Cardinal Health Inc (NYSE: CAH) Q2 2026 Earnings Call dated Feb. 05, 2026
Corporate Participants:
Matt Sims — Vice President, Head of Investor Relations and Enterprise FP&A
Jason Hollar — CEO & Director
Aaron Ault — Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Erin Wilson Wright — Analyst
Elizabeth Anderson — Analyst
Eric Percher — Analyst
Michael Cherny — Analyst
Allen Lutz — Analyst
George Hill — Analyst
James — Analyst
Kevin Caliendo — Analyst
Lisa Gill — Analyst
Daniel Grosslight — Analyst
Glenn Santangelo — Analyst
Charles Rhyee — Analyst
Steven Valiquette — Analyst
Brian Tanquilut — Analyst
Presentation:
operator
Hello and welcome to the second quarter fiscal year 2026 Cardinal Health Incorporated Earnings Conference Call. My name is Sergey and I will be your coordinator for today’s event. Please note that this conference is being recorded and for the duration of the call your lines will listen only. However, you will have the opportunity to ask questions at the end of the call. This can be done by pressing star1 on your telephone keypad to register your question. Can you also please limit yourself to one question each to allow the maximum of attendees to ask the question? If you require assistance at any point, please press 0 and you will be connected to an operator.
I will now hand you over to your host, Matt Sims, Vice President Investor Relations to begin today’s conference. Thank you.
Matt Sims — Vice President, Head of Investor Relations and Enterprise FP&A
Good morning and welcome to Carmel Health. Second quarter fiscal 26 earnings conference call and thank you for joining us with me today are Cardinal Health CEO Jason Haller and our CFO Aaron All. You can find this morning’s earnings press release and investor presentation on the Investor Relations section of our website@ir.cardinalhealth.com since we will be making forward looking statements today, let me remind you that the matters addressed in these statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially from from those projected or implied. Please refer to our SEC filings and the forward looking statement slide at the beginning of our presentation for a description of these risks and uncertainties.
Please note that during our discussion today the comments will be on a non GAAP basis unless specifically called out as gaap. GAAP to Non GAAP reconciliations for all relevant periods can be found in the supporting schedules attached to our press release. For the Q and a portion of today’s call, we kindly ask that you limit questions to one per participant so that we can try and give everyone an opportunity. With that, I will now turn the. Call over to Jason.
Jason Hollar — CEO & Director
Thanks Matt. Good morning everyone. We are pleased to report that the Cardinal Health team has delivered another excellent quarter driven by broad based performance across the enterprise. I am encouraged by our results which are a direct reflection of our continued operating momentum and relentless commitment to serving our customers and driving our strategy forward. We have continued to prioritize strengthening our core and expanding in specialty, accelerating our other growth businesses and executing our GMPD turnaround. What stands out to me most in this quarter’s performance is the balance of results across our portfolio.
As we achieved strong profit growth of at least double digits from all five of our operating segments, our performance was again led by strength in our pharmaceutical and specialty solutions segment where we continue to see a robust demand environment coupled with strong operational execution. Our strategic focus on specialty is delivering tangible results. As we shared at a recent industry conference, we expect our specialty revenues will surpass $50 billion in fiscal 26, a testament to our progress in this high growth, higher margin space. Our MSO platforms continue to be a meaningful driver of our growth, in particular led by the Specialty Alliance’s leading multi specialty platform.
With the acquisition of the country’s leading urology mso, Solaris Health, officially completed in early November, we are positioned to further expand as we add additional practices and capabilities to our platform. Turning to our GMPD segment, we are pleased to report continued progress against our improvement plan initiatives. The team remains focused on driving Cardinal Health brand growth where we continue to see positive results and simplification which is driving improved operational health. Our other growth businesses at Home Solutions, Nuclear Precision Health Solutions and Optifreight Logistics also again delivered a strong quarter. The performance of these businesses is driven by secular tailwinds, the strength of their value propositions and our focused long term investments.
Our second quarter performance gives us confidence as we move forward and as a result, I’m pleased to share that we are again raising our outlook. With that, I’ll turn over to Aaron to go through the financials.
Aaron Ault — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you. Good morning. We provided an interim update at a recent industry conference but noted at the time that our books were still open for the second quarter. I am now pleased to share the final details of our second quarter results which reflect another period of exceptional execution and broad based demand strength across our enterprise. Our performance demonstrates the resilience of our business model and the tangible benefits of our diversified portfolio as demonstrated by the significant earnings growth in all five of our operating segments. As a result of this momentum and factoring in our updated forecast for the remainder of the fiscal year, I’m also pleased to note that we are raising again our fiscal year 2026 earnings per share guidance.
Our new range is $10.15 to $10.35, up from the at least $10 interim guidance update. This updated outlook represents year over year eps growth of 23% to 26%. Let us begin with the second quarter consolidated results which are most easily explained with the observation that when revenue and gross margin grow faster than SGA, positive progress is the result. Total revenue for the second quarter increased 19% to $66 billion. This top line expansion was primarily driven by continued strong demand within the pharmaceutical and specialty solutions segment as well as other gross margin dollars increased 24% to $2.4 billion, driven by favorable mix across our businesses.
We remain disciplined with our cost structure even as we expand our capabilities and invest for the future, while SG&A expenses increased 16% to $1.5 billion. It is important to note that excluding the impact of recent acquisitions, our organic SGA growth was more modest in the low single digits and that the turnaround part of our business gmpd actually saw lower SGA year over year from optimization efforts. The combination of robust growth and disciplined expense management resulted in operating earnings of $877 million at the total enterprise level, an increase of 38% compared to the prior year period.
Moving below the operating line, interest and other expense increased to $77 million compared to $38 million in the prior year. This increase was driven primarily by the financing costs associated with our announced acquisitions, including the Solaris Health transaction which we were excited to close during the quarter. Our effective tax rate for the quarter was flat at 21.4%. Average diluted shares outstanding were 237 million, a decrease of 2% from the prior year. In the quarter we repurchased $375 million in shares, reaching our full year fiscal 26 target for baseline share repurchase of $750 million. Our weighted average price on these repurchases has been $173 per share.
The net result for the quarter was non GAAP diluted EPS of $2.63, an increase of 36% compared to $1.93 in the second quarter of last year. Now let us turn to the segment results. Starting with pharmaceutical and specialty solutions, revenue for the segment increased 19% to $61 billion. This growth was driven by both existing and new customers and we observed a continuation of strong pharmaceutical demand across the portfolio. This included approximately 6 percentage points of revenue growth from GLP1. Sales segment profit increased 29% to $687 million. This significant profit expansion was driven by contributions from brand and specialty products, our MSO platforms and positive results within our generics program.
We experienced consistent market dynamics in our Red Oak enabled generics program and once again we saw healthy generic unit growth that exceeded our long term expectations. Furthermore, these results benefited from our continuous focus on efficiency initiatives across our distribution network. Our teams are leveraging our investments in technology infrastructure such as the Vantis HQ E Commerce platform to drive customer efficiency and streamline our operations which directly supports our margin profile. Moving to the GMPD segment, revenue increased 3% to $3.3 billion driven by volume growth from our existing customer base. We were particularly pleased with the performance of our cargo health brand portfolio which saw revenue growth of 10% in the United States.
It is worth noting that we estimate 3 to 4 percentage points of this growth in the quarter was driven by the timing of inventory restocking by other distributors, which we anticipate offsetting. In Q3 segment profit for GMPD increased to $37 million compared to $18 million in the prior year period. This improvement was driven by volume growth from existing customers and the realization of benefits from our cost optimization initiatives. These positive drivers were partially offset by the adverse net impact of tariffs. Despite the tariff headwind, the segment’s transition from past challenges to solid profitability is evident and we remain committed to the improvement plan initiatives that focus on growing Cardinal Health brand, enhancing our supply chain and simplifying operations.
Now let us discuss our other growth businesses, Nuclear and Precision Health Solutions, At Home Solutions and OptiFreight Logistics revenue increased 34% to $1.7 billion driven by strong demand across all three businesses and the contribution from the acquisition of advanced diabetes supply or ads. Segment profit increased 52% to $179 million. This impressive growth was driven by strong underlying performance across all three businesses as well as the acquisition of ads. The integration of ADS into our at home solutions business continues to progress well. This combination has created a powerful platform for patients with chronic conditions and we are seeing the benefits of our dual strategy as both a direct to home distributor and a direct provider in nuclear and precision health solutions.
We were pleased to see continued momentum in our thermostics offerings with revenue growth exceeding 30%. Our leadership in the radiopharmaceutical space and our end to end service capabilities continues to resonate with the pharmaceutical partners and providers alike. Optifreight Logistics also delivered an exceptional quarter, welcoming new customers to our logistics management program and helping current customers succeed in expanding utilization of our program drove significant growth in inbound and outbound shipments. As a result, the business was able to grow revenues by over 30% this quarter, further validating our position as the leader in healthcare logistics management. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow year to date, We’ve now generated $1.8 billion in adjusted free cash flow.
Our teams continue to focus on working capital efficiency to support our capital deployment priorities. We ended the quarter with a cash position of $2.8 billion. Regarding capital allocation, we deployed significant capital during the quarter to drive value for shareholders and invest in our future year. To date we’ve invested approximately $240 million back into the business through capital expenditures to support our organic growth initiatives. We’ve also returned $1 billion to shareholders so far this year, comprised of approximately $250 million in dividends and as mentioned, $750 million through accelerated share repurchase programs. We accomplished all of this and still closed the quarter with a Moody’s adjusted leverage ratio of 3.2 times, which is back within our targeted range of 2.75 times to 3.25 times.
We achieved this target well ahead of schedule and that provides us with flexibility to assess opportunities consistent with our disciplined capital allocation framework. I will now highlight our updated fiscal year 26 guidance. With two strong quarters behind us and signs of continued momentum across our portfolio, we are raising again our outlook for the full year to a new range of $10.15 to $10.35. In the pharma segment, our revenue guidance remains unchanged. Our prior guidance had already contemplated an anticipated impact from manufacturer list price decreases associated with IRA for pharma segment profit. We are pleased to raise our outlook to a range of 20% to 22% growth, up from the prior range of 16% to 19%.
This increase reflects the strength we have seen year to date and the confidence we have in the continued performance of our largest operating segment. As we’ve previously highlighted, in the second half of fiscal 26 we annualized the $10 billion of new customer revenue that we onboarded last year as well as the prior acquisitions of ION and gia, while also benefiting from Solaris contributions this year. Although we aren’t assuming the same level of outsized demand to persist for the balance of the year, we have incorporated some of the recent strength and anticipate mid teens profit growth in the second half of the year.
In the GMPD segment, we are updating our revenue outlook to 1% to 3% growth. On GMPD segment profit. We are raising our guidance to approximately $150 million. This raised outlook reflects the continued progress our team is making against the GMPD improvement plan, including with Cardinal Health brand. As I mentioned when Reviewing the GMPD Q2 results, some of the outperformance in Q2 was attributed to the timing of Cardinal Health brand distributor buying patterns which we anticipate will normalize in Q3. We continue to anticipate sequential profit growth from Q3 to Q4. In our other growth businesses, our revenue guidance remains unchanged at 26% to 28% growth.
We are increasing our segment profit guidance for other to a range of 33% to 35% growth, up from the prior range of 29% to 31%. This revision is driven by the strong performance across all three growth businesses to date. As you model the remainder of the year, please remember that we will lap the acquisition of ADS in our fourth quarter. Additionally, we will face more difficult comparisons in our nuclear business in the third quarter as we begin to lap some of the robust theranostics growth that we experienced a year ago. Moving below the operating line, we are lowering our outlook for our effective tax rate by 1 percentage point to a range of 21% to 23%, down from the prior outlook of 22% to 24%.
This improvement reflects our first half performance and the expectations of positive discrete items in the back half of fiscal 2026. We are also updating our share count assumptions reflecting our Q2 accelerated share repurchase program. We are lowering our outlook for diluted weighted average shares to a range of 237 million to 238 million shares from approximately 238 million shares. Finally, regarding adjusted free cash flow, we continue to anticipate robust adjusted free cash flow generation between $3 billion and $3.5 billion for the year. In conclusion, our second quarter results demonstrate that Cardinal Health is executing effectively on its strategy.
We are strengthening our core distribution business while aggressively expanding in higher margin areas such as specialty and our other growth businesses. We remain focused on operational excellence, simplification and delivering value to our customers and partners. Our updated guidance reflects our confidence in the remainder of the fiscal year and our ability to navigate the dynamic healthcare environment. We are well positioned to deliver sustainable growth and long term value for our shareholders. With that, I will turn the call back over to Jason.
Jason Hollar — CEO & Director
Thanks Aaron. Our strategy within pharmaceutical and specialty solutions remains clear and the team’s consistent execution gives us confidence in the long term potential ahead. We continue to prioritize the core and the investments in our footprint and technology have contributed to improved service levels and including a 10% improvement over the past two years, setting a new benchmark for product availability in specialty. We are seeing growing contributions across specialty distribution, our MSL platforms and Biopharma Solutions. Our acquisition of Solaris Health is already gaining momentum in the market with the addition of our first urology practice under this new structure in Michigan, moving upstream to a key part of our specialty growth, Biopharma Solutions.
We are pleased to highlight that a number of key manufacturer partners have recently selected our Synexus Access and Patient Support business to support their hub programs totaling over 1 million new patients served. These wins were enabled by our significant investments to digitize the patient support journey. We are seeing similar momentum in our leading 3 PL business where we continue to partner with manufacturers in the commercialization of their specialty therapies. As an example, in calendar 25 our business supported roughly half of all new product launches that utilize the three pl. Turning to gmpd, our improvement plan initiatives are yielding tangible results.
We remain focused on simplification while continuing to invest in our network and are encouraged by the positive trends within the Cardinal Health branded portfolio. This is particularly evident in our more clinically differentiated product categories where innovation remains central to our product portfolio. For example, the SmartFlow intermittent pneumatic compression device designed to reduce the risk of deep vein thrombosis has had a very positive market response with volume exceeding our launch expectations. Now turning to our other growth businesses where we remain encouraged by both the momentum in their results and strong positioning for future growth. Increasingly we see additional points of connectivity across Nuclear At Home Solutions and Optifreight and an ability to leverage the full strength of our enterprise portfolio.
Nuclear and Precision Health Solutions continues to outpace the market backed by our differentiated offerings and our team’s deep expertise. I’m pleased to share that Nuclear recently conducted their 2025 customer survey and again earned a net promoter score well above the industry average, a clear reflection of the reliability, adaptability and cutting edge technology we deliver to customers. Our performance is driven by our unique end to end capabilities and strong demand for theranostics which again delivered over 30% revenue growth for the quarter. The expansion of these products has meaningful impacts for our customers and the patients they serve and we will continue to invest to support the business’s growth.
Of the more than 70 products in our pipeline which is largely dominated by novel theranostics in the areas of oncology and urology. We continue to see opportunities for greater connectivity between our nuclear business and our MSO and specialty businesses, aided by industry shifts driving greater demand for precision medicine. We are uniquely positioned to equip community practices with the know how to establish and manage a theranostics program to accelerate adoption within at home solutions. The demand environment continues to be strong, supported by the shift of care to the home. We are executing a smooth and efficient integration of ads, positioning us for long term growth.
We see synergistic opportunities with our large core pharma and specialty solutions business with the latest example seen in the announcement of our Continued Care Pathways program. This program leverages the full Cardinal Health portfolio to simplify diabetes supply management for partner pharmacies and patients which is already supporting over 11,000 pharmacies today with more opportunities in the pilot testing phase. We are pleased to announce a key partnership with Public Supermarkets, a recent new customer in our pharma business, to further expand our reach. Finally, OptiFreight Logistics continues to demonstrate its market leading value proposition. With ongoing investments in our proprietary technology driven platform TotalView Insights.
We see long term potential to deliver cost savings, transparency and operational efficiency for our customers. We are also making strong progress with new customer centric technology to expand our presence in the pharmacy space as we continue to drive core growth and tech forward transformation. In closing, we have great confidence in the resilience of our business model and our essential position as the backbone of the US Healthcare system, delivering daily to tens of thousands of locations with products sourced from several thousand manufacturers. This vital role was on full display during the recent storms that impacted much of the United States where the Cardinal Health team demonstrated its extraordinary commitment to ensuring critical products and services reach customers and patients.
The team’s commitment and actions are instrumental to our success and we’re deeply grateful for their contributions. As we move into the back half of the fiscal year, the momentum across our business reinforces our belief in the opportunities in front of us and gives us confidence in our ability to continue delivering sustainable value creation. With that, we will take your questions.
Questions and Answers:
operator
Thank you. As a reminder, if you have any questions, please press star1 on your telephone keypad. Once again, can you please limit yourself to one question each? Tell the maximum of attendees to ask questions. Our first question is from Erin Wright from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Erin Wilson Wright
Great. Thanks for taking my question. So can you unpack or break down some of the components of the profit performance in pharma solutions? And can you break down what’s organic versus inorganic organic and for the balance of the year what’s implied in terms of that underlying organic growth in the second half and and just that underlying demand trend? I think you commented on that in your prepared remarks. How do you think about that continued underlying strength and stability of the business from a utilization trend perspective as well as strength and specialty thanks.
Matt Sims
Good morning Aaron, thank you for the question. We saw momentum in the quarter within the pharma business as we’ve seen in the last several quarters with strong demand really all categories and parts of the business brand specialty, consumer generics. You saw the significant revenue growth and profit growth as well. It’s really driven in particular on the profit line by specialty trending above historical lovers. As we talked about at JPMorgan, we’re going to be above the $50 billion for the year there, seeing strength in the key priority areas, urology, oncology, nice strength within the biopharma parts of the business as well.
You’ve heard us talk about Ms. Annexis. We saw the contributions we expected from the MSOs and were pleased to close the Solaris transaction in November. So we got two months of benefit in the quarter there. But I want to emphasize the contributions in the quarter from the MSOS were consistent with our expectations. We really saw strong core growth. Generics is always a positive or recently has always been a positive story for us. When we see growing volumes, which we saw, and consistent market dynamics, which we saw. Right. That is, that is certainly a nice contributor to the underlying business. And of course you can’t get past just strong execution by our operations teams in the quarter as well as we think about where PhRMA goes from there and the guide for the for the rest of the year. I guess I’d observe that the raise to our guide is really driven by both reflecting the strong Q2 performance and improved expectations as we carry forward, particularly in the core part of the business. We do have higher growth in H1 than we have called. We called mid teens profit growth in the back half.
And that’s not a, that’s not a deceleration of expectation on demand. It’s rather the observation that as part of our guidance all along we’ve referenced the fact that we’ll be lapping $10 billion of new customers in the back half from last year and lapping, of course ION and gia, which we acquired in the second half last year with some benefit from Solaris not being in the portfolio. We are assuming strong, stronger demand, if you will. As we called out in my prepared remarks, we did raise our expectation in part based on demand we’re seeing, but we are not calling outsized demand.
You know, that would be a opportunity and that’s consistent with our guidance philosophy from prior quarters as well. And lastly, I would observe that we are not assuming, as is our practice, that the Solaris distribution moves over to Cardinal Health. You know, that if it were to come to us, it would be toward the end of our fiscal year. So that is not baked in. Jason, anything you want to add?
Erin Wilson Wright
Yeah, I would just. I know this question will probably come up a variety of different ways. I think it is helpful to remind you all what we said in the last call is still pretty consistent with our current expectations that M and A for the pharma business is expected to be about 8% of our total growth for the for the full year. So that’s the same ballpark that we’re anticipating today and can help you kind of pieces together all those different elements. But definitely very pleased with the core performance of the business. Not just the pharma business but throughout, you know, the other operating segments.
So while M and A has been a nice accelerator of our strategy, what we’ve continued to demonstrate is that the core is strong and that our organic core investments and priorities continue to drive the business forward as well.
Matt Sims
Next question please.
operator
The next question is from Elizabeth Anderson from Evercore isi. Please go ahead.
Elizabeth Anderson
Hi guys. Good morning. Congrats on the quarter. I was wondering if you could maybe parse apart the other segment a little bit. You know, is ADSG sort of performing in, you know, ahead of your expectations in terms of how you thought that sort of full first year performance would be? How would you. Is it sort of improved competitive position? You talked about some of the underlying dynamics in nuclear. So I just maybe trying to parse apart on the sort of three underlying business level some of that outperformance there as that was obviously a very nice result in the quarter.
Jason Hollar
Yeah, I’ll go ahead. This is Jason. I’ll go ahead and start and have Aaron add in any additional details. I’d say it’s a very similar type of commentary that I, Erin and I just provided for our pharma business. The core was strong for each of the three businesses. Within our other segment we saw good double digit growth irrespective of the M and A and the ADS acquisition as well. That that acquisition has has gone at least consistent, perhaps a little bit better than what we had anticipated. It’s still early in terms of all the integration and synergy opportunities.
But the core business remains strong overall for that home business, but also for our nuclear and optifreight businesses. Each one of these three businesses are very much focused on core organic investments, making sure that that core is strong and that we’re taking care of customers and patients that we have today. We are investing organically in each of these three businesses in different ways to further propel their capabilities and their growth going forward. And then as it relates to at home, of course we are also doing the inorganic investment. But it’s really important for us that we keep that organic investments and organic growth going.
Each one of three businesses have a little bit of a different story within our at home business. Organically we’re very much focused on the distribution network, continuing to build out the automation and the technology there. We’ve completed three of the 11 DCs, we have another three to go for the next three years. Nuclear. It’s very much a story around the continued growth of Theranostics and the innovation that we’re seeing in that space and we’re investing into our capabilities and our cyclotron capacity to get there. And optifreight it’s to take the leadership and the capability that we already have a long history of in the medical side and expand that into greater share of wallet with those medical customers but also expanding over time into the pharmacy side of that.
So each of them are operating very well, very consistent growth right now and we’ll continue to evaluate the right type of M and A to further accelerate that as appropriate. But for the time being, you know, we’re still wanting to make certain we’re taking care of the at home customers and make sure that this integration goes flawlessly. Aaron, anything I missed there, I would.
Matt Sims
Just emphasize strong positioning, positive secular trends, double digit core profit growth in each of the three businesses. Setting aside the positive impact of the ADS acquisition and Jason did reference the Theranostics point, I would point out that we will be lapping strong Q3 and theranostics with the product launches from last year and so that will be that as part of our your guidance already as well. Next question please.
operator
The next question is from Eric Percher for Nephron Research. Please go ahead.
Eric Percher
Thank you. Question on capital allocation. I believe your prior commentary was somewhat predicated on returning to the low threes. You’re back there maybe earlier than we expected. Significant cash flow over the balance of the year. Can you give us a bit more on capital allocation and maybe also the capacity or opportunity for further transactions? Do you need some time on msos and do you see opportunities in the other segment?
Matt Sims
Thank you for the question Eric. I would observe two things. First, that we try very hard to tell you what we’re going to do and then go do it and report back. And we are very disciplined and following the aptly named disciplined capital allocation framework that we have. And so two quarters into the year we are on track to make the 600 to 650 million dollars of CapEx investments that we talked about before. We have protected our balance sheet and gotten us back within our targeted leverage range at the end of Q2. So that’s good news as well.
And we’ve two quarters in fulfilled our baseline share repurchase commitment of $750 million. And what that means for a business that is continuing to generate strong cash is that we have flexibility to assess how will we create the most shareholder value as we carry forward. We are working, as you can tell from Jason’s comments, we are investing for growth in the businesses really across the portfolio, whether it’s in the pharma business with specialty within the other three parts of the other business we just highlighted or indeed continuing the progress against the turnaround plan for gmpd.
Now part of that as well is we look, we are looking at the landscape and seeing where can we drive more growth or where should be, where should we be returning additional capital to shareholders. And while we have nothing to provide today from a commitment in that respect, we are very mindful of the flexibility that the business is generating for us to ensure that we are relentlessly focused on creating that shareholder value.
Jason Hollar
Yeah, what I would add is we’ve worked real hard, the team has done a fantastic job and worked very hard to generate a lot of cash. And we’re going to be very careful as how we deploy that. And when you think about in our industry where there’s been some of the greatest operational challenges, it’s very much on this poor decisions on where to allocate capital. So we have learned from that, are very intentional around where we put that to work. As I already mentioned, we’re really focused on the core of the business and the strategy is not predicated on any significant M and A.
With that said, I think the word opportunistic will come up whether we’re talking about repurchases or whether we’ll talk about additional M and A. I don’t see that there’s a, you know, a large gap or anything that we’re going to be really leaning into. We’re really pleased on the MSO side with the three different platforms that we have now acquired and or built. Oncology, autoimmune and Urology. And we’re going to want to look at how we can create more value with each of those partnerships and those assets. And we think that there’s opportunities probably to do more but smaller types of acquisitions in that type of space.
The at home space and other in general remains quite fragmented. So there will be opportunities if we so choose. But we’re going to make certain that we protect the Corps with any of those additional acquisitions to ensure that it truly does create synergistic value, helps build capabilities and that, you know, we’re not going to be doing anything defensively here. We’ll be, you know, looking to see if some offensive actions take place. And while we’re pleased with the leverage, you know, our cash is at a little bit of the lower side where it’s historically been. And that’s something that will be having a lot of flexibility with, you know, all of our other levers that are in place to continue to have the flexibility as needed when those opportunities do arise.
So we’ll continue to evaluate all that and, you know, certainly report back as we get better clarity on it.
Matt Sims
Yeah, just to summarize, I guess what I would say is we’re pleased that both internally and externally there is competition for our capital.
operator
The next question is from Michael Czerny from Learing Capital. Please go ahead.
Michael Cherny
Good morning and thanks for taking the question. Maybe if I can build on that a little more clearly. The last couple years the story in many eyes has been about the improvement on Specialty both from an MSO as well as distribution capability. The scaling you’ve done as you think about that prioritization of internal capital and external capital. How has the experience you’ve had with Specialty combined with the pipeline for a variety of different new launches and biosimilars impacted your thought process of where strategic advancement should be as you continue to push for driving towards your LRP and potentially higher.
Yeah, great, great question. Love to go deeper. Our view has changed very little. If you go back to not this last investor day, but the one before that, we talked about the specialty flywheel effect and benefits that we anticipate that while distribution is important to us, the MSO strategy, the Biopharma Solutions strategy, all these capabilities, both upstream with the manufacturers and downstream with our customers and ultimately patients, all work together. And I don’t think it’s a surprise that what we’re seeing in Specialty is across the board performance improvements. The MSOs certainly help bring it all together in different ways.
Our Biopharma Solutions strength has absolutely improved our credibility in the distribution space. We have fantastic relationships both upstream and downstream. So we’re executing very well both directions and that then creates additional opportunities. Having really referenced our other businesses, the businesses of Nuclear at Home and OptiFreight, all three of which plug into pharmacy capabilities in different ways. One of which we’ve talked about a little bit this last month with our continued Care Pathways program with At Home and connecting the dots with those large pharmacy customers. So we see a lot of opportunity to continue to bring that together.
And that’s why we’re less focused on expanding into new and different areas because there’s still a lot of opportunity to expand within the customers, within the products, within the platforms, within the capabilities that we already have. And I think when you look at those opportunities, there’s more than enough there that we just don’t need to get distracted and grow in other ways because we just don’t have a gap in that portfolio that currently we’re worried about. So that means we can just again be more offensive and take on additional growth vectors within what we already have.
Matt Sims
Next question please.
operator
The next question is from Allen Lutz from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Allen Lutz
Good morning and thanks for taking the questions. The Cardinal Health brands in GMPD continue to accelerate. Even if you net the timing issue that you mentioned, is there anything specific to call out there around that strength? And then second question on GMPD lower SGA in the quarter around optimization efforts. Can you talk a little bit about what you’re seeing there, specifically where those savings are coming from and then what’s implied in the GMPD guide for the remainder of the year. Thanks. Yeah, great. Yeah, I’ll start and then hand it over to Aaron for the sg.
And a question as it relates to Cardinal brand growth, it’s really not all that sophisticated. It goes back similar to my last commentary. You have to go back at least a few years, probably more like several years to when that the GMPD team really started to not only focus on but really invest into their core. So that’s the five point plan that we walked through before, really focused on the basics of the business. We had to invest in some capacity and capability at the manufacturing sites. You know we have fantastic products and we had great demand but we weren’t always getting product to the customer at the right time and place.
So getting those capabilities right our back orders, I don’t think it’s ever been lower. Our service levels have never been higher. I mean we’re at levels of operational excellence that we’ve just not seen before and that creates lots of opportunities. It was hard for us to expand into new customers, new categories with those constraints we had before. Those constraints are largely off and we’re really executing quite well to those customer requirements. It’s nice that the underlying utilization is still relatively robust. It’s not like what we see on the pharma side, but that low single digit consistent type of market growth so allows us to have enough underlying volume that we’re then able to come in and take care of more of our customers needs.
I’ll now turn it over to Aaron.
Aaron Ault
For the and on the SGA topic, certainly GMPD is a highlight there, which we’ll come to in a second. But I want to Emphasize that Jason and I are really pleased with the focus that the entire enterprise has been putting on how do we both invest for the future and relentlessly optimize our cost structure to of course reinforce that flywheel. The GMPD business in the face of the executing its the GMPD improvement plan has been relentless and looking for opportunities on how do we both consistent with the five point plan, raise our game and service our customers better but do it at a much more efficient in a much more efficient way.
And this quarter is testament to the progress they’ve been making and that their overall SG and a cost both direct and from an enterprise perspective really came down in ways that we were pleased to see in support of that business. Next question please.
operator
The next question is from George Hill from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. George Hill, please go ahead with your question.
George Hill
Yeah, good morning guys and thanks for taking the question I guess. Jason, I’d like to ask about the macro pricing environment as we’re seeing some brand drug manufacturers make price increases as 2026 starts. It doesn’t seem to have impacted your guys guidance at all. But as you look forward I guess I’m wondering should we expect to see manufacturer, brand, brand drug price decreases? I’m sorry, not increases, decreases impact either the revenue state, either the revenue line or the operating income line as we think about calendar 26. And maybe also if you could talk about the offsets that you guys have used to preserve your operating earnings on the income statement.
Thanks.
Jason Hollar
Sure. Yeah. As well. I mean when you talk about prices, I don’t think your question was around the contingent inflation but that that piece of it has been pretty what we’ve anticipated as it relates to ira, mfn, all those types of discussions. There’s really no new news as it relates to this. You know you’ve heard from us quite consistently that we anticipate that whatever changes do occur to that top line will be adjusted within our cost structure and with the DSA fees with the manufacturers to preserve that margin. We communicated at the recent industry conference that we indeed were successful with that for all the 26 items.
And there’s nothing at this moment that we see with the 27 and 28 items that would make us believe it would be any different than that. You are right George, that revenue is a different story. So you know as the WACC levels come down that will adjust through revenue as well as our cost of goods sold so that our margins remain stable. But that’s all been factored in for 26. We didn’t see Anything that came through as it relates to WAC level adjustments that was significantly different than our original guidance. And so we’ve not adjusted our revenue meaningfully for any changes there.
We would anticipate that, like what we’ve seen in 26 in the future, we anticipate something similar, that some manufacturers will choose to adjust WAC and some will choose to utilize more of a rebate structure. And it’s our expectation in our, as we think about longer term that while that should not impact our margin in any meaningful way, it could impact, you know, revenue a little bit differently than what’s anticipated. But we don’t see that being, again, very, very impactful across those years at this point in time, but still need to get a little bit more information before we can solidify any of that.
Matt Sims
Next question, please.
operator
The next question is from Steven Baxter from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
James
Hey, this is James Armor. Steve, thanks for taking the question. As far as GLP1s, we’re seeing a lot of change in the market between. Pricing changes, channel changes, the introduction of orals. Is there any way you’re any difference. In how you’re modeling revenue or earnings. For GLP1 this year or maybe how you’re thinking about it in the long term?
Jason Hollar
No. You know, the oral contribution that we see so far is, you know, slow. We anticipate it growing quickly, but it’s not something I would expect to be material for this fiscal year and the underlying economics behind it. We’ve talked before that the cost to serve. We anticipate being a little bit better on the oral versus the injectables, but it’s, you know, just too early to determine, you know, what the volume contributions will be for the different pieces. Irrespective of all that. I, I’ve been fairly consistent on this point. I, you know, what you’ve seen is a massive increase in volume growth over the last couple of years and you just haven’t heard us call it out as a meaningful driver.
And I do not anticipate that you’re going to hear us call it out as a meaningful driver going forward, irrespective of how strong the oral growth is or the mix between the two. While there are some differences, it’s just relatively unlikely that that’s going to be a big driver for underlying profitability. Revenue certainly has been much more of a contributor. We saw similar contributions this quarter than what we’ve seen the last several quarters. In terms of the growth pieces. Yeah, 6% of SAL in Q2 and we expect a 6%, the growth rates being for GLPs and.
And while we would expect that to start to slow down a little bit for the injectables, just by the nature of the size of the market, that’s where the orals will come in and start to offset that slower growth rate. But make no mistake, we expect both to be growing fairly significantly still for at least the near term.
Matt Sims
Next question, please.
operator
The next question is from Kevin Caliendo from UBS. Please go ahead.
Kevin Caliendo
Hey, good morning, guys. I want to change up a little. Bit and ask a GMPD question. Specifically, CMS put out a proposal around domestic PPE recently. I know it’s just a proposal, there’s. Comments and the like, but if it were to go through, would this be a positive or a negative for you guys? Like, how would it impact what you’re doing or the profits potentially on ppe? What do you think happens to pricing? I’m just trying to understand if this. Is something as investors we should be following and care about and if it. Will impact you or the industry in any way.
Jason Hollar
So you’re gonna have to make me go way back and give a little bit of a history lesson on PP in general. I can’t recall how long ago it was, but it was probably several years ago. I remember when we were dealing with the COVID impacts, making statements like, well, normally you would never expect us to talk about PPE because the revenue and margin is relatively low and fairly consistent. Obviously, with COVID the volatility on both the volume, the price and the cost created a bit of a perfect storm of volatility. So I guess I start off by saying that because it’s not a huge category for our business, it’s an important one, certainly for customers, but it’s not a key part of the growth that we just described.
Certainly. And given its importance to our customers, that means it is important to us. And if they see value in buying PPE domestically, or if they’re incentivized to do so in some way, or whether we’re incentivized to do some way, absolutely, we can support that. We have a very flexible, talented procurement team in our GMPD business and we source very diverse sources today throughout the world. That, of course, was expanded as a result of COVID We would love to source even more in the United States. Quite frankly, today, the cost is not typically something our customers choose to buy, but we are very, very open, willing and flexible to support that.
But there’s not a lot of choice today in that type of marketplace. Especially at the price points that are competitive market. But that’s where the incentives are going to be important within this equation. And if doing so we are very able, very flexible in order to support that type of action.
Matt Sims
Next question please.
operator
The next question is from Lisa Jeal from JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Lisa Gill
Hi, thanks very much and good morning. I was wondering if you could just spend a few minutes discussing your relationship with hospital and health systems on the specialty side and do you see incremental opportunities there when we think about your specialty business?
Jason Hollar
Well, so we’re quite present today and have a great relationship and reasonable share within that particular part of the market. So you know we are very much capable of supporting the broad needs specialty irrespective of what channel, what customer. So we’ve seen growth consistent across the different channels over the last several years. As a reminder, up until recently we have Talked about the 14% overall specialty revenue and we’ve increased that recently in our three year CAGR to about 16%. So we’ve seen a little bit of an acceleration and you know that that is part of the market that we have been winning at least our fair share within.
And I really have to go back to three and a half years ago when I put Debbie Weitzman into the leadership role of that business. One of the first things that she did in terms of the pharma business is she brought together the specialty and the non specialty side and had created a one face, one voice to the customer that allows us to make sure that we’re taking care of all those customers needs. And because while specialty is really interesting and important to us, it’s only one component of what they need to have their support with.
And so we’ve changed our go to market type of strategy and it’s really resonated quite well with our customers. And that’s the type of innovation and very high touch type of support that will continue to drive to ensure that their needs are met.
Matt Sims
Next question please.
operator
The next question is from Daniel Crosslied from Citi. Please go ahead.
Daniel Grosslight
Hi guys, thanks for taking the question and forgot on a strong quarter here. I wanted to go back to the, to the biopharma solutions and specifically the new business wins that you’ve highlighted for Synexus, including a significant competitive takeaway. What specific capabilities are resonating most with manufacturers and then as we look forward for the next year or so, are there any significant investments that you anticipate making to keep you guys competitive in your hub business? Thanks.
Jason Hollar
Yeah, love the question. Thank you so I put it into two key buckets. First of all, you got to start with the team. Not only is it a great group of people, they understand the customer and they really listen to what the customer is wanting and needing and demanding. And that’s where it starts. Because then from there you then implement the solutions to take care of those customers. And the solutions is the digitization that we did with our tool, our platform. And while there’s always technology, you know, we really leaned into it in a way that simplified their work with us.
We allow them to once when they bring one of their products onto our platform, it allows it to be replicated quite seamlessly to other products that they have. So once we get that foot in the door and we can prove that we have a better tool, better process, then we see a lot of follow on opportunities that go from there. This is not a recent investment that we made. This team has been all over this for years. And your last part of your question is, you know, I think in terms of future investments, you know, we’re always going to have additional investments.
What, what we’re trying to instill is a culture and a process that is not ever starving any of our businesses and then requiring some big catch up. It may mean that we have elevated levels of spend for longer periods of time, but we like having less volatility on spend and more of a consistent investment so that we’re getting in front of those opportunities and not having to be more defensive and catching up. And so we have made widespread investments across each of our investments. There’s nothing that we’re calling out today that will be significant. But just keep in mind, we are spending more today on whether it’s capital or these types of projects than we have in the past.
And so we’re already at to some degree elevated levels. I don’t anticipate that dropping, but also not expecting that to spike in any significant way. The SG&A comments that Aaron made and he was answering a specific question around gmpd, but I think those types of, that type of answer goes for each of our businesses. What we are looking to do is take away the excess and the waste and the system that always exists in any business and reinvest that in much more productive areas. So we’re always looking for productivity, efficiency, using technology, AI and just, you know, elbow grease to go after it and to take costs out.
But then we’re always also looking for, well, where can we invest that with a great return, not only to drive financials, but to solve more of our customers and patients problems. And that’s what’s really going well with the organization right now, is that we’re able to look ahead farther than we ever have in the past. And that’s what we’re spending on is not today’s problems, but we’re spending on tomorrow’s opportunities.
Aaron Ault
Just as a reminder, we have committed to getting the biopharma services part of the portfolio to a billion dollars of revenue by 2028. Jason’s been highlighting the successes at Synexis with doubling the therapy supported, et cetera. That’s all been a key part of that internal and external competition for our capital that I referenced before. So we’re quite excited about Synxis being half of the growth to get to that $1 billion target. Next question, please.
operator
The next question is from Glenn Santangela from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Glenn Santangelo
Yeah, thanks for taking my question. Hey, Jason, I just wanted to come back to the Farm and specialty segment. I think in your prepared remarks you seem to suggest that one of the big drivers was the Red Oak generics program maybe performing a little bit better than you thought. And I think you sort of highlighted maybe better generic volumes than maybe you were expecting. And I’m kind of curious, you could just give us a little bit more details there and what’s maybe driving that? Is it greater generic introductions or is it greater penetration within your existing customers? And any sort of comments you have around generic pricing would be helpful.
Thanks.
Jason Hollar
Yeah, I think Aaron and made the comments around strength in terms of the generics program. I believe it was more from the perspective as a year over year driver, which it certainly is. And when you look at Red Oak, the utilization has been strong. That, that part is clear in terms of the, the spread, the margin per units. We didn’t call out anything in particular. Remains very consistent market dynamics. It also remains a year that does have good launches. Not, you know, the launches aren’t any greater than what we had thought new in terms of new items this year.
But the underlying utilization across industry remains, you know, quite good. So I’d focus more on the volume than any other type of price, cost or new item type of perspective.
Matt Sims
We managed business to average margin per unit. Right. That’s why we call consistent market dynamics. The business did see great service levels. That is certainly supportive of the volume trends. And of course we were onboarding new customers and so that is helpful from a generic volume perspective as well. Next question, please.
operator
The next question is from Charles Ryee from TD Cowan. Please go ahead.
Charles Rhyee
Yeah, thanks for taking the Question. Maybe just sticking with sort of the pharma segment and sort of thinking about the guy for the second half. You know, if we look at the first half performance, you know, I think AI growth was up 28% and if you look at the guide for the second half it’s roughly about 16%. Should we think about this Delta being sort of entirely just lapping new customers and M and A and understanding we have contribution from Solaris and of course we’re raising our second half expectations. Just trying to understand sort of what the moving parts is.
And I’m really trying to get a sense for like how you’re thinking about underlying sort of core growth in the pharma segment. Thanks.
Aaron Ault
A couple of thoughts. I want to point out that our second half guide is well above our long term growth target within that business. It is the case that our guidance philosophy all year long has been to call out the fact that we will be lapping that $10 billion of new customer in the back half as well as lapping the M and A. And so we want to make sure people are modeling that appropriately as we carry forward. I did call out that we are based on the success and the strength we saw in Q1 and Q2 from an internal forecast and guidance perspective.
We have factored in some stronger demand within for the back half for us than what we had originally been anticipating. But we’ve not gone so far as to assume it’s the outsized demand we’ve seen so far will be there. That I consistently call that out as an opportunity for everyone if it continues at that higher rate. We have not assumed Solaris, the distribution coming in that would be end of fiscal year if that happens as well. Those are the drivers we’ve provided. Next question please.
operator
The next question is from Stephen Valiket from Mizuho. Please go ahead.
Steven Valiquette
Great, thanks. Good morning. So I just have a question also on the GMPD segment. If we go back to the analyst day last year you guys talked about as part of the five point plan, you know, new product development and commercialization. So I’m just kind of wondering as we fast forward, you know, six months or so when you know, still a lot of moving parts on tariffs and everything else, just the progression of like the new products and with the better than average growth right now, how much of that is driven from either growth from the existing portfolio versus new products and also what’s your appetite for just.
Runway to still increase that number of. Cardinal Private Label SKUs within the overall GMPD portfolio. Thanks.
Jason Hollar
Yeah. I’m happy you asked the question because after Aaron and I answered the prior question, it hit me that I missed that point of our five point plan. New product development investment is certainly a component of our prioritization and of the success we’ve had. Now to be clear, what we mean by that and where we’re prioritized is within the product categories that we participate in today, like the new compression device. With that I referenced my commentary or our new pump in our nutrition business. These are all categories that we already have a significant presence that allows us to grow through providing broader products to those existing customers, those existing markets.
We have not prioritized new products into new product categories. Similar reason for what I described before with our other businesses where we have fantastic opportunity to still grow Cardinal Brand Mix within the product categories that we’re already participating in today. We can get at it faster, more efficient, more effective, solving more patients problems and create more value for our customers by prioritizing on those product categories. So it is a key component of our growth, but it’s a little bit of a broader, better products within those same exact categories. So we’ll continue to invest into that and that will remain our priorities for at least the near term with this business.
Matt Sims
Next question please.
operator
We’ll now take our last question today from Brian Tankulu from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Brian Tanquilut
Hey, good morning and congrats on the quarter again. Maybe Aaron, as I think about the growth in the embedded tech segments or tech business businesses within the core like Synexus, any, anything you can share with us in terms of the growth rates for those, you know, tech operations. I know last quarter I think you pointed to Synexis, you were more than 30%. So. So just curious how we should be thinking about that and how you think about it going forward. Thanks.
Aaron Ault
Yeah, we’ve called out both the aspirational goal of the $1 billion by fiscal 28 and biopharma services growing within the year, up 30%, half of it from Synexis. We don’t separately break the parts of the portfolio out, but I do want to emphasize that when Jason talks about how our key strategic investments are in specialty. We view this as an important part of the specialty business. And so we continue to invest whether it’s in Synexis, the Hub business cell and gene 3PL, the other parts of the portfolio. We are investing for the long term there to help support the broader growth objective for the specialty part of our business.
Great. Thank you.
operator
Thank you. We do not appear to have any further questions and I would like to turn the call back over to Jason Har for any additional closing remarks. Over to you, sir.
Jason Hollar
Yeah, thanks. Thanks for joining us today. Obviously, we’re very pleased with our performance this quarter as well as the progress in advancing our strategy. As always, please reach out if you have any further questions with that. Have a great day.
operator
This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.
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