Mylan's 1st Quarter Results Are Weaker Than They Might Seem

Last year wasn't all that great for Mylan N.V. (NASDAQ: MYL). However, the drugmaker began to see some signs of improvement when it reported its fourth-quarter results at the end of February. And Mylan's outlook pointed to a better year in 2018.

Mylan announced its first-quarter results before the market opened Wednesday. Did the company actually get off to a better start this year than it did in 2017? Here are the highlights from Mylan's first-quarter update.

Mylan results: The raw numbers

Metric

Q1 2018

Q1 2017

Year-Over-Year Change

Sales

$2.68 billion $2.72 billion

(1.3%)

Net income from continuing operations

$87.1 million $66.4 million

31.2%

Adjusted earnings per share (EPS)

$0.96 $0.93

3.2%

What happened with Mylan this quarter?

Mylan continued to experience some of the same challenges in the first quarter that it encountered last year. North American net sales dropped 19% year over year to $985.3 million. This decline stemmed from several factors, including loss of exclusivity on the company's olmesartan products, lower sales of branded products (especially EpiPen), the divestiture of some contract manufacturing assets, and the impact of the adoption of new accounting standards beginning this year.

The drugmaker benefited from growth outside of North America, though. European sales jumped 16% year over year to $1.04 billion. Sales in the rest of the world increased 8% to $626.7 million. However, these sales results were boosted significantly by foreign exchange fluctuations. On a constant currency basis, Mylan's sales increased by 2% year over year in Europe and by 3% in the rest of the world.

Mylan's big jump in GAAP net income also came with an asterisk. The company had a U.S. income tax benefit of $76.6 million in the first quarter of 2018, compared to a tax hit of $5.2 million in the prior-year period.

First-quarter non-GAAP adjusted EPS was in line with Mylan's expectations. The modest growth in adjusted EPS resulted primarily, however, from stock buybacks that reduced the number of outstanding shares by 3.7% year over year.

Probably the best news for Mylan in the first quarter was that the company generated significantly more adjusted free cash flow. Mylan reported adjusted free cash flow of $663.6 million, up 39% over the prior-year period.

What management had to say

Mylan CEO Heather Bresch stated:

The company's president, Rajiv Malik, added:

Looking forward

Mylan reaffirmed its full-year 2018 guidance provided earlier this year. The company continues to project 2018 revenue between $11.75 billion and $13.25 billion. The midpoint of that range reflects a year-over-year increase of 5%. Mylan expects full-year adjusted EPS between $5.20 and $5.60 -- an 18% year-over-year jump. The company also still thinks that adjusted free cash flow generated in 2018 will be between $2.1 billion and $2.5 billion.

There are several things that investors should watch in the coming months. Mylan has experienced some intermittent supply issues resulting from manufacturing delays with Pfizer, which makes both branded and authorized generic versions of EpiPen. It's possible that these issues could exacerbate Mylan's challenges in North America.

On a positive note, several new product launches could boost Mylan's sales. The company is launching two new HIV drugs in the U.S. -- Cimduo and Symfi -- following the March launch of Symfi Lo. Mylan is pricing these drugs significantly lower than rival HIV treatments.

While it's possible that Mylan could make some acquisitions this year, one seems to be off the table. The company stated in April that a Reuters report that Mylan was seeking to acquire Merck KGaA's consumer business was "untrue."

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Keith Speights owns shares of Pfizer. The Motley Fool recommends Mylan. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.