Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Merck’s profit tops expectatio­ns

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Merck beat fourth-quarter expectatio­ns, thanks to more sales of its blockbuste­r cancer drug Keytruda, but the company’s early view on 2023 underwhelm­ed Wall Street.

Shares of the drugmaker slid Thursday after Merck released an earnings forecast that fell well short of projection­s by industry analysts. In the final quarter of 2022, Keytruda sales grew 19% to $5.45 billion. Overall revenue climbed 2% to $13.83 billion.

Sales of the company’s covid-19 treatment Lagevrio slipped 13% to $825 million. Merck said a strong U.S. dollar hurt internatio­nal sales, which included growth in Japan and the United Kingdom.

Overall, Merck’s net income fell 20% to $3 billion compared with the final quarter of 2021, as research and developmen­t costs also jumped.

Adjusted earnings totaled $1.62 per share, the company said. Analysts expected earnings of $1.53 per share on $13.66 billion in revenue for the quarter, according to FactSet.

Keytruda again led Merck in full-year revenue last year by bringing in nearly $21 billion. Lagevrio, which U.S. regulators approved in late 2021, recorded $5.7 billion in sales. Most of that came in the year’s first two quarters.

The company expects sales to tumble for Lagevrio to around $1 billion in 2023.

Merck leaders have cited the evolving coronaviru­s pandemic and the amount of inventory remaining in the marketplac­e as factors behind the drop.

Merck expects adjusted earnings to range between $6.80 and $6.95 per share in 2023 on revenue of $57.2 billion to $58.7 billion.

Analysts forecast earnings of $7.33 per share on $57.94 billion in sales, according to FactSet.

Shares of Rahway, N.J.based Merck & Co. Inc. fell 3% to $103.46 Thursday in New York.

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