Penticton Herald

J&J takes whopping $10.7-billion loss

- By The Associated Press

Johnson & Johnson posted a rare quarterly loss, a whopping $10.71 billion, due to a $13.6 billion charge related to last month’s U.S. tax overhaul.

While the loss was expected and the company’s adjusted results beat Wall Street expectatio­ns, shares fell more than 4 per cent, an unusually big swing for the health care giant.

On Tuesday, J&J reported a big jump in sales, but that was offset by sharply higher spending on production, marketing, administra­tion and research, partly due to one-time charges.

The $13.6 billion charge is for a tax payment on years of accumulate­d foreign earnings, now being brought back to the U.S., that amount to more than $66 billion, Chief Financial Officer Dominic Caruso said in an interview. About $18 billion of that was held in cash and was taxed at 15 per cent, while the remainder was taxed at a low 8 per cent rate.

Caruso told analysts on a conference call that “$12 billion will come back immediatel­y. We’ll immediatel­y use that to fund operations in the U.S.”

That will include investing in innovative products and paying shareholde­r dividends, he said. J&J won’t necessaril­y go on a shopping spree, having made 16 acquisitio­ns totalling $35 billion last year, including its biggest-ever, $30 billion to buy Swiss biopharmac­eutical company Actelion to enter the lung blood pressure niche.

“This was a strong quarter for Johnson & Johnson, as the pharmaceut­ical segment ... continues to drive solid growth for the company,” Edward Jones analyst Ashtyn Evans wrote to investors.

Despite that, J&J shares closed down $6.31 at $141.83.

Evans said she was “scratching her head” over the steep drop, adding it could be due to a combinatio­n of factors: the size of the net loss, investors expecting a stronger financial forecast for 2018, fears that prostate cancer drug Zytiga might get generic competitio­n late this year even though J&J said it won’t, or a federal appeals court ruling invalidati­ng some patients of top seller Remicade, which already has two cheaper competitor­s.

The maker of biotech drugs and Band-Aids said the fourth-quarter loss amounts to $3.99 per share. A year earlier, the New Brunswick, New Jersey, company had a net profit of $3.81 billion, or $1.38 per share.

Excluding the tax charge and other one-time gains and costs, earnings came to $4.78 billion, or $1.74 per share, topping Wall Street projection­s by 2 cents.

The world’s biggest maker of health care products posted revenue of $20.2 billion, a hair below Street forecasts for $20.22 billion but up 11.5 per cent from a year ago.

Sales of prescripti­on drugs, J&J’s largest business, jumped 17.6 per cent to $9.68 billion, led by a 40 per cent jump in sales of cancer drugs, including Darzalex, Imbruvica and Zytiga.

Sales of drugs for immune-system disorders rose 5 per cent to $3.1 billion, including recently approved Tremfya for plaque psoriasis. However, revenue from J&J’s topselling medicine, Remicade for rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease and other immune conditions, fell nearly 10 per cent due to increasing competitio­n from biosimilar­s. Those are near-copies of complex biologic drugs “manufactur­ed” inside living cells.

Sales of Tylenol, Neutrogena skin care and other consumer health products rose 3.1 per cent to $3.54 billion, while sales of medical devices climbed 8.3 per cent to $6.97 billion amid that segment’s turn-around efforts.

Expenses were higher across the board, with manufactur­ing costs up 31 per cent, marketing and administra­tion spending up 13.5 per cent and research and developmen­t costs up nearly 38 per cent, in addition to a $408 million charge for acquisitio­n of products in developmen­t.

Johnson & Johnson said it expects full-year earnings of $8 to $8.20 per share and revenue of $80.6 billion to $81.4 billion.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? A selection of Johnson & Johnson brand first aid products are arranged for a photo. Johnson & Johnson absorbed a $10.7-billion Q4 loss.
The Associated Press A selection of Johnson & Johnson brand first aid products are arranged for a photo. Johnson & Johnson absorbed a $10.7-billion Q4 loss.

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