The results underscore a comeback for GSK in the race to help fight
the COVID-19 pandemic after it failed to bring a vaccine to the
market so far. The spin off of the consumer venture with Pfizer has
also put the future in focus as boss Emma Walmsley faces pressure
from activist investors.
"We have ended the year strongly, with another quarter of excellent
performance ... and we enter 2022 with good momentum," Walmsley
said. "This is going to be a landmark year for GSK."
The drugmaker is pressing on with the spin off of its consumer arm,
home to brands such as Sensodyne toothpaste and Advil painkiller,
after turning down Unilever's 50 billion pound buyout offer for the
unit in December.
Some activist investors had called on GSK to give more consideration
to a potential sale of the unit. They have also questioned the
ability of top management to boost the success rate of drug
development, where GSK has long lagged peers.
The company said sales in 2022, after the consumer unit spin-off,
were expected to grow 5% to 7% and adjusted operating profit was
forecast to rise 12% to 14%. This includes the boost from a
settlement with Gilead but not sales of its COVID-19 products.
Analysts had forecast group earnings of 120.8 pence per share, or a
rise of about 8% from 2021, on sales of 36.28 billion pounds.
The company said it expected pandemic-related sales in 2022 to be at
similar levels to 2021 but said these would contribute less to
profit at "New GSK" due to lower margins on its antibody treatment,
knocking off profit by 5% to 7%.
GSK shares were up 0.2% at 0845 GMT.
PANDEMIC AND BEYOND
Excluding the Gilead deal, which secured royalty payments from an
HIV drug, from the 2022 outlook "suggests a modest trim to consensus
underlying operating profit, albeit management's guidance at the
beginning of the year is likely to include a degree of
conservatism," Morgan Stanley analysts said.
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GSK's sotrovimab, developed with Vir
Biotechnology, is one of the few COVID-19
treatments shown to have worked against the
fast-spreading Omicron variant, spurring demand.
It was amongst GSK's top selling offerings in
2021.
GSK has secured orders for 1.7 million doses of
sotrovimab, including from the United States,
Canada and the European Union.
Sales of sotrovimab, branded Xevudy, stood at 828 million pounds in
the fourth quarter, up from 114 million in the third quarter and
above market expectations of 774 million pounds.
Revenue from shingles vaccine Shingrix, a key earnings driver over
past quarters, slipped 7% to 597 million pounds but still surpassed
consensus of 548 million pounds.
Adjusted earnings for the group stood at 25.6 pence per share for
the three months to Dec. 31, while turnover rose 13% to 9.53 billion
pounds at constant currency rates, topping a consensus https://www.gsk.com/en-gb/investors/analyst-consensus/analyst-consensus
of 23.8 pence apiece on sales of 9.49 billion pounds.
GSK said it expected key trial results in 2022 on up to seven future
growth drivers including a long awaited read-out on a vaccine for
the elderly against the common respiratory syncytial virus before
the end of June.
Walmseley told a media call the consumer arm's performance this year
was expected to be in line with the previously stated medium-term
target for annual currency-adjusted sales growth of 4% to 6%. GSK
will unveil more details at a Feb. 28 investor event.
($1 = 0.7378 pounds)
(Reporting by Pushkala Aripaka in Bengaluru and Ludwig Burger in
Frankfurt; Editing by Mark Potter and Edmund Blair)
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