By Deena Beasley
(Reuters) -Amgen on Tuesday reported quarterly financial results that beat Wall Street expectations as product sales rose 12%, offsetting higher operating expenses related to experimental
weight-loss drug MariTide and a higher tax rate.
The California-based biotech company's third-quarter revenue also rose 12% from a year earlier to $9.56 billion. Adjusted earnings per share increased 1% to $5.64.
Analysts had expected an adjusted profit of $5.01 on revenue of $8.97 billion, according to LSEG data.
Amgen said third-quarter sales of cholesterol-lowering drug Repatha rose 40% from a year earlier to $794 million on higher demand.
Sales of arthritis drug Enbrel fell 30% to $580 million due to a 38% price drop driven by changes in the U.S. Medicare health plan for people age 65 and older and hospital purchases at favorable pricing.
The company said it expects to have data before year-end from two key mid-stage MariTide studies. One is testing the drug in obese or overweight adults with or without type 2 diabetes, and the second is looking at MariTide as a treatment for type 2 diabetes. Amgen also said it has completed enrollment in two Phase 3 studies for similar patient populations.
MariTide is an antibody linked to a pair of peptides that activate receptors for the appetite- and blood sugar-reducing hormone GLP-1 while simultaneously blocking a second gut hormone called GIP.
Adjusted third-quarter operating expenses rose 18% from a year earlier, while research and development costs rose 31%. Amgen said its tax rate increased 4.8 percentage points due to a change in product mix.
For the full year, Amgen raised its outlook for adjusted earnings now expects $20.60 to $21.40 per share on revenue of $35.8 billion to $36.6 billion. It had previously forecast earnings of $20.20 to $21.30 per share on revenue of $35 billion to $36 billion.
Analysts, on average, have estimated 2025 earnings of $21.04 per share on revenue of $35.67 billion.
(Reporting By Deena BeasleyEditing by Bill Berkrot)











