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May 9, 2017

Allergan posts Q1 loss after near-US$2B Teva writedown

Allergan

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Botox-maker Allergan Plc (AGN.N) posted a first-quarter loss on Tuesday as it took a nearly US$2 billion write-down on the value of its stake in Teva Pharmaceutical Industries (TEVA.N), which has lost more than 40 per cent of its value since last year.

Allergan sold its generics business Actavis to Teva in August 2016 for US$33 billion in cash and 100 million shares of the Israeli generic drugmaker, worth around US$5.3 billion at the time. Under the terms of the deal, Allergan agreed to hold on to the shares for at least one year.

Teva has struggled since then, and the company's chief executive stepped down in February after sharp criticism for a string of costly acquisitions and delayed drug launches.

Allergan said its net loss was US$2.63 billion, or US$7.86 per share, compared with a profit of US$186.1 million, or 47 cents per share, a year earlier.

Most of the loss was from the write-down of the Teva stake, as well as research and development related costs.

Allergan said it concluded that Teva's decline was not temporary and took the impairment. Allergan Chief Executive Officer Brent Saunders told an Israeli newspaper earlier this year that the company plans to sell the stake in cooperation with Teva after the lockup period ends.

OPERATING EARNINGS BEAT ESTIMATES

Excluding the write-down and other costs, Allergan's earnings exceeded analyst expectations. It earned US$3.35 per share in the quarter, beating the average analyst estimate by 5 cents, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Higher demand for its facial aesthetics, eye care and newer products, more than offset declining sales of older drugs.

The company is armed with its top-selling Botox drug, known for smoothing wrinkles, but it also had a busy deal-making 2016, announcing at least a dozen deals.

This past February, Allergan agreed to buy Zeltiq to gain access to a device which uses cooling to kill fat cells, adding to its line-up of aesthetic products that are not dependent on reimbursement for sales.

The company raised its forecast for 2017 slightly to reflect the Zeltiq deal.

Shares of the Dublin-based company, which also posted first-quarter revenue that edged past estimates, fell US$1.51, or 0.6 per cent, to US$240.48 on the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday afternoon.