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Just caught some genuinely provoking questions from the Philip Morris earnings call that really got me thinking about where the tobacco transition story is heading.
So PM crushed expectations in Q4 2025 with $10.36B in revenue, beating the $10.31B consensus. EPS came in at $1.70 as expected, though EBITDA was slightly soft at $4.15B versus $4.18B anticipated. The real story here is the smoke-free product momentum - IQOS, ZYN, and VIVE all posted double-digit growth across multiple regions. CEO Jacek Olczak made a point about five consecutive years of volume growth, which honestly is pretty impressive for a legacy tobacco company.
What caught my attention were the provoking questions from analysts during the call. Matt Smith from Stifel asked about growth catalysts beyond 2026 - Olczak pointed to Japanese tax policy shifts and U.S. product launches as potential accelerators. Eric Sarota at Morgan Stanley dug into the Japan competitive dynamics around IQOS, and the takeaway was that despite rising competition, market share remains solid with Italy and Taiwan emerging as growth pockets.
Bonnie Herzog from Goldman Sachs raised some provoking points about how Japanese excise tax hikes could squeeze volumes, but Olczak seemed confident that pricing power and innovation could offset margin pressure. Faham Baig at UBS questioned the recent pullback on ZYN promotions in the U.S. - turns out that's deliberate strategy to strengthen the brand ahead of new launches.
The most provoking moment came from Gerald Pascarelli at Needham, who highlighted state-level nicotine pouch taxes. Olczak's counterargument was interesting - he suggested these taxes could actually backfire on public health goals by discouraging smokers from switching to less harmful alternatives.
Operating margins ticked down to 32.6% from 33.6% year-over-year, which is worth monitoring. The stock was trading around $188.29 after the earnings beat, up from $182 pre-release.
Looking ahead, the provoking dynamics to watch are regulatory approvals for ZYN Ultra and IQOS ILUMA in the U.S., how the Japanese tax environment reshapes growth, and whether smoke-free adoption keeps accelerating globally. The margin story will depend heavily on whether pricing and innovation can outpace cost pressures. Interesting inflection point for the company.