Pfizer profit just misses; company scraps cholesterol drug

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Pfizer, the largest U.S. drugmaker, reported a quarterly adjusted profit that just missed analysts' estimates, and the company shaved 4 cents off its 2016 earnings forecast after


scrapping development of a cholesterol-lowering treatment. The drugmaker earned 61 cents per share in the third quarter, excluding special items, missing the average analyst estimate by 1


cent, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Pfizer's new breast cancer treatment, Ibrance, generated sales of $550 million, missing the consensus forecast of $576 million compiled by


Evercore ISI. The company's Lyrica pain drug brought in sales of $1.05 billion, missing expectation of $1.28 billion, but its Prevnar vaccine generated $1.54 billion, above the forecast


of $1.48 billion. Pfizer also said on Tuesday it was abandoning the development of its cholestrol-lowering drug, bococizumab, citing an "evolving treatment landscape." The company


lowered the upper end of its 2016 adjusted earnings forecast to $2.43 from $2.48 per share, while retaining the lower end at $2.38. Pfizer also bumped up the lower end of its revenue


forecast to $52 billion from $51 billion, while reaffirming the upper end at $53 billion. Bococizumab, which belongs to a pricey new class of medicines called PCSK9 inhibitors, was always


going to be late to the party, since two rival drugs hit the market last summer — Praluent, co-developed by Regeneron and Sanofi and Repatha from Amgen. Pfizer's shares were down about


1 percent at $31.40 in premarket trading.