Moderna raises Covid vaccine outlook despite sharp drop in quarterly sales

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Shares of Moderna rose Thursday after the biotech company hiked its full-year outlook for its Covid vaccine, its only marketable product, despite reporting a quarterly loss and sharp drop in revenue. 

The biotech company generated second-quarter sales of $344 million. That plunged from the $4.75 billion it recorded in the same period a year ago, when Covid cases still trended higher in the U.S. 

Moderna posted a net loss of $1.38 billion, or $3.62 per share, for the quarter. That compares with $2.20 billion in net income, or $5.24 per share, reported during the same quarter last year.

Moderna expects $6 billion to $8 billion in sales from its Covid shot this year, driven by potential U.S. demand for 50 to 100 million doses in the fall season. That’s up from its previous forecast of $5 billion. 

Here are Moderna’s results:

  • Loss per share: $3.62 (That may not be comparable to the $4.04 expected by analysts surveyed by Refinitiv)
  • Revenue: $344 million (That may not be comparable to the $319.6 million expected by analysts surveyed by Refinitiv)

Moderna shares rose nearly 4% in premarket trading. The Massachusetts-based company’s shares have dropped more than 38% this year, putting its market value at around $42 billion. 

Moderna, Pfizer and Novavax have all seen sales of their Covid-related products plummet as much of the world moves on from the pandemic and depends less on protective vaccines and treatments. But people are still dying from Covid every day and the virus isn’t fully going away anytime soon, so the drugmakers are investing in new products to fight it. 

Covid vaccine sales for Moderna and its rivals will look different during the second half of the year. 

The U.S. government will shift Covid products to the commercial market, which means drugmakers will start selling vaccines and treatments directly to health care providers rather than to the government.

The companies are slated to deliver updated versions of their shots targeting the omicron subvariant XBB.1.5, the most immune-evasive strain of the virus to date. All three drugmakers are waiting for the Food and Drug Administration to approve their vaccines for the fall. 

Moderna hasn’t disclosed when it expects its shots to be available to the public after they’re approved. But new CDC Director Mandy Cohen told NPR on Monday that the new vaccines could be available by the “early October time frame.”

Moderna will hold an earnings call with investors at 8 a.m. ET, which will likely provide updates on its upcoming Covid vaccine rollout and drug pipeline.

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