Abbott Labs.

Abbott kept about 18¢ of every sales dollar on a GAAP basis in FY2025 (~$8.05B operating earnings on ~$44.3B sales), while the Street’s 18‑month target still sits near ~$122.

If you own Abbott, you own a steady healthcare machine with one weak spot you should watch.

abt

healthcare large cap updated feb 6, 2026
$108.77
market cap ~$189B · 52-week range $106–$130
xvary composite: 80 / 100 · above average
our overall rating — combines growth, value, risk, and momentum
Start here if you're new
what it is
Abbott sells medical devices, lab tests, nutrition products, and older branded drugs to hospitals, labs, and consumers worldwide.
how it gets paid
FY2025 worldwide sales were $44.3B. Medical Devices led at $21.4B (~48% of sales), per Abbott’s segment table.
why it's growing
Revenue grew 5.7% last year. Despite a soft finish in spots, Abbott still delivered respectable top- and bottom-line gains in 2025, led by medical devices while Nutrition stayed a drag.
what just happened
Abbott's latest quarter was basically a tie on EPS, with $1.50 a share matching estimates while Nutrition stayed weak.
At a glance
A+ balance sheet — rock-solid finances — built to survive anything
75/100 earnings predictability — reasonably predictable
21.1x trailing p/e — priced about right
2.5% dividend yield — cash in your pocket every quarter
19.0% return on capital — solid for a large defensive healthcare name
xvary composite: 80/100 — above average
What they do
Abbott sells medical devices, lab tests, nutrition products, and older branded drugs to hospitals, labs, and consumers worldwide.
Abbott wins by not betting on one shelf. Medical Devices are ~48% of FY2025 sales, while Diagnostics, Nutrition, and Established Pharmaceuticals make up the rest. If one aisle slows, your whole thesis does not—and Nutrition is still the segment investors watch closest after infant‑formula disruption and portfolio cleanup.
healthcare large-cap medical-devices dividend defensive
How they make money
$44.3B annual revenue · their business grew +5.7% last year
Medical Devices
$21.4B
+12.6%
Diagnostics
$8.9B
−4.3%
Nutrition
$8.5B
+0.4%
Established Pharmaceuticals
$5.5B
+6.6%
The products that matter
continuous glucose monitoring system
FreeStyle Libre
~$8B Diabetes Care FY2025 · CGM is the core growth driver
Abbott reported ~$8.0B in full‑year Diabetes Care sales in FY2025; CGM sales were $2.0B in Q4 alone (+15% reported). Libre’s replaceable sensor cadence makes this more recurring than most hardware stories.
growth engine
blood and molecular diagnostic testing
Diagnostics Portfolio
~$8.9B segment · ~20% of total revenue
This line is roughly one-fifth of company revenue on the segment table above—so even a small miss here matters when devices are doing more of the lifting.
scale matters
consumer biosensing wearable
Lingo
consumer health wearable · early-stage market
it's Abbott trying to extend a biosensor platform beyond diabetes, but this is still too early to move a $44.3B company on its own.
optionality
Key numbers
~18%
GAAP operating margin
FY2025 GAAP operating earnings were ~$8.05B on ~$44.3B sales (~18.2%)—adjusted figures are higher, but this is the clean apples‑to‑apples filing margin.
19.0%
return on capital
Return on capital → profit from each dollar invested → so what: Abbott turns investment into earnings better than most large defensive companies.
$11.6B
long-term debt
Long-term debt → money owed over years → so what: the balance sheet is still strong because that is only 6% of capital.
2.5%
dividend yield
Dividend yield → cash paid back to you each year → so what: you get paid while waiting for mid-single-digit growth.
Financial health
A+
strength
  • balance sheet grade A+ — near the highest rating possible
  • risk rank 1 — safer than 95% of stocks
  • price stability 95 / 100
  • long-term debt $11.6B (6% of capital)
  • net profit margin 21.7% — keeps 22 cents of every dollar in revenue
  • return on equity 22% — $0.22 profit for every $1 investors have put in
A+ with balance sheet grade and risk rank standing out. your money faces less risk here than at most public companies.
Total return vs. market

You invested $10,000 in ABT 3 years ago → it's now worth $20,830.

The index would have given you $14,770.

source: institutional data · total return
What just happened
in line
Abbott's latest quarter was basically a tie on EPS, with $1.50 a share matching estimates while Nutrition stayed weak.
Q4 2025 adjusted EPS was $1.50, matching the consensus call. Full‑year 2025 adjusted EPS was $5.15 vs. $4.67 in 2024. Nutrition was the weak spot in Q4 (worldwide Nutrition sales down ~9% reported YoY in the quarter).
$11.5B
revenue (Q)
$1.50
eps (Q · adj.)
~18%
GAAP op. margin (FY)
the number that mattered
$1.50 mattered because Abbott did not miss on profit, which keeps the bull case alive while investors wait for Nutrition to stop shrinking.
source: company earnings report, 2026

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What could go wrong

the #1 risk is FreeStyle Libre slowing before Diagnostics and Nutrition recover.

med
Libre concentration risk
Diabetes Care (where Libre lives) was ~$8.0B in FY2025—roughly 37% of the $21.4B Medical Devices segment. That is a great growth engine, and it also concentrates device narrative risk in one franchise.
If Libre growth cools, a large slice of device momentum—and a visible piece of total sales—cools with it.
med
Nutrition demand is wobbling
Nutrition is ~$8.5B on FY2025 reported sales (~19% of the company). Q4 worldwide Nutrition sales fell ~9% YoY as volumes and pricing actions weighed on demand.
If that weakness lasts longer than one quarter, Abbott's defensive segment stops acting defensive.
med
Diagnostics still needs a cleaner reset
Diagnostics is $8.9B on FY2025 reported sales—about 20% of the company—with reported sales down ~4% year over year as COVID‑testing tailwinds fade and lab markets stay mixed.
Diagnostics plus Nutrition equal about $17.4B of revenue. If Nutrition stays choppy while Diagnostics is only slowly improving, Devices has to keep sprinting to hold group growth.
Abbott looks diversified on paper. In practice, a large Diabetes Care / Libre complex is helping mask uneven FY2025 performance across Diagnostics and Nutrition. That is manageable—it is not invisible.
source: institutional data · regulatory filings · risk analysis
Pay attention to
metric
medical devices growth staying in double digits
Devices grew 12% last year and 13% in the latest quarter. If that drops sharply, the whole mix-shift thesis gets weaker fast.
earnings
whether 2026 guidance still holds
Management guided to $5.55–$5.80 in adjusted EPS. You want the midpoint to look conservative, not ambitious.
risk
nutrition volumes after the 9% quarterly drop
Price helped, then hurt. If volumes do not stabilize, one of Abbott's steadier businesses becomes another cleanup job.
trend
diagnostics getting back to flat or better
Segment revenue here shows growth, but execution still matters—another stretch of soft testing demand or pricing pressure would push more of the story onto Libre.
Analyst rankings
short-term outlook
average
momentum score 3 — the stock is trading like the market, not ahead of it. in human-speak, nobody sees a near-term breakout here.
risk profile
safest 5%
stability score 1 — lower drawdown risk than almost any stock. this is the part of the story you pay 21x earnings for.
chart momentum
top 5%
technical score 1 — top-tier relative strength. the chart looks stronger than the debate around the fundamentals.
earnings predictability
75 / 100
management is usually reliable. you should expect steadier numbers here than in most healthcare names.
source: institutional data
Institutional activity

institutions have been net selling for 2 consecutive quarters — 1,326 buyers vs. 1,412 sellers in 3q2025. total institutional holdings: 1.4B shares. net selling for 2 quarters.

source: institutional data
Price targets
3-5 year target range
$91 $152
$109 current price
$122 target midpoint · +12% from current · 3-5yr high: $170 (+55% · 14% ann'l return)
source: institutional data · analyst targets

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