Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc (NASDAQ: REGN) Q4 2025 Earnings Call dated Jan. 30, 2026
Corporate Participants:
Ryan Crowe — Senior Vice President of Investor Relations & Strategic Analysis
Leonard S. Schleifer — Board co-Chair, President and Chief Executive Officer
George D. Yancopoulos — Board co-Chair, President and Chief Scientific Officer
Marion McCourt — Executive Vice President – Commercial
Christopher R. Fenimore — Executive Vice President, Finance and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Alexandria Hammond — Analyst
Christopher Raymond — Analyst
Salveen Richter — Analyst
Tyler Van Buren — Analyst
David Risinger — Analyst
Tazeen Ahmad — Analyst
Geoffrey Meacham — Analyst
Akash Tewari — Analyst
Terence Flynn — Analyst
Evan Seigerman — Analyst
Presentation:
operator
Welcome to the Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Shannon and I will be your operator for today’s call. At this time, all participants are in listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session. Please note that this conference call is being recorded. I will now turn the call over to Ryan Crow, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations. You may begin.
Ryan Crowe — Senior Vice President of Investor Relations & Strategic Analysis
Shine. Good morning, good afternoon and good evening to everyone listening around the world. Thank you for your interest in Regeneron and Welcome to our fourth quarter 2025 earnings conference call. An archive and transcript of this call will be available on the Regeneron Investor Relations website shortly after our call concludes. Joining me on Today’s call are Dr. Leonard Schleifer, board Co Chair, Co Founder, President and Chief Executive Officer, Dr. George Onkopoulos, Board Co Chair, Co Founder, President and Chief scientific officer, Marion McCourt, executive vice president of Commercial, and Chris Ventmore, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
After our prepared remarks, the remaining time will be available for your Q and. A. I would like to remind you. The remarks made on today’s call may include forward looking statements about Regeneron. Such statements may include, but are not limited to, those related to Regeneron and its products and business, financial forecast and guidance, development programs and related anticipated milestones, collaborations, finances, regulatory matters, payer coverage and reimbursement, intellectual property, pending litigation and other proceedings and competition. Each forward looking statement is subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results and events to differ materially from those projected in that statement. A more complete description of these and other material risks can be found in Regeneron’s filings with the United States Securities Exchange Commission, including its Form 10K for the year ended December 31, 2025, which we plan to file with the SEC next week.
Regeneron does not undertake any obligation to update any forward looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. In addition, please note that GAAP and non GAAP financial measures will be discussed on today’s call. Information regarding our use of non GAAP financial measures and a reconciliation of those measures to GAAP is available in our quarterly results, press release and our corporate presentation, both of which can be found on the Regeneron Investor Relations website. Once our call concludes, the IR team will be available to answer any further questions. With that, let me turn the call over to our President and Chief Executive Officer, Dr.
Leonard Schleifer. Len, take it away.
Leonard S. Schleifer — Board co-Chair, President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Ryan. And thanks to everyone for joining today’s call. Regeneron capped 2025 with another solid quarter of commercial execution with fourth quarter total revenue of 3% year over year driven by double digit net sales growth for three of our leading products compared to the fourth quarter of last year. Global net product sales for Dupixent as reported by sanofi increased by 32% and Libtio by 13% at constant exchange rates, while Eylea HD in the United states grew by 66%. Global Dupixent net sales were 4.9 billion in the fourth quarter and 17.8 billion for the full year 2025.
Dupixent is currently the most widely used innovative branded antibiotic medicine with more than 1.4 million patients on therapy globally now approved in eight indications, most of which remain significantly underpenetrated. Dupixent is well positioned for future growth. Global Libtaionet product sales were $425 million in the fourth quarter and $1.45 billion for the full year 2025 in the US Libtio continues to be the market leading immunotherapy for advanced non melanoma skin cancers following FDA and EC approvals of Littio for adjuvant CSCC in the fourth quarter. We are making great progress launching this potential blockbuster opportunity with this indication expected to be a significant growth driver for Liptio in 2026 and beyond.
Liptio also continues to build share in advanced non small cell lung cancer where in the US it is now the second most prescribed immunotherapy in the first line setting with new patient market share in this setting greater than Aptivo, Tecentriq and Imfinzi combined. Eylea HD net product sales in The United States were 506 million in the fourth quarter up 66% and 1.6 billion for the full year 2025 up 36% despite continued patient co pay affordability issues that have dampened branded anti Vega category growth. In November the FDA approved IAH HD for macular edema following retinal vein occlusion or RVO and monthly dosing across all approved indications, further strengthening the IAH HD Compeller profile.
Our FDA submission seeking approval of the IAH HD pre filled syringe using a new manufacturer has been accepted for review. A standard pre licensing inspection has been scheduled and the decision on our filing is expected in late April. In addition, as a backup, Catlin Indiana continues to work with the FDA to resolve findings from a previous inspection. We continue to believe that all three of these product enhancements are key to fully unlocking Eylea’s HD commercial potential. While we anticipate continued growth in Eylea HC this year, IAH 2mg will continue to be under competitive pressure, which is expected to intensify in the second half of 2026 as multiple biosimilar products are launched in the United States.
Regarding patient affordability, we are pleased that we matched a $60 million donation to the Good Days Retinal Vascular and Neovascular Disease Fund in the fourth quarter. Today. We reiterated our commitment to helping patients afford their medicines by extending our matching program through the end of this year up to $200 million. Turning now to our negotiations with the United States government regarding efforts to reduce drug costs for American patients, we are actively engaging in constructive discussions with the center for Medicare and Medicaid Services and other federal agencies, and we anticipate reaching an agreement that aligns with the frameworks previously established by other companies.
We remain optimistic about striking a deal with the administration to achieve our shared goals ensuring timely and affordable access to groundbreaking medical advancements for American patients maintaining the United States leadership in biotechnology innovation and manufacturing and addressing the long standing imbalance in the distribution of costs for medical innovation which has historically placed a disproportionate burden on American patients. Finally, looking ahead to the next 12 months, Regeneron has several key objectives that I’d like to share. First, we anticipate at least four FDA approvals, including three for new molecular antibes across three distinct modalities, plus approval for the IAH HD pre filled syringe as well as several additional regulatory submissions.
We expect registration enabling data for multiple programs including phianlimab Rlac3 antibody in combination with Liptio and advanced melanoma as well as the combination of Simvisuran and Pozelumab in pnh. In addition to the ongoing studies in key areas such as myeloma, anticoagulation and complement mediated diseases. 2026 will be an important clinical development execution year as we anticipate initiating 18 additional Phase 3 studies with cumulative target enrollment of approximately 35,000 patients over multiple years, setting the foundation for Regeneron’s next wave of potential blockbuster products. We also plan to begin clinical development of at least three first in class antibodies that address novel targets of which two were discovered and validated by the General Genetic center as well as our long acting IL13 antibody in atopic dermatitis.
We expect strong commercial execution to continue, maximizing the potential of our leading brands across key therapeutic areas and finally, we plan to continue prudently deploying capital to share repurchases, dividends and complementary business development, all with the goal of driving long term shareholder value. Obviously a busy and ambitious year ahead, one that I am particularly energized and excited to embark upon. We look forward to reporting our programs on these goals as we move through the year. With that, I’ll turn the call over to George.
George D. Yancopoulos — Board co-Chair, President and Chief Scientific Officer
Thanks Len. Earlier this month at the JPMorgan conference, we highlighted the breadth and depth of our pipeline which is expected to generate clinical data over the next few years spanning oncology, hematology, complement mediated diseases, anticoagulation and obesity as well as in other areas. In 2026, we plan to build on our established leadership in ophthalmology as well as immunology and inflammation while advancing key late stage programs starting with ophthalmology. A Leah HD was recently approved by the FDA for monthly dosing and for the treatment of rvo, further strengthening its clinical profile. Data supporting these approvals will be presented at the upcoming Angiogenesis meeting, further highlighting efficacy, safety and durability of ivhd, along with dosing flexibility designed to support more personalized patient care.
In terms of our ophthalmology pipeline for our C5 program for geographic atrophy, we expect interim data from our phase 3 study in the second half of 2026. We are currently evaluating our C5 srna simdicerin as monotherapy and also with posaxalumab, our potentially best in Class C5 antibodies, with the goal of providing a systemic treatment that avoids the safety issues from repeated intravitreal injections associated with currently approved GA therapies in case intravitreal delivery is required to adequately treat this disease. We’ve also begun clinical development of an interventional formulation of pozelumab and to evaluate local C5 inhibition for appropriate patients.
Beyond GA and ophthalmology, we have initiated a study of a novel intravitrally delivered T cell receptor blocking antibody for non infectious uveitis, a disease generally driven by autoimmune T cells. This advance was made possible by our unique antibody capabilities as we are not aware of any other company that’s been able to generate such an antibody. This year we also plan to initiate clinical development for a long acting antibody targeting a novel genetically validated target for glaucoma along with a long acting antibody that aims to treat thyroid eye disease and graves disease. Moving to immunology and inflammation we are committed to strengthening our leadership by advancing several next generation therapeutic approaches as we first revealed at the JPMorgan conference.
In addition to exploring longer dosing intervals for Dupixent, we are progressing Veloxamine derived fully human long acting antibodies with enhanced binding properties that target the IL4 receptor alpha, the same target as Dupixent, as well as antibodies targeting IL13, IL4 and a bispecific antibody targeting both IL4 and IL13. All of these approaches are designed to enable extended dosing. Our long acting IL13 antibody is expected to enter the clinic in the coming months, embarking on an expedited development plan in atopic dermatitis that we believe will enable us to remain competitive under other industry players that are pursuing related approaches.
Our other long acting antibodies are expected to enter the clinic by 2027, each with a custom development plan. At the same time, our Regeneron Genetics center has utilized its large scale genetics approaches to identify several exciting new immunology and inflammation targets similar to Dupixent. We believe these may represent future pipelining and product opportunities. The first of these antibodies is expected to enter clinical development in the first half of this year. After initially evaluating healthy volunteers, we plan to rapidly advance this candidate to establish proof of concept in several genetically linked diseases such as lupus, Sjogren’s and primary Billy biliary cholangitis.
Turning now to Allergy Our initial CAT and Birch phase three studies demonstrated that allergen specific monoclonal antibody cocktails can meaningfully address ocular endpoints, adding to earlier data that showed significant reductions in nasal respiratory and skin endpoints. These phase three data from the CAT and BIRCH programs will be presented at the upcoming QUADAI conference. We anticipate initiating the confirmatory phase II study for catalogy in the first half of the year. While confirmatory phase three study for Burch allergy is already underway, we are also advancing an innovative strategy with the goal of eliminating all IgE mediated allergies.
Our initial clinical effort is in patients suffering from severe food allergies involving transient linotypic treatment followed by long term dupixent maintenance. This approach demonstrated proof of principles with the first four treated patients all achieving over 90% sustained IgE reductions. These results validate our approach of first removing IgE producing plasma cells and then preventing their return. Building on this, we are developing next generation agents specifically targeting IgE producing cells with the first expected to enter clinical development over the next year for potentially more rapid and broader allergy applications. On to oncology at the animal lab our LAG3 antibody in combination with fatal our pivotal study in first line metastatic melanoma remains on track to read out in the first half of this year.
Early clinical data from our first implant study across multiple advanced melanoma cohorts suggested a potentially differentiated investment class profile. Also in the first half of this year, we’re expecting an interim analysis for our study of adjuvant melanoma as well as phase two data in advanced non small cell lung cancer, a more speculative setting in which clinical validation has not yet been established for lag3 and PD1 combinations. Moving to HEMA linazipic or BCMA by CD3 bispecific is establishing a new benchmark in multiple myeloma in late Lyme disease and with the caveat across trial comparisons Linoxific has demonstrated nearly double the complete response rate compared to other BCMA C3 bispecifics at similar follow up times with lower rates of cytokine release syndrome, shorter hospitalization requirements and more convenient dosing intervals.
Building on its remarkable monotherapy activity across multiple lines of therapy, we are undertaking an ambitious development plan to simplify the existing myeloma treatment paradigm which currently relies on highly complex, intense and burdensome triple and quad drug combinations by exploring linotypic monotherapy as well as in simple combinations in early nine settings. In our phase 2 study and newly diagnosed multiple myeloma, all nine valuable patients treated with linozervic monotherapy at the planned phase III dose achieved MRD negativity, an endpoint the FDA recently endorsed as a registrational enabling for this malignant disease. Even more compelling are the early signals in myeloma precursor and related settings, for example, in evaluable patients with high risk smoldering myeloma, Linosipic once again achieved 100% MRD negative in all 12 evaluative patients, whereas the standard of care Daratumumab achieved less than 10% complete response.
Similarly, in second line patients with light chain amyloidosis, linovivir monotherapy normalized abnormal light chain levels in approximately two weeks, whereas in a separate study a daratumumab containing quad combo regimen took approximately five months to approach these levels in first line patients. Both of these promising results could herald market advances to existing standard of cares which can involve complex and toxet multi drug combinations. With four pivotal studies underway and four more initiating by the middle of this year, we are rapidly advancing our limogenic development program with the hopes of transforming the myeloma treatment paradigm and ultimately preventing progression to malignant disease onto complement mediated diseases.
Our C5 program consists of customized approaches to treat different diseases which require different levels of targeted inhibition to maximize efficacy for each condition. I previously summarized above our C5 efforts in geographic atrophy. In our PIVOTAL study for generalized myasthenia graphics, we showed that syndicirin alone achieved differentiated efficacy and convenience with every three months subcutaneous dosing, delivering a potentially best in class profile with a placebo adjusted improvement in the myasthenia graft’s Activities of Daily Living score of 2.3 endpoints at 24 weeks, the primary endpoint of the study and the best result among C5 inhibitors to date based on cross trial comparisons.
We remain on track to submit our U.S. regulatory application in the first quarter with potential approval anticipated later this year or early next year in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria or PNH, where our phase 3 lead in data showed the combination of Syndicera and Frazilimab was necessary to achieve potentially best in class disease control. With 96% of patients controlled in the PIVOTAL trial leading cohort and with the ability to rapidly rescue patients previously treated with revolizumab who had not been well controlled, these results once again have the potential to deliver a best in class profile with pivotal data expected late this year or early next year, positioning this combination of C5 complement inhibitors as a new standard of care for PNH.
Moving to anticoagulation clot prevention remains a critical unmet need since less than half of eligible patients receive anticoagulant therapy primarily due to concerns about their bleeding risk. To address this, we are developing two complementary Factor 11 antibodies, one optimized for maximal anti robotic activity and the other designed to further reduce bleeding risk, enabling a tailored approach based on individual patients benefit risk profiles. Initial clinical data support this strategy showing impressive efficacy and a favorable bleeding profile compared to current standards of care. Pitiful studies are already underway in prevention of postsurgical venous thromboembolism or VTE with pivotal studies in cancer associated PT prevention, catheter associated thrombosis, stroke prevention in patients with atrial fibrillation and peripheral artery disease, all expected to initiate this year.
Moving to obesity, we continue to pursue a differentiated strategy that includes olarfati our in licensed GLP GIP Agnes entering pivotal monotherapy studies in 2026 as well as a co formulation of oladorpatide with Praluen, our antibody to PCSK9. Since current GLP activists do not meaningfully lower LDL cholesterol, this co formulated combination is designed to treat the large population of people living with obesity who also suffer from hyperlipidemia with a single convenient and similarly affordable once weekly subcutaneous injection analogous to the currently approved GLPs. Moreover, imagine if someone had invented a new GLP that, in addition to delivering profound weight loss, could also lower bad cholesterol by 50 to 60%.
It would create an important and differentiated opportunity for the many obese patients simultaneously suffering from hypolipidemia with elevated cardiovascular risk. Our clinical program for this novel combination that we believe can deliver these same dual benefits is expected to begin later this year. Before I turn the call over to Mary, I would like to quickly address a couple of additional developments in our pipeline in rare diseases. Our devioto gene therapy continues to produce transformative outcomes with meaningful hearing gain in 11 of the 12 treated children born with profound genetic deficits. This program was selected as the first new molecular entity to receive the FDA Commissioner’s National Priority Voucher designation and we are awaiting a regulatory decision in the first half of this year in fibro dysplasia osseous cancer progressive or fop, a debilitating disease in which the soft tissues of the body are progressively replaced with abnormal bone, the Artosumab program demonstrated more than 99% reduction in abnormal bone formation at 56 weeks, an unprecedented result and we are waiting on regulatory decisions in the US and EU in the second half of this year.
Our commitment and dedication to these types of rare diseases, particularly those that affect children, not only speak to the heart and soul of Regenera, but have also proven to pave the way for broader opportunities in the future, as we would hope would be the case here. In summary, our scientific and clinical momentum continues to accelerate across the R and D enterprise with multiple pivotal readouts, regulatory milestones and first in class programs advancing in 2026. I have never been more excited about the breadth, depth and potential impact of our pipeline. With that, let me turn it over to Mayor.
Marion McCourt — Executive Vice President – Commercial
Thank you George. The fourth quarter delivered a strong finish 2025 completing a successful year across our commercial portfolio. Our market leading brands ivhd, Depixon and Leptio continue to deliver sustainable growth based on their clinical profiles as well as our ability to execute effectively in competitive markets. In 2025 we expanded use of our existing brands and successfully launched new medicines and indications across multiple therapeutic areas and geographies. We begin 2026 well positioned to advance our portfolio and are excited by upcoming opportunities to change the lives of even more patients. Starting with our retinal franchise of Eylea HD and Eylea, which delivered combined U.S.
net sales of $1.1 billion. In the fourth quarter, Eylea HD net sales reached $506 million, representing 18% sequential growth. Performance was driven by a 10% increase in physician demand compared to the third quarter, highlighting Eylea HD’s strong clinical profile and commercial momentum despite a similar sequential decline in the overall anti VEGF category. This fourth quarter dynamic is typical for the anti VEGF category. For full year 2025 the category maintained approximately 5% growth versus 2024 while the innovative branded segment, which excludes Avastin and Biosimilars, declined by approximately 12%. Importantly, IAHLEAHD represents a growing proportion of Regeneron’s total anti Vega franchise and now contributing nearly half of total net sales.
Following recent label enhancements to include monthly dosing and retinal vein occlusion, ALI HD now has the broadest label and greatest dosing flexibility of any anti VEGF medicine. Physicians were eagerly awaiting both label enhancements and we are seeing positive early launch signals in our efforts to get this important medicine to even more patients. The combination of this new dosing flexibility with IAH HD’s demonstrated durability further strengthens its position in the anti VEGF renal category. New real world market data shows that on average patients with ongoing anti VEGF therapy who switched to IAH HD were able to extend their treatment duration by almost four weeks.
This underscores IAH HD’s durability profile in addition to its well established efficacy and safety. We look forward to the potential FDA approval of our prefilled syringe which if approved will provide additional convenience for retina specialists and further enhance IAH HD’s profile. While IAH HD grew IAH 2mg fourth quarter US net sales declined 15% sequentially to 577 million. Together Eylea HD and IAH continue to lead the innovative branded anti VEGF category. Looking ahead, we remind you of two separate factors that will impact early 2026. The first quarter is typically impacted by patient reauthorizations and as we disclosed earlier this month, wholesaler inventory levels were elevated by approximately 30 million at the end of the fourth quarter.
For Eylea HD as well as Eylea, we expect first quarter net sales will be negatively impacted as the inventory is absorbed. For Eylea HD we anticipate high single digit sequential demand growth in the first quarter while Eylea demand is expected to decline at a double digit rate based on competition and importantly ongoing conversion to IHD. Turning now to DUPIXENT which delivered $4.9 billion in the fourth quarter global net sales representing 32% year over year growth on a constant currency basis, US net sales grew 36% year over year to $3.7 billion based on broad demand growth and strong performance across several ongoing launches.
Dupixent is now approved in eight type 2 inflammatory diseases and is the number one prescribed biologic among dermatologists, pulmonologists, allergists, ear, nose and throat specialist. Based on the combination of its differentiated efficacy, safety and treatment experience across dipixent established indications including atopic dermatitis, asthma, nasal polyps and eosinophilic esophagitis, Dupixent continues to deliver robust demand growth supported by strong physician preference in each of these indications. We’ve also seen remarkable uptake in our more recent launches including copd, chronic spontaneous Urticaria bolus, penfalwood and with physicians regularly sharing their experiences How Dupixent has changed the lives of their patients, many of whom previously had no approved treatment options.
With many indications still significantly underpenetrated, Dupixent continues to be well positioned to deliver near medium and long term growth. Turning to oncology and hematology, Liptile reported $425 million in global net sales in the fourth quarter, up 13% year over year on a constant currency basis. In the US net sales grew 14% year over year to $285 million based on strong demand growth across all approved indications. Leptiva is a leading immunotherapy for advanced non melanoma skin cancers and our recent launch in adjuvant CSFC is off to a great start, including the recent addition of Liptio in the MCCN guidelines as the only Category 1 preferred immunotherapy in this setting in advanced non small cell lung cancer, liptio is now the second most commonly prescribed treatment for patients receiving their first immunotherapy.
Physicians increasingly recognize liptio as a preferred treatment option based on clinical experience, versatility as a monotherapy in combination with chemotherapy supported by an increasing body of robust clinical data including recently reported five year survival results. Briefly turning to lendesific, our new treatment for relapsed refractory multiple myeloma. We are encouraged by the launch progress to date, with physicians appreciating Lensific’s differentiated clinical profile, less burdensome hospitalization requirements and convenient dosing regimen. We expect adoption to continue to steadily build over time in this late line setting with the larger commercial opportunities in earlier lines of therapy. In summary, in the fourth quarter we delivered strong growth across ivhd, Dupixent and Littile and we continued to progress several launches including Linazific in 2026.
Our commercial portfolio is well positioned to capitalize on many near term growth opportunities enabling to deliver more treatments to patients. With that I will turn the call to Chris.
Christopher R. Fenimore — Executive Vice President, Finance and Chief Financial Officer
To Chris thank you Marion. My comments today on Regeneron’s financial results. And outlook will be on a non. GAAP basis unless otherwise noted. Fourth quarter 2025 total revenues of 3.9 billion grew 3% compared to the prior year, reflecting higher collaboration revenue driven by strong global Dupixent sales growth. Continued growth in net sales of Eylea HD and Litayo as well as higher other revenue partially offset by lower net sales of EYLEA 2mg Fourth quarter diluted net income per share was $11.44 on net income of 1.2 billion beginning with the Sanofi collaboration. Fourth quarter, total Sanofi collaboration revenues were approximately 1.6 billion, of which 1.5 billion related to our share of collaboration profits. Regeneron’s share of profits grew 42% versus the prior year, primarily driven by Dupixent and improving collaboration margins.
The Sanofi development balance was just below $600 million at the end of the year, reflecting a reduction of approximately 300 million since the end of the third quarter and over $1 billion in full year 2025. DUPIXENT’s continued strength enabled a rapid reimbursement of the development balance in 2025, which we now expect to be fully reimbursed by mid-2026. Once fully reimbursed, Sanofi Collaboration revenues will reflect our full share of global profits for Dupixent and Kevzara. Moving to Bayer fourth quarter net sales of Eylea and Eylea 8mg outside the US were 817 million inclusive of 312 million of Eylea 8mg sales.
Total buyer collaboration revenue was 319 million, of which 270 million related to our share of net profits outside the United States. Other revenue, which includes profit share and royalties associated with license agreements as well as amounts earned for contract manufacturing, grew 33% in the fourth quarter to 239 million. This included 179 million related to royalty income from Alaris plus our share of profits from Arcolis. Alaris net sales exceeded $1.5 billion in 2025, achieving the top royalty tier of 15% for the first time per our agreement with Novartis. Escalating royalty tiers, which range from 4 to 15%, are applied to cumulative net sales from the start of each calendar year.
This leads to step ups in royalty income each quarter as higher royalty tiers are applied to cumulative net sales. Now to our operating expenses R and D expense was 1.3 billion in the fourth quarter, reflecting continued investments to support Regeneron’s innovative pipeline including multiple late stage opportunities. Fourth quarter SGA was 691 million inclusive of a matching contribution to the Good Days Vascular and Neovascular Retinal Disease fund of approximately $60 million. Our effective tax rate in the fourth quarter was 17%. The increase in our tax rate from the prior year primarily reflects a lower tax benefit from stock based compensation.
Regeneron generated $4.1 billion in free cash flow in 2025 and ended the quarter with cash and marketable securities less debt of 16.2 billion. We returned $3.8 billion to shareholders in 2025, primarily through $3.4 billion in share repurchases. We continue to be opportunistic buyers of our shares with $1.5 billion remaining authorized for repurchases as of December 31st. We also initiated a quarterly dividend last year providing us with additional flexibility to return capital to shareholders in 2025. We paid nearly $400 million in cash dividends and announced this morning that our Board of Directors has authorized a quarterly dividend of $0.94 per share payable in March, equivalent to $3.76 on an annual basis.
We continue to view our dividend as a way to expand the pool of potential Regeneron shareholders to include funds with a dividend mandate. While share repurchases will remain the primary means of returning capital to our shareholders, I will conclude with our financial guidance for 2026, consistent with what was provided at the JP Morgan conference a few weeks ago, we expect 2026 R&D spend to be in the range of 5.9 to 6.1 billion. The increase versus 2025 is driven by costs to support our expanding late stage pipeline, including new phase three studies in oncology and he man our factor 11 antibodies and our obesity program.
In addition, as you heard from George, we plan on advancing several new molecules into the clinic across a number of different therapeutic areas including ophthalmology and INI. We expect 2026 SGA to be in the range of 2.5 to $2.65 billion, reflecting investments to support the ongoing launches of LIPTIO and Adjuvant, CSC and Linoxific and late line Multiple Myeloma as well as other potential launches including Sidicerin and gmg. We expect our gross margin and net product sales to be in the range of 83% to 84%. This guidance reflects a changing product mix as well as cost to support expanding our bulk manufacturing capacity and fill finish capabilities.
We also expect 2026 capital expenditures to be in the range of 1.1 to $1.3 billion, primarily related to the ongoing expansion of the R and D facilities at our Tarrytown headquarters, investments in our manufacturing network to support our growing commercial portfolio and pipeline. Finally, we expect our 2026 effective tax rate to be in the range of 13 to 15%. It is important to note that our 2025 effective tax rate benefited from a favorable tax audit settlement which reduced our 2025 ETR by 1.2 percentage points. A full summary of our guidance can be found in our earnings press release published earlier this morning.
In conclusion, Regeneron’s strong performance in 2025 positions us well to continue investing in our differentiated pipeline to deliver significant advances for patients and deploying capital to drive long term value for shareholders. With that, I’ll pass the call back to Ryan.
Ryan Crowe — Senior Vice President of Investor Relations & Strategic Analysis
Thank you Chris. This concludes our prepared remarks. We will now open the call for Q and A to ensure we are able to address as many questions as possible. We will answer one question from each caller before moving on to the next. Shannon, can we please move to the first question?
Questions and Answers:
operator
Thank you. To ask a question, please press star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 11. Again, our first question comes from the line of Alexandria Hammond of Wolf Research. Your line is not open.
Alexandria Hammond
Thanks for taking the question. So clearly there’s a ton of interest in the upcoming readouts for LIPTIO plus finumab. So in metastatic melanoma and adjuvant, any update on when we could receive this data? Beyond first half, should we expect to get an adjuvant interim update with a metastatic? And I guess as a follow up we know there are several interims for the adjuvant. So if we don’t get an update on the adjuvant with a metastatic readout, when could we expect that next interim? Thank you.
Ryan Crowe
Thanks Alex. We don’t really have any additional clarity right now on the timing for the advanced melanoma readout. First half is the best estimate at this time in terms of the adjuvant timing that’s also in the first half. They may coincide, they may not. Once we have the data. We will read it out shortly thereafter. Shannon, let’s move to the next question.
operator
Our next question comes from the line of Chris Raymond with Raymond James. Your line is now open.
Christopher Raymond
Thank you. Just a question on Dupixent ip. I’m sure you’re aware of Sanofi’s commentary yesterday about taking potential for taking the Runway out well beyond the current thinking. And I think their commentary took things out maybe to the 2040 or beyond range. I know you don’t want to give too much detail here, Len, but maybe any commentary you can provide in light of those comments yesterday. Thank you.
Leonard S. Schleifer
No, no additional comments. I thought Sanofi did a good job laying out what the realm of possibilities are.
George D. Yancopoulos
I think we should highlight the fact that we have also a lot of exciting follow on opportunities in this space, particularly with our collection of what we hope will prove to be the best in class. Long acting, aisle 13, IL4 and IL4 13 bicyclics, as well as what we call a new soupy doopy molecule that is a new version of dupixent that was naturally selected that might have even more improved properties. I think it’s worth just highlighting again because a lot of people don’t realize how special dupixent is in terms of not only its remarkable efficacy, how it delivers.
It doesn’t just help a little, it really dramatically benefits patients across these eight now approved diseases. But the thing that I think is underappreciated is its incredible safety profile. And I think that we’ve all seen that so many people are trying all sorts of other approaches to go after some of the same disease, like atopic dermatitis. We’ve seen data, let’s say with ox 40 and ox 40 ligands, which I think most people now realize are somewhat disappointing, not only from the efficacy side, but perhaps even most importantly from the safety side. What people I think don’t appreciate and understand is when we discovered dupixent and understood this whole pathway, we realized that this was a specific pathway that was driving only allergic disease.
And it was a vestigial, largely vestigial part of the immune system that was no longer required to fight most pathogens. That’s why unlike most other immunomodulators, it doesn’t suppress overall immunity. When you suppress overall immunity with things like JAK inhibitors or things like OP sporty ligand, you suppress everything and then you raise concerns and fears. The possibility that the general immunosuppression will now subject the patients to more infections, which is generally actually what you see. And remarkably with Dupixent you don’t see these sorts of things, so you don’t see generalized increases. We don’t have black box warnings about infections because we’re not generally suppressing the immune system.
We’re only suppressing the part of the immune system which is largely vestigial and is largely aberrant activated in our modern world for reasons we have theories about but won’t get into now that drive allergic inflammation. So it’s a very special approach and you don’t have to worry about, for example, getting Kaposi’s sarcoma or things like that with treatment with Dupixent.
Ryan Crowe
Thanks, George and Lynn. Let’s move to the next question, please.
operator
Our next question comes from the line of Salvine Richter with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open. Good morning.
Salveen Richter
Thanks for taking my question. Just a follow up here on the frontline metastatic melanoma data in the first half. Is there any way you could frame for us how to think about the bar on hazard ratio here and just any commentary about the PD L1 expression levels of these patients as we look to this first interim read? Thank you.
George D. Yancopoulos
I think as we’ve discussed before, this study is largely powered to get an effect in terms of the primary endpoint, which is the pfs analogous to the current combination standard of care. Of course, we hope that we might actually achieve better. We have two dose groups in the study and so forth. But we’re also powered that if we were to hit at that level as the current standard of care, we would also hope to demonstrate a benefit and the study is appropriately powered to pick up an overall survival benefit. That is the minimum hopeful expectations and we might see better than that as well.
Ryan Crowe
And regarding PD L1 status of the enrollment, we are screening patients, but we are not using it as an inclusion or an exclusion criteria. There’s no floor or cap on the proportion of patients with high expression or low expression. So this population we expect would represent a true first line advanced melanoma population. And we look forward to the results. Shannon, next question please.
operator
Our next question comes from the line of Tyla Van Buren with TD Cowan. Your line is now open.
Tyler Van Buren
Hey guys. Good morning. Thanks for the question and congratulations on the results. I wanted to ask about broader R and D strategy. In your presentation you have the slide where you divide your pipeline among the six therapeutic areas and INI has expanded significantly as of late as well as ophthalmology, which is not terribly surprising and I would argue is necessary given the history of the company. So would you say that these two areas, addition to oncology, will remain a bigger focus than the three others, or are you committed to remaining relatively balanced across all six areas over the next few years?
George D. Yancopoulos
Well, Tyler, thanks for bringing that up. First of all, I do want to point out that we are somewhat disappointed with the industry in that we invent a great leading drug like IAH and then you get literally dozens and dozens of companies just trying to come up with the Me too and take a little bit of that business or the same thing with Dupixent. They’re just trying to come up and try to mimic Dupixent and maybe try to make a little incremental improvement. What our goal is to really do what I think this industry should be doing, which is taking advantage of the most innovative approaches to come up with new drugs for new indications.
And what we do is we take an agnostic approach that is generally guided by genetics, which has proven to be so successful in our history. This is perhaps one of the first, if not the first company that bet its entire future on the power of genetics. First mouse and now human genetics. So we make our choices based on the most powerful available data and technology that can guide decision making, which is large scale human genetics, which allows us to use AI in ways that other people. That allows us to pick targets. Many of the targets that we’ve now described, for example in ophthalmology and in immunology and inflammation, but across other areas as well, are driven by the same kind of genetics that allows us to know whether Dupixent will work in an indication or not, that if the genetic says that if you’re missing that genetic pathway, you’re likely going to help the disease.
And if you have increases in that genetic path, you’re going to get more of that disease. And that has proven very powerful for us to make decisions. That’s how we find indication. We are therapeutic, agnostic, but obviously we have capabilities broadly across all these areas. But we’re very excited about these new programs because like our previous successes, they are driven by human genetics telling us that these targets, if we can make and we believe we have the most powerful technologies to address these targets, whether it be antibodies, bispecifics, genetic medicines. If we properly can target these genetically valid pathways, we can create new opportunities, new drugs for new indications, not just also protecting our existing franchises by making sure that we always have the best anti VEGF approach and portfolio, we have the best anti allergy portfolio, so forth.
Well, we want to break New ground. We’re doing it across all these therapeutic areas we’re very excited about. Thanks, George.
Ryan Crowe
Next question, please. Shannon.
operator
Our next question comes from the line of Dave Reisinger with Lee Rink Partners. Your line is now open.
David Risinger
Yes, thanks very much. So my question is for George. George, could you talk a little bit. More about the souped up version of Dupixent that’s in development, including the event path ahead? Thanks very much.
George D. Yancopoulos
Yeah. Obviously Dupixent is a very unusual antibody. I don’t know if everybody remembers the history of it, but some of the biggest companies in the world tried to make a molecule like Dupixent and failed in clinical trials. For example, Amgen, using an inferior humanized antibody, humanized mouse approach, tried to make a Dupixent that is targeting the same receptor as we did and their antibody completely failed in all their clinical trials. So Dupixent was a very special molecule. But what we continue to do is use our best technologies, our best antibody generating technologies, starting with our best in class human immune system in a mouse, generating millions and millions of versions over the last many, many years and testing them and comparing them.
We think that we have one that might actually be in some ways even better than Dupixent. It looks like it may be longer acting and may have some other advantages as well. So we’re going to be moving it forward in the clinic as we announced, and we’ll be testing it and we’ll see whether indeed we have been able to come up with an even better dupy or a Sufi dupy, as we call it.
Leonard S. Schleifer
And just to remind everybody that while not formally in the alliance with Sanofi, it is covered by the alliance, meaning that if it goes into full development, that we’ll be doing this with Sanofi.
Ryan Crowe
Thank you. Next question please. Shannon.
operator
Our next question comes from the line of Tazeen Ahmad with Bank of America, Yolanda Snope and.
Tazeen Ahmad
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to spend a minute on geographic atrophy. You guys have a cohort, I believe, reading out in the second half of this year on your GA program. I think there was a lot of promise a few years back just given the number of patients with ga, but the two approved drugs have proven not to be able to get a ton of market share. So what do you think is differentiated in your program? Do you think that you’ll need to show a visual acuity benefit or is it going to be in your mind just as good to show slowing of vision loss given that you expect to have a better safety profile than both those drugs.
Thanks.
George D. Yancopoulos
Well, let me just remind you that the first drug in the wet AMD space was Macu Chen, which was an aptamer. And if you compare the benefits that it provided compared to something like iah, yes it had a benefit, but it was just barely slowing down wet AMD disease, as opposed to what we were able to do with iah, where we could actually reverse it, improve vision even, and maintain or restore vision for years thereafter. So obviously the approaches that we have at our disposal, things like our antibodies and our SIRNA’s, have historically proven to be much more powerful at blocking pathways than technologies approaches such as aptamer, pegylated aptamers and pegylated peptides and so forth.
So one possibility and opportunity, of course, is that by providing more profound blockade, one might actually see better benefit. Another, of course, important aspect of our program is we are trying both systemic blockade as well as local blockade. So one of the problems with the existing therapies and why they are not so widely used is they are largely preventative, but they come with very dangerous side effects in that they can cause essentially problems that might result in immediate blindness, like retinal vasculitis with occlusive vasculitis disease. So imagine you’re taking something to prevent blindness that can actually cause blindness.
So the systemic approach now, of course it may have its own problems, there’s always risk. So it may come with its own problems in terms of systemic infection, but, but it should be free from causing these local potential blinding risks in the eye. So you may end up either with better efficacy or the same efficacy, but with a better safety profile in terms of avoiding these blinding risks. And also in the case of right now, the current treatments, most patients actually have bilateral disease, so you have to inject both eyes and many of them also suffer now.
And in fact, these drugs can actually in some cases cause WET AMD progression of WET amd. They need injections in both eyes and they also need injections with anti vegf. So obviously a systemic approach would avoid all these complications. You would have to give two sets of injections to both sets of eyes and so forth. So we’re very excited because there’s many, many opportunities here. And I also remind you that we are testing both the monotherapy in terms of syngcerin alone, which works so spectacularly in myasthenia gravis, as well as the combination of syngcerin with the antibody, which works so beautifully and was required to optimally work in pnh.
We don’t know because we collectively society, the medical system does not understand why in one case you need complete blockade, in the other case you need this sort of subdiscerin type of effect. We’re exploring both. So there’s many, many, many ways to provide improved benefit for these patients who really need an improved way of treating their disease. It could be something that really addresses the tremendous burden that’s inflicted by bilateral disease layered with anti VEGF requirements and so forth. It could be better efficacy, it could be better safety, and it could also be, for example, a systemic approach that does not completely inhibit the complement system.
So many, many, many ways to imagine delivering a better outcome for patients who really need it here, especially if more of them will choose to undertake this preventative approach. Thank you.
Leonard S. Schleifer
Just to add one point which George always emphasizes. VEGF is made locally and so you give a local drug to block a local problem. The C5 is made systemically, primarily in the liver. So it may require systemic blockade as opposed to inovitual. But we have all the tools to dissect what the best approach is.
Ryan Crowe
And final note on this to Z. And the primary endpoint of our initial pivotal study is growth rate in G8 lesionary. But I would note that we do have a prospective secondary endpoint that will measure 15 letter loss of visual acuity. So we will have an endpoint that looks at visual acuity at year one and year two of this study, unlike incumbent therapies who looked at this on a post hoc basis. Let’s move to the next question please.
operator
Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Meacham with Citi. Your line is now open.
Geoffrey Meacham
Oh great. Thanks guys for the question. I just want to talk about I.A.H.D. for a sec. Maybe just talk about the trends for growth for this year. Wanted to get maybe your perspective as you kind of exit 25 and go into 26. The sources of growth with regard to new patients, switches versus competition. And then on the pre filled syringe related. Would you characterize that as kind of a tipping point? Are there ophthalmologists, are there practices that are sort of waiting for that? I want to get a sense for how much of a gating factor that is to ultimate demand.
Thanks.
Marion McCourt
Thank you Jeff for the question. And I’m going to start with the last portion on IVHD and the pre filled syringe potential approval that we talked about today. And as you know from the numbers that we shared, we’re making good progress with IAH HD in the marketplace. The recent label enhancements with Q4 weekly dosing and RVO and have been very well received. And of course pre filled syringe as I mentioned will be a convenience factor for offices so some that find that to be incredibly important. Obviously we’ll have a new opportunity to use Iahlea HD but obviously we have a lot of users today.
It’ll only get better when we get and potentially have the pre filled syringe approval.
Ryan Crowe
Okay, let’s move to the next question please Shannon,
operator
our next question comes from the line of Akash to 1. Your line is now open.
Akash Tewari
Hey, thanks so much on your PCSK9 Gitglip combo. Can you talk about the CO formulation here? How are you able to deliver both drugs in a single auto injector versus something akin to an on body infusion? And what are the chances you partner this asset out to share the development costs? Can you characterize any of those discussions so far? Thank you.
Leonard S. Schleifer
We don’t comment on the status of of discussions. We’re always open minded to deals and enhance our channel value.
George D. Yancopoulos
But as you touched on it, that’s the magic and that’s the secret of our capabilities Best in class formulations group that delivered unprecedented formulation capability with IAH and iahd. It’s the same people doing the same things that have figured out how to magically be able to get into an auto injector, a very similar injector that’s used just for your glp in a similar sort of volume, both the antibody and a peptide. And so we’re very excited because Len’s the one who put it this way. Imagine inventing a GLP that in addition to doing what the leading GLP does, it also just lowers cholesterol, bad cholesterol, by 50 to 60%.
Wouldn’t everybody want to take that? Because we understand that so many people who suffer from obesity also suffer from cardiovascular risk. And while losing weight helps your cardiovascular risk, it also is dramatically driven by the bad cholesterol which weight loss doesn’t appreciably impact. So it’s a very, very exciting opportunity. We’re very excited that our scientists were able to figure out how to make this magic happen. And we think it’s going to offer patients a really differentiated way of not only having their desirable weight loss, but also dramatically improving their hyperlipidemia and associated cardiovascular risk as well.
So we’re very, very excited to be able to offer this opportunity and move forward with our clinical program to see if it’s a reality.
Ryan Crowe
Okay, thank you. We have time for two more questions, Shannon.
operator
Our next question comes from the line of Terrence Flynn with Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open.
Terence Flynn
Good morning. Thanks for taking the question. Bayer is going to be presenting some Phase 3 SSP data for their oral factor 11 inhibitor S indexion next week. Just wondering anything you’ll be focused on in that data set as it pertains to your Factor 11 antibody program in terms of development, et cetera. Thank you.
George D. Yancopoulos
Yeah, I mean, it is very hard to compare these small molecules with antibodies as we know historically and it’s the case here. You know, small molecules suffer from both lack of specificity. We know they inhibit multiple proteases, including the target of interest here, and they also have off target effects as well. And so the hope here is by having an antibody which we think is very, very different than a small molecule, the specificity as well as the efficacy may allow you to have a very different profile where you will actually have better anticoagulation, but also hopefully better safety, less bleeding, which we think what it’s all about.
And so there will be some read through, there will be some usefulness to following that. On the other hand, we believe our antibody has a very substantially differentiated and potentially advantageous profile. And so the key thing is if our antibodies really can deliver what we believe they can with dramatic decreases in the overall bleeding risk, then they should allow somebody to essentially get a, an occasional shot once after a procedure, let’s say, or once a month eventually, things like that, that won’t require these patients to be either having to worry about making sure they stay on their meds or monitoring them and so forth.
So very different opportunity. Of course there’s some read through, but we think our antibiotics are going to be very different. George, Shannon, let’s go to the last question, please.
operator
Our last question comes from the line of Evan Segerman with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open.
Evan Seigerman
Hi guys. Thank you so much for taking my question. I’d love for you to talk a little bit about the confidence that gives you to move your GLP1 GIP into Phase 3 clinical trials globally, just given how rapidly this market is evolving. Put it another way, what’s differentiated about this asset from currently available standard of care and other advanced assets in development.
Leonard S. Schleifer
So I think if you go back and listen carefully to what George was saying, that the biggest advance here from our perspective is the ability to combine this with our PCSK9. There are only two approved PCSK9 antibodies and the ability to combine this antibody with These peptides in the same syringe at the same dosing interval. I think that’s highly differentiated for the 50% or more of people who are obese and have high cholesterol. We know several hundred thousand people already take both a glip and a PCSK9 inhibitor. And that’s without the convenience of having to put that together in a single shot and without really focusing any marketing on the obese group.
So I think, Evan, that that’s what. The core of the differentiation could be. Obviously we’re considering putting it together with other assets in our pipeline, other combinations we can’t imagine directly competing. But I do think we should have data that’s competitive to the best in class. The commercial strategy is not to directly compete without the combination. George, you want to add something?
George D. Yancopoulos
Yes. So remember, one of the reasons we have confidence is this has already been extensively studied in China and it’s designed to be, and the clinical data suggests it is very tirzepatide like in its efficacy and safety profile when compared in the same populations. And it is already in advanced phase three trials in China. That’s why we think we have very much a tirzepatide like or a best in class type agent. But as one said, we don’t necessarily want to just compete just for the weight loss. A lot of people are just so focused on the weight loss and they’re trying to say, oh, let me get a little bit more weight loss, a little less nauseousness, a little less vomiting.
They’re all competing around the weight loss. They’re all fighting in that space. We want to take this to a whole other place where we’re adding a completely new benefit, a completely different benefit to the weight loss. So let everybody else fight for an extra 1% or 2% in weight loss. We’re going to give you 50 to 60% LDL lowering with the associated expected cardiovascular benefit that’s highly differentiated. So we didn’t get this to compete just by itself. And in the obesity space, though, we think we have an agent here that is very similar to the best in class type of reagent.
It’s all about the combinations. And the first combination we’re rolling out, we think is this very, very exciting one that frankly, honestly, every obese patient should take this regardless of their lipid status, because lower lipids is better and that would be better. It would frankly be better for the entire population. Why do we know? Because cardiovascular disease driven by hyperlipidemia is still the number one killer in America. And people are not taking it. So it may be almost a Trojan horse. Imagine they want to lose their weight and they’re not even going to realize that they’re going to be helping their hearts.
They’re going to be decreasing the overall rate of cardiovascular disease and death in this country. A Trojan horse to really make an impact for society. This is what we’re trying to do. Everybody, frankly, in America should be on a PCFQ9. This is a way to actually do it and do it in a way that people will actually want to take. And we think we have a variety of other ways not to compete on the weight loss side, but to give another important benefit on top of the weight loss. All right, thank you, George. And thanks to everyone who dialed in.
Ryan Crowe
Today for your interest in Regenera. We apologize to those remaining in the Q and A queue you do not have a chance to hear from today. As always, the IR team is available to answer any remaining questions that you may have. Once again, have a great day and a nice weekend.
operator
This concludes today’s conference. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.
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