cloudy forecast for big pharma

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21 WWW.CEN-ONLINE.ORG AUGUST 18, 2008 THE NEWS out of the pharmaceutical industry in recent months illustrates the roller-coaster ride that comes with heavy reliance on blockbuster drugs. Some com- panies are striking deals to expand their portfolios and insulate themselves from patent expiries and drug setbacks, while others are attempting to break the block- buster addiction altogether. Overall, second-quarter results for big U.S. drug companies looked healthier than in recent years. Average sales for the eight U.S. firms tracked by C&EN increased by 11.5%, and earnings were up 16.4%. The group’s average profit margin of 22.0% was an improvement over the 21.1% reported in the second quarter of 2007. For the first half of the year, average sales were up 10.1%, while earnings increased 8.7%. The average profit margin of 22.4% was down slightly from 22.7% in the 2007 period. European companies are having a tough- er time in 2008. Sales for the first half of the year for the companies followed by C&EN increased just 2.6% on average, and earnings were up a mere 0.7%. Profit margins for the first six months averaged 26.5%, a slight de- crease from 27.0% in the first half of 2007. Faced with slowing growth in sales and earnings, more drug companies are eyeing their biotech industry partners as a means of bolstering the bottom line. In the past month, Roche, which saw its first-half sales fall by 3.6% to $21.6 billion, made a bid for full control of Genentech; Sanofi-Aventis, which experienced a 3.5% decline in six-month sales to $21.5 billion, is buying vaccines partner Acambis; and Bristol-Myers Squibb is trying to acquire ImClone Systems, its partner for the can- cer drug Erbitux. Analysts wonder whether Amylin, Eli Lilly & Co.’s partner for the dia- betes drug Byetta, might be the next target. However, these biotech partners won’t give in without a fight. Most stock analysts believe Genentech’s board will reject Roche’s offer as undervalued, although they also think Roche will eventually fork over more to win control of the biotech firm. Meanwhile, ImClone is contemplat- ing the spin-off of its drug pipeline in a move designed to spurn BMS. Carl Icahn, the financier who chairs ImClone’s board, has said the BMS offer is not nearly high enough given the value of a potential suc- cessor to Erbitux in ImClone’s pipeline. BMS was one of the stronger looking companies this quarter, apparently fully re- covered from the short-lived generic com- petition its blood thinner Plavix faced early BUSINESS CLOUDY FORECAST FOR BIG PHARMA Second-quarter results are good, but companies’ ABILITY TO MAINTAIN GROWTH is uncertain LISA M. JARVIS, C&EN NORTHEAST NEWS BUREAU DRUG COMPANIES U.S. companies posted relatively healthy second-quarter earnings, while European firms lagged SECOND-QUARTER 2008 FIRST-HALF 2008 SALES EARNINGS a CHANGE FROM 2007 PROFIT MARGIN b SALES EARNINGS a CHANGE FROM 2007 PROFIT MARGIN b $ MILLIONS SALES EARNINGS 2008 2007 $ MILLIONS SALES EARNINGS 2008 2007 U.S. Abbott Laboratories $7,314 $1,308 14.8% 21.6% 17.9% 16.9% $14,080 $2,296 14.3% 18.9% 16.3% 15.7% Bristol-Myers Squibb 5,203 903 16.4 24.4 17.4 16.2 10,094 1,745 18.3 22.6 17.3 16.7 Eli Lilly & Co. 5,150 959 11.2 44.5 18.6 14.3 9,958 2,023 12.4 74.3 20.3 13.1 Johnson & Johnson 16,450 3,367 8.7 9.3 20.5 20.4 32,644 6,965 8.2 7.8 21.3 21.4 Merck 6,052 1,686 -1.0 5.9 27.9 26.1 11,874 2,812 -0.1 -7.5 23.7 25.6 Pfizer 12,129 3,698 9.4 25.6 30.5 26.6 23,977 7,797 1.8 0.6 32.5 32.9 Schering-Plough 4,921 769 54.8 19.2 15.6 20.3 9,577 1,668 55.6 28.1 17.4 21.2 Wyeth 5,945 1,233 5.3 -0.2 20.7 21.9 11,656 2,499 5.8 -0.8 21.4 22.9 TOTAL U.S. c $63,165 $13,923 11.5% 16.4% 22.0% 21.1% $123,860 $27,805 10.1% 8.7% 22.4% 22.7% EUROPE AstraZeneca $7,956 $1,816 9.4% 3.9% 22.8% 24.0% $15,633 $3,683 9.8% 8.8% 23.6% 23.8% GlaxoSmithKline 11,721 4,242 3.5 10.2 36.2 34.0 23,067 8,329 2.6 1.9 36.1 36.3 Novartis 10,990 2,410 15.9 11.0 21.9 22.9 21,206 4,844 11.9 10.2 22.8 23.2 Roche na na na na na na 21,615 4,934 -3.6 -3.6 22.8 22.8 Sanofi-Aventis 10,568 2,536 -3.6 -4.3 24.0 24.2 21,527 5,479 -3.5 -8.6 25.5 26.9 TOTAL EUROPE c $41,235 $11,004 5.6% 5.6% 26.7% 26.7% $103,048 $27,269 2.6% 0.7% 26.5% 27.0% TOTAL ALL COMPANIES c $104,400 $24,927 9.1% 11.4% 23.9% 23.4% $226,908 $55,074 6.6% 4.6% 24.3% 24.7% NOTE: European company results are converted at June 30 exchange rates, except for AstraZeneca and Novartis, which report in U.S. dollars. a After-tax earnings from continuing operations, excluding significant extraordinary and nonrecurring items. b After-tax earnings as a percentage of sales. c For companies reporting. Percentages are calculated from combined sales and earnings. na = not available.

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21WWW.CEN-ONLINE.ORG AUGUST 18, 2008

THE NEWS out of the pharmaceutical industry in recent months illustrates the roller-coaster ride that comes with heavy reliance on blockbuster drugs. Some com-panies are striking deals to expand their portfolios and insulate themselves from patent expiries and drug setbacks, while others are attempting to break the block-buster addiction altogether.

Overall, second-quarter results for big U.S. drug companies looked healthier than in recent years. Average sales for the eight U.S. firms tracked by C&EN increased by 11.5%, and earnings were up 16.4%. The group’s average profit margin of 22.0% was an improvement over the 21.1% reported

in the second quarter of 2007. For the first half of the year, average sales were up 10.1%, while earnings increased 8.7%. The average profit margin of 22.4% was down slightly from 22.7% in the 2007 period.

European companies are having a tough-er time in 2008. Sales for the first half of the year for the companies followed by C&EN increased just 2.6% on average, and earnings were up a mere 0.7%. Profit margins for the first six months averaged 26.5%, a slight de-crease from 27.0% in the first half of 2007.

Faced with slowing growth in sales and earnings, more drug companies are eyeing their biotech industry partners as a means of bolstering the bottom line.

In the past month, Roche, which saw its first-half sales fall by 3.6% to $21.6 billion, made a bid for full control of Genentech; Sanofi-Aventis, which experienced a 3.5% decline in six-month sales to $21.5 billion, is buying vaccines partner Acambis; and Bristol-Myers Squibb is trying to acquire ImClone Systems, its partner for the can-cer drug Erbitux. Analysts wonder whether Amylin, Eli Lilly & Co.’s partner for the dia-betes drug Byetta, might be the next target.

However, these biotech partners won’t give in without a fight. Most stock analysts believe Genentech’s board will reject Roche’s offer as undervalued, although they also think Roche will eventually fork over more to win control of the biotech firm. Meanwhile, ImClone is contemplat-ing the spin-off of its drug pipeline in a move designed to spurn BMS. Carl Icahn, the financier who chairs ImClone’s board, has said the BMS offer is not nearly high enough given the value of a potential suc-cessor to Erbitux in ImClone’s pipeline.

BMS was one of the stronger looking companies this quarter, apparently fully re-covered from the short-lived generic com-petition its blood thinner Plavix faced early

BUSINESS

CLOUDY FORECAST FOR BIG PHARMASecond-quarter results are good, but companies’

ABILITY TO MAINTAIN GROWTH is uncertainLISA M. JARVIS, C&EN NORTHEAST NEWS BUREAU

DRUG COMPANIES U.S. companies posted relatively healthy second-quarter earnings, while European firms lagged

SECOND-QUARTER 2008 FIRST-HALF 2008

SALES EARNINGSa CHANGE FROM 2007 PROFIT MARGINb SALES EARNINGSa CHANGE FROM 2007 PROFIT MARGINb

$ MILLIONS SALES EARNINGS 2008 2007 $ MILLIONS SALES EARNINGS 2008 2007

U.S.Abbott Laboratories

$7,314 $1,308 14.8% 21.6% 17.9% 16.9% $14,080 $2,296 14.3% 18.9% 16.3% 15.7%

Bristol-Myers Squibb

5,203 903 16.4 24.4 17.4 16.2 10,094 1,745 18.3 22.6 17.3 16.7

Eli Lilly & Co. 5,150 959 11.2 44.5 18.6 14.3 9,958 2,023 12.4 74.3 20.3 13.1Johnson & Johnson

16,450 3,367 8.7 9.3 20.5 20.4 32,644 6,965 8.2 7.8 21.3 21.4

Merck 6,052 1,686 -1.0 5.9 27.9 26.1 11,874 2,812 -0.1 -7.5 23.7 25.6Pfi zer 12,129 3,698 9.4 25.6 30.5 26.6 23,977 7,797 1.8 0.6 32.5 32.9Schering-Plough 4,921 769 54.8 19.2 15.6 20.3 9,577 1,668 55.6 28.1 17.4 21.2Wyeth 5,945 1,233 5.3 -0.2 20.7 21.9 11,656 2,499 5.8 -0.8 21.4 22.9TOTAL U.S.c $63,165 $13,923 11.5% 16.4% 22.0% 21.1% $123,860 $27,805 10.1% 8.7% 22.4% 22.7%

EUROPEAstraZeneca $7,956 $1,816 9.4% 3.9% 22.8% 24.0% $15,633 $3,683 9.8% 8.8% 23.6% 23.8%GlaxoSmithKline 11,721 4,242 3.5 10.2 36.2 34.0 23,067 8,329 2.6 1.9 36.1 36.3Novartis 10,990 2,410 15.9 11.0 21.9 22.9 21,206 4,844 11.9 10.2 22.8 23.2Roche na na na na na na 21,615 4,934 -3.6 -3.6 22.8 22.8Sanofi -Aventis 10,568 2,536 -3.6 -4.3 24.0 24.2 21,527 5,479 -3.5 -8.6 25.5 26.9TOTAL EUROPEc $41,235 $11,004 5.6% 5.6% 26.7% 26.7% $103,048 $27,269 2.6% 0.7% 26.5% 27.0%

TOTAL ALL COMPANIESc

$104,400 $24,927 9.1% 11.4% 23.9% 23.4% $226,908 $55,074 6.6% 4.6% 24.3% 24.7%

NOTE: European company results are converted at June 30 exchange rates, except for AstraZeneca and Novartis, which report in U.S. dollars. a After-tax earnings from continuing operations, excluding significant extraordinary and nonrecurring items. b After-tax earnings as a percentage of sales. c For companies reporting. Percentages are calculated from combined sales and earnings. na = not available.

22WWW.CEN-ONLINE.ORG AUGUST 18, 2008

BUSINESS

last year. Second-quarter sales increased 16.4% to $5.2 billion, while earnings surged 24.4% to $903 million.

And BMS has one of the industry’s fresher drug portfolios. Ixempra, a breast cancer treatment launched last fall, had sales of $26 million in the quarter. Sprycel, approved two years ago to treat chronic myeloid leukemia, brought in $76 million—more than double the sales dur-ing the second quarter of 2007. Sales of the arthritis drug Orencia, recently approved for children, were up 55% to $106 million. And benefiting from introduction to mar-kets outside the U.S., the hepatitis B drug Baraclude saw a 131% surge in sales to $136 million.

YET THE SITUATION could get tougher for BMS going forward. Second-quarter sales of Plavix were up 17% to $1.4 billion, but last month a court in Germany said two generic drug companies could sell their cheaper versions of Plavix there. And Novartis’ generics unit, Sandoz, is seeking permission to sell the drug in other Euro-pean countries.

Merck & Co. and Schering-Plough were hit in the quarter by bad news for their cho-lesterol joint venture, which markets both Zetia and Vytorin, a pill that combines Zetia and Merck’s statin Zocor. In January, the companies released pre-liminary data from a large trial showing that although Vytorin is more effective at lowering “bad” cholesterol than Zocor, it also causes more plaque to build up in the arteries of patients with an inherited form of high cholesterol. Physicians cut back on prescriptions, caus-ing sales of Vytorin to fall 14% in the second quarter to $592 million. Zetia sales dipped 3% to $560 million.

That decline could be exacerbated in the remainder of the year. Last month, Merck and Schering-Plough got more disappoint-ing news about Vytorin. Results from an-other trial showed Vytorin did not reduce the number of major cardiovascular events

in a subset of patients with an abnormally thick valve in the aorta.

The study did show the risk of develop-ing coronary artery disease was lower, but that benefit was overshadowed by an alarming side effect noted in the study: a higher in-cidence of cancer among patients taking Vytorin compared with those tak-ing a placebo. Although the companies believe the findings were an anomaly—they noted that an analysis of earlier trials did not demonstrate an increased risk of cancer—the finding still set off panic among patients.

For Schering-Plough, the financial im-pact of the cholesterol drug troubles was obscured by the benefits of its 2007 acqui-sition of AkzoNobel’s Organon Biosciences unit. Second-quarter sales jumped to $4.9 billion, a 54.8% improvement, and earnings increased by 19.2%.

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23WWW.CEN-ONLINE.ORG AUGUST 18, 2008

Merck was also able to offset the cho-lesterol drug decline in the first quarter with strong sales of new products such as Januvia and Janumet. These diabetes drugs continued to go strong in the second quarter, posting combined sales of $406 million; however, the human papilloma virus vaccine Gardasil had a weak showing. The result: Merck’s overall sales for the quarter declined 1.0% to about $6.1 billion, although earnings improved 5.9% to nearly $1.7 billion.

Gardasil sales fell 9% to $326 million, a drop Merck attributed to a slowdown in vaccinations among teenage girls and lower than expected vaccination rates among women age 19 to 26. “Despite our efforts to increase the penetration rates in this population, we clearly underestimated the attitudinal and behavioral barriers with both the 19- to 26-year-old females themselves as well as the doctors that treat them,” Kenneth C. Frazier, Merck’s presi-dent of global human health, told investors on a call to discuss the results. Frazier went on to say that Merck considers that popula-tion segment “still very much in front of us” and noted a range of efforts to reach consumers and doctors to increase uptake of the vaccine.

GIVEN THE RISKS of a business in which a setback with just one blockbuster product can derail sales growth for quarters if not years, some firms are looking to overhaul their approach. GlaxoSmithKline, which took a hit last year when its diabetes drug Avandia was linked to an increased risk of heart attacks, revealed a shift in strategy away from reliance on blockbuster drugs. “In the past, there has been almost an in-dustry mantra that ‘we have to find a block-buster,’ ” an endeavor that’s like finding a needle in a haystack, GSK’s chief executive officer, Andrew Witty, said in announcing second-quarter results.

GSK is now focused on launching a handful of new drugs each year to gener-ate a steady revenue stream. “Every now and again, among all those products, we’re going to discover a needle, and we’re go-ing to make the most of it,” Witty added. The British firm also plans to diversify its businesses beyond proprietary small mole-cules—the traditional bread and butter for big pharma—by increasing its activity in vaccines and in selling its off-patent drugs in emerging markets.

GSK’s second-quarter sales increased 3.5% to $11.7 billion, and its profits im-

proved 10.2% to $4.2 billion. The picture for the first half of the year was less rosy: Earnings were up just 1.9% to $8.3 billion, based on a 2.6% rise in sales to about $23.1 billion.

Sales of Avandia and related products were down 46% in the quarter to $379 mil-lion. The company’s HIV drug franchise saw a 6% drop in second-quarter sales to

$705 million; a 24% increase in Combivir sales partially offset erosion across several other HIV products.

Meanwhile, GSK’s vaccines portfolio proved to be an area of strength, posting 34% sales growth to $1.1 billion. Witty said GSK can continue to capitalize on the vac-cine business by expanding into new mar-kets and geographies. ■

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