Pharmaceutical heavyweight AstraZeneca (LSE: AZN) said this morning that profits from the firm’s core business fell by 12% during the first quarter, due to acquisitions and increased investment in new cancer treatments.
Core earnings dropped by 12% to $0.95 per share, which was broadly in line with analysts’ estimates. AstraZeneca did manage to notch up a 1% increase in revenue, which rose to $6,115m. This was due to an increase in externalisation revenues, which is income from licensing and partnership deals.
A lot to prove
AstraZeneca’s share price is now 12% lower than it was one year ago. It’s also 28% below the £55 per share offer the firm rejected from US pharma giant Pfizer in 2014. Pascal Soriot, AstraZeneca’s chief executive, gained backing for the firm’s fight against Pfizer by promising that annual revenue would rise from about $23bn to $43bn between 2017 and 2023.
Mr Soriot still has a lot to prove, but turning around AstraZeneca after years of underinvestment was never going to be easy. The firm’s dividend has now been unchanged at $2.80 per share since 2013. A falling share price means the yield is now attractive, at 4.8%, but is AstraZeneca a great dividend buy?
Top fund manager Neil Woodford remains a big fan of the stock, and I’m tempted to agree. AstraZeneca flagged up strong sales growth for new products including heart disease treatment Brilinta, and lung cancer treatment Tagrisso, today. This suggests that extra investment in R&D is starting to pay off.
The dividend is expected to remain flat in 2016 and 2017, but the yield is high enough for this to be acceptable in the short term. On a three-to-five-year view, I suspect AstraZeneca could be a profitable buy.
Car sales boost results
Revenue rose by 15% to £171m during the first quarter at engineering firm Laird (LSE: LRD). The gains were the result of strong sales in Laird’s wireless systems division, where revenue rose by 52% to £79m.
This impressive gain was due to a mix of acquisitions and organic growth. Laird says demand remains strong for its automotive products, which include technology used for in-vehicle navigation, entertainment and telematics systems.
Laird’s dividend has doubled since 2010 and is now higher than it was before the financial crisis. The firm’s 3.8% yield looks appealing to me, but it’s worth looking at the potential downside for the shares.
The biggest immediate risk seems to be that Laird’s largest division, Performance Materials, will continue to underperform. Revenue from this division fell by 5% to £92m during the first quarter. This appears to be the result of a particularly strong first-quarter performance last year. Laird expects trading to improve during the second half of this year. Analysts covering the firm appear to agree, as Laird’s adjusted earnings are expected to rise by 56% to 25.3p this year, putting the shares on an undemanding forecast P/E of 14.
Although it can sometimes be risky to rely on promised improvements in trading for the second half of the year, I’m tempted to give Laird the benefit of the doubt. After a difficult year in 2015, Laird’s turnaround appears to be broadly on track.