
La plataforma más completa de información y servicios económicos para iPad.
Sudoku: Juega cada día a uno nuevo
El tiempo: Consulta la previsión para tu ciudadBy Ransdell Pierson
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Johnson & Johnson plans to cut up to 7 percent of its workforce in order to generate cost savings needed to finance increasingly costly drug research and to weather future challenges, the diversified healthcare company said on Tuesday.
J&J said the planned restructuring will eliminate 7,000 to 8,000 jobs and generate annualized cost savings of $1.4 billion to $1.7 billion by 2011, with $800 million to $900 million expected to be achieved in 2010.
"This is what we need to do to right-size the company to make sure we have the resources to invest" for long-term sustainable growth of the company, Chief Executive Officer William Weldon told analysts on a conference call, referring to J&J's "rich portfolio" of products in development.
Weldon said the restructuring -- most of it slated to occur overseas -- is not a response to U.S. healthcare reform and new generic competition for its Risperdal schizophrenia drug and Topamax epilepsy treatment.
Instead, it will position J&J to better endure soaring research costs, possible looming overseas price controls on its medicines and unforeseen other challenges, he said.
The typical cost of developing a new medicine has now climbed to between $1.3 billion to $1.5 billion, from a cost of $800 million only a few years ago, Weldon said. He noted that J&J and other drugmakers increasingly are partnering with rival companies in order to share such financial gambles.
During J&J's last major restructuring, in 2007, it cut 3 percent to 4 percent of its workforce, generating annual savings of $1.3 billion to $1.6 billion. Earlier this year, the New Brunswick, New Jersey-based company said it would eliminate 900 positions from its Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceutical unit.
Cost savings have helped J&J cope with plunging sales of Risperdal and Topamax and to acquire stakes this year in Irish drugmaker Elan Corp and Dutch vaccine company Crucell. In May, J&J agreed to buy cancer drug developer Cougar Biotechnology for $970 million in cash.
Like rival drugmakers, J&J is struggling to refill its pipeline with new drugs to offset sales lost to generic competition and flagging revenue from older products, including some dogged by safety concerns.
J&J, which also sells medical devices and a vast array of consumer products, has boasted annual double-digit profit growth for most of the past century. But it is expected to post flat earnings this year and single-digit growth in 2010, hurt by patent expirations and a weak global economy that has crimped demand for its consumer brands and surgical products.
J&J, which employs about 117,000 people worldwide, said it will take a charge of $1.1 billion to $1.3 billion against its fourth-quarter earnings, but did not change its 2009 earnings forecast excluding one-time items of $4.54 to $4.59 per share.
Chief Financial Officer Dominic Caruso declined to provide a 2010 profit view. But he advised analysts to stick with their forecasts for next year, saying they had already considered J&J's ability to leverage profit growth.
The cost cuts will mainly be achieved by reducing layers of management and simplifying business structures and processes, J&J said. But the company, which is known for giving much autonomy to its hundreds of subsidiaries, said the restructuring is not a move toward centralization.
J&J joins the growing list of major pharmaceutical companies to slash jobs as big-selling drugs lose patent protection. J&J's prescription drug sales fell more than 14 percent to $5.25 billion in the third quarter, hurt by less costly generic forms of Risperdal and Topamax.
Pfizer Inc, Merck & Co and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co have all announced sweeping job cuts, as have British drugmakers GlaxoSmithKline Plc and AstraZeneca.
J&J shares slipped 0.7 percent to $59.06 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson; additional reporting by Lewis Krauskopf and Toni Clarke; editing by Dave Zimmerman, Maureen Bavdek and Andre Grenon)
PUBLICIDAD

Un terremoto de 4,8 grados en la escala de Richter se ha sentido a las 19:20 GMT (21:20 locales) en el norte de It...

Un avión de línea con 153 personas a bordo se estrelló en un barrio de Lagos, la capital económica de Nigeria, cho...
Un sismo de 5 grados de magnitud en la escala de Richter se registró hoy en El Salvador, a 46 kilómetros al sur de...

Los inmigrantes ilegales en Israel, la mayoría de Sudán y Eritrea que ingresan por el Sinaí egipcio, pueden ser en...
El presidente colombiano, Juan Manuel Santos, consideró hoy como una "gran captura" la detención del narcotrafican...
El Jardín Gramacho, un gigantesco vertedero de basura en las afueras de Río de Janeiro considerado el mayor de Amé...
Un sismo de magnitud 5,1 remeció al norte de Italia , en la misma zona que fue azotada por dos letales terremotos ...

Las autoridades de Nigeria temen que las 159 personas que viajaban en un avión comercial siniestrado en un populo...
Miles de personas han vuelto ha salir a las calles este domingo en las principales ciudades egipcias para protesta...
La selección española de fútbol se ha impuesto a la China dirigida por José Antonio Camacho (1-0) en el último de ...
Noticias más leidas
Noticias más leidas
Noticias más leidas
Noticias más leidas
Una carrera contrareloj contra los kilos de más.

Ecoprensa S.A. - Todos los derechos reservados | Cloud Hosting en Acens