Drugmakers Roche and Sanofi talk up their pipelines, as earnings fail to excite

Drugmakers Roche and Sanofi talk up their pipelines, as earnings fail to excite


Drugmakers Roche and Sanofi’s latest earnings were largely as expected, with the companies talking up the potential of experimental medicines ahead of a looming “patent cliff” for Big Pharma.

Both companies’ stocks were down less than 1% on Thursday after reporting earnings before the bell.

They are both among the pharmaceutical companies that could see revenue fall dramatically in the coming years unless they top up their pipelines by developing drugs internally or acquiring drug candidates developed by others.

“On the pipeline side, we’ve had an amazing run of a number of Phase 3 readouts that are going to be instrumental for future growth,” the CEO Thomas Schinecker told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday.

“We have a number of medicines that we’ve now moved into the late stage of development, and we will have up to 19 new medicines that we can launch by the end of the decade.”

Roche's U.S drug prices will be lowered, says CEO

Innovation in focus

Sanofi posted a quarterly beat on both top and bottom lines, and issued 2026 guidance largely in line with expectations.

It reported fourth-quarter sales growth of 13% at constant currencies and earnings per share of 1.53 euros ($1.20), both above forecasts, even with headwinds in its vaccine business thanks to changes in U.S. vaccine policy. 

“Growth was supported by new medicines and Dupixent, reaching a new quarterly high,” CEO Paul Hudson said in a statement.

Similar to Roche, Sanofi also sees sales growing by high-single digits in 2026, with profit growth “slightly higher than revenue.” 

“We anticipate profitable growth to continue over at least five years,” the company said.

Despite the beat and a newly announced 1 billion euro share buyback, the focus for Sanofi investors remains on the company’s research and development.

The need to expand the pipeline will put long-term R&D spend and the potential future M&A front and center in Sanofi’s earnings call on Thursday afternoon, Jefferies analyst Michael Leuchten said in a note after earnings.

The obesity entry

Apart from its experimental breast cancer drug giredestrant and MS treatment fenebrutinib, Roche is betting big on a slice of the lucrative obesity market in the coming years.

The company is facing key loss of exclusivity for some of its best-selling drugs, but CEO Schinecker told CNBC’s that this was “absolutely manageable.” 

On Tuesday, the company reported positive Phase 2 clinical trial results for its weight-loss candidate CT-388. It showed that the drug resulted in a 22.5% weight reduction over 48 weeks, on par with market rivals Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy and Eli Lilly’s Zepbound. The company hopes it to be able to compete in the increasingly crowded market through differentiation.

Last year, Roche also entered into a partnership with Danish Zealand Pharma to co-develop Zealand’s drug petrelintide, an amylin analog, as a stand-alone as well as in combination with CT-388.

“We’re not investing in [the] first generation of these medicines – we’re investing in the next generation,” CEO Schinecker told CNBC on Thursday.

“We can differentiate in combination with other therapies we have in house, because there are more than 200 comorbidities in neurology, in immunology, in cancer, and none of the other players have the kind of portfolio that we have for combinations,” he said, adding that there was also windows for differentiation with the longer lasting molecule itself, as well as in diagnostics.



Source

Bank of England faces the ‘most difficult combination,’ says governor Bailey as energy prices soar
World

Bank of England faces the ‘most difficult combination,’ says governor Bailey as energy prices soar

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey attends the central bank’s Monetary Policy Report press conference at the Bank of England, in the City of London, on May 8, 2025. Carlos Jasso | Afp | Getty Images Bank of England policymakers must contend with the “most difficult combination” of economic effects, according to governor Andrew Bailey, […]

Read More
Core inflation rate hit 3.2% in March as first-quarter growth disappointed at 2%
World

Core inflation rate hit 3.2% in March as first-quarter growth disappointed at 2%

Consumers faced escalating prices in March as the Iran war sent oil soaring and created a new level of challenges for the Federal Reserve, according to a batch of reports Thursday that showed economic growth slower than expected and a generational low in layoffs. The core personal consumption expenditures price index, which excludes food and […]

Read More
Boaz Weinstein’s activist investor Saba seizes control of UK tech fund after bitter SpaceX feud
World

Boaz Weinstein’s activist investor Saba seizes control of UK tech fund after bitter SpaceX feud

Saba Capital, the activist hedge fund led by Boaz Weinstein, has won a dramatic victory in its long-running campaign against the board of Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust. Shareholders in Edinburgh Worldwide voted Thursday for Saba Capital’s plan to oust EWIT chair Jonathan Simpson-Dent — and five other board members — and to install three Saba-backed […]

Read More