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Amneal Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (AMRX) Q2 2019 Earnings Call Transcript

Logo of jester cap with thought bubble with words 'Fool Transcripts' below it
Logo of jester cap with thought bubble with words 'Fool Transcripts' below it

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Amneal Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NYSE: AMRX)
Q2 2019 Earnings Call
August 5, 2019, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks

  • Questions and Answers

  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning and welcome to Amneal Pharmaceuticals second quarter 2019 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the * key followed by 0. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press * then 1 on your touch tone telephone. To withdraw your question, please press * then 2. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Please note this event is being recorded.

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I would now like to turn the conference over to Mark Donohue, Vice President, Investor Relations and Corporate Communications. Please go ahead.

Mark Donohue -- Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Communications

Thanks and good morning. Welcome to Amneal's second quarter 2019 earnings call. Earlier this morning, we issued press releases reporting a leadership transition and our quarterly results. The press releases as well as the slides that will be presented on this call are available on our website at amneal.com. We're conducting a live webcast of this call, a replay of which will also be available on our website after its conclusion.

Please note that today's call is copyright material of Amneal and cannot be rebroadcast without the company's expressed written consent. I'd also like to remind you that during the course of this call, management will make projections or other forward-looking remarks regarding future events or the future financial performance of the company. It's important to note that such statements about estimated or anticipated Amneal results, prospects, or other non-historic facts are forward-looking statements and reflect our current perspective of existing trends and information as of today's date.

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Amneal disclaims any intent or obligation to update these forward-looking statements except as expressly required by the law. Actual results may differ materially from current expectations and projects depending on a number of factors affecting the Amneal business. These factors are detailed in our periodic public filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including but not limited to the Amneal Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Form 10-K for the period ended December 31, 2018.

Our discussion today also includes certain non-GAAP measures as defined by the SEC. Management uses both GAAP financial measures and the disclosed non-GAAP financial measures internally to evaluate and manage the company's operations and to better understand its business.

Further, management believes inclusion of non-GAAP financial measures provides meaningful supplementary information to and facilitates analysis by investors in evaluating the company's financial performance, results of operations, and trends. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures is available in this morning's press release and in the appendix of today's presentation.

I'm joined here this morning by Chirag and Chintu Patel, Amneal's Co-CEOs, as well as Todd Branning, our Chief Financial Officer. Following prepared remarks, we will hold a Q&A session. Also, on the call and available for Q&A is Andy Boyer, our Executive Vice President of Commercial Operations, Joe Todisco, Senior Vice President of Specialty Commercial, Pradeep Bhadauria, Chief Scientific Officer, and David Buchen, Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary.

For our agenda today, Chirag and Chintu will begin with a discussion of our strategic direction. Following that, Todd will review detailed financial results. We'll have a question and answer session following the prepared remarks. I would now like to turn the call over to Chirag.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you, Mark. Good morning and thanks, everyone for coming together so quickly. Before we get into the details of our second quarter financial results, Chintu and I will take a few minutes to discuss the leadership transition and more changes, our thoughts on the business, and our vision for the future of the company. What we announced today is important and we wanted to speak with you directly. Our goal is to give you some insight into the decisions our board has made and preview what's in store for Amneal in the coming months.

Let's start by setting the stage. For those of you who do not know our story, we founded Amneal in 2002 with the simple goal of providing affordable medicines to patients. Over the following years, we transformed the company from a third-party manufacturing business based out of a single plant in New Jersey to a vertically integrated multi-billion generic pharmaceutical company with global operations.

We've built one of the largest and most diversified ANDA pipelines in the industry while maintaining an obsessive focus on best-in-class quality and operational expertise. This enabled us to grow Amneal in a substantial way through not only reinvestment in our pipeline and infrastructure but also strategic M&A along the way. In fact, during our tenure, we were pleased to have been recognized as the fastest-growing generics company by revenue over ten years.

Of course, we recognize that industry dynamics have changed substantially. The buying power of the GPOs is at an all-time high and competition from fellow generics manufacturers has only increased. In times like these, Amneal cannot afford to sit still.

As Co-Chairmen, we supported strategic decisions at the board level, including the recently announced restructuring plan, while we endorsed the program, which is designed to reduce Amneal's cost base and optimize our global manufacturing infrastructure, the board believes there is more that needs to be done. To reflect the changes that are needed, the board decided that Chintu and I should return as co-CEOs of the company.

We would like to sincerely think Paul and Rob for their service to Amneal. We remain very grateful for what they have contributed to the company and look forward to working with Rob as an advisor through the transition. We would also like to think Bob Burr, Janet Vergis, and DJ Rama for their service on the board.

Looking ahead, we are excited to partner with Paul Meister, who joins Amneal as Chairman of the Board. Paul has an outstanding track record of leading the transformation of companies in the healthcare space, both as an executive at the board level and under his leadership, Fisher Scientific grew revenue at a double-digit rate over a decade and he was instrumental in executing the company's seminal merger with Thermo Electron.

He also served as the Chairman and CEO of Inventiv Health, which has provided him with key domain expertise within pharma and biotech. We look forward to Paul's contributions and are certain he will meaningfully enhance the success of our company. A lot has changed since we founded Amneal and we realize it is a larger, more complex public company than we last led.

Between Paul Meister's deep public company experience, our track record of strategic and operational execution, and the broader team's domain knowledge and work ethic, we know we have the bench strength to succeed. Indeed, of the things we accomplished as leaders of the business, we are most proud of our culture and our employees.

Put simply, we could not have done it without many significant contributions of Amneal's people. As Co-CEOs, Chintu and I will be working closely together. Chintu will focus primarily on manufacturing operations and R&D, while I will oversee our commercial and business development teams as well as all other corporate functions. In assuming the co-CEO roles again, we have resigned from our other executive positions and will be responsible for setting the strategic direction and oversight of every part of the Amneal business. We are excited about this opportunity and will approach it with the same passion, focus, and discipline that enabled us to build Amneal in the first place.

As founders, operators, and significant shareholders, we believe we are uniquely situated to address the challenges we face and that our interests are deeply aligned with those of our fellow shareholders. As we dig in and understand more, we will develop a detailed action plan around our key initiatives, but for now, let us walk through our near-term goals at a high level.

We are going to revitalize the generics business in the United States. We have best-in-class internal manufacturing capabilities in the US, Ireland, and India, as well as a commercial portfolio of over 300 approved products. We need to better leverage this existing infrastructure to maximize opportunities with key customers and think creatively about planned utilization.

We will drive operational efficiencies to improve gross margins through cost rationalization and better supply chain management. Additionally, we'll continue our track record of bringing complex genetics to market. As you have seen, our second quarter was challenging, particularly for our generics gross margin. We plan to work closely with Todd and the entire team to improve financial and resource planning, which should minimize unexpected costs and alleviate the margin pressure we experienced in the second quarter.

Some of these areas have been identified in the restructuring plan, but we believe there are even greater opportunities to run the company more efficiently. At the same time, Amneal has always prioritized growth and today is no different. We will reinvigorate our organic growth initiatives and refocus our investments in product development within both generics and specialty.

We will be taking a careful look at our R&D platform to concentrate resources on projects that present the greatest return given the increased competition in the retail generics sector, such as hospital-based sterile injectable franchise. We will also analyze new investments in specialty products, in addition to IPX 203 to drive crucial growth in specialty. Chintu will elaborate on these further in just a moment.

Ultimately, these initiatives will lay the foundation for accelerating inorganic growth in both generics and specialty. As we look at the landscape today, we are confident we will be well-positioned to capture opportunities across both segments through a number of potential avenues, including creative licensing and business development deals, accelerating the migration of Amneal's generic portfolio to key focus areas such as more complex products, first to market opportunities, difficult to develop dosage forms, including transdermals, injectables, and respiratory products, as well as specialty and biosimilars.

The emerging direct-to-consumer sales channel, which could help us improve efficiency in the supply chain, and of course, the evaluation of potential M&A opportunities, including transformational transactions. I would like to now turn the call over to my brother, Chintu.

Chintu Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, everyone. Thanks, Chirag. I'm humbled to have this opportunity and enthusiastic to make a difference. Seventeen years ago, when we founded Amneal, generics was not viewed as a high-growth industry, but even then, we saw the opportunity ahead of us and built the business from scratch to the fourth-largest generic drug company in the United States.

We started our business primarily developing and selling oral solid retail-based generic products. However, we quickly realized this category would get increasingly competitive. As you know, the nature of generics means that we are constantly fighting the erosion of our base business as new entrants launch their own products. This trend became especially pronounced following the enactment of GDUFA, which allowed the FDA to prioritize new launches in hopes of clearing the growing ANDA backlog.

As an organization, we had the foresight to strategically move up the value chain and turn our focus to more complex products, which naturally have higher barriers to entry and more defensible revenue streams. How did we do that? We developed in-house manufacturing capability for a full suite of dosage forms, including oral solids, liquids, nasal sprays, ophthalmics, transdermal patches, topical, sterile injectables, and respiratory.

We utilized our internal R&D and manufacturing platforms to construct the third-largest pipeline of assets or development ANDAs in the industry and by far the largest relative to our scale. We engaged in business development and consummated a number of creative acquisitions. And we always maintained an unwavering commitment to quality and a collaborative relationship with our regulators. As a result, we have enjoyed one of the best quality track records in the industry with no major observations at our sites.

As my brother mentioned, the industry is currently facing a number of challenges. However, I strongly believe there are growth opportunities in both segments of our business. As long as there are innovators making branded drugs, there will be opportunities for us in generics. We have the team, the facilities, and the pipeline, which is over 170 products today and expected to grow over time.

We intend to execute and maximize the productivity of our existing assets. Indeed, over the next 24 months, we expect to launch approximately 15 complex generic products. The only difference now is product selection and channel focus. Our aim has already shifted from retail generics to complex molecules such as sterile injectable, which are typically more durable revenue streams with largely institutional customers.

We also recognize the meaningful opportunity within biosimilars and we continue to find development partners to complement their R&D capabilities with our regulatory and commercial expertise. And within our specialty segment, we have a truly differentiated platform within neurology and endocrinology. These therapeutic areas have high unmet needs that affect sizable patient populations.

We'll continue to augment this business with internally developed products or those being licensed to leverage our existing commercial infrastructure. Recognizing where the industry was heading over the past several years, we broadened our deep scientific and industry expertise by managing other companies in adjacent areas within life sciences.

For instance, I recently served as CEO of Kashiv BioSciences, a clinical stage pharma company that is developing a pipeline of biosimilars and 505(b)(2) specialty products. The latter is a particularly interesting product category for a couple of reasons. First, these products utilize novel drug delivery technology to improve upon existing molecules. As such, while they are branded products, they have shorter clinical timelines and a less costly path to market.

Additionally, they all can serve large patient populations with high unmet needs, particularly in neurology. What this means, simply put is that we will look to commercialize branded therapies at a lower cost of development while leveraging our existing salesforce, which is obviously a compelling return on our investment.

This same logic applies for attractive assets, both pipeline and commercial that we may license or acquire. There are clearly risks with any level of drug development and we don't take those lightly. But as we build out our specialty business, we will do it in a disciplined and cost-effective manner.

Our goals now are revitalizing our pipeline, ramping our building efforts, and streamlining manufacturing. We have stellar resources at our disposal, an industry-leading R&D team, deep customer relationships, and scalable commercial infrastructure. We look forward to strengthening our existing platform and adding new ones as appropriate. We are ready to roll up our sleeves and begin.

As most of you know, we embarked on a transformational combination with Impax two years ago because we felt it was the best way to drive value at that time. Today, there is even more value in scale and the resulting infrastructure better positions us to execute. We don't want to miss out on opportunities to capture that, but to do so effectively, we need to address a number of key issues within the business. We are committed to doing that as quickly as possible.

We understand that today's healthcare environment requires a new approach and new ideas. Based on our preliminary work, we have a strong sense about where we need to focus our energies. Over the coming months, we will be defining the plan and look forward to sharing our thoughts on our next quarterly call. We have never shied away from a challenge and look forward to the next chapter in Amneal's life.

Finally, I would like to thank our global workforce for their hard work and dedication. Starting today, we will engage with teams internally as we travel to our locations around the world and share our collective vision for the company.

With that, I would like to now turn the call over to Todd to take you through the quarter.

Todd Branning -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Chintu. Good morning, everyone. Turning to slide 11 and a review of Amneal's results for the second quarter, total combined net revenue was $405 million for the second quarter 2019 compared to $462 million last year. The decline was primarily attributable to price and volume erosion in the generic segment, the divestitures of our international businesses, and the loss of exclusivity on Albenza in our specialty segment. We offset some of the decline with higher revenues from products launched in 2018, growth in Rytary, Unithroid, and Zomig, and 17 new product launches this year.

Our gross margin in the second quarter was negatively impacted by product sales mix, generic price erosion, and inventory obsolescence, which impacted our cost of goods sold. We are tightly managing expenses across the organization and when combined with synergy capture from last year's combination with Impax, adjusted combined R&D and SG&A expenses declined $34 million in aggregate. We will continue to focus on capturing additional cost savings and further improving efficiencies across the company.

Combined adjusted EBITDA was $92 million in this year's second quarter, down 34% from the prior year period as both lower revenue and margins were only partially offset by lower expenses. Diluted adjusted earnings per share on a combined basis declined $0.14 to $0.09 for the second quarter compared to the prior year period.

Moving to slide 12 and a review of our generic segment results, compared to last year's second quarter, combined net revenue decreased 12% to $335 million. The decrease was primarily driven by price and volume erosion within our existing business as well as an $11 million decline in international revenues from divestitures. The decrease was partially offset by sales of new products launched in 2018 and throughout the first six months of 2019.

On a sequential basis compared to the first quarter of 2019, combined net revenues were lower by 12% as we felt the impact of pricing pressure on our base business and lower sales from international operations due to divestitures. The decrease was only partially offset by new product launches. Our combined adjusted gross margin declined in the second quarter to 34% compared to 48% in last year's second quarter and 42% in this year's first quarter.

The compression of our margin was primarily due to the impact of competition, product sales mix, higher failure to supply penalties, higher manufacturing costs due to under-utilized plant capacity, and inventory obsolescence charges. We do expect costs from inventory obsolescence and underutilized plant capacity to decline in the second half of 2019, leading to an increase in our adjusted gross margin percentage for generics.

Combined adjusted operating income in the second quarter compared to last year's second quarter decreased $44 million to $65 million. On a sequential basis, adjusted operating income was down $32 million compared to the first quarter of 2019. The decrease was due to lower revenues and lower gross profit partially offset by a reduction in R&D and SG&A expenses as we realized the benefit of cost synergies and other initiatives.

Moving to slide 13 and our specialty segment results. On a year over year basis, combined net revenue decreased 13% to $70 million as higher sales of Rytary, Unithroid, and Zomig were more than offset by an 89% or $13 million decline in sales of Albenza as a result of the loss of exclusivity in the third quarter of 2018.

On a sequential basis, combined net revenue in the second quarter increased 9% due to higher sales of Rytary and Zomig compared to this year's first quarter. Combined adjusted gross margin for the second quarter was 82%, up from 79% in the prior year period, primarily due to favorable product sales mix.

On a year over year basis, second quarter 2019 combined adjusted operating income improved by $1 million despite a $10 million decline in revenue driven by the improvement in gross margin and lower operating expenses. And on a sequential basis, combined adjusted operating income for the second quarter increased $10 million to $39 million. This was driven by higher revenue and lower expenses compared to this year's first quarter, which had a higher level of spend due to the timing of new marketing programs and our annual sales meeting.

Moving to slide 14, we ended the second quarter with $57 million in cash and cash equivalents, down $10 million compared to the first quarter of 2019. Our cash flow from operations improved in the second quarter, deposited $21 million, as accounts receivable collections normalized this quarter compared to the prior two quarters. Our efforts to be disciplined with R&D and SG&A spending also contributed to the improvement in cash flow from operations.

During the quarter, we collected $38 million in the sale of our UK and German businesses. In April, we paid $50 million to Jerome Stevens, representing the upfront 10-year license payment for Levothyroxine. We also had cash outflows of approximately $32 million for certain items, including restructuring and integrated-related expenditures. We expect these non-recurring expenditures will continue to decline as the year progresses.

For the remainder of the year, we will continue to control our spending. When combined with our current expectations, the revenues will improve as new product launches accelerate into the back-half of the year. We expect to see a further improvement in our cash flow from operations during the second half of 2019.

Turning to slide 15, on July 10th, we announced a restructuring plan designed to reduce our cost base, further right size our organization, and optimize our global manufacturing infrastructure. At the same time, we revised our 2019 adjusted EBITDA guidance to reflect the continuing market pressure and additional competition on our key generic products.

The uncertainty of supply of epinephrine auto injector from our third-party supplier during the high seasonal third quarter as well as delays in key product approvals and launches, including generic NuvaRing. We reaffirmed our 2019 adjusted EBITDA guidance this morning. We updated additional financial guidance metrics to conform with our adjusted EBTIDA range and now expect adjusted diluted EPS to be in the range of $0.52 to $0.62.

Most of the decline in the revised adjusted EBITDA range was the effect of competition, which has impacted prices and volumes across much of our generic portfolio. Our specialty business has performed in line with our expectations and we expect continued growth of this business in the back-half of the year. We continue to forecast full year adjusted gross margin in the range of 47% to 50%.

Our year to date adjusted gross margin is 46% and we expect this will increase in the second half of 2019 with the launch of more high-value products. In addition, we expect plant capacity utilization will improve as production ramps up to support new product launches and the higher levels of inventory obsolescence charges we recorded during the first and second quarters of 2019 decline. We also expect R&D and SG&A expenditures to remain in the range of the amounts spent during Q2.

I will now turn the call back to Chirag for closing remarks.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you, Todd. We appreciate all of you joining the call this morning. I would like to echo Chintu's earlier comments and thank our global workforce for their continued hard work and support. We look forward to working closely with all of you to achieve our goals. As we have discussed, we recognize the hard work that will be required, but we know this business very well and are excited and ready for that challenge. Thank you very much and I will turn the call back over to Mark.

Mark Donohue -- Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Communications

Thanks, Chirag. Before we open the call for questions, I'd ask if you can please keep your questions to one and one follow-up so we can get to every analyst before the 9:30 a.m. stop time for this call. With that, Andrew, I'm going to turn the call over to you and open it up for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press * then 1 on your touch tone telephone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press * then 2. Once again, please keep your questions limited to one question and one follow-up. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster.

The first question comes from Gregg Gilbert of SunTrust. Please go ahead.

Gregg Gilbert -- SunTrust Robinson Humphrey -- Managing Director

Good morning, gentlemen. I'll ask my one plus one right up front. The initiatives and strategies you're highlighting today do not sound different from what was previously being highlighted by the prior team. So, what do you plan to do differently or is it just a function of switching out the people executing on the strategy you already believed in? That's the first part.

The second part is about business development. When you looked at a deal like what was recently announced between Mylan and Pfizer, it certainly puts Mylan in a fundamentally different place as it relates to risk profile and balance sheet strength, etc. Do you think a transaction that fundamentally changes Amneal along those lines is something worth considering in addition to your company's specific initiatives that you talked about? Thank you.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thanks, Gregg. This is Chirag. So, let me start with the answer to your first question. The biggest challenges we know facing the business are here. For us, it's not new. Pricing pressure has been going on since as early as 2013. Yet, we are consistently capitalized on opportunities. We have always succeeded by controlling what we can control. We have diversified our experience and capabilities and are focused on the near-term priorities.

We will be rationalizing cost structure, specifically our generics cost business gross margins, improving the inventory management, supply chain, optimization of our manufacturing infrastructure, basically maximizing our current assets, preparing for new launches, hands on approach, execution focus, look at what new pipelines we can bring as well.

So, these will be our first priorities, very operational focus. While we return to the growth plan we will be looking at deals, which would be at the right time. We may have some singles and doubles first before we do the transformation.

Chintu Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer

So, now, on the second question about the Mylan and Pfizer merger, I think that merger, we recognize that merger and it was from the public knowledge, I think it makes sense. As far as Amneal is concerned, as Chirag mentioned, at the appropriate time, we will be evaluating all options, including a transformational deal.

Gregg Gilbert -- SunTrust Robinson Humphrey -- Managing Director

Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Randal Stanicky of RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Randall Stanicky -- RBC Capital Markets -- Managing Director

Thank you. I want to go back to the first question. Was this management change and board shakeup, was it a result of a disagreement over strategic direction? Again, how should we think about Amneal being different going forward if the case? And then second, for Todd, you look at the second quarter adjusted EBTIDA, it stepped down. You're now implying a step up in the back-half. Can you help us in terms of understanding what drivers are built into that upward expectation in the back-half of this year? Thanks.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thanks, Randall. This was a board decision. We are focused on Amneal's growth and maximizing shareholders' value and we are very grateful to Paul and Rob and look forward to working with Rob during transition as well. There was no disagreement. It was unanimous by the board. Where we look at Amneal going forward, as we explained just a few minutes ago, our focus will be on execution, operational efficiencies, capitalizing on our current assets, optimizing our utilization. How do we get rid of all of these inventory obsolescence and failure to supply charges that hit Amneal? How do we get new products launched?

So, going forward, we're going to be sharp in execution as well as bringing new products to the market, more injectable products, biosimilar commercial launch readiness as well as specialty product editions. So, we'd like to, as we have done over the years since founding the company, return the company back on to the growth plan on its normal operations. As we keep looking at creative deals, strategic deals, as I mentioned, singles or doubles first and then do the transformational deal.

Todd Branning -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Randall, this is Todd. Good morning and thanks for your question on adjusted EBTIDA. So, as we look at the back-half of the year, the things that stand out in terms of the forecast are our specialty business has growth this year and we expect that that will continue to grow into the back-half of the year, so, the additional earnings power being generated by that segment of that business.

Also, our new product launches will accelerate. We've talked about this for several quarters now, that it was a back half-weighted year. Our new product launches in generics will accelerate into the back-half of the year. We believe the combination of those two will more than offset any additional revenue erosion that we see on the base generics business. We have modeled some of that into the back half of the year, but we expect that the growth of specialty and the new product launches coming in generics will be drivers from a topline standpoint.

Then I would add we expect that our plant capacity utilization, as I mentioned in my remarks, will improve in the second half of the year as we ramp up production to support new product launches, and also some of the inventory headwinds that we've seen -- and we've talked about this in both first and second quarters now -- we believe are behind us. So, some of the higher costs driven by inventory obsolescence charges will decline in the second half of 2019.

Lastly, we expect to continue to spend R&D and SG&A at the levels that we saw in Q2. So, we believe that the combination of everything I've mentioned there is what will drive EBITDA growth over the back half of the year.

Operator

The next question comes from Chris Schott of JP Morgan. Please go ahead.

Chris Schott -- JP Morgan -- Managing Director

Great. Thanks very much for the question. I guess my question was qualitatively, if we look beyond 2019, how do we think about growth for Amneal? I appreciate the need to reposition the company given the changes that have occurred in the market, but it does seem like some of these initiatives will take time. So, when we think about 2020, is that a year of gradual EBITDA improvement or could we be thinking about something more meaningful in terms of recovery?

Then I have a follow-up to that on investment. It seems like you've already taken a lot of cost out of the model. So, as you optimize and further reduce expenses, how do you ensure you have enough resources going into the business to develop the products you need to grow the business over time?

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you, Chris. This is day one, so, I would not like to comment on 2020. Let us dig in and we will be back with you within 90 days in the next quarterly call. Before I turn it over to Todd for further clarification, let me answer your second question.

The optimization and cost rationalization doesn't mean that we are just focusing on reducing costs. The efficiency also means what current products, the approved but not launched products, existing products we are under-indexed, how do we increase market share and grow more business? This is the avenue we are more familiar with is to increase business and keep growing with proper cost structure so we can compete with our global competitors.

Chintu Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer

Just one comment on R&D, which you had asked -- so, we are still continuing to spend about 9% to 10% of our revenue on R&D. With the resources, we'll be able to put dollars at the right projects so that we have a good return on investment. We continue to believe and will be bolstering our R&D pipeline going forward, but focus will be a lot more on complex and specialty products. And we continue to have 15 new complex launches over the next 24 months.

Todd Branning -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hi, Chris. It's Todd. I would just add to the comments and remarks that Chirag and Chintu have made -- we're not in a position today to provide guidance on 2020 or even discuss it even at a high-level. So, we'll do that at some point in the future. As we've talked about, we want to revitalize the generics business, which we touched on, as well as continue to support growth in specialty.

As we look at the investments that are required to do those things, we'll continue to assess those and analyze what's required to drive those improvements in our business. So, I think you'll see us -- while we'll try to be disciplined around our spending from an operating expense standpoint, we understand the need to support and grow these businesses and that's what we're going to be committed to doing.

Operator

The next question comes from David Amsellem from Piper Jaffray. Please go ahead.

David Amsellem -- Piper Jaffray -- Managing Director

Thanks. I just wanted to get a little more insight from you on how you're thinking about contribution from these complex generic launches. It doesn't quite jive with your comments on the buying power of the GPOs or the consortia. In other words, we've seen less and less impact from new launches or diluted value pipeline.

So, maybe at a high level, can you talk about why you're sanguine about contribution from new launches maybe not this year, but just longer-term particularly as you think about complex generics and the fact that a lot of your peers are also developing complex generics? Help us understand your optimism there. That would be helpful. Thank you.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you, David. I guess we were born optimistic. You are absolutely right. The impact of new product contributions is not the same as it used to be. We have seen this. Maybe if I refer to the past a bit. We always used to get ahead by launching the products which could have limited competition. In this new time, we would have to focus, which we do have in the pipeline certain disclosed or non-disclosed, which is slide number eight.

We'll be focusing on the high-value products within different segments -- so, more on hospital-based products, inhalations, limited competition, transdermal we already launched, and also, specialty products. What else can we add to our current commercial infrastructure in CNS as well as endocrinology?

David Amsellem -- Piper Jaffray -- Managing Director

I just wanted to fit in my follow-up -- it seems like everything is on the table. Of all of the items on the laundry list, which segments, which type of product line do you find the most attractive? Whether it's CNS brands, hospital injectables -- help us understand how you're prioritizing the shopping list.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

So, we already have hospital injectable portfolios -- certain products are in the market. I don't know the exact number, but multiple products are pending for approval as well. We'll continue to push more on hospital-based products. Then also, certain opportunities within hospital-based products, which are branded side, 505(b)(2) side. So, we'll be looking at those as well.

Then we'll be looking at our complex generics, which we already have in pipeline, inhalation device-based products, device combos, ophthalmics, dermatology -- so, these would be building upon our strengths but very limited. Biosimilars, we'll be partnering. We already have partnered three products. We'll be looking to partner more because it augments well with our hospital-based sales infrastructure.

Then specialty, we have evaluated a few. We will continue to evaluate whether we bring in the products which are marketed and realize the synergy or add in the Phase 2 products, Phase 3 products -- these are, again, 505(b)(2). So, these are not like NCE, which takes years and $1 million or more in development. But yet, it's a clear need out there for larger patient populations.

I know I gave you the laundry list, but we have the deep pipeline, deep expertise, and R&D team to execute on these. We're very selective. It's not going to be driven by filing 50 products. It is going to be driven by which product we file.

Operator

The next question comes from Elliot Wilbur of Raymond James. Please go ahead.

Elliot Wilbur -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Thanks. Good morning. The generics space certainly has cured a lot of optimism over the last couple years. I appreciate that you both remain optimistic with respect to the growth outlook for the business. The first question is for Todd. I guess with respect to operating cash flow, there's been quite a bit of concern around this metric over the past couple of quarters. You did see a modest recovery this period but certainly less robust than some were hopeful for.

If I think about adjusted net income based on guidance parameters you provided today, it implies second half adjusted net income of $110 million, $120 million approximately. How can we think about operating cash flow with respect to tracking that particular metric?

Todd Branning -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hi, Elliot. Good morning and thanks for your question. As you stated, we saw some improvement from our cash flow from operations in quarter two this year compared to quarter one. Throughout the quarter, we had seen what we had expected to see, which was a normalization of both our cash collections in as well as some of our cash expenditures out.

It wasn't, let's say, for the entire quarter because we were still dealing at the beginning of the quarter with some of the issues that we had talked about in quarter one in terms of the timing of cash collections with customers, but toward the end of the quarter, things were becoming very normalized, very stable for us.

So, we expect that that will continue into the back half of the year and that the profile we had talked about earlier this year that we saw an improvement in cash flows throughout the year, so, we expect that to continue into Q3 and Q4 and I believe that's very much what you'll see.

Elliot Wilbur -- Raymond James -- Analyst

I want to ask a follow-up question around the expectations for new product launch cadence over the balance of the year. Previously, the company had indicated that it believed it could launch up to 50 new products. Now, you're basically indicating you expect to launch 15 complex generics within the next 24 months or so.

Assuming that the 50 new products, that number is no longer anticipated, but I'm trying to get a sense of how we can reconcile those two, has there been substantial rationalization across the portfolio such that we won't see anywhere close to that 50 or is there just more of a timing issue and a lot of those products have most likely shifted into 2020?

Todd Branning -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

This is Todd. I'll continue on that question. In terms of this year, the up to 50 still stands. I think we were 17 through the end of June and we've had another handful of launches so far in Q3. So, we're still of the belief that we have the capability to launch up to 50 this year. There might be some toward the end of the year that could slip into the early part of 2020, but we still see ourselves as very much on track with what we've communicated this year in terms of expectations in terms of the number of launches this year.

A subset of that, I suppose, are what we are characterizing as these high-value, more complex new product launches and we expect that over the next 24 months, we'll be able to launch those products and that's the 15 that we referred to in our prepared remarks.

Operator

The next question comes from Louise Chen of Cantor Fitzgerald. Please go ahead.

Louise Chen -- Cantor Fitzgerald -- Managing Director

Hi, thanks for taking my question and follow-up here. My first question is here for the Cofounders of Amneal. We've gotten a lot of questions as to whether or not you have pledged your shares as collateral to loans as detailed in your Qs and Ks and I'm just wondering if there is any risk to a force selling here. The second question I have was regarding your debt covenants. Where do you stand and do you have the ability to draw on your revolver? Thank you.

Chintu Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer

I'll take the first question. There is no risk in collateral. Minimum dollars have been drawn. So, there is no issue there. Todd?

Todd Branning -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hi, Louise. It's Todd. Thanks for your question on debt covenants. So, we're in good shape as it relates to those. Our term loan B is debt covenant-light. There are only very standard affirmative and negative covenants in there. We're in complete compliance with all of those under our asset-backed lending facility. There is one financial covenant, but it is linked to the amount borrowed under that and we haven't borrowed any amounts -- we don't have any outstanding borrowings right now under that facility. So, we still have the ability to use that as needed without any restrictions at the moment.

Operator

The next question comes from Gary Nachman of BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Gary Nachman -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Hi, good morning. As the business dynamics in US generics have been changing so rapidly, what have been the one to two most surprising things to you over the last year in terms of magnitude leading to such a dramatic change in outlook leading to where you were a couple of years ago? Then just a follow-up on the last question in terms of leverage and balance sheet capacity -- is big M&A on hold until you get the leverage down or could you still be opportunistic with different transactions that you would be looking at, particularly on the bigger side? Thank you.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you, Gary. Andy, would you like to speak to the generic markets today versus how it was before? Maybe that will answer his first question.

Andrew Boyer -- Executive Vice President of Commercial Operations

Yeah. What I would say is price erosion obviously is a function of the mix of products you have in your portfolio. For a long time, Amneal has had high-barrier assets for a period of time that have not seen significant competition. When you look at what transpired at the end of 2018 and into 2019, our largest products ended up having four, five, even six competitors on them, which was a sustainable value and profitability for the organization. We were concentrated there.

So, I think a combination of that, the pricing pressure in the marketplace has been significant. I think the diversification of the big three and their volumes, trying to minimize the risk to all the supply chain exposures that have occurred over a period of time, where they're no longer going with one or two manufacturers. They often have four or five different manufacturers and splitting their volumes in order to protect themselves over what's transpired over the last two years with the tremendous supply disruptions.

So, I look at those two key areas as probably the most significant changes. I think the new product launches we have coming have the ability to offset some of that, especially since our biggest products have seen significant competition and it's just a matter of us executing.

Todd Branning -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Gary, this is Todd. I'll take your second question on leverage. So, we're perfectly mindful and aware of the elevated leverage that we have within the company, especially with our reduced earnings outlook for this year. Our priorities are going to remain to revitalize the generics business, to continue to grow our specialty business, to look for opportunities, to invest organically to support those two segments of our business.

Certainly, as a matter of practice, we routinely consider ways to move the business inorganically and we'll continue to do that, but clearly, we're going to do that with a mindset and an understanding of what our financial position and realities are right now. So, I would say our near-term priority is to do the things that we have talked about in terms of revitalizing generics, stabilizing our business, growing specialty, and that will be our focus in the near-term.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

And I would finish, Gary, with saying that Amneal has more value than is reflected today. So, we will be focusing on our current priorities, operational focus. While the M&A is not on the table, it will come at the right time.

Gary Nachman -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Ami Fadia of SVB-Leerink. Please go ahead.

Ami Fadia -- SVB-Leerink -- Analyst

Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Could you give us some color around the 15 complex launches that you expect over the next 24 months? Maybe give us a sense of how large they may be in terms of the brand of products that they target and maybe more specifically, if you can give us an update on a couple of products that you've talked about -- Copaxone, Neulasta, give us a better update on NuvaRing timing. And if there's an inhalation product, is that something that we can expect over the next 24 months? Thank you.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you, Ami. I'm going to have our CSO, Pradeep, who is present here, to go over this.

Pradeep Bhadauria -- Chief Scientific Officer

This is Pradeep. When we are talking about complex product pipeline, clearly, we have a pretty diversified portfolio within our complex pipeline as well, ranging from complex injectables, transdermal, topical, rings, and then we also have some complex biosimilar kinds of products, and then we also have some complex products which are in the ophthalmic and nasal category. Some of those products you can pretty much see on slide No. 8 as well. We expect that some of these products are going to hit the market in the next 12-24 months.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thanks. Chintu, would you like to chime in please?

Chintu Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer

And your particular question on NuvaRing, NuvaRing is moving positively through the regulatory process and we are optimistically cautious about the fourth quarter launch on NuvaRing, as stated before.

Ami Fadia -- SVB-Leerink -- Analyst

Could you give us an update on the others?

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

So, Ami, if you go on slide eight, we have a few more products. For other competitive reasons, we usually guard some of the products. So, whatever we can disclose, we have put it on slide eight. So, you can refer to that. We have categorized that within different buckets. We have also put down there what we have accomplished, which is over the last 10 to 12 years. That will give you an idea which direction we're moving and which categories.

Operator

The next question comes from Balaji Prasad of Barclays. Please go ahead.

Balaji Prasad -- Barclays -- Analyst

Hi, good morning, everyone. I would like to dig deeper into your focus on the hospital business as a growth driver. So, can you give more specific details on this focus and how is it different from your current hospital's business, the size of the opportunity, and also, if there's incremental capex requirements for this and the timelines around this?

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you, Balaji. So, this is day one. So, I'll give you the certain details that I know at this point or we know at this point. We are already selling in the hospital segments a number of injectable products. We have pipelines of about 15+ products. We will be increasing that pipeline substantially. We like that area.

Also, in our capex, there is a location for one more sight as well as more lines of injectables and we'll be looking at acquisitions, small planned acquisitions on injectables as well. So, we are focused in growing that segment and augment that with the specialty products within hospital as well as biosimilars, which go both ways for retail as well as hospitals.

Balaji Prasad -- Barclays -- Analyst

Thank you and all the best.

Operator

The next question comes from David Maris from Wells Fargo. Again, due to time constraints, this will be the last question. Please go ahead.

David Maris -- Wells Fargo -- Managing Director

Good morning and thank you. Just on the generic industry trends and how you see them, you mentioned that things are intense and they're bad, but maybe you could just talk about what you've seen in the last three to six months. Are things getting toucher or are they the same challenging environment and you expect them to remain so for some time or are things improving? There's been a lot of, I would imagine with today's news, that you expect them to remain tough, but just clarify what you've seen in the most recent past and what you expect over the next year. Thank you.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you, David. So, again, we're just starting our here again, but it is important to look at this question on a case by case basis. Amneal is at a scale within the generic retail sector that we still have growth opportunities. We have seen the competition. We had one of the best pipelines and products in the market.

So, the competition has already shown up for those products. So, now, the focus is on new product launches and I think we have -- I believe we have enough new products to launch in excess to whatever rolls off every year. Andy, would you like to add more color specifically for the last three to six months?

Andrew Boyer -- Executive Vice President of Commercial Operations

Yeah. Hi, David. What I would say is I don't know that the market has changed that much. It's been fairly consistent. Obviously, it's competitive out there. I think what's changed is our mix of products. The FDA is a double-edged sword for us. We've got this wonderful pipeline that needs to come to fruition and we'd be having a very different conversation right now if we hadn't gotten competition on our top four products and we had launched our pipeline, which is going to come here at some point.

I don't know that the market has significantly changed. I just think the timing of our new product launches and the timing of the competition to our big four products has put us in the situation that we are in today. We're poised to execute and get back to growth.

Mark Donohue -- Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Communications

Thanks, David. That concludes our call for today. We appreciate you all for joining us on short notice. Investor relations will be available all week to answer any follow-up questions. We look forward to speaking to you soon. Thank you.

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Thank you.

Operator

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

Duration: 61 minutes

Call participants:

Mark Donohue -- Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Communications

Chirag Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer and President

Chintu Patel -- Co-Chief Executive Officer

Todd Branning -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Andrew Boyer -- Executive Vice President of Commercial Operations

Pradeep Bhadauria -- Chief Scientific Officer

Gregg Gilbert -- SunTrust Robinson Humphrey -- Managing Director

Randall Stanicky -- RBC Capital Markets -- Managing Director

Chris Schott -- JP Morgan -- Managing Director

David Amsellem -- Piper Jaffray -- Managing Director

Elliot Wilbur -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Louise Chen -- Cantor Fitzgerald -- Managing Director

Gary Nachman -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Ami Fadia -- SVB-Leerink -- Analyst

Balaji Prasad -- Barclays -- Analyst

David Maris -- Wells Fargo -- Managing Director

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