Pfizer Inc. (PFE) Q1 FY2026 Earnings Call Transcript & Summary

May 5, 2026

NYSE US Health Care Pharmaceuticals Earnings Calls 53 min

What were the key takeaways from Pfizer Inc.'s Q1 FY2026 earnings call?

In the first quarter of 2026, Pfizer Inc. reported revenues of $14.5 billion, exceeding expectations and reflecting a 2% operational increase. Adjusted diluted earnings per share (EPS) was $0.75, also above forecasts. Management reaffirmed full-year guidance, expecting total revenues between $59.5 billion and $62.5 billion and adjusted EPS in the range of $2.80 to $3.00, indicating strong contributions from their product portfolio despite anticipated headwinds from upcoming patent expirations.

What topics did Pfizer Inc. cover?

  • Revenue and EPS Beat: Pfizer's Q1 2026 revenues were $14.5 billion, exceeding expectations and representing a 2% operational increase. Adjusted diluted EPS was $0.75, surpassing forecasts, indicating effective cost management and strong commercial execution.
  • Strong Growth in Launched Products: Launched and acquired products generated $3.1 billion in Q1, reflecting a 22% operational growth. This growth is attributed to successful execution in key therapeutic areas, particularly oncology and obesity.
  • Legal Developments Enhancing Growth Outlook: Management highlighted two significant legal developments, including a patent settlement for VYNDAMAX, which could enhance the company's growth profile post-2028. This settlement provides greater confidence in achieving a high single-digit revenue CAGR starting in 2029.
  • R&D Pipeline Progress: Pfizer reported progress in its R&D pipeline, with 3 positive Phase III readouts and plans for 20 pivotal study starts in 2026. Management emphasized a disciplined approach to resource allocation in high-potential areas like oncology and metabolic diseases.
  • Dividend Commitment: Management reiterated their commitment to maintaining and growing the dividend over time, supported by improved cash flow visibility post-2028 due to recent legal wins.

What were Pfizer Inc.'s Q1 FY2026 results?

  • Revenue: $14.5B (vs expectations, +2% YoY)
  • Adjusted EPS: $0.75 (beat by $0.12)
  • Operational Revenue Growth (Launched Products): 22% (reflecting strong execution in key therapeutic areas)
  • Adjusted Operating Margin: 38% (above pre-pandemic levels)
  • Total Revenue Guidance (2026): $59.5B - $62.5B (maintained guidance)
  • Adjusted EPS Guidance (2026): $2.80 - $3.00 (maintained guidance)

Pfizer's strong Q1 performance, driven by effective execution and a robust pipeline, positions the company favorably for the remainder of 2026 and beyond. The reaffirmed guidance and legal developments enhancing growth prospects post-2028 provide a solid foundation for long-term investment. Investors should monitor the company's ability to navigate upcoming LOE challenges and the execution of its R&D strategy as potential catalysts for future growth.

Earnings Call Speaker Segments

Operator

Operator
#1

Good day, everyone, and welcome to Pfizer's First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Francesca DeMartino, Chief Investor Relations Officer and Senior Vice President. Please go ahead, ma'am.

Francesca DeMartino

Executives
#2

Good morning -- to Pfizer's earnings call. I'm Francesca DeMartino, Chief Investor Relations Officer. On behalf of the Pfizer team, thank you for joining us. This call is being made available via audio webcast at pfizer.com. Earlier this morning, we released our results for the first quarter 2026 via press release that is available on our website at pfizer.com. I'm joined today by Dr. Albert Bourla, our Chairman and CEO; and Dave Denton, our CFO. Albert and Dave have some prepared remarks, and we will then open the call for questions. Members of our leadership team will be available for the Q&A session. Before we get started, I want to remind you that we will be making forward-looking statements and discussing certain GAAP financial measures. I encourage you to read the disclaimers in our slide presentation -- the press release we issued this morning and the disclosures in our SEC filings, which are all available on the IR site on pfizer.com. Forward-looking statements on the call are subject to substantial risks and uncertainties speak only as of the call's original date, and we undertake no obligation to update or revise any of the statements. With that, I will turn the call over to Albert.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#3

Thank you, Francesca. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our call. It's a wonderful day here in New York. We've had a strong start to the year. Our business continues to perform well, and we are making strategic progress. One of our great strengths is the ability to execute. And we are delivering on our financial commitments while we also invest to strengthen Pfizer for future growth and impact. In the first quarter, we exceeded expectations for both total revenues and adjusted diluted earnings per share. We have made progress so far this year in delivering our 2026 critical R&D milestones including 3 positive Phase III readouts and encouraging mid stage readouts for both approved and investigational medicines. We are keeping pace with our robust agenda of approximately 20 planned pivotal study starts this year. We also had 2 significant legal developments that improved our growth profile post 2028 and of course, our cash flow outlook. Our recent settlement agreements resolving infringement of patent related to VYNDAMAX have the potential to change the growth profile of the company significant post 2028. This gives us greater confidence that starting in 2029 and we will enter a 5-year period of high single digit revenue CAGR. Additionally, we use the recent Belgium court ruling regarding COMIRNATY contracts with EU member countries as a positive for future EPS and cash flow. The improved visibility into our cash flow provides is a positive for our longer-term capital allocation priorities including, of course, our ability to preserve and support the dividend. As we look to the rest of the year, we are clearly focused on our most impactful opportunities to create value for patients and our shareholders. We previously served our strategic priorities for 2026, and I will walk you through the progress we are making -- our launched and acquired products had a tremendous start to the year with 22% growth. 3 of our business development transactions represent about 8% of the invested capital in the recent years, and they are all progressing very well. Oncology represents our most advanced and concentrated area of research and commercial focus and our Seagen acquisition is a central reason one. Since beginning the -- since bringing the company to Pfizer, we have transformed our oncology organization unifying our team expanding our commercial portfolio and advancing a leading ADC platform. The 20% year-over-year operational revenue growth in the quarter of our Seagen products shows but we have made good progress in deepening our presence within the oncology community. We continue to strengthen physician engagement and drive greater recognition of the clinical value homes. We are also executing with focus to maximize the value of our Metsera acquisition. This underpins the strategy intended to position Pfizer as the leader in the next generation of obesity there. We intend to advance 10 Phase III studies this year, and we are targeting a first approval in 2028 from a portfolio that includes ultra-long active peptides with the potential, if successful, developed and approved for competitive efficacy and tolerability with a differentiated monthly maintenance dosing schedule. The success we have achieved with -- no -- since our Biohaven acquisition shows the power of our leading field force and commercial capabilities have worked. Nurtec contributed in the first quarter with 41% operational growth, driven by robust, robust demand and both follow acute and preventive migraine treatments. We continue to see a meaningful growth opportunity in the oral CGRP class of medicines for patients with migraine. Of course, 2026 is a pivot target for R&D, and I'm pleased with our early progress this quarter. While we have a large active pipeline, we rely on a rigorous and disciplined approach to focus resources where we see the greatest conversion. We are targeting approximately 20 pivotal study starts, 8 key data readouts and 4 regulatory decisions this year. Our critical R&D milestones reinforce how we are concentrating investment in key areas such as oncology, metabolic disease and vaccines, where we have existing commercial infrastructure, scientific expertise and significant opportunity for competitive differentiation. Roughly half are anticipated key data amounts and regulatory decision in 2026 are expected to come from on where we are advancing multiple programs across areas such as breast, thoracic, gastrointestinal and blood. During the quarter, we presented notable EV-304 study findings for PADCEV. The results show that PADCEV -- -- reduces the risk of recurrence or death by nearly 50% in patients with cisplatin-eligible muscle invasive bladder cancer. Combined with the recent compelling data from the EV-303 trial, this highlights the potential for this regimen to become the new standard of care patients with muscle invasive bladder cancer regardless of cisplatin visibility. Bladder cancer is diagnosed in more than 600,000 patients a year ago, including an estimated 85,000 in the U.S. MIBC represents approximately 30% of all these bladder cancer cases. The positive top line results we saved last week from the Phase III MagnetisMM-5 study of ELREXFIO represent a meaningful step towards our goal of reaching more patients earlier in the course of their disease. In this study, ELREXFIO significantly improved progression-free survival for double-class exposed patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma, who received at least 1 prior line treatment. This is a significant opportunity to address patiently. Multiple myeloma and aggressive and currently incurable blood cancer is the second most common type of blood cancer worldwide with 436,000 new cases each year in the United States, and over 187,000 new cases global. During the quarter, we also served randomized Phase II data for tumors our potential first-in-class nDiKA4 inhibitor in patients with HER-2 negative breast cancer who received prior CDK4/6 inhibitor phase III. These data suggest that, has the potential to differentiate from the CDK4/6 inhibitor class with improved data center ability, reinforcing our confidence in the molecule. Looking ahead, we remain focused on accelerating this investigational medicines development in first-line and early breast cancer, where it may provide even greater impact for patients. We view this as an important opportunity to deliver a next-generation backbone therapy building on Pfizer's long commitment to patients with breast cancer. We have been working with regulators on the pathway for expanding coverage through our next-generation pneumococcal conjugate vaccine to extend our leadership in this competitive space. Yesterday, we initiated our Phase III program for our 25 valent pediatric vaccine candidate with increased balancing and next-generation serotype 3 technology. I am also pleased to provide an update on our strategy in the adult market. We have decided to advance directly to our fifth generation adult vaccine candid. And today, I am proud to share for the first time, but it includes coverage for 35 times. We believe this gives us the strongest opportunity to maintain our current market leadership in the adult market over the long term, and we expect to enter clinical development this year. In I&I, we announced a positive readout in March from a Phase II trial of --, our investigational trispecific antibody in atopic dermatitis. We intend to advance a broad clinical development program for this investigational medicine, which was discovered in-house at Pfizer and is currently being evaluated in atopic dermatitis and also in asthma and COPD. We remain on track with our commitment and our continued focus on what matters most, maximizing the long-term value of our pipeline for patients. We are investing with strategic discipline and focus to build the foundational supporting our aim of high single-digit 5-year revenue CAGR. It's vital that our R&D has the resources to advance our robust pipeline, including both internally discovered programs and opportunities we have added through strategic moves such as our acquisition of Metsera and our in-licensing agreements with [indiscernible]. Our commercial teams are leaders in translating scientific progress into real world -- we are furthering investments to provide them with capabilities, technology and support, helping our medicines reach the right patients at the time so we can deliver sustained value. We also remain deeply committed to our shareholders. We intend to maintain and over time grow our dividend as we continue to deliver and build long-term value. Embedding the use of artificial intelligence across our company is a key strategic priority, and we are driving continued progress in R&D, commercial, manufacturing and core enterprise funds. We are empowering our colleagues to accelerate innovation by pairing frontier AI tools tailored to find roll with comprehensive and continuously updated trend. One of the areas where we see the most substantial promise is the discovery development delivery of new medicines and vaccines. Leveraging the power of AI to compress time lines and improve vision making is central to our innovation strategy. We are embedding AI into each functional line of R&D. Pfizer has a vast repository of small and large molecule translational and clinical data, and AI is creating the opportunity to along inside but to drive a significant impact on how we discover and develop medicines and vaccines. So with that now, I will turn it over to Dave to speak about the financial performance of the company.

David Denton

Executives
#4

Great. Thank you, Albert, and good morning. Let me begin by highlighting that our strong first quarter performance reflects the continued disciplined execution across our strategic priorities. and importantly, continued progress in repositioning the company for sustainable growth. We are making targeted investments today to drive revenue growth later in the decade and beyond. Looking ahead, Pfizer is entering a new phase, our launched and acquired products, combined with the strengthening pipeline or positioning the company with the ability to deliver growth towards the end of the decade. While we remain focused on managing near-term LOE headwinds, we are actively building the foundation for durable long-term value creation. And with that as context, I'll review our first quarter results discuss our capital allocation priorities and conclude with an update on our '26 guidance, which we are reaffirming today. In the first quarter of '26, revenues were $14.5 billion, exceeding our expectations and representing an operational increase of 2%. Excluding our -- -- products, the underlying business delivered approximately 7% operational revenue growth, reflecting solid demand across key brands and continued strong commercial execution. On the bottom line, first quarter reported diluted earnings per share was $0.47 and adjusted diluted earnings per share was $0.75, also exceeding our expectations. In addition to our strong revenue, this outperformance also reflects our ongoing commitment to managing our cost base and to drive productivity across the organization. Our results this quarter demonstrate the effectiveness of our refined commercial strategy, solid contributions across our product portfolio primarily driven by PADCEV, Eliquis, Nurtec, Labrena and Vendee family, each reflecting focused execution in our key therapeutic areas. Our launch and acquired products delivered $3.1 billion in the first quarter, and revenues grew by approximately 22% operationally. These results demonstrate the early impact of our portfolio transition and our investment strategies. We continue to invest behind these product groups to support their growth which we expect will enable the to partially offset upcoming LOE headwinds over the next several years. Adjusted gross margin for the first quarter was approximately 76%, primarily the result of product mix during the quarter and ongoing cost control measures. I do want to note accrued royalty expense was higher in this quarter and dampened gross margin compared to the first quarter of last year. With that said, trust management across our manufacturing foot remains a top priority. As a reminder, over the past several years, our adjusted gross margins have generally remained in the mid- to upper 70s when it's COMIRNATY, which has a 50-50 profit split with our partner by OnTech -- we continue to expect pro $700 million in savings from our Phase I of our manufacturing optimization program this year with approximately $175 million realized in this quarter. Total adjusted operating expenses were $5.5 billion for the first quarter of $26 million, an increase of 4% operationally versus the first quarter of last year. And now looking at the components adjusted SI&A expenses decreased 5% operationally, primarily reflecting lower marketing and promotional spending on various products from more targeted investments and ongoing productivity improvements as well as lower spending in corporate-enabling functions. Adjusted R&D expenses increased 11% operationally, primarily driven by an increase in spending in certain oncology and obesity product candidates. First quarter 2026 adjusted operating margin was strong at 38% and above pre-pandemic levels, demonstrating effective cost management as well as revenue performance. We have already made meaningful progress on our productivity initiatives and remain on track to deliver the majority of the anticipated $7.2 billion in total net cost savings by the end '26. And looking ahead, we will continue to identify opportunities to further enhance efficiencies while prioritizing rents that support future growth. Turning to the bottom line. Q1 reported diluted earnings per share, again, was $0.47, and our adjusted diluted earnings per share was 75%. The $0.75, which benefited from our strong non-COVID revenue and efficient operating structure. Now with that, we turn to our capital allocation strategy. Our strategy is designed to enhance long-term shareholder value while preserving flexibility. It includes reinvesting in the business at appropriate returns, maintaining and over time, growing our dividend and preserving optionality for future value-enhancing actions, including share repurchases. In Q1, we invested $2.5 billion in internal R&D, returned $2.4 billion to shareholders via the quarterly dividend and our completed business development activity is minimal. We closed on the sale of our stake in Vive in the second quarter, providing us with approximately $1.65 billion in net proceeds after taxes and customary closing costs. Our BD capacity women in the proceeds is approximately $7 billion. First quarter '26 operating cash flow was $2.6 billion and leverage ended the quarter at approximately 2.8x and as just a reminder, given the LOE headwinds over the next few years, we expect leverage to remain around the curves or even slightly higher through the transition period. I will also mention that we made our final TCJA repatriation tax payment of approximately $2.6 billion in April. Based on our performance to date and continued execution, we are reaffirming our full year '26 today, we continue to expect total company revenues in the range of $59.5 billion to $62.5 billion and adjusted diluted earnings per share in the range of $2.80 to $3 a share. This outlook reflects our expectation of strong contributions across our product portfolio, adjusted gross margins in the mid-70s range, disciplined cost management and continued investments to support growth by the end of this decade. As a reminder, sustained low disease levels of code would likely continue to weigh on utilization over the next several months. And additionally, our plan assumes that the majority of sales will occur towards the end of the year and consistent with the vaccination season. And as always, we continue to monitor currency fluctuation as the year progresses. In closing, over the next several years, our focus remains on investing in key assets while managing upcoming LOE events, primarily from this year through 2028. As we look towards the end of the decade, growth is expected to be driven by our advancing AR pipeline and the continued progress of our launched and acquired products. Following the VYNDAMAX settlement, we now have a clear line of sight to a high single-digit 5-year revenue CAGR post 2028. Furthermore, this event, combined with our legal win in the Belgium port regarding the EU COMIRNATY contract will enhance our cash flow post 2028. We continue to position Pfizer for durable long-term growth and shareholder value. And with that, I'll now turn the call back over to Albert to begin the Q&A session.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#5

Thanks, Dave. Nice quarter. Now operator please assemble the queue.

Operator

Operator
#6

[Operator Instructions] Our first question today comes from Vamil Divan with Guggenheim.

Vamil Divan

Analysts
#7

Great. I'll keep it to one. I think a lot of focus on the upcoming ADA meeting. I'm just curious if you can just kind of clarify exactly what we should expect to see the both vest per 3, any other data that we should expect from Pfizer perspective? I think in typical hosting an investor event in conjunction with the meeting. So curious if there's any other details you can share around ASCO?

Albert Bourla

Executives
#8

So Chris, the question is for you how much of the data you're going to disclose given the ADA?

Chris Boshoff

Executives
#9

And thank you very much for the question. It's obviously a very important program. We're excited with the progress and since the close of Metsera, as you know, -- we had exceptional execution, not only the clinical development, but also on the commercial development side and as well as CMC and on the pharmaceutical scientists as well as the devices. Detailed Phase III -- detailed data from Vest will be shared the top line data we presented last time, I think 4Q '25 earnings. Data from BSP1, the open-label extension will be shared as well as data from Vespa II which is weekly better Benoit, our new name for our GLP-1 with or without titration in participants with type 2 diabetes will be shared. We will not share yet at ADA date on Amlan mono. We expect 24 weeks monotherapy in 28 weeks combination with the Amling1 that will be shared in the second half of this year.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#10

Next question?

Operator

Operator
#11

Our next question comes from Dave Risinger with Leerink Partners.

David Risinger

Analysts
#12

Yes. So my questions are on your oncology reps this year that could move the needle for the company. Could you comment on your expectations for EE and MeVro pivotal readouts this year? And then separately, if you could just please provide an update on your restructuring of corporate strategy and business development operations at the company?

Albert Bourla

Executives
#13

Thank you very much, Dave. Let me take the second one and the Chris will address the S and the member. We did some changes in our organizational structure that are aligned with our constant effort to simplify. We have reduced the members of my executive team by 4 over the next couple of years as the last 2 years. So the business development moved under Chris Boshoff because most of the business development are right now related with R&D pipeline and sources. We see significant improvement in any friction that could exist and how smooth things could work by doing that. We also moved the commercial development, which is all the commercial strategies that were sitting in that group into the global marketing of the organization. And that creates also a significant amount of synergies by having global and the new products, global market dealing with new products and with our own products. That went under me. Alexander took over the responsibility to manage the portfolio management team. He is the new chair, and he is focusing on prioritizing the pipeline. And then the strategy group moved to my chief of staff, so in the offer the CEO, where I can have also a better supervision. So this is the change that happened into our organization. And we feel that they are consistent with everything we were planning, which is simplification of our business, Chris.

Chris Boshoff

Executives
#14

Thank you very much. So to start with SB, important program for us. Integrin B26 is a highly differentiated target overexpressing 90% of lung cancers and little express in normal tissue in the lung. And we were encouraged by the first-line data with -- I mean the Phase I data, which we shared, albeit a single-arm experience with a median overall survival of approximately 16.3 months. The second line study, just a reminder is focused on non-squamous based on the signals we've seen Phase III study against docetaxel. The study statistically powered. Should it be positive for overall survival. It will also be clinically meaningful -- just a reminder, we also have an ongoing Phase III trial in the TPS high, TPS more than 50. Data will be shared at ASCO from the Phase I experience. This is pembro versus pembro plus A reminder that last year, we shared data for that combination of PD-L1 high and full of patients, but everyone responded in that population, so it was a 100% response rate in a small population. And for mebrometostat, again, an important differentiated, highly specific differentiated EZH2. The first study that will read out is METRO 1, which is in patients post abiraterone, a significant unmet need of inzalidomide versus -- sorry, in inzalidomide EZH2 versus physician's choice of inzalidomide. And that should read out middle or second half of this year.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#15

Operator, next question.

Operator

Operator
#16

Our next question comes from Chris Schott with JPMorgan.

Christopher Schott

Analysts
#17

Maybe just 2 for me. First, maybe for Dave or the broader team. I know you typically don't raise guidance with 1Q, but it does seem like a very solid start to the year from a revenue perspective. Can you just talk generally about the business trends versus your expectations and just how you're thinking about the year progressing from here? And the second question for me was on BD capacity. You mentioned $7 billion. I guess just given the VYNDAMAX clarity, could the company look at larger transactions if the right deal were to present and sell? Or is the focus still much more on the internal pipeline and maybe smaller tuck-ins from here?

David Denton

Executives
#18

Yes. Chris, Dave here. Thank you. Yes, I think to your first question, company is off to a really solid start in Q1. If you look kind of up and down and across the board from a product perspective, -- we exceeded expectations on top line and bottom line and really strong cost control and cost management and very disciplined execution. So yes, setting ourselves up really well for delivery for the balance of the year. As you well know, Chris, I have a philosophy of not really adjusting in Q1. I think as you well know, if you look at our COVID franchise, it will always be back half weighted because of the seasonality of the -- and so we are, if anything, have derisked delivery on that without raising guidance. So absent that, we probably would be raising guidance, how is that again, strong performance. Secondly, as I said, we do have $7 billion in BD capacity. Obviously, this development from a legal perspective actually gives us more confidence in our cash flow delivery over the next several years. And we constantly look at BD and understand what is appropriate strategically to do from a BD perspective to support the needs of the company and to deliver long-term value.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#19

Thank you, Dave. Next question.

Operator

Operator
#20

Our next question comes from Kerry Holford with Berenberg.

Kerry Holford

Analysts
#21

Just on COMIRNATY, I wonder if you can just talk a little bit more about the vaccination rates you're expecting this year within the U.S. an international region. And then just coming back to the international region. Can you talk a little bit more about the European contracts reminder of those existing phase payments -- and in the context of that recent Belgian court decision, the 2 items that together, how should we think about the evolution of ex U.S. sales for that vaccine?

Albert Bourla

Executives
#22

Okay. Let's start with international, and then we move to with Alexandre and then Amir will speak about the origination rates in the year.

Alexandre de Germay

Executives
#23

Good question. just to put context, the decline that you see in Q1 on Comes nothing to do with vaccination. It's really the effect of last year we shipped our last contract elements of our contract with the U.K. So we don't have that contract in in 2026, and that's why you have the reduction but it hasn't really talked about the vaccination rate. Actually, we went through the vaccinations numbers in Europe in 2025 and mostly stable versus 2024. Of course, you have differences -- for instance, in brands, the vaccination rate is around 25% of the other adults in Spain, it's going to be around 35%. But those rates are stable, and we see government will need to continue to invest and increase awareness of their order and at-risk population to get vaccination. In 2026, we will work with those government across the European unions to actually continue to execute our contract the same way we did in previous years. Now with regard to the legal case and the court judgment on April 1, 2026. The court judgment is very clear, and we've started to work with the governments in Poland and Romania to actually execute the judgment, and we're discussing the best path forward to implement that jet.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#24

Thank you Alexandre. So Amir, what about the U.S.

Aamir Malik

Executives
#25

Vaccination rates in the U.S., obviously, it's very different for every segment. In COVID, with community, there was a narrowing of the label. So we did see a shrinking of the market a bit. In the case of RSV, we always see now going past our third season with a tougher to activate adult population but growing on the maternal space, and there's population dynamics with Prevnar both acute and adults. So we see ups and downs in the vaccination rates as a result of those dynamics. But what I feel very good and very confident about is the way that we're executing in that market. So if you look at every single 1 of our vaccines, we have market-leading positions of at more than 60%, COMIRNATY, more than 60% Prevnar keys now at 84% and Prevnar adult even after many months of competition from Mark Holding share steady at 70%. So I feel very good about the way that we're executing in a slightly turbulent market.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#26

Thank you for the confidence Amir. I see it with you. Next question, please.

Operator

Operator
#27

Our next question comes from Raffat with Evercore ISI.

Umer Raffat

Analysts
#28

And I appreciate some of the comments you made around maintaining the dividend. I just thought I would approach it from 2 different angles, if I may. First, I guess, what's the likelihood that Pfizer entertains a transformative M&A in near or medium term, which could end up impacting dividend as we've seen in history. And then secondly, Albert, I guess, how are you personally, but also the Board thinking about your tenure at Pfizer and how it ties to dividend integrity beyond.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#29

Look, we never say never. And we always look at every business -- possible business combination for M&A if you are asking me if right now, we think that we are going to go for something very big, a big measure. No, we think that right now, in the next years, it is the time to execute on AI transformation of these organizations. And that requires not the disruption of mega merge. So I would say that open to everything, and we are looking at letting that can create shareholder value, but it is not right now very high in our list to find something like that. The second question, how I see my tenure, I see it like continuing. And I said multiple times that I was very proud of what we were able to achieve with COVID. But then if you're spoiled with this feeling of satisfaction, you want to do it again. So I'm planning to do it again. And hopefully, with [indiscernible]. Next question.

Operator

Operator
#30

Our next question comes from Asad Haider with Goldman Sachs.

Asad Haider

Analysts
#31

Albert, just going back to last December's guidance call, you highlighted $17 billion of annual revenue impacted by LOEs by 2030 and now with the tafamidis statin settlement extending back to mid-2031, your comments that you are aiming to achieve high single-digit 5-year revenue growth starting in 2029. Just if you could double-click on that a little bit more, just looking at the decline in the current BD aperture that you just described, just level set us on any updated thoughts on bridging the gap around how we should be thinking about the levers to drive this growth against the stack LOEs -- and then just related, embedded in this high single-digit CAGR, what are the assumptions around your base business such as and the current oncology products?

Albert Bourla

Executives
#32

Yes, it is easier to forecast the base business because it's constant. So that it is following the normal trends that we expect based on product by product. The alloys also are easy. -- to predict because they have the segment of currents. Right now, you're right, with this 2.5 years delay of the LOE of a product that is $6 billion plus. It is providing significant, as you can understand, opportunity for cash flows, EPS and changes the growth profile. That's why we spoke now because with this uncertainty going about our projections about the growth profile, which we see is starting in '29. It's a 5-year high single-digit CAGR. How that is built is built with the current portfolio with the decline through the LOEs and with the additions of pipeline that they are heavily risk-adjusted. So it's not that we are having a binary events. So the pipeline are multiple, as you know. We have a series of readouts right now that will affect the revenues in the '29. And so I think we're actually confident about that because when it is a large number of pipeline assets is adjusted, statistic usually work and those that we will fail will fail and both will succeed. But the risk adjustment takes into consideration about -- so very confident about the growth trajectory of the company starting in '29. And I'm also very confident that we navigate the LOEs as you saw right now. very well started already this year, the alloys. I also want to emphasize that always the strategy for LOEs was new and acquired products. to do well because they were launched and acquired to offset the alloys. They are growing 22% this year. They are already on $3.1 billion in the quarter if you without saying that that's the guidance, but if you multiply it by 4, just to give you, we are talking about over $12 billion this year and growing. And the [ 17 ] billion of LOEs now after Vinda, they are more 14% to 15% rather than [ 17 ]. So I think it's -- look, let's do -- thank you. Next question? Our next question comes from Evan Seigerman with BMO Capital Markets.

Evan Seigerman

Analysts
#33

I really want to touch on capital deployment, specifically when it comes to share repurchases. Dave, I know that, that's been a method that you wanted to employ now with clarity on Vyndamax and the CAGR post 2028, what other -- what else do you need to see to potentially start buying back shares, especially at these levels?

David Denton

Executives
#34

Yes, Evan, great question. We always look at our capital allocation strategy and balance between the 3 options that we have. At the moment, our focus is really on investing in our R&D platform and in business development to drive long-term value. With the development in these court cases, -- that does give us a bit more confidence in our cash flow over time. So you'll see us the capital allocation, share repurchase lever will come back into greater consideration going forward. So great question. something we always work at, and we're always looking to do what's best for the company and shareholders long term.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#35

Thank you, Dave very clear. Next question please.

Operator

Operator
#36

Next question comes from Courtney Breen with Bernstein.

Courtney Breen

Analysts
#37

I just wanted to probe a little bit more on Sigvatata/vedotin and positioning in that frontline setting all comers relative to the symbiotic Lung01 study that you've already started with the PD-1 VEGF. I also note that you've got kind of a Phase I/II running combining these 2 assets -- and can you help us contextualize that new Phase III or comers that you intend to start this year for SV first line? And how that may be positioned relative to symbiotic?

Albert Bourla

Executives
#38

All right, Chris.

Chris Boshoff

Executives
#39

Thank you very much for the question. Lung cancer is obviously a very significant unmet need and having a number of shots on goal now with a very differentiated portfolio. gives us confidence that we can continue to play important role in all cancer beyond just in the targeted therapies like lorlatinib. For SP, we are very encouraged by the data we've seen for the combination of pembrolizumab plus ASP in the PD-1 -- PD-L1 high population, where we previously showed in a small number of small code of patients that they all responded in the PD-L1 high to that combination. So the Phase III study that's ongoing pembrolizumab versus pembrolizumab for SP. That study is recruiting well in the first-line setting. -- and we're confident for the readout for that study. And ongoing also is the second line study, which is against dose ease which was encouraged by the previous data we've seen, albeit in a single-arm experience with a medium overall survival of 16.3 months. So that study should read out mid-tier's dosing tax versus ASV second-line doled for, obviously, for overall survival. And it is positive as I said earlier, it will be clinically meaningful. And then ongoing studies being planned also for the broader population in combination with chemo plus pembrolizumab, and we will share some of the data at later this year for the early data for that combination. In terms of 404, at ASCO, we will share the POCI data of 4404-monotheraphy in first-line PD-L1 expressing non-small cell lung cancer -- as you know, we recently shared data at AACR, where we repeated the preclinical and early data generated by 3SBio in China. So we're really confident that this is a differentiated molecule. -- the binding against VEFF is we've shown at AACR is better -- is higher affinity ability than what's seen with a all that end with competitor PG/PD-1 molecules. So confident in the molecule, we'll share more data later this year with a broad program starting including in combination with chemo and just a reminder, ASCO will also share data and with 4401-plus chemo in first-line advanced recurrent endometrial cancer, another program that we plan to start a Phase III program.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#40

Thank you, Chris. The next question. Last question.

Operator

Operator
#41

Our final question comes from Louise Chen with Scotiabank.

Louise Chen

Analysts
#42

I want to ask you which key products do you think will drive the reacceleration of your growth in 2029 and beyond? And then regarding the international obesity opportunity, just curious what you learned from the launch of your GLP-1?

Albert Bourla

Executives
#43

Alexandre let start with you again at this time because the obesity international has, of course, the numbers have surprised how big the international market is. And then also to speak about key products that will drive your growth in '29 and then Amir U.S. key products that will drive growth in '29.

Alexandre de Germay

Executives
#44

So a good question on the euglutide launch in China. Of course, it's very, very early days. We really launched the product Monday last week. So I mean it's only a week, so I can't really talk to you about the penetration of euglutide in China. But -- what is really interesting is actually the incidence of chronic weight in China is quite high, 15% of the Chinese population. And considering the size of the China population that makes it 1 of the larger market for chronic weight management. And that's the reason why we decided on March and February of the to actually do this collaboration with win Bioscience for the commercialization of economy in China, -- and since then, we got the approval and commercialize these assets -- has a very interesting profile. And actually, he's generating in a placebo-controlled study, a 1.1 percent weight loss at 48 weeks, which is in part was the best Q1 with this bias mechanism of action of GLP-1. We think that we have -- we are bringing to market a very effective asset with a good tolerability profile. And of course, we're going to leverage our very strong primary care capabilities in China that puts Pfizer China as 1 of the leading in primary care. So it's a combination of a very attractive clinical profile, plus our knowledge in this area. Well, we believe makes a leader in this category. And we are not coming very late into the market because remember, really really introduce their asset in the beginning of last year. So it's not like we're coming many years after the introduction of those assets. So as I said, I'm very optimistic, both due to the profile of this asset and the capability that we have developed in China. Now when it comes into the growth engine of the international. There are -- I just want to step back 1 second. If you look at the water and the fact that our non-Covprimary care group double-digit growth. We delivered $2 billion this quarter. Remember, we closed last year with double-digit growth on primary care. Now if you look at the specialty tier about $1.5 billion this quarter, we're delivering a double-digit growth again. That was on the back of a double digits last year. And there are assets in those different areas that will continue to power our growth. If I come back to primary care, our vaccines are growing very strongly. And the reason why we are growing very strongly on vaccine is because both and on RSV, we have a large population. If you look at -- as you know, in -- this is a very -- it's a very large population and 2/3 of our vaccine business come from the atria. And of course, we have a large pediatric population to continue to grow. So both in maternal immunization and optomocalco. So the vaccines have a potential to grow in pediatric and in adults. Of course, a big growth in the -- at the end of the decade will come from the Mercer asset in chronic weight management because there are 2 elements of that. One, it's an underserved category with a large epidemic across the world, right? In some of the emerging markets, we have a very high prevalence in Saudi, in Brazil and Mexico of obesity and our presence in those markets will -- with a strong primary care will allow us to actually anatispotential. But also -- it is a cash market, which also is a big advantage in Europe and other developed markets where right after the approval, we can introduce those products which is not the case today in many of our categories because it takes a lot of time for reimbursement negotiation with the payer. So you see we have an in-line assets that will continue to power the growth, and we are bringing assets like the matter that will go straight to market. And of course, the oncology asset will come, but it will take longer for reimbursement negotiation.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#45

Thank you, Alexandre. Amir for U.S.

Aamir Malik

Executives
#46

Luis answer the question. There's many things that give us confidence about driving growth in the U.S. in '29. If you take the first category, we have products that are on the market today that have a lot of upside to them. You think about Padcev, all of our recent growth has been primarily driven by LAC -- we're at the high 50% penetration there. And we've got lots of upside in MIDC, 303 and 304. So there's a lot of headroom for growth there. Secondly, you look at products like Nurtec, we've got a lot of tailwind behind us now, but only 60% of people who write a triptan have yet to write an oral CGRP -- so there's a lot of headroom for growth, and we're executing really well against that. Second, you look at some of our existing large franchises. We have a lot of confidence in what's going to happen with Vinda now with years additional exclusivity gives us the opportunity to invest and to continue to grow diagnosis -- and we are doing a great job defending our existing patient base as well as ensuring that it is the choice, the top choice for new patient starts. And so we think we have a lot of momentum on franchises like that as well. And then just to complement what Alexandre was saying, if I think about new areas of growth, we talked a lot about the oncology assets already, but obviously, we're very excited about what we have to bring to the market in obesity the assets speak for themselves, but what I'm particularly excited about is the fact that we have unique capabilities as a company to win in this area, both in terms of our ability to activate consumers and patients in very different ways as well as our legacy in this space and the fact that almost 60% of physicians who are going to write these products, we already touch today through a combination of our field forces. So those combinations are just some examples of what gives us top 10 to grow in '29.

Albert Bourla

Executives
#47

Thank you, Amir. And thank you, everyone, for your attention. Our strong performance in the quarter reflects the impact of our continued focus and disciplined execution. We are engaging with precision to maximize the value of our commercial portfolio, and we are seeing the results in our financial performance. In R&D, we are making meaningful progress with a robust slate of critical milestones ahead in 2026 that we believe will further demonstrate the strength and breadth of our pipeline. I want to thank my Pfizer team. I believe we have the best team Pfizer ever had. They are dedicated to ours, continue to deliver and embrace our commitment to creating long-term value for patients and for our shareholders. Thank you for joining the call today, and thank you for your interest in Pfizer. We look forward to sharing further updates as we execute our priorities throughout the year.

Operator

Operator
#48

Thank you. This brings us to the end of today's meeting. We appreciate your time and participation. You may now disconnect.

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