Pfizer profit falls sharply

Thu Oct 18, 2007 9:35am EDT
 
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By Ransdell Pierson

NEW YORK (Reuters)- Pfizer Inc (PFE.N) said on Thursday third-quarter earnings fell sharply due to a $2.8 billion charge to end its involvement with the poorly selling inhaled insulin drug Exubera.

But excluding one-time charges, profit beat analysts' forecasts as overall revenue fell just 2 percent, less than Wall Street had expected. Cholesterol fighter Lipitor lost ground and sales of several other important Pfizer drugs plunged due to competition from cheaper generics.

Deutsche Bank analyst Barbara Ryan said Pfizer's abandonment of Exubera was irrelevant from a financial perspective because the drug had such dismal sales.

"They tested the patient (Exubera) and there was no pulse, so it's going from zero to zero," she said

The world's biggest drugmaker earned $761 million, or 11 cents per share, in the third quarter, compared with $3.36 billion, or 46 cents per share, a year earlier.

Excluding special items, profit was 58 cents per share. Analysts' average forecast was 52 cents, according to Reuters Estimates.

In addition to the Exubera charge, Pfizer said results were hurt by restructuring expenses tied to cost-reduction initiatives.

Revenue fell to $11.99 billion but was $270 million higher than the average Wall Street forecast. Pfizer said positive foreign exchange factors boosted revenue by $300 million.

"Despite our best efforts, Exubera has failed to gain the acceptance of patients and physicians," Chief Executive Jeff Kindler said in a press release. "We have therefore concluded that further investment in this product is unwarranted."

Exubera, developed in partnership with Nektar Therapeutics (NKTR.O), was approved by U.S. regulators in January 2006 and made history as the first form of inhaled insulin. Other companies are trying to develop similar products.

New York-based Pfizer said it would return its worldwide Exubera rights to Nektar and work with doctors over the next three months to switch Exubera patients to other diabetes treatments.

After being launched, many investors assumed Exubera would become a sure-fire blockbuster, on the theory that diabetics would prefer an inhaled form of insulin over traditional injectable forms of the hormone used to control blood sugar.

Instead, Exubera became a dud, with paltry sales. Some analysts speculated the bulky canister device used to administer the powdered drug was a turn-off to patients.

In view of the hefty Exubera charge, Pfizer slashed its 2007 net earnings forecast. But excluding special items, it issued a slightly improved forecast of $2.10 to $2.15 per share, thanks in part to lower expenses.

For 2008, it said it still expects earnings, excluding special items, of $2.31 to $2.45 per share.  Continued...

 
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