Johnson & Johnson on Tuesday forecast 2019 sales that fell short of analysts’ estimates and said it expected further pressure on U.S. prescription drug prices, weighing on the broader pharmaceutical sector.
J&J, the first major drugmaker to report fourth-quarter results, said it expects full-year sales of $80.4 billion to $81.2 billion, below Wall Street estimates of $82.69 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.
The company also said it expected adjusted 2019 earnings of $8.50 to $8.65 per share, putting the midpoint below analysts’ expectations of $8.60 per share.
J&J shares were down 2 per cent at $128.02, while the broader S&P 500 health care sector was off 1.1 per cent.
The health care conglomerate on a call with analysts said that net prices of its medicines declined 6 per cent to 8 per cent in 2018 after falling 4.6 per cent in 2017. J&J did raise U.S. list prices on about two dozen prescription drugs earlier this month, including on its top-selling products.
The company is “obviously engaged with the [Trump] administration and a lot of different groups right now on the issue of pharmaceutical pricing,” Chief Executive Alex Gorsky said on call with analysts.
He said the company had some concerns related to reference pricing, a proposal to tie U.S. drug pricing to the average price paid for drugs in a handful of other developed nations, where the governments directly or indirectly control medicine costs.
“We are concerned about some unintended consequences around access and innovation as it relates to some of the proposals,” Mr. Gorsky said.
Drugmakers have come under intense pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump and Congress to lower out-of-pocket medical costs for consumers.
Mr. Gorsky attempted to deflect some of that responsibility, saying medicines and medical devices combined for about 20 per cent of costs to patients. The remaining 80 per cent, he said, comes “from outside our industry.”
While J&J has huge medical device and consumer health divisions, its pharmaceuticals unit has been its main growth driver in recent years.
Strength in the pharmaceuticals business also helped offset higher costs, including a doubling of litigation expense in the fourth quarter to $1.29 billion.
Most of that was related to resolving older lawsuits in its medical devices business, spokesman Ernie Knewitz said in an e-mail response to Reuters. For the full year, litigation expenses rose to $1.9 billion from $1.3 billion in 2017. About 10 per cent of that total was related to talc, Mr. Knewitz said.
J&J is facing more than 11,000 lawsuits over the safety of talc in its products, including baby powder, alleging that its use caused cancer.
“We remain committed to ensuring the facts about our talc are understood and we will continue to defend the safety of our products,” Mr. Gorsky said.
Reuters on Dec. 14 published a special report detailing that the company knew for decades that cancer-causing asbestos could be found in its talc.
J&J has repeatedly said that its talc products are safe, and that decades of studies have shown them to be asbestos-free and that they do not cause cancer.
Excluding items, J&J said it earned $1.97 per share for the fourth quarter, beating analysts’ average estimate by 2 cents.
Sales in the quarter rose about 1 per cent to $20.39 billion, topping Wall Street estimates of $20.20 billion.
Sales of Stelara for psoriasis and Crohn’s disease jumped 33.6 per cent to $1.44 billion. Cancer drugs Darzalex and Imbruvica also had double-digit sales increases to $584 million and $703 million, respectively.