Feb 11 (Reuters) - Gilead Sciences ( GILD ) posted
fourth-quarter results that exceeded Wall Street estimates on
Tuesday as its HIV drug sales rose 16% and acquisition-related
costs fell.
The California-based drugmaker's adjusted profit rose to
$1.90 per share from $1.72 a year earlier, beating analysts'
estimates of $1.70 per share, according to LSEG data.
Revenue for the quarter rose 6% to $7.57 billion, also
exceeding Wall Street estimates of $7.14 billion.
Net earnings per share rose to $1.42 from $1.14 a year ago.
For 2025, the company said it expects adjusted earnings of
$7.70 to $8.10 per share on product sales of $28.2 billion to
$28.6 billion. The low end of the company earnings range is
above analysts' projections of $7.58 per share. They are
estimating 2025 revenue of $28.42 billion.
"From this foundation of commercial strength, we are
planning for the potential launch of lenacapavir for HIV PreP
(pre-exposure prophylaxis) in summer 2025," Gilead CEO Daniel
O'Day said in a statement.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is expected to decide
by mid-year whether to approve lenacapavir as a twice-yearly
injection to prevent HIV infection.
Gilead said its fourth-quarter HIV product sales rose to
$5.45 billion from $4.69 billion a year earlier, due to higher
demand, higher prices and favorable inventory dynamics. Biktarvy
sales rose 21% to $3.8 billion, beating the average analyst
estimate of $3.48 billion.
Sales of COVID-19 drug Veklury fell 53% to $337 million,
which was short of Wall Street expectations of $397 million.
Oncology sales rose 10% to $843 million and sales of liver
disease drugs rose 4% to $719 million.