Abbott Laboratories Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis
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Written by:
Groups: HEALTHCARE (https://betafinch.com/groups/HEALTHCARE), INCOME (https://betafinch.com/groups/INCOME)
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Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown. Here's the Abbott Labs (ABT) Q2 2026 script.
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**ALEX:** Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown. I'm Alex, joined as always by Jordan, and today we're digging into Abbott Laboratories' second quarter 2026 results. Before we jump in, quick disclaimer — this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
**JORDAN:** Thanks, Alex. And there's a lot to like in this print. Let's start with the headline numbers.
**ALEX:** Right, so Abbott posted sales growth of 4.8% for the quarter — that's an acceleration from the last two quarters — and adjusted EPS of $1.31, which beat both the midpoint of their guidance and consensus estimates.
**JORDAN:** And here's the part investors really zeroed in on — Abbott didn't just reaffirm full-year sales guidance of 6.5% to 7.5%, they actually raised their EPS guidance range to $5.45 to $5.60. CEO Robert Ford was pretty clear that gross margin expansion is doing a lot of the heavy lifting there — margins came in at 58%, up 100 basis points year-over-year.
**ALEX:** Let's talk segments, because there's a real story of divergence here. Medical devices grew 8.5%, led by electrophysiology — that's the heart rhythm and ablation business — which grew in the low teens. EPD, their emerging markets pharma division, grew 9%, powered by India, Latin America, and Southeast Asia.
**JORDAN:** Diagnostics was mixed. Core lab was strong, U.S. up 7.5%. But rapid and molecular diagnostics — that's respiratory testing — declined 8% because it was just a weak flu and respiratory virus season. That's expected and temporary though, not a demand problem.
**ALEX:** And then nutrition — this is the comeback story of the quarter. Sales came in ahead of expectations for the second straight quarter, up sequentially by $125 million. Ensure retail consumption in the U.S. is up double digits.
**JORDAN:** Yeah, that's the price increases from late last year finally working through the system — volumes are responding well now that consumers have adjusted. Management is now framing nutrition as a sustainable 2-4% grower going forward.
**ALEX:** Let's get into the strategic stuff, because there's a lot of pipeline news. Abbott completed enrollment in its coronary IVL trial, filed with the FDA for the Amulet 360 left atrial appendage device, and got a CE mark in Europe for Libre Duo — which is notable, it's the world's first dual glucose-ketone monitoring sensor, designed to help prevent diabetic ketoacidosis.
**JORDAN:** The CGM story is worth sitting with for a second. Diabetes care crossed $2 billion in quarterly sales, growing 9.5%. Now, one analyst on the call kind of poked at that number as "only" 9.5%, and Ford pushed back — reasonably, I'd say. He pointed out there's 75 to 80 million people globally who could realistically use a CGM, and only 15 million currently do. Growth right now is basically waiting on reimbursement expansion, especially the big one: U.S. Type 2 non-insulin Medicare coverage, which could unlock roughly 10 million beneficiaries. Ford said that could happen this fall but wouldn't pin down an exact date.
**ALEX:** They're also planning a fifth manufacturing facility for CGM sensors — a billion-dollar investment — because they expect to hit capacity limits at their current facility within a couple years. That's a pretty strong signal of how bullish they are on long-term demand.
**JORDAN:** One theme that came up repeatedly in the Q&A was this investor worry about decelerating hospital procedure volumes — tied to ACA enrollment changes and Medicaid dynamics.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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