Free Newsletter
J&J revenue sees first decline in 76 years
While overall earnings were ahead of what analysts predicted for drugmaker Johnson & Johnson, it is clear that generic competition has hurt the company's sales. The company earned $2.6 billion (94 cents per share) in the fourth quarter, a little more than it did in the fourth quarter of 2007, when it earned $2.5 billion (88 cents per share).
While its consumer products division showed a 1.2 percent increase in sales globally, its medical device unit sales were down by 1.9 percent. Cordis, a J&J unit that makes stents, saw sales drop to $722 million, or to 16.8 percent. However, its prescription medications took the greatest hit. Sales of Razadyne, its medication for Alzheimer disease dropped by 77.6 percent to $11 million, and Risperdal, dropped 84 percent since the fourth quarter of 2007.
Overall, the company reported a 4.9 percent decline in revenue to $15.8 billion, the company's first revenue decline in 76 years.
J&J chairperson Bill Weldon said that J&J is confident it is positioned well for growth, and that the company has made significant progress in its research pipeline.
- read the story in the Wall Street Journal
- find out more at CNN Money
- see what Forbes has to say
Related Articles:
J&J to pay $1B for implant maker Mentor
J&J deal marks preventive health move
Think Pfizer's jealous of J&J's numbers?
J&J report impressive Q3 earnings
Comments
Post new comment
Paid Research Reports
- Stakeholder Opinions: Vaccines in Emerging Markets (Asia) - Opportunities in China, India, South Korea and Taiwan
- Big Pharma Performance Before, During and Beyond the Global Recession
- Optimizing Lifecycle Management: Maximizing commercial lifespan through label expansion and combination products
- The CRO Market Outlook: Emerging markets, leading players and future trends
- Pharmaceutical Sales Force Effectiveness Strategies
- Commercial Insight: Influenza Vaccines and Antivirals - The pandemic's long-term impact





