By John Letzing and Denise Roland 

Novartis AG outlined plans to revive its ailing eye-care business as the unit contributed to a 57% decline in fourth-quarter net profit reported by the Swiss drug giant on Wednesday.

The company said it would narrow Alcon's focus to surgical equipment and vision-care products, such as contact lenses, by hiving off ophthalmic drugs into the company's giant pharmaceuticals division.

The Swiss firm also appointed former Hospira boss Mike Ball to lead the slimmed-down Alcon division, replacing Jeff George. Chief Executive Joe Jimenez said of Mr. George's departure: "He's had a tough year at Alcon and with all the changes Jeff felt now was a good time to step down." Mr. Ball left Hospira last year, after it was acquired by Pfizer Inc.

Novartis shares were down 3.05% at 81.10 Swiss francs on Wednesday morning.

Alcon has struggled recently amid increased competition in the lens implant market and the entry of cheaper copycats of some ophthalmic drugs. Stripping out the effect of the strong dollar, sales at the unit fell 6% in the fourth quarter, to $2.3 billion, while operating income decreased 36% to $132 million.

Mr. Jimenez said Novartis would invest about $200 million into a plan that should boost Alcon's performance, and that he expects the unit will begin to "return to growth by the end of this year."

Novartis's CEO, who had previously said he was open to selling off underperforming parts of Alcon, said that "for now" the company planned to keep all of the business.

For Novartis as a whole, net income fell to $1.05 billion in the quarter ended in December, compared with $2.45 billion in the same period a year earlier.

Revenue dipped 4% to $12.52 billion, the company said. Core net income, which strips out one-time events such as impairments or gains, fell 5% to $2.7 billion, Novartis said. Analysts had expected revenue of $12.7 billion and core net income of $2.7 billion.

As well as the drag from the weak Alcon unit, profit took a hit from a $346 million write-down on Novartis' Venezuela business, related largely to the currency impact of high inflation in the country. The decline was also sharpened by a one-off gain in the previous year of around $400 million from the sale of Novartis' shares in LTS Lohmann Therapie-Systeme AG.

Stripping out the effect of the strong dollar, revenue increased 4% and net income fell 34%. Mr. Jimenez said he expected the strong dollar to continue to affect reported results through 2016, but said the effect would lessen.

Novartis is bracing for a tough year, with its best-selling cancer drug Gleevec expected to lose U.S. exclusivity in February. It said it expected revenue and profit to be "broadly in line" with results in 2015.

The company is leaning heavily on two new launches--Entresto for heart failure and Cosentyx for psoriasis and certain rheumatic ailments--to help offset the expected sharp drop-off in Gleevec sales this year.

Entresto, which analysts expect to generate $5 billion in annual sales at its peak, has got off to a slow start as two-thirds of heart failure patients are covered by Medicare, which can delay reimbursement decisions for six months post-launch. The heart failure drug generated just $5 million in sales in the fourth quarter.

Cosentyx by contrast has progressed "strongly," said Novartis, bringing in $121 million of revenue in the fourth quarter.

On top of the Alcon restructuring, Novartis said it planned to move off-patent drugs worth around $900 million in sales from its pharmaceuticals unit into Sandoz, its generics business. Mr. Jimenez said he believed this would generate growth since those products would be more strongly promoted as part of Sandoz.

In addition, Novartis said it plans to take steps including centralizing manufacturing to reduce costs by $1 billion annually by 2020. The effort will involve one-time restructuring costs of about $1.4 billion spread over five years, Novartis said.

Write to John Letzing at john.letzing@wsj.com and Denise Roland at Denise.Roland@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

January 27, 2016 04:29 ET (09:29 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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