earnings reports

J&J looks at job cuts despite weathering inflation impact

Reuters

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J&J looks at job cuts despite weathering inflation impact

J&J. The Johnson & Johnson logo is displayed to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the company's listing at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, September 17, 2019.

Brendan McDermid/Reuters

Johnson & Johnson chief financial officer Joseph Wolk says the US healthcare conglomerate is looking at 'rightsizing' itself

Johnson & Johnson posted better than expected third-quarter earnings on strong demand for its cancer drug Darzalex, but said it may still cut some jobs as it contends with inflationary pressure and challenges created by the strong dollar.

J&J chief financial officer Joseph Wolk said the US healthcare conglomerate is looking at “rightsizing” itself, particularly as it moves from being a three-segment business to a two-segment business through the spin-off of its consumer unit.

That business, which will be called Kenvue and hold many of the company’s best known brands like Band-Aid bandages and Tylenol, is set to be spun out late next year.

J&J said it was not immune to the effects of inflation on its business and the impact of a strong dollar, despite “health care being more resilient” than most industries. A stronger dollar will reduce 2023 adjusted earnings by between 40 cents and 45 cents, the company said.

“We are looking at making sure that our resources are deployed on those projects, those initiatives, those services that really add the most value for our business,” Wolk told Reuters.

Johnson & Johnson shares were marginally down in early trading at $166.29, reversing from their premarket gains.

The share move was mainly due to macroeconomic and currency concerns which are not unique to J&J, said Edward Jones analyst John Boylan.

The company expects some inflationary pressures to ease next year, but warned higher costs of inventory manufactured in 2022 could weigh on 2023 profit.

Total sales rose 1.9% to $23.79 billion in the third quarter, topping estimates of $23.34 billion, according to Refinitiv IBES data.

Excluding items, J&J earned $2.55 per share, beating Wall Street estimates by 8 cents.

Sales of cancer drug Darzalex jumped nearly 30% to $2.05 billion in the quarter.

The medical devices unit reported a 2.1% rise in sales to $6.78 billion on demand for contact lenses and wound-closure products. – Rappler.com

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