Britain's GSK tops quarterly expectations, consumer arm spin off on track

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The spin out of the consumer venture with Pfizer (NYSE:PFE), christened Haleon, has put GSK’s future in focus as Chief Executive Emma Walmsley faces pressure from activist investor Elliot to shore up its pipeline. This month, GSK agreed to pay $1.9 billion to buy Sierra Oncology (NASDAQ:SRRA).

GSK’s adjusted earnings stood at 32.8 pence per share for the three months to March 31, while turnover rose 32% to 9.78 billion pounds ($12.30 billion). Analysts had expected earnings of 30 pence per share on revenues of 9.15 billion pounds, a company-compiled consensus https://www.gsk.com/en-gb/investors/analyst-consensus/analyst-consensus showed.

Sales from its COVID-19 antibody treatment stood at 1.3 billion pounds in the quarter, ahead of analysts’ expectations of 1.1 billion pounds.

Although GSK’s Xevudy, known chemically as sotrovimab, was shown to have worked against the Omicron variant, recent data suggested it was unlikely effective against the BA.2 subvariant dominant in the United States, the treatment’s biggest buyer.

The London-listed company, which rejected Unilever (NYSE:UL)’s 50 billion pound bid for its consumer unit in December, said the division was expected to post annual organic revenue growth of 4%-6%.

($1 = 0.7952 pounds)