DHR January 28, 2026

Danaher Corporation Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Call - Bioprocessing Strength Anchors 2026 Guide (3%-6% Core Revenue, $8.35-$8.50 EPS)

Summary

Danaher closed 2025 with clear momentum in bioprocessing and enough diagnostic tailwinds to beat street expectations, but management is deliberately conservative on equipment recovery and life sciences consumables. The company reported solid full year results, a durable free cash flow profile, and one-off productivity gains that boost near-term earnings, while flagging that academic and government spending and China policy remain the key sources of uncertainty.

The boardroom message is straightforward. Bioprocessing drives the story — high single-digit consumables growth, improving equipment orders, and new product launches underpin a 3%-6% core revenue guide for 2026 and an EPS range of $8.35 to $8.50. That outlook rests on a mix of execution, modest end-market recovery, and $250 million of cost actions that supply roughly $0.30 of EPS benefit. Upside is possible, but management is pacing expectations until more equipment order data and life sciences funding patterns confirm a durable recovery.

Key Takeaways

  • Full year 2025 sales $24.6 billion; core revenue increased 2% year over year.
  • Adjusted operating profit margin for 2025 was 28.2%; adjusted diluted EPS $7.80, up 4.5% versus prior year.
  • Free cash flow for 2025 was $5.3 billion, with free cash flow to net income conversion of approximately 145%, the 34th consecutive year above 100%.
  • Q4 2025 sales were $6.8 billion with 2.5% core revenue growth; Q4 adjusted diluted EPS was $2.23, up 4% year over year, and Q4 free cash flow was $1.8 billion.
  • Bioprocessing was the standout in Q4, with core revenue up 6%; consumables grew high single digits and equipment returned to growth, with three consecutive quarters of sequential equipment order improvement.
  • Management expects bioprocessing to grow high single digits in 2026, led by consumables; equipment is modeled as roughly flat for the year, supported by current backlog and shorter-cycle projects.
  • Life sciences core revenue was essentially flat in Q4, with instruments steady, consumables down due to lower plasmid and mRNA demand from a few large customers and continued academic funding weakness.
  • Diagnostics core revenue increased 2% in Q4; clinical diagnostics and non-respiratory molecular menus showed strength. Cepheid respiratory revenue beat expectations in Q4 and management now assumes approximately $1.8 billion of respiratory revenue for 2026 under a normal season.
  • Management is initiating 2026 guidance of 3%-6% core revenue growth and adjusted diluted EPS of $8.35 to $8.50. Q1 2026 core revenue is expected to be up low single digits with an operating margin of about 28.5%.
  • Danaher implemented roughly $250 million of cost actions in 2025, which management says provides about $0.30 of EPS benefit in 2026; much of the benefits are expected to flow in the second half of the year.
  • Innovation and product launches were highlighted: Cytiva bioreactor formats and protein A resins; SCIEX ZenoTOF 8600 mass spec; Beckman Mosaic Spectral module and expanded DxI 9000 assays; Cepheid Xpert GI FDA clearance.
  • Geographic detail: developed markets grew low single digits in Q4, North America flat, Western Europe mid-single-digit growth. High growth markets up mid-single digits with China down low single digits in Q4.
  • Management says China bioprocessing demand is expected to grow in 2026 despite a difficult Q4 comparable; diagnostics headwinds from China policy are expected to moderate through the year.
  • Balance sheet and capital allocation: strong free cash generation, debt/EBITDA below 2, and an M&A environment described as becoming more constructive. Danaher remains disciplined, focused on strategic tuck-ins in attractive end markets.
  • Risks and conservatism: academic and government demand remains muted and could limit life sciences upside; equipment order improvements are encouraging but still early, and FX or below-the-line items could swing EPS relative to the guide.

Full Transcript

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Good day, everyone. My name is Nikki, and I will be your conference facilitator this morning. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Danaher Corporation’s fourth quarter 2025 earnings results conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during that time, simply press star, then 1 on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star, then 2 on your telephone keypad. I will now turn the call over to Mr. John Bedford, Vice President of Investor Relations. Mr. Bedford, you may begin your conference.

John Bedford, Vice President of Investor Relations, Danaher Corporation: Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us on the call. With us today are Rainer Blair, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Matt McGrew, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. I’d like to point out that our earnings release, the slide presentation supplementing today’s call, the reconciliations and other information required by SEC Regulation G, and a note containing details of historical and anticipated future financial performance, are all available on the investors section of our website, www.danaher.com, under the heading Quarterly Earnings. The audio portion of this call will be archived on the investors section of our website later today under the heading Events and Presentations, and will remain archived until our next quarterly call. A dial-in replay of this call will also be available until February eleventh, 2026.

During the presentation, we will describe certain of the more significant factors that impacted year-over-year performance. The supplemental materials describe additional factors that impacted year-over-year performance. Unless otherwise noted, all references in these remarks and supplemental materials to company-specific financial metrics relate to results from continuing operations and relate to the fourth quarter of 2025, and all references to period-to-period increases or decreases in financial metrics are year over year. We may also describe certain products and devices which have applications submitted and pending for certain regulatory approvals or are available only in certain markets. During the call, we will make forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, including statements regarding events or developments that we believe or anticipate will or may occur in the future.

These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, including those set forth in our SEC filings, and actual results might differ materially from any forward-looking statements that we make today. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date that they are made, and we do not assume any obligation to update any forward-looking statements, except as required by law. With that, I’d like to turn the call over to Rainer.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: All right, John, thank you, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us on the call today. We delivered a strong finish to the year with better-than-expected performance across the portfolio. We were particularly encouraged by continued strength in our bioprocessing business, along with improving momentum in diagnostics and life sciences. Our team’s disciplined execution also enabled us to exceed our fourth quarter margin, earnings, and cash flow expectations. Now, during the quarter, end market trends across our businesses were broadly consistent with what we saw through the first three quarters of the year. In pharma, global monoclonal antibody production remained robust, and we were encouraged to see a modestly more favorable capital spending environment. We also continued to see a recovery in pharma R&D spending, while biotech demand remained stable.

Academic and government demand remained muted but was stable sequentially, while clinical and applied end markets continued to perform well. Now, I’d like to take a moment to thank our associates for their efforts in 2025. They did a tremendous job leveraging the Danaher Business System to navigate a dynamic geopolitical and policy environment while continuing to deliver for our customers and drive productivity gains across our businesses. Their dedication and passion for serving our customers enabled the launch of innovative therapies and diagnostic solutions, drove share gains in many of our businesses, and reinforced Danaher’s reputation as a trusted leader in life sciences and diagnostics.

Now, looking ahead, we expect the gradual end market improvements we saw through 2025 to continue, and we believe the combination of our differentiated portfolio, the power of the Danaher Business System, and the strength of our balance sheet positions Danaher for long-term value creation as we move into 2026 and beyond. So with that, let’s take a closer look at our full year 2025 financial results. Sales were $24.6 billion, and core revenue increased 2%. Our adjusted operating profit margin was 28.2%, and adjusted diluted net earnings per common share of $7.80 were up 4.5%. We also generated $5.3 billion of free cash flow, resulting in a free cash flow to net income conversion ratio of approximately 145%.

Strong free cash flow generation is one of the most important metrics at Danaher, and 2025 marks the 34th consecutive year our free cash flow to net income conversion ratio exceeded 100%. Our earnings growth and strong free cash flow generation in the face of tariff-related cost pressures and significant productivity investments underscore the differentiated quality of our earnings and business models. Now, our continued investments in innovation drove an accelerated cadence of new product introductions across Danaher in 2025. These new technologies are helping customers develop and manufacture therapies and diagnostic tests faster and more efficiently, ultimately helping to improve healthcare outcomes. In biotechnology, Cytiva launched more than 20 new products across the biologics workflow.

Upstream, new 500- and 2,000-liter formats of the Xcellerex X-platform bioreactor are helping drive higher yields while reducing the time and cost of biologic drug manufacturing for our customers. Downstream, Cytiva strengthened its purification portfolio with the launch of two new protein A resins, MabSelect SuRe 70 and MabSelect PrismA X, delivering cost-effective solutions for preclinical and clinical production without compromising quality. Now, these launches reinforce Cytiva’s commitment to helping customers improve yields and lower manufacturing costs while maintaining high performance across the drug development life cycle. In life sciences, SCIEX reinforced their leadership in mass spectrometry with the introduction of the ZenoTOF 8600. The 8600 delivers up to 30 times increased sensitivity versus previous platforms, accelerating proteomic research and enabling faster identification of disease pathways to help accelerate drug development timelines.

Meanwhile, Beckman Coulter Life Sciences expanded its flow cytometry portfolio with the Mosaic Spectral Detection Module, bringing spectral capabilities to the CytoFLEX platform that enable flexible, high-precision, multiparameter characterization for pharmaceutical researchers. In diagnostics, Beckman Coulter Diagnostics expanded the DxI 9000 assay menu, highlighted by progress in neurodegenerative disease, including the first-to-market automated high-throughput BD-Tau research use only immunoassay, while continuing to expand cardiac and blood virus menus. These advances, combined with sensitivity up to 100 times greater than traditional immunoassay systems, enable faster, more accurate patient diagnoses and help pave the way for precision diagnostics. Finally, last week, Cepheid received FDA clearance for its Xpert GI Panel, a multiplex PCR test that quickly detects 11 common gastrointestinal pathogens from a single patient sample.

Leveraging Cepheid’s advanced 10-color multiplexing technology on its GeneXpert Cell base, this test simplifies GI testing workflows, helps guide appropriate treatment for high-risk patients, and can aid in reducing the risk of outbreaks in healthcare and community settings. This panel marks another step forward in Cepheid’s multiplex testing strategy, building on momentum from the 4-in-1 respiratory panel, the MVP panel in women’s health, with further multiplex introductions planned over time. These are just a few of the innovations from across Danaher that are delivering meaningful customer impact while also driving clear financial results, including approximately 25% year-over-year growth in new product revenue. With that, let’s turn to our fourth quarter 2025 results in more detail. Sales were $6.8 billion in the fourth quarter, and we delivered 2.5% core revenue growth.

Geographically, core revenues in developed markets increased low single digits, with North America essentially flat and Western Europe up mid-single digits. High growth markets were up mid-single digits, with solid growth outside of China, more than offsetting a low single-digit decline in China. Our fourth quarter adjusted gross profit margin of 58.2% and our adjusted operating profit margin of 28.3% were both down 130 basis points, as the impact of cost savings initiatives more than offset the positive impact of volume leverage. Adjusted diluted net earnings per common share of $2.23 were up 4% year-over-year, and we generated $1.8 billion of free cash flow in the quarter.

So now let’s take a closer look at our fourth quarter results across the portfolio and give you some color on our end markets today. Core revenue in our biotechnology segment increased 6%. Core revenue in discovery and medical declined at a high single-digit rate in the quarter, driven by a difficult prior year comparison in our medical filtration business and by declines in protein research instrumentation as academic research customers continue to face funding constraints. Core revenue in bioprocessing grew high single digits, with high single-digit growth in consumables and mid-single-digit growth in equipment. Consumables growth was supported by continued robust demand for commercialized therapies, particularly monoclonal antibodies. We were also encouraged by the return to equipment revenue growth in the quarter and by a third consecutive quarter of sequential equipment order growth, though orders remain below historical levels.

Current momentum in our equipment order book and funnels is concentrated around shorter cycle projects, such as line additions and brownfield expansions, with U.S. reshoring-related greenfield investments expected to provide incremental upside over time. Now, given the sustained and substantial activity levels at our customers over the last year, we anticipate high single-digit core revenue growth in bioprocessing for the full year 2026. Growth is expected to be led by consumables, with our current backlog and order trajectory supporting equipment revenue improving to approximately flat for the year. So we see a bright future ahead for Cytiva. Underlying biologic demand, which is the primary growth driver of our business, has grown at double-digit rates annually for more than a decade, and we expect strong demand growth to continue into 2026 and beyond.

This outlook is supported by another year of robust FDA approvals for biologic medicines in 2025 and increased uptake of existing therapies during this year, which, taken together, drove global biologic revenues to surpass small molecule drugs for the first time. The development pipeline also remains strong, with biologics expected to represent more than two-thirds of the top 100 drugs by 2030. So these positive trends reinforce our confidence in the durability of long-term growth in the bioprocessing market and for Cytiva’s leading franchise. Turning to our life sciences segment, core revenue increased 0.5%. Core revenue in our life sciences instrument businesses was essentially flat in the quarter. Looking across end markets, we continue to see a modest recovery in pharma, particularly in Europe, while biotech demand remains stable.

Academic and research demand was muted, especially in the U.S. and China, but was generally stable on a sequential basis, and clinical and applied markets remained healthy. Core revenue in our life sciences consumables businesses declined in the quarter, primarily due to lower demand for plasmids and mRNA from two of our larger customers, as well as continued funding pressure across early-stage biotech and academic research. We were encouraged to see another quarter of sequential improvement at Aptam, as key commercial initiatives in pharma and recombinant proteins delivered solid growth, partially offsetting ongoing softness in academic research. Moving to our diagnostics segment, core revenue increased 2%. Core revenue in our clinical diagnostics businesses grew mid-single digits, with high single-digit growth outside of China. Notably, Leica Biosystems and Radiometer were each up nearly 10%, with broad-based strength across both instruments and consumables.

Beckman Coulter Diagnostics also delivered another strong quarter, with mid-single-digit growth globally, led by high single-digit growth in immunoassay. This is Beckman’s sixth consecutive quarter of mid-single digit or better core growth outside of China and caps off a year of sustained momentum across its innovation and commercial engines. In molecular diagnostics, respiratory revenue of approximately $500 million exceeded our expectation as customers purchased in anticipation of an active respiratory season, given the high prevalence of currently circulating respiratory viruses. Over the past several weeks, we’ve worked closely with the team to better understand seasonal trends and revisit our assumption for respiratory revenue in a typical year. As a result, we expect respiratory revenue of approximately $1.8 billion for the full year 2026.

This assumes a normal respiratory season and that testing protocols at our customers remain broadly consistent with what we’ve seen the last few years. Low double-digit growth across Cepheid’s core non-respiratory test menu was highlighted by nearly 30% growth in sexual health and mid-teens growth in hospital-acquired infection assays. This strong performance reflects continued traction in Cepheid’s growth strategy, including new menu additions, such as the MVP panel and women’s health, enabling entry into new care settings and existing customers continuing to add both menu and instruments across their healthcare networks. So looking ahead, we’re excited about the long runway for durable growth at Cepheid, supported by a robust pipeline for future menu additions and anticipated continued expansion of our leading global install base. Now let’s briefly look ahead at expectations for the first quarter and the full year 2026.

Looking across the portfolio, we’re assuming bioprocessing growth will be similar to 2025, including continued strength in consumables driven by healthy growth in monoclonal antibody demand and our strong positioning across the biologics workflow. In life sciences, we’re assuming a modest improvement in end markets, but assume growth will remain below historical levels given the current macro environment. And in diagnostics, we’re assuming higher growth in 2026 due to moving past the peak of headwinds from policy changes in China and our expectation that we will continue to execute well globally. For the full year 2026, we anticipate core revenue growth in the 3%-6% range. Additionally, we are initiating full year adjusted diluted EPS guidance in the range of $8.35-$8.50.

In the first quarter, we expect core revenue to be up low single digits, and additionally, we expect the first quarter adjusted operating profit margin of approximately 28.5%. So to wrap up, we’re pleased with our solid finish to the year and proud of the work our teams did in 2025 to reliably support our customers through a dynamic macro environment. They did a tremendous job staying focused on what we can control, running the Danaher Business System playbook to offset cost pressures and deliver productivity gains while continuing to invest in innovation for the long term. So looking ahead, we’re encouraged by the momentum building across our portfolio and expect growth to accelerate as end markets continue to improve.

Our strong positioning and attractive end markets and high recurring revenue business models support our long-term expectation for high single-digit core growth, with a differentiated margin and cash flow profile. With the powerful combination of our differentiated portfolio, talented team, and strong balance sheet, all powered by the Danaher Business System, we feel well positioned to create long-term shareholder value while making a meaningful, positive impact on human health. With that, I’ll turn the call back over to John.

John Bedford, Vice President of Investor Relations, Danaher Corporation: Thank you, Rainer. That concludes our formal comments. We’re now ready for questions.

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. And if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your keypad. To leave the queue at any time, press star two. Once again, that is star and one to ask a question. Our first question comes from Michael Ryskin with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Michael Ryskin, Analyst, Bank of America: Great. Thanks for taking the question, guys, and congrats on the-

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Morning, Mike.

Michael Ryskin, Analyst, Bank of America: Morning, Rainer. Maybe just to kick things off, you, you’re going—you’re opening with a 3%-6% core revenue guide. That’s consistent with the kind of, you know, the framework you laid out on the 3Q call. But if you look at the various segment details you provided, it looks like the segment levels, as you kind of do the, you know, the sum of the parts, it gets you closer to that 3%, which you, you know, you hinted at in the past. I’m just curious, you know, if you could talk about how much conservatism is embedded in that, or maybe, you know, what are the levers or what are the drivers you could see getting you closer to that 6?

You know, where do you see potential for upside as you go through the year, if there’s one segment or another that kind of sticks out to you?

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Sure, Mike. Well, how about I level set first on the guide, and then I can talk to those upside levers. So first of all, we had a good finish to 2025, with the business performing better across the board in Q4. And that really reinforced that, that 3%-6% core growth outlook that we talked about in October. And now we’ve converted that into our core growth guide, which is based on the expectation of continued recovery in our end markets. And to your point, let me give you a little color on those. First of all, we expect bioprocessing to remain strong at high single digits. We had an excellent finish to the year.

In fact, I’ve just spent time out with customers and with our teams, and things are going really well for us there in terms of spec wins and orders, and of course, sales as well. And this momentum should lead to continued strength in consumables. And for equipment, we were encouraged by that momentum that we saw in the fourth quarter, but we’re assuming that equipment is flat for 2026, which is off of a mid-teens decline in 2025. But that is supported by our current backlog. Now, as we think about life sciences and our discovery in medical businesses, we expect those to be flat, and we’re assuming some modest improvement in our end markets there. And that said, we do expect growth will improve through the year as our own comps ease, particularly in our life science consumables businesses.

And then lastly, we expect diagnostics to grow in the low single digits. We’re assuming consistent mid-single digit growth outside of respiratory in China. And with China, we think the volume-based procurement headwinds will moderate as we move through the year. In respiratory, we’ve taken a look at that number again here in terms of the endemic level, and we think that’s probably fairly consistent with 2025. So this is how we’re setting up the year based on these improving end markets and some of the momentum that we saw coming out of Q4. Now, Mike, to your point as to upside levers, there’s probably two larger drivers that are most relevant there. One is to see continued improvement across our life science end markets. We’re seeing some of that.

We want to see more of that, especially some of those policy headwinds that we’re seeing here in the U.S. in particular. We’d like to see that improved biotech funding environment fall through now to an increasing order book in that particular segment. So encouraged, but we don’t see that yet. And then, of course, China continuing an acceleration in life science research would be helpful in those life science end markets as well. And then the other level is bioprocessing, where you know seeing better than high single digit growth for the year with equipment potentially accelerating or even consumables accelerating more as we see more biosimilars and mass production increasing. Those would be two areas that could produce additional upside to the guide.

Michael Ryskin, Analyst, Bank of America: Okay. That, that’s helpful. And if I could follow up just on that point on the bioprocessing outlook for 2026. Can you talk a little bit about, you know, the order book, maybe book to bill, how that shaped up in the fourth quarter, for consumables and for equipment? Just give us a little bit more, more clarity on the confidence that’s driving that 2026 outlook. You know, you’ve got, you still have easy comps in equipment, but a little bit tougher comps in consumables. So just for both the equipment on the consumable side, you know, what the orders look like exiting the year and how that supports next year’s outlook.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Sure. The order book fully supports the high single digit growth that we’ve been talking about for 2026. As you know, the lead times have gotten much shorter on the consumable side, so having a book to build there of around one is exactly where it needs to be. So we feel very good about that. We’ve talked about equipment orders increasing sequentially here the last three quarters in a row, and then, of course, we grew revenue in the fourth quarter. So we feel comfortable that we’re starting to head in the right direction there in equipment as well. But one quarter of growth, we’re not ready to call that a trend yet, but the orders coming out of the last three quarters are encouraging.

Michael Ryskin, Analyst, Bank of America: All right. Thanks so much.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Thanks, Mike.

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. We will move next to Tycho Peterson with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Good morning, Tycho.

Tycho Peterson, Analyst, Jefferies: Hey, good morning. Rainer, would love to just hear a little bit more about, you know, the strength on SCIEX and, you know, how much of that is the new product versus maybe end market recovery, and where specifically are you seeing kind of end markets turn for the better there?

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: So SCIEX did nicely with mid-single-digit growth here in the fourth quarter, and we’re seeing a number of factors contribute to that. Certainly innovation with the ZenoTOF 8600 gaining some nice traction. But we also see continued improvement in the pharma end market there. It’s the third quarter in a row that we saw in life sciences, the pharma end market, being at growth. The clinical and applied markets were robust as well. As you know, SCIEX is the gold standard there in PFAS testing as just one example. And then lastly, I would say in the academic and government segment, that continued to be muted, so it’s stable, but not growing in the last quarter.

So generally speaking, we see the end markets continuing to improve, and that also contributed to, SCIEX’s and the instruments group performance there in the fourth quarter.

Tycho Peterson, Analyst, Jefferies: Okay. And then maybe one for Matt on margins. You know, we, we got the first quarter operating margin guide, obviously, but how should we think about kind of, you know, the flow through of incrementals? You didn’t really touch on the incremental cost out, you know, initiatives on the call, but how should we think about kind of a full year, you know, margin target and, and progression throughout the year?

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation: Yeah, I think the way I sort of think about it is kind of very similar to core growth, right? So I think we’re kind of starting out the year at low single digit core growth and, you know, very similar to what we saw here in Q4, and that is going to sort of accelerate through the year. So you’ll see kind of a little easier comps here in life science consumables in the second half. Some modest end market improvements in life sciences that Rainer just alluded to. Put in the easier comps in China, DX and respiratory, I think what we’ll see is sort of that low single digit growth kind of build through the year, and earnings is gonna follow that.

I think you’ll see that follow the trajectory of the core growth, with certainly the second half and the fourth quarter probably being the biggest beneficiary of the 2025 cost actions. And so if you kind of go through that, I think you’ll see the second half is certainly building out, but that’s largely almost all the benefit from the cost actions in the fourth quarter.

Tycho Peterson, Analyst, Jefferies: Okay. And then just lastly, quickly on bioprocessing. I appreciate all the incremental color. Any commentary specifically on China? You know, there were some mixed data points earlier this week from one of the companies that reported on China bioprocessing. So curious if you’re, you know, seeing anything abnormal there in terms of trend.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: We’re not. Our fourth quarter bioprocessing business in China is coming off of a large comp, but the underlying activity level continues to strengthen there. You know that the biotech market there, in particular, has, it’s found some new momentum here as they are able to monetize some of those molecules that they’re developing there, some new to the world, through licenses, through going public and other types of monetization opportunities. So for us, bioprocessing should continue to have a positive development, and certainly we expect China bioprocessing to grow in 2026.

Tycho Peterson, Analyst, Jefferies: Thank you.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Thank you.

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Scott Davis with Melius Research. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Morning, Scott.

Michael Ryskin, Analyst, Bank of America: Good morning, guys.

Scott Davis, Analyst, Melius Research: ... Seems pretty encouraging commentary, particularly around bioprocess. But, guys, I want to back up a little bit. Like, you did a fair amount of, you know, restructuring and such, and that can be defined in a lot of different ways. But is the—can you help us understand a little bit of the postmortem other than just the, you know, the margin impact? Kind of what did you actually do as it relates to kind of, you know, either rooftops or, you know, headcount? Was—is there tangible change in fixed assets or anything that, you can kind of talk about publicly here?

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Scott, I mean, this is traditional Danaher business system type of productivity improvement, where we’re certainly consolidating rooftops, but also driving process efficiency, efficiency. And yes, that has resulted in reducing associates as well. So, we expect the cost savings that we’ve generated there to sustain here for the long term. And as we noted in previous calls, those are pretty significant.

Scott Davis, Analyst, Melius Research: Yeah. Okay. That’s a good, a good non-answer, Rainer. I get it, understood. The flu season has been pretty nasty. God knows it’s cold up here, cold where you’re at, too. But, is there, are, are you seeing a, a, a big pickup in orders here in January? Kind of, I, I know that you had a strong, you know, probably pre-order season and 4Q and such, but, have you seen a, a pretty sizable reload as you—as, as the cases have picked up?

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Well, we certainly in the second half of the fourth quarter saw the cases pick up quite significantly, and you’ve probably noted that in the ILI being as high as it’s nearly ever been. And that was manifested then also in the respiratory beat that we showed in the fourth quarter. Now, since then, we’ve seen that ILI come down, but testing continues to be robust, and we’ve put out the perspective that we expect our first quarter respiratory to be around $500 million of revenue.

Scott Davis, Analyst, Melius Research: That’s helpful. Thank you, Rainer. Best of luck.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Thank you.

Scott Davis, Analyst, Melius Research: See you guys.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Yep.

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. We will move next with Doug Schenkel with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Morning, Doug.

Doug Schenkel, Analyst, Wolfe Research: Morning, Rainer. Thanks for taking the questions. Starting on bioprocessing, you know, given the strength of equipment growth in the fourth quarter and favorable comparisons for really at least the first three quarters of 2026, it’s a smidge surprising you didn’t guide for maybe a little more growth at that line. Was there any pull forward of demands into Q4? And/or is this just, you know, maybe some extra prudence as we sit here in January in what’s been, you know, a tough environment and an unpredictable environment, you know, over the last few years?

Scott Davis, Analyst, Melius Research: Yeah, Doug, maybe I’ll take that. I think not too dissimilar to what we saw sort of on the consumable side, maybe six or eight quarters ago. You know, it’s been—it’s encouraging to see some growth and it signals your growth out of the equipment, but it’s just one quarter. And so one quarter, a trend does not make. I think, you know, we still are in that environment, similar environment, like you talked about, to where we’ve been. So while encouraging in the fourth quarter, I just think it’s, you know, until we have a little bit more, a few more data points to point to on the equipment side, I think it’s, again, kind of demonstrated ability over the past year that we’re just gonna go ahead and guide to flat.

I think it’s a good place to start. Let’s see how the year progresses, and we’ll go from there.

Doug Schenkel, Analyst, Wolfe Research: Okay, that that is helpful, Matt. And pivoting to capital deployment, you know, the business is clearly stabilizing. You got solid free cash flow as always, debt to EBITDA below 2. Can you just describe, you know, the M&A environment and your readiness and your priorities to potentially get a little more aggressive than you’ve been recently? I guess I’m trying to get at whether or not you feel that you’re in a better spot now than maybe you were a couple quarters ago, to move, you know, to move on something potentially more sizable and more aggressive if the opportunity were to present itself. Thank you.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: So Doug, I would say the M&A environment is more constructive. We’ve seen some valuations moving in the right direction. Interest rates have moderated a little bit, and our cultivation, and our bias towards M&A and our cultivation of those M&A targets, remain, as strong, as ever. And as you point out, our cash flow, generation, not only is differentiated, but, puts our balance sheet in a place where we’re able to act on opportunities. And we’re gonna stick with our discipline, of, looking at end markets that we believe have long-term tailwinds, attractive assets within that market that have defensible value or value creation opportunities that we can compound over time. And then, of course, the financial model has to work as well.

We do see that that continues to progress in the right direction. So we like the setup. We see improving end markets. Our team is executing well as manifested by the flow-through that you see on the business and the cash flow, and of course, the balance sheet is primed.

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. We will move next with Jack Meehan with Nephron Research. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Morning, Jack.

Jack Meehan, Analyst, Nephron Research: Good morning. Hope you’re doing well. I want to push on a couple of the guidance assumptions a little bit. The first is in life sciences. 2025 is obviously an unusual year in terms of customer spending patterns. I was curious about your thoughts on 4Q as a jumping off point for 2026. You know, in so much that, you know, is it possible there were some push outs from earlier in the year that might have come in, you know, around year-end? Like, what can you build off of in 4Q versus what, you know, might be like an elevated base? Any thoughts on that?

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: So, Jack, I think we continue to see improvement in the pharma end market. That would be the third quarter in a row that we have seen that improvement, and we would expect that to continue here going forward. The clinical and the applied markets have been solid and stable for several quarters, and, and we would expect that to be the same. I think in academic and government, that’s where the activity level has been muted. We could still have a bit of choppiness ahead of us with the discussions that we hear currently in the market. But over time, we also expect that to moderate. So generally speaking, we would expect the life science end market to continue their gradual improvement here through 2026.

Jack Meehan, Analyst, Nephron Research: Sounds good. Okay. And then, Matt, I wanted to push a little bit more on the margin puts and takes for 2026. So you talked about the $250 million cost actions. You also have the biotechnology segment, your highest margin segment, growing the fastest. There’s the BBP. Is there anything else that stands out? You know, I’m just trying to think about the 100 basis points-

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Yeah.

Jack Meehan, Analyst, Nephron Research: or more for the year.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Yeah, no, maybe, maybe let me give you just a little color on how we constructed the EPS guide of $8.35-$8.50, just to give you a simple frame of kind of what that is. I think that might be helpful. So, we’re assuming the low end of the core growth, like we’ve talked about, so think 3%-4%. Assuming 35%-40% fall through, we’re going to. We’ve got a $0.30 benefit from the 2025 cost actions. So that’s in that 100 basis points of margin expansion. It is inclusive of this $0.30 benefit. And that, as you remember, was the Q4 actions plus the savings, so it’s $250 million. So that benefit is about $0.30.

And then there’s kind of some below the line stuff in FX, which, you know, obviously could go either way. So I just assume all that stuff kind of nets to zero. If you do that math, you get kind of $835-$850. And so, you know, if we do better from a core growth perspective than 30%-34%, you know, there’s probably likely some upside here to EPS. But, you know, we’re just going to kind of start the year with what I laid out, see how the year progresses, and we’ll go from there.

Jack Meehan, Analyst, Nephron Research: Okay. Thank you, guys.

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Patrick Donnelly with Citi. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Morning, Patrick.

Patrick Donnelly, Analyst, Citi: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the question. Maybe a follow-up on Jack there on the Life Sciences business. Rainer, it sounds like things are improving, you know, across the board, Abcam, Aldevron, SCIEX. Can you just run through what you saw into year end on that front? You know, was there a good budget flush? And then similarly, as we look at 2026, it seems like that’s still flattish for the year. It feels like there’s some upside there. Can you just talk through what you need to see to get that number going to a few percent growth? And again, would love, would love to dig into some of those verticals, Abcam, Aldevron, in particular.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Sure. I mean, let’s start with the fourth quarter. Like we said, the life science business was a little bit ahead of our expectations there, and that was led by SCIEX and Beckman Coulter Life Sciences. And so we saw the pharma end market in particular do a little bit better than anticipated. There was just probably a little bit of a budget flush. We saw that, especially in Europe. So not enormous, but we did see a little bit of a flush. We’re not a great read-through, read-across for that, with the size of our instrument business there, but nonetheless, we did see some. Now, as we think about 2026, we expect that end markets, such as pharma, will continue to improve, that clinical and applied markets will stay stable.

I think the upside that we’re looking for in life sciences comes sort of out of two categories. One being in the academic and government area. We, we need to see more stabilization there around the spending discussions and the budgetary discussions. So that would be one point. And then we’d like to see biotech, in particular, take advantage of the improved funding environment that we’ve seen here over the last two, three quarters and start seeing that fall through into the order book. So that, I think, would be what we’d like to see to think about upside in the life sciences.

Patrick Donnelly, Analyst, Citi: Yep, and then maybe just the Abcam piece, Rainer. You talked about seeing improvement throughout the quarter. It seemed like that was firming up a little bit. Just wanted to dig in there.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: I mean, we’re really encouraged by what we’re seeing here at Abcam. The business continued to improve here in the fourth quarter. In fact, we’ve seen now three months of growth, particularly driven by the recombinant protein in the pharma segment that we’ve been talking about. And of course, the team has been working very hard on right sizing the cost picture there to the business and to our earnings expectations going forward. And we see that. In fact, the operating margins are 500 basis points higher than when we acquired the business, and so we like what we see here for Abcam and expect to continue to see that trend here in 2026 as well.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation: Understood. And then maybe a little bit of a longer term one. I think as you build this year, it seems like, again, Rainer, I think you touched on the gradual recovery a few times. You know, as we exit this year and move forward, it certainly feels like we’re approaching more level of normalcy. You know, what is the path back to the LRP that you guys have out there? Is that on the table as we look ahead? I know it’s January twenty-sixth, but as we look ahead, you know, to future years, what is the path there, and what do you need to see to believe that that’s on the table next year?

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Well, I mean, I would say it’s too early to comment on 2027 and beyond, to the point you just made. But here, here’s how we’re thinking about it. I mean, fundamentally, our businesses are in excellent end markets, and those growth drivers that we’ve talked about are very much intact, and we expect those growth drivers to continue to recover here. And what are some of those? Well, the proliferation of biologics, some of the advancements that we see in life science research, and then, of course, the diagnostics area, bringing those diagnostics much closer to the patient. So we don’t see any change to our long-term framework. And as these end markets continue to recover, we’ll get back to that high single-digit growth over time.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation: Understood. Thank you, guys.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Gotcha.

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. We will move next with Dan Leonard with UBS. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Hi, Dan.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation0: Thank you very much, hi, Rainer. Thank you very much for taking the question. You’ve talked a couple of times about the importance of an improving biotech funding environment on your life sciences business. Can you remind us how sensitive would the biotech business segment be to an improvement in biotech funding?

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: So that emerging biotech sector for us has traditionally been in the sort of 15% of the business overall.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation: It’s probably more like 5% of overall Danaher, or 15% of bioprocessing, 10-15%. So, I mean, it’s not. It, it’s there in some level of exposure, but it’s not the majority of what we do, obviously.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation0: Yeah. I mean-

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Just to reaffirm, most of our business in bioprocessing is driven by commercial volume, 75%, we talk about that, and then you have a mix of clinical and biotech in the remaining 25%. So let’s say 10%-15% is probably in the biotech area. We have been seeing some improved orders there in bioprocessing out of that space, but early days.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation0: Understood. Thank you. A quick follow-up, Rainer. You mentioned the reshoring topic as a longer-term theme in bioprocessing. Can you update us on how any of those conversations with customers have been trending over the past three months?

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Sure. I mean, as I mentioned earlier, I’ve been out in the market a great deal with our teams and meeting with our customers, pharma customers, CDMO, CEOs, you name it, to get a real sense of what’s going on here as it relates to the demand picture and the reshoring question. I think the takeaway here is that, one, equipment investment has been muted here for the last couple of years, despite the fact that demand has been fairly strong, as we see in the consumables demand. So you have this aspect of the fact that there’s probably some catch-up required here over time just to meet the existing demand, and then you add on top of that, the reshoring topic, which continues to advance. There’s no question that is going to happen.

It’s just a matter now of bringing that timing together. And so again, it’s a little difficult to pinpoint the timing, but we’ve been encouraged, certainly on the former aspect, so the need to keep up with demand in our order book here for equipment. And we want to see how this now plays out going forward. But we really believe we could be in the early innings of a long-term investment cycle. And as you know, we’re really quite well positioned to support those investments going forward.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation0: Thank you very much.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Thank you.

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. And we have time for one more question. That question comes from Dan Brennan with TD Cowen. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: Hi, Dan.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation1: Great, thanks. Hey, good morning, Rainer and Matt. Thanks for the question. Maybe to start just back to bioprocessing, if you don’t mind. You know, with the biotech guide, it’s 6% for the year, and I think you guys talked about diagnostics, MedTech flat. So that gets us to bioprocessing growth, I think, around 6%, which is a bit lower than what I think you guys did in 2025. So is that math correct? And, you know, I’m just wondering, would that imply like a bit of a slowdown that you’re starting the year at for consumables, given equipment is stronger? I know, Matt, you talked about conservatism, but this is such a focus, I just want to kind of flesh out how you’re thinking about the starting point for the 2026 guide.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation: Yeah, I would make it very, very clear here. Bioprocessing on the consumable side for the year and for Q1, our assumption is that we’ll grow high single digits, and it’s probably going to be at the upper end of high single digits. We are assuming equipment is going to be flat for the year, and that bioprocessing will be all up, all in high single digits for the year. I think what you’re probably referring to is if you look at bioprocessing the statement, you’ve got discovery and medical in there as well. And so I think discovery and medical for Q1, we’ve kind of said it’s gonna be flat, it might be up a bit. I think the rest of the year for discovery and medical is gonna be flat, maybe down a little.

And so to kind of balance that out, you know, you’re gonna have high single digits out of, out of consumables or sorry, out of bioprocessing and consumables. No change whatsoever to what we’ve seen in the end markets and no change to what we have been talking about for a while now. So I think really the wild card is what does DNM do for the segment? But just to be perfectly clear, we are not seeing any sort of change or slowdown in bioprocessing.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation1: Okay, great. And then, and then maybe just a final question, just for life sciences. I know, Randy, you gave a lot of color so far on the kind of moving pieces there, but, you know, academic, I don’t know, maybe it’s like 15%-20% of life sciences, I’m guessing, so that remains muted. And I know in your guide, you kind of mentioned ongoing macro pressure, but I would think pharma is a big part of life sciences, and I would think with MFN and tariffs kind of behind us, hopefully, you could see a really nice recovery on easy comms from pharma.

So could you just unpack a little bit, like on the pharma piece, kind of what you’re seeing in life sciences and kind of how you kind of guide it and, you know, is there the chance for that to get better in 2026? Thank you.

Rainer Blair, President and Chief Executive Officer, Danaher Corporation: So our life science end markets, in order of priority and size, are pharma, clinical, applied, academic and government. Pharma has shown growth here for 3 quarters in a row in our business, and that’s a recovery in investment that we’ve seen out of pharma once the Most Favored Nation deals have come to fruition and more confidence has returned to that market. And when we say we expect end markets in life sciences to continue to improve, we’re referring specifically to the pharma end market. We expect the clinical, so think of research, use only testing, that sort of thing. We expect that to remain stable, as do we expect the applied market to remain stable. So no significant change there. Those are robust. They’re doing fine. And then you have academic and government that’s muted, softer.

There’s still some noise there, and that represents another potential upside as the policy situation stabilizes and finds its momentum again.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation1: Great. Thank you.

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. We have reached our allotted time for questions. I will now turn the call back to John Bedford for closing remarks.

Matt McGrew, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Danaher Corporation: Thank you, Nikki, and everybody. We’re around for comments rest of the day. Thanks.

Nikki, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. This brings us to the end of Danaher Corporation’s fourth quarter 2025 earnings results conference call. We appreciate your time and participation. You may now disconnect.