SOLV Solventum Corp - 10-K
0001964738-26-000007Year-over-year tone shift - average net-tone change across Risk Factors and MD&A vs the prior 10-K. This filing is 0.14pp more bullish than last year's.
Why YoY instead of absolute: the LM lexicon has ~6.6× more negative words than positive (legal/risk-disclosure language is heavy on hedging), so every 10-K reads bearish on raw tone. Year-over-year change strips that bias and surfaces the actual shift in management's framing.
Tone shift by section
The two components the gauge averages: how Risk Factors and MD&A each shifted in net tone versus last year's 10-K. The headline above is their average, so a green needle over a soft section just means the other section carried it.
Sentence-level sentiment highlighting with category and subcategory filters is coming once the snippet-scoring pipeline lands. For now, dig into the actual section text on the Sections tab.
Language change vs prior 10-K
Risk Factors (Item 1A) - words with the biggest YoY frequency increase- restructuring+9
- difficulties+3
- unforeseen+3
- adverse+2
- loss+2
- achieve+3
- effective+3
- successfully+2
- enhance+2
- efficiency+2
Risk Factors (Item 1A)
17,993 words
Item 1A. Risk Factors
RISK FACTORS
Investing in our securities involves a high degree of risk. You should consider and read carefully all of the risks and uncertainties described below, as well as the other information contained in this Annual Report, including our financial statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report, before making an investment decision. The risks described below are not the only ones we face. The occurrence of any of the following risks or additional risks and uncertainties not presently known to us or that we currently believe to be immaterial could cause a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, financial condition and liquidity. In addition, many of these risks are interrelated and could occur under similar business and economic conditions, and the occurrence of certain of them could in turn cause the emergence or exacerbate the effect of others. The risk factors described below are not necessarily presented in order of importance. This Annual Report also contains forward-looking statements and estimates that involve risks and uncertainties. Our actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in the forward-looking statements as a result of specific factors, including the risks and uncertainties described below. See "Special Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements and Information."
Risks Related to the Spin-Off and Solventum’s Relationship with 3M
Solventum’s historical financial information for periods prior to the Spin-Off is not necessarily representative of the results or performance that it would have achieved as a separate, publicly traded company and may not be a reliable indicator of its future results or performance.
The historical financial information of Solventum for periods prior to the Spin-Off included in this Annual Report is derived from the Consolidated Financial Statements and accounting records of 3M. Accordingly, the financial information included herein does not necessarily reflect the financial condition, results of operations or cash flows that Solventum would have achieved as a separate, publicly traded company during the periods prior to the Spin-Off or those that Solventum will achieve in the future primarily as a result of the factors described below:
• Prior to the Spin-Off, Solventum’s working capital requirements and capital for its general corporate purposes, including capital expenditures and acquisitions, had historically been satisfied as part of the corporate-wide cash management policies of 3M. Following the Spin-Off, Solventum’s results of operations or cash flows may be more vulnerable to changing market conditions and therefore more volatile.
• Prior to the Spin-Off, 3M or one of its affiliates performed various corporate functions for Solventum’s business such as information technology, legal, treasury, accounting, auditing, human resources, investor relations and finance. The financial results included in the historical financial information reflect allocations of corporate expenses from 3M for such functions, which may be less than the expenses that Solventum would have incurred had it operated as a separate, publicly traded company. Solventum may also be unable to replicate corporate functions that will operate with the same degree of effectiveness as the equivalent 3M functions from which the Solventum business had historically benefited.
• Solventum’s business historically was integrated with the other businesses of 3M and benefited from 3M’s economies of scope and scale in costs, employees, vendor relationships and customer relationships. While Solventum has sought to minimize the impact on its business when separating these arrangements, there is no guarantee these arrangements will continue to capture these benefits in the future. Additionally, Solventum may be unable to obtain similar arrangements, goods, services or technologies at prices or on terms as favorable as or to the same extent that 3M obtained them prior to the Spin-Off. Among other benefits, Solventum’s business historically had access to 3M’s extensive global research and development resources, which historically enhanced its ability to innovate, develop new products and technologies, and improve and update existing products and technologies. Solventum’s lack of access to 3M’s research and development resources may negatively impact it.
• The cost of capital for Solventum’s business may be higher than 3M’s cost of capital prior to the Spin-Off, and Solventum may need to obtain additional financing from banks, through public offerings or private placements of debt
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or equity securities, strategic relationships or other arrangements in order to fund capital expenditures and investments, return capital to shareholders or service debt, which may or may not be available and may be more costly.
• Solventum’s historical financial information for periods prior to the Spin-Off does not reflect the debt that Solventum incurred as part of the Spin-Off.
• Solventum has and will continue to incur costs in connection with the separation from 3M and the related transition agreements entered into with 3M.
• As an independent public company, Solventum is subject to public company reporting requirements under the Exchange Act, and is required to prepare its standalone financial statements according to the rules and regulations required by the SEC.
Other significant changes may occur in Solventum’s cost structure, management, financing and business operations as a result of operating as a company separate from 3M.
Solventum may not achieve some or all of the expected benefits of the Spin-Off.
Solventum may not be able to achieve the full strategic and financial benefits expected to result from the Spin-Off, or such benefits may be delayed or not occur at all. The Spin-Off was designed to provide the following benefits to Solventum, among others: (1) the ability to pursue tailored capital allocation strategies and make company-specific investment decisions to drive innovation and growth; (2) enhanced management focus, with Solventum having a distinct board and management team with relevant expertise able to focus on strengthening its business; (3) improved operational agility and focus, enabling Solventum to pursue its distinct operating priorities and strategies with increased flexibility to act based on its unique characteristics, better positioning each for long-term success; (4) greater access to capital through the creation of a distinct and compelling investment profile appealing to a different long-term investor base from 3M; (5) independent equity currency, enabling Solventum to use its own industry-focused stock to consummate future acquisitions or other transactions; and (6) enhanced recruitment and retention, including by aligning employee, management and board incentives with performance.
Solventum may not achieve these and other anticipated benefits for a variety of reasons, including, among others: (1) the operation of Solventum as a standalone public company continues to demand significant management resources and require significant amounts of management’s time and effort, which may divert management’s attention from operating and growing Solventum’s business; (2) Solventum may continue to be required to pay costs that could be substantial and material to its financial resources, including costs associated with separating its operations from 3M and for related transition services, as well as increased accounting, tax, legal and other professional services costs; and (3) operational challenges as a standalone company, including those related to customer service, pace of change and productivity improvements, could result in additional expenses or reductions in productivity. If Solventum fails to achieve some or all of the benefits expected to result from the Spin-Off, or if such benefits are delayed, it could have a material adverse effect on its competitive position, business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.
Solventum’s accounting and other management systems and resources may not be adequately prepared to meet the financial reporting and other requirements to which it is subject to as a standalone publicly traded company following the Spin-Off.
Solventum’s financial results were previously included within the consolidated results of 3M. Solventum was not directly subject to the reporting and other requirements of the Exchange Act. As a result of the Spin-Off, Solventum is directly subject to reporting and other obligations under the Exchange Act, including the requirements of Section 404 of Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which require annual management assessments of the effectiveness of its internal control over financial reporting and a report by its independent registered public accounting firm. These reporting and other obligations place significant demands on Solventum’s management and administrative and operational resources, including accounting resources.
To comply with these requirements, Solventum has needed to migrate its systems, including information technology systems and enterprise resource planning systems, implement additional financial and management controls, reporting systems and procedures and hire additional accounting and finance staff. Solventum has incurred and expects to incur additional annual expenses related to these steps, and those expenses may be significant. If Solventum is unable to implement appropriate financial and management controls, reporting systems, information technology and procedures in a timely and effective fashion, its ability to comply with its financial reporting requirements and other rules that apply to reporting companies under the Exchange Act could be impaired. In addition, implementation of management controls, reporting systems, information technology and procedures may result in additional material costs to Solventum. Any failure to achieve and maintain effective internal controls in a timely, effective and cost-effective manner could have a material adverse effect on its business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.
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In connection with the Spin-Off, Solventum incurred debt obligations and may incur additional obligations in the future, which could adversely affect its business and profitability and its ability to meet other obligations.
In connection with the Spin-Off, Solventum completed certain financing transactions. As a result of such transactions and the subsequent repayment of debt with proceeds from the divestiture of the Purification and Filtration business, as of December 31, 2025, Solventum had approximately $5 billion of outstanding indebtedness. Depending on market or other economic conditions, Solventum could also incur additional indebtedness in the future.
This significant amount of debt could potentially have important consequences to Solventum and its fixed income and equity investors, including:
• requiring a substantial portion of its cash flow from operations to make interest payments;
• making it more difficult to satisfy debt service and other obligations;
• increasing the risk of a future credit ratings downgrade, which could increase future debt costs and limit the future availability of debt financing;
• increasing its vulnerability to general adverse economic and industry conditions;
• reducing the cash flow available to fund capital expenditures and other corporate purposes and to grow its business;
• limiting Solventum’s flexibility in planning for, or reacting to, changes in its business and the industry;
• placing Solventum at a competitive disadvantage relative to its competitors that may not be as highly leveraged with debt;
• requiring Solventum to repatriate earnings to the U.S., causing withholding taxes to be applied, which in turn could increase Solventum’s effective tax rate; and
• limiting Solventum’s ability to raise additional capital or borrow additional funds as needed or take advantage of business opportunities as they arise, pay cash dividends or repurchase ordinary shares.
To the extent that Solventum incurs additional indebtedness, the foregoing risks could increase. In addition, Solventum’s actual cash requirements in the future may be greater than expected. Its cash flow from operations may not be sufficient to repay all of the outstanding debt as it becomes due, and Solventum may not be able to borrow money, sell assets or otherwise raise funds on acceptable terms, or at all, to refinance its debt.
Solventum may not be able to engage in desirable capital-raising or strategic transactions following the Spin-Off.
Under current U.S. federal income tax law, a spin-off that otherwise qualifies for tax-free treatment can be rendered taxable to the parent corporation and its shareholders as a result of certain post-spin-off transactions, including certain acquisitions of shares or assets of the spun-off corporation. To preserve the tax-free treatment of the distribution and certain related transactions, and in addition to Solventum’s indemnity obligation described below, the Tax Matters Agreement restricts Solventum, for the two-year period following the distribution, except in specific circumstances, from (1) entering into any transaction pursuant to which all or a portion of the shares of Solventum stock would be acquired, whether by merger or otherwise; (2) issuing equity securities beyond certain thresholds; (3) repurchasing shares of Solventum stock other than in certain open-market transactions; and (4) ceasing to actively conduct certain of Solventum’s businesses. Further, the Tax Matters Agreement imposes similar restrictions on Solventum and its subsidiaries that are intended to prevent certain transactions undertaken as part of the internal reorganization from failing to qualify as transactions that are generally tax-free for U.S. federal income tax purposes under Sections 355 and 368(a)(1)(D) of the Code or for applicable non-U.S. income tax purposes. The Tax Matters Agreement also prohibits Solventum from taking or failing to take any other action that would prevent the distribution and certain related transactions (or certain transactions undertaken as part of the internal reorganization) from qualifying as tax-free transactions under applicable law. These restrictions may limit Solventum’s ability to pursue certain equity issuances, strategic transactions or other transactions that it may otherwise believe to be in the best interests of its shareholders or that might increase the value of its business.
If the Spin-Off, together with certain related transactions, were to fail to qualify as a transaction that is generally tax-free for U.S. federal income tax purposes, Solventum, as well as its shareholders, could be subject to significant tax liabilities. In addition, if certain internal restructuring transactions were to fail to qualify as transactions that are generally tax-free for U.S. federal or non-U.S. income tax purposes, Solventum could be subject to significant tax liabilities. In certain circumstances, Solventum could be required to indemnify 3M for material taxes and other related amounts pursuant to indemnification obligations under the Tax Matters Agreement.
It was a condition to the Spin-Off that (1) the private letter ruling received by 3M from the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (the "IRS") regarding certain U.S. federal income tax matters relating to the Spin-Off, including the qualification of the Spin-Off, together with certain related transactions, as a transaction that is generally tax-free for U.S. federal income tax purposes pursuant to Sections 355 and 368(a)(1)(D) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code," such qualification, "U.S. Tax-Free Status" and, such ruling, the "IRS Ruling") be valid; and (2) 3M received one or more opinions of 3M’s tax advisors regarding U.S. Tax-Free Status (each, a "Tax Opinion"). The IRS Ruling is and any Tax Opinion were based upon and
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rely on, among other things, various facts and assumptions, as well as certain representations, statements and undertakings of 3M and Solventum, including those relating to the past and future conduct of 3M and Solventum. If any of these representations, statements or undertakings are, or become, inaccurate or incomplete, or if any representations or covenants contained in any of the separation-related agreements and documents or in any documents relating to the IRS Ruling and/or any Tax Opinion are inaccurate or not complied with by 3M, Solventum or any of their respective subsidiaries, the IRS Ruling and/or such Tax Opinion may be invalid and the conclusions reached therein could be jeopardized.
Notwithstanding 3M’s receipt of the IRS Ruling and any Tax Opinion, in each case, regarding U.S. Tax-Free Status, the IRS could determine that the distribution and/or certain related transactions should be treated as taxable transactions for U.S. federal income tax purposes if it determines that any of the representations, assumptions or undertakings upon which the IRS Ruling or such Tax Opinion was based are inaccurate or have not been complied with. In addition, the IRS Ruling does not address all of the issues that are relevant to determining whether the Spin-Off, together with certain related transactions, qualifies as a transaction that is generally tax-free for U.S. federal income tax purposes, and any Tax Opinion represents the judgment of such advisor and is not binding on the IRS or any court and the IRS or a court may disagree with the conclusions in such Tax Opinion. Accordingly, notwithstanding 3M’s receipt of the IRS Ruling and the Tax Opinion(s), in each case, regarding U.S. Tax-Free Status, there can be no assurance that the IRS will not assert that the Spin-Off and/or certain related transactions do not qualify for tax-free treatment for U.S. federal income tax purposes, or that a court would not sustain such a challenge. In the event the IRS were to prevail with such challenge, 3M, Solventum and their shareholders could be subject to significant U.S. federal income tax liability.
If the Spin-Off and certain related transactions were to fail to qualify as a transaction that is generally tax-free for U.S. federal income tax purposes under Sections 355 and 368(a)(1)(D) of the Code, in general, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, 3M would recognize a taxable gain as if it had sold the Solventum common stock distributed to 3M shareholders in a taxable sale for its fair market value, and 3M shareholders who received Solventum common stock in the distribution would be subject to tax as if they had received a taxable distribution equal to the fair market value of such shares. Even if the distribution and certain related transactions otherwise qualify as generally tax-free for U.S. federal income tax purposes under Section 355 and Section 368(a)(1)(D) of the Code, it may result in taxable gain to 3M (but not its shareholders) under Section 355(e) of the Code if the distribution were deemed to be part of a plan (or series of related transactions) pursuant to which one or more persons acquire, directly or indirectly, shares representing a 50 percent or greater interest (by vote or value) in 3M or Solventum. For this purpose, any acquisitions of 3M or Solventum shares within the period beginning two years before the Spin-Off and ending two years after the distribution are presumed to be part of such a plan, although 3M or Solventum may be able to rebut that presumption. The process for determining whether an acquisition is part of a plan under these rules is complex, inherently factual in nature and subject to a comprehensive analysis of the facts and circumstances of the particular case. Notwithstanding the IRS Ruling and the Tax Opinion(s), a sufficient change in ownership of 3M or Solventum may occur that could result in a material tax liability to 3M.
In addition, prior to the Spin-Off, 3M and its subsidiaries completed the internal reorganization, and 3M, Solventum and their respective subsidiaries incurred certain tax costs in connection with the internal reorganization, including non-U.S. tax costs resulting from transactions in non-U.S. jurisdictions, which may be material. With respect to certain transactions undertaken as part of the internal reorganization, 3M has requested and intends to obtain tax rulings in certain non-U.S. jurisdictions and/or opinions of external tax advisors, in each case, regarding the tax treatment of such transactions. Such tax rulings and opinions will be based upon and rely on, among other things, various facts and assumptions, as well as certain representations, statements and undertakings of 3M, Solventum or their respective subsidiaries. If any of these representations or statements is, or becomes, inaccurate or incomplete, or if 3M, Solventum or any of their respective subsidiaries do not fulfill or otherwise comply with any such undertakings or covenants, such tax rulings and/or opinions may be invalid or the conclusions reached therein could be jeopardized. Further, notwithstanding receipt of any such tax rulings and/or opinions, there can be no assurance that the relevant taxing authorities will not assert that the tax treatment of the relevant transactions differs from the conclusions reached in the relevant tax rulings and/or opinions. In the event any such tax rulings and/or opinions cannot be obtained or the relevant taxing authorities prevail with any challenge in respect of any relevant transaction, Solventum and 3M could be subject to significant tax liabilities.
Under the Tax Matters Agreement that Solventum entered into with 3M, Solventum generally is required to indemnify 3M for any taxes resulting from the separation (and any related costs and other damages) to the extent such amounts resulted from (1) an acquisition of all or a portion of Solventum’s equity securities or assets, whether by merger or otherwise (and regardless of whether Solventum participated in or otherwise facilitated the acquisition), (2) other actions or failures to act by Solventum or (3) certain of Solventum’s representations, covenants or undertakings being incorrect or violated. Any such indemnity obligations could be material. In addition, Solventum, 3M and each company’s respective subsidiaries may have incurred certain tax costs in connection with the separation, which may be material.
The transfer to Solventum of certain contracts, permits and other assets and rights may have required the consents or approvals of, or provide other rights to, third parties and governmental authorities. If such consents or approvals were not
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obtained, Solventum may not be entitled to the full benefit of such contracts, permits and other assets and rights, which could increase its expenses or otherwise harm its business and financial performance.
The Separation and Distribution Agreement provided that certain contracts, permits and other assets and rights were to be transferred from 3M or its subsidiaries to Solventum or its subsidiaries in connection with the separation. The transfer of certain of these contracts, permits and other assets and rights may have required consents or approvals of third parties or governmental authorities or provided other rights to third parties. In addition, in some circumstances, Solventum and 3M are joint beneficiaries of contracts, and Solventum and 3M may have needed the consents of third parties in order to split or separate the existing contracts or the relevant portion of the existing contracts to Solventum or 3M.
Some parties may use consent requirements or other rights to seek to terminate contracts or obtain more favorable contractual terms from Solventum, which, for example, could take the form of price increases. This could require Solventum to expend additional resources in order to obtain the services or assets previously provided under the contract or require Solventum to seek arrangements with new third parties or obtain letters of credit or other forms of credit support. If Solventum is unable to obtain required consents or approvals, it may be unable to obtain the benefits, permits, assets and contractual commitments that are intended to be allocated to Solventum as part of the Spin-Off, and Solventum may be required to seek alternative arrangements to obtain services and assets that may be more costly and/or of lower quality. The termination or modification of these contracts or permits or the failure to timely complete the transfer or separation of these contracts or permits could negatively affect Solventum’s business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.
Following the Spin-Off, Solventum’s commercial relationships with 3M remain significant, which could adversely affect Solventum’s business, its ability to meet other obligations and the market price of its common stock.
Following the Spin-Off, Solventum continues to have significant commercial relationships with 3M, including under the agreements that Solventum entered into with 3M in connection with the Spin-Off, which include the Separation and Distribution Agreement, a Transition Services Agreement, a Transition Distribution Services Agreement, a Transition Contract Manufacturing Agreement, Research and Development Master Services Agreements, Real Estate License Agreements, an Intellectual Property Cross License Agreement, a 3M Mark Use Agreement, a Transition Trademark License Agreement, Master Supply Agreements, a Tax Matters Agreement, an Employee Matters Agreement, and a Stockholder’s and Registration Rights Agreement (collectively, the "3M Agreements"), as well as 3M’s continued ownership of Solventum’s common stock and the ownership of equity interests of 3M by certain officers and directors of Solventum. These commercial relationships could potentially have important consequences to Solventum and its investors, including:
• Solventum could be negatively affected if it is required to make material payments pursuant to its indemnification obligations to 3M such as with respect to certain taxes (and any related costs and other damages) resulting from the separation and/or for uninsured liabilities related to the Bair Hugger patient warming system under the Separation and Distribution Agreement and certain other 3M Agreements. In addition, 3M’s indemnity of Solventum with respect to certain liabilities relating to PFAS prior to Spin-Off may not be sufficient to protect Solventum against the full amount of such liabilities if, for example, 3M fails to fully satisfy its indemnification obligations or disputes whether that liability is subject to indemnification.
• If Solventum does not satisfactorily perform its obligations under the 3M Agreements, it may be held liable for any resulting losses suffered by 3M, subject to certain limits. In addition, during the transition support periods under the Transition Services Agreement, the Transition Distribution Services Agreement and the Transition Contract Manufacturing Agreement, Solventum’s management and employees may be required to divert their attention away from its business in order to provide services to 3M.
• The terms of the 3M Agreements may be less beneficial to Solventum than the terms that would have resulted from arm’s-length negotiations between unaffiliated third parties, because the 3M Agreements were prepared in the context of the Spin-Off while Solventum was still a wholly owned subsidiary of 3M and did not have an independent Board of Directors or a management team that was independent of 3M.
• Solventum may incur temporary interruptions in business operations if it cannot transition effectively from 3M’s existing operating systems, databases and programming languages that support certain of its systems, including, for example, research and development support, information technology infrastructure and systems and accounting and reporting systems. The process of implementing an information technology infrastructure, in particular, has been and is expected to be expensive and time-consuming, and any difficulty, delay or additional expense incurred in developing such an infrastructure or transitioning from 3M’s information technology environment and systems could be disruptive to Solventum’s business operations and create risks to Solventum’s relationships with customers and other third parties. The failure to implement the new systems and transition data successfully and cost-effectively could disrupt Solventum’s business operations and have a material adverse effect on its profitability. In addition, these systems and
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services may also be more expensive than the amounts reflected in its historical consolidated financial statements or less efficient than the systems and services 3M is expected to provide during the transition period to Solventum.
• Solventum is relying on 3M to satisfy its obligations under the 3M Agreements not only for a successful transition but also for the success of its long-term operations. If 3M does not, or is unable to, satisfy its obligations under some of the 3M Agreements, such as the Research and Development Master Services Agreements and the Master Supply Agreements, under which 3M has agreed to provide services or goods to Solventum for either a long-term duration or for a shorter transition period, as applicable, Solventum could experience significant short-term and long-term disruptions to its business or other operational difficulties or losses.
• The disposition by 3M of its remaining ownership interest in Solventum, which currently represents approximately 14.8% of the outstanding Solventum common stock, may be subject to various conditions, including receipt of any necessary regulatory and other approvals and the existence of satisfactory market conditions. These conditions may not be satisfied or 3M may decide for any other reason not to consummate the disposition and instead retain a significant ownership interest in Solventum for a period of time, not exceeding five years. Satisfying the conditions relating to such disposition may require actions that 3M has not anticipated. Any delay by 3M in completing the disposition could have a material adverse effect on the market price for Solventum common stock.
• Certain of Solventum’s directors and employees may have actual or potential conflicts of interest because of their financial interests in 3M or because of their previous positions with 3M, which could have implications for both Solventum and 3M. For example, conflicts of interest could arise in connection with the resolution of any dispute between Solventum and 3M regarding the terms of the 3M Agreements or out of any commercial arrangements that Solventum or 3M may enter into in the future.
• The 3M Agreements may limit Solventum’s ability to fully exploit certain intellectual property due to certain field of use restrictions on the licenses granted between the parties, which may permit 3M to compete with Solventum using intellectual property owned by or licensed to Solventum. Solventum’s ability to compete may be further impacted by the non-competition provisions contained in the Separation and Distribution Agreement, which prohibit Solventum from manufacturing and/or selling certain products, or from selling its products to certain end users for a specified period of time following the Spin-Off.
Any of the foregoing may adversely impact demand for Solventum’s products or cause Solventum to lose market share, and could result in operational disruptions or additional expense, all of which may have an adverse effect on Solventum’s business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows or may adversely impact the market price of Solventum’s common stock.
Risks Related to Solventum’s Business
General Economic and Business Risks
Solventum’s results may be impacted by the effects of, and changes in, worldwide economic, political, regulatory, international trade and geopolitical conditions, war and other events beyond its control.
Solventum develops, manufactures, distributes and sells its products globally, and, accordingly, Solventum’s operations and the execution of its business strategies and plans are subject to global competition and economic and geopolitical risks that are beyond its control, such as, among other things, disruptions in financial markets, economic downturns, military conflicts, political changes and trends such as protectionism, economic nationalism or regionalism resulting in government actions impacting international trade agreements, imposing trade restrictions such as tariffs, and retaliatory countermeasures, changes in regulatory regimes that could restrict Solventum’s ability to manufacture and sell its products (including healthcare regulatory regimes), diminished or insufficient protection of intellectual property and government deficit reduction and other austerity measures in locations or industries in which Solventum operates. For example, changes in the policies or practices of government programs, authorities or agencies (e.g., Medicare and Medicaid in the U.S.) could adversely impact the amount of funding Solventum’s customers have for its products and services. Trade and tariff actions have had an impact on Solventum and its suppliers and may have material adverse effects on Solventum's business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows. Further escalation of specific trade tensions, including those between the U.S. and China, or more broadly of global trade conflict, could adversely impact Solventum’s business and operations around the world. Solventum’s business is also impacted by social, political and labor conditions in locations in which Solventum or its suppliers or customers operate; adverse changes in the availability and cost of capital; monetary policy; interest rates; inflation; recession; commodity prices; currency volatility or exchange control; ability to expatriate earnings; and other laws and regulations in the jurisdictions in which Solventum or its suppliers or customers operate.
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The global economy has been impacted by the conflicts between Russia and Ukraine and in the Middle East and other geopolitical events. The U.S. and other governments have imposed export controls on certain products and financial and economic sanctions on certain industry sectors and parties in Russia. 3M suspended operations of its subsidiaries, including those of Solventum’s business, in Russia in March 2022 and, in September 2022, committed to a plan to exit the related net assets in Russia, including those of Solventum’s business, through a sale of 3M’s Russian subsidiaries that was consummated in June 2023. Solventum has operations that source certain raw materials from suppliers in Russia and has experienced related supply disruption due to the conflict. These geopolitical tensions could result in, among other things, cyberattacks, further supply chain disruptions impacting downstream customers, higher energy costs, lower consumer demand and changes to foreign exchange rates and financial markets, any of which may adversely affect Solventum’s business and supply chain.
The deployment and use of artificial intelligence ( " AI " ), machine learning, or other emerging technologies in Solventum’s products and services, including as part of its research and development efforts, or its failure to adapt its products or services to industry trends and developments related to such technologies in a timely manner, or at all, could adversely affect Solventum’s business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.
Solventum has begun to deploy AI in its products and services, including as part of its research and development efforts, and Solventum expects to continue to explore additional uses as AI continues to develop. In addition, Solventum intends to devote significant resources to develop and deploy cloud, edge and software solutions in its healthcare solutions. For example, Solventum has incorporated AI into certain products in the Health Information Systems business segment and certain of its digital offerings and expects to continue to build AI into additional products. Any disruption or failure in the AI, machine learning, or other emerging technologies Solventum deploys or uses in its products and services, including as part of its research and development efforts, could adversely impact Solventum’s business, including as a result of flawed AI algorithms, insufficient or biased datasets, malfunctions or manipulations, unintentional release of confidential information, or product or service delays or recalls. In addition, any failure to successfully deploy or use such technologies in Solventum’s products and services, or to adapt to medical technology industry trends and developments related to such technologies in a timely manner (or at all), particularly as competitors incorporate such technologies into new and existing products and services, could adversely affect customer demand for Solventum’s products and its competitiveness. The deployment of AI, machine learning or other emerging technologies into Solventum’s products and services will require additional investment and increase its costs. Furthermore, the rapid advancement of technology, including AI, creates additional risks as Solventum includes such technology into its products and services, including from confidentiality, privacy, data protection, cybersecurity and compliance perspectives, and raises intellectual property issues and operational, technological and other concerns. Any of the above factors could adversely affect Solventum’s business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.
Public health crises may increase Solventum’s cost of doing business and disrupt Solventum’s operations.
Due to Solventum’s global operations, Solventum’s business is and will be impacted by public health crises, epidemics and pandemics in the locations in which Solventum or its suppliers or customers operate, and these events have adversely affected, and could in the future adversely affect, Solventum’s operations and financial performance. As a result of such events, we have in the past experienced, and in the future may experience, increased economic and demand uncertainty and could experience adverse impacts to Solventum’s operations, including its supply chain; its manufacturing and distribution capabilities; site shutdowns, workplace disruptions; restrictions on movement of people, raw materials and goods (both at our own facilities and at those of our customers and suppliers); global supply chain disruptions and price inflation. Solventum is not able to predict the impact of public health crises, epidemics or pandemics, which may have a material adverse effect on its business, cash flows, financial condition and results of operations.
Our brands are critical to our success, and damage to our reputation or our brands could adversely affect our business, results of operations or financial condition.
Our ability to compete successfully depends on the strength of our brands. Following the Spin-Off, Solventum now operates under its own brand and accordingly may no longer benefit from 3M’s long operating history, reputation and well-known brand. Developing and maintaining the reputation of our brands is a critical component of our ability to attract and retain employees and maintain and develop our relationships with consumers, customers, manufacturers, suppliers, distributors and other third-party partners, including healthcare professionals, influencers and other individuals with whom we have relationships. We believe employees, consumers, customers and third-party partners value the reputation and status of our brands. However, these efforts may not be successful, and the loss of benefits conferred by 3M’s brand recognition and reputation or the failure to maintain the value of our brands could impact our relationships or brand loyalty with employees, consumers, customers and third-party partners and otherwise adversely affect our business, results of operations or financial condition.
Our reputation and our brands could in the future be damaged by negative publicity, whether or not valid. Negative publicity could relate to our company, our brands, our products, our supply chain, our ingredients, our packaging, our sustainability and social impact practices, our employees or any other aspect of our business. Our reputation or our brands could
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also be adversely affected by negative publicity related to our industry, our competitors, our competitors’ products, our customers or our third-party partners, including healthcare professionals, and other individuals with whom we have relationships, even if the publicity is not directly related to our company or our brands and even if the publicity is not accurate. In addition, widespread use of digital and social media platforms around the world has greatly increased the accessibility of information and the speed with which it is disseminated, which has made, and likely will continue to make, maintaining our reputation and our brands more challenging. Damage to our reputation or our brands could cause employees, consumers, customers and third-party partners to lose trust in our business or our products, require us to expend substantial resources to remedy the damage or otherwise adversely affect our business, results of operations or financial condition.
Acquisitions, strategic alliances, divestitures and other strategic events resulting from portfolio management actions and other evolving business strategies, and possible further organizational restructuring, could affect future results.
Solventum monitors its business portfolio and organizational structure and may make acquisitions, divestitures and changes to its organizational structure or enter into strategic alliances, equity investments or joint ventures. For example, on September 2, 2025, Solventum announced the close of its sale of the Purification & Filtration business ("P&F") to Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. for $4.0 billion in cash before customary adjustments. In addition, on December 23, 2025, Solventum acquired Acera Surgical ("Acera"), a privately held bioscience company focused on developing and commercializing fully engineered materials for regenerative wound care, for cash consideration of $696 million, net of cash acquired, plus a future payment of $125 million dependent on the acquired business achieving a sales-based milestone. These activities have resulted, and any future activities may result, in substantial investment of Solventum’s resources. The success of any such activities will depend upon a number of factors, including Solventum’s ability to:
• identify suitable acquisition targets or assets, conduct due diligence, negotiate transactions on favorable terms and ultimately complete such transactions;
• compete for acquisition targets and assets, which may lead to substantial increases in purchase price or terms that are less attractive to Solventum;
• finance any future acquisition, investment, alliance or other transaction on terms acceptable to Solventum, if at all (which may involve the use of Solventum’s shares for payment of the purchase price);
• identify, negotiate and ultimately complete suitable divestitures or other strategic transactions;
• comply with applicable laws and regulations, including foreign laws and regulations;
• obtain any legally required rulings by antitrust or other regulatory bodies;
• successfully and timely integrate and operate acquired businesses;
• successfully separate any divested business;
• protect intellectual property and prevail in litigation relating to newly acquired technologies;
• predict or realize expected growth opportunities, cost savings, synergies and market acceptance of acquired companies’ products; and
• successfully identify and retain key target employees and customers.
In addition, acquisitions may expose Solventum to significant risks and uncertainties, including failure to identify significant non-compliant behaviors or practices by, or liabilities relating to, the acquisition target (or its agents) prior to acquisition; successor liability imposed by regulators for actions by the acquisition target (or its agents) prior to acquisition; and diversion of management’s attention from existing operations to the acquisition and integration process. Equity and other investments and strategic alliances pose additional risks, as Solventum could share ownership in companies and, in some cases, management responsibilities with one or more other parties whose objectives for the alliance may diverge from those of Solventum over time; who may not have the same priorities, strategies, or resources as Solventum does; or whose interpretation of applicable policies may differ from those of Solventum. Such transactions will be subject, in certain circumstances, to the consent of 3M under the Tax Matters Agreement that Solventum entered into with 3M, as discussed in "—Risks Related to the Spin-Off and Solventum’s Relationship with 3M." There can be no assurance that any future transactions of this type will be pursued or, if pursued, will be successful.
Solventum may not be able to effectively integrate acquired businesses into its operations or achieve expected cost savings or profitability from its acquisitions.
Solventum’s acquisitions involve numerous risks, including:
• unforeseen difficulties in integrating personnel and sales forces, operations, manufacturing, logistics, research and development, information technology, compliance, vendor management, communications, purchasing, accounting, marketing, administration and other systems and processes;
• difficulties harmonizing and optimizing quality systems and operations;
• diversion of financial and management resources from existing operations;
• unforeseen difficulties related to entering markets for which or geographic regions where Solventum does not have prior experience;
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• potential loss of key employees;
• unforeseen risks and liabilities associated with businesses acquired, including any unknown vulnerabilities in acquired technology, compromises of acquired data or noncompliance with data privacy requirements; and/or
• inability to generate sufficient revenue or realize sufficient cost savings to offset acquisition or investment costs.
As a result, if Solventum fails to evaluate and execute acquisitions properly, Solventum might not achieve the anticipated benefits of such acquisitions, and Solventum may incur costs in excess of what it anticipates. These risks would likely be greater in the case of larger acquisitions.
Solventum’s restructuring program may not be successful or Solventum may not fully realize the expected cost savings and/or operating efficiencies from its restructuring initiatives.
Solventum has initiated a multiyear restructuring program, 'Transform for the Future', which is designed to further enable its long-term growth strategy and ensure it's best positioned to compete-to-win in a rapidly changing healthcare environment. Designed to transform the cost structure, enhance operational efficiency, and reposition for profitable growth, the primary activities of the restructuring program include operating structure optimization and workforce reorganization, procurement and cost management, supply chain, manufacturing and global footprint optimization, and streamlining systems and increased automation to improve operational efficiency. Additionally, as a result of the restructuring initiative, Solventum may experience a loss of continuity, loss of accumulated knowledge and/or inefficiencies during transitional periods. The restructuring initiative presents risks that may impair Solventum’s ability to achieve anticipated operating enhancements and/or cost reductions, or otherwise harm its business, including higher than anticipated costs in implementing the restructuring program, as well as management distraction. For more information on Solventum’s restructuring program, see Note 14 to Solventum’s consolidated financial statements. If Solventum fails to achieve some or all of the expected benefits of its restructuring program, or if costs related to the restructuring program are more than anticipated, it could have a material adverse effect on Solventum’s competitive position, business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.
Solventum may not be able to access the capital and credit markets on terms that are favorable to Solventum, or at all.
Solventum could need access to the capital markets to supplement its existing funds and cash generated from operations to satisfy its needs for working capital, to meet capital expenditure and debt service requirements, and for other business initiatives. Solventum’s ability to issue additional debt or enter into other financing arrangements on acceptable terms could be adversely affected by its debt levels, unfavorable changes in economic conditions or uncertainties that affect the capital markets. In the event of adverse capital and credit market conditions, Solventum may be unable to obtain capital market financing on favorable terms, or at all.
Change in Solventum’s credit ratings could increase cost of funding.
Solventum’s credit ratings are important to its cost of capital. The major rating agencies will routinely evaluate Solventum’s credit profile and assign debt ratings to Solventum. This evaluation is based on a number of factors, which include financial strength, business and financial risk, as well as transparency with rating agencies and timeliness of financial reporting. Changes in Solventum’s credit ratings could adversely affect its ability to obtain capital market financing and the cost of such financing. Moreover, a reduction in Solventum’s credit rating to below investment-grade could cause certain customers to reduce or cease to do business with Solventum, which would adversely impact its financial performance.
Foreign currency exchange rates and fluctuations in those rates may affect Solventum’s ability to realize projected growth rates in its sales and earnings.
Because Solventum’s financial statements are denominated in U.S. dollars and a material percentage of its revenues are derived from outside the U.S., Solventum’s results of operations and its ability to realize projected growth rates in sales and earnings could be adversely affected by volatility in foreign currency exchange rates, particularly if the value of the U.S. dollar strengthens significantly against foreign currencies. Following the Spin-Off, Solventum may be more exposed to matters such as foreign currency exchange rates as a smaller, standalone company than it had been as a part of the larger 3M enterprise.
Solventum cannot predict with any certainty changes in foreign currency exchange rates or its ability to mitigate these risks. Solventum may experience additional volatility because of increasing inflationary pressures and other macroeconomic factors, including in emerging market countries. Solventum may be unable to hedge the effects of foreign exchange rate changes in a cost-effective manner.
Changes in interest rates could adversely affect Solventum.
Solventum is exposed to changes in interest rates, including through variable rate debt and due to the fact that increases in interest rates may adversely affect the financial condition of Solventum’s counterparties in a manner that may affect their ability
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to transact with Solventum or their demand for Solventum’s products and services. Any of the foregoing could adversely affect Solventum’s business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
Market Dynamic Risks
Solventum operates in highly competitive markets, competition may increase in the future and the healthcare industry may be disrupted, necessitating that Solventum lower prices or resulting in a loss of market share.
Healthcare markets are characterized by rapidly evolving technology, frequent introduction of new products, intense competition and pricing pressure. Solventum faces substantial competition from international and domestic companies of all sizes, including existing competitors, new market entrants and non-traditional entrants. Demand for Solventum’s products and services, which impacts revenue and profit margins, will be affected by, among other things, (i) the development and timing of the introduction of competitive products and services; (ii) Solventum’s pricing strategies; (iii) changes in customer order patterns, such as changes in the levels of inventory maintained by customers, vendors or channel partners; (iv) changes in customers’ preferences for Solventum’s products and services, including the success of products and services offered by competitors; (v) changes in customer designs for their products and services that can affect the demand for Solventum’s products and services; (vi) the emergence of new AI-enabled competitors and business model disruption, particularly for our HIS business; (vii) changes in the business environment related to disruptive technologies, such as AI, block-chain, expanded analytics and other enhanced learnings from increasing volume of available data; (viii) local market conditions, such as mandatory intellectual property transfers, protectionist measures and other government policies supporting increased local competition; (ix) costs of production or delivery, whether due to geographic location, currency fluctuations, taxes, duties or otherwise; (x) the perception of Solventum’s brand and image in the market; (xi) changing regulatory standards, legal requirements or enforcement rigor; (xii) failure to acquire or effectively integrate businesses and technologies that complement or expand Solventum’s existing businesses; and (xiii) consolidation among customers, suppliers, channel partners or competitors.
In addition, Solventum’s inability to obtain and maintain regulatory authorizations for, and supply commercial quantities of, Solventum’s products and services as quickly and effectively as its competitors could limit market acceptance. Solventum’s competitors may also have greater financial, marketing and other resources, respond more quickly to new or emerging technologies, undertake more extensive marketing campaigns; adopt more aggressive pricing policies, or be more successful in attracting potential customers, employees and strategic partners.
Consolidation in the healthcare industry could have an adverse effect on Solventum’s revenues and results of operations.
Many healthcare industry companies, including healthcare systems, distributors, manufacturers, providers and insurers, are consolidating or have formed strategic alliances. As the healthcare industry consolidates, competition to provide products and services is expected to continue to intensify, resulting in pricing pressures, decreased average selling prices and the exclusion of certain suppliers from important market segments. Consolidations also create larger enterprises with greater negotiating power and Solventum may lose customers. If consolidation trends continue, it could adversely affect Solventum’s business results, cash flows, financial condition or prospects. If Solventum faces an increase in costs or reduces its prices because of industry consolidation, or if Solventum loses customers as a result of consolidation, its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows could be adversely affected.
Reductions in customers’ research budgets or government funding may adversely affect Solventum’s business.
Solventum’s customers include hospitals, universities, healthcare providers, government agencies and public and private research institutions. Research and development spending of such customers can fluctuate based on spending priorities and general economic conditions. The level of government funding of research and development is unpredictable. The availability of governmental research funding may be adversely affected by many factors, including public spending priorities, available resources, economic conditions and governmental spending reductions, particularly during periods of economic uncertainty. Stalemates in national, regional or local government budgeting decisions could also lead to substantial delays or reductions in governmental spending. Any reduction or delay in governmental funding could cause Solventum’s customers to delay or forgo purchases of its products.
Solventum’s growth objectives are largely dependent on the timing and market acceptance of its new products and services, including its ability to continually renew its pipeline of new products and services and to bring those products and services to market.
A significant element of Solventum’s strategy is to increase revenue growth by focusing on innovation and new product and service development. New service and product development requires significant investment in research and development, clinical trials and regulatory approvals. The ability to bring new products and services to market is subject to difficulties or delays in development, such as the inability to identify viable new products and services, obtain adequate intellectual property
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protection, regulatory approvals and reimbursement in the U.S. and abroad and successfully complete clinical trials or gain market acceptance of new products and services. It is uncertain when or whether Solventum’s products or services currently under development will be launched or will be commercially successful. Additionally, new offerings may be quickly rendered obsolete by changing customer preferences, changing industry standards or competitors’ innovations or reverse engineering efforts. If Solventum cannot successfully introduce new products and services that address the needs of its customers, Solventum’s offerings may become obsolete, and its business results, cash flows and financial condition could suffer.
The success of many of Solventum’s products depends upon certain key healthcare professionals.
Solventum works with leading global healthcare professionals who provide considerable knowledge and experience. The research, development, marketing and sales of many of Solventum’s products depend on maintaining working relationships with healthcare professionals. Solventum relies on these professionals for assistance in the development and marketing of its products. A public health crisis, epidemic or pandemic, including any resurgence of the COVID-19 pandemic may limit access to these professionals, and resulting travel restrictions, shutdowns and similar measures in response to any such public health crisis may impact Solventum’s ability to maintain these relationships, which in turn would adversely affect its ability to develop, market and sell new and improved products. If new laws, regulations or other developments limit Solventum’s ability to appropriately engage these professionals or to continue to receive their advice and input or Solventum is otherwise unsuccessful in maintaining strong working relationships with these healthcare professionals, the success of Solventum’s products could suffer, which could result in a material adverse effect on its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
Changes in reimbursement practices of third-party payers or other cost containment measures or worsening economic conditions could affect the demand for Solventum’s products and the prices at which they are sold.
Sales of many of Solventum’s products directly or indirectly depend on the availability of reimbursement and the amount of reimbursement that its customers may seek from various third-party payers, including government programs, authorities or agencies (e.g., Medicare and Medicaid in the U.S.), and private health plans. The coverage policies and reimbursement levels of third-party payers, which can vary among public and private sources and by country, may affect which products customers purchase and the prices they are willing to pay for those products in a particular jurisdiction. Reimbursement rates can also affect the market acceptance rate of new technologies and products.
In general, employers and third-party payers, particularly in the U.S., have become increasingly cost-conscious, with higher deductibles imposed in many medical plans. Additionally, austerity measures or other reforms by foreign governments may limit, reduce or eliminate payments for Solventum’s products and adversely affect both pricing flexibility and demand for Solventum’s products. Even if Solventum develops promising new products, it may find limited demand for the products unless reimbursement approval is obtained from third-party payers. Further legislative or administrative reforms that impact reimbursements or pricing could result in a material adverse effect on its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
In addition, current or worsening economic conditions, including recessionary pressures, may adversely affect the ability of Solventum’s customers to pay for its products and services, and the amount spent on healthcare generally, which could result in decreased demand for Solventum’s products and services, declining cash flows, longer sales cycles, slower adoption of new technologies and increased price competition.
Pricing pressure has also increased due to continued consolidation among healthcare providers, trends towards managed care, the shift towards governments becoming the primary payers of healthcare expenses, reduction in reimbursement levels and medical procedure volumes and government laws and regulations relating to sales and promotion, reimbursement and pricing generally. As a result of these and other measures, including future measures or reforms that cannot be predicted, reimbursement may not be available or sufficient to allow Solventum to sell its products on a competitive basis. Legislation and regulations affecting reimbursement for Solventum’s products may change at any time. Solventum cannot predict the impact of these pressures and initiatives or any negative effects of any additional regulations that may affect its business.
Solventum’s future results are subject to vulnerability with respect to materials and fluctuations in the costs and availability of purchased components, compounds, raw materials, energy, production capacity and labor due to shortages, increased demand and wages, logistics, supply chain interruptions, manufacturing site disruptions, regulatory developments, tariffs, inflation and other disruptive factors.
Solventum depends on various components, compounds, raw materials and energy (including oil and natural gas and their derivatives) supplied by others for the manufacturing of its products. If suppliers fail to meet their delivery obligations, raise prices or cease to supply to Solventum, it may continue to cause delays in delivery or significantly increase Solventum’s costs. If Solventum loses suppliers, if their operations are substantially interrupted, if their prices continue to increase significantly due to tariffs or inflationary pressures, or if any of them fail to meet performance or quality specifications, Solventum may be
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required to identify and qualify one or more replacement suppliers. This also may require Solventum to redesign or modify its products to incorporate new components and obtain regulatory authorization, qualification or certification of these redesigned or modified products.
Supplier relationships could be interrupted due to supplier material shortages, equipment malfunctions, transportation delays, tariffs, inflationary pricing pressures, work stoppages, labor shortages and other disruptive events, or could be terminated. In addition, some of Solventum’s suppliers are limited- or sole-source suppliers, and Solventum’s ability to meet its obligations to customers depends on the performance, product quality and stability of such suppliers and Solventum’s ability to source alternatives in a cost effective manner. Solventum may experience a sustained interruption in its receipt of adequate supplies or the distribution of its products, or disruption to key manufacturing sites’ operations, including due to government actions relating to discharge or emission permits or other legal or regulatory requirements. In addition, there can be no assurance that Solventum’s processes to minimize volatility in component and material pricing will be successful or that future price fluctuations or shortages will be managed. Solventum could incur contractual penalties, experience a deterioration in customer relationships or suffer harm to its reputation if it is unable to fulfill its obligations to customers. Any of the foregoing could have a material adverse effect on Solventum’s ability to fulfill supply obligations to its customers or on its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
Solventum’s business also depends on having sufficient production capacity to meet the demand for Solventum’s products and to support Solventum’s future growth. Solventum is conducting capital expansion efforts to increase its manufacturing capacity in certain areas of its operations. These efforts may not be successful. If this is the case, it could adversely affect Solventum’s operations and limit Solventum’s ability to support future growth or significantly impact its financial results and condition.
In addition, many of Solventum’s products require sterilization prior to sale, and Solventum utilizes contract sterilizers to perform this service. To the extent Solventum’s contract sterilizers are unable to sterilize Solventum’s products, whether due to capacity, availability of materials for sterilization, regulatory or other constraints, including federal and state regulations on the use of ethylene oxide, Solventum may be unable to transition to alternative internal or external resources or methods in a timely or cost effective manner or at all, which could have a material impact on Solventum’s results of operations and financial condition.
3M is the sole source of supply for raw materials used in certain of our products and our business will be harmed if 3M does not satisfy our requirements.
3M is the sole source of supply for certain chemical materials and inputs used in our products (including transparent IV film dressings, biological indicators for sterilization assurance, medical securement tapes and dental composites and cements) that, as of the Spin-Off, accounted for approximately $3 billion of our revenue for fiscal year 2025, including a material with a manufacturing process proprietary to 3M that is used in our products accounting for approximately $2 billion of our revenue for fiscal year 2025. While 3M has agreed to supply these items to Solventum for a period of time, our business will be harmed if 3M does not satisfy our requirements during such period of time, and Solventum may subsequently need to either reach agreement with 3M for an extended supply arrangement, develop our own manufacturing capabilities for these materials or identify an appropriate substitution or product reformulation in order to continue manufacturing and selling the applicable products. There is no guarantee that 3M will agree to continue to supply these materials following the term of the supply agreement on commercially reasonable terms or at all. At this time, Solventum has not identified an appropriate substitute input to replace the materials supplied by 3M, and Solventum does not currently have the capability to manufacture such materials itself. If 3M’s obligation to supply us with this material ends before we can develop or secure an alternative source of supply, the related product sales, which may be material, will be at risk. Any alternatives we pursue to mitigate this risk might also result in higher costs to source or produce the relevant products. Solventum’s failure to ensure a continuing supply of these materials or find acceptable substitutes, or the costs incurred by Solventum in connection with securing such continuing supply or finding such substitutes, could have a material adverse effect on Solventum’s business, including potentially the loss of revenue from the relevant products.
Legal and Compliance Risks
Solventum is subject to risks related to international, federal, state and local treaties, laws and regulations that are subject to change at any time, as well as compliance risks related to legal or regulatory requirements, contract requirements, policies and practices or other matters that require or encourage Solventum or its suppliers, vendors or channel partners to conduct business in a certain way. The outcome of legal and regulatory proceedings related to compliance with the treaties, laws, regulations and requirements could have a material adverse effect on Solventum’s business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
Solventum operates globally, including in some jurisdictions that pose potentially elevated risks of fraud or corruption or increased risk of internal control issues, and is subject to risks related to international, federal, state and local treaties, laws and
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regulations, including those involving product liability; antitrust; intellectual property; environmental, health and safety; tax; the FCPA and other anti-bribery laws; international import and export requirements and trade sanctions compliance; regulations of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and similar foreign agencies; privacy laws and information security policies and regulations; and U.S. federal healthcare program-related laws and regulations including the False Claims Act, anti-kickback laws and the Physician Payments Sunshine Act. Solventum is also subject to compliance risks related to legal or regulatory requirements, contract requirements, policies and practices or other matters that require or encourage Solventum and its suppliers, vendors or channel parties, to conduct business in a certain way, and Solventum’s activity as well as the activity of such suppliers, vendors or channel parties could adversely affect Solventum’s business. In particular, Solventum is subject to legal risks with respect to the below laws and regulations:
• Antitrust - Regulatory authorities may have authority in the event of alleged non-compliance with applicable law to impose fines and sanctions on Solventum or to require changes or impose conditions on the way Solventum conducts business. Under certain circumstances, violations of antitrust laws could result in suspension or debarment of Solventum’s ability to contract with certain parties or complete certain transactions. In addition, an increasing number of jurisdictions also provide private rights of action for competitors or consumers to seek damages asserting claims of anti-competitive conduct. An adverse outcome under any such investigation or audit could subject Solventum to fines or criminal or other penalties.
• FCPA and other anti-bribery laws - The failure to comply with the FCPA and similar anti-corruption and anti-bribery laws could result in significant civil fines and penalties or criminal sanctions against Solventum. Because of the predominance of government-sponsored healthcare systems around the world, many of Solventum’s customer relationships outside of the U.S. are with governmental entities, the employees of which may be considered government officials under such laws. Many anti-corruption laws also prohibit bribery of private sector individuals, and thus extend far beyond interactions with government officials. Solventum is subject to the FCPA’s accounting provisions, which require Solventum to keep accurate books and records and to maintain an adequate system of internal accounting controls sufficient to provide reasonable assurances of management’s control, authority and responsibility over Solventum’s assets. Global enforcement of anti-corruption laws has increased substantially in recent years, with more frequent voluntary self-disclosure by companies, aggressive investigations (including coordinated investigations across countries and governmental authorities) and enforcement proceedings by U.S. and non-U.S. governmental agencies, and assessment of significant civil and criminal fines, penalties and other sanctions against companies and individuals. From time to time, Solventum or its affiliates receive reports, internally and externally, via various reporting channels, about business and other activities that raise compliance or other legal or litigation issues. Solventum has been in the past, and in the future could be, required to investigate such reports and cooperate with U.S. and foreign regulatory authorities in such investigations, audit, monitor compliance or alter its practices as part of such investigations. While Solventum maintains and implements U.S. and international compliance programs, including policies and procedures, training and internal controls designed to reduce the risk of noncompliance, Solventum’s employees, suppliers, vendors, channel partners or agents may violate such policies and procedures and engage in practices that contravene relevant laws and regulations. Any alleged or actual violations of these anti-corruption laws may subject Solventum to government scrutiny, criminal or civil sanctions and other liabilities, including exclusion from government contracting, and could disrupt its business, adversely affect its reputation and result in a material adverse effect on its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
• Environmental Laws - Solventum is subject to environmental, health and safety laws and regulations concerning, among other things, the generation, handling, transportation and disposal of hazardous substances or wastes, the remediation of hazardous substances or materials at various sites and emissions or discharges into the land, air or water. If Solventum or its suppliers violate these environmental laws and regulations, facilities could be shut down, and violators could be fined or otherwise sanctioned. New laws and regulations, violations of these laws or regulations, stricter enforcement of existing requirements or the discovery of previously unknown contamination could require Solventum to incur costs or could become the basis for new or increased liabilities that could be material.
• Anti-Kickback and False Claims Laws - Solventum’s products are purchased by healthcare providers that typically bill various third-party payers, such as governmental healthcare programs (e.g., Medicare, Medicaid and comparable non-U.S. programs), private insurance plans and managed care plans, for the healthcare services provided to their patients. As a result, Solventum’s products are subject to regulation regarding quality and cost by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, including the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services ("CMS"), as well as comparable state and non-U.S. agencies responsible for reimbursement and regulation of healthcare goods and services, including laws and regulations related to kickbacks, false claims, self-referrals and healthcare fraud. Many states have similar laws that apply to reimbursement by state Medicaid and other funded programs as well as in some cases to all payers. As a manufacturer of products reimbursable by federal healthcare programs, Solventum is subject to the Physician Payments Sunshine Act, which requires it to annually report certain payments and other transfers of value it makes to U.S.-licensed physicians and certain advanced practice providers, and U.S. teaching hospitals. Any failure to comply
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with these laws and regulations could subject Solventum or its officers and employees to criminal and civil financial penalties.
• Data Privacy, Emerging Technology and Cybersecurity Laws - Because Solventum is a business with a significant global footprint, compliance with evolving regulations and standards in data privacy, emerging technologies, and cybersecurity may result in increased costs, compliance challenges and the threat of increased regulatory enforcement activity. Solventum’s business relies on the secure electronic transmission, storage and hosting of sensitive information, including personal information, protected health information, financial information, intellectual property and other sensitive information related to our customers and workforce. Solventum is required to comply with increasingly complex and changing legal and regulatory requirements that govern the collection, use, storage, security, transfer, disclosure and other processing of personal data, including for the development and use of AI, in the U.S. and in other countries. Examples of those laws include, but are not limited to, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, as amended by the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act of 2009 (collectively, HIPAA), various U.S. state consumer privacy laws that have become effective recently, the EU General Data Protection Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (GDPR) and the United Kingdom's version of the same, the Lei Gerai de Proteção de Dados Pessoias (Brazil LGPD), China’s Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL), PRC Cybersecurity Law and Personal Data Cross Border Transfer Rule, the European Union's Artificial Intelligence Act and various other country-specific requirements at the state and federal level around the world. In addition, privacy laws and regulations are becoming stricter and may potentially impose additional requirements on Solventum’s business, and certain jurisdictions have implemented data localization laws which can be costly and operationally difficult to satisfy. Similarly, the legal and regulatory landscape surrounding AI is rapidly evolving and uncertain and includes an increasingly large amount of complex, stringent, and inconsistent global regulations, including with regard to certification requirements in many of the countries in which Solventum's customers are located. Solventum cannot be sure how these laws and regulations will be interpreted, enforced, or applied to its operations, products and services. In addition to the risks associated with enforcement activities and potential contractual liabilities, Solventum’s ongoing efforts to comply with evolving laws and regulations may be costly and require ongoing modifications or limitations to its products, services, policies, procedures and systems. If Solventum or third parties are unable to effectively manage the use of AI or other emerging technologies by employees and third party providers, Solventum or third parties may fail to adequately safeguard confidential personal data, or if such information or data are wrongfully used by Solventum or third parties or disclosed to unauthorized persons or entities, such an event could result in a material adverse effect on its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
• Sustainability and Climate Change - There has been increased focus in recent years by federal, international, state and local regulatory and legislative bodies to expand mandatory sustainability reporting, diligence and disclosure requirements, including the European Union’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), legislation in California requiring reporting of greenhouse gas emissions and climate risk and similar regulatory requirements in other jurisdictions. Additionally, there is an increase in regulatory mandates to combat and/or limit the effects of climate change through a variety of means, including regulating greenhouse gas emissions (and the establishment of enhanced internal processes or systems to track them), policies mandating or promoting the use of renewable or zero-carbon energy and sustainability initiatives, and additional taxes on fuel and energy. If legislation or regulations are enacted or promulgated in the U.S. or in any other jurisdiction in which Solventum does business that impose more stringent restrictions and requirements than its current legal or regulatory obligations, Solventum and companies in its supply chain may experience increased compliance burdens and costs to meet the regulatory obligations, which could cause disruption in the sourcing, manufacturing and distribution of its products and adversely affect its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows. Furthermore, new regulatory mandates related to extended producer responsibility laws, single-use plastic or chemical bans, or similar product-focused legislation may cause shift in market trends. These outcomes may in turn result in customers transitioning to competitive products, loss of market share, negative publicity, reputational damage, loss of customer confidence or other negative consequences (including a decline in stock price).
Solventum’s results of operations could be adversely impacted if the costs to comply with these evolving treaties, laws, regulations and requirements are greater than projected by Solventum. In addition, the outcome of legal and regulatory proceedings related to compliance with these treaties, laws, regulations and requirements are difficult to reliably predict, may differ from Solventum’s expectations and can result in, among other things, government scrutiny; criminal, civil or administrative sanctions, including fines; limitations on the extent to which Solventum can conduct business; employee and business partner terminations due to policy violations; reputational damage; private rights of action that result in litigation exposure, including expenses and costs incurred in connection with settlement or court proceedings, for Solventum; and other liabilities. In some instances, Solventum may make self-disclosures to relevant authorities that may pursue or decline to pursue enforcement proceedings against it. In addition, detecting, investigating and resolving actual or alleged violations of these treaties, laws, regulations or requirements is expensive and could consume significant time and attention of Solventum’s senior management. Although Solventum maintains general liability insurance to mitigate monetary exposure, the amount of liability
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that may result from certain of these risks may not always be covered by, or could exceed, the applicable insurance coverage. Various factors or developments can lead Solventum to change current estimates of liabilities and related insurance receivables where applicable or make such estimates for matters previously not susceptible of reasonable estimates, such as a significant judicial ruling or judgment, a significant settlement, significant regulatory developments or changes in applicable law. Conducting internal investigations or responding to audits or investigations by government agencies could be costly and time-consuming. A future adverse ruling, settlement or unfavorable development could result in future charges that could result in a material adverse effect on its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows in any particular period. In addition, negative publicity related to the matters noted above or other matters involving Solventum may negatively impact Solventum’s reputation.
Solventum may face potential liabilities related to PFAS, which could adversely impact Solventum’s results.
3M agreed to assume, and indemnify and defend us against, certain liabilities relating to PFAS, generally including all such liabilities relating to the period prior to the Spin-Off, as well as certain liabilities relating to Solventum products that contain PFAS and that continue to be sold on the same basis by Solventum following the Spin-Off through 2025. As an independent company, Solventum is generally responsible for all PFAS-related liabilities resulting from its business, operations and activities following the Spin-Off, subject to the indemnification by 3M of certain liabilities relating to certain Solventum products sold through 2025. See "—Risks Related to the Spin-Off and Solventum’s Relationship with 3M—Following the Spin-Off, Solventum’s commercial relationships with 3M remain significant, which could adversely affect Solventum’s business, its ability to meet other obligations and the market price of its common stock."
Certain of Solventum’s products, like the products of other companies in Solventum’s industries, contain or are enabled by PFAS. 3M announced in December 2022 that it would work to discontinue the use of PFAS across its product portfolio by the end of 2025, and, as described above, 3M agreed to indemnify Solventum for certain PFAS-related product claims related to sales of products through such date. Solventum has also taken actions to meet this goal while owned by 3M, and, except as described below, Solventum intends to minimize the use of PFAS in products wherever feasible. 3M ceased supplying Solventum with PFAS-related products or components at the end of 2025.
Solventum continues to evaluate the availability of third-party components and products that do not contain PFAS in connection with working towards the goal of discontinuing the use of PFAS in its products. Depending on the availability and feasibility of such third-party components and products not containing PFAS (including the ability to obtain any required regulatory approvals), Solventum expects there will be some circumstances in which the use of PFAS-containing materials manufactured by third parties and used in certain applications in Solventum’s product portfolio. PFAS use is primarily limited to industry-standard fluoropolymers in third-party purchased components. Examples include o-rings, gaskets and seals used in filters needed for high stress process conditions, molded plastic parts used in the plastic housing of perioperative temperature management devices, medical grade membranes used in negative pressure wound therapy fluid canisters, release liners used with adhesive dressings, circuit boards used in electronic hardgoods, such as negative pressure wound therapy devices, and lithium ion batteries included in surgical clippers. Sales of these types of products will continue beyond 2025, in which case the 3M indemnification described above would not be available with respect to sales of products containing such materials after 2025. In such instances, Solventum intends to continue to evaluate the adoption of third-party products and components that do not contain PFAS to the extent such products and components become available and such adoption is feasible. Many companies in Solventum’s industries use PFAS-containing products and components, and Solventum believes that its use of such products and components is of a nature and magnitude that is broadly consistent with that of other companies in these industries.
There have been accelerating regulatory and legislative activities concerning PFAS globally, including increasingly strict restrictions on various uses of PFAS in products, as well as increased litigation relating to PFAS being filed against other parties. The potential options available to Solventum following 2025 (after which sales by Solventum of products containing or enabled by PFAS will no longer be subject to indemnification from 3M), regarding PFAS in products will involve risks, which risks may be material, and could have a material adverse effect on Solventum’s results of operations, cash flows or consolidated financial position.
Climate change and the impacts of climate change may materially adversely affect Solventum’s business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
The impacts of climate change may include physical risks (e.g., rising sea levels or frequency and severity of extreme weather conditions, including natural disasters), social and human effects (e.g., population dislocations, economic disruption, political and social instability or harm to health and well-being) and transition risks (e.g., regulatory or technology changes), shifts in market trends (e.g., customers increasingly prioritize purchasing products that are sustainably made) and other adverse effects. In addition, Solventum faces the risk of increased compliance costs due to regulation aimed at eliminating carbon intensive inputs to its products; imposing climate-related costs associated with product sterilization, disposal, or recycling; and/or imposing an economic cost on carbon such as through carbon taxes or cap-and-trade systems.
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Such impacts may cause physical damage to Solventum’s facilities as well as those of its suppliers, customers and other business partners, and disrupt Solventum’s supply chain and operations by adversely affecting its ability to procure goods or services required for the operation of its business at the quantities and levels it requires due to impairment of the availability and cost of certain products, materials, natural resources, commodities and energy.
Additionally, the impacts of climate change may further influence customer preferences and requirements, such as increased demand for products with lower environmental footprints, and for companies to produce and demonstrate progress against greenhouse gas reduction plans and targets. Failure to provide climate-friendly products or demonstrate greenhouse gas reductions could result in loss of market share.
Solventum operates in a strictly regulated industry, and compliance with laws and regulations applicable to the commercialization of Solventum’s products is costly and failure to comply may result in significant penalties.
The products Solventum develops, manufactures and commercializes are regulated in most of the markets Solventum serves. These regulations and standards govern the methods and controls used for the design, manufacture, packaging, labeling, storage, safety, sales and distribution, marketing clearance or approval, advertising and promotion, sterilization, installation, servicing, performance and effectiveness of the products Solventum sells globally. These regulations and standards apply to all facilities of Solventum’s business that conduct the activities previously described, regardless of where the facilities are located, as well as the activities performed by most of Solventum’s employees, including but not limited to, sales and marketing, research and development, regulatory affairs, quality assurance, medical, affairs and operations, both before and after a product is commercially distributed. Importantly, these regulations are promulgated and enforced by government bodies in individual countries, and differ by country and/or region and are dynamic.
Solventum commits a significant amount of resources to maintain compliance with these regulations and standards, which requires Solventum to create systems, processes and procedures that are aligned with the regulations in all markets Solventum serves. Compliance also requires Solventum to maintain knowledge of the current regulations that govern its activities. As these regulations change, Solventum must adapt its systems, processes and procedures to comply with the new regulations.
Governing bodies monitor compliance, among other ways, by conducting regularly occurring and unexpected audits of Solventum’s facilities to determine if Solventum’s systems, processes and procedures comply with the current regulations in the markets it serves. After each audit, the governing body typically provides a report of their findings describing the observations made during the audit. Sometimes these observations describe minor non-compliance issues in Solventum’s systems, processes and procedures. Often, these gaps require commensurate modifications but have no impact to Solventum’s ability to continue operations and commercialization of its products. In rare situations, the governing body may find significant or major non-compliance issues in Solventum’s systems, processes and procedures. If a governing body concludes, through these audits or otherwise, that Solventum is not in compliance with applicable laws or regulations or that any of its products are defective, ineffective or pose an unreasonable risk for patients, users or others, the governing body may require Solventum to recall a product or products, retract promotional materials and/or cease shipment of products, among other required actions; these requirements may remain in place until Solventum can demonstrate adequate compliance. Failure to demonstrate adequate modifications to Solventum’s systems, processes and procedures and continued compliance or repeat findings may result in more significant enforcement actions including but not limited to: warning letters, revocation of product approvals and licenses, injunctions, product seizure, penalties and fines, consent decrees and criminal prosecution, among other actions. These actions may have a negative impact on Solventum’s capital expenditures, earnings and competitive position.
To market its products internationally in compliance with applicable medical device and pharmaceutical regulations and standards, Solventum must obtain and maintain approvals for products and product modifications. The regulations promulgated by the governing bodies also require Solventum to submit data to demonstrate that its products meet the safety and effectiveness requirements to support the intended uses described in its labeling. This data is reviewed by the governing bodies to determine if Solventum has provided the necessary and sufficient information to demonstrate the safety and effectiveness of its products for the intended use described in its labeling. In many cases, the governing bodies request additional information to make this determination, which sometimes requires Solventum to conduct new testing or clinical trials, delaying the approval and commercialization of the product. In rare instances, the governing body may disapprove the application, prohibiting Solventum’s ability to commercialize the product in that market. In these instances, Solventum may decide to cease commercialization efforts for the product in that (or those) market(s) or it may decide to modify the product or retest the products and resubmit the data to the governing bodies. Delays to products approvals or disapproval of Solventum’s applications may have a negative impact to Solventum’s capital expenditures, earnings and competitive position. Solventum’s failure to properly maintain approvals for its products may result in its inability to continue to commercialize products in that market.
This global regulatory environment will likely continue to evolve, which could impact Solventum’s ability, or increase the time and cost, to obtain future approvals for its products. The process of obtaining regulatory clearances and/or approvals to
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market and sell Solventum’s products can be rigorous, costly and time-consuming and the clearances and/or approvals might not be granted timely or result in limitations on the indicated uses of products.
Regulatory authorities, including the FDA, also strictly regulate the indications for use and associated promotional safety and effectiveness claims that may be made about approved or cleared products. If regulatory authorities determine that Solventum has promoted or marketed a product for off-label use, including through external-facing materials, oral statements or physician training, Solventum could be subject to penalties, fines, injunctions, criminal prosecution or other penalties.
Solventum is subject to laws and regulations governing government contracts, public procurement and government reimbursements in many jurisdictions, as to which the failure to comply could adversely affect Solventum’s business.
Solventum sells its products to government entities throughout the world and will be directly or indirectly subject to government policies governing reimbursement for healthcare procedures and services and various statutes and regulations in a variety of jurisdictions that apply to companies doing business with the government. The laws governing government contracts can differ from the laws governing private contracts and government contracts may contain terms and conditions that are not applicable to private contracts or that expose Solventum to higher levels of risk and potential liability than non-government contracts. Similarly, most jurisdictions have public procurement laws and reimbursement policies that set out rules and regulations for purchases and reimbursements by governmental entities. Solventum’s failure to comply with these laws could result in contract terminations, suspension or debarment from contracting with these entities, civil fines and damages, criminal prosecution and possible exclusion from participation in federal healthcare programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, as well as possible recoupment of any overpayments related to such violations. These jurisdictions may modify their laws, policies, rules or regulations, or impose new requirements that adversely affect Solventum’s business.
Additionally, some governmental entities, including the U.S. federal government, can terminate contracts for their convenience or for Solventum’s default. These governmental entities may also be subject to continued legislative funding approval. Early termination for convenience of one or more of Solventum’s contracts, or a change in a government customer’s funding levels, could impact Solventum’s expected revenues. Early termination for default of one or more of Solventum’s contracts could subject it to penalties and damages resulting from the default, including costs for the governmental entity to reprocure the items under contract, in addition to other penalties previously listed.
Solventum will also be subject to government audits, investigations and oversight proceedings. Efforts to ensure its business arrangements comply with applicable laws will involve substantial costs. If any actions by governmental or enforcement authorities are instituted against Solventum, defense can be costly, time-consuming and may require significant financial and personnel resources. If Solventum is not successful in defending itself or asserting its rights, those actions could have a significant impact on its business, including the imposition of civil, criminal and administrative penalties, damages, disgorgement, monetary fines, individual imprisonment, possible exclusion from participation in certain government healthcare programs (including Medicare and Medicaid in the U.S.), contractual damages, reputational harm, diminished profits and future earnings, and curtailment or restructuring of its operations. In addition, any of Solventum’s government contracts could be terminated or Solventum could be suspended or debarred from all government contract work.
Solventum is exposed to risks associated with product liability claims, including existing claims and claims resulting from the actions or inactions of its customers or third parties, and product recalls or safety alerts that are outside of its control.
Solventum is exposed to potential product liability risks that are inherent in the design, manufacture and marketing of medical technologies. Customers or their patients have brought and likely will continue to bring product liability claims if Solventum’s products fail, or allegedly fail, to perform as expected or show a failure rate that is higher than expected, or the use of Solventum’s products results, or is alleged to result, in bodily injury, death or property damage. Even if these or similar claims are without merit, they can result in costly and time-consuming litigation. Solventum may also be exposed to claims or regulatory action if its products do not conform or are alleged not to conform to applicable product or design specifications, labeling or manufacturing requirements. Product and other liability actions, claims or injunctions are subject to significant uncertainty and may be expensive, time-consuming and disruptive to Solventum’s operations. For these and other reasons, Solventum may choose to settle product liability claims and other liability actions, regardless of their actual merit. If any such action or injunction were finally determined adversely to Solventum, such decision could result in significant damages and reputational harm, including the possibility of punitive damages, and Solventum’s financial position could be adversely affected. Adverse publicity could result in additional regulation of Solventum’s products or the healthcare industry in general, delay regulatory approval of new products, cause reputational harm and adversely affect Solventum’s ability to promote, manufacture and sell its products, even if the claims against Solventum are later shown to be unfounded or unsubstantiated.
In addition, manufacturing or design defects, component failures, unapproved or improper use of Solventum’s products, or inadequate disclosure of risks or other information relating to the use of Solventum’s products could lead to injury or other serious adverse events. Such events could lead to recalls or safety alerts relating to Solventum’s products (either voluntary or as required by the FDA or similar governmental authorities in other countries), and could result, in certain cases, in the removal of
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a product from the market. A recall could result in significant costs and lost sales and customers, enforcement actions and/or investigations by state and federal governments or other enforcement bodies, as well as negative publicity and damage to Solventum’s reputation that could reduce future demand for its products.
Information Technology and Intellectual Property Risks
Solventum employs information technology systems to support its business and collect, store and use proprietary and confidential information. Security and data breaches, cyberattacks and other cybersecurity incidents involving Solventum’s information technology systems and infrastructure could disrupt or interfere with Solventum’s operations; result in the compromise and misappropriation of proprietary and confidential information belonging to Solventum or its customers, suppliers and employees; and expose Solventum to numerous expenses, liabilities and other negative consequences, including violations of applicable laws, any or all of which could adversely impact Solventum’s business, reputation and results of operations.
In the ordinary course of business, Solventum relies on centralized and local information technology networks and systems, some of which are provided, hosted or managed by vendors and other third parties, to process, transmit and store electronic information, and to manage or support a variety of businesses. That technology includes systems that could be used to process, transmit and store sensitive information, including personal information, protected health information, employee data, financial information, intellectual property, clinical data and sales and marketing data. Further, Solventum expects that the breadth and complexity of its information technology networks and systems will increase as it expands its product and service offerings to utilize AI, machine learning, and other emerging technologies. Third parties and threat actors, including organized criminals, nation-state or nation-state supported actors who are increasingly well-resourced, regularly attempt to gain unauthorized access to the information technology networks and infrastructure, data and other information used by or belonging to Solventum, and many such attempts are increasing in their frequency, sophistication and intensity and are not recognized until launched against a target. In addition, AI is increasing in use among such third parties and threat actors which may lead to more sophisticated and targeted phishing attempts, cyberattacks, phishing attempts, or otherwise enhance the social engineering capabilities of such parties. Despite Solventum’s cybersecurity and business continuity measures (including employee and third-party training, monitoring of networks and systems, patching, maintenance and backup of systems and data), its information technology networks and infrastructure are still potentially susceptible to attack, compromise, damage, disruption or shutdown, including as a result of the exploitation of known or unknown hardware or software vulnerabilities in its systems, the introduction of computer viruses or ransomware, service or cloud provider disruptions or security breaches, phishing attempts, employee error or malfeasance, power outages, telecommunication or utility failures, systems failures, natural disasters or other catastrophic events. Furthermore, Solventum relies on third-party vendors to supply and/or support certain aspects of its information technology systems and resulting products. These third-party systems could also become vulnerable to cyber-attack, malicious intrusions, breakdowns, interference or other significant disruptions, and may contain defects in design or manufacture or other problems that could result in system disruption or compromise the information security of Solventum’s own systems. Solventum’s increased adoption of remote working also introduces additional threats and risk of disruptions to its information technology networks and infrastructure. Geopolitical conflict may increase cybersecurity risks on a global basis.
As noted elsewhere in these Risk Factors, Solventum is using AI, machine learning, cloud, edge, and other emerging technologies in its products and services. Use of these technology solutions could result in Solventum’s increased vulnerability to cyber-attack, malicious intrusions, breakdowns, interference or other significant disruptions, exposure to penalties from non-compliance with emerging regulations, and may result in defects in design or manufacture or other problems that could result in system disruption or compromise the information security of Solventum’s other systems.
Despite Solventum’s cybersecurity measures, it is possible for security vulnerabilities or a cyberattack to remain undetected for an extended time period, up to and including several years, and the prioritization of decisions with respect to security measures and remediation of known vulnerabilities that Solventum and the vendors and other third parties upon which Solventum relies may prove inadequate to protect against attacks. While Solventum may experience future cyberattacks on and disruptions of its information technology systems and infrastructure, Solventum is not aware of any such incidents to date having had a material impact.
If Solventum’s information technology systems, products or services or sensitive data are compromised, there are many consequences that could result including, but not limited to, patients or employees being exposed to financial or medical identity theft or suffering a loss of product functionality; losing existing customers or having difficulty attracting new customers; experiencing difficulty preventing, detecting and controlling fraud; being exposed to the loss or misuse of confidential information; having disputes with customers, physicians and other healthcare professionals; experiencing increases in operating expenses or an impairment in its ability to conduct its operations; incurring expenses or losing revenues as a result of a data privacy breach, product failure, information technology outages or disruptions; voluntary or forced recalls or modifications to Solventum’s products; or suffering other adverse consequences including time-consuming and expensive lawsuits or other legal action and damage to Solventum’s reputation.
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Solventum is subject to numerous international, federal and state privacy and security laws. Security and data breaches, cyberattacks and other cybersecurity incidents involving data protected by such laws, such as patient medical records and other health information, could subject Solventum to onerous governmental and regulatory investigations, fines and remediation actions, in addition to private litigation by affected individuals.
Solventum may be unable to obtain, maintain, protect or effectively enforce its intellectual property rights.
Solventum is substantially dependent on patent and other proprietary rights and relies on a combination of patents, trademarks, tradenames, copyrights, trade secrets and agreements (such as employee, non-disclosure and non-competition agreements) to protect its business and proprietary intellectual property. However, Solventum cannot assure that its means of obtaining, maintaining and enforcing its intellectual property rights will be adequate to maintain a competitive advantage.
Intellectual property laws differ in various jurisdictions in which Solventum operates and are subject to change at any time, which could further restrict Solventum’s ability to protect its intellectual property and proprietary rights. In particular, a portion of Solventum’s revenues is derived from jurisdictions where adequately protecting intellectual property rights may prove more challenging or impossible. In addition, the laws of many jurisdictions may not provide an adequate forum to effectively address situations where Solventum’s intellectual property rights have been compromised.
Protecting against the unauthorized use of proprietary technology is difficult and expensive and Solventum may need to litigate with third parties to enforce or defend patents issued to it or to determine the enforceability and validity of its proprietary rights or those of others. Determining whether an offering infringes, misappropriates or otherwise violates a third party’s intellectual property rights involves complex legal and factual issues, and the outcome of this type of litigation is often uncertain and inconsistent.
At any given time, Solventum may be involved as either plaintiff or defendant in a number of patent infringement actions, the outcomes of which may not be known for prolonged periods of time. While it is not possible to predict the outcome of patent and other intellectual property litigation, such litigation could result in Solventum’s payment of significant monetary damages and/or royalty payments, negatively impact Solventum’s ability to sell current or future products, or prohibit it from enforcing its patent and proprietary rights against others, which could result in a material adverse effect on its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows. Regardless of the merits or outcome, the resolution of any intellectual property dispute could require significant financial and management resources.
Solventum may not receive protection for pending or future applications relating to intellectual property rights owned by or licensed to it and the claims allowed under any issued intellectual property rights may not be sufficiently broad to protect Solventum’s products, services, solutions and any associated trademarks. Products sold by Solventum’s competitors may infringe, misappropriate or otherwise violate intellectual property rights owned or licensed by Solventum and such infringement, misappropriation or violation may be undetected by Solventum. In addition, as Solventum’s patents will expire in the normal course. Solventum’s inability to protect its intellectual property could result in a material adverse effect on its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
Additionally, Solventum licenses or will license certain intellectual property owned by 3M. As 3M is the owner of such intellectual property, Solventum will need to engage with 3M regarding the enforcement of such intellectual property rights. To the extent 3M and Solventum cannot align on prosecuting infringement of the intellectual property licensed to Solventum, such intellectual property may not be protected and continued infringement of such intellectual property could result in a material adverse effect on Solventum’s business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
Tax Matters Risks
Changes in tax rates, laws or regulations could adversely impact Solventum’s financial results.
Solventum’s business is subject to tax-related external conditions, such as tax rates, laws and regulations in the U.S. and foreign jurisdictions. Changes in tax rates, laws or regulations, including further developments arising from tax reform legislation or regulation in the U.S. or foreign jurisdictions, could impact Solventum’s financial statements.
In particular, Solventum could be negatively impacted by the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting 2.0 initiative ("BEPS 2.0") by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development ("OECD") which, if enacted by OECD member countries, would likely impact the amount of tax that multinationals, such as Solventum, pay in the future.
Due to the uncertainty of any tax changes and other tax-related factors at this time, it is currently not possible to assess the ultimate impact these actions may have on Solventum’s financial statements. Solventum intends to monitor BEPS 2.0 and other
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tax-related developments in the U.S. and foreign jurisdictions, including rule changes and implementation timing, to evaluate the impact BEPS 2.0 and other tax legislation or regulation may have on Solventum’s financial results.
Solventum’s tax burden could increase as a result of ongoing or future tax audits and inquiries.
Solventum is subject to periodic tax audits and inquiries by tax authorities. Tax authorities may disagree with Solventum’s interpretation of applicable tax laws and regulations, which could result in examination from taxing authorities and additional taxes. Solventum regularly assesses the likely outcomes of these tax audits in order to determine the appropriateness of Solventum’s tax provision. However, Solventum may not accurately predict the outcomes of these tax audits and, as a result, the ultimate outcome of any of these examinations could have a retroactive or prospective impact on Solventum’s overall tax burden.
Solventum could be negatively impacted by future changes in the allocation of income to each of the income tax jurisdictions in which Solventum operates.
Solventum operates in multiple income tax jurisdictions both in the U.S. and internationally. Solventum has adopted transfer pricing policies that determine how income is allocated to each of the income tax jurisdictions in which Solventum operates, based on current interpretations of complex income tax regulations. The allocation of Solventum’s income could be impacted by different factors including tax law changes, tax audits, underlying business changes, organizational changes, or operating model changes, which could result in increases to Solventum’s overall tax burden.
Solventum may benefit from various global tax incentives intended to encourage investment or employment; if Solventum’s incentives are not renewed or Solventum cannot or does not wish to satisfy all or part of the tax incentive conditions, Solventum may lose the tax incentives and could be required to refund tax incentives previously realized.
Solventum benefits or may benefit in the future from various global tax incentives intended to encourage investment or employment. If Solventum’s incentives are not renewed or Solventum cannot or does not wish to satisfy all or part of the tax incentive conditions, Solventum may lose the tax incentives and could be required to refund tax incentives previously realized or granted. As a result, Solventum’s tax burden could be higher than it would have been had Solventum maintained the benefits of the tax incentives.
Employee Matters Risks
If Solventum is unable to attract or retain key personnel and qualified employees, or maintain relations with its employees, unions and other employee representatives, Solventum’s business would be adversely affected.
There is substantial competition for key personnel, senior management, research and development personnel, and qualified employees in the healthcare industry and Solventum may face increased competition for such a highly qualified scientific, technical, clinical and management workforce in a highly competitive environment. Solventum’s ability to recruit and retain such talent will depend on a number of factors, including how its compensation, benefits, work location and work environment compare with those offered by its competitors and other local employers. There can be no assurance that Solventum will be successful in retaining existing personnel or recruiting new personnel.
The loss of one or more key employees, inability to attract or develop additional qualified employees, any delay in hiring key personnel, any deterioration of the relationships with its employees, or any material work stoppage, strike, or similar action could result in a material adverse effect on its business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.
Risks Related to Solventum Common Stock
A significant number of shares of Solventum common stock may be sold by 3M or others, which may cause the Solventum stock price to decline.
Any sales of substantial amounts of Solventum common stock in the public market or the perception that such sales might occur may cause the market price of Solventum common stock to decline. Shares distributed to 3M shareholders in the separation are generally freely tradeable without restriction or further registration under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act"), except for shares owned by Solventum’s "affiliates," as that term is defined in Rule 405 under the Securities Act. Accordingly, 3M shareholders may sell large amounts of Solventum common stock in the open market, and Solventum is unable to predict whether and when such sales would occur.
3M holds 14.8% of Solventum’s outstanding common stock. Based solely on statements as part of the Spin-Off, the Company believes 3M plans to dispose of all of the Solventum common stock that it retains after the Spin-Off through one or more sales of such shares (not later than five years after the Spin-Off). Solventum agreed that, upon the request of 3M and
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pursuant to the terms of the stockholder’s and registration rights agreement, it will use its reasonable best efforts to effect a registration under applicable federal and state securities laws of any shares of Solventum’s common stock retained by 3M to the extent that 3M wishes to sell the shares of our common stock it retained in a registered offering. 3M’s shares are restricted securities within the meaning of Rule 144 under the Securities Act and are eligible for resale by 3M in the public market without registration subject to volume, manner of sale and holding period limitations under Rule 144 under the Securities Act. Any sales of substantial amounts of Solventum common stock in the public market by 3M or the perception that such sales might occur, in connection with the Spin-Off or otherwise, may cause the market price of Solventum common stock to decline.
Because Solventum does not currently intend to pay any dividends on its common stock, holders of its common stock must rely on stock appreciation for any return on their investment. Solventum cannot guarantee the timing, declaration, amount or payment of dividends on its common stock.
Solventum does not currently anticipate paying a regular dividend on its common stock in the near future. The timing, declaration, amount and payment of any future dividend will be within the discretion of Solventum’s Board of Directors and will depend upon many factors, including Solventum’s financial condition, earnings, capital requirements of its operating subsidiaries, covenants associated with certain of Solventum’s debt service obligations, legal requirements, regulatory constraints, industry practice, ability to access capital markets, and other factors deemed relevant by Solventum’s Board of Directors. Moreover, if Solventum determines to pay any dividend in the future, there can be no assurance that it will continue to pay such dividends or the amount of such dividends.
Anti-takeover provisions could enable Solventum’s Board of Directors to resist a takeover attempt by a third party and limit the power of its shareholders.
Solventum’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws contain, and Delaware law contains, provisions that are intended to deter coercive takeover practices and inadequate takeover bids by making such practices or bids unacceptably expensive to the bidder and to encourage prospective acquirers to negotiate with Solventum’s Board of Directors rather than to attempt a hostile takeover. These provisions include, among others:
• until the annual stockholder meeting in 2028, Solventum’s Board of Directors will be divided into classes, which could have the effect of making the replacement of incumbent directors more time consuming and difficult;
• as long as Solventum’s Board of Directors is classified, Solventum directors can be removed by stockholders only for cause;
• Solventum’s Board of Directors have the sole authority to fix the size of Solventum’s Board of Directors;
• Solventum’s Board of Directors have the authority to amend and repeal Solventum’s amended and restated bylaws without a stockholder vote;
• Solventum’s shareholders do not have a right to call a special meeting or act by written consent;
• Solventum’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws do not provide for cumulative voting in the election of directors;
• Solventum’s Board of Directors have the power to designate and issue, without any further vote or action by the Solventum shareholders, shares of preferred stock from time to time in one or more series;
• Solventum’s shareholders have to follow certain procedures and notice requirements in order to present certain proposals or nominate directors for election at shareholder meetings; and
• Solventum’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation contains exclusive forum provisions (as described in more detail in the following risk factor).
In addition, Solventum is subject to Section 203 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, which could have the effect of delaying or preventing a change of control that you may favor. Section 203 provides that, subject to limited exceptions, persons that acquire, or are affiliated with persons that acquire, more than 15% of the outstanding voting stock of a Delaware corporation may not engage in a business combination with that corporation, including by merger, consolidation or acquisitions of additional shares, for a three-year period following the date on which that person or any of its affiliates becomes the holder of more than 15% of the corporation’s outstanding voting stock.
Solventum believes these provisions will protect Solventum shareholders from coercive or otherwise unfair takeover tactics by requiring potential acquirers to negotiate with Solventum’s Board of Directors and by providing Solventum’s Board of Directors with more time to assess any acquisition proposal. These provisions are not intended to make Solventum immune from takeovers; however, these provisions will apply even if the offer may be considered beneficial by some shareholders and could delay or prevent an acquisition that Solventum’s Board of Directors determines is not in the best interests of Solventum and its shareholders. These provisions may also prevent or discourage attempts to remove and replace incumbent directors.
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In addition, an acquisition or further issuance of Solventum stock could trigger the application of Section 355(e) of the Code, causing the Spin-Off to be taxable to 3M. Under the Tax Matters Agreement, Solventum would be required to indemnify 3M for the resulting tax, and this indemnity obligation might discourage, delay or prevent a change of control that Solventum shareholders may consider favorable.
Language change vs prior 10-K
MD&A (Item 7) - words with the biggest YoY frequency increase- lost+4
- loss+4
- prevention+4
- divestiture+3
- closing+3
- gain+5
- effective+4
- positively+4
- enable+2
- improving+2
MD&A (Item 7)
7,048 words
Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
The following discussion and analysis of our financial condition and results of operations should be read in conjunction with the Company’s consolidated financial statements and corresponding notes elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. The following discussion and analysis provides information management believes to be relevant to understanding the financial condition and results of operations of Solventum for the years ended December 31, 2025 and 2024. Discussion, analysis and comparisons of the year ended December 31, 2023 that are not included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K can be found in "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" in the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 filed on February 28, 2025. This discussion contains forward-looking statements that are based upon current expectations and are subject to uncertainty and changes in circumstances. Our actual results could differ materially from the results contemplated by these forward-looking statements due to a number of factors, including those discussed below and elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, particularly in "Risk Factors." See "Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements."
All amounts discussed are in millions of U.S. dollars, unless otherwise indicated. Amounts reported within this Annual Report are rounded to the nearest million and the sum of the components may not equal the total amount reported due to rounding. Additionally, certain columns and rows within tables may not sum due to rounding.
Unless the context otherwise requires, references to "Solventum" and the "Company" refer to (i) 3M’s Health Care Business prior to the Spin-Off as a carve-out business of 3M and (ii) Solventum Corporation and its subsidiaries following the Spin-Off.
Transition to Standalone Company
Solventum utilized allocations and carve-out methodologies through the date of the Spin-Off to prepare combined financial statements. The consolidated financial statements herein for periods prior to the Spin-Off may not be indicative of the Company’s future performance, do not necessarily include the actual expenses that would have been incurred, and may not reflect our results of operations, financial position, and cash flows had we been a separate, standalone company during the historical periods presented.
In particular, Solventum benefited from 3M’s long operating history, reputation and well-known brand. Following the separation, Solventum is operating under its own brand, and accordingly may be negatively impacted due to the loss of benefits conferred by 3M’s brand recognition and reputation. In addition, the debt obligations incurred by Solventum in connection with the separation will adversely affect its profitability and could affect its ability to use its cash flow for investing in the business, strategic transactions, including mergers and acquisitions, and returning capital. See Note 1, "Significant Accounting Policies - Organization and Description of Business and Basis of Presentation " to the consolidated financial statements and Part 1, Item 1A "Risk Factors" for additional information.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations ("MD&A") is designed to provide a reader of Solventum’s financial statements with a narrative from the perspective of management. Solventum’s MD&A is presented in the following sections:
• Overview
• Results of Operations
• Performance by Business Segment
• Geographic Area Supplemental Information
• Critical Accounting Estimates
• New Accounting Pronouncements
• Financial Condition and Liquidity
• Financial Instruments
Overview
Solventum is a leading global healthcare company developing, manufacturing, and commercializing a broad portfolio of solutions that leverages deep material science, data science, and digital capabilities to address critical customer and patient needs. We constantly seek to enable the improvement of standards of care and move healthcare forward with innovation powered by insights, clinical intelligence, technology, and manufacturing expertise. Our 70+ year history of discovering and innovating advanced solutions has helped us solve our customers’ toughest challenges and become a trusted partner.
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Operating Segments and Sales Change Information
Solventum manages its operations in three reportable business segments: MedSurg, Dental Solutions, and Health Information Systems. On February 25, 2025, the Company entered into a Transaction Agreement to sell its Purification and Filtration business to Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. ("Buyer"). On June 25, 2025, the Company and Buyer entered into an Amended and Restated Transaction Agreement to exclude the Company’s drinking water filtration business (the "Water Business") from the scope of the Purification and Filtration business to be acquired by Buyer (such acquired business, the "Business"). On September 1, 2025, Solventum completed the sale of the Business to the Buyer in accordance with the terms of the Agreement. The cash consideration paid to Solventum at closing was approximately $4 billion. Refer to Note 3, "Acquisitions and Divestitures" for additional information.
References are made to organic sales change, which is defined as the change in net sales, absent the separate impacts on sales from foreign currency translation and acquisitions, net of divestitures. Constant currency, as reflected in the tables below, is defined as the change in net sales absent the impact on sales from foreign currency translation. Other, as comprised in the tables below, includes acquisition and divestiture-related activities. Acquisitions include sales from Acera that was acquired in December 2025, non-health care related supply agreements that conveyed from 3M to the Company at Spin-Off and sales from new supply agreements with 3M that commenced at Spin-Off. Divestiture impacts include lost sales from the Company’s Purification and Filtration business that was sold in September 2025, certain health care businesses retained by 3M India in connection with the Spin-Off, as well as impacts from other immaterial divested businesses. Solventum believes this information is useful to investors and management in understanding ongoing operations and in analysis of ongoing operating trends.
Healthcare Market Drivers
Changing demographics
An aging population, the prevalence and incidence rates of chronic conditions, and a rising middle class are driving the demand for improved access to quality care.
Optimizing workflows to improve care quality and operational efficiency
Of the $5.3 trillion in annual U.S. healthcare spending, an estimated 25% represents administrative costs that do not contribute to health outcomes and which we believe to be potentially wasteful based on overall spending data reported by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in the NHE Fact Sheet (available on CMS.gov as of January 14, 2026) and administrative spending estimates published in JAMA (Shrank et. al., Waste in the US Health Care System: Estimated Costs and Potential for Savings , published October 7, 2019). As healthcare providers and payers face increasing reimbursement constraints and evolving payment models, the need to reduce avoidable administrative costs has become more acute. Our solutions are designed to optimize workflows, enabling clinicians to be more productive by spending less time on administrative tasks and more time focused on improving the patient care experience. Our solutions also support reducing infections and complications that lead to an increase in avoidable administrative and clinical costs.
Increasing digital technology and data-driven care delivery
Both clinicians and patients have shifted their preferences towards utilizing digitally enabled solutions to provide data-driven care. Whether it is interactions with patients through a digital interface or the use of data, analytics, and artificial intelligence (AI) to support informed health decisions, the need for digital tools in the healthcare industry has grown over time. Our solutions integrate digital processes, AI-enabled capabilities and data in multiple ways and across different parts of the healthcare industry and are intended to enable efficient and effective delivery of care.
Shifting care from the hospital to lower-cost care sites
Although hospitals continue to be a core site for delivery of care, patients are increasingly looking for flexibility of care when and where they need it. Alternative care sites, such as ambulatory surgery centers, wound care clinics, retail pharmacies, and the home, are more affordable and accessible to patients. We believe our solutions enable clinicians to extend their care delivery from acute to ambulatory to home settings without compromising the quality of care and while reducing the total cost of care.
Increasing demand for personalized care
Engaging patients in a personalized way allows clinicians to provide a better care experience while improving outcomes and reducing costs. This spans several areas of healthcare, including customized orthodontic aligner treatments, and follow-up wound care at home. We believe our solutions deliver personalized care options in a way that is patient-centric, scalable, and cost-effective.
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Our ability to take advantage of these market opportunities will be subject to various risks, including general economic, business and market dynamic risks, the impact of our separation from 3M; and the cost to service the debt we incurred in connection with the separation. See Part I, Item 1A, "Risk Factors" in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, for a discussion of these risks, which you should consider carefully.
Sales and operating income by business segment:
The following tables contain sales and operating results by business segment for all periods presented. Refer to the section entitled "—Performance by Business Segment" below for discussion of sales change and operating performance. Refer to Note 18 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information on the Company's business segments.
Segment and Total Company Net Sales
Year ended December 31,
(Millions)
Reported Growth
Currency Impact
Constant Currency
Other
Organic Growth
Segment Sales
Advanced Wound Care
Infection Prevention and Surgical Solutions
MedSurg
Dental Solutions
Health Information Systems
Purification and Filtration
All Other
Total Company
Year ended December 31,
(Millions)
Reported Growth
Currency Impact
Constant Currency
Other
Organic Growth
Segment Sales
Advanced Wound Care
Infection Prevention and Surgical Solutions
MedSurg
Dental Solutions
Health Information Systems
Purification and Filtration
All Other
Total Company
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Segment and Total Company Operating Income
Year ended December 31,
(Millions)
2025 vs 2024 change
Segment Operating Income
MedSurg
Dental Solutions
Health Information Systems
Purification and Filtration
All Other
Corporate and Unallocated
Total Company
Year ended December 31,
(Millions)
2024 vs 2023 change
Segment Operating Income
MedSurg
Dental Solutions
Health Information Systems
Purification and Filtration
All Other
Corporate and Unallocated
Total Company
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Net Sales by Geographic Area
While the Company manages its businesses globally and believes its business segment results are the most relevant measure of performance, the Company also utilizes geographic area data as a secondary performance measure. Sales are generally reported within the geographic area based on the location of the customer taking possession of the products or in which services are rendered. Additional geographic financial information related to the Company’s operations is provided in Note 18 in the accompanying consolidated financial statements.
Percent change information compares year ended December 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024 with the same periods for the prior year, unless otherwise indicated.
Year ended December 31, 2025
(Millions)
United States
International
Worldwide
Net sales
% of worldwide sales
Increase/(decrease)
Organic growth
Other
Constant Currency
Currency Impact
Reported Growth
Year ended December 31, 2024
(Millions)
United States
International
Worldwide
Net sales
% of worldwide sales
Increase/(decrease)
Organic growth
Other
Constant Currency
Currency Impact
Reported Growth
Additional information beyond what is included in the preceding table is as follows:
Year ended 2025 results
• In the United States geographic area, both total sales and organic sales increased. Organic growth was led by MedSurg and Health Information Systems. Other is comprised of lost sales due to the divestiture of the Purification and Filtration business in September 2025.
• In the International geographic area, total sales declined while organic sales increased. Organic growth was led by MedSurg and Dental Solutions. Other is comprised of lost sales due to the divestiture of the Purification and Filtration business in September 2025.
Year ended 2024 results
• In the United States geographic area, both total sales and organic sales increased. Organic growth was led by MedSurg and Health Information Systems.
• In the International geographic area, total sales decreased while organic sales increased. Organic growth was led by MedSurg and Purification and Filtration.
Managing currency risks
Prior to April 1, 2024, Solventum indirectly participated in 3M’s centrally managed hedging program. Starting in the second quarter of 2024, Solventum established its own hedging program. Refer to Note 11 to the consolidated financial statements for additional details.
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Foreign currency had a positive worldwide impact on sales for the year ended December 31, 2025 compared to 2024. Solventum estimates that year-on-year foreign currency transaction effects, including hedging impacts, increased pre-tax income by approximately $6 million in 2025.
The stronger U.S. dollar had a negative worldwide impact on sales for the year ended December 31, 2024 compared to 2023. Solventum estimates that year-on-year foreign currency transaction effects, including hedging impacts, decreased pre-tax income by approximately $23 million in 2024.
Financial condition
Refer to the section entitled "—Financial Condition and Liquidity" below for a discussion of items impacting cash flows.
Results of Operations
Net Sales
Refer to the preceding "—Overview" section and the "—Performance by Business Segment" section later in MD&A for discussion of sales change.
Costs of Sales
Year ended Year ended December 31,
(Percent of corresponding net sales)
Cost of product
Cost of software and rentals
Costs of Product
Costs of product includes manufacturing, engineering and logistics costs. The Company operates a global supply chain and sourcing organization, including product sourced under master supply and transition manufacturing agreements with 3M. As a result, the Company is impacted by changes in the global regulatory and economic environment, including tariffs. The evolving regulatory and economic environment may impact our cost or ability to source products. To the extent possible the Company takes actions to offset these costs or identify alternative sources of supply.
Costs of product, measured as a percent of sales of product, increased in 2025 when compared to 2024. The increase was driven by the impact of new tariffs of approximately $55 million, the full year impact from inventory sourced under the master supply and transition manufacturing agreements with 3M, and higher logistics costs, partially offset by benefits from cost savings programs.
Costs of product, measured as a percent of sales of product, increased in 2024 when compared to 2023. The increase was driven by increased costs due to the impact of higher costs on inventory sourced under the master supply and transition manufacturing agreements with 3M and due to the cost of other transition support provided by 3M that have been incurred since Spin-Off.
Costs of Software and Rentals
Costs of software and rentals includes compensation-related costs associated with installation, training and maintenance for our software products, and depreciation, maintenance and refurbishment costs and logistics costs related to our hardware rental units.
Costs of software and rentals, measured as a percent of sales of software and rentals, decreased in 2025 as compared to 2024. The decrease was due to the impact of lower external license fees, price and sales mix, primarily driven by higher sales of our revenue cycle management solution.
Costs of software and rentals, measured as a percent of sales of software and rentals, increased in 2024 as compared to 2023. This increase was driven by higher compensation costs.
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Operating Expenses
Year ended December 31,
(Percent of total net sales)
Selling, general and administrative (SG&A)
Research and development (R&D)
Gain on sale of business
Operating Income
Selling, General and Administrative
SG&A, measured as a percent of total net sales, increased in 2025 when compared to 2024. The increase was driven by costs incurred to separate the Purification and Filtration business, higher compensation, including equity-based awards, and higher costs associated with both initial stand-up and ongoing operations to support a standalone company.
SG&A, measured as a percent of total net sales, increased in 2024 when compared to 2023. The increase was driven by higher compensation, including equity-based awards, and higher costs associated with both initial stand-up and ongoing operations to support a standalone company.
Research and Development
R&D, measured as a percent of total net sales, decreased slightly in 2025 when compared to 2024 primarily due to reimbursement of a portion of our technical development costs from 3M related to our supply chain separation.
R&D, measured as a percent of total net sales, increased slightly in 2024 when compared to 2023 due to initial stand-up costs. The Company continues to prioritize investment initiatives.
Gain on Sale of Business
The gain on sale of business primarily relates to the Company's completed sale of the Purification and Filtration business in the third quarter of 2025, which resulted in a net gain of $1.5 billion for 2025.
Interest Expense, Net, Loss on Debt Extinguishment, Net, and Other Expense (Income), Net
Year ended December 31,
(Millions)
Interest expense, net
Loss on debt extinguishment, net
Other expense (income), net
Interest expense, net includes interest accrued on debt obligations, offset by interest income from cash and marketable securities. Interest expense, net decreased in 2025 as compared to 2024 due to lower interest expense as a result of lower debt outstanding. Interest expense, net increased in 2024 as compared to 2023 due to interest incurred on the February 2024 issuance of senior notes and March 2024 draw on the senior term loan credit facilities. Refer to Note 9 to the consolidated financial statements for more information. This increase was partially offset by interest earned from cash and marketable securities held during the period.
Loss on debt extinguishment, net includes charges incurred in the third quarter of 2025 from the differential between carrying value and the amount paid to acquire the tendered Senior Notes and related expenses. Refer to Note 9 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information. These charges were partially offset by the gain from interest rate swaps entered into and subsequently settled in connection with the sale of the Purification and Filtration business. Refer to Note 11 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information.
Other expense (income), net includes the non-service component of periodic pension cost, investment gains and losses, and foreign currency transaction gain (loss). Other expense (income), net decreased in 2025 as compared to 2024 primarily due to charges associated with the substantial liquidation of foreign operations completed as part of our separation from 3M. Other expense (income), net increased in 2024 as compared to 2023 resulting from charges associated with the substantial liquidation of foreign operations completed as part of our separation from 3M in addition to foreign currency impacts and investment losses.
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Provision (benefit) for Income Taxes:
Year ended December 31,
(Percent of pre-tax income/loss)
Effective tax rate
The change in the effective tax rate in 2025 when compared to 2024 was primarily driven by impacts associated with the sale of the Purification and Filtration business. Refer to Note 8 to the consolidated financial statements for additional detail on the Company's effective tax rate.
Performance by Business Segment
Note 18 to the consolidated financial statements provides an overview of Solventum’s reportable business segments. Upon closing the sale of our Purification and Filtration business, we primarily manage our operations in three business segments: MedSurg, Dental Solutions, and Health Information Systems. Our Chief Operating Decision Maker evaluates segment operating performance using net sales and business segment operating income.
All Other
All Other primarily consists of the Water Business that was retained after the sale of the Purification and Filtration Business. All Other also includes sales and cost of sales related to our agreements to supply 3M and other supply agreements assumed by the Company at Spin-Off related to legacy 3M businesses, which were historically included within Corporate and Unallocated.
Corporate and Unallocated
Certain items are maintained at the corporate level and not allocated to the segments ("Corporate and Unallocated"). Corporate and Unallocated primarily includes amortization of acquired intangible assets, restructuring and related charges, timing related benefits or costs associated with capitalized manufacturing variances, charges and recoveries related to certain litigation, transaction and employee retention costs related to the acquisition of Acera, and gains on sale of businesses. In addition, Corporate and Unallocated includes Spin-Off and separation related costs. Spin-Off and separation related costs include any costs incurred as part of our separation from 3M and costs to setup operations as a standalone company, including system implementations, manufacturing relocations, legal entity separations, certain equity awards granted as part of the Spin-Off, profit mark-ups on transition service arrangements with 3M and other one-time costs. Corporate and Unallocated also includes income and costs related to transition service agreements entered into in connection with the sale of the Purification and Filtration business.
Because Corporate and Unallocated includes a variety of miscellaneous items, it is subject to fluctuation on a quarterly and annual basis.
Operating Business Segments
Information related to the Company’s segments is presented in the tables that follow with additional context in the corresponding narrative below the tables.
MedSurg (57.9% of consolidated sales for the year ended December 31, 2025 )
Year ended December 31,
(Millions)
Net sales
Increase/(decrease)
Organic growth
Other
Constant currency
Currency impact
Reported growth
Business segment operating income (millions)
Percent change
Percent of sales
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Year 2025 results:
Sales in MedSurg were up 3.9%:
• Organic growth was driven by volumes in our Infection Prevention and Surgical Solutions business, led by I.V. site management. Growth within our Advanced Wound Care business was led by volume growth in negative pressure wound therapy.
• Other primarily includes lost sales from certain health care businesses retained by 3M India in connection with the Spin-Off.
• Foreign currency translation positively impacted sales by 0.6%.
Business segment operating income margin decreased when compared to the same period last year. The decrease was primarily driven by the impact of higher product costs due to tariffs, logistics and a full year of supply agreement mark-ups from 3M.
Year 2024 results:
Sales in MedSurg were up 0.1%:
• Organic sales growth of 1.2% was driven by volumes, primarily due to benefits from medical OEM products, I.V. site management, and single-use negative pressure wound therapy, partially offset by declines in traditional negative pressure wound therapy and sterilization assurance products.
• Other includes lost sales from certain health care businesses retained by 3M India in connection with the Spin-Off.
• Foreign currency translation negatively impacted sales by (0.6%).
Business segment operating income margin decreased when compared to the same period last year. The decrease was driven by higher costs to stand-up and operate our standalone structure after Spin-Off.
Dental Solutions (16.2% of consolidated sales for the year ended December 31, 2025)
Year ended December 31,
(Millions)
Net sales
Increase/(decrease)
Organic growth
Other
Constant currency
Currency impact
Reported growth
Business segment operating income
Percent change
Percent of sales
Year 2025 results:
Sales in Dental Solutions were up 4.2%:
• Organic growth was primarily driven by new product volume growth in restorative and prevention solutions, partially offset by a decline in traditional orthodontic products.
• Other is driven by lost sales from certain health care businesses retained by 3M India in connection with the Spin-Off.
• Foreign currency translation positively impacted sales by 1.1%.
Business segment operating income margin decreased when compared to the same period last year as a result of higher logistics costs, tariffs and other costs to operate our standalone structure after Spin-Off.
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Year 2024 results:
Sales in Dental Solutions were down (2.6%):
• Volume declines associated with softening end-market demand were partially offset by the favorable impact of prior year price actions.
• Other is primarily driven by lost sales from the Company’s dental anesthetics business that was sold in August 2023 as well as lost sales from certain health care businesses retained by 3M India in connection with the Spin-Off.
• Foreign currency translation negatively impacted sales by (0.7%).
Business segment operating income margin decreased when compared to the same period last year as a result of higher costs to stand-up and operate our standalone structure after Spin-Off.
Health Information Systems (16.3% of consolidated sales for year ended December 31, 2025)
Year ended December 31,
(Millions)
Net sales
Increase/(decrease)
Organic growth
Other
Constant currency
Currency impact
Reported growth
Business segment operating income
Percent change
Percent of sales
Year 2025 results:
Sales in Health Information Systems were up 4.1%:
• Positive organic growth was driven by expanded adoption of our Solventum™ 360 Encompass TM and performance management solutions.
• Clinician productivity solutions declined primarily due to impacts from changing market conditions.
• Foreign currency translation positively impacted sales by 0.2%.
Business segment operating income margin increased when compared to the same period last year, driven by sales price growth, product mix and lower external license fees.
Year 2024 results:
Sales in Health Information Systems were up 1.6%:
• Positive sales growth was driven by continued adoption of our 3M TM 360 Encompass TM .
• Clinician productivity solutions declined primarily due to impacts from changing market conditions.
Business segment operating income margin increased slightly when compared to the same period last year as product mix benefit due to higher software sales and lower professional services was partially offset by higher compensation costs.
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Purification and Filtration (6.0% of consolidated sales for the year ended December 31, 2025)
Year ended December 31,
Net sales (millions)
Increase/(decrease)
Organic growth
Other
Constant currency
Currency impact
Reported growth
Business segment operating income (millions)
Percent change
Percent of sales
Year 2025 results:
Sales in Purification and Filtration were down (29.9)%:
• Organic growth was driven by growth in both bioprocessing filtration and industrial filtration, which benefited from added production capacity, partially offset by declines in membrane OEM products.
• Other is driven by lost sales after the business was sold in September 2025.
• Foreign currency translation positively impacted sales by 1.1%.
Business segment operating income margin increased due to volume growth, favorable sales mix and a benefit resulting from the Company stopping depreciation on assets classified as held for sale, partially offset by higher costs to operate our standalone structure after Spin-Off.
Year 2024 results:
Sales in Purification and Filtration were up 3.0%:
• Primarily driven by higher volume growth in our bioprocessing filtration product category. This growth was partially offset by our membranes OEM.
• Other includes lost sales from certain health care businesses retained by 3M India in connection with the Spin-Off.
• Foreign currency translation negatively impacted sales by (0.6)%.
Business segment operating income margin decreased primarily due to the negative impact from costs to stand-up and operate our standalone structure after Spin-Off.
Geographic Area Supplemental Information
Employees as of December 31,
Capital Spending
for the year ended December 31,
Property, Plant and Equipment - net as of December 31,
(Millions, except Employees)
United States
International
Total Company
Employment:
Employment decreased in 2025 when compared to 2024 and decreased slightly in 2024 when compared to 2023. The above table includes the impact of acquisitions, divestitures, and other actions.
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Capital Spending and Property, Plant and Equipment - Net:
Investments in property, plant and equipment enable growth across many diverse markets, helping to meet product demand and increasing manufacturing efficiency. The Company is increasing its investment in manufacturing and sourcing capability in order to more closely align its production capability with its sales in major geographic areas in order to best serve its customers throughout the world with proprietary, automated, efficient, safe and sustainable processes. Capital spending is discussed in more detail below in the section entitled "—Cash Flows from Investing Activities."
Critical Accounting Estimates
Information regarding significant accounting policies is included in Note 1 of the accompanying consolidated financial statements. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make certain estimates and assumptions. Such estimates and assumptions are subject to inherent uncertainties which may result in actual amounts differing from these estimates.
The Company considers the items below to be critical accounting estimates. Critical accounting estimates are those estimates made in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles that involve a significant level of estimation uncertainty and have had or are reasonably likely to have a material impact on the financial condition or results of operations of the Company.
Legal Proceedings
Assessments of lawsuits and claims can involve a series of complex judgments about future events, the outcomes of which are inherently uncertain, and can rely heavily on estimates and assumptions. The Company accrues an estimated liability for legal proceeding claims that are both probable and reasonably estimable in accordance with Accounting Standard Codification (ASC) 450, Contingencies . Please refer to the section entitled "Process for Disclosure and Recording of Liabilities Related to Legal Proceedings" (contained in "Legal Proceedings" in Note 12 to the accompanying consolidated financial statements) for additional information about such estimates.
Goodwill and Intangible Assets
The Company makes certain estimates and judgments in impairment assessments of goodwill. Goodwill is tested for impairment annually in the fourth quarter of each year, as further discussed below, and is tested between annual tests if an event occurs or circumstances change that would indicate the carrying amount may be impaired. The Company may assess qualitative factors for its reporting units to determine whether it is more likely than not that the fair value of a reporting unit is less than its carrying amount including goodwill. Alternatively, the Company may bypass this qualitative assessment and perform a quantitative goodwill impairment test.
Impairment testing for goodwill is done at a reporting unit level, with all goodwill assigned to a reporting unit. An impairment loss would be recognized when the carrying amount of the reporting unit’s net assets exceeds the estimated fair value of the reporting unit. The estimated fair value of a reporting unit is determined based on a market approach using comparable company information such as EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) multiples. The Company also performs a discounted cash flow analysis for certain reporting units where the market approach indicates additional review is warranted. A discounted cash flow analysis involves key assumptions including projected sales, EBITDA margins, capital expenditures, and discount rates. Changes in reporting unit earnings, comparable company information, and expected future cash flows, as well as underlying market and overall economic conditions, among other factors, make these estimates subject to uncertainty. The Company did not perform a discounted cash flow analysis for any reporting unit for any period presented, as the market approach analysis resulted in sufficient headroom between the fair value and the carrying value for each of the Company's reporting units.
As of December 31, 2025, goodwill totaled approximately $5.7 billion. The Company has four reporting units that are assigned goodwill, with the MedSurg reporting unit accounting for approximately 74 percent of the goodwill balance. In connection with our annual testing in the fourth quarter of 2025, no qualitative indicators of impairment were identified for any of the Company's reporting units. For reporting units where quantitative testing was completed, the fair value exceeded the carrying value of the reporting unit by at least 65 percent. On December 23, 2025, subsequent to our annual impairment test, the Company completed the acquisition of Acera. Preliminary goodwill related to the acquisition was recognized and is included in the balance of our MedSurg reporting unit at December 31, 2025. The Company will continue to monitor its reporting units for any triggering events or other indicators of impairment.
The Company acquires intangible assets in connection with business combinations, primarily developed technology, trade names, and customer relationships. These acquired intangible assets are recorded at their estimated fair value as of the acquisition date. The fair values of acquired intangible assets are determined using information available on the acquisition date and are based on estimates and assumptions that management believes are reasonable. These estimates may include the amount
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and timing of projected future cash flows attributable to each class of intangible asset, the discount rates used to present value those cash flows, and the assessment of the asset’s expected life cycle. Significant assumptions vary by the class of intangible asset and the valuation technique applied.
New Accounting Pronouncements
Information regarding new accounting pronouncements is included in Note 1 to the Company's consolidated financial statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
Financial Condition and Liquidity
Solventum's principal sources of liquidity are our existing cash and cash equivalents, cash generated from operations, and access to both our revolving credit facility and commercial paper program, which the Company believes will satisfy our foreseeable operating needs, capital expenditures, and debt service requirements. Discretionary cash may be allocated to strategic acquisitions, share repurchases, or repayment of debt obligations. The Company's cash position reflects business results and a global cash management strategy that leverages liquidity management along with analyzing economic factors and tax considerations.
Debt and Credit Facilities
Refer to Note 9 of the Company's consolidated financial statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for more information.
The Company had approximately $82 million in bank guarantees, surety bonds, and other similar instruments issued and outstanding at December 31, 2025. These instruments are utilized in connection with normal business activities.
Commercial Paper
On March 4, 2024, the Company entered into a commercial paper program that allows it to issue up to $2.0 billion aggregate principal amount of short-term notes to finance short-term liabilities. Any such issuance will mature within 364 days from date of issue. There was no commercial paper outstanding at December 31, 2025.
Cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities
As of December 31, 2025, Solventum had $878 million of cash and cash equivalents, of which approximately $800 million was held by the Company’s foreign subsidiaries and approximately $78 million was held in the United States. These balances are invested in bank instruments and other high-quality fixed income securities. There was an immaterial amount of marketable securities at December 31, 2025.
Cash Flows
Cash flows from operating, investing and financing activities are provided in the table that follows. Individual amounts in the consolidated statements of cash flows exclude the effect of exchange rate impacts on cash and cash equivalents, which are presented separately in the cash flows. Thus, the amounts presented in the following operating, investing and financing activities tables reflect changes in balances from period to period adjusted for these effects.
Year Ended December 31,
(Millions)
Cash provided by (used in):
Operating activities
Investing activities
Financing activities
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
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Operating Activities
In 2025, cash flows provided by operating activities decreased compared to 2024 primarily due to lower net income, excluding the gain on sale of the Purification and Filtration business, driven by higher costs to separate from 3M as well as higher transaction related activity including costs incurred in connection with closing the Purification and Filtration divestiture and higher receivables and other assets required to support the related transition service agreements.
In 2024, cash flows provided by operating activities decreased compared to 2023 primarily due to lower net income. Cash flow activity with 3M is reflected in the due from and due to related parties. This activity includes settlement of payables and receivables transferred at Spin-Off related to operating transactions between 3M and Solventum entities that occurred prior to the Spin-Off and transactions under the transition agreements with 3M.
Investing Activities
The increase in investing activities is related to proceeds from sale of the Purification and Filtration business in September 2025, partially offset by the payment to acquire Acera in December 2025. Purchases of property, plant and equipment remained flat in 2025 as compared to 2024. The company continues to focus capital spending on separation related activities as the Company relocates manufacturing and source of supply from 3M.
Purchases of property, plant and equipment increased in 2024 as compared to 2023. The increase is primarily driven by additional separation related capital spending as the Company relocates manufacturing and source of supply from 3M.
Financing Activities
Financing cash outflows increased in 2025 primarily due to the Company's repayment of $2.0 billion of senior notes via tender offers, including extinguishment costs, upon completion of the sale of the Purification and Filtration business and $870 million repayment of outstanding principal issued under the three year senior unsecured term loan credit facility. In addition, the Company repaid the remaining $200 million aggregate principal amount outstanding under the eighteen month senior unsecured term loan credit facility.
2024 proceeds from long-term debt of $8.3 billion were related to the first quarter issuance of $6.9 billion in senior notes and $1.5 billion in senior term loan credit facilities. The proceeds from these financing transactions were transferred to 3M in connection with the Spin-Off transaction, other than the amounts retained in order to achieve the $600 million retained cash target. During 2024, the Company repaid $300 million outstanding principal issued under the senior term loan credit facilities.
Material Cash Requirements from Known Contractual and Other Obligations:
Solventum’s material cash requirements from known contractual and other obligations primarily relate to the following, for which information on both a short-term and long-term basis is provided in the indicated notes to the consolidated financial statements:
• Tax obligations—Refer to Note 8 to the consolidated financial statements.
• Debt—Refer to Note 9 to the consolidated financial statements.
• Commitments and contingencies—Refer to Note 12 to the consolidated financial statements.
• Operating leases—Refer to Note 13 to the consolidated financial statements.
Solventum purchases the majority of its materials and services as needed, with no unconditional commitments. In limited circumstances, in the normal course of business, the Company enters into unconditional purchase obligations with various vendors that may take the form of, for example, take or pay contracts in which the Company guarantees payment to ensure availability of certain materials or services or to ensure ongoing efforts on capital projects. Additionally, the Company enters into contractual obligations for cloud storage solutions, enterprise resource planning and other IT-related services. The Company expects to receive underlying materials or services for these purchase obligations. To the extent these purchase obligations fluctuate, it largely trends with normal-course changes in regular operating activities. Additionally, contractual capital commitments represent a small part of the Company’s expected capital spending. As of December 31, 2025, unconditional purchase obligations aggregated to approximately $330 million over the next five years, primarily comprised of IT-related obligations.
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Financial Instruments
The Company enters into foreign exchange forward contracts to hedge against the effect of exchange rate fluctuations on cash flows denominated in foreign currencies and to offset, in part, the impacts of changes in value of various non-functional currency denominated items including certain intercompany financing balances. As circumstances warrant, the Company also uses cross currency swaps as hedging instruments to hedge portions of the Company’s net investments in foreign operations. To help manage borrowing costs, the Company may enter into interest rate swaps, interest rate locks or other hedging instruments.
Refer to Item 7A, "Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk," for further discussion of foreign exchange rates risk, and interest rates risk and commodity prices risk.
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- Ticker
- SOLV
- CIK
0001964738- Form Type
- 10-K
- Accession Number
0001964738-26-000007- Filed
- Feb 27, 2026
- Period
- Dec 31, 2025 (Q4 25)
- Industry
- Surgical & Medical Instruments & Apparatus
External resources
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