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Tuesday, 07/18/2017 12:31:58 PM

Tuesday, July 18, 2017 12:31:58 PM

Post# of 109991

Johnson & Johnson Raises Guidance -- Update
DOW JONES & COMPANY, INC. 11:06 AM ET 7/18/2017
Symbol Last Price Change
JNJ 134.4 +2.25 (+1.7%)
QUOTES AS OF 12:30:49 PM ET 07/18/2017
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) raised its sales and profit outlook for the year even as the health-care giant's second-quarter revenue declined amid steeper competition for some of its key drugs.

Chief Executive Alex Gorsky said the company expects sales and earnings to accelerate in the second half of the year, as J&J incorporates two key acquisitions and launches new products.

The New Brunswick, N.J., company now expects adjusted earnings for the year of $7.12 to $7.22 a share, up from $7 to $7.15. And it expects sales of $75.8 billion to $76.1 billion, up from $75.4 billion to $76.1 billion.

J&J is the world's largest health-products company and its sales are considered a bellwether for the industry.

The company has been reshaping its pharmaceutical, medical-device and consumer-health businesses to adapt to patent expiries, pricing pressures and changing consumer preferences.

J&J's results have also been pressured by a stronger U.S. dollar and weakness in some emerging markets.

Rheumatoid-arthritis drug Remicade, long the company's top-selling product, has begun facing competition from lower-cost "biosimilar" rivals that analysts expect will erode sales.

Remicade sales dropped 14% in the second quarter to $1.53 billion world-wide. Finance Chief Dominic Caruso said sales have held up well against a biosimilar from Pfizer Inc., and that most of the drop was due to a tough comparison in the previous year's quarter, when J&J recorded a positive gain for rebates on Remicade and other drugs.

J&J attributed a $342 million drop in its pharmaceutical sales in the quarter to the same positive gain last year.

Sales of diabetes drug Invokana, another key J&J product, plunged 23% to $295 million in the quarter. And sales of prostate-cancer treatment Zytiga dropped 7.2% to $558 million as a federal probe of charities that help patients pay for drugs chilled financial support to help patients cover their out of pocket costs.

Last month, J&J closed its largest deal ever, a $30 billion acquisition of Swiss drug company Actelion. Mr. Gorsky said J&J sees "great opportunities" to increase sales of Actelion drugs by expanding their use to more patients and around the world.

J&J closed in February on its $4.3 billion purchase of Abbott Laboratories' eye-surgery equipment business.

Analysts estimate newly-approved psoriasis drug Tremfya could reach $6.4 billion in yearly sales world-wide, according to Evaluate, a market-intelligence firm. A new rheumatoid-arthritis drug, sirukumab, is estimated to notch $ 5.5 billion in world-wide sales if approved.

Overall revenue in J&J's pharmaceutical business, the company's largest, edged 0.2% lower to $8.64 billion, hurt by foreign-currency challenges. J&J's medical-devices business recorded a 4.9% increase in sales to $6.73 billion. Consumer-health sales grew 1.7% to $3.48 billion.

In all for the quarter, J&J earned $3.83 billion, or $1.40 a share, down from $4 billion, or $1.43 a share, in the same period a year before.

Revenue rose 1.9% to $18.84 billion.

Excluding certain items, adjusted earnings were $1.83 a share. Analysts had expected $1.80 in adjusted per-share profit on revenue of $18.95 billion.

Write to Jonathan D. Rockoff at Jonathan.Rockoff@wsj.com and Anne Steele at Anne.Steele@wsj.com

By Jonathan D. Rockoff and Anne Steele
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) raised its sales and profit outlook for the year even as the health-care giant's second-quarter pharmaceutical revenue declined amid steeper competition for some of its key drugs.

Chief Executive Alex Gorsky said the company expects sales and earnings to accelerate in the second half of the year, as J&J incorporates two key acquisitions and launches new products.

The New Brunswick, N.J., company now expects adjusted earnings for the year of $7.12 to $7.22 a share, up from $7 to $7.15. And it expects sales of $75.8 billion to $76.1 billion, up from $75.4 billion to $76.1 billion.

J&J is the world's largest health-products company and its sales are considered a bellwether for the industry.

The company has been reshaping its pharmaceutical, medical-device and consumer-health businesses to adapt to patent expiries, pricing pressures and changing consumer preferences.

J&J's results have also been pressured by a stronger U.S. dollar and weakness in some emerging markets.

Rheumatoid-arthritis drug Remicade, long the company's top-selling product, has begun facing competition from lower-cost "biosimilar" rivals that analysts expect will erode sales.

Remicade sales dropped 14% in the second quarter to $1.53 billion world-wide. Finance Chief Dominic Caruso said sales have held up well against a biosimilar from Pfizer Inc., and that most of the drop was due to a tough comparison in the previous year's quarter, when J&J recorded a positive gain for rebates on Remicade and other drugs.

J&J attributed a $342 million drop in its pharmaceutical sales in the quarter to the same positive gain last year.

Sales of diabetes drug Invokana, another key J&J product, plunged 23% to $295 million in the quarter. And sales of prostate-cancer treatment Zytiga dropped 7.2% to $558 million as a federal probe of charities that help patients pay for drugs chilled financial support to help patients cover their out of pocket costs.

Last month, J&J closed its largest deal ever, a $30 billion acquisition of Swiss drug company Actelion. Mr. Gorsky said J&J sees "great opportunities" to increase sales of Actelion drugs by expanding their use to more patients and around the world.

J&J closed in February on its $4.3 billion purchase of Abbott Laboratories' eye-surgery equipment business.

Analysts estimate newly-approved psoriasis drug Tremfya could reach $6.4 billion in yearly sales world-wide, according to Evaluate, a market-intelligence firm. A new rheumatoid-arthritis drug, sirukumab, is estimated to notch $ 5.5 billion in world-wide sales if approved.

Over all revenue in J&J's pharmaceutical business, the company's largest, edged 0.2% lower to $8.64 billion, hurt by foreign-currency challenges. J&J's medical-devices business recorded a 4.9% increase in sales to $6.73 billion. Consumer-health sales grew 1.7% to $3.48 billion.

In all for the quarter, J&J earned $3.83 billion, or $1.40 a share, down from $4 billion, or $1.43 a share, in the same period a year before.

Revenue rose 1.9% to $18.84 billion.

Excluding certain items, adjusted earnings were $1.83 a share. Analysts had expected $1.80 in adjusted per-share profit on revenue of $18.95 billion.

Write to Jonathan D. Rockoff at Jonathan.Rockoff@wsj.com and Anne Steele at Anne.Steele@wsj.com


(END) Dow Jones Newswires
07-18-171106ET
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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