Connect with us

Business

Hansa Biopharma AB (publ) (HNSBF) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Published

on

OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the Hansa Biopharma Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2025 Financial Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]. Please note that this event is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to Hansa Biopharma’s CEO, Renee Aguiar-Lucander. Please go ahead.

Advertisement

Renee Aguiar-Lucander
Chief Executive Officer

Thank you. Good afternoon, and good morning. Welcome to the Hansa Biopharma conference call to review Q4 and the results for the full-year of 2025. I’m Renee Aguiar-Lucander, CEO of Hansa Biopharma. Joining me today is Evan Ballantyne, Chief Financial Officer; Richard Philipson, Chief Medical Officer; and Maria Tornsen, Chief Operating Officer and President, U.S.

Please turn to Slide 2. Please allow me to draw your attention to the fact we’ll be making forward-looking statements during this presentation, and you should therefore apply appropriate caution. Please turn to Slide 3 and today’s agenda.

Let’s move on to Page 4, please. In terms of key achievements in Q4, Q4 saw strong growth over the same quarter last year, with product revenue growth of almost 140% and total revenue growth of 135%. Total revenues for the year amounted to SEK 222.3 million or about $25 million, a growth of 46% compared to total revenues in 2024. In Q4, we successfully also closed an equity round of SEK 671.5 million or about USD 71 million, which will fund operations into 2027.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Business

MJ Gleeson hails ‘robust’ performance despite seeing a drop in profits

Published

on

Business Live

The Yorkshire firm saw revenues rise in the first half of its financial year but was hampered by increasing costs

A Gleeson Homes development

A Gleeson Homes development(Image: Gleeson Homes)

Housebuilder MJ Gleeson has reported a “robust performance in a subdued market” as revenues increased but profits fell.

The Sheffield firm, which specialises in homes at the lower end of the housing market, has released half year results in which turnover increased 9.6% to £173.1m. But over the same period, operating profit fell by 17.6% to £4.2m.

Gleeson sold 848 homes in the period (up from 801 on the same period last year) and its net reservation rate increased significantly. Average selling prices for its homes went up 2.5% to £198,800.

Its Gleeson Partnerships arm, which focused on building affordable homes for housing associations and private rental investors, secured three further agreements and delivered its first homes. But it was a tougher period for its Gleeson Land division, which fell to a loss despite three land sale transactions in the period and five sites being marketed or in a sales process.

Advertisement

The company said it was “cautiously encouraged by early signs of a recovery in open market demand” with reservation rates in recent weeks up on the end of 2025 though not yet at last year’s levels.

Gleeson said that further changes implemented in January to complete a restructuring of the company would lead to costs of up to £4.5m that would be recognised as exceptional during the second half of the company’s financial year.

Chief executive officer Graham Prothero said: “For the full year, whilst current market expectations remain achievable, a strong Spring selling season remains fundamental to our assumptions in delivering on those expectations and we need to see the recovery gain further momentum. The bulk market has softened further, as investors remain cautious and focused on pricing.

“Margins continue to be pressured as net selling price increases are outpaced by build costs, and we experience increasing regulatory and tax headwinds. We will update our guidance in April 2026 with the benefit of greater trading visibility through to the year end.

Advertisement

“With the right structure and leadership in both businesses, the Group is in a strong position to deliver on its medium-term strategic objectives.”

Gleeson’s results have been released in a week of big announcements from companies in the housebuilding sector. The UK’s largest housebuilder, Barratt Redrow has posted falling half-year profits as it said the late autumn Budget created “significant uncertainty” on top of a lack of homebuyer confidence and spending power. That comes a day after Newcastle firm Bellway had revealed growth in house completions and an increase in its average price.

Continue Reading

Business

Ferrari Projects Higher Revenue as New Models Drive Growth

Published

on

Ferrari Projects Higher Revenue as New Models Drive Growth

Ferrari said it expects revenue and earnings to rise this year, supported by its lineup of higher-margin luxury sports models and demand for customized vehicles.

The Italian luxury sports-car maker expects full-year revenue of around 7.5 billion euros ($8.94 billion) this year, up from the 7.15 billion euros it reported in 2025, with the year set to be dictated by new models and higher income from racing activities and its lifestyle business. However, higher investments and currency could drag on earnings.

Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Continue Reading

Business

Lactaid debuts coffee creamers

Published

on

Lactaid debuts coffee creamers

The lactose-free creamers are offered in three flavors. 

Continue Reading

Business

Form 6K Kinross Gold Corp For: 11 February

Published

on


Form 6K Kinross Gold Corp For: 11 February

Continue Reading

Business

Microchip Technology Incorporated (MCHP) Presents at Wolfe Research Auto, Auto Tech and Semiconductor Conference 2026 Transcript

Published

on

OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Q3: 2026-02-05 Earnings Summary

EPS of $0.44 beats by $0.01

 | Revenue of $1.19B (15.59% Y/Y) beats by $973.81K

Microchip Technology Incorporated (MCHP) Wolfe Research Auto, Auto Tech and Semiconductor Conference 2026 February 11, 2026 9:40 AM EST

Company Participants

Matthias Kaestner
Sajid Daudi – Head of Investor Relations

Advertisement

Conference Call Participants

Christopher Caso – Wolfe Research, LLC

Advertisement

Presentation

Christopher Caso
Wolfe Research, LLC

Okay. Good morning, everyone. We’ll move on to our next presentation. I’m Chris Caso, Wolfe’s semiconductor analyst. So thanks for joining us at our conference. Next up is Microchip. With us from Microchip is Matthias Kaestner. Hopefully, I pronounced that correctly.

Advertisement

Matthias Kaestner

Matt is good.

Christopher Caso
Wolfe Research, LLC

Advertisement

Matt is good. That’s fine. And Sajid Daudi from Investor Relations. Matthias is the Corporate VP of Auto, Data Center and Networking. I know Microchip has had you out on the road a bit with investors recently because we’ve heard data center is kind of good right now. So thanks for joining us. I know — and Eric, if you’re listening, I hope you feel better.

Question-and-Answer Session

Advertisement

Christopher Caso
Wolfe Research, LLC

So maybe to start and Microchip has been pretty vocal over the last quarter or so with a view that the cycle is really starting to turn. And of course, Microchip was a little later to see the recovery, and now it sounds like that you are. So maybe you can give us an update of kind of what you see from a booking standpoint, from what’s going on with customers, particularly as we go into the Chinese New Year holiday, which I know is an important time for you.

Matthias Kaestner

Advertisement

Yes. And before we begin, I’ll just kind of share the safe harbor statements, which is that during the course of this discussion, we’ll be making certain forward-looking projections regarding the future outlook of Microchip, and we refer you to the SEC filings that

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

CeBev LLC, New Tree Fruit Co. form partnership

Published

on

CeBev LLC, New Tree Fruit Co. form partnership

The “de-sugared” juice line will be offered in schools.

Continue Reading

Business

Yorkshire and Humber business optimism hits 15-month high as activity nears growth

Published

on

Business Live

A NatWest survey highlights growing optimism but jobs are still falling in private sector companies

Hull City Centre.

Hull City Centre.(Image: pharbour)

Business optimism in the Yorkshire and Humber has reached a 15-month high as activity in the area returned almost to growth, a survey suggests.

The NatWest Regional Growth Tracker – which measures the month-on-month change in the region’s manufacturing and service sectors – remained just below the 50.0 no-change mark, but rose for a second month in a row in January to 49.3.

Private sector companies in Yorkshire and Humber region recorded back-to-back months of new business growth and firms taking part in the survey highlighted neww product launches, upbeat sales projections, planned investment activity and supportive economic tailwinds.

But payroll numbers in the area fell for a 14th consecutive month, with only Wales out of all of the UK’s regions and nations seeing a sharper fall in job numbers.

Advertisement

Malcolm Buchanan, chair of the NatWest regional board, said: “Sustained growth in demand for Yorkshire & Humber goods and services and a strengthening of firms’ year-ahead expectations for activity serve as promising leading indicators for the region’s economy. A softening of cost pressures, in tandem with stronger increases in prices charged, also bodes well from a margins perspective, implying a diminished strain on earnings.

“However, the local labour market continues to be challenged by a hesitancy among firms to grow their workforces. Payroll numbers fell for a 14th straight month in January, and at a rate that outpaced the UK-wide average. However, the more upbeat business outlook could spur hiring, as firms look to achieve their more bullish growth forecasts for 2026.”

The survey has been released as data being released tomorrow is expected to show that the UK economy has grown modestly again in the last three months of 2025 amid pressure from budget uncertainty.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) will shed light on how the economy fared when it reveals the latest UK GDP (gross domestic product) data for December, and the final quarter and year as a whole. Economists have broadly predicted that the economy grew by 0.1% in the quarter, following growth of 0.1% in the third quarter.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Oscar Health Widens Insurance Losses Despite Revenue Gains, Targets Profitability

Published

on

Oscar Health Widens Insurance Losses Despite Revenue Gains, Targets Profitability

Oscar Health’s OSCR 6.19%increase; green up pointing triangle fourth-quarter loss widened as the health insurer continued to struggle with the high utilization of medical services by plan enrollees, but revenue rose and the company continues to target profitability this year.

The health insurer, which focuses on individuals and small businesses, posted a loss of $352.6 million, or $1.24 a share, wider than the $153.5 million, or 62 cents a share, reported a year earlier.

Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Continue Reading

Business

Caulipower introduces new entrees

Published

on

Caulipower introduces new entrees

The lineup includes prepared bowls and pizzas. 

Continue Reading

Business

Novo Nordisk faces defining year in the obesity drug market

Published

on

Novo Nordisk faces defining year in the obesity drug market

Maziar Mike Doustdar, CEO of Novo Nordisk, speaks in the Oval Office during an event about weight-loss drugs at the White House in Washington, DC on November 6, 2025.

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds | Afp | Getty Images

Novo Nordisk entered 2026 with the momentum of a historic year in more ways than one – but recent weeks have delivered more drama than most companies might expect over a decade.

Advertisement

The Danish drugmaker kicked off the year with the explosive launch of the first-ever GLP-1 pill for obesity. Its recent challenges have centered around protecting its market share in the blockbuster weight loss drug market, all while its stock price swings wildly.

This week, Novo sued upstart telehealth provider Hims & Hers for alleged patent infringement and received its own warning from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for what the agency says is misleading claims in advertising. That all followed a 2026 outlook that disappointed investors and stood in stark contrast to its chief rival, Eli Lilly

While Lilly guided to 2026 sales growth of 25%, Novo forecast that sales and profits could decline as much as 13% this year

“Enough has occurred in the past week to occupy a few volumes,” said Deutsche Bank analyst Emmanuel Papadakis on Tuesday, as he — like many of his Wall Street peers — lowered his price target on the stock following the gloomy outlook.

Advertisement

The rapid news flow has given investors whiplash. So far in February, U.S.-listed Novo shares have traded across a spread ranging from $43.24 to $64.16, shedding as much as 14% in a single day only to gain 10% back in a later session. 

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon
hide content

Novo Nordisk U.S.-listed shares over the last month.

The latest developments add to a thorny situation for Novo as it risks being edged out by Lilly and the growing number of people taking cheaper compounded versions of semaglutide, which are unapproved copycats of Novo’s Wegovy jab.

Advertisement

CEO Mike Doustdar, who took the reins in August after the former CEO was ousted over misjudging the U.S. market and challenges there, has a plan to steer the company through what’s been described as a “show me” year. 

His agenda is extensive: cracking down on those compounded knock-offs, sustaining strong demand for its newly launched obesity pill, building prescription volumes in the U.S. and bringing new, next-generation obesity and diabetes treatments to market.  

In an interview with CNBC on Wednesday, Doustdar acknowledged the challenges ahead but said 2026 “is also a year of growth in many ways.” 

“We will have more patients this year than ever before, we will produce more than last year and years before that,” he said. 

Advertisement
Novo Nordisk CEO on Medicare coverage, new obesity pill, U.S. pricing pressure

Doustdar said around 246,000 patients are currently on the company’s Wegovy pill, which launched at the beginning of January and is already outpacing the early rollouts of existing GLP-1 injections.

“This, of course, tells me that while the investors are feeling a bit of a headwind on the pricing side and the whole business as you’re alluding to, they are hopefully getting convinced that over a period of time that would wash out and that growth will come,” Doustdar said. 

The compounding issue

Novo has repeatedly cited compounding pharmacies as a key reason for its slowing sales growth. The company estimates 1.5 million Americans are currently taking the copycat weight loss drugs offered by Hims & Hers, as well as some wellness clinics and compounding pharmacies. 

Telehealth firms like Hims have profited massively from selling so-called compounded versions of injectable semaglutide under a regulatory loophole that allows other companies to sell copycats of the drugs if the branded medicines are in short supply. While branded semaglutide injections are no longer in short supply after a notable demand spike, the companies have continued to mass market cheaper versions directly to consumers, raising legal questions. 

“We understand why compounding, mass compounding, got started. It was on the back of a shortage. We really don’t understand why it continued,” Doustdar told CNBC on Wednesday, noting that Novo’s opposition has nothing to do with medically necessary compounding for individual cases. 

Advertisement

Hims last week announced plans to sell a compounded version of Novo’s newly launched Wegovy pill for roughly $100 less than Novo sells the branded version for, though it quickly backed down after Novo said it would sue over patent infringement and the FDA announced a broader crackdown on compounding. The agency also said it had referred Hims to the Department of Justice over potential violations. 

The Hers website arranged on a laptop in New York, US, on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025.

Gabby Jones | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Novo moved to sue Hims on Monday over compounded versions of both injectable and oral semaglutide, adding to more than 130 lawsuits the drugmaker has filed against pharmacies, wellness clinics and other firms unlawfully marketing those copycats. 

Advertisement

“The news last Thursday about the pill… was seen as kind of the last straw for many people,” Rothschild & Co Redburn analyst Simon Baker told CNBC. 

From the point of view of U.S. regulators, removing cheaper drugs from the market at a time when the Trump administration has made lower drug prices for Americans a priority might not have been an easy sell, Baker said. 

But, “when we got the move on the pill, there was a realization that this has just gone a little bit too far,” he added. “You can’t have people launching knock-off versions of pills five weeks after the brand gets launched.”

“That would destroy the industry.”

Advertisement

If Novo can get the compounding issue under control, the company can potentially win back some market share and turn things around for sales projections, said BMO Capital Markets analyst Evan Seigerman. 

Doustdar called it “a very strong signal” that the government acknowledged the compounding fight with Hims and “articulated that very publicly. We welcome that.” 

Of course, a government crackdown on compounding wouldn’t clear the way for Novo alone. 

Lilly’s obesity drug Zepbound already enjoys significant market share, and the company is preparing to launch its own oral version. 

Advertisement

The market share race

A combination image shows an injection pen of Zepbound, Eli Lilly’s weight loss drug, and boxes of Wegovy, made by Novo Nordisk.

Hollie Adams | Reuters

The battle for U.S. market share could amount to a must-win for Novo — the weight loss segment accounted for more than half of its sales in 2025.

Lilly is estimated to have around 60% of the branded GLP-1 market globally, while Novo has about 39%. Novo has also highlighted a gap in the “preference share” for Wegovy versus Lilly’s injections. 

Advertisement

Lilly’s obesity drug Zepbound has shown more pronounced weight loss than Wegovy and has become the preferred medicine among patients and prescribers, despite launching years after Novo’s drugs. 

In the U.S., Novo estimates that between 7 and 8 patients out of 10 go to Lilly.

Meanwhile, in the compounding market, the share of copycats for Novo’s drug far outweighs that of Lilly’s.

“It’s a curious question as to why in the branded market, Lilly has a much bigger share than Novo but in the compounded market, there’s a lot more of Novo’s molecule than there’s of Lilly’s,” Baker noted. “We don’t know the answer.”

Advertisement

Novo is banking on the Wegovy pill to help with its eroding market share and says it’s already reaching entirely new patients. Doustdar has said that 88% of people on the pill are taking the lowest starter dose of the drug, signaling that many patients have been waiting on oral options. 

Lilly is expected to launch its rival weight loss pill, orforglipron, in the second quarter of 2026. Investors are closely watching how that will pan out, especially as Novo has lost its first-mover advantage before. 

“They’re putting a lot of muscle behind the marketing of [Wegovy pill], including now a reinvigorated direct-to-consumer channel, which they were a little bit late to arrive at,” TD Cowen analyst Michael Nedelcovych told CNBC. “That seems to be paying dividends.”

Still life of the new Wegovy semaglutide tablets on a white background. Its a prescription medicine used with a reduced calorie diet and .and physical activity.

Advertisement

Michael Siluk | Universal Images Group | Getty Images

Doustdar touted the pill’s efficacy, which is on par with the Wegovy injection and superior to Lilly’s oral drug based on separate clinical trials. The Wegovy pill showed around 16.6% weight loss on average compared to roughly 12.4% on average with Lilly’s oral drug. 

“If you use these two numbers, basically you have a 40% difference between the efficacy of these pills,” he said. “I think this is going to be a very main, main selling point of the pill.”

When Lilly eventually launches orforglipron, its primary marketing point will likely be aimed at convincing customers that the Wegovy pill is inconvenient because of certain food restrictions. That makes Novo’s head start extra important as it offers them a chance to lay the groundwork and convince people of the contrary.

Advertisement

Novo contends that those dietary requirements won’t hinder uptake. But Leerink Partners analyst David Risinger told CNBC last week that it could help Lilly’s pill eventually generate greater sales globally.

Still, while sales of both companies’ drugs may soar, prices are coming down across the board.

U.S. pricing headwinds

The GLP-1 market is facing broad price erosion following landmark “most favored nation” deals between companies and the Trump administration. It’s unclear how much of the price decline can be offset by volume increases.

“No matter how well we do initially to catch up with the price decrease … of course mathematically, [it] takes a bit of time,” Doustdar said, adding the company is “very hopeful” and “working day and night to accelerate those volume uptakes.” 

Advertisement

Analysts largely believe Novo is being intentionally cautious with its sales projections, baking in the expected pricing pressures. 

“There are a number of pushes and pulls in 2026, some have quite high visibility, some have lower visibility… I think Novo have added in the things of high visibility more than the things of low visibility,” said Baker.

Where there’s higher visibility is where pricing is coming down, generics in Canada and a few other markets, and restrictions on Medicaid for some of their drugs, Baker said: “They’ve got these negatives in quite fully.”

“Given the problems they had last year, they don’t want to overpromise and underdeliver,” he said. 

Advertisement

Novo’s guidance likely doesn’t include any reduction in the volume of compounded drugs on the market, as the FDA’s announcement of its “decisive steps” to restrict GLP-1 compounding came after the guidance was released. 

But the price sensitivity of consumers for weight loss drugs remains a big unknown, which makes greater volumes and more access points important. 

Novo is anticipating Medicare coverage for weight loss treatments, expected to begin later this year, to open up a 15 million-patient opportunity, Doustdar told CNBC. 

Around 67 million Americans are covered by Medicare, but “when you take a look at specifically our products and the target group, I think around 15 million people would be a good number to target,” Doustdar said. Though he said Medicare access to obesity treatments will open up gradually. 

Advertisement

Next-generation treatments

Flags with the logo of Novo Nordisk flutter next to the company’s factory in Hillerod on Nov. 12, 2025.

Sergei Gapon | AFP | Getty Images

Novo is also pinning its hopes on other drugs in its pipeline to help it claw back market share. That includes a higher dose – 7.2 milligrams – of Wegovy, which is waiting for FDA approval and could make the drug a stronger competitor to Zepbound. 

Doustdar said that higher dose helps patients lose around 21% of their weight, which is “very much on par” with the highest dose of Zepbound. Wegovy, under its approved doses, has shown around 15% weight loss on average in clinical trials. 

Advertisement

“When that comes to the market, my thought, my wish, my hope is that people will realize, OK, now we have two products with similar efficacy,” Doustdar said. 

He added that “hopefully will also change the dynamic as we go forward,” referring to the market’s increasing preference for Zepbound.

BMO’s Seigerman said it’s difficult to say whether that will be the case, as Zepbound is already entrenched as the best product in the injectable market.  

Later this year, Novo expects its next-generation treatment called CagriSema to enter the market. That experimental weekly injection combines semaglutide with cagrilintide, which mimics another gut hormone called amylin. 

Advertisement

Novo Nordisk has defended CagriSema’s trial results, which disappointed investors, coming in under the expected 25% weight loss on average. 

On Wednesday, Doustdar said the company was “penalized quite harshly by the stock market” for those results, which showed around 23% weight loss. But he said the drug would be “one of the best products out there” if it were available today. 

To assess the real efficacy of the drug, “you need to look at all the data together,” he added, pointing to three upcoming phase three trials for the drug, including one study that pits CagriSema against Zepbound. 

When asked whether Novo needs to further diversify away from obesity like competitors, Doustdar argued that the company doesn’t see obesity or diabetes as a single, monolithic disease and sees more opportunity in developing multiple, specialized therapies within the category.

Advertisement

While the world labels millions of patients simply as “obese,” he said the underlying biology and severity of the condition vary widely – from someone who needs to lose a modest amount of weight to someone with severe complications like fatty liver disease requiring a transplant. 

And as the market matures, Novo’s sales are still growing year-on-year on a constant currency basis, albeit at a slower pace than before. Only time will tell when, or if, that will change.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025