Jan 30 (Reuters) - Thermo Fisher Scientific ( TMO ) on
Thursday beat Wall Street estimates for fourth-quarter profit
and revenue, helped by improved demand for its products and
services used in developing therapies.
Contract drug manufacturers witnessed reduced spending from
biotech clients in the past two years, but recent interest rate
cuts could improve the funding environment for biotechs as
borrowing costs might ease.
However, some life sciences firms such as rival Danaher ( DHR )
have indicated that despite the rate cuts smaller
biotech clients are still cautious with their investments.
Earlier this week, Franco-German peer Sartorius
reported preliminary annual results that beat expectations and
posted a 23.1% rise in fourth-quarter orders for its key
Bioprocess Solutions division, lifting shares of life sciences
firms such as Thermo Fisher.
On an adjusted basis, Thermo Fisher earned a profit of $6.10
per share for the quarter ended Dec. 31, beating analysts'
estimates of $5.94 per share, as per data compiled by LSEG.
The Waltham Massachusetts-based company's revenue rose 5% to
11.40 billion, ahead of estimates of $11.28 billion.
Sales at its laboratory products segment that provides
products and services used in clinical trials and drug
development, came in at $5.94 billion for the reported quarter,
but fell short of estimates of $5.97 billion.
Revenue from that segment makes up more than half of Thermo
Fisher's total sales.