Forsidebilde av showet Beta Finch - J&J - JNJ - EN

Beta Finch - J&J - JNJ - EN

Podkast av Beta Finch

engelsk

Business

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Les mer Beta Finch - J&J - JNJ - EN

AI-powered earnings call analysis for Johnson & Johnson (JNJ). Two AI hosts break down quarterly results, key metrics, and market implications in digestible podcast episodes.

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episode Johnson & Johnson Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis cover

Johnson & Johnson Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis

More earnings analysis: https://betafinch.com [https://betafinch.com] Groups: PHARMA (https://betafinch.com/groups/PHARMA) [https://betafinch.com/groups/PHARMA)], INCOME (https://betafinch.com/groups/INCOME) [https://betafinch.com/groups/INCOME)] ────────── ALEX: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown. Today we're digging into Johnson & Johnson's second quarter 2026 results, and Jordan, there's a lot to unpack here. JORDAN: There really is. But first, the fine print — this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. ALEX: Right, so let's get into it. J&J posted $25.3 billion in quarterly sales, up 5.6% operationally. That doesn't sound huge until you realize they absorbed a 460 basis point headwind from STELARA losing patent protection to biosimilars. JORDAN: Yeah, strip out STELARA and the rest of the business grew double digits. That's the real story. Net earnings came in at $5.5 billion, diluted EPS of $2.27, and on an adjusted basis, EPS was $2.90, up nearly 5% year-over-year. And here's the kicker — they raised full-year guidance. Operational sales growth now expected at 6.5% to 7.1%, and adjusted EPS guidance moved up to $11.50-$11.65. ALEX: They're also closing in on a milestone — more than $100 billion in annual revenue for the first time in the company's 140-year history. JORDAN: Which is wild to say out loud. This is a company with 28 different products or platforms each doing over a billion dollars a year. That's not a one-hit-wonder portfolio, that's just breadth everywhere. ALEX: Let's talk oncology, because that's really where J&J flexed this quarter. DARZALEX, their multiple myeloma drug, did over $4 billion, up almost 18%. But the newer combo therapies are what caught my eye — CARVYKTI up 47.7%, TECVAYLI up 56%, TALVEY up 62.6%. JORDAN: Those growth rates on top of an already-dominant multiple myeloma franchise are pretty remarkable. And they're not resting — new data showed the TALVEY-DARZALEX combo keeping over 80% of patients progression-free at two years, with overall survival up to 89%. That's the kind of data that extends a franchise's life for years. ALEX: Then there's the newer launches — ICOTYDE in psoriasis, INLEXZO in bladder cancer, RYBREVANT in lung and now head-and-neck cancer. ICOTYDE in particular is getting a lot of attention. Over 11,000 patients started therapy, 6,000 unique prescribers, and more than half of commercial payers already covering it within 90 days. JORDAN: What's interesting is how they're positioning it alongside TREMFYA, which by the way had a monster quarter — 71% growth, its first $2 billion quarter. Instead of cannibalizing each other, management's framing ICOTYDE as the go-to first systemic treatment and TREMFYA as the first-choice biologic, especially for patients trending toward psoriatic arthritis. It's a two-pronged attack on the same disease area. ALEX: Now, MedTech was the softer spot this quarter — only 3.6% growth. Cardiovascular was the drag, mainly Abiomed's heart pump business. JORDAN: Right, and this is worth unpacking because it wasn't a demand problem. A neutral clinical trial out of the U.K. made physicians more cautious about patient selection for Impella devices, so usage slowed. Management was pretty direct about it — they called it a "behavioral" issue, not structural. They're leaning on their own much larger evidence base, over 40,000 patients studied versus the UK trial's 300, while they wait for their own PROTECT IV trial data, which won't read out until 2027. ALEX: Meanwhile, three of MedTech's four businesses — surgery, vision, and orthopedics — actually accelerated and beat expectations. So it's really one segment, heart recovery, dragging on an otherwise solid MedTech story. JORDAN: And there's real excitement building around the robotics pipeline — the OTTAVA surgical robot and MONARCH for urology are both awaiti This episode includes AI-generated content.

15. juli 2026 - 7 min
episode Johnson & Johnson Q4 2025 Earnings Analysis cover

Johnson & Johnson Q4 2025 Earnings Analysis

**Beta Finch Podcast Script: Johnson & Johnson Q4 2025** ALEX: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown where we dive deep into the numbers that matter. I'm Alex, and joining me as always is my co-host Jordan. Today we're dissecting Johnson & Johnson's Q4 2025 earnings call, and wow - what a way to cap off the year. Before we jump in, I need to mention that this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. JORDAN: Thanks Alex, and yeah, JNJ really delivered here. They're calling 2025 a "catapult year" - and the numbers back that up. Let's start with the headline figures because they're impressive across the board. ALEX: Absolutely. Fourth quarter operational sales growth came in at 7.1%, which is solid, but the full-year picture is even better. They hit $94.2 billion in total revenue for 2025 with 5.3% operational growth. But here's the kicker, Jordan - they're guiding for $100 billion at the midpoint for 2026. That's a massive psychological milestone for any healthcare company. JORDAN: Right, and what's fascinating is how they're positioning this growth. CEO Joaquin Duato kept emphasizing their "28 billion-dollar products" - that's an incredible diversification of revenue streams. No other healthcare company has that kind of breadth. They're not relying on one or two blockbusters like some of their competitors. ALEX: Let's break down the two main segments. On the Innovative Medicine side, they posted 5.3% operational growth for the year, crossing $60 billion in pharma sales for the first time. The star performer here continues to be DARZALEX in multiple myeloma - $14 billion in annual sales with 22% growth. That's just staggering for a drug of that size. JORDAN: And they're not stopping there. The multiple myeloma franchise is becoming a juggernaut. They mentioned being the number one company in that space, with 80% of patients treated with at least one of their four medicines. Plus, CARVICTI, their CAR-T therapy, is showing strong momentum with over 10,000 patients treated across 14 markets. ALEX: The immunology story is equally compelling. Tremfya hit $5 billion in sales and grew 65% in Q4 - that's not a typo, sixty-five percent! They're confident it'll exceed $10 billion in peak sales, especially as it continues taking share in inflammatory bowel disease where STELARA used to dominate. JORDAN: Speaking of STELARA, that's the elephant in the room that's actually becoming less relevant. STELARA declined 48.6% due to biosimilar competition, but here's what's remarkable - JNJ grew double digits for the full year excluding STELARA. They've successfully navigated that cliff, which was a major investor concern. ALEX: Now let's talk MedTech. 5.4% operational growth for the year with some really strong pockets. Cardiovascular was the standout with 15% operational growth, reaching $9 billion. The Abiomed and Shockwave acquisitions are clearly paying dividends here. JORDAN: What caught my attention was their robotics ambition. They just submitted their Ottava robotic surgery system for FDA approval via a de novo pathway - meaning there's no predicate device to compare it against. That suggests they truly believe they have something differentiated in a space dominated by Intuitive Surgical. ALEX: The guidance for 2026 is aggressive but achievable based on their pipeline momentum. 5.7% to 6.7% operational sales growth, with that $100 billion midpoint I mentioned. Adjusted EPS growth of 5.5% at the midpoint, which factors in about $500 million in medtech tariffs - significantly higher than 2025. JORDAN: I want to highlight something CFO Joe Wolk said about margins. They're expecting at least 50 basis points of adjusted operating margin improvement despite those tariff headwinds and increased investment in This episode includes AI-generated content.

23. feb. 2026 - 8 min
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