Abbott, Intuitive And J And J Start Medtech Earnings Season Against A Turbulent Backdrop

Johnson & Johnson will be the first company to provide results that shed light on those questions. The continuation of the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in China and other parts of Asia, has tempered analyst expectations about the performance of J&J’s medical device unit. Earlier this month, J.P. Morgan analysts forecast J&J will miss the consensus sales forecast by $557 million, primarily because of a shortfall in its medtech business.

 

“On the MedTech business, we are moderately lowering estimates to reflect (a) the near-term impact of Omicron challenges on 1H22 procedure volumes particularly in China and broader Asia while (b) we expect growth stabilization in what we hope to be a normalized 2H22. We expect softer 1Q/2Q 2022 results and guidance based on challenges from Omicron particularly with ongoing China disruptions,” the analysts wrote in a note to investors.

 

The extent that COVID-19 cases affect results will depend on a geographic sales mix, with the anticipated recovery of elective procedures in the U.S. and Europe after the winter wave contrasting with the situation in China, where almost all of the 26 million people in Shanghai have been locked down.

 

Intuitive, which will report results on April 21, has limited exposure to China. Analysts at Bank of America put China’s share of Intuitive procedures at 4%, suggesting the company can weather disruption in the country if volumes rebound in the U.S. The analysts are upbeat about Intuitive’s prospects, naming the company as one of their top picks going into the quarter.

 

The bullish assessment reflects a belief that the 10.9% procedure growth expected by Wall Street “looks like a low bar looking at sequential growth.” Yet, like other high-tech medtech companies, the robotic surgery specialist needs semiconductors, as an ongoing shortage has affected the medical device sector and a host of other industries.

 

Intuitive has highlighted supply chain disruption as a risk factor in 2022, according to analysts at RBC Capital Markets, and faced minor, immaterial limitations on the supply of skill simulators in the fourth quarter. However, the BofA analysts said the company "sounded good on chip availability for this quarter" at an event held last month. If supply disruptions pressure margins, the BofA analysts think the company has some flexibility to offset margins given its plus-20% growth in operating expenses.

 

The RBC analysts named Intuitive alongside Abbott on the list of medtech companies that may be exposed to disruption to the supply of electronic components. Abbott will reveal the extent to which the supply situation has affected its business when it reports earnings on April 20.