Gilead quarterly profit falls as COVID antiviral sales decrease
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[August 03, 2022]
By Deena Beasley
(Reuters) -Gilead Sciences Inc on Tuesday
said its second-quarter adjusted profit fell due to higher research and
royalty costs as well as a downturn in sales of its COVID-19 antiviral
drug Veklury.
Quarterly revenue, however, rose 1% to $6.3 billion, which was ahead of
the average Wall Street estimate of $5.85 billion, according to
Refinitiv data.
The biotech company said adjusted quarterly profit fell 13% to $1.58 per
share, which also topped the average analyst estimate of $1.52. Net
income fell to 91 cents per share from $1.21 per share.
Sales of COVID-19 treatment remdesivir, which is sold under the brand
name Veklury, fell 46% to $445 million, but still came in ahead of
analysts' estimates of $390 million.
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"Sales declined as hospitalization rates declined in most geographies,"
Gilead Chief Commercial Officer Johanna Mercier said on a conference
call, adding the company remains ready to supply Veklury if needed.
Cancer drug Trodelvy - shown in a recent trial to modestly delay tumor
growth in women with the most common form of breast cancer - saw sales
rise 79% to $159 million. Sales of Gilead's cancer cell therapies rose
by a robust 68% to $368 million.
HIV drug sales, driven by demand for higher-priced products, rose 7% to
$4.2 billion.
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Gilead Sciences Inc pharmaceutical company is seen after they
announced a Phase 3 Trial of the investigational antiviral drug
Remdesivir in patients with severe coronavirus disease (COVID-19),
during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in
Oceanside, California, U.S., April 29, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake
 Gilead announced that the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration will decide by Dec. 27 whether to approve
its long-acting HIV medication lenacapavir.
"We’ve seen somewhat of a recovery in core products from last
quarter’s weaker results," BMO Capital Markets analyst Evan
Seigerman said in a research note. He pointed to particular strength
in HIV and cell therapy products.
For full-year 2022, California-based Gilead sightly raised its
forecast for adjusted earnings per share to between $6.35 to $6.75
from a previous view of $6.20 to $6.70. Gilead said it now expects
product sales of $24.5 billion to $25 billion, up from a prior
estimate of $23.8 billion to $24.3 billion.
Gilead were up 1% at $60.15 in after hours trading.
(Reporting By Deena BeasleyEditing by Bill Berkrot)
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