
Jan 12 (Reuters) - Medtronic has "significant firepower" to pursue acquisitions as the medical device maker evaluates opportunities to expand its portfolio, executives said at a major industry conference that kicked off on Monday in San Francisco.
The medical device maker has been eyeing tuck-in deals as it seeks to diversify its portfolio, particularly in cardiology and neuroscience, with CEO Geoff Martha in November saying that they would prefer companies in "early stage or close to market."
The company's balance sheet gives it flexibility to execute a "meaningful number" of transactions without financial strain, Chief Financial Officer Thierry Piéton said at the J.P. Morgan healthcare conference on Monday.
"What's changing versus the last few years is coming back to doing more M&A," he said, adding that Medtronic's dividend policy remains unchanged.
Medtronic, which makes devices ranging from pacemakers to insulin pumps, reported a 3.7% rise in revenue to $33.6 billion in fiscal 2025.
The company is targeting deals in the low- to mid-single-digit billions of dollars, choosing targets that will supplement its internal R&D efforts, Martha said on Monday. The company has set up a new committee at the board level to move faster on deals, he added.
The executives said Medtronic is focused on two themes, expanding in areas where it already competes and acquiring enabling technologies for procedures such as cardiac ablation and surgical robotics.
The company has spent recent years improving operations by divesting non-core units and plans to spin off its diabetes business as MiniMed Group through a U.S. initial public offering following its struggles over the last few years.
It also added two new directors to its board last year after activist investor Elliott Investment Management emerged as one of its largest shareholders.
Medtronic now sees itself positioned to pursue strategic opportunities.
"We've earned the right to do these acquisition, and we've got the capacity, so we're going to step up," Piéton said.
(Reporting by Kamal Choudhury in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona and Leroy Leo)
LATEST POSTS
- 1
How C-reactive protein outpaced ‘bad’ cholesterol as leading heart disease risk marker - 2
Find the Excellence of Old style Expressive dance: Encountering the Effortlessness and Polish of Dance - 3
Starship success, a private moon landing and more: The top 10 spaceflight stories of 2025 - 4
Novartis to build manufacturing hub in North Carolina, creating 700 jobs - 5
NASA’s history-making moon mission aims to send the first woman and person of color to deep space
Shakira's 2026 'Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran' U.S. Tour: How to get tickets, prices, dates and more
Monetary Security: Building Serious areas of strength for an Establishment
Record-breaking flu hospitalizations in New York in a single week: Health officials
See the first close-up photos of the moon from NASA's Artemis II mission
McDonald's is bringing two 'KPop Demon Hunters' meals to McDonald's. Here's what they include and when they launch.
South Carolina confirms 124 new measles cases as outbreak on the Arizona-Utah line grows
6 Objections for an Ocean side Wedding
Instructions to Pick the Ideal SUV Size for Seniors
Man triggers smoke bomb during failed crypto robbery












