Pfizer: Why its FY2024 downgrade has Wall Street wary

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Pfizer (PFE) disappointed Wall Street this week with lower revenue guidance for the upcoming year, giving analysts another reason to doubt the company and its stock.

Shares for Pfizer were at the end of Wednesday down 7.5%, trading at a near-10-year low of $26.45. PFE was down another 2% or so on Thursday.

"PFE shares are looking increasingly washed out at current levels, we do not see a clear path for the stock to recover given the ongoing uncertainty on the company’s core earnings power," wrote JPMorgan analyst Chris Schott.

There were some rumors that this could reflect poorly on CEO Albert Bourla.

Pfizer is going through significant transformation both with leadership — losing chief commercial officer Angela Hwang —and its pipeline. The company is faced with lower revenues from its COVID products and needs to fill a $17 billion hole from expiring patents by the end of the decade.

Pfizer's leaders, CEO Bourla and CFO David Denton, faced stern questions from analysts on a call Wednesday about its 2024 projections — including significantly lower-than-expected diluted EPS guidance of $2.05 to $2.25.

"I was just wondering if you can talk about the margin trajectory from here in terms of when you might be able to reach pre-pandemic margins?" asked Morgan Stanley's Terence Flynn.

Denton said the company's objective is to get back to pre-pandemic margins, but that its growth outlook won't match pre-pandemic predictions.

"I know the company has said specifically that our '20 to '25 growth rates would be, excluding COVID, approximately 6% from a CAGR [compounded annual growth] perspective over that time frame. Given the guidance we just provided for 2024, it seems that objective of getting to that 6% growth rate by 2025 ... seems somewhat out of reach at this point in time," Denton said.

Other questions asked for clarity on the earnings per share guidance and potential impacts of the guidance on expected dividends.

Albert Bourla, CEO of Pfizer attends a discussion at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland May 25, 2022. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
Touting his stock: Albert Bourla, CEO of Pfizer, at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, in 2022. (Arnd Wiegmann/REUTERS) · REUTERS / Reuters

Evercore ISI analyst Umer Raffat asked why the company was forecasting a loss of $0.40 per share next year due to the Seagen acquisition, when Seagen looked to have a healthy portfolio and was breaking even this year. "The only dilution should be from their interest, which is only $1.9 billion, which is less than $0.30 on EPS. So how do we get to $0.40 on Seagen's EPS dilution? So, the gross margin and the Seagen ... is probably where the Street is confused around the overall numbers," Raffat said.

Bourla and Denton took turns reiterating a strong outlook. They said they anticipate $3.1 billion in revenue from Seagen, an oncology-focused company that Pfizer closed on Thursday, to add to the bottom line in 2024.