Edwards reported double-digit Q3 sales growth, but some analysts are skeptical about 2024

This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

By the numbers

Q3 net sales: $1.48 billion

12% year-over-year increase

TAVR: $961 million

11% year-over-year increase

TMTT: $52.4 million

Compared to sales of $29.7 million in the year-ago period

Growth questions

Edwards Lifesciences reported double-digit sales growth for the second consecutive quarter after struggling for much of last year, but Wall Street still has questions about the company’s potential going forward.

The heart device company grew sales 12% year over year to $1.48 billion in the third quarter, in line with analysts’ expectations. Edwards’ transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) business — by far its largest segment — grew 11% year over year to $961 million.

CFO Scott Ullem said on a Wednesday evening earnings call that TAVR growth “reflected a more balanced hospital staffing environment” and continued adoption of the company’s Sapien valves. He added that the company’s new Sapien 3 Ultra Resilia valve is on track to account for the majority of U.S. TAVR sales before the end of the year.

Despite another quarter of growth for TAVR, multiple analysts highlighted in research reports that third-quarter sales slightly missed expectations.

J.P. Morgan analyst Robbie Marcus questioned executives on the call about the segment’s slow recovery coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic, saying that TAVR sales grew at “much higher rates” before the pandemic.

CEO Bernard Zovighian and Larry Wood, group president of TAVR and surgical structural heart, pushed back on the question, and Wood reaffirmed his confidence in the company’s ability to deliver double-digit growth in the long term.

“This is our third straight quarter of double-digit growth, which coming out of COVID and all the rockiness that we saw during that period of time, it’s actually been really good to see the stability that we’ve seen and the continued growth, even as our business gets larger,” Wood said. “I actually feel really good about our growth rate.”

Marcus wrote that despite the TAVR market remaining under pressure, there are signs of improvement, and Edwards is best positioned to capitalize on the structural heart market with its TAVR and transcatheter mitral and tricuspid therapies businesses.

Other analysts had questions about last quarter and the company’s growth potential. Leerink Partners analysts wrote that Edwards reported earnings that are “largely in line with Street expectations, but that are unlikely to drive positive sentiment amid a recent stretch of volatility for the stock.”

Stifel analysts, meanwhile, were skeptical about Edwards’ future: “Despite another solid total company performance quarter, we expect slower top-line growth as we head into 2024. With the lack of new product launches, challenging comps, TAVR growth slowing, and the overall 2024 growth outlook moderating, we see limited upside for [Edwards’] shares.”

5-year TAVR results

On Tuesday, Edwards released 5-year clinical trial results comparing TAVR to open-heart surgery in low-risk patients. The results showed no significant difference between the procedure and open-heart surgery. Analysts have questioned whether market growth may slow if TAVR does not show a strong enough benefit over open-heart surgery at five years and beyond.

When Wood was asked about the results on Wednesday’s call, he claimed that TAVR does not need to be superior to still drive growth.

“There’s just a little bit of an oddity here that people are discussing that somehow TAVR has to be better than surgery,” Wood argued. “If we have two procedures — TAVR and surgery — and we can go to patients and say, ‘Your results are identical at five years,’ then that’s going to automatically default people to the less invasive therapy.”

Wood explained that there were details that shaped the results, such as the TAVR group having a three-times higher rate of death from COVID-19. He added that Edwards needs to follow the patients up to the 10-year mark, but that the company couldn’t be “any happier about the data.”

2024 outlook

Edwards executives received several questions about 2024, but provided little insight. Zovighian said he was confident about the future, but the company would go through next year’s financial forecast in detail during an investor event on Dec. 7.

Wood may have given a hint at what expectations could be when he said the company believes it can continue to deliver double-digit TAVR growth.