Bristol-Myers profit slightly tops Wall Street view on
blood thinner sales
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[April 25, 2019]
By Michael Erman
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S drugmaker
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co, which is set to buy biotechnology company
Celgene Corp for $74 billion, posted slightly better-than-expected
first-quarter earnings on Thursday on strong sales of its blockbuster
blood thinner Eliquis.
Net earnings in the quarter rose to $1.71 billion, or $1.04 a share,
from $1.49 billion, or 91 cents a share, a year earlier.
Excluding one-time items, the company said it earned $1.10 a share. That
beat the average analyst estimate by a penny, according to IBES data
from Refinitiv.
Bristol-Myers said it still expects full-year adjusted earnings of $4.10
to $4.20 per share.
Revenue in the quarter was $5.92 billion, exceeding analysts' estimates
of $5.75 billion.
That difference is largely due to Eliquis, which Bristol shares with
Pfizer Inc. Sales of the drug used to prevent blood clots that can cause
strokes jumped 28 percent from last year to $1.93 billion. Analysts had
expected $1.82 billion from the drug in the quarter.
Sales of cancer immunotherapy Opdivo were in line with Wall Street
expectations at $1.8 billion, up 19 percent from a year ago but
basically flat compared with the previous quarter.
Bristol-Myers pioneered cancer immunotherapy with its first such drug
Yervoy and later Opdivo. But Merck & Co's rival treatment Keytruda has
taken a dominant position in lung cancer - the most lucrative oncology
market - taking a toll on Bristol-Myers shares.
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Logo of global biopharmaceutical company Bristol-Myers Squibb is
pictured at the headquarters in Le Passage, near Agen, France March
29, 2018. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/File Photo
Some analysts and investors have suggested that one reason Bristol launched its
bid for Celgene was over concerns about Opdivo's growth after losing ground to
Merck.
Bristol said it still expects the deal to close in the third quarter, after its
shareholders voted to approve the deal earlier this month despite a campaign by
activist hedge fund Starboard Value LP to scuttle it.
The company announced in early January that it planned to buy Celgene in a cash
and stock transaction to bring together companies that specialize in oncology
and cardiovascular drugs in what would be the largest pharmaceutical industry
merger ever.
The New York-based drugmaker has said the combined company will have six drugs
with expected near-term launches - five from the Celgene pipeline - representing
over $15 billion in annual revenue potential, as well as strong early-stage
experimental assets.
Shares of Bristol-Myers closed at $44.62 on the New York Stock Exchange on
Wednesday. They are off by about a third since October, when shares dropped due
to setbacks for Opdivo in lung cancer.
(Reporting by Michael Erman; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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