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#1H FY24 Results
Added a month ago

CSL Have announced their 1H results with conference call later this morning.

ASX Announcement

Their Highlights

• Revenue $8.05 billion, up 11% at CC3

• NPAT $1.90 billion, up 17%

• NPAT $1.94 billion1 at CC, up 20%

• NPATA $2.02 billion, up 11%

• NPATA $2.06 billion at CC, up 13%

• NPATA earnings per share $4.182 , up 11%

• NPATA earnings per share $4.26 at CC up 13%

• Interim dividend5 of US$1.19 per share (Converted to Australian currency, the interim dividend is approximately A$1.81 per share, up 12%)

• Guidance reaffirmed – FY24 NPATA2,4 anticipated to be in the range of approximately $2.9 billion to $3.0 billion at CC


My Analysis

Pretty good results, which as far as I can see are broadly in-line with consensus. $CSL are sticking to FY guidance of 13%-17% NPATA Growth, and 9-11% CC revenue growth.

The stand out is Behring where revenue grew 14%, while Seqirus experienced a "challenging season" with only 2% growth. There's no PCP comparison for Vifor, so need to look at that.

There will be a short update on R&D. Key milestones ahead in the short terms are HIZENTRA (3Q - first phase 3 data) and Garadacimab (4Q first approval expected)

Disc: Held

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#Bear Case
Added 2 months ago

Disappointing phase 3 result for CSL 112. Hope tomorrows result is strong to compensate

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#sa-mRNA
Added 4 months ago

Arcturus, CSL win approval for world’s first self-amplifying mRNA vaccine in Japan 

Not exactly "small cap" news but I hadn't seen it come up anywhere else ...

Arcturus Therapeutics (NASDAQ:ARCT) and its partner CSL announced Tuesday that Japan's Ministry of Health had approved their ARCT-154 COVID-19 vaccine, marking the world's first regulatory clearance of a self-amplifying mRNA (sa-mRNA) vaccine

Accordingly, in Japan, ARCT-154 will be indicated for initial and booster vaccinations in adults aged 18 years and older

Compared to conventional mRNA technology used by leading COVID-19 vaccine makers such as Pfizer (PFE)/ BioNTech (BNTX), and Moderna (MRNA), self-amplifying mRNA technology is associated with an enhanced immune response at lower vaccine doses

"Self-amplifying mRNA technology has the potential to be an enduring vaccine option," said Nobel laureate Dr. Drew Weissman, "I look forward to seeing this next generation mRNA technology protect many from COVID-19 and possibly other harmful infectious diseases." 

"Today's approval marks a historic and exciting milestone as the first sa-mRNA vaccine in the world to be registered," Jonathan Edelman, Senior Vice President of the Vaccines Innovation Unit at Australian biotech CSL (CSLLLY), said

The decision is based on data from multiple clinical studies for ARCT-154, including a large ongoing trial in Vietnam and a Phase 3 COVID-19 booster trial 


About sa-mRNA

Messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine technology protects against infectious diseases by instructing cells in the body to make a specific protein, stimulating the immune response, and leaving a blueprint to recognize and fight future infection. However, sa-mRNA makes copies of the mRNA which generates the production of more protein compared to an equivalent amount of mRNA in a vaccine. The technology has the potential to create more potent cellular immune responses and increase duration of protection, while using considerably lower doses of mRNA


DISC: Held in RL

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#Management
Added 5 months ago

While I am on the topic of director buying.


Dr Megan Clarke has bought around ~50k of shares on the recent price weakness. I cant recall the details but I think CSL might be caught up in the ozempic panic which IMO is way overblown and CSL has a HUGE moat.

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#Capital Markets Day (CMD)
Added 5 months ago

I'm just out of $CSL's capital markets day and, as ever, the deep dive into each of the three businesses and the R&D portfolio always leaves me in awe of what a tremendous business this is and the breadth and depth of talent on the management team. There are too many moving parts to summarise the day effectively and, I work on the basis that anyone who was so motivated would have been there anyway. So, instead, I'll pull a few selected slides from the deck with a brief explanation of what they said to me.


My Key Take Aways from the Day

  • $CSL will sustainably grow earnings at double digits annually for the foreseeable future. FY24 guidance was re-affirmed.
  • It continues to sustain its R&D pipeline with new discoveries, with several exciting near-term, late-stage milestones for FY24
  • Gross margin and ROIC will progressively improve year on year over the coming 3-5 years or so, driven by a program of efficiency improvements to drive plasma recovery, a period of 3-years of reduced capex and debt moving back to 2 x EBITDA by EOFY24.
  • Overall, revenue will be driven by the tailwind of ageing populations in developed markets; label expansions of the existing portfolio; growth of recently launched products; and new approvals expected.
  • The company has a framework for disciplined capital allocation, focused on sustaining growth while increasing shareholder returns over time


Today was Paul McKenzie's first outing as CEO for Capital Market's Day. He did a good job topping and tailing the day, supporting his team in the Q&A, and letting the team do the heavy lifting as you'd expect. As far as I am concerned, he did a good job and the first test will be meeting or beating FY24 guidance.


Capital Discipline

I start with Fig.1 the framework for capital discipline presented by CFO Joy Linton.

Figure 1

faf0450e1e17310cec20a1436970f22753477c.png

$CSL continues to invest strongly for growth. The next several years will be some transitionary points:

  • A progressive return to pre-COVID %GM in the plasma business, with a promise to grow margins beyond these levels as a result of a range of investment in IT and manufacturing technology to reduce CPL (costs per litre) at the collection stage and increase plasma yield through manufactuing. This isn't something that just happens, and the team outlined some of the details of improvements being made in the collection centres and in the plasma extraction processes.
  • A reduction in capex of c. 30% over the next three years. This follows the completion of a major program of new facility investments over recent years
  • NPATA growth allowing the debit required for the Vifor acquisition to be reduced back to the target level of < 2 x EBITDA - a conservative position that should retain investment grade credit rating.


Revenue Growth

$CSL expects to grow strongly across all its businesses. The positioning of each of the three businesses and the market opportunities are summarised in Fig. 2.

Importantly, many of the conditions for $CSLs treatments are related to ageing, so there remains a long-term trend of ageing over the coming decades in developed markets, then to be followed in the future in the middle income countries. Even in developed markets, there is a significant variation in uptake of $CSL products, so there is significant opportunity in driving product use to a more uniform adoption of the standard of care in the most advanced markets. New indications for existing products come on top of that.

In summary, there are many levers for growth offset of course by competition and new tharapies, of which GLP-1s are just one of many.

Figure 2

5bf3649556e47f2a1a17b8edfd80c6cf8f0841.png

Although the story for Iron (i.e. Vifor) was perhaps less confident (from my perspective) with indications that progress may be lumpy, this is more down to the uncertainty of how rapidly the growth of Injectafer will take off following approval for Heart Failure in the US and the approval of Ferinject in China, offset by the launch of generic competition from Sandoz (CEO Paul McKenzie emphasised that generic competition was in the acquisition case, but I sense that with the manufacturing challenges of the drug, Sandoz has perhaps been a bit faster out of the blocks than expected).

Of course it is important to remember that adding treatments for renal failure and CKD complements $CSL's other therapy areas, so Vifor is as much about building capability as it is about buying a portfolio of drugs. CFO Joy Linton summed it up when she pointed out that CSL's prior acquisitions have usually taken several years before their promise has materialised, pointing to the 3 years it took for the value of Sequirus (acquired from Novartis) to show through.

We've recently heard how $CSL has been in the gun sights from analysts and commentators from GLP-1 FLOW clinical trial. Head of R&D Bill Mazzanotte addressed this in his opening remarks. He pointed out that cardi-vascular diseases are of a "multi-dimensional and complex nature". By this, he means that there are many diseases within the category, and for each disease there are many indications according to patient profile, disease type and stage of advancement. Reflecting on the hype around GLP-1s, Bill pointed out that 25 years ago Statins were emerging and commentators were saying that would be the end of cardiovascular disease and the existing drugs that treated them. "It didn't happen," he said. He further added that there are many drivers of renal disease, and that weight is not an independent driver (a bit like we've debated here on OSA). While he accepted there will be an impact he considered it to be a small impact on a small part of the portfolio. He summarised by saying "I am proud of the scientists who have done the work. I am grateful that patients have a new opportunity. But I am confident of our product and R&D portfolio."

From that respect, today was good for my general well-being. Having a day immersed in the CSL portfolio reminded me (as a non-clinician) just how complex and multi-faceted disease is, and how vast the array of treatments and modes of action are. It is highly, highly unlikley that any one mode of therapeutic action is going to be a "silver bullet."


R&D Portfolio

Bill Mazzanotte gave an update on R&D. At the headline level, several new candiates were added to the Phase 1 pipeline from different CSL "platforms" across the therapy areas; several drugs advanced throught the pipeline; and several candidates were dropped. Fig 3 shows the FY23 progress in the R&D portfolio and Fig 4 shows the updated portfolio and fig. 5 shows the key expected milestones for the next three years. (I'll be interested to read some of the broker notes on this, particularly GS, whose global healthcare desk will no doubt do a detailed analysis, considering similar developments across the competition. That's more than I can ever do! Chris Cooper asked several questions during the day, so I am sure there will be an update.)

Figure 3 FY23 Progress

37e7ddd97411fb00e57806b7e4e08f18b16d9e.png


Figure 4

d09656cb41282bead119e2873e3a2f16851c3f.png


Figure 5 FY24 R&D Milestones

bb837a6412c6f7487bdbf4f18e2f861410a61a.png

Key milestones are Garadacimab approvals decisions, and Phase III results of CSL112.


Articificial Intelligence and IT Generally

Chief Information and Digital Officer Mark Hill gave a short and interesting presentation of how $CSL is using IT to drive value both in R&D and Operations.

Mark who is a IT veteran of four decades in industry made the following remarks which stood out. First "AI is here to stay, and it is bigger than the internet" and second, it is "difficult to harness because the speed of innovation is faster than anything we have seen."

However, this wasn't a buzzword-hype presentation. On the contrary, Mark gave practical examples of the kind of things that $CSL are applying generative AI to, and they have even built an internal accelerator to innovate, test and then deploy useful applications. ("No one need write meeting minutes again")

I'm calling out this segment because I think across industries, AI - like digital before it and ongoing - will lead to capabilities that the best companies will figure out how to use, and then gain benefits from so doing. Some will succeed, others will be left behind.

And as @Strawman said in the last episode of Baby Giants podcast, if I recall correctly, in quoting Warren Buffet, AI will be like attending a parade, where some stand on a box to get a better view. But eventually, everyone is standing on a box, so no-one has a better view.

From a competitive perspective, however, some get on taller boxes and they get up earlier. From today's presentation it looks like CSL is taking this seriously and is unlikely to be left behind.


Guidance Re-Affirmed

I guess the good news about today is that there was no bad news. Guidance is intact, and the team sounds like they have clear plans in place to drive forward on the margin improvements that are under their control.


Figure 6; Guidance Re-Affirmed

58fbbd93d5ace5d09513614841619a1112ccf8.png


I started my career in industry working in big pharma over 30 years ago, and attended many management updates on the progress of the commercial and R&D portfolios. Today felt strangely familiar. $CSL is a global leader taking stock of where it stands, and laying out its plans to continue to grow more strongly than the industry. I'm pretty confident they will continue to succeed and was impressed by each of the presenters today. This is a business that doesn't depend on single CEO and I've no doubt that anyone of the key executives presenting today could take the ship forward if they needed to. That said, Paul McKenzie did a good job, and came across as a very competent team captain.


Disc: Held in RL and SM

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#Capital Markets Day (CMD)
Added 5 months ago

Not much to see here but FWIW Morgan Stanley has just released their first thoughts on CSL's First Capital Markets Day (CMD) today ...


Strategy to manage double-digit earnings growth looks robust; long-term Behring margins "beyond" pre pandemic levels, RIKA (automated plasma technology) could deliver 10% yield improvement:

We gleaned the following for CSL from its CMD presentation: i) It's positioned for double-digit earnings growth and is leading in a market with a large unmet need, yield/capacity is improving and R&D is yielding results; ii) current Ig yield is ~5% ahead of FY19, with ~8-13% likely within 3-5 years and ~16-27% likely by decade-end; iii) CSL expects to outgrow the market - Ig market growth 6-8% pa vs CSL at high-single digits, Hem B market growth 4-6% vs CSL at high-single digits, HAE market growth 4-6% vs CSL at high- single digits; iv) Rika is now in 15 centers with a final roll out timeline to be detailed by end CY23, with individual nomograms to deliver ~10% yield improvement; v) COVID-19 vaccine approvals expected across 2024-26; vi) realization of COGS efficiencies to drive Behring margins to pre-pandemic levels and beyond; vii) CIDP FcRn exposure appears lessened - it now accounts for 19% of IVIg revenue and 8% of SCIg revenue (vs. our estimate of 22-25% of total revenue previously); viii) Patient Blood Management is a key mid-term growth plank for V4; and ix) capex is down 30% from pcp with yield/process improvements delaying the need for expansion


DISC: Held in RL

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#ASX Announcements
Added 6 months ago

Could this announcement be to address the very issue we're currently discussing or is just the "norm" for CSL?


Notice of Capital Markets Day


CSL Limited (ASX:CSL; USOTC:CSLLY) will hold a Capital Markets Briefing on Monday 16 October 2023 in Sydney, Australia.

The briefing will commence at approximately 9.00am Australian Eastern Daylight Time and will focus on the Company’s business activities and initiatives for growth.

Presentations will be webcast on the Company website at www.csl.com in the ‘Investors’ section.

An archived copy of the webcast will also be uploaded later that day. 

Presentation materials will be available at the commencement of the briefing in the ‘Investors’ section of the Company website at www.csl.com.  

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#Thoughts
Added 6 months ago

Let me start by saying that I think CSL is easily one of the best companies on the ASX. I think the business will survive, and thrive, for many more years to come.

And, as with Resmed, I think any impact from Ozempic and related drugs is likely overstated.

But I do think this is (potentially) a lesson in how you can get fairly ordinary results as an investor even if you buy into a great company. In fact, over the last three years, "ordinary" is putting it mildly when you compare CSL to the wider market:

72fe6094b93ef671103e1ccf8ae878d629e1fb.png

Everything is easy in hindsight, but this is what happens when a company priced for strong growth doesn't deliver. Per share earnings growth and Return on Equity in recent times haven't been great:

9ff86cc3333d0c611b1dc6ba0da342ed4b1e69.png

The reasons behind this are far from existential, of course. And it's worth noting that the consensus forecast for FY25 EPS is $11.08 -- 62% higher than FY23! But at the start of 2020 the forward PE was 43x

This was rationalised at the time by:

  • Low interest rates
  • Strong growth expectations
  • High quality


Remember, interest rates (as defined by US 10year treasuries) were 2% and heading lower in early 2020. Things, as we now know, turned out differently. Lower for longer just didn't turn out to be the case...

df1a4df0726f3fa73f980cf01f76812a36d317.png



Likewise, COVID impacted collections and margins, so the growth wasn't as strong as was initially expected.

My point is that at a PE of 42x, there was very little room for error. No one could have predicted covid or what global interest rates were going to do, but the company itself was telling investors in 2020 that they expected 2-7% EPS growth -- which is nothing to sneeze at for $120b company (and they actually beat that guidance!). But a PE of 42x?

This was always my issue. Yes, i'll hasten to add that high quality companies deserve a premium. It's not sensible to expect CSL to trade at a PE of (say) 15. But you are always going to sail into the wind at those kind of multiples -- unless you can realistically expect super strong growth.

Put it this way, to overcome a PE compression of 43 to 35 (and remembering that a PE of 35x aint exactly low!), EPS needs to grow at about 19% just to keep the share price steady.

Anyway, that was then and this is now. And now we (still) have a super high quality company, whose earnings are expected to grow strongly but the PE is now on a forward PE of 25

a44546cdffb63b1d723d0a13addbccd3fb102a.png

NOW things are getting interesting!

Thank god the market is anything but rational.

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#Risks
Added 6 months ago

Thought I'd throw this out to the broader and much more informed SM community.

CSL share price is currently trading down at around 2019 levels because.....as I understand.....of weight-loss drug GLP-1 RA?

I'd appreciate views as to whether this "perceived risk" warrants such a dive in s/p?

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#Bull Case
stale
Added 6 months ago

CSL is close to the bottom of a multi-year trading range here (somewhere between $250-$340). Assuming the range holds, it is a good time to buy.

If it breaks the range, it may be an even better time to buy after it settles :). This is from an investor's perspective of course, those who can hold for long periods and withstand volatility to the downside - traders will want to tread more cautiously.

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#Bear Case
stale
Added 7 months ago

A contrarian opinion on CSL presented here (among other things).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1NhZfbiACSg

Disc. : Held IRL

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#Risks
stale
Added 8 months ago

Top sellers on the register including State Street who lends out shares for shorts and has massive holding.

At 258, CSL is now below the capital raise price for the Vifor takeover. Falling DXY doesn't help.

384bd139ed87db417276afbd4cb6b1a1496826.png

On the other hand, brokers still putting in high price targets of $300+.



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#Morgan Stanley’s View
stale
Last edited 9 months ago

Morgan Stanley’s top healthcare picks for ASX reporting season - TradingView. Com, 11th July 2023.

“Morgan Stanley says the recovery of healthcare earnings to pre-pandemic levels is more challenging than expected. Analysts favour companies that have recently provided guidance on upcoming earnings. 

“For most stocks, volume recovery to pre-pandemic levels has been sluggish accompanied by higher cost inflation, yet P/E multiples across the sector are generally inflated,” Morgan Stanley analysts said in a note on Tuesday.

“Staffing shortages have been a major detractor from volume recovery which could be more structural than transient (eg. nurses).”

Heading into August reporting season, the investment bank favours CSL (ASX: CSL) – which recently reset its FY24 expectations – as well as Sonic Healthcare (ASX: SHL) – where volume growth is robust and cost inflation has been contained.

Most preferred large caps: CSL, Ebos and Sonic Healthcare

CSL provided a market update on 14 June, which triggered a sharp 6.9% selloff. The update reaffirmed an FY23 net profit guidance of US$2.7 billion to US$2.8 billion and a first-time FY24 guidance of US$2.88 billion to US$3.01 billion, which missed analyst expectations. The stock has fallen a further 14% since the update and trading at levels not seen since July 2022. Morgan Stanley’s Overweight thesis is based on key points including:

  • “Industry data suggest that the trajectory of plasma recovery is accelerating.”
  • “CSL's plasma collections are now above pre-pandemic levels with positive momentum.”
  • “We don’t see change to the long-term picture despite the downgrade to our forecasts following the market update, but rather a 6-12 month delay in getting there.”

Morgan Stanley is “Overweight” on CSL with a share price target of $325.”

Held: IRL 9.4%, SM 19%

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#A Safe Haven?
stale
Last edited 9 months ago

Recently we built up a large sum of cash in our IRL portfolios due to the Blundy-Itaoui acquisition of Best & Less (which has almost reached compulsory acquisition stage now, 90% of ownership).

Looking for somewhere to park the cash, I chose to invest in CSL shares. CSL is now in the Blue Chip dog house, closing at a 12 month low of $266.90. The share price has been going sideways for 3 1/2 years. I thought this might be a reasonably safe place to park a lot of cash with a 12 month horizon in mind. Hopefully I can still extract a bit of cash along the way (if needed) by selling a few shares.

Macquarie thinks CSL is a safe haven according to this article in the AFR from the 19th June - Macquarie’s seven stock picks to ride out weaker earnings - see excerpt below:

Safe havens

Its advice is to stay defensive, even in the face of the recent downgrades from safe havens such as CSL, Amcor and ASX.

Macquarie’s analysis suggests (perhaps unsurprisingly) that cyclical stocks deliver the most earnings downgrades when forward orders fall and the economy slows. Media, discretionary retail, financial services, insurance and banks all typically experience double-digit falls in EPS when the economy enters a downturn phase.

On the other hand, sectors such as health, telecommunications, consumer staples and utilities experience either earnings upgrades or below-average downgrades.”

Since this article was published on the 19 June, CSL has fallen a further 6 per cent, from $284.44 to $266.90. So NOT so safe in the short term. It might fall further yet! The chartists might be suggesting you to get out of CSL now and buy back in when the share price goes above $320? (That never makes much sense to me).

I am reasonably happy with the guidance for 2024 (NAPTA up 13% to 18% on the market update on 14th June) and they haven’t hit their straps yet with the Vifor acquisition.

cab06b8be681e66050dfd0a1e7fac463179be6.jpeg

Most Brokers think there might be some upside to CSL according to the commentary by Bronwyn Allen on The Motley Fool yesterday:

Macquarie has an outperform rating on CSL shares with a $326 price target.”

“Morgans believes CSL shares are “poised to break out this year“. 

The broker has an add rating and a $323 share price target for CSL. 

Morgans says:

A key portfolio holding and key sector pick, we believe CSL is poised to break-out this year, a COVID exit trade, offering double-digit recovery in earnings growth as plasma collections increase, new products get approved and influenza vaccine uptake increases around ongoing concerns about respiratory viruses, with shares offering good value trading around its long-term forward multiple of ~30x.”

“The most bullish of the bunch is Citi. It has a buy rating and a 12-month price target of $340. This implies a 27% potential upside on the stock. 

This actually represents a cut in Citi’s share price target following CSL’s recent update, which revealed currency headwinds for the company, given it reports its earnings in US dollars. 

Citi was previously tipping $350 per share by the end of FY24. 

There is still the threat of a US recessionin FY24, which of course, isn’t good for US shares or ASX shares. 

But Morgan Stanley points out that US healthcare stocks have outperformed the market by an average of 13% during the past four recessions.”

The consensus share price target from 18 analysts on Simply Wall Street data is $324, which represents an upside of 21%.

Now all the analysts could be wrong. CSL is a complex global roll-up. I’m not even going to attempt to value it given there are hundreds of others who are more skilled than me already doing just that. Most think CSL is worth more than it is selling for now, and I don’t think it is going broke any time soon. So I think it might be a reasonably safe place to park a lot of cash for 12 months or so.

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#ASX Announcements
stale
Added 10 months ago

CSL Market Update

$CSL out today with an adjustment to guidance stating that "currency headwinds" have increased from US$175m estimated at HY to US$230-250m today.

Reiterated their preferred measure of NPATA, stating that results expected to come in towards top end of guidance of $2.7-2.8bn, and that NPATA growth to FY24 would be 13-18% of US$2.9-US$3.0bn cc.

From the wording of the announcement, it looks like they are trying to guide some analysts who have been shooting a bit high.

Listening to the various commentators on CSL there are strong expectations of return to favourable plasma collection dynamics, contributions from Vifor, operational efficiencies, and progress on new products. Some are stating that they believe that after the SP having tracked sideways more or less over the last three years, FY24 is going to be the next "breakout year". So that perhaps explains the negative initial reaction of the market to the result, trading anywhere from down 6-8% this morniing.

Of course, currency headwinds can also turn to tailwinds, and SP of this growth stock has been stifled in the higher interest rate environment. During FY24 and FY25 as we potentially tip into the next phase of the macro cycle, we could indeed see the drag effect of these macro factors reverse and reinforce the underlying operational strength of the business. So there is a logic to being patient.

Based on my model, 3 yr earnings growth of 19% CAGR makes the current forward P/E 40 a bit steep for me to be adding any more, although I always ask the question when the market offers this mini-pullback opportunities.

I didn't make the investor call, but will scruitinize the transcript to see if there is anything else, although I doubt it as they are pretty careful in what goes in the release, and tend not to "freelance" in the Q&A.

Disc: Held in RL only

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#Broker Views
stale
Added one year ago

Just adding to @mikebrisy's Broker Views for CSL


out of 16 analysts that Sentieo has in it's coverage database for CSL:

Strong Sell 0

Sell 0

Hold 3

Buy 10

Strong Buy 3

and out of 15 price targets the average is $315.77

and some of the analysts not in Mike's list from FNArena:

Morgan Stanley: Overweight ($327.00) (17/10/22)

RBC: Outperform ($329 (down from 339)) (17/10/22)

JP Morgan: Overweight ($330) (17/10/22)

There's also a new one from BofA but for some reason it's not loading right now

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#Broker Views
stale
Added one year ago

Yesterday I gave a brief report on the $CSL Vifor briefing, concluding that overall the information shared did not significantly impact my view on valuation. https://strawman.com/reports/CSL/mikebrisy?view-straw=20145

Overnight, it appears the analysts largely agree, based on their target price adjustments:

  • Goldman Sachs unchanged at $291 (Neutral)
  • Citi unchanged at $340 (Buy)
  • Credit Suisse unchanged at $304 (Neutral)
  • Macquarie unchanged at $329.50 (Outperform)
  • Morgans reducing to $312.20 from $321.30 (Add)

All but GS are from the FNArena Broker Database.

Looking at market consensus = $328 (n=16, range $281 - $376), the discount of current SP of $276 to consensus is -16%. (Source: marketscreener.com)

$CSL is one firm where I don't think I can get a better handle on valuation than the big investment houses. The biggest research teams are well-resourced, read across competitors, study clinical trials reports and regulatory approvals, analyse pricing and reimbursement. For me, investing in a company like $CSL is about picking the right time to add a long term growth stocktaking into account all views.

$CSL rarely trades at this discount to consensus. Given the re-opening of both plasma collection and dialysis cycling through the next round of results, there will likely be upward pressure on share price to close gaps to targets. This will particularly be true if we start to see a moderating of inflation over next 6 months. Of course, some of the higher targets may be moderated over time if results don't shoot the lights out. So arguably, there is room for disappointment. Even so, this looks like a very good entry point.

Personally, I'm not buying more $CSL as it is at 5% of my RL portfolio. Happy to keep it there, and will revisit this based on the the R&D Investor Day in November.

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#Vifor Briefing
stale
Added one year ago

https://newswire.iguana2.com/af5f4d73c1a54a33/csl.asx/3A604660/CSL_CSL_Vifor_Market_Briefing

This morning CSL held their investor briefing on the $12bn Vifor acquisition, updating their forecasts to now reflect Vifor as a segement within the business. Overall revenue growth guidance was unchanged, with the exception of signalling directional changes for non-US contributions weakening due to US$ strength. There is also a higher cost of debt associated with the acquisition due to rising interest rates.

Overall, while there is the prospect of generic competion for the core iron injectible product, this is offset by the complexity of the manufacturing process and relatively low market penetration, as well as the strong pipeline of recently launched products being rolled out and strong clinical development pipeline.

CFO Joy Linton communicated changes to how CSL will report in the future, reporting GM less sales and marketing at the segment level (Sequirus, Behring and Vifor), with R&D and G&A now to be reported only at Group level.

For me, the value of the briefing was that it explains how the Vifor and CSL combination strengthens capabilities both in therapeutic knowledge, R&D including clinical development and market footprint. On the latter, several of the Vifor products already in the market and in last phase clinical development can expect to experience enhanced growth from the much larger CSL market footprint.

CSL is comprehensively covered by brokers, so it will be interesting to watch the various research notes and updates coming out over the next few days. While I don't have my own CSL model, nothing I heard leads me to expect big swings either way.

At the moment CSL SP appears weighed down by i) impact of higher interest rates ii) expectations of margin pressure iii) weaker contribution from non-US due to currency impacts offset by return to pre-COVID activity and growth in plasma. Re-opening also a positive impact on the dialysis segment which is a value driver for Vifor.

A recording of the webcast will be available later today on www.csl.com. It is about one hour of presentation and an hour of analysis Q&A.

Next stop is the R&D Investor Briefing in November.

Disc. Held in RL (5%), not held in SM

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#Outlook and Guidance
stale
Added one year ago

Skipping straight to the outlook from CSL CEO  Paul Perreault’s address in the AGM announcement this morning. FY23 Net profit after tax is expected to between $US2.4 billion and $2.5 billion, a growth of 10 - 14% on a “like-for-like” basis. Given the current macro outlook and the weakness in the stock market this week, that is music to my ears!

Disc: Held IRL (7%), SM (18%)

Outlook

Finally, let’s move our attention to the outlook for your business. Looking specifically at CSL Behring:

• We see a continued improvement in plasma collections and that is expected to underpin strong future sales growth for our marginal litre products, IG and Albumin;

• The higher cost of plasma is still evident and expected to prevail in Financial Year 23; and

• We are looking to replenish inventory to a level that gives us more confidence on our ability to meet patient need, and in a more cost-effective way.

For CSL Seqirus:

• Product differentiation will continue to drive strong demand for our influenza vaccines, particularly Flucelvax

Across the enterprise:

• We expect to continue to be faced with challenges in the external cost environment, whether that be inflationary pressures, staffing constraints or the logistics and supply chain challenges

In terms of guidance for Financial Year 23, I am pleased to reaffirm that:

• Revenue growth to be in the range of 7 to 11% over Financial Year 22 at constant currency

• With net profit after tax expected to be approximately in the range of $2.4 to $2.5 billion at constant currency.

• On a like for like basis, this represents a growth of between 10 – 14%.

This excludes CSL Vifor earnings and costs associated with the acquisition, as well as

non-recurring COVID vaccine contribution.

Updated Financial Year 23 guidance, including CSL Vifor, will be provided at the CSL Vifor market briefing on October 17th

As always, our forward-looking statements are subject to the usual disclaimers as mentioned at the start of this presentation.

To close, I am absolutely certain that the fundamentals of our business are strong and the diversity of our pipeline is rich. This really sets up CSL to build on our track record of sustainable growth for years to come.

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#SPP
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Added 2 years ago

Looks like SPP offer may come in under $255 barring big spike on Monday

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Valuation of $310.00
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Added 3 years ago
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#Financials
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Last edited 3 years ago

Started looking into CSL to fill the more defensive part of my portfolio. Looking at the historical PE's their 5 year low is 31.1 and 5 year high of 42.9. Current PE of 33.7.

CSL are still spending > $1b on R&D

EPS are forecast to grow 10% this FY but only 2-3% next FY. 

For a company that has grown EPS at a CAGR of 15% over the last 5 years and still investing a huge amount of $ in R&D I think the market is looking at the short term and not the opportunity that lies ahead for CSL.

Will continue on this over the weekend, just a few early thoughts.

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#H1 FY2021 Results
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Added 3 years ago

18-Feb-2021:  Half Year Results Announcement   plus   Half Year Results Investor Presentation

and:   Statutory Accounts for the Half Year Ended 31 Dec 2020

CSL Delivers a Strong Half Year Result of $1.8 Billion* Net Profit

  • CSL delivered a strong first half result for 2021 with reported net profit after tax of $1,810 million, up 44% at CC** reflecting:
    • Solid growth in our core immunoglobulin portfolio led by HIZENTRA®
    • Successful transition to own distribution model in China
    • Strong growth in the leading HAE product HAEGARDA®
    • Exceptionally strong performance by Seqirus
    • CSL’s diversified portfolio and resilient business model in the midst of COVID-19 pandemic
    • Full financial recognition of contracted income for UQ COVID-19 vaccine in first half, after program termination
  • Earnings per share $3.98, up 44% at CC**
  • Interim dividend*** of US$1.04 per share, up 9%
    • Converted to Australian currency, the interim dividend is approximately A$1.34 per share down 9%
  • FY21 net profit after tax is anticipated to be in the range of approximately $2,170 million to $2,265 million at constant currency

Notes:

  1. (*) All figures are expressed in US dollars unless otherwise stated.
  2. (**) Constant currency (CC) removes the impact of exchange rate movements, facilitating comparability of operational performance. For further detail please refer to CSL’s Financial Statements for the Half Year ended December 2020 (Directors’ Report).
  3. (***) For shareholders with an Australian registered address, the interim dividend of US$1.04 per share (approximately A$1.34) will be unfranked for Australian tax purposes and paid on 1 April 2021. For shareholders with a New Zealand registered address, the interim dividend of US$1.04 per share (approximately NZ$1.44) will be paid on 1 April 2021. The exchange rates will be fixed at the record date of 5 March 2021. All other shareholders will be paid in US$. CSL also offers shareholders the opportunity to receive dividend payments in US$ by direct credit to a US bank account.

--- click on links above for more ---   [I hold CSL shares and believe they are one of the, if not THE highest quality company on the ASX.]

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#ASX Announcements
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Added 4 years ago

07-May-2020:  New Debt Facilities to Strengthen Maturity Profile

Also (last month):  09-Apr-2020:  Company Update on COVID-19   and   08-Apr-2020:  Company Update on COVID-19

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