(Bloomberg) -- Roche Holding AG nudged this year’s profit and sales forecast upward as new medicines for cancer and multiple sclerosis fill the gap left by competition for its older drugs, particularly in the vital U.S. market.
Core earnings per share will climb by a percentage in the mid-single digits this year, factoring out currency fluctuations, in line with sales, the Basel, Switzerland-based company said on Thursday. Roche had predicted in January that both profit and sales would rise by a low- to mid-single digit percentage.
The boost a quarter into the year is a sign of the Swiss drugmaker’s optimism about its ability to offset competition for the trio of decades-old cancer medicines at the heart of its business. Roche has been branching out into other types of diseases as sales for its old medicines drop, particularly in Europe, where biosimilar copies are widely available.
“This strong first-quarter performance underscores our confidence in Roche,” Peter Welford and colleagues at Jefferies Financial Group Inc. wrote in a note to clients. The company is their top pick among large European pharma companies, they said.
Roche’s new multiple sclerosis drug Ocrevus saw sales grow by two-thirds in the first quarter, to 836 million Swiss francs ($830 million). The hemophilia therapy Hemlibra had sales of 219 million francs. And Perjeta, a breast-cancer medicine designed to complement Roche’s aging blockbuster Herceptin, recorded a 41 percent boost to 868 million francs.
The Swiss drugmaker’s total sales climbed 9 percent to 14.8 billion francs. Roche reports only revenue on a quarterly basis and will disclose earnings after the first half of the year.
©2019 Bloomberg L.P.