Regulatory News:
Eurofins Scientific (Paris:ERF):
Financial Highlights
- Eurofins delivered a very strong performance in FY 2021,
exceeding all financial objectives:
- Record Revenues of €6,718m, +24% vs. FY 2020 (vs. €6,350m
objective)
- FY 2021 revenue organic growth13 of +21.7% (vs. FY 2020)
- Record Adjusted1 EBITDA3 at €1,902m +35% vs. FY 2020 (vs.
€1,700m objective)
- Record Adjusted EBITDA margin of 28.3%, +230bps vs. FY 2020
(vs. 26.8% objective)
- Net operating cash flow at €1,510m, +23% yoy and +€286m vs. FY
2020, enabling a reduction in gross indebtedness of €401m
- Record FCF-Firm10 at €1,015m, +16% vs. FY 2020 (vs. €700m
objective)
- Net Profit7 amounted to €783m, +45% yoy
- Reported Basic EPS8 stood at €3.91, +44% yoy, and diluted EPS
stood at €3.73, +45% yoy
- The Core Business (excluding COVID-19 related clinical testing
and reagent revenues) exceeded once again the 5% long run organic
growth objective:
- Core Business revenues of €5,292m (vs. €5,150 objective)
- FY 2021 revenue organic growth, of +12.3% (vs. FY 2020) and
+11.9% (vs. FY 2019 adjusted for cyber-attack)
- Q4 organic revenue growth, of +7.5% (vs. FY 2020) and +12.6%
(vs. FY 2019 adjusted for cyber-attack)
- Further margin progression driven by network, scale and
efficiency gains
- The Core Business delivered 6.5% average organic growth between
2011 and 2021 and by 2021 had fully recovered the negative impact
of both the 2019 cyber-attack and the 2020 COVID-19 lockdowns. Over
the last 11 years on average Eurofins exceeded by 30% each year its
organic growth objective
- Strong progress made in 2020 and 2021 to increase Eurofins
presence in BioPharma, Genomics, In Vitro Diagnostics (IVD), Life
Sciences, and technology driven areas, and in Asia, a key focus for
this decade
- Due to this evolution and a strong outlook for future years in
all of Eurofins activities, the annual organic growth long run
objective is raised by 30% from 5% to 6.5%
Impact of the pandemic on Eurofins
future direction
- COVID-19 related activities remained robust in 2021 at about
€1,425m, with the Eurofins network continuing to support government
and health authorities with innovative tests and solutions to help
fight the pandemic
- Over 40 million COVID-19 PCR tests now completed in Eurofins
laboratories
- Further innovation with the rapid roll-out of new test formats
for the detection of emerging Variants of Concern
- On the same day as the World Health Organisation (WHO)
designated Omicron as a Variant of Concern, Eurofins launched a kit
for the rapid detection of this variant
- Decision to maintain testing capacity, despite lower volumes in
Q3, justified with strong revenues in Q4
- Eurofins is coming out of the pandemic considerably
strengthened. Its Core Business is consistently exceeding growth
expectations and is facing further increasing growth opportunities.
Leverage has been significantly reduced and Core Business
profitability is increasing markedly. As a result, Eurofins is
intending to:
- Increase its organic and inorganic investments to expand its
network particularly towards Asia, BioPharma, In Vitro Diagnostics
(IVD), Life Sciences and technology driven activities
- Increase its cash flow allocation towards owning a larger
proportion of its state-of-the-art sites
- Increase investments in digitalisation, automation, cyber
security, leadership and staff development, and R&D
Other financial
highlights
- Net capex9 spend accelerated in H2 and increased overall to
€495m, +41% vs. FY 2020, with around two thirds invested in new
laboratories and laboratory equipment to meet future demand,
especially in Biopharma and Asia, alongside further investment in
LIMS systems and cyber-resilience
- Rate of acquisitions accelerated in H2 and Eurofins closed 38
acquisitions in 2021, amounting to a total spend of €533m, fully
funded from free cash flows (vs. €177m FY 2020) and representing
full-year equivalent pro-forma revenues of €252m
- The integration of the large 2017-2018 acquisitions has been
successfully completed, achieving at least our 12% Return on
Capital Employed target
- BioPharma, Genomics, IVD and related activities are now at 85%
of the combined size of Eurofins’ Food & Environment testing
businesses
- In China the Group increased its laboratory footprint by 87% in
2021 vs. 2020
- China revenues as a proportion of total Group revenues should
increase by over 60% between 2018 and 2022
- The Group has a robust M&A pipeline and is looking to
expand its reach into consumer genetics and direct to consumer
markets and expand geographically especially, in Asia
- Net debt11 remained stable at €2,239m, with net debt to
pro-forma adjusted EBITDA of 1.2x (vs. 1.6x in Dec 2020), well
below the Group’s 1.5-2.5x target range providing flexibility to
pursue growth opportunities should they arise
- Eurofins’ management intends to propose, at the upcoming Annual
General Meeting (AGM) on 26 April 2022, to increase by 47% the
annual dividend to €1.00 per share, corresponding to 26% of FY 2021
reported Basic EPS
Further progress on ESG
- Significantly increased scope of carbon footprint data
collection (77% FTEs/55% sites vs. 20% FTEs/10% sites in FY 2020)
and achieved a 3.8% reduction in carbon footprint (tCO2e/FTE)
compared to baseline year (2019). Confirmation of CO2 neutrality
goal by 2025
- Increasingly strong female representation in leadership roles
(49% female leaders at all leadership levels, 30% National Business
Line leaders/Business Unit Managers, 21% Senior Leadership/Regional
Business Line leaders and gender parity at Board level)
- Upgrades received from eight ESG rating agencies during
2021
- Establishment of a Sustainability and Corporate Governance
Committee at Board level and an Executive Sustainability Committee
at operational management level
Outlook and financial
objectives
- Given the very strong set of 2021 results, the positive market
outlook, Eurofins increased Life Sciences and Asia focus and new
investment initiatives outlined above, Eurofins is updating its
objectives for 2022 and 2023 and setting new objectives for 2024
(all at average 2021 currency exchange rates), assuming 6.5%
organic growth per year and including potential revenues from
acquisitions of €250m in each of 2022, 2023 and 2024 consolidated
at mid-year, as follows:
New vs.
previous objectives (including M&A)
€m
New FY 2022
Previous FY 2022
New FY 2023
Previous FY 2023
New FY 2024
Revenues
6,225 (incl. €300m COVID
revenues)
5,700 (zero COVID revenues)
6,550 (zero COVID revenues)
6,175 (zero COVID revenues)
7,250 (zero COVID revenues)
Adjusted EBITDA
1,500
-
1,575
-
1,725
FCFF before investment in owned
sites16
850
-
900
-
950
If no M&A at all were to
be carried out which is not the plan, the objectives would be as
follows:
New vs.
previous objectives (excluding M&A)
€m
New FY 2022
Previous FY 2022
New FY 2023
Previous FY 2023
New FY 2024
Revenues
6,100 (incl. €300m COVID
revenues)
5,450 (zero COVID revenues)
6,175 (zero COVID revenues)
5,725 (zero COVID revenues)
6,575 (zero COVID revenues)
Adjusted EBITDA
1,475
1,300
1,485
1,375
1,580
FCFF before investment in owned sites*
825
-
845
-
875
*The cash flow objectives are after
significantly increased capex to accelerate future growth
- For FY 2022 the Adjusted EBITDA margin target of the COVID-19
related activities has been conservatively set at the Core Business
margin target level, given lower utilisation and ramp down costs.
Margin dilution from M&A and mature start-ups integration to
Core Business is assumed to be compensated by margin increases in
the Core Business
- We have assumed, for the purposes of the financial objectives,
no contribution from COVID-19 related activities in FY 2023 and FY
2024 and only €300m in 2021
- Continued significant COVID-19 testing beyond Q1 2022 would be
an upside risk to objectives
- Higher rates of inflation for a prolonged period, may drive
further price rises for our services and consequently would also
lead to higher growth
- An objective for FCFF before investment in owned sites
objective is introduced for the coming years to properly highlight
this capital allocation, which like M&A is discretionary and
reversible. It will also help reduce future rental costs, while
reducing the Group’s dependency on third party landlords and
increasing mid-term cash flows. Eurofins’ owned buildings surface
area grew by 43% between 2019 and 2021 and now represent 387,000
m2
- Due to the many growth opportunities highlighted, Eurofins is
targeting capex excluding cash allocation to purchase owned sites
at around 6.5% of revenues. Purchase or construction of owned sites
is harder to plan as it depends on opportunities and speed of
permitting and building. It could represent around €100m per
year
- Now that integration of large 2017/2018 large acquisitions is
substantially completed, SDI should mainly depend on the number and
speed of ramp up of start-ups. As can be judged today, it should be
in the range of €30m-€60m per annum
Eurofins resilience to potential
crises
- Eurofins core business very strong performance with continued
organic growth through the 2007-2009 global recession and the 2020,
2021 COVID crisis showed the strong resilience of Eurofins
activities, also in times of crisis
- In addition, all of Eurofins M&A spend is discretionary and
maintenance capex represents only 2% or 3% of revenues or
potentially less as our network has been very well invested over
the last 10 years. Significant cash flow could in such case be
redirected to further debt reduction
- Beyond its strong balance sheets, low leverage and significant
undrawn credit lines, Eurofins also owns 387,000 m2 of laboratories
and offices that could be sold and leased back if needed and
ancillary or new venture activities that could be monetised if
required
Comments from the CEO, Dr Gilles Martin:
“I am delighted to see
Eurofins deliver such strong financial results in 2021 alongside
many operational and entrepreneurial achievements and continued
positive contribution to society. Last year again we continued to
innovate to support public health authorities and healthcare
professionals in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic. Our Core Business
has produced strong organic growth across almost all business lines
and geographies, driving margin expansion and cash conversion.
Business confidence across our network is high, and therefore we
continue to make significant investments to accelerate long-term
growth through innovation and digitalisation, new start-up
laboratories, the expansion of our laboratory network and strategic
acquisitions.
“Looking back over the last 11
years Eurofins’ Core Business has exceeded by 30% on average its
annual organic growth objective of 5%. In view of the many
opportunities that the Group’s increased orientation towards
BioPharma, Genomics, IVD and other Life Science activities as well
as faster growing economies in Asia combined with the impact of
recent genomic and other scientific breakthroughs are creating, we
are pleased to upgrade our mid-term annual organic growth objective
by 30% to 6.5%.
“Should Eurofins achieve its
new objectives, our profitability and free cash flows now appear
sufficient to sustainably self-finance M&A to complement
organic growth to exceed 10% overall annual growth of our Core
Business, whilst maintaining low leverage, funding significant
R&D, digitalisation, network expansion, more ownership of our
laboratories and delivering about 1% dividend return to our
shareholders.”
Conference Call
Eurofins will hold a conference call with analysts and investors
today at 15:00 CET to discuss the results and the performance of
Eurofins, as well as its outlook, and will be followed by a
questions and answers (Q&A) session.
Click here to Join Call >> No need to dial in. From
any device, click the link above to join the conference call.
Alternatively, you may dial-in to the conference call via telephone
using one of the numbers below:
UK: + 44 330 336 9105 US: + 1 323 794 2551 FR: + 33 176 772 274
BE: + 32 240 406 59 DE: + 49 692 222 134 20 DK: + 45 351 580 49
Business Review
The following figures are extracts from the Consolidated
Financial Statements and should be read in conjunction with the
Consolidated Financial Statements and Notes for the year ended 31
December 2021. The Full Year Report 2021 can be found on Eurofins’
website at the following link:
https://www.eurofins.com/investors/reports-and-presentations/
Table 1: Full Year 2021 Results Summary
FY 2021
FY 2020
+/- % Adjusted results
+/- % Reported results
In €m except otherwise stated
Adjusted1 results
Separately disclosed items2
Reported results
Adjusted1 results
Separately disclosed items2
Reported results
Revenues
6,718
-
6,718
5,439
-
5,439
+24%
+24%
EBITDA3
1,902
-62
1,840
1,413
-62
1,351
+35%
+36%
EBITDA margin (%)
28.3%
-
27.4%
26.0%
-
24.8%
+230bps
+260bps
EBITAS4
1,473
-84
1,389
1024
-99
925
+44%
+50%
Net profit7
1,043
-260
783
706
-167
539
+48%
+45%
Basic EPS8 (€)
5.29
-1.38
3.91
3.63
-0.91
2.71
+46%
+44%
Net cash provided by operating
activities
1,510
1,224
+23%
Free Cash Flow to the Firm10
1,015
873
+16%
Net capex9
495
350
+41%
Net operating capex
383
267
+43%
Net capex for purchase and development of
owned sites
112
83
+34%
M&A spend
533
177
+201%
Net debt11
2,239
2,242
Leverage ratio (net debt/pro-forma
adjusted EBITDA)
1.2x
1.6x
-0.4x
Note: Definitions of the alternative
performance measures used can be found at the end of this press
release
Revenues increased 24% year-on-year to €6,718m in FY 2021 from
€5,439m in FY 2020, significantly above both the Group’s FY 2021
revenue objective of €5,450m which was set on 4 March 2020 and
raised to €6,350m on 21 October 2021 to reflect the Group’s very
strong performance in the first 9 months of the year. The strong
trading performance was driven by the growth and resilience of our
Core Business (excluding COVID-19 clinical reagents and testing
revenues) and ongoing COVID-19 testing.
The Core Business saw very robust levels of demand across almost
all business lines and geographies, resulting in strong organic
growth of 12.3% vs. FY 2020 and 11.9% vs. FY 2019 (adjusted for the
impacts of the cyber-attack of 2 June 2019). In Q4 2021, the Core
Business delivered robust organic growth of 7.5% vs. Q4 2020 and
12.6% vs. Q4 2019 (adjusted for cyber-attack).
Eurofins recorded total organic growth including COVID-19
testing and reagents of 21.7% vs. FY 2020. The Group continued to
maintain high volumes of COVID-related testing, contributing
revenues of about €1,425m in FY 2021 (vs. over €800m in FY 2020).
Eurofins’ network continued to support healthcare authorities and
practitioners with testing solutions to help fight the pandemic and
to identify and track Variants of Concern. The Group’s decision to
maintain significant COVID-19 testing capacity in H2 2021, despite
lower testing volumes in Q3 2021, was justified, delivering over
€350m revenues in Q4 2021.
Table 2: Organic Growth Calculation and Revenue
Reconciliation
In €m except otherwise stated
2020 reported revenues
5,439
+ 2020 acquisitions - revenue part not
consolidated in 2020 at 2020 FX
62
- 2020 revenues of discontinued activities
/ disposals15
-7
= 2020 pro-forma revenues (at 2020 FX
rates)
5,494
- 2021 FX impact on 2020 pro-forma
revenues
-53
= 2020 pro-forma revenues (at 2021 FX
rates) (a)
5,441
2021 organic scope* revenues (at 2021
FX rates) (b)
6,619
2021 organic growth rate
(b/a-1)
21.7%
2021 acquisitions - revenue part
consolidated in 2021 at 2021 FX
98
2021 revenues of discontinued activities /
disposals15
0
2021 reported revenues
6,718
* Organic scope consists of all companies that were part of the
group as at 01/01/2021. This corresponds to 2020 pro-forma
scope.
Table 3: Breakdown of Revenue by Operating Segment
€m
FY 2021
As % of total
FY 2020
As % of total
Growth %
Europe
3,999
60%
3,146
58%
27%
North America
2,147
32%
1,887
35%
14%
Rest of the World
572
9%
406
7%
41%
Total
6,718
100%
5,439
100%
24%
Europe
In Europe, revenues increased 27% to €3,999m compared to €3,146m
in FY 2020. Europe accounted for 60% of Group revenues in FY 2021
(58% in FY 2020). Eurofins generated proportionally more COVID-19
revenues in Europe.
In the context of COVID-19, the Group continues to develop
additional solutions and deploy additional services to support
public health authorities. On the same day as the World Health
Organisation (WHO) designated Omicron as a Variant of Concern,
Eurofins launched a kit for the rapid detection (in one hour) of
this variant. Eurofins also launched new CE-marked multiplex kits
to detect and differentiate three viral infections in the same PCR
run (SARS-CoV-2, Influenza virus and RSV).
Among many other developments in our BioPharma services
laboratories, the completion of a new building for Eurofins
Villapharma BioPharma laboratory in Murcia (Spain) significantly
increased our BioPharma discovery capacity to serve growing
customer demand. Eurofins BioPharma’s testing portfolio and service
offering in Europe expanded for its chemistry clients with the
addition of Absorption, Degradation, Metabolism and Excretion
(ADME) characteristics testing for compounds developed and
synthesised, available at the Eurofins Villapharma site. Eurofins
also introduced high throughput experimentation capabilities at
Villapharma to develop and synthesise chemicals at much faster
turnaround times. As a result, Eurofins can provide faster testing
for its clients’ compounds helping them to determine in a timely
manner whether they should proceed with further testing and
progress the molecule to the next phase of drug discovery.
Food and Feed testing activities in Europe remained resilient in
the second half of the year following their strong performance in
H1 2021. More stringent regulations across many geographies and new
testing methods developed and launched by Eurofins led to strong
demand for the Group’s Food testing services. Environment testing
activities experienced very strong volumes across most geographies
in Europe, with continued market share gains. More stringent
regulations are increasing demand for Environment testing services,
for example around per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), soil
protection and asbestos remediation. Eurofins significantly ramped
up its capacity for wastewater pandemic monitoring in Europe,
including detection capabilities to differentiate COVID-19 Variants
of Concern.
North America
In North America, which accounts for 32% of Group sales (35% in
FY 2020), revenues increased 14% to €2,147m in FY 2021.
The BioPharma services business continued to experience strong
growth across all activities. Eurofins Discovery launched a new
biotherapeutics start-up to serve the large molecule drug discovery
market. Eurofins Contract Development and Manufacturing
Organization (CDMO) finalised the construction of a new spray dryer
operation for its drug product business unit that will support
phase I/II development and niche commercial products. Eurofins CDMO
is also planning to construct a new high potency Active
Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API) facility, which is expected to be
completed in April 2022, as well as a new large scale API plant in
2023 to accommodate increasing demand.
Eurofins’ Clinical Diagnostics business continues to innovate
developing new testing methods to expand its services for
transplant patients. Eurofins Viracor continued to invest in
research studies to demonstrate the utility of their innovative
assays, including a liver-specific Viracor TRAC study and a study
researching the benefits of combining the use of Viracor TRAC and
TruGraf testing. The first study was published in the American
Journal of TransplantationA and the second study was
published in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of
NephrologyB. Eurofins Transplant Genomics’ TruGraf test saw
very strong year-on-year growth in sample volumes (+322% in FY 2021
vs. FY 2020). Humana, a leading health care company that offers a
wide range of insurance products and health and wellness services,
began to offer nationwide in-network coverage for the TruGraf blood
gene expression test to its Medicare kidney transplant patients.
EmpowerDX launched over 20 new at-home collection diagnostic test
kits for cardiovascular, hormone, and mental health, among
others.
The Environment testing business in North America was impacted
by restrictions around sample collection and adverse weather
conditions in the first half of 2021. Nonetheless, legislative and
regulatory drivers are supporting growth in Environment testing,
including litigation related to specialty testing services such as
PFAS and 1-4 dioxane, as well as an ever-increasing societal focus
on ESG. Eurofins reinforced its leadership position in Environment
testing with the addition of differentiated services and
technologies, specifically PFAS in blood, serum, soil vapor and
stack emissions as well as non-target PFAS forensic testing,
emerging pollutants (e.g. 6-PPD Quinone) testing and dioxin
testing. EmpowerDX collaborated with Eurofins Environment testing
to launch the first direct to consumer test for PFAS identification
in a blood sample. PFAS are environmental chemicals that have been
linked to liver damage, thyroid disease, and cancer.
The Food testing business in North America continued to develop
and launch new testing methods. Eurofins DQCI was selected by the
American Dairy Products Institute and the Dairy Foods magazine as
an honouree in the 2021 Breakthrough Award for Dairy Ingredient
Innovation program for vitamins A1/A2 testing. Eurofins Food
Integrity and Innovation initiated the development of a method for
the analysis of selected mycotoxins (aflatoxins and ochratoxin A)
in hemp plants and products. The method workflow employs
immunoaffinity clean-up columns from Eurofins Technologies and will
be submitted for AOAC International Official Method of Analysis
consideration. Eurofins’ Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP)
microbiology laboratory in Horsham, Pennsylvania, received dual
ISO-17025 and cGMP certification for their robust Quality
Management System (QMS) from the American Association for
Laboratory Accreditation (A2LA). This is the first Eurofins
laboratory in North America to accomplish dual accreditation, and
it will enable Eurofins to facilitate expanded and more rigorous
infant formula testing methods.
____________________________ A
https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/american-journal-of-transplantation-article-validates-clinical-utility-of-donor-derived-cell-free-dna-in-detecting-liver-rejection-301417295.html
B https://cjasn.asnjournals.org/content/16/10/1539
Rest of the World
In the Rest of the World, revenues increased by 41% to €572m,
compared to €406m in FY 2020.
In 2021, Eurofins expanded its total laboratory footprint in
China by 87%.
In BioPharma services, there was a significant increase in
demand for CDMO services from India. Eurofins Central Laboratory in
China moved to a much larger new state-of-the-art building in
Shanghai to accommodate increasing demand for specialty testing to
support clinical research in China.
Eurofins’ Food and Feed testing laboratory footprint was
strengthened in Southeast Asia with new start-up laboratories
commissioned at Penang (Microbiology and Chemistry) and the
addition of a food and dairy microbiology laboratory in Singapore.
In China, Eurofins established new accredited pesticide residue
methods to meet the novel Chinese pharmacopoeia Maximum Residue
Limit (MRL) regulations. Eurofins experienced very strong growth in
Food and Feed Testing across the Pacific, and Latin America.
Eurofins finalised the construction of new facilities providing
Clinical Services in Brazil in Q4 2021. The Brazilian Clinical
Diagnostics business launched new tests including, Non-Invasive
Prenatal Testing (NIPT), fetal gender determination from mothers
blood, bioinformatics determination of copy number variation in
Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) for hereditary cancer,
metabolomics in urine and blood, hereditary cancer panels, among
others.
COVID-19 Contribution
COVID-19 related activities remained very robust in 2021, with
the Eurofins network continuing to support public health
authorities and health practitioners with innovative tests and
solutions to help fight the pandemic, particularly against the
latest Variants of Concern. COVID-19 revenues amounted to about
€1,425m in FY 2021 more than €200m more than the last objective
published in October. Given the uncertain outlook for COVID-19
testing in 2022 and beyond, the Group has prudently written off 88%
of the capex relating to COVID-19 testing activities.
Infrastructure Programme
As of the end of 2021, Eurofins occupied more than 1,600 sites
throughout the world (laboratories, offices, phlebotomy sites,
storage/warehouses, etc.). The total net floor area of these sites
amounted to about 1.5 million m2, of which more than 1.3 million m²
is laboratory space.
Nearly 100,000 m² of laboratories and offices were added or
brought to most modern standards by means of construction, building
acquisition and leasehold improvements completed throughout 2021
(significant acceleration vs. initial investment plan of adding
85,000 m2 in 2021 and 2022 combined). In 2022 and 2023, Eurofins is
planning an additional ca. 160,000 m2 expansion and modernisation
of its global real estate network. Eurofins intends to continue to
invest significantly in its real estate to build the largest and
most efficient laboratory network in its industry.
A few examples of strategic new laboratories and extensions to
existing campuses delivered in 2021 are provided below:
- The acquisition and renovation of a new facility near Heathrow,
enabled the consolidation of 3 laboratories located in the South
West of London: Food Microbiology in Acton, Water Microbiology in
Camberley and the larger Forensics testing laboratories in
Teddington. With capacity to employ up to 450 FTEs, the 5,500 m²
building serves as a flagship facility for Eurofins in the South of
the U.K., is in prime location for travel and has opportunity for
future expansion.
- In Aix-en-Provence, in the South-East of France, a competence
centre was built to merge six laboratories (two Microbiological
laboratories, one Chemical laboratory and two Hospital Hygiene
laboratories). This allows for synergies, improving geographical
positioning in terms of catchment area and proximity to a courier
delivery services depot, and security in terms of long-term
laboratory occupancy. The new 4,266 m², three-story building is
located next to an existing 5,400 m² building.
- A new consolidated facility for Environmental and Food
Chemistry Testing in Cork, Ireland was acquired and fitted out. The
3,408 m² building is on 12,560 m2 of land, providing sufficient
space for further expansion to accommodate future growth.
- Following the acquisition of TestAmerica in the U.S.A. in 2018,
site rationalisations and reorganisations have been progressing
continuously. In 2019, a 18,000 m² plot of land that includes a
7,950 m² building at 2841 Dow Avenue, Tustin, California, U.S.A.
was purchased. Subsequently, the building was redeveloped to
consolidate the Eurofins Calscience LLC and TestAmerica Irvine
laboratories into one premises. This new site will reduce support
costs, leverage market presence, improve efficiency and service to
clients, as well as provide room for expansion of the business and
accommodate other Eurofins businesses requiring laboratory space in
the Los Angeles area. Furthermore, a 4,650 m² building in
Barberton, Ohio was purchased in October 2021 and subsequently
redeveloped for Eurofins TestAmerica North Canton.
- In 2021, Eurofins China opened its new headquarter in Shanghai,
consolidating laboratories for Consumer Product testing, Cosmetics
and Personal Care testing, Biopharma Product testing as well as the
National Service Centre (NSC) and Group IT. Eurofins is currently
occupying the building and has invested in the renovation of six of
the building’s floors with a total area of 12,432 m². This provides
sufficient room for future expansion and consolidation of new
business lines into the facility.
We will continue to roll-out new laboratories in 2022 and 2023
particularly in BioPharma services where, given current capacity
constraints, we see significant value creation opportunity.
Eurofins’ owned buildings surface area grew by 43% between 2019
and 2021 while leased space only increased by less than 4%.
The Group also vacated over 100,000 m² of laboratories between
2019 and 2021 as part of ongoing reorganisation and efficiency
programmes.
Eurofins now operates about 1.5 million m2 of mostly
state-of-the-art laboratory buildings and owns 387,000 m2 of these.
An asset of significant and increasing realisable value, especially
considering the global shortage of laboratory space especially for
BioPharma activities and the rising building costs.
Financial Review
Revenues increased 24% year-on-year to €6,718m in FY 2021,
significantly above the Group’s latest updated FY 2021 revenue
objective of €6,350m. The robust trading performance was driven by
the strength and resilience of our Core Business. The Core Business
saw very robust levels of demand across all business lines,
resulting in strong organic growth of 12.3% vs. FY 2020 and 11.9%
vs. FY 2019 (adjusted for the cyber-attack of 2 June 2019). In Q4
2021, the Core Business delivered robust organic growth of 7.5% vs.
Q4 2020 and 12.6% vs. Q4 2019 (adjusted for cyber-attack).
The Group maintained high volumes of COVID-19 testing through
the year, contributing revenues of about €1,425m in FY 2021 (vs.
over €800m in FY 2020). Eurofins’ network continued to support
health authorities and organisations with testing solutions to help
fight the pandemic and to identify and track the latest Variants of
Concern.
Group Adjusted EBITDA increased by 35% year-on-year to €1,902m
in FY 2021, representing a 28.3% adjusted EBITDA margin (+230bps
year-on-year), exceeding the Group’s latest updated FY 2021
Adjusted EBITDA objective of €1,700m. There was a strong positive
margin progression in the Core Business driven by network, scale
and efficiency gains despite some increases in personnel costs.
Table 4: Separately Disclosed Items2
In €m except otherwise stated
FY 2021
FY 2020
One-off costs from integrations,
reorganisations and discontinued operations, and other
non-recurring income and costs
-32
-54
Temporary losses and other costs related
to network expansion, start-ups and new acquisitions in significant
restructuring
-29
-8
EBITDA impact
-62
-62
Although higher than originally planned, Separately Disclosed
Items (SDI) at EBITDA level remained stable year-on-year at €62m
and reduced to 3.2% of Adjusted EBITDA in FY 2021 vs. 4.4% in FY
2020. In FY 2021, SDI comprised:
- One-off costs from integrations, reorganisations and
discontinued operations, and other non-recurring income and costs
of €32m, down 40% from €54m in FY 2020. This €32m SDI includes €17m
on litigations and other costs related to one small acquisition
(these costs may be offset if there is a successful case outcome,
as currently expected), €12m on real estate and site moves across
various geographies (the U.S., the U.K. and Germany) and business
lines and €3m on COVID-19 related activities mainly due to
termination of some contracts in the Netherlands and Hungary.
- Temporary losses and other costs related to network expansion,
start-ups and new acquisitions in significant restructuring, of
€29m, significantly higher when compared to FY 2020 (€8m). This
€29m SDI is mostly due to Transplant Genomics Inc. in the U.S.
ramping-up significantly its salesforce to capitalise on very large
market opportunities for its new unique OmniGrafTM test combination
and to the acceleration of Eurofins’ start-up programme.
Reported EBITDA increased 36% year-on-year to €1,840m in FY
2021, representing a 27.4% reported EBITDA margin, a 260bps
improvement year-on-year. These strong results demonstrate that the
significant investments made over the last years to build an
unmatched global state-of-the-art laboratory network with
leadership positions across key Life Sciences markets is enabling
the Group to extract economies of scale and thus also improve
margins and cash flow generation.
Table 5: Breakdown of Reported EBITDA by Operating
Segment
€m
FY 2021
Rep. EBITDA margin %
FY 2020
Rep. EBITDA margin %
Growth %
Europe
1,172
29.3%
833
26.5%
41%
North America
608
28.3%
538
28.5%
13%
Rest of the World
165
28.9%
87
21.3%
90%
Other1
-106
-107
Total
1,840
27.4%
1,351
24.8%
36%
(1) Other corresponds to Group Service
Centres
At regional level, Europe and the Rest of the World benefited
most from accretive COVID-19 related testing, with Europe in
particular recording a 41% growth in Reported EBITDA and a 280bps
year-on-year improvement in Reported EBITDA margin. North America
delivered Reported EBITDA growth of 13% year-on-year and a 20bps
Reported EBITDA margin decline compared to FY 2020, driven by a
significant reduction in COVID-19 related activity in North
America. The Rest of the World segment delivered strong growth of
90% in Reported EBITDA and generated a Reported EBITDA margin of
28.9% in FY 2021 (+760bps year-on-year), driven in part by a
significant increase in COVID-19 related activity in the
Asia-Pacific region.
The Group’s mature scope14, represented 96% of the Group’s
revenues in FY 2021 compared to 94% in FY 2020.
Depreciation and amortisation (D&A) increased by 6%
year-on-year to €451m. As a percentage of revenues, D&A stood
at 6.7% of Group revenues in FY 2021 vs. 7.8% in FY 2020, a 110bps
decrease year-on-year.
Reported EBITAS stood at €1,389m (20.7% Reported EBITAS margin,
+370bps compared to FY 2020) while Reported EBIT6 amounted to
€1,258m (18.7% Reported EBIT margin, +400bps compared to FY
2020).
Finance costs amounted to €206m, an 86% increase compared to FY
2020. This significant increase was mainly related to the one-off
costs of €92m for early and partial redemption of four unsecured
Eurobonds due between 2022 and 2026, above par value and to the
anticipated partial repayment of the Schuldschein loan due in July
2022. Through various refinancing exercises, Eurofins reduced its
corporate senior gross debt in H1 2021 by almost €500m, while
increasing its average life by more than 2.7 years (5.8 years at
end of 2021) and decreasing its average cost from 2.52% to 1.78% as
from H2 2021 and onwards. This reduction in interest costs will
improve cash flow generation going forwards. The Group will
continue to pursue additional refinancing opportunities to
potentially reduce interest costs further in FY 2022. Eurofins’
outstanding hybrid capital can be called by Eurofins in August
2022, in April 2023 and in November 2025.
Reported profit before tax increased 52% year-on-year to €1,057m
from €694m in FY 2020, mostly driven by the very strong trading
performance of the Group in FY 2021. Income tax rate increased to
26% of reported profit before tax in FY 2021 from 22% in FY 2020,
representing a tax expense of €274m (+78% year-on-year). The
increase in the tax rate was mainly driven by a decrease in usage
of tax loss carry forwards in FY 2021 vs. FY 2020.
Reported net profit7 stood at €783m (12% of revenues, +45%
compared to €539m FY 2020), resulting in a basic EPS8 of €3.91
(+44% year-on-year from €2.71 in FY 2020).
Adjusted net profit7 stood at €1,043m compared to €706m in FY
2020, resulting in adjusted basic reported EPS8 to increase by 46%
to €5.29 in FY 2021 compared to €3.63 in FY 2020. The increase was
largely driven by the increase in profitability in FY 2021.
Cash Flow &
Financing
Table 6: Cash Flows Reconciliation
€m
FY 2021 reported
FY 2020 reported
Y-o-Y variation
Y-o-Y variation %
Net Cash from Operations
1,510
1,224
+286
+23%
Net capex (i)
-495
-350
-144
+41%
Net operating capex (includes LHI)
383
267
+116
+43%
Net capex for purchase and development of
owned sites
112
83
+29
+34%
Free Cash Flow to the Firm
1,015
873
+142
+16%
Acquisitions spend and other investments
(ii)
-539
-175
-365
+209%
Net Cash from Investing (i) + (ii)
-1,034
-525
-509
+97%
Net Cash from Financing
-910
-49
-862
+1,774%
Net increase / (decrease) in Cash and
cash equivalents and bank overdrafts
-396
616
-1,012
-164%
Cash and cash equivalents at end of
period and bank overdrafts
515
911
-396
-43%
The extra cash generated by COVID-19 activities in FY 2021
enabled the Group to:
- invest in the purchase of land and buildings to own more of its
large laboratory campuses, an investment which will reduce future
cash outflows on rentals, and reduce dependency towards third party
landlords. These are reversible discretionary capital allocations
as these sites could have equally been leased or could be leased
back if required
- engage in a significant debt early redemption exercise, with a
very positive outcome of locking in lower interest rates which will
reduce future interest payments, while securing a longer debt
maturity
- acquire more companies than initially planned (pro-forma
revenues of €252m in FY 2021 vs. €150m originally planned),
including in unique and promising areas for mid-term growth (Pharma
Discovery in the U.S., Cosmetics Testing in Germany, Direct to
Consumers DNA testing in the U.S., Genetic Clinical Testing in
Japan)
- accelerate the launch of start-ups (23, excluding COVID-19
related activities), many of which in high growth business lines
and geographies such as Biotherapeutics, Biosafety and Oncology in
North America, Biopharma Product Testing and Discovery in Asia,
Food and Environment Testing in Asia, Water Testing in Europe
- ramp-up an exceptional IT & cyber-security upgrade plan,
which should make the Group more agile and more resilient against
potential future cyber threats
- extend its digitalisation program to new business lines such as
Clinical Diagnostics, Consumer Product Testing, Material Sciences
or Cosmetics Testing
Overall, in FY 2021, cash flow was strong, with net cash
provided by operating activities increasing by 23% to €1,510m, from
€1,224m in FY 2020. Net working capital12 stood at 4.5% of Group’s
revenues in FY 2021 vs. 4.5% in FY 2020 (stable year-on-year).
Net capex spend increased by 41% year-on-year to €495m in FY
2021 compared to €350m in FY 2020, representing 7.4% of Group’s
revenues vs. 6.4% in FY 2020. Eurofins, taking advantage of its
strong cash flow generation, made significant investments this year
geared towards long-term growth. The Group bought a large number of
strategic sites often with land reserves for future extensions to
continue to reduce dependence on third party landlords while
providing ample space to further expand its laboratory footprint.
Significant investment made in IT to continue to improve
digitalisation to offer best-in-class service levels to our
customers, as well as investment in IT security infrastructure. In
spite of these large investments, Free Cash Flow to the Firm
increased significantly by 16% to €1,015m vs. €873m for FY 2020.
Eurofins has managed to significantly improve its cash flow
generation in 2021 thanks to the very strong resilience of our Core
Business, which delivered 12.3% organic growth in FY 2021, and
contributions from our ongoing work to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.
The strong cash conversion in FY 2021 enabled the Group to further
reduce its leverage (net debt to adjusted pro-forma EBITDA) to 1.2x
vs. 1.6x at the end of December 2020.
M&A spend was €533m in FY 2021, representing a significant
increase of 201% year-on-year (€177m in FY 2020) as the Group
continued to expand its reach into consumer genetics and direct to
consumers markets while also reinforcing its presence in Asia. The
Group closed 38 acquisitions (including asset deals) during the
year 2021, representing full-year equivalent pro-forma revenues of
€252m in FY 2021 significantly above the Group’s €150m
objective.
Year-end net debt decreased to €2,239m from €2,242m in FY 2020
thanks to strong cash flow generation in 2021. As a result, the
leverage ratio (net debt divided by pro-forma adjusted EBITDA)
decreased to 1.2x at the end of December 2021, from 1.6x at the end
of December 2020. Leverage remains well below the Group’s target
range providing ample opportunities to continue investing for
future growth.
The Group closed the year with a very solid liquidity position,
with €515m of cash on its balance sheet vs. €912m in FY 2020 and
over €1 billion of undrawn credit lines at the end of December
2021. The year-on-year reduction in cash is mainly related to the
significant increase in investment geared towards long-term growth
(net capex +41% vs. FY 2020, owned buildings, M&A spend +201%
vs. FY 2020) as well as the one-off financial expenses incurred for
various refinancing exercises completed in FY 2021 (€92m of other
financial expenses in FY 2021 vs. €2m in FY 2020).
Start-up Programme
Start-ups or green-field laboratory projects are generally
undertaken in new markets and in particular in emerging markets,
where there are often limited viable acquisition opportunities or
in developed markets where Eurofins transfers technology developed
by its R&D and Competence Centres abroad or expands
geographically.
In 2021, the Group opened 23 new start-up laboratories, bringing
the total number of start-ups created since 2000 to 201. In 2021,
these start-ups continued to contribute to the overall organic
growth of the Group, accounting for 0.3% out of the 21.7% organic
growth achieved in FY 2021. Their EBITDA margin continued to
progress while remaining dilutive to the Group.
Of these 201 start-ups, 40% are located in Europe, 19% in North
America and 41% in the Rest of the World with a significant number
in high growth regions in Asia. By area of activity, 37% are in
Food and Feed testing, 8% are in Pharma/Biotech/Agroscience
services, 20% in Environment testing, and 9% in Clinical
Diagnostics.
Acquisitions
During 2021, the Group completed 38 acquisitions of which 12
were asset deals, representing full-year equivalent pro-forma
revenues of €252m in FY 2021 and a total investment of €533m. These
acquisitions employ approximately 2,745 employees.
In July 2021, Eurofins acquired DNA Diagnostics Center (“DDC”),
a leader in consumer genetic testing in the U.S. and in November
2021, Eurofins acquired MTS Global (“MTS”), a full-service safety
and quality services provider for the Softlines & Leather, Toys
& hardlines testing services, mainly active in Asia.
Post-Closing Events
Since the beginning of 2022, Eurofins completed 8 acquisitions
of which 2 asset deals. The total annual revenues of these
acquisitions amounted to approximately €48m in 2021 for an
aggregate acquisition price of €83m. These acquisitions employ over
350 employees.
Summary financial statements:
Table 8: Summarised Income Statement
FY 2021
FY 2020
In €m except otherwise stated
Reported Results
Reported Results
Revenues
6,718
5,439
Operating costs, net
-4,878
-4,088
EBITDA
1,840
1,351
EBITDA Margin
27.4%
24.8%
Depreciation and amortisation
-451
-426
EBITAS
1,389
925
Share-based payment charge and
acquisition-related expenses, net
-131
-125
EBIT
1,258
800
Finance income
2
3
Finance costs
-206
-110
Share of profit of associates
2
2
Profit before income taxes
1,057
694
Income tax expense
-274
-154
Net profit for the year
783
540
Attributable to:
Owners of the Company and hybrid capital
investors
783
539
Non-controlling interests
-
1
Earnings per share (basic) in EUR
- Total
4.09
2.90
- Attributable to owners of the
Company
3.91
2.71
- Attributable to hybrid capital
investors
0.18
0.18
Earnings per share (diluted) in EUR
- Total
3.90
2.75
- Attributable to owners of the
Company
3.73
2.58
- Attributable to hybrid capital
investors
0.17
0.17
Basic weighted average shares outstanding
- in millions
192
186
Diluted weighted average shares
outstanding - in millions
201
196
Table 9: Summarised Balance Sheet
31 December 2021
31 December 2020
In €m except otherwise stated
Reported Results
Reported Results
Property, plant and equipment
1,830
1,575
Goodwill
4,115
3,524
Other intangible assets
896
825
Investments in associates
6
6
Non-current financial assets
76
51
Deferred tax assets
91
77
Total non-current assets
7,013
6,057
Inventories
154
157
Trade receivables
1,052
949
Contract assets
337
245
Prepaid expenses and other current
assets
183
189
Current income tax assets
77
66
Derivative financial instruments
assets
1
-
Cash and cash equivalents
515
912
Total current assets
2,319
2,518
Total assets
9,332
8,576
Share capital
2
2
Treasury shares
-4
-
Hybrid capital
1,000
1,000
Other reserves
1,578
1,543
Retained earnings
1,964
1,311
Currency translation reserve
107
-165
Total attributable to owners of the
Company
4,648
3,690
Non-controlling interests
30
26
Total shareholders' equity
4,677
3,716
Borrowings
2,500
2,917
Deferred tax liabilities
124
115
Amounts due for business acquisitions
84
49
Employee benefit obligations
76
73
Provisions
16
8
Total non-current liabilities
2,799
3,163
Borrowings
254
238
Interest due on borrowings and earnings
due on hybrid capital
31
51
Trade accounts payable
628
542
Contract liabilities
163
137
Current income tax liabilities
86
84
Amounts due for business acquisitions
57
56
Provisions
29
36
Other current liabilities
608
552
Total current liabilities
1,856
1,696
Total liabilities and shareholders'
equity
9,332
8,576
Table 10: Summarised Cash Flow Statement
FY 2021
FY 2020
In €m except otherwise stated
Reported
Reported
Cash flows from operating
activities
Profit before income taxes
1,057
694
Depreciation and amortisation
451
426
Share-based payment charge and
acquisition-related expenses, net
131
125
Finance income and costs, net
186
102
Share of profit from associates
-2
-2
Transactions costs and income related to
acquisitions
-14
-6
Changes in provisions employee benefit
obligations
-1
19
Other non-cash effects
5
8
Change in net working capital
-5
-48
Cash generated from operations
1,807
1,318
Income taxes paid
-297
-94
Net cash provided by operating
activities
1,510
1,224
Cash flows from investing
activities
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
-458
-311
Purchase, capitalisation of intangible
assets
-62
-45
Proceeds from sale of property, plant and
equipment
25
5
Net capex
-495
-350
Free cash Flow to the Firm
1,015
873
Acquisitions of subsidiaries net of cash
acquired and proceeds from disposals
-533
-177
Disposal/(acquisitions) of investments,
financial assets and derivative financial instruments, net
-8
-
Interest received
2
3
Net cash used in investing
activities
-1,034
-525
Cash flows from financing
activities
Proceeds from issuance of share
capital
36
565
Proceeds from issuance of hybrid
capital
-
-
Proceeds from borrowings
826
946
Repayment of borrowings
-1,280
-1,305
Repayment of lease liabilities
-153
-151
Purchase of treasury shares, net of
gains
-4
-
Dividends paid to shareholders and
non-controlling interests
-130
-
Earnings paid to hybrid capital
investors
-36
-36
Interests and premium paid
-169
-68
Net cash (used in)/provided by
financing activities
-910
-49
Net effect of currency translation on cash
and cash equivalents and bank overdrafts
39
-34
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and
cash equivalents and bank overdrafts
-396
616
Cash and cash equivalents and bank
overdrafts at beginning of period
911
295
Cash and cash equivalents and bank
overdrafts at end of period
515
911
1
Adjusted results – reflect the
ongoing performance of the mature and recurring activities
excluding “separately disclosed items”.
2
Separately disclosed items –
include one-off costs from integration and reorganisation,
discontinued operations, other non-recurring income and costs,
temporary losses and other costs related to network expansion,
start-ups and new acquisitions undergoing significant
restructuring, share-based payment charge, impairment of goodwill,
amortisation of acquired intangible assets and negative goodwill,
loss/gain on disposal and transaction costs related to acquisitions
as well as income from reversal of such costs and from unused
amounts due for business acquisitions, net finance costs related to
borrowing and investing excess cash and one-off financial effects
(net of finance income), net finance costs related to hybrid
capital, and the related tax effects.
3
EBITDA – Earnings before
interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation, share-based payment
charge, impairment of goodwill, amortisation of acquired intangible
assets, negative goodwill, loss/gain on disposal and transaction
costs related to acquisitions as well as income from reversal of
such costs and from unused amounts due for business
acquisitions.
4
EBITAS – EBITDA less depreciation
and amortisation.
5
Share-based payment charge and
acquisition-related expenses, net – Share-based payment charge,
impairment of goodwill, amortisation of acquired intangible assets,
negative goodwill, loss/gain on disposal and transaction costs
related to acquisitions as well as income from reversal of such
costs and from unused amounts due for business acquisitions.
6
EBIT – EBITAS less Share-based
payment charge and acquisition-related expenses, net.
7
Net Profit – Net profit for
equity holders after non-controlling interests but before payment
to Hybrid capital holders.
8
Basic EPS – basic earnings per
share attributable to equity holders of the Company.
9
Net capex – Purchase of
intangible assets, property, plant and equipment, less proceeds
from disposals of such assets.
10
Free Cash Flow to the Firm - Net
cash provided by operating activities, less Net capex.
11
Net debt – Current and
non-current borrowings, less Cash and cash equivalents.
12
Net working capital –
Inventories, trade receivables and contract assets, prepaid
expenses and other current assets less trade accounts payable,
contract liabilities and other current liabilities excluding
accrued interest receivable and payable.
13
Organic growth for a given period
(Q1, Q2, Q3, Half Year, Nine Months or Full Year) – non-IFRS
measure calculating the growth in revenues during that period
between 2 successive years for the same scope of businesses using
the same exchange rates (of year Y) but excluding discontinued
operations.
For the purpose of organic growth
calculation for year Y, the relevant scope used is the scope of
businesses that have been consolidated in the Group's income
statement of the previous financial year (Y-1). Revenue
contribution from companies acquired in the course of Y-1 but not
consolidated for the full year are adjusted as if they had been
consolidated as of 1st January Y-1. All revenues from businesses
acquired since 1st January Y are excluded from the calculation.
14
Mature scope: excludes start-ups
and acquisitions in significant restructuring. A business will
generally be considered mature when: i) The Group’s systems,
structure and processes have been deployed; ii) It has been
audited, accredited and qualified and used by the relevant
regulatory bodies and the targeted client base; iii) It no longer
requires above-average annual capital expenditures, exceptional
restructuring or abnormally large costs with respect to current
revenues for deploying new Group IT systems. The list of entities
classified as mature is reviewed at the beginning of each year and
is relevant for the whole year.
15
Discontinued activities /
disposals: discontinued operations are a component of the Group’s
Core Business or product lines that have been disposed of, or
liquidated; or a specific business unit or a branch of a business
unit that has been shut down or terminated, and is reported
separately from continued operations. For more information, please
refer to Note 2.26 of the Consolidated Financial Statements for the
year ended 31 December 2021.
16
FCFF before investment in owned
sites: FCFF less Net capex spent on purchase of land, buildings and
investments to purchase, build or modernise owned sites/buildings
(excludes laboratory equipment and IT).
About Eurofins – the global leader in bio-analysis
Eurofins is Testing for Life. Eurofins is the global leader in
food, environment, pharmaceutical and cosmetic product testing and
in agroscience Contract Research services. Eurofins is also one of
the market leaders in certain testing and laboratory services for
genomics, discovery pharmacology, forensics, BioPharma Contract
Development and Manufacturing, advanced material sciences and in
the support of clinical studies. The Group also has a rapidly
developing presence in highly specialised and molecular clinical
diagnostic testing and in-vitro diagnostic products.
With 58,000 staff across a decentralised and entrepreneurial
network of 900 laboratories in 54 countries, Eurofins offers a
portfolio of over 200,000 analytical methods to evaluate the
safety, identity, composition, authenticity, origin, traceability
and purity of a wide range of products, as well as providing
innovative clinical diagnostic testing services and in-vitro
diagnostic products.
The Group’s objective is to provide its customers with
high-quality services, innovative solutions and accurate results on
time. Eurofins is ideally positioned to support its clients’
increasingly stringent quality and safety standards and the
increasing demands of regulatory authorities as well as the
requirements of healthcare practitioners around the world.
In 2020 and 2021, Eurofins reacted quickly to meet the global
challenge of COVID-19, by creating the capacity to help over 20
million patients monthly who may have been impacted by the pandemic
with our testing products and our services and directly supporting
healthcare professionals working on the front line to fight the
virus. The Group has established widespread PCR testing
capabilities and has carried out over 40 million tests in its own
laboratories, is supporting the development of a number of vaccines
and has established its SAFER@WORK™ testing, monitoring and
consulting programmes to help ensure safer environments, travel and
events during COVID-19.
Eurofins has grown very strongly since its inception and its
strategy is to continue expanding its technology portfolio and its
geographic reach. Through R&D and acquisitions, the Group draws
on the latest developments in the field of biotechnology and
analytical chemistry to offer its clients unique analytical
solutions.
Shares in Eurofins Scientific are listed on the Euronext Paris
Stock Exchange (ISIN FR0014000MR3, Reuters EUFI.PA, Bloomberg ERF
FP).
Until it has been lawfully made public widely by Eurofins
through approved distribution channels, this document contains
inside information for the purpose of Regulation (EU) 596/2014 of
the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 April 2014 on
market abuse, as amended.
Important disclaimer:
This press release contains forward-looking statements and
estimates that involve risks and uncertainties. The forward-looking
statements and estimates contained herein represent the judgment of
Eurofins Scientific’s management as of the date of this release.
These forward-looking statements are not guarantees for future
performance, and the forward-looking events discussed in this
release may not occur. Eurofins Scientific disclaims any intent or
obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements and
estimates. All statements and estimates are made based on the
information available to the Company’s management as of the date of
publication, but no guarantees can be made as to their completeness
or validity.
View source
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For more information, please visit www.eurofins.com or
contact: Investor Relations Eurofins Scientific SE Phone: +32 2
766 1620 E-mail: ir@eurofins.com
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