By Manas Mishra, Michael Erman and Patrick Wingrove
April 24 (Reuters) - Major drugmakers were a standout on a tumultuous day of corporate earnings on Thursday, beating expectations even as they grapple with the threat of sector-specific tariffs, efforts to lower drug prices and federal layoffs that could undermine efforts to invest heavily in the U.S. in coming years.
Unlike companies like airlines that drastically cut or pulled forecasts due to tariff-related uncertainty, large drugmakers have mostly been immune to the trade turmoil. Bristol Myers Squibb BMY.N, Merck & Co MRK.N, Sanofi SASY.PA and Roche ROG.S all exceeded quarterly earnings expectations on Thursday, and Bristol raised its profit forecast.
The sector overall has mostly weathered the market's ups and downs, with the S&P 500 Healthcare index down just 0.5% this year, compared with a 7.5% drop in the broader S&P 500 index.
Still, drugmakers are grappling with several factors that could cause upheaval, such as Trump administration efforts to shrink the federal workforce, including at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and probes into pharmaceutical imports that set the stage for levies on the sector.
Drugs have so far been exempt from U.S. President Donald Trump's reciprocal tariffs, but he has argued the U.S. needs more drug manufacturing so it does not have to rely on other countries for its supply of medicines.
So far, there is little clarity on the rates and timings of any such tariffs. But the industry could be in for a big hit if Trump goes ahead with his plans, since the U.S. imports more than $200 billion in prescription drugs.
Some companies, like Merck, have begun to see the effects, as it forecast a $200 million hit from tariffs levied by the U.S. on some countries, particularly China, and from subsequent tariffs from other countries.
Its biggest exposure is through blockbuster cancer drug Keytruda, the world's biggest-selling prescription medicine. Merck said it has enough U.S. inventory for this year, while it is working to expand domestic manufacturing for future years.
Johnson & Johnson JNJ.N earlier this month accounted for a $400 million hit from tariff-related costs in its full-year forecast, mostly related to its devices business.
Manufacturers have said that sector-wide tariffs could create supply chain disruptions and eventually hurt patients. They say they have continued talking to the White House to highlight this impact.
"The concern for us is anything that would impact innovation," said Bristol Myers Chief Financial Officer David Elkins, "or would restrict access to medicines for patients."
In the longer term, companies would need to increase their investments in the U.S., said Stephen Farrelly, healthcare analyst for ING.
"There is a clear distinction on whether you transition existing capacity, which is difficult, disruptive, costly and takes time, or rather you position future investment into the U.S., which is more realizable, and more realistic," Farrelly said.
Several drugmakers have pledged to pump billions of dollars into U.S. manufacturing, with Roche earlier this week saying it would invest $50 billion over the next five years, while also shifting current production to the United States.
However, Roche CEO Thomas Schinecker said on Thursday that making all goods in the U.S. that are used there would inflate manufacturing costs. He said Roche was in direct talks for tariff exemptions, arguing the products it ships into the U.S. are offset by its exports of U.S.-made drugs and diagnostics.
TRUMP TURMOIL
The industry's commitment to spend more in the United States may run into obstacles due to the Trump administration's move to fire FDA staff who support reviews of new drug manufacturing plants that the agency conducts before it can approve them to produce medicines.
The FDA is slated to lose 3,500 employees under Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s massive restructuring of U.S. health agencies, raising concerns that the regulatory review of treatments and vaccines could be disrupted.
The FDA missed an April 1 approval decision deadline for Novavax's COVID-19 vaccine. That raised fears it would not be approved, only to have the agency ask for more data this week that raised hopes of an eventual green light for the shot.
A Merck executive said on a Thursday investor call that the FDA’s deadlines to approve the company’s drug applications had not shifted. Still, Merck said it is watching for any mid- to long-term impact of FDA layoffs.
Drug companies have also had to contend with administration efforts to lower drug costs in the largest market, including its looking into matching far lower prices paid for drugs in other developed countries. Some European companies have urged the EU to allow for higher prices to bolster local investment in the face of Trump tariff threats.