Merck Plans More Job Cuts; 2Q Profits Rise
Business + Economy

Merck Plans More Job Cuts; 2Q Profits Rise

Drugmaker Merck & Co. plans to cut as many as 13,000 more jobs under a new round of restructuring.

The announcement came Friday as Merck reported a higher second-quarter profit than a year ago, when about $2 billion in charges hurt results. The news drove shares down more than 2 percent.

The new cuts would bring to 30,000 the positions eliminated since Merck's November 2009 megadeal to buy Schering-Plough Corp., on top of about 5,000 positions the companies cut before the deal closed.

Most of the new job cuts will come from headquarters and other administrative functions. The company also will close some offices and manufacturing sites, CEO Kenneth Frazier told analysts during a conference call. The cuts are to be made by 2015 and won't start in earnest until next year.

Such cuts are part of ongoing streamlining by Merck and many competitors, whose payrolls and costs ballooned in the 1990s as they added thousands of salespeople to promote a surge of blockbuster drugs taken by millions. With those drugs getting generic competition, too few new drugs coming on the market and payers pressing for relief from high prices, the companies are slashing costs in developed countries.

Meanwhile, they're adding salespeople and factories in emerging markets, where their drugs must have much lower prices. Merck, Pfizer Inc. and the Roche group also made huge acquisitions in 2009, allowing them to quickly cut overlapping costs and boost the bottom line, while diversifying into new businesses and adding to their pipelines of experimental drugs.

Frazier said the company will keep making smart investments in research but be more aggressive in halting unpromising research projects. Merck just ended development of a migraine drug in final testing, and hasn't given a reason.

"They can't cut another 12 percent of their headcount and expect it to have no effect. Something will suffer," said Erik Gordon, an analyst and professor at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business, adding a big cut "makes analysts and short-term investors happy because it's a sure thing. Less sure is whether their future pipeline will be strong enough to avoid needing another merger and round of cuts."

Merck spokesman David Caouette told The Associated Press that 35 percent to 40 percent of the new job cuts will be in the U.S. He couldn't provide details on those cuts or site closures, but said Merck will "continue to hire in high-growth areas like emerging markets." Caouette noted Merck eliminated nearly 12,500 positions last year but only reduced total headcount by 6,000. The company had 91,000 employees at the end of July.

"All in, I think they're going to end up with probably 80,000 employees," said Deutsche Bank analyst Barbara Ryan, who said the new cuts weren't unexpected.

The maker of asthma and allergy drug Singulair and Type 2 diabetes pill Januvia said it expects to save $1.3 billion to $1.5 billion with the new round of cuts and is on track to hit its goal of $3.5 billion in annual cost savings, from the first restructuring program, by the end of 2012. But all the restructuring will add a total of about $6.2 billion in charges from the two programs.

Frazier said the cuts are needed because Singulair's patent expires next year, and business conditions are "a lot tougher than in the past."

Singulair produced about $5 billion in sales last year — nearly 11 percent of total revenue. That will plunge when generic versions of the drug hit the market after its patent expires next August. Merck officials also cited pressures from increasing austerity measures from cash-strapped European government health programs, and the need to invest in developing and promoting new drugs.

Merck's net income was $2.02 billion, or 65 cents per share, up from $752 million or 24 cents a share, a year earlier. Earning excluding one-time items, it matched analyst expectations of 95 cents per share.

Adjusted earnings, excluding $926 million in restructuring and acquisition charges and other items, came to $2.95 billion, up 9 percent from a year ago.

Revenue totaled $12.15 billion, up 7 percent. Analysts expected $11.81 billion.

During the conference call, Goldman Sachs analyst Jami Rubin told Frazier the long-term cost savings are "very good news."

But Merck shares fell 68 cents, or 2 percent, to $34.25 in midday trading.

Ryan said the stock likely fell because some investors may have expected better results and others are upset that Frazier, who took over in January, still refuses to give a long-term profit forecast.

Instead, he repeatedly said he's focused on improving revenue and profit by cutting costs and expanding in key areas.

Merck raised the lower end of its adjusted profit forecast by 2 cents, to $3.68 to $3.76 per share. But it now expects only $1.95 to $2.17 including charges, down from its April forecast of $2.04 to $2.39 per share including one-time charges.

Favorable foreign exchange rates boosted revenue by 4 percent.

Merck's top-selling drugs were Singulair at $1.35 billion and Januvia and combination diabetes pill Janumet, which together brought in $1.04 billion. A few other key products — cervical cancer vaccine Gardasil, immune disorder drug Remicade and HIV treatment Isentress — had double-digit sales increases. But generic competition eroded sales of heart drugs Cozaar and Hyzaar and other products.

Prescription drug revenue totaled $10.36 billion, up 7 percent. Veterinary medicines brought in $802 million, up 10 percent, and consumer products such as Coppertune sunscreen brought in $541 million, down 1 percent.

Merck said initial sales of new hepatitis C drug Victrelis were strong, but gave no figures. It said it has 12 product launches going on around the world and expects by the end of next year to have five "biosimilar" versions of biologic drugs in late testing.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.