BC
BRUKER CORP (BRKR)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 missed on both revenue and EPS vs S&P Global consensus as academic, biopharma and industrial demand weakened, tariffs rose, and FX turned into a headwind; revenue was $797.4M vs $810.2M consensus and non-GAAP EPS $0.32 vs $0.42 consensus, while GAAP EPS was $0.05 . Consensus values marked with asterisk are from S&P Global: revenue $810.2M*, EPS $0.42*.
- Bruker cut FY25 guidance to revenue of $3.43–$3.50B (2%–4% reported growth) and non-GAAP EPS of $1.95–$2.05 (down 15%–19% YoY), citing lower organic demand (-2% to -4%), ~60 bps tariff and ~90 bps FX headwinds to margin; management also initiated a larger cost program targeting $100–$120M annual savings in FY26 to drive ~300 bps operating margin expansion even in flat growth .
- Non-GAAP operating margin fell 480 bps YoY to 9.0% on weaker volume, mix, tariffs and FX; non-GAAP gross margin was 48.6% (-270 bps YoY). Free cash flow was -$148.8M on tax timing and working capital; book-to-bill was mid-0.9x and BSI backlog ~6.5 months .
- Innovation cadence remained strong (timsUltra AIP, timsOmni, timsMetabo; biocrates acquisition), supporting the medium-term multiomics thesis despite near-term headwinds; Q2 segment mix: CALID strength offset BioSpin softness; BEST declined .
- Catalysts: clarity on tariff rates (esp. Switzerland), visibility on U.S. NIH/NSF funding settlements, China stimulus timing, execution of cost actions, and potential Q4 UHF NMR recognition; management models Swiss tariffs at 15% and can re-route production if needed .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Product/innovation momentum: Launched timsUltra AIP with sensitivity gains enabling single-cell and high-throughput proteomics; also highlighted timsOmni and timsMetabo, and announced biocrates metabolomics acquisition to broaden multiomics consumables/software/services .
- CALID strength and applied MS/diagnostics: First-half CALID revenue up low-teens on MALDI Biotyper and ELITech molecular diagnostics; applied MS grew, offsetting life-science MS softness (management commentary) .
- Cost discipline and forward margin plan: Announced expanded cost reductions of $100–$120M annualized for FY26; management targets ~300 bps operating margin uplift in FY26 even with muted growth .
What Went Wrong
- Demand softness and order intake: Organic revenue -7.0%; BSI -7.2% organic; book-to-bill mid-0.9x as U.S. academic, biopharma and industrial markets weakened; Europe and Americas saw low double-digit organic declines; China declined low-single digits .
- Tariffs and FX headwinds: Q2 margins/EPS impacted by higher tariffs and a decline in USD; CFO quantified ~$0.06 EPS headwind from FX in Q2; FY25 margin guide embeds ~60 bps tariffs and ~90 bps FX headwinds YoY .
- Free cash flow pressure and working capital: Q2 FCF -$148.8M on sizable tax prepayments ($50–$60M) and working capital; inventories rose to $1.22B vs $1.07B at 12/31/24 .
Financial Results
Key P&L and margins (prior year and prior quarter comparisons):
Q2 2025 vs S&P Global consensus:
Values with an asterisk (*) are from S&P Global.
Segments and geography:
KPIs and cash flow:
Non-GAAP adjustments impact (EPS):
- Q2 2025 total non-GAAP adjustments equated to $0.27 per diluted share; non-GAAP EPS was $0.32 vs GAAP $0.05 .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Life-science research instruments demand is under pressure… We are lowering our financial guidance for FY 2025…” — Frank H. Laukien, CEO .
- “Announcing a significantly expanded cost management initiative, expected to reduce our annual costs by $100–$120 million in FY 2026… resume rapid margin expansion and double-digit EPS growth next year, even in a scenario where demand remains muted.” — Frank H. Laukien .
- “Q2 non-GAAP operating margin was 9%, impacted by weaker volume leverage, unfavorable mix, tariffs and foreign currency… FX resulted in a $0.06 EPS headwind.” — Gerald Herman, CFO .
- “We’re modeling Swiss tariffs at 15%. In a worst case of 39%, we would re-route production to Germany/France.” — Frank H. Laukien .
- “We do have ~$30M of cost savings in our FY25 guide, with the bulk of incremental savings hitting in FY26.” — Frank H. Laukien / Gerald Herman .
Q&A Highlights
- Guide and 4Q cadence: Management comfortable with typical strong seasonality; expects Q3 EPS similar to Q2 and reacceleration in Q4 supported by cost saves and operating leverage .
- Free cash flow: Q2 burn driven by $50–$60M tax prepayments and working capital; CapEx to scale down in 2H25 .
- Orders/backlog: BSI book-to-bill mid-0.9x; backlog ~6.5 months, expected to normalize to ~5 months over time as consumables mix rises .
- Tariffs: FY25 assumptions EU/Israel 15%, Malaysia 19%, Switzerland 15% modeled; contingency to shift builds if needed .
- Academic funding trajectory: 2025 U.S. academic gov’t down 20–25% for Bruker; early signs of stabilization tied to settlements; timing still uncertain .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2025 vs consensus: Revenue $797.4M vs $810.2M*; non-GAAP EPS $0.32 vs $0.42*; both below Street, driven by weaker organic demand, tariffs and FX . Values with asterisk (*) are from S&P Global.
- Forward look: Street modeled Q3/Q4 EPS of ~$0.33*/$0.65* and revenue of ~$847M*/$959M*; management guided a weak Q3 and stronger Q4 on seasonality and cost saves. Q3 actuals subsequently printed above consensus (revenue $860.5M, EPS $0.45), but for this recap the focus is Q2 print and FY25 guide reset (consensus values are from S&P Global; actuals reflected in estimates feed for Q3).
- Implication: Street models may need to reflect lower FY25 organic growth, tariff/FX headwinds and the timing of cost savings (more 4Q-weighted), with potential FY26 EPS upgrades contingent on execution of $100–$120M cost actions. Values with asterisk (*) are from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes (Detail and Rationale)
- FY25 revenue to $3.43–$3.50B (from $3.48–$3.55B) on weaker academic, biopharma and industrial demand; organic now -2% to -4% (from 0%–2%); FX tailwind increased to ~2.5%; M&A to ~3.5% .
- FY25 non-GAAP EPS to $1.95–$2.05 (from $2.40–$2.48); FY25 op margin ~-210 bps YoY (M&A -40 bps; tariffs -60 bps; FX -90 bps; organic -20 bps) .
- FY26: ~$100–$120M cost savings targeted; management models ~300 bps operating margin uplift even under flat revenue, indicating potential double-digit EPS growth resumption .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends (Deep Dive)
Management Commentary (Selected Quotes)
- “Our second quarter came in below expectations… We are lowering our financial guidance for FY 2025…” — Frank H. Laukien .
- “We anticipate… visibility on U.S. NIH and NSF funding… We are encouraged by several recent settlements… to allow the resumption of grants…” — Frank H. Laukien .
- “These cost actions are expected to contribute approximately 300 basis points of operating margin improvement in fiscal year 2026 even under flat or muted market demand conditions.” — Gerald Herman .
- “Our Q4 tends to be more like a 3/10 of the number on an annualized basis… we’re pretty confident you’re going to see a significant lift in operating margin and EPS performance for the fourth quarter.” — Gerald Herman .
Q&A Highlights
- Street pushback on magnitude/timing: Why not act sooner on cost? Management already had phased saves; ~$30M benefit embedded in FY25, with bulk in FY26; committed to $100–$120M regardless of top line .
- Leverage and covenants: Company satisfied debt covenants; long-term target around ~2.7x over time (qualitative) .
- Academic funding path: 2025 down 20–25% for Bruker; FY26 budget visibility limited; some early signs of stabilization from settlements; expect spending to resume promptly upon grant awards .
- Product channel risk (MALDI/BD): Management does not expect material disruption; >50% MALDI Biotyper sold direct; developing contingencies; competitive dynamics manageable .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2025 miss: Non-GAAP EPS $0.32 vs $0.42*; Revenue $797.4M vs $810.2M*; driven by organic decline (-7% total), tariffs and FX . Values with asterisk (*) are from S&P Global.
- Street ahead of guide: Pre-cut FY25 implied higher EPS/organic growth; post-cut, consensus should migrate lower for FY25, with FY26 potentially re-rating on execution of cost saves. Values with asterisk (*) are from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term reset: FY25 is a transition year with organic decline and margin compression from tariffs/FX/M&A; Q3 remains weak with an expected 4Q seasonal and cost-driven rebound .
- Cost actions are the 2026 story: $100–$120M annual savings support ~300 bps operating margin uplift and double-digit EPS growth potential even with muted demand; execution tracking will be key .
- Innovation underpins medium-term thesis: ASMS launches (timsUltra AIP/Omni/Metabo) and biocrates broaden multiomics and consumables exposure, improving mix and resiliency over time .
- Order/market watch items: Monitor U.S. NIH/NSF settlements, China stimulus timing, biopharma R&D budgets, and industrial research demand stabilization; these are catalysts for bookings recovery .
- Tariff/FX sensitivity: Swiss tariff outcome and USD trajectory are tangible EPS levers; Bruker has supply-chain flexibility to mitigate extreme scenarios .
- Working capital/cash: Expect FCF to improve as tax timing effects abate and CapEx scales down in 2H; watch inventory normalization and order-to-revenue cycle .
- Trading implications: Post-guide cut, setup skews to execution on cost saves and 4Q delivery; positive surprises could come from tariff relief, faster grant flow, or stronger uptake of new platforms .
Values with asterisk (*) are from S&P Global.