(Reuters) - Pfizer Inc reported stronger-than-expected quarterly sales due to cost cuts and demand for its vaccines and cancer drugs, but the company forecast 2015 earnings below Wall Street expectations, citing patent expirations and the stronger dollar.
The largest U.S. drugmaker said on Tuesday that it earned $1.23 billion, or 19 cents per share, in the fourth quarter. That compared with $2.57 billion, or 39 cents per share, a year earlier.
Excluding special items, PFIZER (PFE.NY)earned 54 cents per share. Analysts on average expected 53 cents, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Pfizer forecast 2015 earnings of $2.00 to $2.10 per share, excluding special items. Wall Street had been expecting $2.18.
Shares of Pfizer were down 0.6 percent at $32.60 in premarket trading.
Revenue fell 3 percent to $13.1 billion but exceeded analysts' estimates of $12.9 billion.
In May, the company gave up its six-month pursuit of British rival AstraZeneca
Many industry analysts said Pfizer also went after AstraZeneca to bolster its own relatively weak pipeline of experimental drugs in later stages of testing, and because cost cuts following a big merger would have propped up earnings.
U.S. rival AbbVie
(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)