2nd UPDATE: Roche Disappoints As Revamp Costs, Reforms Weigh
February 02 2011 - 6:00AM
Dow Jones News
Massive restructuring charges and slowing sales in the U.S. and
Europe hit Roche Holding AG's (ROG.VX) 2010 earnings, but the
world's largest maker of cancer drugs Wednesday said it was
confident to grow sales and profits this year and beyond as its
pipeline remained strong despite recent setbacks.
The Basel-based company said full-year net profit rose 11% to
8.67 billion Swiss francs, or $9.03 billion, from CHF7.78 billion
in the year-earlier period, which was weighed down by CHF2.4
billion in expenses for the takeover of Genentech. The 2010 figure
undercut analysts views of CHF9.66 billion as Roche took a CHF1.3
billion restructuring charge for its ongoing revamp, including
nearly 5,000 job cuts and unit divestments.
Sales also missed already-subdued market expectations. Revenue
dropped 3% to CHF47.47 billion from CHF49.05 billion, hurt by the
absence of revenue from flu drug Tamiflu, which in the year-earlier
period benefited from brisk demand linked to the flu pandemic, and
as the strong Swiss franc, its reporting currency, shaved off part
of the company's sales. In local currencies, sales remained
flat.
While Roche's key cancer drugs Avastin, Mabthera and Herceptin
were able to grow between 7% to 9% worldwide despite fears that
recent regulatory scrutiny in the U.S would dent Avastin sales,
overall pharma sales were held in check by the U.S. healthcare
reform and austerity measures in European countries such as Greece
and Spain. Thanks to a strong performance in emerging markets,
which make up around 25% of the company's drug sales, Roche was
able to cushion the hit from price cuts in industrialized
countries.
"The group results are solid despite an increasingly challenging
environment", Roche chief executive Severin Schwan said, noting
that the company's core pharmaceuticals division outperformed the
overall pharma market. Schwan said that the company's late-stage
experimental drugs "form a strong base for the company's future
success," giving Roche confidence to achieve solid sales and profit
growth in 2011.
"Also, I am confident that in the mid- and long-term Roche can
grow profitably thanks to our strong pipeline," he said.
The CEO said Roche will continue cutting costs and improving
productivity but doesn't plan a second big round of cost and job
cuts. "It was clear from the beginning that [the ongoing
restructuring] should be a singular program," Schwan said.
Roche targets low single-digit sales growth and high
single-digit core earnings per share growth in 2011 even as the
company expects that drug price cuts around the world will dent its
profits by about CHF500 million this year. It didn't provide an
exact outlook for the period beyond 2011.
Analysts said the targets were somewhat disappointing,
reflecting the company's overall cautious stance. Some analysts had
expected Roche to make a bolder outlook statement, as cost savings
from the ongoing restructuring should have had a marked effect on
earnings. Others said that Roche's ability to maintain growth at
its cancer franchise was promising going forward.
Roche was under pressure during much of 2010 as pipeline
setbacks, increased regulatory scrutiny and global austerity
programs hurt its business, prompting the Swiss drug maker to
launch a multibillion dollar restructuring that should be completed
during the next two years.
Despite these setbacks--which have pushed Roche's stock more
than 20% lower during 2010--the company still owns a strong
pipeline and expects to submit as many as 10 new medicines by the
end of 2013. In January, the company said that late stage trials
showed its experimental skin-cancer drug RG7204 to be effective,
expecting a launch of the drug later this year. While analysts
expect the drug to reach blockbuster size, Roche declined to make a
sales forecast.
Some analysts, however, were cautious about Roche's bullish
stance after the company Wednesday said it has decided to stop the
development of diabetes drug taspoglutide and return the rights to
Ipsen (IPN.FR). Although the experimental medicine had already run
into problems last year due to side effects in late-stage trials,
it was once touted by Roche as a potential blockbuster drug, which
is now undermining credibility in the Swiss company's often bullish
sales forecasts.
Also, Roche's peak sales estimate was cut for oncology product
Avastin to CHF7 billion from CHF9 billion, partly due to the strong
Swiss franc and after the U.S Food and Drug Administration's
recommendation late last year that the medicine no longer be
approved for treating breast cancer patients.
Analysts also said that its expensive eye drug Lucentis, which
it co-markets with Swiss peer Novartis AG (NVS), could suffer from
future sales declines should tests show that Roche's own drug
Avastin is as effective and secure in treating eye diseases.
Results of a U.S. government-sponsored study are expected to be
published soon and analysts say the results could prompt physicians
to switch to cheaper Avastin. Roche and Novartis don't expect a
huge impact.
Given the increased regulatory scrutiny and growing reluctance
from governments and insurers to reimburse expensive drugs,
analysts believe Roche will face an uphill struggle over the next
two years, which could intensify once some of its key drugs such as
Mabthera lose patent protection and face competition from generics
makers. The recent appointment of ThyssenKrupp AG's (TKA.XE) Alain
Hippe as chief financial officer has been interpreted as a sign
that Roche will do everything to keep a lid on costs.
Roche, meanwhile, lifted its dividend by 10% to CHF6.6 per
share, mimicking other industry players such as AstraZeneca PLC
(AZN) and Novartis AG (NVS), which have also raised dividends and
launched share buybacks in a bid to appease and hold investors,
increasingly disappointed about a sector which traditionally
produced high sales and profit growth.
At 0949 GMT shares of Roche were 1.8% lower at CHF141.9 in an
overall flat market.
-By Goran Mijuk, Dow Jones Newswires, +41 43 443 80 47;
goran.mijuk@dowjones.com
Ipsen (PK) (USOTC:IPSEY)
Historical Stock Chart
From Dec 2024 to Jan 2025
Ipsen (PK) (USOTC:IPSEY)
Historical Stock Chart
From Jan 2024 to Jan 2025