Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Johnson & Johnson profit jumps 73% on rising sales

- LINDA A. JOHNSON

Johnson & Johnson’s second-quarter profit soared 73%, thanks to strong sales growth across all of its businesses as hospitals and the rest of the health care industry continued recovering from the coronaviru­s pandemic’s impact.

The health care giant handily topped Wall Street expectatio­ns and increased its 2021 sales and profit forecasts sharply.

The world’s biggest maker of health care products on Wednesday reported secondquar­ter net income of $6.28 billion, or $2.35 per share, up from $3.63 billion, or $1.36 per share, a year earlier.

Adjusted income came to $6.63 billion, or $2.48

per share, blowing past Wall Street projection­s for $2.28 per share.

Revenue totaled $23.31 billion, up 27.1% from 2020’s second quarter.

The one weak spot was dismal sales of Johnson & Johnson’s covid-19 vaccine, which brought in $164 million in the quarter and $264 million so far this year.

The vaccine has been plagued by concerns about some very rare side effects and the shutdown of the Maryland factory of Johnson & Johnson’s U.S. contract manufactur­er, Emergent BioSolutio­ns, because of contaminat­ion problems that led to tens of millions of vaccine doses having to be trashed. It’s unclear when — or if — the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion will allow the factory to resume production, which was halted in mid-April.

Johnson & Johnson has the only authorized vaccine that requires just one shot, so it had been expected to play a huge role in vaccinatin­g people in rural areas and developing countries.

Instead, the company has fallen far short of its supply commitment­s to the U.S., other government­s and a World Health Organizati­on-backed program to get affordable vaccines to poor and middleinco­me countries. However, Johnson & Johnson recently got approval to make more vaccine doses at its newly expanded factory in the Netherland­s.

Company executives said that they expect total 2021 covid-19 vaccine sales of roughly $2.5 billion, mostly in the fourth quarter.

“We hope this will be the start of what we expect to become a vibrant vaccine business over time,” including vaccines it’s developing for HIV, sepsis and respirator­y syncytial virus, Jennifer Taubert, head of the prescripti­on medicine business, told analysts on a call to discuss the quarter’s results.

Johnson & Johnson noted recent studies show the vaccine works well against coronaviru­s variants and protects people for at least eight months. The company said it’s selling its vaccine on a nonprofit basis, for $5 to $8 per dose.

Johnson & Johnson of New Brunswick, N.J., said foreign sales jumped 29.5% to $11.39 billion, while U.S. sales rose 24.9% to $11.92 billion.

Johnson & Johnson’s medical device and diagnostic­s division had been a laggard during a lengthy restructur­ing and the pandemic, which led people to delay scheduled surgeries and other care. It turned in the best performanc­e in the quarter, with revenue jumping 62.7% to $6.98 billion.

Still, the company warned that some U.S. hospital systems are again delaying elective procedures as infections and hospitaliz­ations increase in the latest surge, caused by the highly transmissi­ble delta variant.

The maker of cancer drugs Darzalex and Imbruvica reported that prescripti­on drug sales, long the company’s main growth driver, rose 17.2% to $12.6 billion.

Sales of consumer health products like Tylenol and Band-Aids, which have been buoyed during the pandemic by medicine cabinet stocking and an increased focus on wellness, climbed 13.3% to $3.74 billion.

“The company’s earnings growth has accelerate­d, driven by newly launched drugs and a decreasing impact from patent losses,” Edward Jones analyst Ashtyn Evans wrote to investors, adding that the current stock price doesn’t fully reflect the growth of Johnson & Johnson’s new products.

Evans, noting recent headlines about lawsuits over Johnson & Johnson’s talc products and a potential $5 billion settlement with states over its sales of opioid painkiller­s Duragesic and Nucynta, said progress in ending that litigation should reduce uncertaint­y about the stock.

Overall sales had a 4.1% benefit from favorable currency exchange rates. During the quarter, Johnson & Johnson’s effective tax rate declined to 5.8% and the company paid shareholde­rs $2.8 billion in dividends.

During the quarter, the FDA approved Johnson & Johnson’s Rybrevant, the first targeted treatment for nonsmall cell lung cancer that has certain genetic mutations.

Johnson & Johnson said that it expects adjusted fullyear earnings in the range of $9.60 to $9.70 per share, up from its April forecast of $9.42 to $9.57. It expects revenue in the range of $93.8 billion to $94.6 billion, up from $90.6 billion to $91.6 billion.

In Wednesday trading, Johnson & Johnson shares rose 0.6% to $169.49.

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