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Healthcare - Medical - Instruments & Supplies - NASDAQ - US
$ 167.86
-2.38 %
$ 4.11 B
Market Cap
-58.49
P/E
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2020 - Q1
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Operator

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen and welcome to the ICU Medical Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session and instructions will follow at that time. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to your host today Mr. John Mills of ICR. Please go ahead, sir..

John Mills

Great, thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us today to discuss the ICU Medical financial results for the first quarter of 2020. On the call today representing ICU Medical is Vivek Jain, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman; and Brian Bonnell, Chief Financial Officer.

We want to let everyone know that we have a presentation accompanying today's prepared remarks. To view the presentation please go to our Investor page and click on the Events Calendar and it will be under the First Quarter 2020 Events.

Before we start our prepared remarks, I want to touch upon any forward-looking statements made during the call, including beliefs and expectations about the company's future results. Please be aware they are based on the best available information to management and assumptions that are reasonable.

Such statements are not intended to be a representation of future results and are subject to risks and uncertainties. Future results may differ materially from management's current expectations.

We refer all of you to the company's SEC filings for more detailed information on the risks and uncertainties that have a direct bearing on operation results and financial position. Please note that during today's call, we will also discuss non-GAAP financial measures, including results on an adjusted basis.

We believe these financial measures can facilitate a more complete analysis and greater transparency in ICU Medicals ongoing results of operations. Particularly when comparing underlying results from period-to-period.

We've also included a reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures in today's release and provided as much detail as possible on any addendums that are added back. And with that, is my pleasure to turn the call over to Vivek..

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Thanks, John. Good afternoon, everybody. And we hope you and your families are well. For the last three years, we've been ending every call with the same comment about support from our customers and the ability of our employees to adapt in our own journey.

While it was never intended for the current environment, that belief is exactly what was and continues to be required in the current environment.

Like everyone in our industry, we want to start first by thanking our hospital customers for trusting us to serve you during these times, none of us know exactly what the new normal is, but we do know we will continue to adapt and offer our best support and execution.

Our own experiences of rapidly adjusting production up and down, new IT systems, new fulfillment models around the world and deep integration work has actually prepared us well for volatility. We'll try to be a bit brief on this call as we know there's a lot of late in quarter reporting happening in the market.

On today's call, we wanted to comment on Q1 results with and without the effects of COVID-19, describe the high level knock-on effects of the pandemic to ICU Medical and how we're adapting, articulate how we feel about our positioning in this environment and any strategic implications.

A view on timing and then we will have a better view of the year for our shorter-term financial goals and at least what assumptions we're making now.

Update on some housekeeping items including quality audits, product approvals, the Austin factory cutover, and lastly, reflecting that criteria by which we are judging ourselves as we described in the last call as back to growing our differentiated product lines.

The first quarter of fiscal 2020 again showed sequential revenue improvement and commercial stability in our most valuable product lines, but did benefit from pandemic accelerated purchases in certain lines and geographies. The company is operationally running well.

The competitive environment, seems to have frozen a bit and we do not have any material production constraints with all plants performing well. While, we did have some COVID ordering benefit, we also had the knock-on effect of a strengthening US dollar, which resulted in a large and mostly non-cash impact on the income statement.

We finished the quarter with $316 million in adjusted revenue, adjusted EBITDA came in at $63 million after absorbing $8 million in currency impact. From a management perspective, even after marking down some of the COVID purchases and the associated profit, we felt okay about the level of profitability.

After adjusting for currency, the primary driver of decreased profitability on a year-over-year basis is price and volume mix in IV Solutions as expected.

Adjusted EPS came in at $1.81 and cash was $440 million as we did drawdown on our revolver in mid-March given the uncertainty and Brian and I will describe some of the thinking there as it is a costly insurance plan. The vast majority of restructuring and integration charges were due to the Austin factory IT system cutover as previously discussed.

So let's go through the businesses quickly and then come back to discuss COVID-19 and the knock-on effects. Starting with the usual with Infusion Consumables, which is our largest business, Infusion Consumables had revenues of $124 million in Q1, 2020 which was a 4% increase year-over-year adjusted for currency and 2% increase on a reported basis.

We had good consistency in most places and product lines. In Oncology, we had a record quarter for growth in the international markets as we are finally able to release more product into that channel, but it was slower in the US as implementation slowed dramatically in March and we had some burn-off from our Q4 implementations.

In traditional IV therapy, we saw a small amount of what we would consider excess purchases in the international markets due to the pandemic. For the majority of the US market volumes were as predicted, and there was not any material customer churn anywhere. Pursuit Vascular's ClearGuard products delivered results as expected.

Moving to Infusion Systems, which is primarily our LVP pumps and associated dedicated sets, this segment did $89 million in adjusted revenue, which was growth of 7% on a constant currency basis, some of our largest market positions in this segment are in Spain and Italy and we did benefit slightly from increased sales into those markets due to the pandemic in Q1.

We will have benefit from COVID-19 demand in this segment again in Q2, primarily in the US market. Even before the pandemic, we were holding the best amount of rollover and competitive signings we had in many years. The challenge now is predicting the ability to actually get into hospitals and implement these conversions.

We continue to believe we stabilized the 10-plus year installed base decline, we still know that safety is a critical factor when choosing an infusion pump. We believe our Plum LVP technology is well positioned, as evidenced by the recent clinical guidelines around IV pumps.

We have gotten back to the core marketing messages around our Plum LVP pump as these independent and clinical reviews have validated our differentiation. As for the non-LVP products, which include our PCA and ambulatory pumps, since the last call supply of PCA viles has been consistent, and we do not see backward slippage in that line.

We do believe our ambulatory product sales will decline, but given recent LVP wins and our current best estimate of installation timelines, we do believe we can finally have growth this year in our Infusion Systems segment, net of currency impact.

Finishing the segment discussion with Infusion Solutions, we had $91 million in adjusted revenue down 1% year-over-year and up $10 million sequentially. Like last quarter, we did see and feel some more stable footing here on the base business. We did see some excess COVID ordering here in the last two weeks of March in the US.

We estimate that was about $5 million to $6 million or around 50% over-ordering, for the last two weeks of March. Our business is a mix of direct and distributor fulfillment. On the direct business, roughly half the overage was to committed customers and half was open market purchases. We do not yet know on the distributed business.

We continue to believe the quality of our customer book has improved with us holding the best list of sustainable relationships versus the day we bought the business, we are still healthy on safety stock and since the last call, our new distribution center has come online in Texas to help improve our longer-term supply chain costs. Okay.

That's a bit on the segments. I'll come back to some of those points when we discuss our current model. There has been a number of impacts for the company from COVID-19 and I will just run down the list. Commercially, we moved very quickly to respond to European tenders for pump hardware and demand for dedicated sets.

In the US market, we have participated in selected national stockpile sales and have responded to selected state RFPs for pumps. The challenge is to balance sales for continuing care versus stockpiles. We do believe most of the pumps, we sold in Q1 into Europe were for actual care delivery.

Operationally, as we mentioned on the Q4 call, the early signs from China did cause us to accelerate some raw material purchases, so we have been prepared. From a planned perspective just as many others have experienced, the pandemic has required additional planning on our operational footprint, shift hours, local transportation and redundancy plans.

We invested in additional PP&E reasonably early and have focused on employee safety. We also added extra compensation to our team members in our Production and Service Operations, who had to perform their duties in states or countries where shelter in place requirements were in place. As a reminder, our primary manufacturing locations are in Texas.

Utah, Costa Rica and Ensenada Mexico, which is 90 minutes south of Tijuana. From an expense perspective, our incremental direct costs related to COVID-19 and our savings are probably a wash. We've had increased expenses as we just described, but we've also had savings with discretionary expenses, less T&E and a higher overall job vacancy rate.

We were struggling with extremely low unemployment rates in Utah and Austin prior to the outbreak. Freight costs have increased as capacity has been reduced from the system.

Strategically, as we've thought through the implications of COVID-19 and the realities of the healthcare system it has exposed, we believe it aligns with much of our commentary since we became a full line supplier.

We make essential items that require significant clinical training, high capital expenditures and in general are items that customers do not want to switch unless they have to. We're US manufacturer that is deeply vertically integrated and has core redundancy on products that we do not produce domestically between Ensenada and Costa Rica.

We think the weaknesses illustrated in the healthcare supply chain that either drove manufacturing to be unpredictable or offshore will all get reassessed in the new normal. We don't make any assumptions about minimum supply chain holds, I think that will be immediately implemented.

But we do believe the market broadly defined does not want a winner-take-all set up in these essential items categories. And that's before each categories assessed on its own innovation and clinical outcomes, et cetera. And so we focused on what we can control in these moments.

For us it's having the best list of supportive healthy customers we can, it's having the best liquidity we can for a company our size, we're not that big, but are necessary to the system and we need to be prepared for whatever realignments or opportunities arise.

But in the medium-term, the pandemic does make us concerned about the economics in the broader healthcare system. Our products are tied directly to hospital admissions and like everyone else we see the rapid deterioration of elective procedures and ER visits, which are tied to admissions.

The knock-on effects have led to lost selling time and delays in implementations for products that need onsite training and enhances inertia when people don't have time to deal with change. For that reason, we are cautious on what the balance of the year will bring excluding upside in our Infusion Systems segment in Q2.

It was unclear in mid-March, whether this would also have a knock-on effects to liquidity. So we chose to drawdown on our revolver, which is unusual for a company that was in our balance sheet position in our product categories. But we did not want to be the last to ask.

We know there is a negative short-term impact of this, if we keep it drawn and that when combined with the currency impacts result in the revision to our guidance range. But we do run the company production plan, compensation plan et cetera, to a forecast that is our latest view.

To describe our current model relative to our initial year assumptions, first we have more sales in Infusion Systems than originally planned, plus two some likely savings through discretionary costs, three some operational improvements, all of which are combined and then offset by declines in solutions and consumables directly related to lack of hospital admissions, currency impact, again of which, a big chunk is non-cash and some incremental COVID related expenses.

Elective drive ballpark one-third of admissions and we're already seeing our customers segmenting those cases into time critical versus time sensitive, which means they're not all coming back in our opinion. It is too early to say with certainty what this means for the fiscal year.

Our current model has made significant adjustments downward in Q2 and Q3 tied to utilization, which is incorporated into our current view and we'll all know more in 90-days.

I would say a wide range of outcomes as possible, but we still want to run the company to a baseline model as we're not that big and the new normal does need to incorporate more volatility.

Moving on to housekeeping items, again in Q1 we had excellent global fulfillment rates to our customers, the cutover of Austin systems happened -- is working well and being supported in Q2. We are fully stood up not only away from Pfizer, but now have modern connected systems across all business lines.

From a quality perspective, we've had a number of notified body audits over the last four months in San Clemente, San Diego, Costa Rica and Salt Lake City all done remotely. These were regarding the MD SAP and CE Mark annual certs. All went well with no major findings and there are a few remaining sites on the agenda for me.

There will be a small announcement on a recall of one lot of IV Solutions produced in mid-2019 by our contract manufacturing partner in Rocky Mount and there is no economic impact.

On product approvals we did receive 510(K) approvals for our SwabTip male cap to complement our SwabCap business and a new Two-Way Transfer Device to add to our IV solutions offering. We need to cut both items into production soon. To synthesize all these comments on the business segments, COVID-19 and how we're trying to judge ourselves.

On the last call, we said, we have the ability to improve our position in our most differentiated businesses of IV Consumables and IV Systems and we have to prove stability in our less differentiated business of IV Solutions.

We talked about the industry structure attractiveness for two years, why we fit in the puzzle and our products are in a good position from a technology quality and manufacturing perspective.

While it may add volatility in the short term, we do think the weaknesses exposed in the healthcare supply chain add to the argument for all participants to be healthy and stable in IV Solutions. We feel we have the best right to win and IV pumps that we've had since we bought the business.

The competitive positioning of the consumables business has not changed, nor the value of the oncology category as a result of COVID-19, but it is really hard to see what the next few quarters will bring.

In the new normal of COVID-19 world where supply chain resiliency and diversity matters, we believe our essential items will logically benefit and our most differentiated items are still differentiated. We said in the last call that 2019 was the most difficult year our team has faced.

The company did emerge operationally stronger from that experience and has taught us all how to adapt. Thank you to all the employees, customers, suppliers and front-line health-care workers. Our company appreciates the role each of us has had to play. With that, I'll turn it over to Brian..

Brian Bonnell Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Thanks Vivek, and good afternoon everyone. To begin, I'll first walk down the P&L, and then talk a little about cash flow and the balance sheet. So starting with the revenue line. Our first quarter 2020 GAAP revenue was $329 million compared to $331 million last year, which is down 1% or flat on a constant currency basis.

For your reference, the 2019 and 2020 adjusted revenue numbers, which exclude contract manufacturing sales to Pfizer can be found on Slide Number 3 of the presentation. Our adjusted revenue numbers for the quarter were $316 million compared to $311 million last year, up 2% or 3% on a constant currency basis.

Infusion Consumables were up 2% or 4% on a constant currency basis. IV Solutions, which we sell primarily in the US was down 1% on both a reported and constant currency basis. Infusion Systems was up 4% or 7% on a constant currency basis and Critical Care down 4% or 3% on a constant currency basis.

As you can see from Slide Number 4 of the presentation. For the first quarter, our adjusted gross margin was 40% compared to 44% for the first quarter last year. The Q1 gross margin was in line with our expectations.

The largest driver for the year-over-year decrease is similar to last quarter and reflects the impact from lower sales of higher-priced non-committed business in IV Solutions along with lost manufacturing overhead absorption from lower production levels compared to a year ago.

SG&A expense was 22% of revenues during the first quarter, which is flat compared to last year. This was slightly less than expected due to a combination of spending controls and currency. R&D expenses were $11 million for the quarter, down $2 million year-over-year. And we expect R&D to be around 4% of revenue for the full-year.

Restructuring, integration and strategic transaction expenses were $12 million in the first quarter versus $24 million last year. The first quarter 2020 spending related primarily to the system cutover for our Austin manufacturing facility and also included cost to restructure certain foreign commercial operations.

The Austin system cutover took place during the quarter and was the final step in the system integration plan related to the Hospira acquisition.

We now expect total restructuring, integration and strategic transaction expenses, to be a bit lower for the full-year at $30 million to $35 million with the majority of the spend coming in the first half of the year. Adjusted diluted earnings per share for the first quarter of 2020 were $1.81 compared to $2.58 for the first quarter last year.

Please note that the prior year results were favorably impacted by excess tax benefits related to equity compensation. We continue to estimate our tax rate for the full-year to be in the range of 21% to 23% with the non-GAAP rate at the higher end of this range.

Diluted shares outstanding for the first quarter were $21.5 million and for modeling purposes this same number can be assumed for the full-year. And finally, adjusted EBITDA decreased 19% to $63 million for the first quarter of this year compared to $78 million last year.

During the first quarter the strengthening of the US dollar, which was brought on by market reaction to the COVID-19 global pandemic had a negative impact to our P&L in a couple of different ways. These impacts are further described in Slide Number 5 of the presentation.

We estimate that the combined effect in Q1 was a reduction in adjusted EBITDA of $8 million and a reduction in adjusted EPS of approximately $0.30.

First, as compared to our original 2020 guidance the impact of foreign exchange from the translation of our foreign entity financial statements in to US dollars for purposes of financial reporting reduced adjusted revenue by $3 million, adjusted EBITDA by $2 million and adjusted EPS by $0.07.

Second in addition to the translation impact, we also incurred foreign currency transaction losses of $6 million during the quarter, which are reflected in the other expense and income line of the P&L and reduced adjusted EBITDA by $6 million and adjusted EPS by $0.23.

These transaction losses relate primarily to balance sheet exposures from inter-company receivables and payables among our various legal entities and were caused by a significant weakening of certain currencies mostly in Latin America, Asia and South Africa.

Although these transaction losses are non-economic in nature as a result from inter-company balances they do impact our reported results. Excluding the impact of currency we believe that the level of profitability in Q1 relative to revenues is appropriate. Now moving on to cash flow and the balance sheet.

For the quarter free cash flow was $14 million working capital reflected continued decreases in both DSOs and days of inventory on hand. These improvements were offset by a reduction in accounts payable due primarily to timing of vendor payments.

Note that the one-time payment to Pfizer of $22 million, which we originally expected to make in the first quarter will be made in the second quarter of this year.

While, we are pleased with our progress to reduce both DSOs and days of inventory on hand, we also recognized that the COVID-19 pandemic could pressure both of these metrics over the remainder of this year.

Our hospital customers, many of whom we service directly, are dealing with the financial implications of lower hospital admissions and procedures, which could result in slower payments in the future. Additionally, we may look to maintain higher levels of inventory in the near-term to ensure we can continue to meet any surges in customer demand.

In the first quarter, we spent $25 million on CapEx for general maintenance, system integration and capacity expansion.

Consistent with our original guidance, we still expect to spend $85 million to $90 million this year, which includes expenditure related to transferring a portion of the contracted solutions products from Pfizer to our Austin manufacturing facility, as well as the build-out of our new Dallas distribution center.

ICU has historically maintained a conservative capital structure and we feel that the uncertainty the market is experiencing today validates that strategy. As the COVID-19 situation caused a deterioration in the financial markets during the month of March, we preemptively drew $150 million on our revolving credit facility.

We plan to hold the proceeds from the revolver draw as cash while the COVID-19 situation and market conditions remain uncertain.

Including the $150 million of proceeds from the revolver draw as of March 31, our cash and investment balances totaled $440 million and were in line with our expectations after considering the revolver proceeds and the delay in the $22 million Pfizer payments.

During the month of March the Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 150 basis points in order to provide relief and stability during the pandemic. This reduces the yield on our cash and investment balances.

As shown on Slide Number 5, the impact of lower interest income on cash balances, combined with the incremental interest expense from the revolver draw is expected to reduce full-year adjusted EPS by $0.15.

As Vivek referenced in his remarks, we are updating our 2020 adjusted EBITDA and adjusted earnings per share guidance to reflect what we know now, which is the expected non-operational impacts for currency and interest income and expense.

As a result, after adjusting for the $10 million negative impact from foreign currency, we now expect adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $230 million to $250 million for the year.

Additionally, after adjusting for the combined impact from foreign currency and interest income and expense of $0.55, we now expect adjusted diluted earnings per share of $5.95 to $6.65.

While our updated guidance does include a set of assumptions related to the commercial and operational impacts of COVID-19, I want to emphasize Vivek's earlier comment that the range of potential outcomes is wide.

However, we will do what we always do and provide an update on our view of the full-year as part of the second quarter earnings call when we expect to know more. In closing, I'd just like to say that it's an unusual time to be stepping into the CFO role.

But I feel fortunate to be at a company whose products are essential to the healthcare system and I take comfort knowing we are well positioned to handle whatever challenges may come. And with that, I'd like to turn the call over for any questions..

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And you do have a question from Jayson Bedford from Raymond James..

Jayson Bedford

Hi, good afternoon.

Can you hear me okay?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Perfectly. Hi, Jason. Go ahead..

Jayson Bedford

So a lot to unpack here, I guess, let's just start on COVID, the $5 million to $6 million in IV Solutions sounds like that's the benefit in that -- the benefit on the pump side, it sounds like it's not necessarily one time, is that a fair characterization?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

I think that's a fair characterization. It wasn't that much revenues into Spain and Italy on the pumps and we expect them to -- longer term to continue to be pumping. On the Solutions piece certainly the part that was not to our -- overage in our existing committed customers that was excess right..

Jayson Bedford

Okay. Can you speak to 2Q and the potential impact there? I think you mentioned participating in select -- selected ordering in US stockpiles.

I'm just wondering in terms of 2Q and the potential net benefit from COVID, care to quantify that?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

I don't know if we want to quantify it Jayson. I would say it's really going to show if anywhere in the pump, in the IV Systems line, but that need to be balanced against the IV Consumables and Solutions businesses where it has been a very volatile ordering pattern for the last four weeks or five weeks..

Jayson Bedford

All right. Okay..

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Not in a good way..

Jayson Bedford

Okay.

In terms of just sticking with the pumps, were you able to install any of the pumps tied to the share gains in 2019 that you previously mentioned?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Not a lot..

Jayson Bedford

Okay.

And I know this may be a difficult question, but at what point do you think hospitals get back to deciding on new pump platforms?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

It's difficult to know, I mean certainly right now, people don't want to deal with things that they don't absolutely positively have to deal with. For us it's about just -- we've lost time in the last six weeks, eight weeks with what's going on here obviously it's a secondary issue.

And we just need to at least be able to get out there and talk and we don't really see that happening, in a real way -- the hospitals haven't even figured out how to allow people in. And there's not a common set of rules for that even, we don't see that happening for about four to six weeks, so you can even get out there in a meaningful way..

Jayson Bedford

All right. Okay, maybe a couple of quick ones for Brian.

Gross margin should we assume that 1Q here is the trough for the year?.

Brian Bonnell Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

No, I don't think that's necessarily the right assumption, just given the potential volatility in volumes over the course of the rest of the year..

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Please remember, Jayson. If we install more pumps that's a negative to gross margin. Or if things deteriorate even beyond what we anticipate at the moment and we'll update everybody in the Q2 call, just like we always do, it just comes down to the other two business and what admissions look like..

Jayson Bedford

All right..

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

But if pumps were -- if admissions went down and volumes went down, which is going to happen, it's just a debate about how much, and pumps went up your mix would be negatively impacted from that..

Jayson Bedford

All right. Okay..

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Margins will be negatively impacted. In that period you'd obviously get to do better on the pumps -- over time pumping..

Jayson Bedford

All right. Okay, and then maybe just last one. Back to the FX dynamics. I'm still little unclear meaning even the companies I think -- the countries that you cited in the PowerPoint, I think you manufacture more product than you sell into those countries.

So I'm still a little puzzled as to why a stronger US dollar wouldn't be a tailwind? So maybe if you could, don't mind going through some of the dynamics there that led to the revision?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Yes, it's a fascinating topic. I'll let Brain take that..

Brian Bonnell Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Yes. So the majority of the impact due to currency on the EBITDA line comes from balance sheet exposures that we have related to inter-company receivables and payables. Specifically a number of our foreign entities have inter-company payables to our US entity in US dollars.

Many of these foreign entities experienced significant impacts to their currency and as a result that liability in US dollars increased as a result and that results in a loss to the other income and expense line of the P&L.

Jayson, did that...?.

Jayson Bedford

Yes.

So, on the P&L, we're going to see it on the other -- the other income line?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Yes, that's what it is; that's what it is..

Brian Bonnell Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Longer term on to your other point historically, for ICU strength against the peso was a good guy. We've got a bunch of different places now, and we hedge, we thought it was a portion of it might be as good as it could get, we haven't saw [ph] that too historically, so....

Jayson Bedford

Okay, thank you..

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Thanks, Jay..

Operator

And your next question comes from Matthew Mishan from KeyBanc..

Matthew Mishan

Hey guys, thanks for taking the questions. I just want to make sure it's been a long day so I just wanted to make sure I understand, you guys aren't necessarily reiterating your guidance excluding -- excluding the FX and interest. You're going to update it in next quarter. And there is a range of outcomes.

I'm just -- is the range of outcomes whether that may fall of the middle where some are actually positive outcomes and then some are negative outcomes.

I'm just trying to understand what that range of outcomes looks like and make sure I fully understand what you're saying?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Sure. And it's okay to be blunt here right. Our concern was if we, the one thing we knew for certain was the currency and interest expense. Right. We could pay off the revolver and that could go if we wanted. We didn't want any anybody presume that if we withdrew that it would be better.

Alright, because it is a very unpredictable and difficult situation out there. We have built in some downside to our current view of the balance of the year that delivers [ph]. But it could get worse, maybe there are some outcomes that are going to get better, but you know this might be the new normal.

We don't want to pull and put it out there, again each year, we've -- late on the beginning of the year we've adjusted if we had to -- in the middle of the year, and things we knew right now were the currency, the interest expense and at least some assumption of what deterioration from Q2 to Q3 could be, that's how it was..

Matthew Mishan

Okay..

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Fair to ask, totally fair to ask. We're just, we're trying -- can we run a model. We're not that big. We want to really be transparent and say this is what we're, we're running towards with a higher degree of risk around it..

Matthew Mishan

All right. That's right sense in this environment.

You were planning towards a $75 million to $80 million run rate on IV Solutions over the course of the last five, six months before this, what are you thinking now and how do you kind of view the manufacturing footprint between Austin and Rocky Mount, has that changed?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Not -- let's do it in reverse. Nothing has changed, the team is actively and that's where a lot of CapEx has gone to get the lines up and running in Austin, to allow moves away from Rocky Mount, that is necessary our long-term model. So that hasn't changed at all. And yes, the base business was probably a little bit higher than 80 in Q1.

I wouldn't make much of it other than it was a, and you kind of go back to Q4, it was a, reasonable flu season et cetera before the pandemic and the winter is usually a heavier month, just couple of million dollars I wouldn't draw any conclusions from that..

Matthew Mishan

And on your commentary around you believe the market doesn't want a winner-take-all what is. I'm just trying to sense, where does it, where does that, where did they not want a winner-take-all.

I mean we'll, are you talking specifically around, around the solutions there? Or is it more around you think the hospital would want to use like multiple pump manufacturers?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

I think it applies to all these categories. And look at the insanity of what we've all been living through, and there aren't that many factories that make a lot of these products, and I guess there aren't that many vendors. And it's not good for the system to be overboard any one situation.

And so whether we're the beneficiary or the non -- on the negative end of that if we were in charge, that's how we would think about the categories and then certainly the message we're trying to deliver right there, obviously your products have to stand on their own merits or technology, etcetera.

But we see the larger systems thinking about that a lot right now, and whether it was vents or PP&E or any of the other categories, and we've been associated with all those categories in our previous experiences. We do think people are going to do a little bit more reflection on that..

Matthew Mishan

And I guess the same question like almost like backwards.

I guess as you look at, as you look at the rumors of you and Smiths, you look at the UK, and how important the manufacturer is to be based in a country -- to supply a country, do you now look, do you now look at a potentially large acquisition like that? I don't know, I don't know if going forward, it would even be feasible in this kind of environment?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

I think we haven't thought about anything outside of the last 90 days. It's on running our own business and making sure we are taking care of our customers.

That's stuff will sort itself out over time on what's required in a given place or not, but I do -- I really do believe it's good for the system to have some diversity in the supply chain, whether that helps us get something not suits us that's secondary, right.

A lot of these categories -- all these categories that you are reading about every night, I mean they didn't leave local manufacturing by accident, they left because they got overweight either misvalued or overweight in certain direction that they wanted and that's not good for anyone..

Matthew Mishan

Thank you very much. And thanks for everything that you're doing out to help support and the questions as well..

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Thank you, Matt..

Operator

And your next question comes from Larry Solow from CJS Securities..

Larry Solow

Good afternoon. Good to hear you guys. Hope you and your families are all hanging in there and are actually healthy. Vivek maybe a couple of questions on just some follow ups.

Most of my questions have been answered, but in terms of sort of your assumptions clearly sort of the biggest drivers are admission, hospital admissions and you said things could get worse. And obviously that would be on the elective surgery side.

Could things get worse on the elective surgery side? Or is it more that you're worried that this continues to be sort of blacked -- almost blacked out for a longer period of time?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

I don't know, first, I don't know if it's just elective surgeries. Larry, I mean ER visits are important too; ER visits is our [indiscernible]. We read the public hospitals transcripts you know the four or five of them that are available, and they've all been very candid about it.

They are obviously all hoping right that electives come back, the system is, the economics of the system depend on it. But what guarantees that the ER business are going to be same, and what guarantees that elective can ever get back more than 75% of what they were for the foreseeable future, and has a big impact on admissions.

People are throwing around numbers, much better than that in the third quarter. I don't know, I don't know that we have enough to believe that and we have to run plans, company plans and all the stuffs based on the number; that's why we want everyone to know..

Larry Solow

What are you guys sort of from a high level, are you incorporating sort of we stay -- we stay the course on the elective side and admission sort of slowly come down more as hopefully COVID subsides a little bit. Is that sort of your view? In down the middle. I would say.

Is that -- would that be like sort of down the middle Vivek?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

I think we are probably a little bit more cautious down the middle. I mean I think we think Q2 could be really challenging and Q3 could also be challenging, if there is any hope it's certainly later in the year..

Larry Solow

Right. And how do -- you mentioned sort of, obviously this whole pandemic hangs a light on sort of the importance of the industry.

How do you think does it impact you guys specifically over the sort of mid to long term, how you will operate your business assuming COVID is even if it's a couple of -- hopefully a two year -- two to three year thing and then it's somewhat under control, do you from a really high level, do you see things you could do better, any thoughts on...?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

From a really high level it doesn't actually change that much what we were doing. We were just -- this was our business and it is our business and we had to, we had to tweak production up and down, we have to stop-start on installations, but it doesn't actually change that much of what we're doing.

There are product features that we want to deliver on in our development road maps in each of the segments and it may be sharpens thinking around some of those, and as we grind, right, we know that we're not going to go away from the system. We grind a way for the next opportunity to help present itself..

Larry Solow

All right.

On the pump side?.

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Make sure we have customers that have -- are on the best footing, right, and believe in what we're doing right..

Larry Solow

Right. And on the system side, you mentioned sort of you came into the year with probably your greatest opportunity or positioning in a long time to continue to begin to take some share.

Obviously, obviously this holds you back a little bit, but has the competitive environment or your opportunity really has, will that, could that potentially slipped through your hands? Or is that kind of just shift to the right? I know your competitor also has -- facing issues, regulatory issues that probably won't be, sounds like it won't be resolved too soon..

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

I think like we did in the last call, we don't really want to comment on it. It has been -- guess we've lost time is what's going on and so we don't know whether we get time back or not, we just have to get out there and execute, but we still believe the opportunities is good as it's ever been for us. I mean do work on the products and figure it out.

We have the full portfolio with all the consumables to go along with it. So we feel like we're well positioned and we just have to execute..

Larry Solow

Okay. And just last question on the oncology piece. You mentioned that you gotten some better traction outside the US, it sounds like you don't expect to really get too much traction in the US until things calm down on the....

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

It's been a little bit of a more complicated story. We were short product for most of last year. We released it first into the US market. We had a big surge of product taken in the US market in Q4. And then we released it to the international markets at the beginning of this year.

As a result of all of that related to US, we didn't have quite the same store reordering in the US, plus and then the pandemic hit and slowed things down from an implementation perspective. That probably flipped the US starts to look a bit more normal, international probably cool off of it now we put some product out there for the next 90 days or so.

But it is dependent on the ability to get into hospitals in service, train and switch people over and that has been challenging obviously the last six, seven or eight weeks, we lost time..

Larry Solow

Okay, great. I appreciate it. Thank you..

Vivek Jain Chief Executive Officer & Chairman of the Board

Okay, that's it. We appreciate very much. We know everybody is buys, it's a difficult time out there. We appreciate everything that all participants are doing here. We appreciate people interest in our company and just like we had in previous years we'll come back on Q2 to tell exactly where we think the world is. Thanks very much folks. Appreciate it..

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect..

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