U.S.
scraps Philips ventilator order in 2020 earnings blow
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[August 31, 2020]
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Philips <PHG.AS> said
the U.S. Department of Health had cancelled most of an order for 43,000
ventilators, leading the Dutch medical equipment maker to cut its 2020
earnings outlook.
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The termination follows a July report by the U.S. Congress House
Subcommittee on Economic and Consumer Policy that found the White
House had overpaid Philips by at least $500 million. Philips denied
any profiteering on ventilators.
Philips was one of several firms contracted by the U.S. to supply
187,000 ventilators to the strategic national stockpile to treat
patients affected by COVID-19.
It expanded capacity in Pennsylvania and California to meet sudden
demand but said in a statement on Monday that it will now deliver
just 12,300 hospital ventilators by the end of the year to the U.S.
Department of Health and Human services.
A spokesman said he expected Philips will find other buyers for the
30,700 excess ventilators.
Shares in Philips, which are down 4.3% in the year to date, dipped
0.6% to 40.84 euros.
"We continue to expect to return to growth and improved
profitability in the second half of the year, starting in the third
quarter," Philips chief executive Frans van Houten said.
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Philips had said in July that the surge in orders for medical
equipment would enable it to achieve an "adjusted EBITA (earnings
before interest, taxes, and amortisation) margin improvement" this
year.
But it said on Monday it expects "to deliver modest comparable sales
growth with an adjusted EBITA margin of around the level of last
year".
Philips' core earnings fell almost a quarter in April-June to 418
million euros ($497.25 million) as sales dropped 6% to 4.4 billion
euros.
ING, which rates Philips shares "hold", said in a note the news was
a slight negative as analysts were already expecting flat margins
this year.
(Reporting by Anthony Deutsch and Toby Sterling; Editing by Louise
Heavens and Alexander Smith)
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