Core Viewpoint - Roche and Sanofi's latest earnings met expectations, with both companies emphasizing the importance of developing new drugs to counteract the impending "patent cliff" facing the pharmaceutical industry [1][2]. Roche - Roche's sales grew by 8% in the fourth quarter, driven by blockbuster drugs like Ocrevus and Tecentriq [5]. - The company forecasts profit growth to outpace sales growth by 2026, with adjusted earnings per share expected to grow by high single digits at constant currencies [5]. - Roche plans to launch up to 19 new medicines by the end of the decade, focusing on late-stage development [3]. - The company is entering the obesity market with its weight-loss candidate CT-388, which showed a 22.5% weight reduction in Phase 2 trials, comparable to competitors [10]. - Roche has partnered with Zealand Pharma to co-develop the drug petrelintide, aiming to invest in next-generation obesity treatments [11]. Sanofi - Sanofi reported a 13% sales growth in the fourth quarter at constant currencies, with earnings per share of 1.53 euros ($1.20), exceeding forecasts [6]. - The company anticipates sales growth in the high single digits for 2026, with profit growth expected to be slightly higher than revenue [8]. - Sanofi's growth was supported by new medicines and its drug Dupixent, which reached a new quarterly high [8]. - The company announced a 1 billion euro share buyback, but investor focus remains on its research and development efforts [8]. - The need to expand the pipeline will be a key topic in Sanofi's earnings call, highlighting long-term R&D spending and potential M&A activities [9].
Drugmakers Roche and Sanofi talk up their pipelines, as earnings fail to excite