BREAKING
Encompass Health Corporation reports Q4 2025 results, issues 2026 guidance 1 day ago Graham Corporation Expands Capabilities Across Defense, Energy, and Space Markets 1 day ago Graham Corporation Sees Robust Q3 on Defense Momentum and FlackTek Integration 1 day ago Biogen’s Q4 FY25 adj. earnings decline, but beat estimates; revenue down 7% 1 day ago Infographic: How Philip Morris (PM) performed in Q4 2025 financial results 1 day ago Abbott reports positive results from study on its atrial fibrillation therapies 1 day ago Atmus Welcomes Heath Sharp to Board of Directors 1 day ago Cboe Global Markets Q4 2025 adj. earnings jump on record high revenues 1 day ago Zurn Elkay beats fourth quarter estimates, forecasts growth for 2026 3 days ago Yum China Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Financial Results 3 days ago Encompass Health Corporation reports Q4 2025 results, issues 2026 guidance 1 day ago Graham Corporation Expands Capabilities Across Defense, Energy, and Space Markets 1 day ago Graham Corporation Sees Robust Q3 on Defense Momentum and FlackTek Integration 1 day ago Biogen’s Q4 FY25 adj. earnings decline, but beat estimates; revenue down 7% 1 day ago Infographic: How Philip Morris (PM) performed in Q4 2025 financial results 1 day ago Abbott reports positive results from study on its atrial fibrillation therapies 1 day ago Atmus Welcomes Heath Sharp to Board of Directors 1 day ago Cboe Global Markets Q4 2025 adj. earnings jump on record high revenues 1 day ago Zurn Elkay beats fourth quarter estimates, forecasts growth for 2026 3 days ago Yum China Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Financial Results 3 days ago
ADVERTISEMENT
Earnings Transcript

Steris Q3 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

$STE February 5, 2026

Call Participants

Corporate Participants

Julie WinterVice President, Investor Relations

Julie WinterVice President, Investor Relations

Daniel A. CarestioPresident and CEO, Director

Analysts

Brett FishbinAnalyst

Michael PolarkAnalyst

Patrick WoodAnalyst

Michael MatsonAnalyst

Jason BednarAnalyst

ADVERTISEMENT

Steris (NYSE: STE) Q3 2026 Earnings Call dated Feb. 05, 2026

Presentation

Operator

Good day and welcome to the Steris plc third quarter 2026 conference call. All participants will be in a listen only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal conference specialist by pressing a Star key followed by zero. After today’s presentation there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press Star then one on your touchtone phone and to withdraw your question please press Star then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ms. Julie Winter, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead ma’.

Am.

Julie WinterVice President, Investor Relations

Thank you. Check and Good morning everyone. Speaking on today’s call will be Karen Burton, our Senior Vice President and cfo, and Dan Corestillo, our President and CEO. And I do have a few words of caution before we open for comments. This webcast contains time sensitive information that is accurate only as of today. Any redistribution, retransmission or rebroadcast of this call without the express written consent of Cesairis is strictly prohibited. Some of the statements made during this review are or may be considered forward looking statements. Many important factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward looking statements, including without limitation, those risk factors described in Steris securities filings.

The Company does not undertake to update or revise any forward looking statements as a result of new information or future events or developments. STARIS SEC filings are available through the Company and on our website. In addition, on today’s call, non GAAP financial measures including adjusted earnings per diluted shareholder, adjusted operating income, constant currency, organic revenue growth and free cash flow will be used. Additional information regarding these measures, including definitions, is available in our press release, as well as reconciliations between GAAP and non GAAP financial measures. Non GAAP financial measures are presented during this call with the intent of providing greater transparency to supplemental financial information used by Management and the Board of Directors in their financial analysis and operational decisions.

With those cautions, I will hand the call over to Karen. Thank you Julie and good morning everyone. It is my pleasure to be with you this morning to review the highlights of our third quarter performance from continuing operations for the third quarter total. As reported revenue grew 9%, constant currency organic revenue grew 8% in the quarter driven by volume as well as 200 basis points of price. Gross margin for the quarter declined 70 basis points compared with the prior year to 43.9%. Positive price and productivity, primarily driven by volume, were more than offset by increased tariffs and inflation.

EBIT margin decreased 40 basis points to 22.9% of revenue compared with last year, mainly driven by the decline in gross margin, which was somewhat mitigated by operating expense discipline. The adjusted effective tax rate in the quarter was 24.2%, a small decline from 24.5% in the third quarter of last year. The year over year decrease was driven primarily by changes in geographic mix. Adjusted net income from continuing operations in the quarter was 249.4 million. Earnings per diluted share from continuing operations were $2.53, a 9% increase over the prior year. Capital expenditures for the first nine months of fiscal 2026 totaled $278.8 million and depreciation and amortization totaled $363.1 million.

We ended the quarter with 1.9 billion in total debt. Gross debt to EBITDA at quarter end was approximately 1.2 times free. Cash flow for the first nine months of fiscal 2026 was 737.6 million, with year over year improvement driven primarily by an increase in earnings and lower capital spending. With that, I will now turn the call over to Dan for his remarks.

Daniel A. CarestioPresident and CEO, Director

Thanks Karen and good morning everyone. Thank you for joining us to hear more about our third quarter performance. Karen covered the quarter at a high level, so I will add some commentary on our segments starting with Healthcare Constant currency Organic revenue grew 8% for the third quarter with growth across all categories. Service continued its streak of outperformance, growing 11% in the third quarter. Consumables also performed well with growth of 8%. Healthcare capital equipment revenue increased 7% for the quarter with backlog remaining over 400 million. Orders were down 1% year to date against difficult comparisons to last year.

EBIT margins for health care in the quarter decreased 100 basis points to 24.3% as volume, pricing and restructuring program benefits were more than offset by increased tariffs and inflation. Turning to AST, constant currency organic revenue grew 8% for the quarter with 9% growth in services and 103% growth in capital equipment. Revenue Services benefited from stable medical device volumes, bioprocessing demand and currency. EBIT margins For AST were 45.1%, up 30 basis points from the third quarter of last year as the additional pricing and volume were more than able to offset increases in labor and energy and the unfavorable mix impact from strong capital growth.

Constant currency organic revenue increased 5% for life sciences in the quarter driven by 11% growth in consumables. Capital equipment also performed well with 7% growth in backlog holding over 100 million. Margins declined 20 basis points as Volume and price were more than offset by tariffs and inflation. From an earnings perspective, we grew the bottom line 9% in the quarter to $2.53 per diluted share. Included in that number is approximately 16 million of pre tax tariff impact which primarily impacted our health care segment. Turning to our outlook for fiscal 2026, as noted in the press release, we are maintaining our outlook for the year.

This includes approximately 8 to 9% as reported revenue growth and constant currency organic revenue growth of 7 to 8%. Our earnings outlook of $10.15 to $10.30 is also being maintained, although with 10 million more in anticipated tariffs, the higher end of that range is less likely. Free cash flow is expected to be 850 million and capex remains unchanged at 375 million. We are pleased with our performance year to date delivering constant currency organic revenue growth of high single digits and double digits earnings per share despite the tariff headwinds. That concludes our prepared remarks for the call.

Chuck, would you please give the instructions and we can begin. The Q and A will do.

Question & Answers

Operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question you may press Star than one on your touchtone phone. If you’re using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two and our first question for today will come from Brett Fishbin with Keybancs. Please go ahead.

Brett Fishbin

Hello, good morning. Thank you very much for taking the questions. Just was hoping maybe at a high level company wide you could just touch on how you’re thinking about fourth quarter constant currency growth. Just thinking about you’re kind of tracking a little bit above the high end of the 7% to 8% FY26 range and maintained 7% to 8% for the year. Just kind of wondering if there’s any incremental concerns or temporary items impacting 4Q or maybe if it sets up as we should be thinking about the higher end or potential upside. Thank you.

Julie Winter — Vice President, Investor Relations

Yeah, thanks Brett. As we look at the fourth quarter and as we said last quarter, we do have a bit of a slowdown in the second half and that would be my caution on getting too excited about the fourth quarter. So that is why we’re holding that 7 to 8% constant currency. Last year’s fourth quarter was a solid quarter so it’s a tough comparison as well, particularly in AST where we had a really strong capital equipment fourth quarter which is is not expected this year. Brett, this Is Julie, just to add on healthcare, too, we’ve been saying all year we don’t expect healthcare services to stay in the teens.

We slowed a little bit to 11% in the third quarter. We would expect continued slowing in that business in the fourth quarter.

Brett Fishbin

All right, perfect. Thank you very much. And then maybe just one more from me. I was just interested to hear maybe a little bit more about what you’re seeing around capital equipment backlog activity in both segments. I think the healthcare backlog is showing stability kind of in the same range it’s been the last couple quarters, but seeing some pretty strong growth out of the life sciences backlog. So just any thoughts on what’s going on there would be appreciated. Thanks again.

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

Yeah, Brett, this is Dan. The life science one is easy because that’s just a recovery comparison to where we were a little over a year ago when pharma wasn’t spending as much. And, you know, we started booking strong orders Q3 last year, and that’s continued and it continues today. And as those continue to flush out, you know, we’re just in a much better spot from a macro perspective than we were, you know, a little over a year ago. So that’s positive. On the health care side, you know, we’ve had strong orders all year. I mean, we’re down 1% versus prior year, which was a, you know, a blowout year in terms of order intake.

So we have not felt any meaningful slowdown as it relates to capital spending. And I go back to what I’ve said many times is, you know, a lot of times our products are treated almost to the utility. They’re needed for capacity. They’re essential in the hospital. And if the procedures continue to grow at some nominal rate or location changes, that capacity has to be put in place as it relates to sterilization, disinfection, et cetera. So we’ve been fairly resilient, whereas I know maybe some others have seen some capital slowdown.

Operator

The next question will come from Mac Etalk with Stevens. Please go ahead.

Michael Polark

Hey, good morning and thank you for taking my questions as well. Maybe just to follow up on Brett’s capital equipment question, Life sciences. I’d just like to know how you would characterize the current conditions in that end market and how conversations with customers are evolving around us onshoring and capacity expansions. Thanks.

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

You know, I’d say in general, Matt, any time there’s a juxtaposition of manufacturing locations, we tend to benefit on the capital side of things because they’re putting in new capacity you know, clearly there’s been some, some pretty big announcements in the last few months in North Carolina and Pennsylvania that have got commitments to build large new processing capacity. And fortunately for us, a lot of that capacity is aseptic manufacturing type products, which tends to be our sweet spot. So it’s definitely a positive macro for us right now. I think, though, the more important thing is that despite some of the pricing pressures in pharma and some of the regulatory changes that may be coming there, nonetheless, they seem to be a much better spot than they were a year and a half ago when there was some confusion.

So all in all, it’s been a positive for us.

Michael Polark

Appreciate that. And then, you know, obviously the $10 million increase in tariff related costs that popped up on the press release. I’d just like to, you know, potentially get an update on your mitigation efforts and, you know, get your sense of how you will be able to maybe offset a majority of these costs in FY27, if that’s possible.

Julie Winter — Vice President, Investor Relations

Sure, yeah. There’s a wide variety of mitigation efforts going on and we are optimistic about our ability to continue to absorb those as we go forward and fully as we move forward. They range from shifting product movement, supplier negotiations, alternative suppliers. Honestly, the hardest work and the biggest part is looking for other cost reductions and an ability to offset those costs with productivity improvements, efficiencies in our facilities and across the offices, back office as well. Hey, Mac, this is Julie. Just the ads on the third quarter and the 10 million for the year is mainly driven by metals and we see an uptick in metals with more capital equipment sales.

So the mix shift to capital has a direct impact on the tariff exposure for this year.

Michael Polark

I appreciate the color. Thank you all.

Operator

The next question will come from Michael Polark with Wolf Research. Please go ahead.

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

Good morning.

Michael Polark

Thank you. I’ll stay on tariffs and then I want to shift to AST. So just on tariffs, can you remind the 55 million that’s now in the guidance, is that six months, just December and March, or was there an impact in the September quarter as well? And I asked just because I’m trying to understand, like what, how much we’ll need to annualize.

Julie Winter — Vice President, Investor Relations

We were 16 million in the third quarter, Mike, and we would expect that to step up a little bit in the fourth. The 55 million is an annual run rate rate for fiscal 26 and we have been incurring tariffs every quarter.

Operator

It seems that Mr. Povlor has disconnected. Our next question will come from Patrick Wood with Morgan Stanley Please go ahead.

Patrick Wood

Hey guys. Two kind of both on the macro regulatory side. You know, CMS had two different proposals. There was obviously the PPE sort of on shoring, some of the API stuff on the drug side. Curious if you think that would have any effect as supply chain shift and if that could affect you guys in a positive way. And then the other one was like another CMS pros or they’re obviously getting rid of for a lot of surgeries, the inpatient only list. They did that obviously for musculoskeletal, but they’re doing it for some of the soft tissue surgeries and things.

Is there a chance that that pulls more procedures into the asc? And do you view that ASC shift is a good thing or a bad thing for you guys?

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

Yeah, sure. Patrick, this is Dan. Nice to hear from you. I would say that the ASC shift has generally been a positive for us. There’s new capacity demands. There’s also a higher degree of clinical support that those facilities need than maybe large acute care facilities in terms of sterilization, disinfection, and that’s something that Steris is uniquely positioned to provide and we’ve been able to do that quite well. In terms of the PPE shift, I have not yet seen any material commitments of major manufacturing moving to us at this point that would have an impact on.

I mean, that would largely be an AST play, right, in terms of PPE that needs that sterile drape and gown type stuff. But I’ve read about it, but I haven’t seen any impact from it this point. And in terms of your question on the API relocation, I have not seen an impact on that yet either.

Patrick Wood

That’s helpful. And then just very quickly as a follow up, you know, we had chatted before about potentially, I don’t know, it’s hard for what you can and can’t say, but a bit more of a commercial push in EMEA across some of your product lines. On the sterilization side, is that still something, you know, a more integrated model and competing a little bit more aggressively in emea. Is that still something that’s on the cards?

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

Absolutely, yes. That’s something we’re committed to. We’ve made a lot of structural changes in EMEA in terms of how we’re going to approach go to market. It’s going to take a while to get that fully formulated and executed. It’s a long process, but we’re confident in the direction that we’re heading.

Patrick Wood

Awesome, thanks.

Operator

The next question will come from Michael Matson with Needham and Company, Please. Go ahead.

Michael Matson

Yeah, thanks. So I wanted to follow up on Mike Pollack’s question on the tariff exposure in 26. I think maybe what he was trying to get at was like, what’s the incremental exposure in 27? I know you probably can’t give us a dollar amount. You’re not giving guidance, but if you’ve been paying tariffs for basically all 4/4 of 26, does that imply that kind of any incremental tariff impact in 27 will be small, you know, less than a quarter worth, effectively, or.

Julie Winter — Vice President, Investor Relations

The. I think that’s a logical approach. You know, obviously the tariffs did fluctuate during the year, especially in the first half of our year as rates settled in. And we’re seeing it come through and reflect it in the different mix. But I don’t. I think it’s reasonable to say that it wouldn’t be more than another quarter’s worth. Kind of level based on current Paris.

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

Yeah, yeah, I understand.

Julie Winter — Vice President, Investor Relations

What’s in place right now.

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

Yeah. Okay. And then just, you know, your leverage ratios at just over one times. It’s been, I think it’s been a few years since you’ve done any acquisitions. So it used to be a pretty big part of the steris story. So maybe why haven’t you been doing more deals and, you know, what’s the outlook? Do you have a pipeline of things that you’re looking at and can we expect to see more in the next few years? Well, we’ve been active on smaller sort of bolt on product acquisitions and some channel acquisitions over the last couple years.

Doing major transformative M and A is not easy. It’s something that we feel we’re good at and we have the muscle for. We’re good at integration, but we also have a very disciplined approach at what meets our financial criteria and where we add value from a customer perspective. So we’re looking. But at this point, we’ve kissed a lot of frogs and not a lot of them have turned out to be princes. Okay, that’s a good way to put it. Thank you.

Operator

The next question will come from Jason Vintner with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Jason Bednar

Morning, everyone. I gotta follow the frogtissing comment here. I’m gonna start with cash flow guidance here. You left that unchanged. But look, based on where you’re at for the first nine months, that target just looks like a layup. So I guess why not bump that higher? I get not changing revenue. I get not changing the EPS guide, but are there any cash flow Fluctuations you’re anticipating that you’re in that would keep you from clearing that guidance bar.

Julie Winter — Vice President, Investor Relations

Hi, Jason. Yeah, I think it’s you’re right. We are very confident with that guidance. A lot of times in the fourth quarter, timing really matters. So we’ve got a heavy capital quarter. Some of those that activity will shift into next year in terms of cash collections. So it’s a little bit harder to predict in the fourth quarter, especially since it is winter and weather can play a. So a little bit of conservatism there.

Operator

Okay.

Jason Bednar

All right, fair enough. And then for a follow up, I did want to peek a little bit ahead to fiscal 27. Look, you’re sitting on a healthy backlog. That’s no secret. The AST momentum is obvious for you and the broader market. The street’s only modeling 6% growth for next year. Is there a reason you wouldn’t be able to maintain your typical 711 growth algorithm beyond fiscal 26? I know a lot have asked here today about tariffs and kind of the impact on tariffs in fiscal 27, but any other considerations we should have in mind, whether it’s top line or margin related.

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

I mean, obviously we’re in the throes of our planning period right now, but I would say in a general sense, the macros don’t look negative to us right now. And obviously next quarter we’re going to give you guys some solid guidance of where we think we’re going to land in fiscal 27. But at this point, I don’t see a lot of downside or anything materially changing in the market today.

Operator

Perfect, thanks. And the next question is a follow up from Michael Pollard with Wolf. Please go ahead.

Michael Polark

Hey, good morning. Can you hear me?

Julie Winter — Vice President, Investor Relations

Yes.

Michael Polark

I’m so sorry what happened earlier, I don’t know. It just dropped and took me a bit to get back. So my follow up, my follow up was going to be on AST services. If somebody asked this and you answered it, I missed it. But just in the quarter, you know, in constant fx, ASP services line up 6%. You know, the prior two quarters was up 10%. Constant fx, if that makes some assumptions on the math. So can we just get a little extra color on kind of how you’ve seen the fiscal year play out in ast, you know, why the December quarter might have been a little bit below the prior two.

And you know, what’s a good way to think about constant FX AST services growth in this current March quarter. Thank you.

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

Sure. Yes. What I would say is, Mike, we kind of Had a strange start to the quarter. We don’t get in and talk about months sequentially, but October was really weak. And then it got better in November. And then we had a really strong December. And there’s nothing I can point to. There wasn’t anything uniquely geographic. There wasn’t any customer subsegment that we look at that was off. It was just a general softness in the volumes that we were seeing across the global network that seems to have righted itself by December.

Michael Polark

If I can just follow up there and then I’ll proceed any. You know, for several quarters now, we’ve been asking about just the tariff impact. You know, customers changing order flows as part of their tariff mitigation. Any fresh view as to whether that could explain some of this kind of quarter to quarter to quarter movement?

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

There was speculation, and this is somewhat anecdotal, but we have heard from some customers they built ahead of tariffs a bit and got product into different locations. I can’t say definitively that was a material impact on the volumes. And maybe that’s why there was some. A slight inventory adjustment that we saw in the fall. But we haven’t seen any movements that have impacted us negatively because we’re well positioned all around the globe to work with our customers for sterilization.

Michael Polark

Thank you, Dan. And I’m sorry again about the snafu earlier.

Daniel A. Carestio — President and CEO, Director

No issue.

Operator

This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to miss Julie Winter for any closing remarks. Please go ahead.

Julie Winter — Vice President, Investor Relations

Thank you everyone for taking the time to join us this morning to hear more about our performance in the quarter. And we look forward to seeing many of you on the road in March.

Operator

The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.

 

ADVERTISEMENT

Disclaimer: This transcript is provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we cannot guarantee that all information is complete or error-free. Please refer to the company's official SEC filings for authoritative information.