05.03.2008 13:00:00
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Pfizer Presents New Opportunities for Global Growth
Pfizer Inc today reviewed strategies to accelerate and refocus Pfizer’s
pipeline and capture new opportunities for global growth at a meeting
for investment analysts.
"We have made real changes in how we operate
our business – in our structure, culture and
leadership – so that we have a much stronger
foundation in place for pursuing the many opportunities before us,”
said Chairman and CEO Jeff Kindler. "We are
delivering and accelerating our pipeline, and we will seize promising
growth opportunities spanning geographies, therapeutic areas and
products.”
Kindler and his leadership team outlined their growth strategies
including optimizing Pfizer’s patent-protected
portfolio; generating revenue opportunities from established products;
accelerating growth in emerging markets; focusing on continuous
improvement and innovation; and investing in complementary businesses.
Accelerating Pipeline with Sharpened
Focus on Key Disease Areas
Pfizer today updated its development pipeline, which is posted on www.pfizer.com.
"2008 marks the start of a multi-year period
of increased productivity,” said Dr. Martin
Mackay, president of Pfizer Global Research & Development. "We
have made strategic decisions to focus internally and externally on
high-value disease areas and to expedite compounds in our pipeline that
will meet the future needs of patients and drive revenue growth.”
Throughout this year and the next, the Company anticipates a strong flow
of medicines progressing from Phase II to Phase III. Pfizer expects:
a total of 15 to 20 Phase III starts by the end of 2009 in
disease areas ranging from cancer, to diabetes, to pain;
to grow the number of Phase III programs by 50 to 75 percent,
to at least 24 – and as many as 28 —
by December 2009, up from 16 today; and
15-20 regulatory submissions between 2010 and 2012.
Pfizer announced that three key compounds expected to move to Phase III
illustrate its commitment to finding innovative ways to address areas of
high patient need: CP-751871, an IGF-1R inhibitor for the
treatment of gastrointestinal, genitourinary, lung and breast cancer; CP-690550,
our JAK-3 inhibitor for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis,
transplant rejection, psoriasis, Crohn’s
disease, and asthma; and PF-734200, our DPP-IV inhibitor for the
treatment of diabetes.
Pfizer has improved R&D productivity in the way it identifies the
compounds most likely to succeed and has focused its resources on
high-value areas. These high-value disease areas --including oncology,
pain, diabetes/obesity, immunology/inflammation, schizophrenia and
Alzheimer’s disease -- represent areas of
significant unmet medical need and/or high market growth potential,
and/or areas where Pfizer may be first or best in class. The Company is
also accelerating clinical development on 20 programs in disease areas
such as arthritis, cancer, pain and diabetes. It is also ending work on
24 clinical and preclinical programs so it can reinvest in high-value
areas.
Pfizer continues to supplement its internal R&D efforts with the best
external science to help deliver a high-value pipeline of new medicines.
Through the execution of new business development deals, Pfizer added 7
clinical candidates, including 4 biologics, in 2007 in prioritized
disease areas. The Company has expanded its venture capital activity and
its early stage product investment strategy, including the establishment
of the Biotherapeutics and Bioinnovation Center (BBC) based in
California. The Company currently has 26 biologics spanning 8
therapeutic areas and has set the goal of becoming a top-tier
biotherapeutics company.
Pfizer scientists described the Company’s
strengths in researching and developing pain medicines, a $45 billion
market with significant unmet medical need. They reviewed 13 programs
across a spectrum of pain conditions, including 9 new molecular
entities. This group includes three Phase III programs, valuable
potential new indications for market-leaders Celebrex and Lyrica,
and trials of S,S reboxetine for fibromyalgia. In addition, Pfizer’s
nine pain compounds in development include the monoclonal antibody PF-4383119,
and the p38 kinase inhibitor PH-797804, both designed to treat
pain by regulating the inflammatory process.
Seizing Opportunities for Global Growth "We see a range of promising growth
opportunities over the next three to five years where we will take
advantage of our global scale,” said Ian
Read, president of Worldwide Pharmaceutical Operations. "We
will run our business with much more flexibility as we continue to
empower Pfizer colleagues closest to our customers.”
To advance these growth opportunities, the Company highlighted
innovative commercial models that take advantage of its broad portfolio
of medicines and its significant global footprint spanning R&D,
manufacturing, sales and marketing to change the way it meets the needs
of customers around the world.
Optimizing the Patent-Protected Portfolio. The company
will continue its focus on delivering revenue from patent-protected
medicines, seven of which are global market leaders in their disease
areas. Revenues from certain in-line medicines including Geodon,
Xalatan, Zyvox, and Vfend are growing at double-digit rates, and
revenues from new medicines Chantix, Lyrica and Sutent more than doubled
to $3.3 billion in 2007, versus $1.5 billion in 2006.
The Company is also establishing a new Business Unit focused solely
on oncology in its Worldwide Pharmaceutical Group. This unit will
bring together global oncology functions including clinical development,
medical affairs, commercial development, sales and marketing. It will
have the resources to seize growth opportunities to strengthen Pfizer’s
research investment in oncology, a market expected to more than double
in the next decade. The Oncology Business Unit will enable the Company
to expedite launches of novel oncology agents, as well as to focus
research efforts on cancers common in Asia, including those of the
liver, esophagus and nasopharynx.
Seizing Growth Opportunities in Emerging Markets. Pfizer
also announced plans to capture greater revenue in emerging markets in
Latin America, Eastern Europe and Asia. The company will leverage its
global scale and breadth of products to provide health solutions to the
growing and untapped market of middle-income patients living in these
markets.
The Company pointed out four drivers that will help it expand in the $47
billion emerging Asian pharmaceutical market. Pfizer expects to
reinforce its market leadership, increasing market share to 6% by 2012,
up from 4% today. These drivers include expanding its existing presence
in high growth markets, building leadership in oncology, tailoring
portfolio offerings to local market needs and taking greater advantage
of global manufacturing and R&D in Asia.
For example, Pfizer plans to expand operations in China from the 110
cities it now serves to more than 650 cities. Growing established
products (medicines that have lost or will soon lose patent protection),
launching new products and reaching more patients will enable Pfizer to
continue to capitalize on its strong base in China, a country expected
to be one of the world’s top five healthcare
markets as early as 2010.
Forming Dedicated Business Unit for Established Products. The
Company recently formed an Established Products Business Unit within
Worldwide Pharmaceutical Operations, with the goal of achieving
double-digit growth in the global market for established medicines. The
newly formed unit will execute growth strategies tailored to the unique
needs of branded emerging markets (such as China, India, Brazil and
Russia), branded traditional markets (such as Japan, Western Europe and
South Korea), and intellectual-property-driven markets (such as the
United States and Canada).
The Company expects to increase market share by leveraging its existing
portfolio through product enhancements and reformulations, pursuing new
indications for niche markets, and intensifying late-stage lifecycle
plans for its established medicines.
"By pursuing growth strategies in the right
geographies, with the right products and business models, we will drive
change, seize opportunities and create value for customers,”
said Read. "We are meaningfully diversifying
our risk, which will be a significant advantage to us as we compete in
this fast-changing marketplace.” Reaffirming 2008 Guidance and
Continuing to Create a Lower, More Flexible Cost Base
Chief Financial Officer Frank D’Amelio
reaffirmed Pfizer’s financial guidance for
full-year 2008(1):
Revenue range from $47 to $49 Billion
Adjusted total costs(2)(3)decrease of at
least $1.5-$2 billion on a constant currency basis(4)
Adjusted cost of sales(2)as percentage of
revenue range from 14.5% to 15.5%
Adjusted SI&A expenses(2)range from $14.4
to $14.9 Billion
Adjusted R&D expenses(2)range from $7.3
to $7.6 Billion
Reported diluted EPS range from $1.78 to $1.93
Adjusted diluted EPS(2)range from $2.35 to
$2.45
Effective tax rate(5)range from 22% to 22.5%
Cash flow from operations range from $17 to $18 Billion
The Company is continuing to create a lower, more flexible cost base to
align with revenues by expanding upon certain cost management
initiatives, such as increasing outsourced manufacturing and further
reducing the global real estate footprint.
"We are proactively managing our total cost
structure to do what is necessary to size the company appropriately to
align with our revenues so that we deliver growing profitability after
the Lipitor loss of exclusivity,” said D’Amelio.
"As a result, we expect to continue to
generate industry-leading operating margins in a percentage range of the
mid- to high- 30s.”
(1) At January 2008 exchange rates.
(2) "Adjusted income" and its components and "adjusted diluted earnings
per share (EPS)" are defined as reported net income and its components
and reported diluted EPS excluding purchase-accounting adjustments,
acquisition-related costs, discontinued operations and certain
significant items. Adjusted Cost of Sales, Adjusted SI&A expenses and
Adjusted R&D expenses are income statement line items prepared on the
same basis, and therefore, components of the overall Adjusted Income
measure. As described under Adjusted Income in the
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations section of Pfizer's 2007
Form 10-K, management uses adjusted income, among other factors, to set
performance goals and to measure the performance of the overall company.
We believe that investors' understanding of our performance is enhanced
by disclosing this measure. Reconciliations of full-year 2008 adjusted
income and adjusted diluted EPS guidance to full-year 2008 reported net
income and reported diluted EPS guidance are provided in our 2007 Form
10-K, filed on February 29, 2008. The adjusted income and its components
and adjusted diluted EPS measures are not, and should not be viewed as,
substitutes for U.S. GAAP net income and diluted EPS.
(3) The total of Adjusted Cost of Sales(2),
Adjusted SI&A expenses(2) and Adjusted R&D
expenses(2).
(4) At 2006 exchange rates.
(5) On adjusted income.
DISCLOSURE NOTICE: The information contained in this press release is
as of March 5, 2008. The Company assumes no obligation to update any
forward-looking statements contained in this release as a result of new
information or future events or developments. This release contains forward-looking information that involves
substantial risks and uncertainties about the Company’s
in-line products and product candidates, financial results and estimates
and business plans and prospects. Among other things, the release
contains, in particular, forward-looking information that involves
substantial risks and uncertainties (i) about various products in
development and potential additional indications for certain in-line
products, including their potential benefits, as well as projections
with respect to the advancement of certain programs into Phase III and
with respect to regulatory submissions for certain programs, and (ii)
about the growth in certain business areas including, without
limitation, established products, emerging markets and biotherapeutics.
You can identify these statements by the fact that they use words such
as "will,” "anticipate,” "estimate,” "expect,” "project,” "intend,” "plan,” "believe,” "target,” "forecast”
and other words and terms of similar meaning. Among the factors that
could cause actual results to differ materially are the following: the
uncertainties inherent in research and development activities; decisions
by regulatory authorities regarding whether and when to approve drug
applications and supplemental drug applications that have been or may be
filed for such products in development and for such additional
indications for in-line products as well as their decisions regarding
labeling and other matters that could affect the availability or
commercial potential of such products and such additional indications;
the speed with which regulatory authorizations, pricing approvals and
product launches may be achieved; the success of external business
development activities; competitive developments, including with respect
to competitor drugs and drug candidates that treat diseases and
conditions similar to those treated by our in-line drugs and drug
candidates; the ability to successfully market both new and existing
products domestically and internationally; difficulties or delays in
manufacturing; trade buying patterns; the ability to meet generic and
branded competition after the loss of patent protection for our products
or competitor products; the impact of existing and future regulatory
provisions on product exclusivity; trends toward managed care and
healthcare cost containment; U.S. legislation or regulatory action
affecting, among other things, pharmaceutical product pricing,
reimbursement or access, including under Medicaid and Medicare, the
importation of prescription drugs that from outside the U.S. at prices
that are regulated by governments of various foreign countries, and the
involuntary approval of prescription medicines for over-the-counter use; the impact of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and
Modernization Act of 2003; legislation or regulatory action in markets
outside the U.S. affecting pharmaceutical product pricing, reimbursement
or access; contingencies related to actual or alleged environmental
contamination; claims and concerns that may arise regarding the safety
or efficacy of in-line products and product candidates; significant
breakdown, infiltration or interruption of our information technology
systems and infrastructure; legal defense costs, insurance expenses,
settlement costs and the risk of an adverse decision or settlement
related to product liability, patent protection, governmental
investigations, ongoing efforts to explore various means for resolving
asbestos litigation, and other legal proceedings; the Company’s
ability to protect its patents and other intellectual property both
domestically and internationally; interest rate and foreign currency
exchange rate fluctuations; governmental laws and regulations affecting
domestic and foreign operations, including tax obligations; changes
in generally accepted accounting principles; any changes in business,
political and economic conditions due to the threat of terrorist
activity in the U. S. and other parts of the world, and related U. S.
military action overseas; growth in costs and expenses; changes in our
product, segment and geographic mix; and the impact of acquisitions,
divestitures, restructurings, product withdrawals and other unusual
items, including our ability to realize the projected benefits of our
cost-reduction initiatives. A further list and description of these
risks, uncertainties and other matters can be found in the Company’s
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2007,
and in its reports on Forms 10-Q and 8-K.
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Aktien in diesem Artikel
Pfizer Inc. | 24,77 | 0,83% |
Indizes in diesem Artikel
Dow Jones | 44 910,65 | 0,42% | |
S&P 500 | 6 032,38 | 0,56% | |
S&P 100 | 2 902,89 | 0,68% | |
NYSE US 100 | 17 376,20 | -0,02% |