line. Our fourth quarter effective tax rate was 26.3%, 1.7 percentage points higher than the previous year and modestly higher than our expectations due to earnings mix at the state level and abroad. Fourth quarter average diluted shares outstanding were 240 million, 2% lower than a year ago due to our share repurchase efforts earlier in the year. The net result was fourth quarter EPS of $2.08, growth of 13%. One quick note on Q4 EPS. We acquired a majority position in GI Alliance and other physician support organizations in the back half of this year, culminating with our just announced acquisition of Solaris Health, which will not close until at least the second quarter of fiscal year '26. We have determined that the minority equity positions owned by physicians and management in GI Alliance, now part of the Specialty Alliance, represent a liability to Cardinal Health, whereas our Investor Day guidance assumed a noncontrolling interest reduction to EPS. As a result, we are showing a higher-than-expected EPS contribution from the Specialty Alliance in fiscal year '25 or approximately $0.05 more than anticipated. Moving on to our segment results, beginning with the Pharma segment on Slide 5. Fourth quarter revenue was relatively flat at $55.4 billion. Excluding the customer contract expiration, revenue increased a robust 22%, driven by brand and specialty pharmaceutical sales growth from existing and new customers. This included approximately 6 percentage points of revenue growth from GLP-1 sales. During Q4, as we have in prior quarters this year, we saw strong pharmaceutical demand across the entire business, within brand, within specialty, within generics and within consumer health. This strength came from both our largest existing customers and our new customers. Segment profit increased 11% to $535 million in the fourth quarter, driven by contributions from our MSO platforms and brand and specialty products in particular. This growth was partially offset by the customer contract expiration. At this point, I will repeat the point that we saw strong demand and volumes across the business. However, Q4 Pharma segment profit was a touch lighter than we expected due to the impact of a few individually immaterial expenses, including bad debt adjustments and the resolution of some routine contractual open items with customers and vendors. If not for these items, our results would have been above the midpoint of our Pharma profit guidance. Finally, we are pleased that our generics program continues to see positive performance, including strong volume growth and consistent market dynamics. Turning to GMPD on Slide 6. Fourth quarter revenue grew 3% to $3.2 billion, driven by volume growth from existing customers. As we saw last quarter, Cardinal Health Brand continues to trend positively with over 6% revenue growth in the U.S. GMPD delivered Q4 segment profit of $70 million, its highest profit quarter, driven by volume growth from existing customers and reflecting the team's notable progress against the GMPD improvement plan, particularly cost containment efforts. While we continue to invest in the business and are pleased with the continued quarter-by-quarter significant improvements to profitability and cash flow presented by the segment, we have more work to do. The team also continued to make progress on mitigating tariff impacts, which Jason will touch on shortly. Finishing with the growth businesses reported within Other as seen on Slide 7. Fourth quarter revenue increased 37% to $1.6 billion, and segment profit increased 44% to $160 million. As we highlighted at Investor Day, these businesses are becoming an increasingly important part of our overall growth, and this quarter was no exception. These growth businesses contributed over 40% of the growth in our enterprise operating earnings for the quarter. Revenue and segment profit were driven by strong growth across all 3 businesses: at-Home Solutions, including contributions from the ADS acquisition; Nuclear and Precision Health Solutions; and OptiFreight Logistics. We closed the ADS acquisition at the start of the fourth quarter and are very pleased with the integration and synergy capture efforts. The at-Home-Solutions management team has a synergy realization plan, which is specific and achievable with opportunities for overperformance over time. All 3 businesses saw strong organic growth. These businesses continue to benefit from their leading value propositions, efficient operations and alignment with favorable long-term secular trends. Turning briefly to our full year enterprise commentary. Fiscal '25 revenue decreased 2% to $223 billion, driven by the customer contract expiration. Excluding the contract expiration, full year revenue increased 18%. Gross margin increased 10% to $8.2 billion, while SG&A increased 8% to $5.4 billion, reflecting the acquisitions and our continued focus on driving operating leverage. Together, this resulted in fiscal '25 total operating earnings growth of 15% to $2.8 billion. Below the line, interest and other increased $174 million, primarily due to financing costs related to acquisitions. Our annual effective tax rate finished at 23.3%. Average diluted shares outstanding were 242 million, 2% lower than a year ago due to share repurchases. The net result was fiscal '25 non-GAAP EPS of $8.24, growth of over 9%, again despite the large customer contract expiration and our significant investments for future growth. Now before I turn to fiscal '26, let's cover the balance sheet. For fiscal '25, our ending cash balance was a robust $3.9 billion, reflecting $2.5 billion of adjusted free cash flow, driven by the strong performance of our businesses and a continued focus on working capital management across our management team. This is an area of both further focus and further opportunity. Now let's look forward to our updated fiscal '26 guidance. Before I start, a reminder that our fiscal year '26 guidance does not yet include the benefit of Solaris Health. While we expect the acquisition to be slightly accretive to EPS within the first 12 months post close, as is our practice, we will update guidance following the close of that acquisition. Today, we are increasing our fiscal year '26 EPS guidance to a new range of $9.30 to $9.50, which reflects growth of 13% to 15%. This is a $0.20 increase from the guidance provided at Investor Day, driven by the benefit to net earnings of the liability classification I referenced earlier as well as increased contributions from Pharma and increased contributions from our Other growth businesses. Slide 15 shows our updated fiscal '26 outlook for our segments. Beginning with Pharma, on revenue, we continue to expect an increase of 11% to 13% as we annualize the new customer wins we had in fiscal year '25 and the first half of fiscal '26, resulting in an approximate $7 billion revenue tailwind. For Pharma segment profit, we are raising our guidance and now expect between 11% and 13% growth. We are expecting 2% to 3% generics market volume growth and continued consistent market dynamics in our Red Oak enabled generics program. In Specialty, we're expecting double-digit revenue growth, including in our higher-margin Biopharma Solutions business where we expect at least 20% revenue growth, fueled in part by the strong momentum in our Sonexus hub that Jason will touch on shortly. We anticipate strong growth in our MSO platforms and increasing contributions from biosimilars. With respect to the MSO platforms, we can now confirm that Cardinal Health will be picking up distribution for the Specialty Alliance gastroenterology portfolio starting in April 2026. We've also begun transitioning the oncology distribution tied to ION, with the majority of volume shifting over during Q2 of this year, consistent with the expiration of existing agreements. Additionally, with respect to the evolving policy environment, we remain confident in our resilient business model that creates tremendous value for the U.S. health care system. In terms of Pharma segment profit cadence, we anticipate first half growth to be a bit stronger than second half growth, driven by the annualization of new customer wins from fiscal '25 and the acquisitions of GIA and ION. Nevertheless, Q3 will remain the highest dollar profit quarter as it has been in prior years. Moving on to GMPD. On the top line, we are updating our guidance to growth between 2% and 4%, aided by low single-digit utilization growth as well as accretive Cardinal Brand growth. On the bottom line, we continue to expect segment profit of at least $140 million, which continues to assume a net $50 million to $75 million headwind to our results in fiscal '26 from tariffs. While the tariff environment continues to evolve, we are not communicating any changes to our exposure or actions today. In addition to market growth and modest increases in Cardinal Health Brand penetration, our results will continue to be aided by ongoing execution of simplification and cost optimization projects in our distribution operations, in our manufacturing operations and in our central functions. In terms of cadence, we expect GMPD segment profit to be weighted to the second half of the year, as we've seen in both fiscal '25 and fiscal '24, driven by seasonality and the timing of tariff mitigation. We expect this profit split to be roughly 1/3 in the first half and 2/3 in the second half, and Q4 should again be the high point of the year. Q2 is the quarter in which the earlier rounds of fiscal year '25 tariff expenses will be realized. As a result, that quarter may have the lowest profit in absolute dollar terms. Turning to our Other growth businesses. We continue to expect robust revenue growth of 26% to 28% and profit growth of 25% to 27%, but on top of a higher jump-off point relative to our Investor Day expectations. This reflects contributions from ADS and continued strong demand overall. Altogether, we expect normalized profit growth of approximately 10% on an organic basis. In at-Home Solutions, we will benefit from our ongoing distribution capacity expansions and automation efficiencies, double-digit revenue growth and the integration of ADS's distribution volumes. In Nuclear, we expect above-market core growth and approximately 20% growth from PET and Theranostics while investing in additional capacity to service the substantial pipeline in areas like oncology, urology and neurology. In OptiFreight Logistics, the team will drive strong core volume growth as well as incremental growth, driven by our expansion into the hospital pharmacy. With the ADS acquisition having closed at the start of our Q4, our growth rates will be strongest in the first 3 quarters until we begin lapping the acquisition in Q4. Stepping back, we feel well positioned to deliver another strong year of operating earnings growth. Moving below the line. We expect interest and other of about $275 million, driven by a step-up in interest expense from the annualization of our acquisition debt financing. Our interest expense guidance does not yet take into account the anticipated financing costs for our proposed acquisition of Solaris Health. Cardinal will fund the cash component of the purchase price through a relatively even mix of new bond financing and use of cash on hand. We will provide more details upon closing, but recall that I commented that the deal should be slightly accretive in the first 12 months. We continue to expect our fiscal year '26 effective tax rate to be in the range of 22% to 24%. As announced at Investor Day, our new baseline of annual share repurchases is $750 million, which we are confirming even with the assumed closure of the Solaris Health acquisition during the year. This leads to diluted weighted average shares outstanding between 238 million and 240 million for the year. Finally, we expect fiscal '26 adjusted free cash flow between $2.75 billion and $3.25 billion, driven by our growing profit, improving working capital efficiency and lapping of the customer unwind last year. Our strong cash flow generation will enable us to delever back to our targeted leverage range of 2.75x to 3.25x adjusted gross debt to EBITDA by the end of fiscal year '26, even with the Solaris acquisition. To close, fiscal year '25 was a terrific year showcasing the resilience and power of our enterprise. As we embark on building upon our growth, we are well positioned with strong cash flows and a robust balance sheet to support our strategic plans. We look forward to updating you on our progress throughout the year. With that, I will turn it back over to Jason.