The Oklahoman

J&J suspends COVID-19 vaccine sales forecast

- Tom Murphy

Johnson & Johnson is suspending sales forecasts for its COVID-19 vaccine only a few months after saying the shot could bring in as much as $3.5 billion this year.

A global supply surplus and uncertaint­y about future demand – fueled in part by vaccine hesitancy in some developing markets – prompted the change, J&J said Tuesday. The company also reported a betterthan-expected first-quarter profit and announced a dividend increase.

J&J’s one-shot vaccine brought in $457 million in global sales during the first quarter, while the company’s pharmaceut­ical sales as a whole totaled nearly $13 billion.

The vaccine registered only $75 million in sales in the U.S., or about 25% less than what it rang up after debuting in last year’s first quarter.

J&J has said it doesn’t intend to profit from the vaccine. But it said in January that the shot could bring in between $3 billion and $3.5 billion in sales this year, as countries continue to fight variants of the virus.

Demand for initial vaccine doses and booster shots has slowed since shots from J&J, Pfizer and Moderna entered the U.S. market last year. More than 82% of the U.S. population age 5 and older has already received at least one vaccinatio­n dose, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Options from Pfizer and Moderna also have been much more commonly used in the United States.

U.S. regulators also have said that most Americans should receive the Pfizer or Moderna shots instead of J&J’s version due to a rare blood clotting problem tied to the shot.

Vaccine sales are a small part of the total revenue picture for Johnson & Johnson. The company also sells medical devices, consumer health products like BandAids and a range of pharmaceut­icals. That includes the cancer treatment Darzalex, which brought in $1.86 billion in the quarter.

Overall, J&J’s profit fell 17% to $5.15 billion in the first quarter, as research and developmen­t costs and other expenses climbed. Adjusted earnings came to $2.67 per share, as total revenue grew 5% to $23.4 billion.

Analysts expected, on average, earnings of $2.58 per share on $23.62 billion in revenue.

J&J said Tuesday that it now expects 2022 adjusted earnings of $10.15 to $10.35 per share, a drop from its previous forecast that company officials attributed to foreign currency rate changes.

Wall Street expects, on average, earnings of $10.55 per share.

Separately, the company said Tuesday that it was raising the quarterly dividend it pays shareholde­rs by 7 cents to $1.13 per share. That will hike the annual payout to $4.52 per share from $4.24.

 ?? RICHARD DREW/AP FILE ?? Vaccine sales are a small part of total revenue for Johnson & Johnson, which also sells medical devices, consumer health products and a range of pharmaceut­icals.
RICHARD DREW/AP FILE Vaccine sales are a small part of total revenue for Johnson & Johnson, which also sells medical devices, consumer health products and a range of pharmaceut­icals.

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