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Final Results

8 Feb 2024 07:00

RNS Number : 4058C
AstraZeneca PLC
08 February 2024
 

AstraZeneca

8 February 2024

FY and Q4 2023 results

 

Strong growth and pipeline momentum with three new medicines approved since the third quarter

 

Revenue and EPS summary

 

FY 2023

Q4 2023

% Change

% Change

 

 

$m 

Actual 

CER[1]

$m 

Actual 

CER 

- Product Sales

43,789 

11,323 

- Alliance Revenue[2]

1,428 

89 

89 

424 

69 

67 

- Collaboration Revenue2

594 

(1)

(1)

277 

75 

74 

Total Revenue

45,811 

12,024 

Total Revenue ex COVID-19

 

45,488 

13 

15 

12,036 

16 

16 

Reported EPS

$3.84 

81 

96 

$0.62 

Core[3] EPS

$7.26 

15 

$1.45 

 

Financial performance for full year 2023 (Growth numbers at CER)

 

? Total Revenue $45,811m, up 6% despite a decline of $3,736m from COVID-19 medicines[4]

 

? Excluding COVID-19 medicines, Total Revenue increased 15% and Product Sales increased 14%

 

? Double-digit Total Revenue growth from Oncology 21%, CVRM 18%, R&I 10%, and Rare Disease 12%

 

? Core Product Sales Gross Margin[5] of 82%, up two percentage points, reflecting the decline in sales of lower margin COVID?19 medicines

 

? Core Operating Margin of 32% increased by two percentage points including the previously announced gain from an update to the contractual relationships for Beyfortus, totalling $712m and recorded as Core Other operating income. In the quarter, higher SG&A expense drove lower operating margins, partly due to phasing of expenses and increased investment in launches for Airsupra, Wainua and Truqap

 

? The Core Tax Rate for the year was 17%. In the fourth quarter, the tax rate was negatively impacted by reviews by tax authorities, administrative appeal processes and other adjustments, offset by a routine intragroup reorganisation of IP, leading to a tax rate of 10% in the quarter

 

? Core EPS increased 15% to $7.26

 

? Second interim dividend declared of $1.97 per share, making a total dividend declared for FY 2023 of $2.90 per share

 

? Total Revenue and Core EPS in FY 2024 are each expected to increase by a low double-digit to low teens percentage at CER

 

Pascal Soriot, Chief Executive Officer, AstraZeneca, said:

 

"As AstraZeneca celebrates its 25th anniversary, we are pleased to report another year of strong financial performance and scientific progress, with double-digit earnings growth, and investment in exciting areas of science, including antibody drug conjugates and cell therapies, that lay the foundations for long-term success.

 

We expect another year of strong growth in 2024, driven by continued adoption of our medicines across geographies. Our differentiated and growing portfolio of approved medicines, global reach and rich R&D pipeline give us confidence that we will continue to deliver industry-leading growth."

 

Key milestones achieved since the prior results announcement

 

? Three first approvals for new molecular entities: Truqap (capivasertib), Wainua (eplontersen), Voydeya (danicopan)

 

? US approvals for Truqap plus Faslodex in HR-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer with biomarker alterations (CAPItello?291), and Wainua for ATTRv-PN (NEURO-TTRansform). China approvals for Imfinzi in mBTC (TOPAZ-1) and Beyfortus for prevention of RSV in infants (MEDLEY/MELODY). First approval, in Japan, for Voydeya, as an add-on therapy to Ultomiris or Soliris for PNH with EVH (ALPHA)

 

? Enhertu granted Priority Review in the US for patients with metastatic HER2-positive solid tumours

 

 

Guidance

 

The Company issues its Total Revenue and Core EPS guidance for FY 2024 at CER, based on the average foreign exchange rates through 2023.

 

 

Total Revenue is expected to increase by a low double-digit to low teens percentage

Core EPS is expected to increase by a low double-digit to low teens percentage

 

 

? Collaboration Revenue is expected to increase substantially, driven by success-based milestones and certain anticipated transactions

 

? Other operating income is expected to decrease substantially (FY 2023 included a $241m gain on the disposal of Pulmicort Flexhaler US rights, and a $712m one-time gain relating to updates to contractual arrangements for Beyfortus)

 

? The Core Tax rate is expected to be between 18-22%

 

The Company is unable to provide guidance on a Reported basis because it cannot reliably forecast material elements of the Reported results, including any fair value adjustments arising on acquisition-related liabilities, intangible asset impairment charges and legal settlement provisions. Please refer to the cautionary statements section regarding forward-looking statements at the end of this announcement.

 

Currency impact

 

If foreign exchange rates for February 2024 to December 2024 were to remain at the average rates seen in January 2024, it is anticipated that both FY 2024 Total Revenue and Core EPS would incur a low single-digit adverse impact versus the performance at CER. The Company's foreign exchange rate sensitivity analysis is provided in Table 19.

 

Investor Day

 

AstraZeneca will host an Investor Day on 21 May 2024.For more information, see www.astrazeneca.com/investor-relations.html .

 

Table 1: Key elements of Total Revenue performance in Q4 2023

 

 

% Change 

 

 

 

Revenue type 

$m 

Actual % 

CER % 

 

 

Product Sales 

11,323 

* Excluding COVID-19 medicines, Q4 2023 Product Sales increased by 14%

Alliance Revenue

424 

69 

67 

* $281m for Enhertu (Q4 2022: $188m)

* $80m for Tezspire (Q4 2022: $37m)

* $41m for Beyfortus (Q4 2022: $nil)

Collaboration Revenue 

277 

75 

74 

* $245m Lynparza regulatory milestone (Q4 2022: $105m)

* $27m Beyfortus sales milestone (Q4 2022: $nil)

Total Revenue 

12,024 

* Excluding COVID-19 medicines, Q4 2023 Total Revenue increased by 16%

Therapy areas 

$m 

Actual %

CER %

 

 

Oncology 

4,989 

23 

24 

* Strong performance across all key medicines and regions

CVRM 

2,702 

18 

18 

 

* Farxiga up 36% (35% at CER), Lokelma up 38%, roxadustat up 27%, Brilinta declined 5% (4% at CER)

R&I 

1,675 

13 

13 

* Fasenra up 10% (9% CER), Breztri up 72%. Saphnelo and Tezspire also continue to grow rapidly, partially offset by a 16% decline in Symbicort following entry of a generic competitor in the US in the third quarter

V&I

413 

(64)

(66)

* $6m revenue from COVID-19 mAbs and ?$17m for Vaxzevria, both resulting from historic contracts (Q4 2022: $734m and $95m respectively)

* Beyfortus $122m, including $41m of Alliance Revenue for AstraZeneca's share of gross profits outside US, $27m of Collaboration Revenue for a sales milestone and $54m of Product Sales from product supplied to Sanofi

Rare Disease 

1,971 

* Ultomiris up 39% (38% at CER), partially offset by decline in Soliris of 15% (13% at CER)

* Strensiq up 12% (13% at CER) and Koselugo up 46% (48% at CER) reflecting strong patient demand

Other Medicines 

274 

(33)

(32)

* Nexium generic competition in Japan

Total Revenue 

12,024 

Regions inc. COVID-19

$m 

Actual %

CER %

 

 

US 

5,101 

Emerging Markets 

2,783 

- China 

 

1,382 

16 

16 

 

- Ex-China Emerging Markets 

 

1,401 

(9)

 

Europe 

2,880 

25 

17 

Established RoW 

1,259 

(9)

(6)

Total Revenue inc. COVID-19

12,024 

* Growth rates impacted by lower sales ofCOVID---19 medicines (see table below)

Regions ex. COVID-19 

 

$m 

Actual %

CER %

 

 

US 

5,101 

12 

12 

Emerging Markets 

2,791 

15 

22 

- China 

1,382 

16 

16 

- Ex-China Emerging Markets 

 

1,409 

14 

27 

Europe 

2,884 

33 

25 

Established RoW 

1,259 

Total Revenue ex. COVID-19

12,036 

16 

16 

 

Table 2: Key elements of financial performance in Q4 2023

 

Metric

Reported

Reported change

Core

Corechange

Comments[6]

Total Revenue

$12,024m

7% Actual 8% CER

$12,024m

7% Actual 8% CER

* Excluding COVID-19 medicines, Q4 2023 Total Revenue increased by 16%

* See Table 1 and the Total Revenue section of this document for further details

Product Sales Gross Margin

80%

+6pp Actual +6pp CER

80%

+3pp Actual +2pp CER

+ In the prior year period, gross margins were reduced due to inventory write-downs and manufacturing contract terminations for Evusheld

* Variations in Product Sales Gross Margin can be expected between periods due to product seasonality, foreign exchange fluctuations and other effects

R&D expense

$3,073m

17% Actual 15% CER

$2,914m

15% Actual 14% CER

+ Increased investment in the pipeline

* Core R&D-to-Total Revenue ratio of 24%(Q4 2022: 23%)

+ Quarterly phasing impact

SG&A expense

$5,371m

16% Actual 16% CER

$4,034m

13% Actual 12% CER

+ Market development for recent launches and pre-launch activities

* Core SG&A-to-Total Revenue ratio of 34%(Q4 2022: 32%)

+ Quarterly phasing impact

Other operating income and expense[7]

$107m

-43% Actual -42% CER

$107m

-17% Actual -15% CER

? Discontinuation of brazikumab development 

Operating Margin

10%

+1pp Actual +1pp CER

23%

Stable

* See Product Sales Gross Margin, expenses and Other operating income and expense commentary above

Net finance expense

$337m

7% Actual 3% CER

$259m

5% Actual 1% CER

+ Higher rates on floating debt and bond issuances

+ Increased Interest expense on income tax balances

? Higher interest received on cash and short-term investments

Tax rate

-7%

+9pp Actual +13pp CER

10%

Stable

? Intragroup purchase of intellectual property

+ Reviews by tax authorities, administrative appeals and changes to certain deferred tax balances

* Variations in the tax rate can be expected between periods

EPS

$0.62

7% Actual 5% CER

$1.45

5% Actual 7% CER

* Further details of differences between Reported and Core are shown in Table 14

 

Table 3: Pipeline highlights since prior results announcement

 

Event

Medicine

Indication / Trial

 

Event

Regulatory approvals and other regulatory actions

Truqap

HR-positive HER2-negative advanced breast cancer with biomarker alterations (CAPItello-291)

Regulatory approval (US)

Imfinzi

Biliary tract cancer (TOPAZ-1)

Regulatory approval (CN)

Wainua

ATTRv-PN (NEURO-TTRansform) 

Regulatory approval (US) 

Beyfortus 

RSV (MELODY-MEDLEY) 

Regulatory approval (CN) 

Voydeya

PNH with EVH (ALPHA)

Regulatory approval (JP)

Regulatory submissionsor acceptances*

Lynparza

gBRCA breast cancer (adjuvant) (OlympiA)

Regulatory submission (CN)

Lynparza + Imfinzi

Endometrial cancer (1st-line) (DUO-E)

Regulatory submission (US, EU, JP)

Enhertu

HER2-expressing tumours (DESTINY-PanTumor02, DESTINY-Lung01, DESTINY-CRC02)

Regulatory submission (US), Priority Review (US)

Enhertu

HER2+/HER2-low gastric (1st-line) (DESTINY-Gastric01)

Regulatory submission (CN)

Imfinzi + Imjudo

NSCLC (neoadjuvant) (AEGEAN)

Regulatory submission (EU)

Wainua

ATTRv-PN (NEURO-TTRansform)

Regulatory submission (EU)

Fasenra

EGPA (MANDARA)

Regulatory submission (US, EU, JP)

Ultomiris

NMOSD (CHAMPION-NMOSD)

Regulatory submission (US)

Ultomiris

gMG

Regulatory submission (CN)

Major Phase III data readouts and other developments

Imfinzi 

NSCLC (unresectable, Stg. III) (PACIFIC-2) 

Primary endpoint not met 

 

acoramidis [8]

ATTR-CM

Primary endpoint met

 

*US, EU and China regulatory submission denotes filing acceptance

 

Upcoming pipeline catalysts

 

For a table of anticipated timings of key trial readouts, please refer to page 3 of the Clinical Trials Appendix, available on www.astrazeneca.com/investor-relations.html.

 

Table 4: Phase III trials started since 1 January 2023

 

Medicine

Trial name

Indication

datopotamab deruxtecan

AVANZAR

NSCLC (1st-line)

TROPION-Lung07

Non-squamous NSCLC (1st-line)

TROPION-Breast04

Neoadjuvant/adjuvant triple-negative or HR-low/HER2-negative breast cancer

TROPION-Breast05

PD-L1-positive locally recurrent inoperable or metastatic TNBC

camizestrant

CAMBRIA-1

HR-positive/HER2-negative adjuvant breast cancer

 

CAMBRIA-2

HR-positive/HER2-negative adjuvant breast cancer

Truqap

CAPItello-292

HR-positive/HER2-negative advanced breast cancer

volrustomig

eVOLVE-Cervical

High-risk locally advanced cervical cancer

 

 

eVOLVE-Lung02

mNSCLC (1st-line) with PD-L1

 

eVOLVE-Meso

Unresectable malignant pleural mesothelioma (1st-line)

 

eVOLVE-HNSCC

Unresected, locally advanced HNSCC

rilvegostomig

ARTEMIDE-Biliary01

BTC with curative intent

saruparib

EvoPAR-PR01

HRRm and Non-HRRm mCSPC

zibo/dapa

ZENITH High Proteinuria

CKD with high proteinuria

Saphnelo

DAISY

Systemic sclerosis

baxdrostat

BaxHTN

Uncontrolled, including treatment-resistant, hypertension

Tezspire

CROSSING

Eosinophilic oesophagitis

Breztri

LITHOS

Mild to moderate asthma

 

ATHLOS

COPD

pMDI portfolio

HFO1234ze + Breztri

COPD

HFO1234ze

Mucociliary clearance in healthy volunteers

HFO1234ze

Asthma

tozorakimab

MIRANDA

COPD

ipavibart (AZD3152)

SUPERNOVA

COVID-19 prophylaxis

Ultomiris

ARTEMIS

Cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury

ALXN2220

DepleTTR-CM

Transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy

efzimfotase alfa (ALXN1850)

HICKORY

Hypophosphatasia

 

Corporate and business development

 

In November 2023, AstraZeneca launched Evinova, with an ambition to become a leading provider of digital health solutions to better meet the needs of healthcare professionals, regulators and patients. Evinova will prioritise bringing to market established and scaled digital technology solutions already being used globally by AstraZeneca to optimise clinical trial design and delivery. Globally-leading clinical research organisations Parexel and Fortrea have entered into agreements to offer Evinova digital health solutions to their wide customer base.

 

In December 2023, AstraZeneca entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Icosavax, Inc (Icosavax). The acquisition strengthens AstraZeneca's late-stage pipeline with Icosavax's lead investigational vaccine candidate, IVX-A12, a potential first-in-class, Phase III-ready, combination VLP vaccine that targets both RSV and hMPV. RSV and hMPV are both leading causes of severe respiratory infection and hospitalisation in adults 60 years of age and older and those with chronic conditions such as cardiovascular, renal and respiratory disease. Subject to the satisfaction of the conditions in the merger agreement, the acquisition is expected to close in the first quarter of 2024.

 

In December 2023, AstraZeneca entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Gracell Biotechnologies Inc. (Gracell), a global clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing innovative cell therapies for the treatment of cancer and autoimmune diseases. The proposed acquisition will enrich AstraZeneca's growing pipeline of cell therapies with GC012F, a novel, clinical-stage FasTCAR-enabled BCMA and CD19 dual-targeting CAR-T therapy, a potential new treatment for multiple myeloma, as well as other haematologic malignancies and autoimmune diseases including systemic lupus erythematosus. The transaction is expected to close in the first quarter of 2024, subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory clearances, and Gracell shareholder approval.

 

In February 2024, AstraZeneca announced that it is investing $300 million in a state-of-the-art facility in Rockville, Maryland to establish life-saving cell therapy platforms for critical cancer trials and future commercial supply. To align with clinical trial timelines, the site will initially focus on pivotal clinical trial manufacturing of CAR-T cell therapies to meet current clinical supply demand. More than 150 new highly skilled jobs will be created to initially focus on manufacturing T-cell therapies to enable clinical trials to be conducted around the world. Over time, the site may expand its focus to support other therapy areas.

 

Sustainability highlights

 

Through the Sustainable Markets Initiative Health Systems Task Force, AstraZeneca announced an industry-first renewable power agreement in China together with four global healthcare leaders and renewable energy company Envision Energy, resulting in potential annual emissions savings of approximately 120,000 tonnes, the equivalent of taking 25,000 cars off the road. See the Sustainability section in this document for further details.

 

Conference call

 

A conference call and webcast for investors and analysts will begin today, 8 February 2024, at 11:45 UK time. Details can be accessed via astrazeneca.com.

 

Reporting calendar

 

The Company intends to publish its Q1 2024 results on 25 April 2024.

 

Operating and financial review

 

All narrative on growth and results in this section is based on actual exchange rates, and financial figures are in US$ millions ($m), unless stated otherwise. Unless stated otherwise, the performance shown in this announcement covers the twelve-month period to 31 December 2023 ('the year' or 'FY 2023') compared to the twelve-month period to 31 December 2022 (FY 2022), or the three-month period to 31 December 2023 ('the quarter' or 'Q4 2023') compared to the three-month period to 31 December 2022 ('Q4 2022'). References to 'first quarter', 'second quarter', 'third quarter' and fourth quarter' refer to the respective quarters in FY 2023.

 

Core financial measures, EBITDA, Net debt, Product Sales Gross Margin (formerly termed as Gross Margin), Operating Margin and CER are non-GAAP financial measures because they cannot be derived directly from the Group's Condensed consolidated financial statements. Management believes that these non-GAAP financial measures, when provided in combination with Reported results, provide investors and analysts with helpful supplementary information to understand better the financial performance and position of the Group on a comparable basis from period to period. These non-GAAP financial measures are not a substitute for, or superior to, financial measures prepared in accordance with GAAP.

 

Core financial measures are adjusted to exclude certain significant items, such as:

 

? Charges and provisions related to restructuring programmes, which includes charges that relate to the impact of restructuring programmes on capitalised IT assets

 

? Amortisation and impairment of intangible assets, including impairment reversals but excluding any charges relating to IT assets

 

? Alexion acquisition-related items, primarily fair value adjustments on acquired inventories and fair value impact of replacement employee share awards

 

? Other specified items, principally the imputed finance charges and fair value movements relating to contingent consideration on business combinations, imputed finance charges and remeasurement adjustments on certain Other payables arising from intangible asset acquisitions, legal settlements and remeasurement adjustments relating to Other payables assumed from the Alexion acquisition

 

? The tax effects of the adjustments above are excluded from the Core Tax charge

 

Details on the nature of Core financial measures are provided on page 63 of the Annual Report and Form 20-F Information 2022.

 

Reference should be made to the Reconciliation of Reported to Core financial measures table included in the financial performance section in this announcement.

 

Product Sales Gross Margin (formerly termed Gross Margin) is calculated by dividing the difference between Product Sales and Cost of Sales by the Product Sales. The calculation of Reported and Core Product Sales Gross Margin excludes the impact of Alliance Revenue and Collaboration Revenue and any associated costs, thereby reflecting the underlying performance of Product Sales.

 

EBITDA is defined as Reported Profit before tax after adding back Net finance expense, results from Joint ventures and associates and charges for Depreciation, amortisation and impairment. Reference should be made to the Reconciliation of Reported Profit before tax to EBITDA included in the financial performance section in this announcement.

 

Operating margin is defined as Operating profit as a percentage of Total Revenue.

 

Net debt is defined as Interest-bearing loans and borrowings and Lease liabilities, net of Cash and cash equivalents, Other investments, and Net derivative financial instruments. Reference should be made to Note 3 'Net debt' included in the Notes to the Condensed consolidated financial statements in this announcement.

 

The Company strongly encourages investors and analysts not to rely on any single financial measure, but to review AstraZeneca's financial statements, including the Notes thereto, and other available Company reports, carefully and in their entirety.

 

Due to rounding, the sum of a number of dollar values and percentages in this announcement may not agree to totals.

 

 

Total Revenue

 

 

Table 5: Therapy area and medicine performance - Product Sales and Total Revenue

 

 

 

FY 2023 

Q4 2023

 

 

 

 

% Change 

 

 

% Change

Product Sales 

 

$m 

% Total 

Actual 

CER 

$m 

% Total 

Actual 

CER 

Oncology 

 

17,145 

37 

17 

20 

4,453 

37 

19 

19 

- Tagrisso 

5,799 

13 

1,419 

12 

- Imfinzi [9]

4,237 

52 

55 

1,135 

51 

52 

- Lynparza 

2,811 

741 

- Calquence

2,514 

22 

23 

675 

15 

14 

- Enhertu

261 

>3x 

>3x 

83 

>2x 

>3x 

- Orpathys 

44 

34 

42 

11 

n/m 

n/m 

- Truqap

n/m 

n/m 

n/m 

n/m 

- Zoladex 

952 

254 

20 

23 

- Faslodex 

297 

(11)

(6)

79 

- Others 

224 

(33)

(30)

50 

(22)

(19)

BioPharmaceuticals: CVRM

 

10,585 

23 

15 

18 

2,698 

22 

18 

18 

- Farxiga 

5,963 

13 

36 

39 

1,606 

13 

36 

35 

- Brilinta 

1,324 

(2)

(1)

329 

(5)

(4)

- Lokelma 

412 

43 

46 

112 

38 

38 

- roxadustat 

271 

38 

45 

63 

28 

28 

- Andexxa

182 

21 

23 

53 

35 

34 

- Crestor 

1,107 

11 

247 

10 

12 

- Seloken/Toprol-XL 

640 

(26)

(20)

144 

(8)

(3)

- Onglyza

227 

(12)

(8)

47 

(9)

(7)

- Bydureon

163 

(42)

(42)

39 

(46)

(47)

- Others 

296 

(19)

(17)

58 

(30)

(31)

BioPharmaceuticals: R&I 

 

6,107 

13 

1,590 

13 

10 

10 

- Symbicort 

2,362 

(7)

(4)

520 

(16)

(16)

- Fasenra

1,553 

11 

12 

420 

10 

- Breztri

677 

70 

73 

199 

72 

72 

- Saphnelo 

280 

>2x 

>2x 

89 

86 

86 

- Tezspire 

86 

>10x 

>10x 

35 

>9x 

>8x 

- Pulmicort 

713 

11 

17 

219 

32 

40 

- Bevespi

58 

-

-

15 

- Daliresp/Daxas 

54 

(72)

(72)

13 

(56)

(55)

- Others 

324 

(23)

(20)

80 

13 

14 

BioPharmaceuticals: V&I 

 

1,012 

(79)

(78)

345 

(69)

(70)

- COVID-19 mAbs

 

132 

(94)

(93)

(99)

(99)

- Vaxzevria 

 

12 

(99)

(99)

(17)

n/m 

n/m 

- Beyfortus

106 

n/m 

n/m 

54 

n/m 

n/m 

- Synagis

546 

(6)

(2)

164 

(16)

(16)

- FluMist

216 

24 

17 

138 

20 

11 

Rare Disease

 

7,764 

17 

10 

12 

1,971 

16 

- Soliris

3,145 

(16)

(14)

715 

(15)

(13)

- Ultomiris 

2,965 

51 

52 

825 

39 

38 

- Strensiq 

1,152 

20 

21 

305 

12 

13 

- Koselugo 

331 

59 

60 

85 

46 

48 

- Kanuma 

171 

41 

(17)

(14)

Other medicines 

 

1,176 

(28)

(24)

266 

(30)

(28)

- Nexium 

 

945 

(27)

(22)

209 

(30)

(28)

- Others

231 

(32)

(30)

57 

(28)

(27)

Product Sales 

 

43,789 

96 

11,323 

94 

Alliance Revenue

 

1,428 

89 

89 

424 

69 

67 

Collaboration Revenue 

 

594 

(1)

(1)

277 

75 

74 

Total Revenue

 

45,811 

100 

12,024 

100 

 

Table 6: Alliance Revenue

FY 2023

Q4 2023

% Change

 

 

% Change

 

$m 

% Total 

Actual 

CER 

$m 

% Total 

Actual 

CER 

Enhertu

1,022 

72 

95 

95 

281 

66 

50 

47 

Tezspire

259 

18 

>3x

>3x

80 

19 

>2x

>2x

Beyfortus

57 

n/m

n/m

41 

10 

n/m

n/m

Vaxzevria: royalties

n/m

n/m

n/m

n/m

Other royalty income

81 

18 

18 

21 

25 

27 

Other Alliance Revenue 

>3x

>3x

Total 

 

1,428 

100 

89 

89 

424 

100 

69 

67 

 

 

Table 7: Collaboration Revenue

FY 2023

Q4 2023

 

 

% Change

 

 

% Change

 

$m 

% Total 

Actual 

CER 

$m 

% Total 

Actual 

CER 

Lynparza: regulatory milestones 

245 

41 

(31)

(31)

245 

88 

>2x

>2x

COVID-19 mAbs: licence fees

180 

30 

n/m

n/m

Farxiga: sales milestones 

29 

n/m

n/m

n/m

n/m

tralokinumab: sales milestones 

20 

(82)

(82)

Beyfortus: regulatory milestones 

71 

12 

>2x

>2x

n/m

n/m

Beyfortus: sales milestone

27 

n/m

n/m

27

10 

n/m

n/m

Other Collaboration Revenue 

22 

(52)

(52)

(88)

(89)

Total 

 

594 

100 

(1)

(1)

277 

100 

75 

74 

 

Table 8: Total Revenue by therapy area

 

FY 2023

Q4 2023

% Change

% Change

$m 

% Total 

 Actual 

CER 

$m 

% Total 

 Actual 

CER 

Oncology 

18,447 

40 

19 

21 

4,989 

41 

23 

24 

BioPharmaceuticals

18,389 

40 

(8)

(6)

4,790 

40 

(3)

(3)

- CVRM

 

10,628 

23 

15 

18 

2,702 

22 

18 

18 

- R&I 

 

6,404 

14 

10 

1,675 

14 

13 

13 

- V&I 

 

1,357 

(72)

(71)

413 

(64)

(66)

Rare Disease

7,764 

17 

10 

12 

1,971 

16 

Other Medicines 

1,211 

(31)

(27)

274 

(33)

(32)

Total

 

45,811 

100 

12,024 

100 

 

Table 9: Total Revenue by region

 

FY 2023 

Q4 2023

% Change 

% Change

$m 

% Total 

 Actual 

CER 

$m 

% Total 

 Actual 

CER 

US

19,077 

42 

5,101 

42 

Emerging Markets 

12,025 

26 

2,783 

23 

- China 

 

5,876 

13 

1,382 

11 

16 

16 

- Ex-China 

 

6,148 

13 

11 

1,401 

12 

(9)

Europe 

9,611 

21 

10 

2,880 

24 

25 

17 

Established RoW 

5,099 

11 

(14)

(8)

1,259 

10 

(9)

(6)

Total 

 

45,811 

100 

12,024 

100 

 

Table 10: Total Revenue by region - excluding COVID-19 medicines

 

FY 2023 

Q4 2023

% Change 

% Change

$m 

% Total 

 Actual 

CER 

$m 

% Total 

 Actual 

CER 

US

19,077 

42 

14 

14 

5,101 

42 

12 

12 

Emerging Markets 

11,830 

26 

12 

20 

2,791 

23 

15 

22 

- China 

 

5,876 

13 

1,382 

11 

16 

16 

- Ex-China 

 

5,953 

13 

24 

35 

1,409 

12 

14 

27 

Europe 

9,597 

21 

19 

17 

2,884 

24 

33 

25 

Established RoW 

4,985 

11 

1,259 

10 

Total 

 

45,488 

100 

13 

15 

12,036 

100 

16 

16 

 

Oncology

 

Oncology Total Revenue of $18,447m in FY 2023 increased by 19% (21% at CER), representing 40% of overall Total Revenue (FY 2022: 35%). Lynparza Collaboration Revenue was $245m in FY 2023 (FY 2022: $355m) reflecting achievement of regulatory milestone for the US approval of PROpel and Enhertu Alliance Revenue was $1,022m (FY 2022: $523m). Product Sales increased by 17% (20% at CER) in FY 2023 to $17,145m, reflecting new launches and expanded reimbursement across key brands; partially offset by declines in legacy medicines.

 

Tagrisso

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

5,799

2,276

1,621

1,120

782

Actual change

7%

13%

3%

10%

(8%)

CER change

9%

13%

10%

8%

(1%)

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Increased global demand for Tagrisso in adjuvant (ADAURA) and 1st -line setting (FLAURA)

US

* Continued adjuvant and 1st-line demand growth

Emerging Markets

* Continued demand growth, partly offset by anticipated seasonality from hospital ordering dynamic in China

Europe

* Continued growth in 1st-line setting and increasing adjuvant demand

Established RoW

* Increased demand in adjuvant and 1st-line offset by continued impacts from HSR price reduction in Japan effective June 2023 and reclassification of Australian government rebates from Q4 2023

 

Imfinzi and Imjudo

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

4,237

2,317

360

758

802

Actual change

52%

49%

25%

39%

>2x

CER change

55%

49%

39%

36%

>2x

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Includes $218m of Total Revenue from Imjudo, which launched in Q4 2022 following approvals in the US for patients with unresectable HCC (HIMALAYA) and Stage IV NSCLC (POSEIDON)

US

* Continued demand growth from new launches in GI, including BTC (TOPAZ-1) and HCC

Emerging Markets

* Increased demand for new launches including BTC as well as continued demand for legacy indications: Stage III unresectable NSCLC (PACIFIC), SCLC (CASPIAN)

Europe

* Competitive share gain in SCLC and expanded reimbursement for BTC, HCC, Stage IV NSCLC and SCLC

Established RoW

* Growth driven by launch of BTC, HCC and Stage IV NSCLC in Japan

 

Lynparza

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

3,056

1,254

542

979

281

Actual change

2%

2%

11%

(3%)

5%

CER change

4%

2%

21%

(4%)

12%

 

Product Sales

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

2,811

1,254

542

734

281

Actual change

7%

2%

11%

12%

5%

CER change

9%

2%

21%

10%

12%

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Lynparza remains the leading medicine in the PARP inhibitor class globally across four tumour types (ovarian, breast, prostate, pancreatic), as measured by total prescription volume

* Following achievement of the regulatory approval for Lynparza PROpel in the US, AstraZeneca recognised $245m in milestone-related income from MSD in Q4 2023

US

* Continued share growth within PARP inhibitor class, offset by declining class use following the label restriction in 2nd-line ovarian cancer effective September 2023

Emerging Markets

* Increased demand, offset by price reduction in China associated with NRDL renewal that took effect March 2023 for ovarian cancer indications (PSR and BRCAm 1st-line maintenance) and new NRDL enlistment in prostate cancer (PROfound)

Europe

* Demand growth from increased uptake and new launches in 1st-line HRD-positive ovarian cancer (PAOLA-1), gBRCAm HER2?negative early breast cancer (OlympiA) and mCRPC (PROpel), offset by reduced use in 2nd-line ovarian cancer and pricing

Established RoW

* Growth driven by increased uptake in biomarker testing and use in 1st-line HRD-positive ovarian cancer, partially offset by market expansion re-pricing in Japan from November 2023

 

 

Enhertu

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

1,283

702

254

296

32

Actual change

>2x

73%

>3x

>2x

>4x

CER change

>2x

73%

>3x

>2x

>4x

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Combined sales of Enhertu, recorded by Daiichi Sankyo Company Limited (Daiichi Sankyo) and AstraZeneca, amounted to $2,566m in FY 2023 (FY 2022: $1,253m)

* AstraZeneca's Total Revenue of $1,283m in the period includes $1,022m of Alliance Revenue from its share of gross profits and royalties in territories where Daiichi Sankyo records product sales

US

* US in-market sales, recorded by Daiichi Sankyo, amounted to $1,472m in FY 2023 (FY 2022: $850m)

* Increased demand across launched indications offset by HER2-low bolus depletion in H2 2023

Emerging Markets

* Continued uptake driven by approvals and launches including strong demand growth in China following HER2-positive (DESTINY-Breast03) and HER2-low (DESTINY-Breast04) metastatic breast cancer launches

Europe

* Continued growth driven by increasing adoption in HER2-positive and HER2-low metastatic breast cancer

Established RoW

* AstraZeneca's Alliance Revenue includes a mid-single-digit percentage royalty on Daiichi Sankyo's sales in Japan

 

Calquence

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

2,514

1,815

98

493

108

Actual change

22%

10%

>2x

72%

58%

CER change

23%

10%

>2x

69%

65%

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Increased penetration globally; leading BTK inhibitor across key markets

US

* Sustained BTK inhibitor leadership across front-line and relapsed refractory CLL, partly offset by continued gross-to-net pressure within competitive class

Europe

* Continued growth supported by expanded access in key markets

 

Truqap

 

Truqap was approved in the US on 16 November 2023 in HR-positive HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer with one or more biomarker alterations (CAPItello-291) and regulatory submissions in other markets are ongoing. Strong initial launch demand resulted in $6m of Total Revenue in Q4 2023.

 

Other Oncology medicines

 

FY 2023

Change

 

Total Revenue

$m

Actual

CER

Zoladex

986

3%

9%

* Strong underlying growth in China and Emerging Markets offset by flat performance in EU and drop in Japan

* Australian government rebate reclassifications from Q4 2023

Faslodex

297

(11%)

(6%)

* Decline in China sales in fourth quarter due to supply issues, a consequence of short lead time of supply replenishment following VBP timeline changes

Orpathys

46

37%

44%

* Included in the NRDL in China from March 2023, for the treatment of patients with NSCLC with MET exon 14 skipping alterations

Other Oncology

224

(33%)

(30%)

* Generic competition

 

 

BioPharmaceuticals

 

BioPharmaceuticals Total Revenue decreased by 8% (6% at CER) in FY 2023 to $18,389m, representing 40% of overall Total Revenue (FY 2022: 45%). The decline was driven by COVID-19 medicines, partially offset by strong growth from Farxiga and R&I medicines.

 

BioPharmaceuticals - CVRM

 

CVRM Total Revenue increased by 15% (18% at CER) to $10,628m in FY 2023 and represented 23% of overall Total Revenue (FY 2022: 21%).

 

Farxiga

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

5,997

1,451

2,214

1,881

451

Actual change

37%

35%

33%

45%

28%

CER change

39%

35%

40%

42%

37%

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Farxiga volume is growing faster than the overall SGLT2 market in most major regions, fuelled by launches in heart failure and CKD

* Additional benefit from continued growth in the overall SGLT2 inhibitor class

US

* Growth driven by heart failure and CKD for patients with and without type 2 diabetes resulting in an increased market share. Favourable gross-to-net adjustment in Q4 2023

Emerging Markets

* Solid growth despite generic competition in some markets and strong momentum in Latin America, among other markets

Europe

* Benefited from the addition of cardiovascular outcomes trial data to the label and growth in HFrEF, CKD and the HFpEF approval in February 2023

* ESC guidelines updated in August 2023 to also include treatment of patients with HFpEF

Established RoW

* In Japan, AstraZeneca sells to collaborator Ono Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd, which records in-market sales

* Continued volume growth driven by HF and CKD launches, largely offset by generic launches in Canada in Q3 2023

 

 

Brilinta

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

1,324

744

285

271

24

Actual change

(2%)

-

-

(4%)

(49%)

CER change

(1%)

-

10%

(5%)

(47%)

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

US

* Flat sales but with volume growth driven by longer duration of treatment

Emerging Markets

* Holding market position despite generics pressure

Europe

* Sales partly impacted by clawbacks

Established RoW

* Sales decline driven by generic entry in Canada

 

Lokelma

 

Lokelma Total Revenue increased 43% (46% at CER) to $412m with strong demand growth in all regions.

 

Roxadustat

Total Revenue increased 37% (44% at CER) to $276m, benefitting from increased demand in both the dialysis and non-dialysis-dependent populations. NRDL listing renewed.

 

Andexxa

 

Andexxa Total Revenue increased 14% (15% at CER) to $182m.

 

Other CVRM medicines

 

FY 2023

Change

 

Total Revenue

$m

Actual

CER

Crestor

1,110

6%

12%

* Continued sales growth in Emerging Markets

Seloken/Toprol-XL

641

(26%)

(20%)

* Ongoing impact of China VBP implementation

Onglyza

227

(12%)

(8%)

* Continued decline for DPP-IV class

Bydureon

163

(42%)

(42%)

* Continued competitive pressures

Other CVRM

296

(19%)

(17%)

 

BioPharmaceuticals - R&I

 

Total Revenue of $6,404m from R&I medicines in FY 2023 increased 7% (10% at CER) and represented 14% of overall Total Revenue (FY 2022: 13%). This reflected growth in Fasenra, Tezspire, Breztri and Saphnelo, offsetting a decline in Symbicort.

 

Fasenra

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

1,553

992

64

355

142

Actual change

11%

9%

50%

16%

-

CER change

12%

9%

61%

14%

6%

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Continued asthma market share leadership in IL-5 class across major markets 

US

* Maintained share of a growing market, leading to strong volume growth  

Emerging Markets

* Continued strong demand growth driven by launch acceleration across key markets 

Europe

* Expanded leadership in severe eosinophilic asthma

Established RoW

* Continued class leadership in Japan

 

Breztri

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

677

383

161

81

52

Actual change

70%

60%

75%

>2x

55%

CER change

73%

60%

85%

>2x

66%

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Fastest growing medicine within the growing FDC triple class across major markets

US

* Consistent share growth within the FDC triple class in new-to-brand[10] and the total market

Emerging Markets

* Maintained market share leadership in China with strong triple FDC class penetration 

Europe

* Sustained growth across markets as new launches continue to progress 

Established RoW

* Increased market share within COPD in Japan and strong launch in Canada 

 

Tezspire

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

345

 

261

1

46

37

Actual change

>4x

 

>3x

>6x

>10x

>10x

CER change

>4x

 

>3x

>5x

>10x

>10x

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Combined sales of Tezspire, recorded by Amgen and AstraZeneca, amounted to $653m in FY 2023 (FY 2022: $174m)

* AstraZeneca's Total Revenue of $345m in the period includes $259m of Alliance Revenue from its share of gross profits in the US, where Amgen records product sales

US

* Maintained new-to-brand market share with majority of patients new to biologics

* Pre-filled pen approved in February 2023

Europe

* Achieved new-to-brand leadership in key markets

* Pre-filled pen approved in January 2023

Established RoW

* Japan maintained new-to-brand leadership

 

Saphnelo

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

280

260

2

8

10

Actual change

>2x

>2x

n/m

>4x

>2x

CER change

>2x

>2x

n/m

>4x

>3x

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Demand acceleration in the US, and additional growth driven by ongoing launches in Europe and Japan

 

Symbicort

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

2,362

726

753

549

334

Actual change

(7%)

(25%)

24%

(6%)

(11%)

CER change

(4%)

(25%)

33%

(7%)

(7%)

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Symbicort remained the global market leader within a stable ICS/LABA class 

US

* Generic competition entered the US market in the third quarter of 2023

Emerging Markets

* Strong underlying demand for Symbicort in both China and Ex-China Emerging Markets, strengthened position as market leader in the region

Europe

* Continued price and volume erosion from generics and a slowing overall market  

Established RoW

* Continued generic erosion in Japan 

 

Other R&I medicines

 

FY 2023

Change

 

Total Revenue

$m

Actual

CER

Pulmicort

 

713

11%

17%

* >80% of revenues from Emerging Markets

* China market share has stabilised, with VBP having been in effect for over 12 months

Bevespi

 

58

-

-

Daliresp/Daxas

 

54

(72%)

(72%)

* Impacted by uptake of multiple generics following loss of exclusivity in the US

Other R&I

362

(33%)

(30%)

* Collaboration Revenue of $20m (FY 2022: $110m)

* Product Sales of $324m decreased 23% (20% at CER) due to generic competition

 

 

BioPharmaceuticals - V&I

 

Total Revenue from V&I medicines declined by 72% (71% at CER) to $1,357m (FY 2022: $4,836m) and represented 3% of overall Total Revenue (FY 2022: 11%). The decline was driven by COVID-19 medicines, which generated $323m of Total Revenue in FY 2023 (FY 2022: $4,059m).

 

COVID-19 mAbs

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

312

-

186

12

114

Actual change

(86%)

n/m

(55%)

(96%)

(72%)

CER change

(85%)

n/m

(55%)

(96%)

(68%)

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* All Product Sales in FY 2023 were derived from sales of Evusheld

Emerging Markets

* $180m license fee from Serum Institute of India in Q2 2023 recorded as Collaboration Revenue

 

Vaxzevria

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

11

-

10

2

-

Actual change

(99%)

n/m

(99%)

n/m

n/m

CER change

(99%)

n/m

(99%)

(99%)

n/m

 

Other V&I medicines

 

FY 2023

Change

 

Total Revenue

$m

Actual

CER

Beyfortus

 

262

>10x

>10x

* In Q4 2023 AstraZeneca reported $54m of Product Sales, $41m of Alliance Revenue, and also $27m of Collaboration Revenue relating to a sales milestone

* Product Sales recognises AstraZeneca's sales of manufactured Beyfortus product to Sanofi

* Alliance Revenue recognises AstraZeneca's 50% share of gross profits on sales of Beyfortus in major markets outside the US

* AstraZeneca will recognise 25% of brand revenues in rest of world markets

* AstraZeneca has no participation in US profits or losses

Synagis

 

546

(6%)

(2%)

* Performance broadly in-line with prior year

FluMist

226

30%

22%

* $10m milestone received from Daiichi Sankyo in the second quarter of 2023 following FluMist approval in Japan

 

Rare Disease

 

Total Revenue from Rare Disease medicines increased by 10% (12% at CER) in FY 2023 to $7,764m, representing 17% of overall Total Revenue (FY 2022: 16%).

 

Ultomiris

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

2,965

1,750

71

668

476

Actual change

51%

54%

88%

39%

54%

CER change

52%

54%

89%

36%

65%

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Continued growth across gMG as well as expansion into new markets and continued conversion from Soliris

* Quarter-on-quarter variability in revenue growth can be expected due to Ultomiris every eight-week dosing schedule and lower average annual treatment cost compared to Soliris

US

* Growth in naïve patients in gMG as well as successful conversion from Soliris across shared indications

Emerging Markets

* Continued growth following launches in new markets

Europe

* Strong demand generation following launches in new markets, particularly in neurology indications, as well as accelerated conversion from Soliris in key markets, partially offset by price reductions to secure reimbursement for new indications

Established RoW

* Continued conversion from Soliris and strong demand following new launches

 

Soliris

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

3,145

1,734

424

670

317

Actual change

(16%)

(20%)

41%

(17%)

(33%)

CER change

(14%)

(20%)

63%

(18%)

(29%)

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

US

* Decline driven by successful conversion of Soliris patients to Ultomiris in PNH, aHUS and gMG, partially offset by Soliris growth in NMOSD

Emerging Markets

* Growth driven by patient demand following launches in new markets

Europe

* Decline driven by successful conversion from Soliris to Ultomiris as well as biosimilar erosion in PNH

Est. RoW

* Decline driven by successful conversion from Soliris to Ultomiris

 

Strensiq

 

Total Revenue

Worldwide

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

FY 2023 $m

1,152

937

40

89

86

Actual change

20%

22%

15%

14%

13%

CER change

21%

22%

22%

11%

22%

 

Region

 Drivers and commentary

Worldwide

* Growth driven by strong patient demand

 

Other Rare Disease medicines

 

FY 2023

Change

 

Total Revenue

$m

Actual

CER

Commentary

Koselugo

331

59%

60%

* Driven by patient demand and expansion in new markets

Kanuma

171

7%

8%

* Continued demand growth in ex-US markets

 

Other medicines (outside the main therapy areas)

 

FY 2023

Change

 

Total Revenue

$m

Actual

CER

Commentary

Nexium

 

962

(30%)

(26%)

* Generic launches in Japan in the latter part of 2022

Others

249

(35%)

(33%)

* Continued impact of generic competition

 

 

 

Financial performance

 

Table 11: Reported Profit and Loss

 

FY 2023

FY 2022

% Change 

Q4 2023

Q4 2022

% Change

 

 

 

$m 

$m 

Actual 

CER 

$m 

$m 

Actual 

CER 

Total Revenue

 

45,811 

44,351 

12,024 

11,207 

- Product Sales

43,789 

42,998 

11,323 

10,798 

- Alliance Revenue

1,428 

755 

89 

89 

424 

251 

69 

67 

- Collaboration Revenue

594 

598 

(1)

(1)

277 

158 

75 

74 

Cost of sales

(8,268)

(12,391)

(33)

(34)

(2,308)

(2,900)

(20)

(18)

Gross profit

 

37,543 

31,960 

17 

21 

9,716 

8,307 

17 

16 

Product Sales Gross Margin

 

81.1% 

71.2% 

+10pp 

+10pp 

79.6% 

73.1% 

+6pp 

+6pp 

Distribution expense

(539)

(536)

(145)

(156)

(7)

(8)

% Total Revenue

1.2% 

1.2% 

1.2% 

1.4% 

R&D expense

(10,935)

(9,762)

12 

13 

(3,073)

(2,625)

17 

15 

% Total Revenue

23.9% 

22.0% 

-2pp 

-2pp 

25.6% 

23.4% 

-2pp 

-2pp 

SG&A expense

(19,216)

(18,419)

(5,371)

(4,621)

16 

16 

% Total Revenue

41.9% 

41.5% 

44.7% 

41.2% 

-3pp 

-3pp 

Other operating income & expense

1,340 

514 

>2x

>2x

107 

189 

(43)

(42)

% Total Revenue

2.9% 

1.2% 

+2pp 

+2pp 

0.9% 

1.7% 

-1pp 

-1pp 

Operating profit

 

8,193 

3,757 

>2x

>2x

1,234 

1,094 

13 

14 

Operating Margin

 

17.9% 

8.5% 

+9pp 

+10pp 

10.3% 

9.8% 

+1pp 

+1pp 

Net finance expense

(1,282)

(1,251)

(337)

(315)

Joint ventures and associates

(12)

(5)

>2x

>2x

(1)

(99)

(99)

Profit before tax

 

6,899 

2,501 

>2x

>2x

897 

778 

15 

18 

Taxation

(938)

792 

n/m

n/m

62 

124 

(51)

(67)

Tax rate

 

14% 

-32% 

-7% 

-16% 

 

 

Profit after tax

 

5,961 

3,293 

81 

96 

959 

902 

Earnings per share

 

$3.84 

$2.12 

81 

96 

$0.62 

$0.58 

 

Table 12: Reconciliation of Reported Profit before tax to EBITDA

 

FY 2023

FY 2022

% Change

Q4 2023

Q4 2022

% Change

 

$m

$m 

Actual 

CER 

$m

$m 

Actual 

CER 

Reported Profit before tax 

6,899 

2,501 

>2x

>2x

897 

778 

15 

18 

Net finance expense 

1,282 

1,251 

337 

315 

Joint ventures and associates 

12 

>2x

>2x

(99)

(99)

Depreciation, amortisation and impairment 

5,387 

5,480 

(2)

(1)

1,327 

1,480 

(10)

(11)

EBITDA 

13,580 

9,237 

47 

55 

2,561 

2,574 

(1)

 

EBITDA for the comparative FY 2022 was negatively impacted by $3,484m unwind of inventory fair value recognised on the acquisition of Alexion. EBITDA for the comparative Q4 2022 was negatively impacted by $309m unwind of inventory fair value uplift recognised on the acquisition of Alexion. This unwind had a $114m negative impact on EBITDA in FY 2023 and a $36m negative impact on EBITDA in Q4 2023.

 

Table 13: Reconciliation of Reported to Core financial measures: FY 2023

 

FY 2023

Reported

Restructuring

Intangible Asset Amortisation & Impairments

Acquisitionof Alexion

Other[11]

Core

Core

% Change

 

$m 

$m 

$m 

$m 

$m 

$m 

Actual 

CER 

Gross profit

 

37,543 

109 

32 

119 

(3)

37,800 

Product Sales Gross Margin

 

81.1% 

 

 

 

 

81.7% 

+2pp 

+2pp 

Distribution expense

(539)

(539)

R&D expense

(10,935)

212 

447 

(10,267)

SG&A expense

(19,216)

207 

3,801 

11 

1,458 

(13,739)

Total operating expense

(30,690)

419 

4,248 

18 

1,460 

(24,545)

Other operating income & expense

1,340 

(61)

1,279 

>2x

>2x

Operating profit

 

8,193 

467 

4,280 

137 

1,457 

14,534 

14 

Operating Margin

 

17.9% 

 

 

 

 

31.7% 

+2pp 

+2pp 

Net finance expense

(1,282)

298 

(984)

(1)

Taxation

(938)

(107)

(809)

(32)

(405)

(2,291)

11 

17 

EPS

 

$3.84 

$0.23 

$2.24 

$0.07 

$0.88 

$7.26 

15 

 

Table 14: Reconciliation of Reported to Core financial measures: Q4 2023

 

Q4 2023

Reported

Restructuring

Intangible Asset Amortisation & Impairments

Acquisition of Alexion

Other

Core

Core

% Change

 

$m 

$m 

$m 

$m 

$m 

$m 

Actual 

CER 

Gross profit

 

9,716 

(24)

37 

9,738 

11 

11 

Product Sales Gross Margin

 

79.6% 

 

 

 

 

79.8% 

+3pp 

+2pp 

Distribution expense

(145)

(145)

(7)

(9)

R&D expense

(3,073)

95 

61 

(2,914)

15 

14 

SG&A expense

(5,371)

44 

938 

351 

(4,034)

13 

12 

Total operating expense

(8,589)

139 

999 

352 

(7,093)

13 

12 

Other operating income & expense

107 

107 

(17)

(15)

Operating profit

 

1,234 

115 

1,007 

43 

353 

2,752 

Operating Margin

 

10.3% 

 

 

 

 

22.9% 

Net finance expense

(337)

- 

- 

- 

78 

(259)

Taxation

62 

(26)

(192)

(10)

(76)

(242)

EPS

 

$0.62 

$0.06 

$0.53 

$0.02 

$0.22 

$1.45 

 

Profit and Loss drivers

 

Gross profit

 

? The calculation of Reported and Core Product Sales Gross Margin excludes the impact of Alliance Revenue and Collaboration Revenue

 

? The change in Product Sales Gross Margin (Reported and Core) in FY 2023 was impacted by:

 

? Positive effects from product mix. The increased contribution from Rare Disease and Oncology medicines had a positive impact on the Product Sales Gross Margin. Sales of Vaxzevria and Evusheld, which were dilutive to Product Sales Gross Margin in 2022, declined substantially in 2023

 

? Dilutive effects from product mix. The rising contribution of Product Sales with profit sharing arrangements (Lynparza, Enhertu, Tezspire, Koselugo) has a negative impact on Product Sales Gross Margin because AstraZeneca records product revenues in certain markets and pays away a share of the gross profits to its collaboration partners. The growth in Beyfortus also has a dilutive impact on Product Sales Gross Margin, as AstraZeneca is responsible for manufacturing and records its sales of goods to Sanofi as Product Sales - these sales generate a much lower gross margin than the Company average

 

? Dilutive effects from geographic mix. Emerging Markets, where Product Sales Gross Margin tends to be below the Company average, grew as a proportion of Total Revenue excluding COVID-19 medicines

 

? In FY 2022, the Reported Product Sales Gross Margin was impacted by $3,484m from the unwind of the inventory fair value uplift recognised on the acquisition of Alexion. In FY 2023, this effect had reduced to $114m

 

? Variations in Product Sales Gross Margin performance between periods can continue to be expected due to product seasonality, foreign exchange fluctuations, and other effects

 

R&D expense

 

? The change in R&D expense (Reported and Core) in the period was impacted by:

 

? Recent positive data read-outs for several high priority medicines that have ungated late-stage trials

 

? Investment in platforms, new technology and capabilities to enhance R&D productivity

 

? Reported R&D expense was also impacted by intangible asset impairments

 

SG&A expense

 

? The change in SG&A expense (Reported and Core) in the period was driven primarily by market development activities for launches

 

? Reported SG&A expense was also impacted by amortisation of intangible assets related to the Alexion acquisition and other acquisitions and collaborations

 

? Reported SG&A expense was also impacted by a $510m charge to provisions relating to a legal settlement with Bristol-Myers Squibb and Ono Pharmaceutical, and a $425m charge to provisions for product liability litigations related to Nexium and Prilosec. The prior year was impacted by a $775m legal settlement with Chugai Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd

 

Other operating income and expense

 

? Reported and Core Other operating income and expense in the year included a $712m gain resulting from an update to the contractual relationships for Beyfortus (nirsevimab), a $241m gain on the disposal of the US rights to Pulmicort Flexhaler, and other disposal proceeds on the sale of tangible assets, and royalties on certain medicines

 

Net finance expense

 

? Reported Net finance expense was impacted by the discount unwind on acquisition-related liabilities. Core Net finance expense increased 2% (1% at CER) with higher interest received on cash and short-term investments, higher rates on floating debt and bond issuances, partially offset by higher rates on floating debt and bond issuances

 

Taxation

 

? The effective Reported Tax rate for the twelve months to 31 December 2023 was 14% (FY 2022: -32%) and the effective Core Tax rate was 17% (FY 2022: 17%); both included a favourable adjustment of $828m to deferred taxes arising from a UK group company undertaking a routine intragroup purchase of certain intellectual property which was offset by updates to tax liabilities following progress of reviews by tax authorities and administrative appeal processes and changes to certain deferred tax balances

 

? The FY 2022 effective Reported Tax rate was lower as it included a favourable adjustment of $883m relating to deferred taxes arising from an internal reorganisation to integrate the Alexion business

 

? The cash tax paid for the twelve months to 31 December 2023 was $2,366m (FY 2022: $1,623m), representing 34% of Reported Profit before tax (FY 2022: 65%)

 

? On 11 July 2023, Finance (No.2) Act 2023 was enacted in the UK, introducing a global minimum effective tax rate of 15%. The legislation implements a domestic top-up tax and a multinational top-up tax, effective for accounting periods starting on or after 31 December 2023. AstraZeneca is continuing to monitor potential impacts as further guidance is published by the OECD and territories implement legislation to enact the rules. Management has performed an assessment of the impact of the UK's Pillar 2 rules based on our 2023 data and no Pillar 2 Income Taxes are expected to arise for most jurisdictions in which the Group operates. It is anticipated that AstraZeneca may, in some jurisdictions, incur additional tax liabilities, but the effect on the Reported Tax rate is reasonably estimated to be immaterial

 

Dividends

 

? A second interim dividend of $1.97 per share (156.0 pence, 20.65 SEK) has been declared, resulting in a full-year dividend per share of $2.90 (227.8 pence, 30.29 SEK)

 

? Dividend payments are normally paid as follows:

 

? First interim dividend - announced with half-year and second-quarter results and paid in September

 

? Second interim dividend - announced with full-year and fourth-quarter results and paid in March

 

? Provisional dates for the 2023 second interim dividend: ex-dividend 22 February 2024, record date 23 February 2024, payable on 25 March 2024.

 

Table 15: Cash Flow summary

 

FY 2023 

FY 2022 

Change 

$m 

$m 

$m 

Reported Operating profit

8,193 

3,757 

4,436 

Depreciation, amortisation and impairment

5,387 

5,480 

(93)

Decrease in working capital and short-term provisions

300 

3,757 

(3,457)

Gains on disposal of intangible assets

(251)

(104)

(147)

Fair value movements on contingent consideration arising from

business combinations

549 

82 

467 

Non-cash and other movements

(386)

(692)

306 

Interest paid

(1,081)

(849)

(232)

Taxation paid

(2,366)

(1,623)

(743)

Net cash inflow from operating activities

10,345 

9,808 

537 

Net cash inflow before financing activities

6,281 

6,848 

(567)

Net cash outflow from financing activities

(6,567)

(6,823)

256 

 

In FY 2022, the Reported Operating profit of $3,757m included a negative impact of $3,484m relating to the unwind of the inventory fair value uplift recognised on the acquisition of Alexion. This was offset by a corresponding item (positive impact of $3,484m) in Decrease in working capital and short-term provisions. Overall, the unwind of the fair value uplift had no impact on Net cash inflow from operating activities. This unwind had $114m negative impact on FY 2023 Reported Operating profit and offsetting positive impact on working capital movements. As a result of the update to the contractual relationships between AstraZeneca, Swedish Orphan Biovitrum AB (Sobi) and Sanofi relating to the future sales of Beyfortus (nirsevimab) in the US, a gain of $712m has been recorded in Non-cash and other movements, with no overall net impact on the Net cash inflow from operating activities.

 

Included within Net cash inflow before financing activities is a Movement in the profit-participation liability of $190m, including a cash receipt from Sobi in Q1 2023 after achievement of a regulatory milestone. The associated cash flow is presented within investing activities.

 

The decrease in Net cash outflow from financing activities of $256m is primarily driven by the increase in Issue of loans and borrowings of $3,816m, offset by the increase in Repayment of loans and borrowings of $3,671m.

 

Capital expenditure

 

Capital expenditure amounted to $1,361m in the twelve months to 31 December 2023 (FY 2022: $1,091m).

Capital expenditure is expected to increase substantially in 2024, driven by investment in several major manufacturing projects and continued investment in technology upgrades.

 

Table 16: Net debt summary

 

At 31 

 Dec 2023 

At 31 

Dec 2022 

 

$m 

$m 

Cash and cash equivalents

5,840 

6,166 

Other investments

122 

239 

Cash and investments

 

5,962 

6,405 

Overdrafts and short-term borrowings

(515)

(350)

Lease liabilities

(1,128)

(953)

Current instalments of loans

(4,614)

(4,964)

Non-current instalments of loans

(22,365)

(22,965)

Interest-bearing loans and borrowings (Gross debt)

 

(28,622)

(29,232)

Net derivatives

150 

(96)

Net debt

 

(22,510)

(22,923)

 

 

Net debt decreased by $413m in the twelve months to 31 December 2023 to $22,510m. Details of the committed undrawn bank facilities are disclosed within the going concern section of Note 1. Details of the Company's solicited credit ratings and further details on Net debt are disclosed in Note 3.

 

Capital allocation

 

The Board's aim is to continue to strike a balance between the interests of the business, financial creditors and the Company's shareholders. The Company's capital allocation priorities include: investing in the business and pipeline; maintaining a strong, investment-grade credit rating; potential value-enhancing business development opportunities; and supporting the progressive dividend policy.

 

In approving the declaration of dividends, the Board considers both the liquidity of the company and the level of reserves legally available for distribution. Dividends are paid to shareholders from AstraZeneca PLC, a Group holding company with no direct operations. The ability of AstraZeneca PLC to make shareholder distributions is dependent on the creation of profits for distribution and the receipt of funds from subsidiary companies. The consolidated Group reserves set out in the Condensed consolidated statement of financial position do not reflect the profit available for distribution to the shareholders of AstraZeneca PLC.

 

Summarised financial information for guarantee of securities of subsidiaries

 

AstraZeneca Finance LLC ("AstraZeneca Finance") is the issuer of 0.700% Notes due 2024, 1.200% Notes due 2026, 4.875% Notes due 2028, 1.750% Notes due 2028, 4.900% Notes due 2030, 2.250% Notes due 2031 and 4.875% Notes due 2033 (the "AstraZeneca Finance Notes"). Each series of AstraZeneca Finance Notes has been fully and unconditionally guaranteed by AstraZeneca PLC. AstraZeneca Finance is 100% owned by AstraZeneca PLC and each of the guarantees issued by AstraZeneca PLC is full and unconditional and joint and several.

 

The AstraZeneca Finance Notes are senior unsecured obligations of AstraZeneca Finance and rank equally with all of AstraZeneca Finance's existing and future senior unsecured and unsubordinated indebtedness. The guarantee by AstraZeneca PLC of the AstraZeneca Finance Notes is the senior unsecured obligation of AstraZeneca PLC and ranks equally with all of AstraZeneca PLC's existing and future senior unsecured and unsubordinated indebtedness. Each guarantee by AstraZeneca PLC is effectively subordinated to any secured indebtedness of AstraZeneca PLC to the extent of the value of the assets securing such indebtedness. The AstraZeneca Finance Notes are structurally subordinated to indebtedness and other liabilities of the subsidiaries of AstraZeneca PLC, none of which guarantee the AstraZeneca Finance Notes.

 

AstraZeneca PLC manages substantially all of its operations through divisions, branches and/or investments in subsidiaries and affiliates. Accordingly, the ability of AstraZeneca PLC to service its debt and guarantee obligations is also dependent upon the earnings of its subsidiaries, affiliates, branches and divisions, whether by dividends, distributions, loans or otherwise.

 

Please refer to the Consolidated financial statements of AstraZeneca PLC in our Annual Report on Form 20?F and reports on Form 6-K with our quarterly financial results as filed or furnished with the SEC for further financial information regarding AstraZeneca PLC and its consolidated subsidiaries. For further details, terms and conditions of the AstraZeneca Finance Notes please refer to AstraZeneca PLC's reports on Form 6-K furnished to the SEC on 3 March 2023 and 28 May 2021.

 

Pursuant to Rule 13-01 and Rule 3-10 of Regulation S-X under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act"), we present below the summary financial information for AstraZeneca PLC, as Guarantor, excluding its consolidated subsidiaries, and AstraZeneca Finance, as the issuer, excluding its consolidated subsidiaries. The following summary financial information of AstraZeneca PLC and AstraZeneca Finance is presented on a combined basis and transactions between the combining entities have been eliminated. Financial information for non-guarantor entities has been excluded. Intercompany balances and transactions between the obligor group and the non-obligor subsidiaries are presented on separate lines.

 

Table 17: Obligor group summarised Statement of comprehensive income

 

 

FY 2023

FY 2022

 

$m 

$m 

Total Revenue

Gross profit

Operating loss

(34)

(27)

Loss for the period

(976)

(687)

Transactions with subsidiaries that are not issuers or guarantors

15,660 

1,071 

 

Table 18: Obligor group summarised Statement of financial position

 

 

At 31 Dec 2023 

At 31 Dec 2022 

 

$m 

$m 

Current assets

5

Non-current assets

-

Current liabilities

(4,856)

(2,839)

Non-current liabilities

(22,239)

(22,797)

Amounts due from subsidiaries that are not issuers or guarantors

18,421

7,806 

Amounts due to subsidiaries that are not issuers or guarantors

-

(293)

 

Foreign exchange

 

The Company's transactional currency exposures on working capital balances, which typically extend for up to three months, are hedged where practicable using forward foreign exchange contracts against the individual companies' reporting currency. Foreign exchange gains and losses on forward contracts transacted for transactional hedging are taken to profit or to Other comprehensive income if the contract is in a designated cashflow hedge. In addition, the Company's external dividend payments, paid principally in pound sterling and Swedish krona, are fully hedged from announcement to payment date.

 

Table 19: Currency sensitivities

 

The Company provides the following currency-sensitivity information:

 

 

 

Average

rates vs. USD

Annual impact ($m) of 5% strengthening (FY 2024 average rate vs. FY 2023 average) [12]

 

Currency

Primary Relevance

 

FY 2023[13]

 

YTD 2024[14]

 

Change

 (%)

 

Total Revenue

Core Operating Profit

EUR

Total Revenue

0.92 

0.92

1 

397 

179 

CNY

Total Revenue

7.09 

7.18

(1)

322 

182 

JPY

Total Revenue

140.60 

145.97

(4)

177 

119 

Other[15]

453 

227 

GBP

Operating expense

0.80 

0.79

2 

60 

(126)

SEK

Operating expense

10.61 

10.34

3 

9 

(63)

 

Sustainability

 

Since the last quarterly report, AstraZeneca:

 

Access to healthcare

 

- Continued to make a high-level contribution to the Partnership for Health System Sustainability and Resilience (PHSSR), providing a valuable platform for dialogue with policymakers and other health system stakeholders:

 

? The PHSSR EU expert advisory group launched its inaugural non-communicable disease (NCD) policy report, 'A stitch in time', on early intervention to tackle Europe's NCD crisis at an event in the European Parliament with more than 100 stakeholders from government, academia, advocacy, policy and industry groups

 

? National initiatives and policy improvements to strengthen health systems continued in countries including Brazil, Canada, Saudi Arabia, Greece, the Netherlands, Italy and Japan

 

? Through Healthy Heart Africa (HHA), trained more than 11,390 healthcare workers, conducted 47.95 million blood pressure screenings cumulatively since launching in 2014 and identified 9.64 million people with elevated blood pressure as of the end of December 2023. HHA has conducted one million screenings per month since February 2023. The programme is on track to achieve its ambition to reach 10 million people with elevated blood pressure by 2025

 

? Through the Young Health Programme (YHP), continued to be recognised for achievements in reaching millions of young people with information on NCD risk behaviours. YHP directly reached six million young people in 2023, an increase of 110% from 2022, and trained 385,000 people across 40 countries. More than 4,400 AstraZeneca employees volunteered time to YHP community projects in 2023

 

Environmental protection

 

? Joined global health and climate leaders at COP28, as part of the first official Health Day at the UN Climate Change Conference, to highlight the urgency of the climate-health crisis and share scalable solutions to decarbonise and adapt health systems. The Company convened cross-sector stakeholders for a Reuters panel discussion on tackling the impact of the climate crisis on lung health, and CEO Pascal Soriot hosted a session through the Sustainable Markets Initiative (SMI) Health Systems Task Force on accelerating the transition to net zero health systems

 

? Through the SMI Health Systems Task Force, announced an industry-first renewable power agreement in China together with four global healthcare leaders and renewable energy company Envision Energy, resulting in potential annual emissions savings of approximately 120,000 tonnes, the equivalent of taking 25,000 cars off the road

 

? Through AZ Forest, AstraZeneca's global reforestation and biodiversity initiative, planted 20 million trees together with partners, as part of the Company's $400 million commitment to plant and maintain 200 million trees by 2030. In December, the Company pledged to plant up to six million trees in western Kenya as part of AZ Forest, building on African reforestation initiatives in Ghana and Rwanda

 

Ethics and transparency

 

? Marked Global Ethics Day in October 2023, following the launch of Code of Ethics training focused on living the AZ Values and the role of ethics in everyday activities and decisions. The Company also launched its 2023 Ethics Survey alongside the training, to provide valuable insights into employee perspectives on AstraZeneca's ethical culture

 

? Appeared on the Forbes list of World's Best Employers for the fourth consecutive year and the World's Top Companies for Women, for the third consecutive year, as well as the FT Diversity Leaders 2024 for the fifth consecutive year, demonstrating the progress being made on the Company's People strategy and AstraZeneca's position as a Great Place to Work

 

Research and development

 

This section covers R&D events and milestones that have occurred since the prior results announcement on 9 November 2023, up to and including events on 7 February 2024.

 

A comprehensive view of AstraZeneca's pipeline of medicines in human trials can be found in the latest Clinical Trials Appendix, available on www.astrazeneca.com/investor-relations. The Clinical Trials Appendix includes tables with details of the ongoing clinical trials for AstraZeneca medicines and new molecular entities in the pipeline.

 

Oncology

 

AstraZeneca presented new data across its diverse portfolio of cancer medicines at four major medical congresses since the prior results announcement: the San Antonio Breast Cancer Congress (SABCS) in December 2023, the 65th American Society of Haematology Annual Meeting and Exposition (ASH) in December 2023, the American Society of Clinical Oncology Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium (ASCO GI) in January 2024 and the American Society of Clinical Oncology Genitourinary Cancers (ASCO GU) in January 2024.

 

Imfinzi and Imjudo

 

Event

Commentary

Approval

 

China

 

 

For the 1st-line treatment of adult patients with locally advanced or metastatic BTC in combination with chemotherapy (gemcitabine and cisplatin). (TOPAZ-1, November 2023)

Trial update

PACIFIC-2

 

PACIFIC-2 Phase III trial for Imfinzi concurrently administered with chemoradiotherapy did not achieve statistical significance for the primary endpoint of PFS versus chemoradiotherapy alone for the treatment of patients with unresectable, Stage III NSCLC. (November 2023)

Presentation: ASCO GI

EMERALD-1

Imfinzi plus TACE and bevacizumab reduced the risk of disease progression or death by 23% compared to TACE alone (HR 0.77; 95% CI 0.61-0.98; p=0.032) with median PFS of 15 months in patients treated with the Imfinzi combination versus 8.2 months with TACE. (January 2024)

 

Enhertu

 

Event

Commentary

Priority Review

US

 

 

For the treatment of adult patients with unresectable or metastatic HER2-positive (immunohistochemistry IHC 3+) solid tumours who have received prior treatment or who have no satisfactory alternative treatment options. (DESTINY-PanTumor02, DESTINY-Lung01, DESTINY-CRC02, January 2024)

 

Truqap

 

Event

Commentary

Approval

US

 

 

In combination with Faslodex for the treatment of adult patients with HR-positive, HER2-negative locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer with one or more biomarker alterations (PIK3CA, AKT1 or PTEN) that have progressed on at least one endocrine-based regimen in the metastatic setting or experienced recurrence on or within 12 months of completing adjuvant therapy. (CAPItello-291, November 2023)

 

BioPharmaceuticals - CVRM

 

Lokelma

 

Event

Commentary

Termination

STABILIZE-CKD and DIALIZE-Outcomes Phase III evidence trials discontinued. Decision was made due to substantially increased enrolment timelines and low event rates, respectively, which made it prohibitive to deliver study results within a timeframe to meaningfully advance clinical practice. (December 2023)

 

Wainua

 

Event

Commentary

Approval

 

US

Treatment of the polyneuropathy of hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis in adults, commonly referred to as ATTRv-PN. (NEURO-TTRansform, December 2023)

 

Rare Disease

 

Alexion, AstraZeneca Rare Disease presented new real-world and clinical data at the 65th American Society of Haematology (ASH) , across PNH, AL amyloidosis, aHUS and haematopoietic stem cell transplant-associated thrombotic microangiopathy (HSCT-TMA).

 

Voydeya

 

Event

Commentary

Approval

JP

 

Treatment of patients with PNH with clinically significant EVH while treated with Ultomiris or Soliris. (ALPHA, January 2024)

Presentation: ASH

LTE ALPHA Phase III trial

 

New results from the 24-week and long-term extension period from the pivotal ALPHA Phase III trial reinforce the potential for Voydeya add-on therapy to address clinically significant EVH in the small subset of PNH patients who experience this condition while treated with C5 inhibitor therapy, allowing them to maintain control of intravascular haemolysis through standard-of-care treatment with Ultomiris or Soliris. (December 2023)

 

acoramidis

 

Event

Commentary

Phase III data readout

ATTRibute-CM (BridgeBio)

 

Positive high-level results from the Japan Phase III trial of acoramidis in adults with ATTR-CM showed consistency to those in the global BridgeBio Pharma, Inc. (BridgeBio) ATTRibute-CM Phase III trial, including survival, cardiac-related hospitalisations and other measures of improved functions at 30 months. (February 2024)

 

Condensed consolidated financial statements

 

 

Table 20: Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income: FY 2023

 

For the twelve months ended 31 December

 

2023 

2022 

 

 

$m 

$m 

Total Revenue[16]

 

45,811 

44,351 

Product Sales

 

43,789 

42,998 

Alliance Revenue

 

1,428 

755 

Collaboration Revenue

 

594 

598 

Cost of sales

(8,268)

(12,391)

Gross profit

 

37,543 

31,960 

Distribution expense

(539)

(536)

Research and development expense

(10,935)

(9,762)

Selling, general and administrative expense

(19,216)

(18,419)

Other operating income and expense

1,340 

514 

Operating profit

 

8,193 

3,757 

Finance income

344 

95 

Finance expense

(1,626)

(1,346)

Share of after tax losses in associates and joint ventures

(12)

(5)

Profit before tax

 

6,899 

2,501 

Taxation

(938)

792 

Profit for the period

 

5,961 

3,293 

Other comprehensive income:

 

 

 

Items that will not be reclassified to profit or loss:

 

 

 

Remeasurement of the defined benefit pension liability

(406)

1,118 

Net gains/(losses) on equity investments measured at fair value through other comprehensive income

278 

(88)

Fair value movements related to own credit risk on bonds designated as fair value through profit or loss

(6)

Tax on items that will not be reclassified to profit or loss

101 

(216)

 

 

(33)

816 

Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss:

Foreign exchange arising on consolidation

608 

(1,446)

Foreign exchange arising on designated liabilities in net investment hedges

24 

(282)

Fair value movements on cash flow hedges

266 

(97)

Fair value movements on cash flow hedges transferred to profit and loss

(145)

73 

Fair value movements on derivatives designated in net investment hedges

44 

(8)

Costs of hedging

(19)

(7)

Tax on items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss

(12)

73 

766 

(1,694)

Other comprehensive income/(expense), net of tax

 

733 

(878)

Total comprehensive income for the period

 

6,694 

2,415 

Profit attributable to:

Owners of the Parent

5,955 

3,288 

Non-controlling interests

5,961 

3,293 

Total comprehensive income attributable to:

Owners of the Parent

6,688 

2,413 

Non-controlling interests

6,694 

2,415 

Basic earnings per $0.25 Ordinary Share

$3.84 

$2.12 

Diluted earnings per $0.25 Ordinary Share

$3.81 

$2.11 

Weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue (millions)

1,549 

1,548 

Diluted weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue (millions)

1,562 

1,560 

Table 21: Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income: Q4 2023

 

For the quarter ended 31 December

 

2023 

2022 

 

 

$m 

$m 

Total Revenue16

 

12,024 

11,207 

Product Sales

 

11,323 

10,798 

Alliance Revenue

 

424 

251 

Collaboration Revenue

 

277 

158 

Cost of sales

(2,308)

(2,900)

Gross profit

 

9,716 

8,307 

Distribution expense

(145)

(156)

Research and development expense

(3,073)

(2,625)

Selling, general and administrative expense

(5,371)

(4,621)

Other operating income and expense

107 

189 

Operating profit

 

1,234 

1,094 

Finance income

108 

45 

Finance expense

(445)

(360)

Share of after tax losses in associates and joint ventures

(1)

Profit before tax

 

897 

778 

Taxation

62 

124 

Profit for the period

 

959 

902 

Other comprehensive income:

 

 

 

Items that will not be reclassified to profit or loss:

 

 

 

Remeasurement of the defined benefit pension liability

(405)

(165)

Net gains/(losses) on equity investments measured at fair value through other comprehensive income

233 

(67)

Fair value movements related to own credit risk on bonds designated as fair value through profit or loss

(11)

Tax on items that will not be reclassified to profit or loss

101 

75 

 

 

(82)

(156)

Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss

Foreign exchange arising on consolidation

809 

1,047 

Foreign exchange arising on designated liabilities in net investment hedges

87 

39 

Fair value movements on cash flow hedges

204 

117 

Fair value movements on cash flow hedges transferred to profit and loss

(173)

(177)

Fair value movements on derivatives designated in net investment hedges

(3)

(41)

Costs of hedging

(16)

Tax on items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss

(5)

(22)

903 

967 

Other comprehensive income, net of tax

 

821 

811 

Total comprehensive income for the period

 

1,780 

1,713 

Profit attributable to:

Owners of the Parent

960 

901 

Non-controlling interests

(1)

959 

902 

Total comprehensive income attributable to:

Owners of the Parent

1,781 

1,712 

Non-controlling interests

(1)

1,780 

1,713 

Basic earnings per $0.25 Ordinary Share

$0.62 

$0.58 

Diluted earnings per $0.25 Ordinary Share

$0.62 

$0.58 

Weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue (millions)

1,549 

1,549 

Diluted weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue (millions)

1,561 

1,559 

 

Table 22: Condensed consolidated statement of financial position

 

At 31 Dec

2023

At 31 Dec

2022

 

$m 

$m 

Assets

Non-current assets

Property, plant and equipment

9,402 

8,507 

Right-of-use assets

1,100 

942 

Goodwill

20,048 

19,820 

Intangible assets

38,089 

39,307 

Investments in associates and joint ventures

147 

76 

Other investments

1,530 

1,066 

Derivative financial instruments

228 

74 

Other receivables

803 

835 

Deferred tax assets

4,718 

3,263 

 

76,065 

73,890 

Current assets

Inventories

5,424 

4,699 

Trade and other receivables

12,126 

10,521 

Other investments

122 

239 

Derivative financial instruments

116 

87 

Income tax receivable

1,426 

731 

Cash and cash equivalents

5,840 

6,166 

Assets held for sale

150 

 

25,054 

22,593 

Total assets

 

101,119 

96,483 

Liabilities

 

 

 

Current liabilities

Interest-bearing loans and borrowings

(5,129)

(5,314)

Lease liabilities

(271)

(228)

Trade and other payables

(22,374)

(19,040)

Derivative financial instruments

(156)

(93)

Provisions

(1,028)

(722)

Income tax payable

(1,584)

(896)

 

(30,542)

(26,293)

Non-current liabilities

Interest-bearing loans and borrowings

(22,365)

(22,965)

Lease liabilities

(857)

(725)

Derivative financial instruments

(38)

(164)

Deferred tax liabilities

(2,844)

(2,944)

Retirement benefit obligations

(1,520)

(1,168)

Provisions

(1,127)

(896)

Other payables

(2,660)

(4,270)

(31,411)

(33,132)

Total liabilities

 

(61,953)

(59,425)

Net assets

 

39,166 

37,058 

Equity

Capital and reserves attributable to equity holders of the Parent

Share capital

388 

387 

Share premium account

35,188 

35,155 

Other reserves

2,065 

2,069 

Retained earnings

1,502 

(574)

 

39,143 

37,037 

Non-controlling interests

23 

21 

Total equity

 

39,166 

37,058 

 

Table 23: Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity

 

Share capital

Share premium account

Other reserves

Retained earnings

Total attributable to owners of the parent

Non-controlling interests

Total equity

 

$m 

$m 

$m 

$m 

$m 

$m 

$m 

At 1 Jan 2022

387 

35,126 

2,045 

1,710 

39,268 

19 

39,287 

Profit for the period

3,288 

3,288 

3,293 

Other comprehensive expense

(875)

(875)

(3)

(878)

Transfer to other reserves

24 

(24)

Transactions with owners

Dividends

(4,485)

(4,485)

(4,485)

Issue of Ordinary Shares

29 

29 

29 

Share-based payments charge for the period

619 

619 

619 

Settlement of share plan awards

(807)

(807)

(807)

Net movement

 

29 

24 

(2,284)

(2,231)

(2,229)

At 31 Dec 2022

 

387 

35,155 

2,069 

(574)

37,037 

21 

37,058 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At 1 Jan 2023

 

387 

35,155 

2,069 

(574)

37,037 

21 

37,058 

Profit for the period

5,955 

5,955 

5,961 

Other comprehensive income

733 

733 

733 

Transfer to other reserves

(4)

Transactions with owners

Dividends

(4,487)

(4,487)

(4,487)

Dividends paid to non-controlling interests

(4)

(4)

Issue of Ordinary Shares

33 

34 

34 

Share-based payments charge for the period

579 

579 

579 

Settlement of share plan awards

(708)

(708)

(708)

Net movement

33 

(4)

2,076 

2,106 

2,108 

At 31 Dec 2023

 

388 

35,188 

2,065 

1,502 

39,143 

23 

39,166 

 

Table 24: Condensed consolidated statement of cash flows

 

For the twelve months ended 31 December

2023 

2022 

$m 

$m 

 

Cash flows from operating activities

Profit before tax

6,899 

2,501 

Finance income and expense

1,282 

1,251 

Share of after tax losses of associates and joint ventures

12 

Depreciation, amortisation and impairment

5,387 

5,480 

Decrease in working capital and short-term provisions

300 

3,757 

Gains on disposal of intangible assets

(251)

(104)

Fair value movements on contingent consideration arising from business combinations

549 

82 

Non-cash and other movements

(386)

(692)

Cash generated from operations

 

13,792 

12,280 

Interest paid

(1,081)

(849)

Tax paid

(2,366)

(1,623)

Net cash inflow from operating activities

 

10,345 

9,808 

 

Cash flows from investing activities

 

Acquisition of subsidiaries, net of cash acquired

(189)

(48)

Payments upon vesting of employee share awards attributable to business combinations

(84)

(215)

Payment of contingent consideration from business combinations

(826)

(772)

Purchase of property, plant and equipment

(1,361)

(1,091)

Disposal of property, plant and equipment

132 

282 

Purchase of intangible assets

(2,417)

(1,480)

Disposal of intangible assets

291 

447 

Movement in profit-participation liability

190 

Purchase of non-current asset investments

(136)

(45)

Disposal of non-current asset investments

32 

42 

Movement in short-term investments, fixed deposits and other investing instruments

97 

(114)

Payments to associates and joint ventures

(80)

(26)

Interest received

287 

60 

Net cash outflow from investing activities

(4,064)

(2,960)

Net cash inflow before financing activities

 

6,281 

6,848 

 

Cash flows from financing activities

Proceeds from issue of share capital

33 

29 

Issue of loans and borrowings

3,816 

Repayment of loans and borrowings

(4,942)

(1,271)

Dividends paid

(4,481)

(4,364)

Hedge contracts relating to dividend payments

(19)

(127)

Repayment of obligations under leases

(268)

(244)

Movement in short-term borrowings

161 

74 

Payment of Acerta Pharma share purchase liability

(867)

(920)

Net cash outflow from financing activities

 

(6,567)

(6,823)

Net (decrease)/increase in Cash and cash equivalents in the period

(286)

25 

Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the period

5,983 

6,038 

Exchange rate effects

(60)

(80)

Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the period

 

5,637 

5,983 

Cash and cash equivalents consist of:

Cash and cash equivalents

5,840 

6,166 

Overdrafts

(203)

(183)

 

 

5,637 

5,983 

 

Notes to the Condensed consolidated financial statements

 

Note 1: Basis of preparation and accounting policies

 

These Condensed consolidated financial statements for the twelve months ended 31 December 2023 have been prepared in accordance with UK-adopted international accounting standards and with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006 as applicable to companies reporting under those standards. The Condensed consolidated financial statements also comply fully with IFRS Accounting Standards as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and International Accounting Standards as adopted by the European Union.

 

These Condensed consolidated financial statements comprise the financial results of AstraZeneca PLC for the years to 31 December 2023 and 2022 together with the Statement of financial position as at 31 December 2023 and 2022. The results for the year to 31 December 2023 have been extracted from the 31 December 2023 audited Consolidated Financial Statements which have been approved by the Board of Directors. These have not yet been delivered to the Registrar of Companies but are expected to be published on 20 February 2024 within the Annual Report and Form 20-F Information 2023.

 

The financial information set out above does not constitute the Group's statutory accounts for the years to 31 December 2023 or 2022 but is derived from those accounts. The auditors have reported on those accounts: their reports (i) were unqualified, (ii) did not include a reference to any matters to which the auditors drew attention by way of emphasis without qualifying their report and (iii) did not contain a statement under section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006 in respect of the accounts for the year to 31 December 2023 or 31 December 2022. Statutory accounts for the year to 31 December 2023 were approved by the Board of Directors for release on 8 February 2024.

 

Except as noted below, amendments to accounting standards issued by the IASB and adopted in the year ended 31 December 2023 did not have a material impact on the result or financial position of the Group and the Condensed consolidated financial statements have been prepared applying the accounting policies that were applied in the preparation of the Group's published consolidated financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2022.

 

The comparative figures for the financial year ended 31 December 2022 are not the Group's statutory accounts for that financial year. Those accounts have been reported on by the Group's auditors and have been delivered to the Registrar of Companies; their report was (i) unqualified, (ii) did not include a reference to any matters to which the auditors drew attention by way of emphasis without qualifying their report, and (iii) did not contain a statement under section 498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.

 

Alliance and Collaboration Revenues

 

Effective 1 January 2023, the Group has updated the presentation of Total Revenue on the face of the Statement of Comprehensive Income to include Alliance Revenue as a separate element to Collaboration Revenue. Alliance Revenue, previously reported within Collaboration Revenue, comprises income related to sales made by collaboration partners, where AstraZeneca is entitled to a share of gross profits, share of revenues or royalties, which are recurring in nature while the collaboration arrangement remains in place. Alliance Revenue does not include Product Sales where AstraZeneca is leading commercialisation in a territory.

 

Collaboration Revenue arising from collaborative arrangements where the Group retains a significant ongoing economic interest and receives upfront amounts and event- triggered milestones, which arise from the licensing of intellectual property, will continue to be reported as Collaboration Revenue. In collaboration arrangements either AstraZeneca or the collaborator acts as principal in sales to the end customer. Where AstraZeneca acts as principal, we record 100% of sales to the end customer within Product Sales. The updated presentation reflects the increasing importance of income arising from share of gross profits arrangements where collaboration partners are responsible for booking revenues in some or all territories.

 

The comparative revenue reported in FY 2022 relating to the twelve months to 31 December 2022 has been retrospectively adjusted to reflect the new split of Total Revenue, resulting in Alliance Revenue of $755m being reported for the twelve months to 31 December 2022, however the combined total of Alliance Revenue and Collaboration Revenue is equal to the previously reported Collaboration Revenue total for the twelve months to 31 December 2022.

 

Going concern

The Group has considerable financial resources available. As at 31 December 2023, the Group had $12.7bn in financial resources (Cash and cash equivalent balances of $5.8bn and undrawn committed bank facilities of $6.9bn, of which $2.0bn were available until February 2025 and the remaining $4.9bn were available until April 2026 - the maturity of this facility was extended in February 2024 to April 2029 - with only $5.4bn of borrowings due within one year). These facilities contain no financial covenants and were undrawn at 31 December 2023.

 

The Group's revenues are largely derived from sales of medicines covered by patents, which provide a relatively high level of resilience and predictability to cash inflows, although government price interventions in response to budgetary constraints are expected to continue to adversely affect revenues in some of our significant markets. The Group, however, anticipates new revenue streams from both recently launched medicines and those in development, and the Group has a wide diversity of customers and suppliers across different geographic areas.

 

Consequently, the Directors believe that, overall, the Group is well placed to manage its business risks successfully. Accordingly, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the Condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

Legal proceedings

The information contained in Note 6 updates the disclosures concerning legal proceedings and contingent liabilities in the Group's Annual Report and Form 20-F Information 2022.

 

IAS 12 'Income Taxes'

On 23 May 2023, the IASB issued an amendment to IAS 12 'Income Taxes' to clarify how the effects of the global minimum tax framework should be accounted for and disclosed effective 1 January 2023. This was endorsed by the UK Endorsement Board on 19 July 2023 and has been adopted by the Group for 2023 reporting. The Group has applied the exemption to recognising and disclosing information about deferred tax assets and liabilities related to Pillar 2 income taxes.

 

Note 2: Intangible assets

 

In accordance with IAS 36 'Impairment of Assets', reviews for triggers of impairment or impairment reversals at an individual asset or cash generating unit level were conducted, and impairment tests carried out where triggers were identified. As a result, total impairment charges of $434m have been recorded against intangible assets during the twelve months ended 31 December 2023 (FY 2022: $224m net charge). Impairment charges in respect of medicines in development were $417m (FY 2022: $95m net charge) including the $244m impairment of the ALXN1840 intangible asset, following the decision to discontinue this development programme in Wilson's disease. Impairment charges in respect of launched medicines were $17m (FY 2022: $146m).

 

As previously disclosed, on 16 January 2023 AstraZeneca completed the acquisition of Neogene Therapeutics, Inc. (Neogene), a global clinical-stage biotechnology company pioneering the discovery, development and manufacturing of next-generation T-cell receptor therapies (TCR-Ts). The purchase price allocation exercise has completed, with the fair value of total consideration determined at $267m. Intangible assets of $100m and goodwill of $158m were recognised in the acquisition balance sheet, as well as a cash outflow of $189m net of cash acquired. Future contingent milestones-based and non-contingent consideration is payable to a maximum of $120m. Neogene's results have been consolidated into the Group's results from 16 January 2023.

 

The acquisition of CinCor Pharma, Inc. (CinCor) completed on 24 February 2023, recorded as an asset acquisition, with consideration and net assets acquired of $1,268m, which included intangible assets acquired of $780m, $424m of cash and cash equivalents, and $75m of marketable securities. The Condensed consolidated statement of cash flows includes a $1,204m payment for the intangible assets, which is presented net of the $424m cash and cash equivalents acquired within Purchase of intangible assets, whilst the $75m increase in marketable securities is presented within Movement in short-term investments, fixed deposits and other investing instruments. Contingent consideration of up to $496m could be paid on achievement of regulatory milestones, and will be recognised when the associated milestones are triggered.

 

Note 3: Net debt

 

The table below provides an analysis of Net debt and a reconciliation of Net Cash flow to the movement in Net debt. The Group monitors Net debt as part of its capital management policy as described in Note 28 of the Annual Report and Form 20-F Information 2022. Net debt is a non-GAAP financial measure.

 

Table 25: Net debt

 

 

At 1 Jan 2023

Cash flow

Acquisitions

Non-cash & other

Exchange movements

At 31 Dec 2023

 

$m

$m

$m

$m

$m

$m

Non-current instalments of loans

(22,965)

(3,826)

4,617 

(191)

(22,365)

Non-current instalments of leases

(725)

(6)

(118)

(8)

(857)

Total long-term debt

 

(23,690)

(3,826)

(6)

4,499 

(199)

(23,222)

Current instalments of loans

(4,964)

4,942 

(4,588)

(4)

(4,614)

Current instalments of leases

(228)

298 

(5)

(337)

(271)

Bank collateral received

(89)

(126)

(215)

Other short-term borrowings excluding overdrafts

(78)

(35)

16 

(97)

Overdrafts

(183)

(20)

(1)

(203)

Total current debt

 

(5,542)

5,059 

(5)

(4,924)

12 

(5,400)

Gross borrowings

 

(29,232)

1,233 

(11)

(425)

(187)

(28,622)

Net derivative financial instruments

(96)

19 

227 

150 

Net borrowings

 

(29,328)

1,252 

(11)

(198)

(187)

(28,472)

Cash and cash equivalents

6,166 

(267)

(59)

5,840 

Other investments - current

239 

(95)

(23)

122 

Cash and investments

 

6,405 

(362)

(82)

5,962 

Net debt

 

(22,923)

890 

(11)

(197)

(269)

(22,510)

 

Non-cash movements in the period include fair value adjustments under IFRS 9 Financial Instruments.

 

The Group has agreements with some bank counterparties whereby the parties agree to post cash collateral on financial derivatives, for the benefit of the other, equivalent to the market valuation of the derivative positions above a predetermined threshold. The carrying value of such cash collateral held by the Group at 31 December 2023 was $215m (31 December 2022: $89m) and the carrying value of such cash collateral posted by the Group at 31 December 2023 was $102m (31 December 2022: $162m).

 

The equivalent GAAP measure to Net debt is 'liabilities arising from financing activities', which excludes the amounts for cash and overdrafts, other investments and non-financing derivatives shown above and includes the Acerta Pharma share purchase liability of $833m (31 December 2022: $1,646m), which is shown in current other payables.

 

Net debt decreased by $413m in the twelve months to 31 December 2023 to $22,510m. Details of the committed undrawn bank facilities are disclosed within the going concern section of Note 1.

 

During the twelve months ended 31 December 2023, Moody's upgraded the Company's solicited long term credit rating from A3 to A2 and its short term rating from P-2 to P-1. Standard and Poor's credit ratings were unchanged (long term: A; short term: A-1).

 

Note 4: Financial Instruments

 

As detailed in the Group's most recent annual financial statements, the principal financial instruments consist of derivative financial instruments, other investments, trade and other receivables, cash and cash equivalents, trade and other payables, lease liabilities and interest-bearing loans and borrowings.

 

The Group has certain equity investments that are categorised as Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy that are held at $313m at 31 December 2023 (31 December 2022: $186m) and for which fair value gains of $17m have been recognised in the twelve months ended 31 December 2023 (FY 2022: $50m). In the absence of specific market data, these unlisted investments are held at fair value based on the cost of investment and adjusting as necessary for impairments and revaluations on new funding rounds, which are seen to approximate the fair value. All other fair value gains and/or losses that are presented in Net gains/(losses) on equity investments measured at fair value through other comprehensive income in the Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income for the twelve months ended 31 December 2023 are Level 1 fair value measurements, valued based on quoted prices in active markets.

 

Financial instruments measured at fair value include $1,550m of other investments, $4,425m held in money-market funds and $150m of derivatives as at 31 December 2023. With the exception of derivatives being Level 2 fair valued, certain equity investments of $325m categorised as Level 3, the aforementioned balances are Level 1 fair valued. Financial instruments measured at amortised cost include $215m of cash collateral pledged to counterparties. The total fair value of interest-bearing loans and borrowings at 31 December 2023, which have a carrying value of $28,622m in the Condensed consolidated statement of financial position, was $27,987m.

 

As announced in April 2023, the contractual relationship between AstraZeneca and Sobi relating to future sales of Beyfortus (nirsevimab) in the US has been replaced by a royalty relationship between Sanofi and Sobi. As a result, a non-current other payable representing AstraZeneca's future obligations to Sobi was eliminated from AstraZeneca's Statement of Financial Position in the quarter to 30 June 2023, and AstraZeneca recorded a gain of $712m in Core Other operating income.

 

Table 26: Financial instruments - contingent consideration

 

 

2023

2022

 

 

 

Diabetes alliance

Other

Total

Total

 

 

$m

$m

$m

$m

At 1 January

2,124 

98 

2,222 

2,865 

Additions through business combinations

60 

60 

Settlements

(823)

(3)

(826)

(772)

Disposals

(121)

Revaluations

520 

29 

549 

82 

Discount unwind

124 

132 

168 

At 31 December

 

1,945 

192 

2,137 

2,222 

 

Contingent consideration arising from business combinations is fair valued using decision-tree analysis, with key inputs including the probability of success, consideration of potential delays and the expected levels of future revenues.

 

The contingent consideration balance relating to BMS's share of the global diabetes alliance of $1,945m (31 December 2022: $2,124m) would increase/decrease by $195m with an increase/decrease in sales of 10%, as compared with the current estimates.

 

Note 5: Pensions and other post-retirement benefit obligations

 

During the twelve months ended 31 December 2023, AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP terminated its main defined benefit pension plan. A total of $839m of pension obligations were discharged, $142m of which was settled via a cash payment to the participants and the remaining $697m was transferred to an external insurer via a buy-out. At 31 December 2023, all assets and obligations had been discharged.

 

Note 6: Legal proceedings and contingent liabilities

 

AstraZeneca is involved in various legal proceedings considered typical to its business, including litigation and investigations, including Government investigations, relating to product liability, commercial disputes, infringement of intellectual property (IP) rights, the validity of certain patents, anti-trust law and sales and marketing practices. The matters discussed below constitute the more significant developments since publication of the disclosures concerning legal proceedings in the Company's Annual Report and Form 20-F Information 2022 and the Interim Financial Statements for H1 2023 and Q3 2023 (the Disclosures).

 

As discussed in the Disclosures, the majority of claims involve highly complex issues. Often these issues are subject to substantial uncertainties and, therefore, the probability of a loss, if any, being sustained and/or an estimate of the amount of any loss is difficult to ascertain.

 

Unless specifically identified below, AstraZeneca considers each of the claims to represent a contingent liability or a contingent asset where the matter is brought by AstraZeneca, and discloses information with respect to the nature and facts of the cases in accordance with IAS 37.

 

In cases that have been settled or adjudicated, or where quantifiable fines and penalties have been assessed and which are not subject to appeal, or where a loss is probable and we are able to make a reasonable estimate of the loss, AstraZeneca records the loss absorbed or makes a provision for its best estimate of the expected loss. The position could change over time and the estimates that the Company made, and upon which the Company have relied in calculating these provisions are inherently imprecise. There can, therefore, be no assurance that any losses that result from the outcome of any legal proceedings will not exceed the amount of the provisions that have been booked in the accounts. The major factors causing this uncertainty are described more fully in the Disclosures and herein.

 

AstraZeneca has full confidence in, and will vigorously defend and enforce, its IP.

 

Matters disclosed in respect of the fourth quarter of 2023 and to 8 February 2024

 

Patent litigation

 

Legal proceedings brought against AstraZeneca considered to be contingent liabilities

 

Enhertu

US patent proceedings

In October 2020, Seagen Inc. (Seagen) filed a complaint against Daiichi Sankyo Company, Limited (Daiichi Sankyo) in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas (District Court) alleging that Enhertu infringes a Seagen patent. AstraZeneca co-commercialises Enhertu with Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. in the US. After trial in April 2022, the jury found that the patent was infringed and awarded Seagen $41.82m in past damages. In July 2022, the District Court entered final judgment and declined to enhance damages on the basis of wilfulness. In October 2023, the District Court entered an amended final judgment that requires Daiichi Sankyo to pay Seagen a royalty of 8% on US sales of Enhertu from April 1, 2022, through November 4, 2024, in addition to the past damages previously awarded by the Court. AstraZeneca and Daiichi Sankyo have appealed the District Court's decision.

 

In December 2020 and January 2021, AstraZeneca and Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. filed post-grant review (PGR) petitions with the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) alleging, inter alia, that the Seagen patent is invalid for lack of written description and enablement. The USPTO initially declined to institute the PGRs, but, in April 2022, the USPTO granted the rehearing requests, instituting both PGR petitions. Seagen subsequently disclaimed all patent claims at issue in one of the PGR proceedings. In July 2022, the USPTO reversed its institution decision and declined to institute the other PGR petition. AstraZeneca and Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. requested reconsideration of the decision not to institute review of the patent. In February 2023, the USPTO reinstituted the PGR proceeding. An oral hearing took place in August 2023. In January 2024, the USPTO issued a decision that Seagen's patent is unpatentable, invalidating all claims asserted against Enhertu. The USPTO's decision does not overturn the Texas District Court's decision unless and until the USPTO's decision is affirmed on appeal by the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. No such appeal has been filed.

 

Legal proceedings brought by AstraZeneca considered to be contingent assets

 

Farxiga

US patent proceedings

In May 2021, AstraZeneca proceeded to trial against ANDA filer Zydus Pharmaceuticals (USA) Inc. (Zydus) in the US District Court for the District of Delaware (District Court). In October 2021, the District Court issued a decision finding the asserted claims of AstraZeneca's patent as valid and infringed by Zydus's ANDA product. In August 2022, Zydus appealed the District Court decision. Zydus's appeal has been dismissed.

 

In December 2023, AstraZeneca initiated ANDA litigation against Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. and Sun Pharmaceutical Industries, Inc. in the District Court. No trial date has been set.

 

Lynparza

US patent proceedings

In December 2022, AstraZeneca received a Paragraph IV notice letter from an ANDA filer relating to patents listed in the FDA Orange Book with reference to Lynparza. In February 2023, in response to the Paragraph IV notice, AstraZeneca, MSD International Business GmbH, and the University of Sheffield initiated ANDA litigation against Natco Pharma Limited (Natco) in the US District Court for the District of New Jersey. In the complaint, AstraZeneca alleged that Natco's generic version of Lynparza, if approved and marketed, would infringe patents listed in the FDA Orange Book with reference to Lynparza. No trial date has been scheduled.

 

In December 2023, AstraZeneca received a Paragraph IV notice letter from ANDA filer relating to patents listed in the FDA Orange Book with reference to Lynparza. In February 2024, in response to the Paragraph IV notice, AstraZeneca, MSD International Business GmbH, and the University of Sheffield initiated ANDA litigation against Sandoz Inc. (Sandoz) in the US District Court for the District of New Jersey. In the complaint, AstraZeneca alleged that Sandoz's generic version of Lynparza, if approved and marketed, would infringe patents listed in the FDA Orange Book with reference to Lynparza. No trial date has been scheduled.

 

Soliris

US patent proceedings

In January 2024, Alexion initiated patent infringement litigation against Samsung Bioepis Co. Ltd. in the US District Court for the District of Delaware alleging that Samsung's biosimilar eculizumab product, for which Samsung is currently seeking FDA approval, will infringe six Soliris-related patents. No trial date has been scheduled. Five of the six asserted patents are also the subject of inter partes review proceedings before the US Patent and Trademark Office.

 

Tagrisso

Patent proceedings outside the US

In Russia, in August 2023, AstraZeneca filed lawsuits in the Arbitration Court of the Moscow Region (Court) against the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation and Axelpharm LLC related to Axelpharm's improper use of AstraZeneca's information to obtain authorisation to market a generic version of Tagrisso. In December 2023, the Court dismissed the lawsuit against the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation. In January 2024, AstraZeneca filed an appeal, which is pending. The lawsuit against Axelpharm remains pending before the Court.

 

In Russia, in November 2023, Axelpharm LLC filed a compulsory licensing action against AstraZeneca in the Arbitration Court of the Moscow Region (Court) related to a patent that covers Tagrisso. The lawsuit remains pending before the Court.

 

Product liability litigation

 

Legal proceedings brought against AstraZeneca for which a provision has been taken

 

Nexium and Losec/Prilosec

US proceedings

AstraZeneca has been defending lawsuits brought in federal and state courts involving claims that plaintiffs have been diagnosed with various injuries following treatment with proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), including Nexium and Prilosec. Most of the lawsuits alleged kidney injury. In August 2017, the pending federal court cases were consolidated in a multidistrict litigation (MDL) proceeding in the US District Court for the District of New Jersey for pre-trial purposes. In addition to the MDL cases, there were cases alleging kidney injury filed in Delaware and New Jersey state courts.

 

In addition, AstraZeneca has been defending lawsuits involving allegations of gastric cancer following treatment with PPIs, including one such claim in the US District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana (Louisiana District Court).

 

In October 2023, AstraZeneca resolved all pending claims in the MDL, as well as all pending claims in Delaware and New Jersey state courts, for $425M, for which a provision has been taken. The

only remaining case is the one pending in the Louisiana District Court. The Court in that case has postponed trial, which was previously scheduled to begin in April 2024 No new trial date has been set.

 

Commercial litigation

 

Legal proceedings brought against AstraZeneca considered to be contingent liabilities

 

340B Antitrust Litigation

US proceedings

In September 2021, AstraZeneca was served with a class-action antitrust complaint filed in the US District Court for the Western District of New York (District Court) by Mosaic Health alleging a conspiracy to restrict access to 340B discounts in the diabetes market through contract pharmacies. In September 2022, the District Court granted AstraZeneca's motion to dismiss the Complaint. In February 2024, the District Court denied Plaintiffs' request to file a new amended complaint and entered an order closing the matter.

 

Caelum Trade Secrets Litigation

US proceedings

AstraZeneca has been defending a matter filed by the University of Tennessee Research Foundation in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee (District Court) related to CAEL-101. In October 2023, AstraZeneca filed a motion for summary judgment on all claims and awaits a decision by the District Court. Trial is currently scheduled for September 2024.

 

Definiens

Germany proceedings

In Germany, in July 2020, AstraZeneca received a notice of arbitration filed with the German Institution of Arbitration from the sellers of Definiens AG (Sellers) regarding the 2014 Share Purchase Agreement (SPA) between AstraZeneca and the Sellers. The Sellers claim that they are owed approximately $140m in earn-outs under the SPA. The arbitration hearing took place in March 2023 and final post-hearing written briefs were submitted in June 2023. In December 2023, the arbitration panel made a final award of $46.43m in favour of the Sellers. AstraZeneca is considering its options.

 

Legal proceedings brought against AstraZeneca which have been concluded

 

Alexion Shareholder Litigation

US proceedings

In December 2016, putative securities class action lawsuits were filed in the US District Court for the District of Connecticut (District Court) against Alexion and certain officers and directors (collectively, defendants), on behalf of purchasers of Alexion publicly traded securities during the period 30 January 2014 through 26 May 2017. The amended complaint alleged that defendants engaged in securities fraud, including by making misrepresentations and omissions in their public disclosures concerning Alexion's Soliris sales practices, management changes, and related investigations. In August 2021, the District Court issued a decision denying in part defendants' motion to dismiss the matter. The Court granted plaintiffs' motion for class certification in April 2023. In August 2023, the parties reached a settlement in principle of this matter. In September 2023, the court granted preliminary approval of the class settlement. A provision was taken in September 2023. The court granted final approval of the class settlement in December 2023, and the matter is now concluded.

 

Government investigations/proceedings

 

Legal proceedings brought against AstraZeneca considered to be contingent liabilities

 

US Congressional Inquiry

US proceedings

In January 2024, AstraZeneca received a letter from the US Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP Committee) seeking information related to AstraZeneca's inhaled Respiratory products. AstraZeneca intends to cooperate with the inquiry.

 

Legal proceedings brought against AstraZeneca which have been concluded

 

COVID-19 vaccine supply and manufacturing inquiries

Brazil proceedings

In February 2022, a Brazilian Public Prosecutor filed a lawsuit against several defendants including the Brazilian Federal Government, AstraZeneca, and other COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers. In April 2022, a Brazilian court issued an order dismissing the lawsuit. In October 2023, the pending appeal was dismissed. No further appeal was made. This matter is now concluded. 

 

Other

Additional government inquiries

As is true for most, if not all, major prescription pharmaceutical companies, AstraZeneca is currently involved in multiple inquiries into drug marketing and pricing practices. In addition to the investigations described above, various law enforcement offices have, from time to time, requested information from the Group. There have been no material developments in those matters.

 

Taxation

 

As previously disclosed in the Annual Report and Form 20-F Information 2022, AstraZeneca faces a number of audits and reviews in jurisdictions around the world and, in some cases, is in dispute with the tax authorities. The issues under discussion are often complex and can require many years to resolve. Accruals for tax contingencies require management to make key judgements and significant estimates with respect to the ultimate outcome of current and potential future tax audits, and actual results could vary from these estimates.

 

The total net accrual to cover the worldwide tax exposure for transfer pricing disputes of $401m (31 December 2022: $260m) reflected the progress in those tax audits and reviews during the year and for those audits where AstraZeneca and tax authorities are in dispute, AstraZeneca estimates the potential for reasonably possible additional liabilities above and beyond the amount provided to be up to $386m, including associated interest (31 December 2022: $245m).

 

The total net accrual to cover the worldwide tax exposure for other uncertain tax treatments of $935m (31 December 2022: $570m) reflected the an update to tax liabilities following progress of reviews by tax authorities and the administrative appeals processes, and where AstraZeneca and tax authorities are in dispute, AstraZeneca estimates the potential for reasonably possible additional liabilities above and beyond the amount provided to be up to $293m, including associated interest (31 December 2022: $209m).

 

Note 7

 

Table 27: FY 2023 - Product Sales year-on-year analysis[17]

The CER information in respect of FY 2023 included in the Consolidated Financial Information has not been audited by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

 

 

World

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

 

$m

Act % chg

CER % chg

$m

% chg

$m

Act % chg

CER % chg

$m

Act % chg

CER % chg

$m

Act % chg

CER % chg

Oncology

17,145 

17 

20 

7,719 

19 

3,828 

16 

3,332 

22 

20 

2,266 

20 

29 

Tagrisso

5,799 

2,276 

13 

1,621 

10 

1,120 

10 

782 

(8)

(1)

Imfinzi

4,237 

52 

55 

2,317 

49 

360 

25 

39 

758 

39 

36 

802 

n/m

n/m

Lynparza

2,811 

1,254 

542 

11 

21 

734 

12 

10 

281 

12 

Calquence

2,514 

22 

23 

1,815 

10 

98 

n/m 

n/m

493 

72 

69 

108 

58 

65 

Enhertu

261 

n/m

n/m

169 

n/m 

n/m

60 

n/m

n/m

32 

n/m

n/m

Orpathys

44 

34 

42 

44 

34 

42 

Truqap

n/m 

n/m 

n/m 

Zoladex

952 

14 

(4)

687 

12 

133 

(1)

118 

(4)

Faslodex

297 

(11)

(6)

31 

87 

142 

(11)

(6)

28 

(49)

(50)

96 

(7)

Others

224 

(33)

(30)

(44)

165 

(34)

(31)

(42)

(41)

47 

(28)

(23)

BioPharmaceuticals: CVRM

10,585 

15 

18 

2,752 

11 

4,586 

11 

18 

2,503 

31 

29 

744 

16 

Farxiga

5,963 

36 

39 

1,451 

35 

2,211 

33 

40 

1,881 

45 

42 

420 

21 

30 

Brilinta

1,324 

(2)

(1)

744 

285 

10 

271 

(4)

(5)

24 

(49)

(47)

Lokelma

412 

43 

46 

214 

26 

50 

n/m 

n/m

58 

94 

91 

90 

32 

42 

roxadustat

271 

38 

45 

271 

38 

45 

Andexxa

182 

21 

23 

75 

(2)

62 

50 

47 

45 

39 

50 

Crestor

1,107 

11 

55 

(16)

862 

15 

52 

26 

25 

138 

(7)

Seloken/Toprol-XL

640 

(26)

(20)

n/m

621 

(26)

(20)

11 

(18)

(17)

(23)

(19)

Onglyza

227 

(12)

(8)

49 

(36)

131 

16 

32 

(16)

(17)

15 

(30)

(28)

Bydureon

163 

(42)

(42)

133 

(45)

12 

12 

27 

(24)

(26)

-

-

Others

296 

(19)

(17)

30 

(10)

152 

(22)

(18)

109 

(15)

(15)

(52)

(49)

BioPharmaceuticals: R&I

6,107 

2,547 

(4)

1,771 

23 

31 

1,164 

10 

625 

Symbicort

2,362 

(7)

(4)

726 

(25)

753 

24 

33 

549 

(6)

(7)

334 

(11)

(7)

Fasenra

1,553 

11 

12 

992 

64 

50 

61 

355 

16 

14 

142 

Breztri

677 

70 

73 

383 

60 

161 

75 

85 

81 

n/m

n/m

52 

55 

66 

Saphnelo

280 

n/m

n/m

260 

n/m 

n/m 

n/m 

n/m

n/m

10 

n/m

n/m

Tezspire

86 

n/m

n/m

n/m 

n/m

48 

n/m

n/m

37 

n/m

n/m

Pulmicort

713 

11 

17 

28 

(58)

575 

25 

34 

68 

(1)

(2)

42 

(15)

(10)

Bevespi

58 

34 

(19)

19 

28 

17 

65 

62 

50 

14 

Daliresp/Daxas

54 

(72)

(72)

42 

(76)

(7)

(11)

(9)

(11)

(48)

(20)

Others

324 

(23)

(20)

82 

(42)

206 

(10)

(5)

30 

(29)

(30)

BioPharmaceuticals: V&I

1,012 

(79)

(78)

109 

(91)

212 

(84)

(83)

396 

(61)

(62)

295 

(76)

(74)

COVID-19 mAbs

132 

(94)

(93)

n/m

(99)

(99)

12 

(96)

(96)

114 

(72)

(68)

Vaxzevria

12 

(99)

(99)

n/m

10 

(99)

(99)

n/m

(99)

n/m

n/m

Beyfortus

106 

n/m 

n/m 

87 

n/m

19 

n/m

n/m

Synagis

546 

(6)

(2)

(1)

n/m

195 

13 

19 

175 

(18)

(18)

177 

(7)

(1)

FluMist

216 

24 

17 

23 

10 

(2)

188 

25 

17 

74 

80 

Rare Disease

7,764 

10 

12 

4,701 

623 

45 

62 

1,529 

911 

12 

Soliris

3,145 

(16)

(14)

1,734 

(20)

424 

41 

63 

670 

(17)

(18)

317 

(33)

(29)

Ultomiris

2,965 

51 

52 

1,750 

54 

71 

88 

89 

668 

39 

36 

476 

54 

65 

Strensiq

1,152 

20 

21 

937 

22 

40 

15 

22 

89 

14 

11 

86 

13 

22 

Koselugo

331 

59 

60 

195 

20 

59 

n/m

n/m

53 

n/m

n/m

24 

n/m

n/m

Kanuma

171 

85 

10 

29 

(7)

(1)

49 

12 

10 

Other medicines

1,176 

(28)

(24)

133 

(8)

731 

(7)

(1)

105 

(14)

(15)

207 

(64)

(61)

Nexium

945 

(27)

(22)

115 

(5)

578 

53 

16 

13 

199 

(64)

(61)

Others

231 

(32)

(30)

18 

(22)

153 

(31)

(28)

52 

(33)

(32)

(58)

(55)

Total Product Sales

43,789 

17,961 

11,751 

9,029 

5,048 

(14)

(8)

 

Table 28: Q4 2023 - Product Sales year-on-year analysis[18]

The Q4 2023 information in respect of the three months ended 31 December 2023 included in the Consolidated Financial Information has not been audited by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

 

 

World

US

Emerging Markets

Europe

Established RoW

 

$m

Act % chg

CER % chg

$m

% chg

$m

Act % chg

CER % chg

$m

Act % chg

CER % chg

$m

Act % chg

CER % chg

Oncology

4,453 

19 

19 

2,067 

16 

904 

11 

18 

903 

31 

22 

579 

28 

32 

Tagrisso

1,419 

597 

12 

360 

299 

22 

14 

163 

(21)

(18)

Imfinzi

1,135 

51 

52 

609 

35 

90 

42 

64 

211 

49 

38 

225 

n/m

n/m

Lynparza

741 

352 

133 

13 

191 

18 

10 

65 

(1)

Calquence

675 

15 

14 

478 

29 

76 

n/m

140 

63 

52 

28 

41 

42 

Enhertu

83 

n/m

n/m

48 

n/m

n/m

20 

n/m

n/m

15 

n/m

n/m

Orpathys

11 

n/m

n/m

11 

n/m

n/m

Truqap

n/m

n/m

n/m 

Zoladex

254 

20 

23 

(40)

167 

12 

16 

35 

(2)

50 

n/m

n/m

Faslodex

79 

22 

n/m 

28 

(26)

(24)

(44)

(49)

23 

(3)

Others

50 

(22)

(19)

(66)

38 

(16)

(14)

(46)

(42)

10 

(28)

(26)

BioPharmaceuticals: CVRM

2,698 

18 

18 

780 

12 

1,078 

15 

19 

679 

38 

28 

161 

Farxiga

1,606 

36 

35 

451 

39 

559 

27 

31 

525 

54 

43 

71 

Brilinta

329 

(5)

(4)

194 

(6)

61 

(5)

68 

(6)

(26)

(27)

Lokelma

112 

38 

38 

58 

21 

13 

n/m

n/m

17 

85 

73 

24 

31 

37 

roxadustat

63 

28 

28 

63 

28 

28 

Andexxa

53 

35 

34 

18 

24 

18 

45 

36 

17 

37 

43 

Crestor

247 

10 

12 

15 

(3)

184 

13 

15 

11 

(5)

(10)

37 

13 

Seloken/Toprol-XL

144 

(8)

(3)

139 

(8)

(2)

(17)

(15)

(34)

(35)

Onglyza

47 

(9)

(7)

(71)

31 

40 

48 

(11)

(17)

(32)

(32)

Bydureon

39 

(46)

(47)

32 

(51)

(1)

(7)

Others

58 

(30)

(31)

28 

(33)

(33)

22 

(31)

(32)

(53)

(51)

BioPharmaceuticals: R&I

1,590 

10 

10 

647 

(6)

456 

34 

41 

317 

22 

14 

170 

10 

12 

Symbicort

520 

(16)

(16)

137 

(46)

153 

15 

21 

142 

(4)

88 

(7)

(6)

Fasenra

420 

10 

275 

16 

22 

43 

93 

22 

14 

36 

Breztri

199 

72 

72 

120 

60 

38 

80 

79 

26 

n/m

n/m

15 

78 

89 

Saphnelo

89 

86 

86 

82 

80 

n/m

n/m

n/m

n/m 

Tezspire

35 

n/m

n/m

n/m

n/m

20 

n/m

n/m

14 

n/m

n/m 

Pulmicort

219 

32 

40 

(54)

183 

50 

61 

19 

(1)

(9)

12 

(3)

(1)

Bevespi

15 

(9)

10 

12 

54 

44 

Daliresp/Daxas

13 

(56)

(55)

10 

(60)

49 

(13)

(12)

(18)

Others

80 

13 

14 

(26)

62 

25 

26 

(5)

(11)

17 

18 

BioPharmaceuticals: V&I

345 

(69)

(70)

59 

(74)

31 

(90)

(90)

195 

(42)

(45)

60 

(76)

(75)

COVID-19 mAbs

(99)

(99)

n/m

n/m

n/m

(95)

(95)

n/m 

n/m 

Vaxzevria

(17)

n/m

n/m

(8)

n/m

n/m

(9)

n/m

n/m

Beyfortus

54 

n/m

n/m

52 

n/m

n/m

n/m

Synagis

164 

(16)

(16)

(36)

37 

29 

37 

67 

(26)

(31)

60 

(21)

(19)

FluMist

138 

20 

11 

(27)

31 

17 

130 

24 

15 

Rare Disease

1,971 

1,232 

136 

18 

46 

364 

(3)

239 

18 

22 

Soliris

715 

(15)

(13)

421 

(14)

86 

36 

140 

(22)

(28)

68 

(25)

(24)

Ultomiris

825 

39 

38 

490 

34 

24 

n/m

n/m

173 

29 

19 

138 

52 

58 

Strensiq

305 

12 

13 

247 

10 

11 

17 

40 

25 

30 

22 

22 

17 

22 

Koselugo

85 

46 

48 

51 

10 

n/m

n/m

15 

n/m

n/m

n/m

n/m

Kanuma

41 

(17)

(14)

23 

(68)

(58)

11 

(1)

Other medicines

266 

(30)

(28)

29 

(9)

151 

(16)

(13)

38 

36 

34 

48 

(66)

(65)

Nexium

209 

(30)

(28)

26 

120 

(9)

(4)

17 

91 

76 

46 

(65)

(65)

Others

57 

(28)

(27)

(48)

31 

(37)

(36)

21 

11 

14 

(69)

(68)

Total Product Sales

11,323 

4,814 

2,756 

2,496 

16 

1,257 

(7)

(4)

 

Table 29: Alliance Revenue

 

FY 2023

FY 2022

$m

$m

Enhertu

1,022 

523 

Tezspire

259 

79 

Beyfortus

57 

Vaxzevria: royalties

76 

Other royalty income

81 

68 

Other Alliance Revenue

Total

1,428 

755 

 

Table 30: Collaboration Revenue

 

FY 2023

FY 2022

$m

$m

Lynparza: regulatory milestones

245 

355 

COVID-19 mAbs: licence fees

180 

Farxiga: sales milestones

29 

tralokinumab: sales milestones

20 

110 

Beyfortus: regulatory milestones

71 

25 

Beyfortus: sales milestone

27 

Nexium: sale of rights

62 

Other Collaboration Revenue

22 

46 

Total

594 

598 

 

 

Table 31: Other operating income and expense

 

FY 2023

FY 2022

$m

$m

brazikumab licence termination funding

75 

138 

Divestment of rights to Plendil

61 

Divestment of US rights to Pulmicort Flexhaler

241 

Update to the contractual relationships for Beyfortus (nirsevimab)

712 

Waltham site gain on sale and leaseback

125 

Other

312 

190 

Total

1,340 

514 

 

Other shareholder information

 

Financial calendar

 

Announcement of first quarter 2024 results: 25 April 2024

Announcement of first half and second quarter 2024 results: 25 July 2024

Announcement of nine months and third quarter 2024 results: 12 November 2024

 

Dividends are normally paid as follows:

First interim: announced with the half year results and paid in September

Second interim: announced with full year results and paid in March

 

Provisional dates for the 2023 second interim dividend: ex-dividend 22 February 2024, record date 23 February 2024, payable on 25 March 2024.

 

Contacts

 

For details on how to contact the Investor Relations Team, please click here. For Media contacts, click here.

 

Addresses for correspondence

 

 

 

 

Registered office

Registrar and transfer office

Swedish Central Securities Depository

US depositary

Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas

1 Francis Crick Avenue

Cambridge Biomedical Campus

Cambridge

CB2 0AA

Equiniti Limited

Aspect House

Spencer Road

Lancing

West Sussex

BN99 6DA

Euroclear Sweden AB PO Box 191

SE-101 23 Stockholm

American Stock Transfer

6201 15th Avenue

Brooklyn

NY 11219

 

United Kingdom

United Kingdom

Sweden

United States

+44 (0) 20 3749 5000

0800 389 1580

+46 (0) 8 402 9000

+1 (888) 697 8018

+44 (0) 121 415 7033

+1 (718) 921 8137

db@astfinancial.com

 

 

Trademarks

 

Trademarks of the AstraZeneca group of companies appear throughout this document in italics. Medical publications also appear throughout the document in italics. AstraZeneca, the AstraZeneca logotype and the AstraZeneca symbol are all trademarks of the AstraZeneca group of companies. Trademarks of companies other than AstraZeneca that appear in this document include: FasT CAR owned by Gracell Biotechnology, Co., Ltd.; Plendil owned by AstraZeneca or Glenwood GmbH (depending on geography); Beyfortus, a trademark of Sanofi Pasteur Inc.; Enhertu, a trademark of Daiichi Sankyo; Seloken, owned by AstraZeneca or Taiyo Pharma Co., Ltd (depending on geography); Synagis, owned by AstraZeneca or Sobi aka Swedish Orphan Biovitrum AB (publ). (depending on geography); and Tezspire, a trademark of Amgen, Inc.

 

Information on or accessible through AstraZeneca's websites, including astrazeneca.com, does not form part of and is not incorporated into this announcement.

 

AstraZeneca

 

AstraZeneca (LSE/STO/Nasdaq: AZN) is a global, science-led biopharmaceutical company that focuses on the discovery, development, and commercialisation of prescription medicines in Oncology, Rare Disease, and BioPharmaceuticals, including Cardiovascular, Renal & Metabolism, and Respiratory & Immunology. Based in Cambridge, UK, AstraZeneca operates in over 100 countries and its innovative medicines are used by millions of patients worldwide. Please visit astrazeneca.com and follow the Company on Social Media @AstraZeneca.

 

Cautionary statements regarding forward-looking statements

 

In order, among other things, to utilise the 'safe harbour' provisions of the US Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, AstraZeneca (hereafter 'the Group') provides the following cautionary statement:

 

This document contains certain forward-looking statements with respect to the operations, performance and financial condition of the Group, including, among other things, statements about expected revenues, margins, earnings per share or other financial or other measures. Although the Group believes its expectations are based on reasonable assumptions, any forward-looking statements, by their very nature, involve risks and uncertainties and may be influenced by factors that could cause actual outcomes and results to be materially different from those predicted. The forward-looking statements reflect knowledge and information available at the date of preparation of this document and the Group undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements. The Group identifies the forward-looking statements by using the words 'anticipates', 'believes', 'expects', 'intends' and similar expressions in such statements. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in forward-looking statements, certain of which are beyond the Group's control, include, among other things:

 

? the ability of the Group and Icosavax to complete the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement with Icosavax, including the parties' ability to satisfy the conditions to the consummation of the tender offer contemplated thereby and the other conditions set forth in the merger agreement with Icosavax;

? the ability of the Group and Gracell to complete the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement with Gracell, including the parties' ability to satisfy the conditions set forth in the merger agreement with Gracell;

? the Group's statements about the expected timetable for completing the acquisitions of Icosavax and Gracell;

? The Group's and Icosavax's beliefs and expectations and statements about the benefits sought to be achieved in the Group's pending acquisition of Icosavax;

? the Group's and Gracell's beliefs and expectations and statements about the benefits sought to be achieved in the Group's proposed acquisition of Gracell;

? the potential effects of the acquisition of Icosavax on both the Group and Icosavax and of the acquisition of Gracell on both the Group and Gracell;

? the possibility of any termination of the merger agreement with Icosavax or of the merger agreement with Gracell;

? the expected benefits and success of IVX-A12 and any combination product or GC012F and any combination product;

? the possibility that any milestone related to any contingent value right will not be achieved;

? the risk of failure or delay in delivery of pipeline or launch of new medicines

? the risk of failure to meet regulatory or ethical requirements for medicine development or approval

? the risk of failures or delays in the quality or execution of the Group's commercial strategies

? the risk of pricing, affordability, access and competitive pressures

? the risk of failure to maintain supply of compliant, quality medicines

? the risk of illegal trade in the Group's medicines

? the impact of reliance on third-party goods and services

? the risk of failure in information technology or cybersecurity

? the risk of failure of critical processes

? the risk of failure to collect and manage data in line with legal and regulatory requirements and strategic objectives

? the risk of failure to attract, develop, engage and retain a diverse, talented and capable workforce

? the risk of failure to meet regulatory or ethical expectations on environmental impact, including climate change

? the risk of the safety and efficacy of marketed medicines being questioned

? the risk of adverse outcome of litigation and/or governmental investigations

? intellectual property-related risks to the Group's products

? the risk of failure to achieve strategic plans or meet targets or expectations

? the risk of failure in financial control or the occurrence of fraud

? the risk of unexpected deterioration in the Group's financial position

? the impact that global and/or geopolitical events may have or continue to have on these risks, on the Group's ability to continue to mitigate these risks, and on the Group's operations, financial results or financial condition

 

Nothing in this document, or any related presentation/webcast, should be construed as a profit forecast. There can be no guarantees that the conditions to the closing of the proposed transaction with Icosavax will be satisfied on the expected timetable or at all or that IVX-A12 or any further vaccines using the VLP technology will receive the necessary regulatory approvals or prove to be commercially successful if approved. There can be no guarantees that the conditions to the closing of the proposed transaction with Gracell will be satisfied on the expected timetable or at all or that GC012F will receive the necessary regulatory approvals or prove to be commercially successful if approved.

 

Glossary

 

 

1L, 2L, etc First line, second line, etc

ADC Antibody drug conjugate

aHUS Atypical haemolytic uraemic syndrome

AKT Protein kinase B

AL amyloidosis Light chain amyloidosis

ANDA Abbreviated New Drug Application (US)

ASO Antisense oligonucleotide

ATTR-CM Transthyretin-mediated amyloid cardiomyopathy

ATTRv / -PN / -CM Hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloid / polyneuropathy / cardiomyopathy

BCMA B-cell maturation antigen

BRCA / m Breast cancer gene / mutation

BTC Biliary tract cancer

BTK Bruton tyrosine kinase

C5 Complement component 5

CAR-T Chimeric antigen receptor T-cell

CD19 A gene expressed in B-cells

CER Constant exchange rates

CHMP Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (EU)

CI Confidence interval

CKD Chronic kidney disease

CLL Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia

COPD Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

COP28 28th annual United Nations (UN) climate meeting

CRC Colorectal cancer

CRL Compete Response Letter

CRPC Castration-resistant prostate cancer

CSPC Castration-sensitive prostate cancer

CTLA-4 Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4

CVRM Cardiovascular, Renal and Metabolism

DDR DNA damage response

DNA Deoxyribonucleic acid

EBITDA Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation

EGFR m Epidermal growth factor receptor / mutation

EGPA Eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis

EPS Earnings per share

ERBB2 v-erb-b2 avian erythroblastic leukaemia viral oncogene homologue 2

FDA Food and Drug Agency (US)

FDC Fixed dose combination

g Germline, e.g. gBRCAm

GAAP Generally Accepted Accounting Principles

GEJ Gastro oesophageal junction

GI Gastrointestinal

GLP1 / -RA Glucagon-like peptide-1 / receptor agonist

gMG Generalised myasthenia gravis

HCC Hepatocellular carcinoma

HER2 / +/- / low / m Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 / positive / negative / low level expression / mutant

HF/ pEF / rEF Heart failure / with preserved ejection fraction / with reduced ejection fraction

hMPV Human metapneumovirus

HR / + / - Hormone receptor / positive / negative

HRD Homologous recombination deficiency

HRRm Homologous recombination repair gene mutation

i.m. Intramuscular injection

i.v. Intravenous injection

IAS / B International AccountingStandards / Board

ICS Inhaled corticosteroid

IFRS International Financial Reporting Standards

IgAN Immunoglobulin A neuropathy

IHC Immunohistochemistry

IL-5, IL-33, etc Interleukin-5, Interleukin-33, etc

IP Intellectual Property

IVIg Intravenous immune globulin

LABA Long-acting beta-agonist

LAMA Long-acting muscarinic-agonist

LRTD Lower respiratory tract disease

m Metastatic, e.g. mBTC , mCRPC, mCSPC

mAb Monoclonal antibody

MDL multidistrict litigation

MET Mesenchymal epithelial transition

NF1-PN Neurofibromatosis type 1 with plexiform neurofibromas

NMOSD Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder

NRDL National reimbursement drug list

NSCLC Non-small cell lung cancer

OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

OOI Other operating income

ORR Overall response rate

OS Overall survival

PARP / -1sel Poly ADP ribose polymerase /-1 selective

pCR Pathologic complete response

PCSK9 Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9

PD Progressive disease

PD-1 Programmed cell death protein 1

PD-L1 Programmed cell death ligand 1

PDUFA Prescription Drug User Fee Act

PHSSR Partnership for Health System Sustainability and Resilience

PFS Progression free survival

PIK3CA Phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase, catalytic subunit alpha

PMDI Pressure metered dose inhaler

PNH / -EVH Paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria / with extravascular haemolysis

PPI Proton pump inhibitors

PSR Platinum sensitive relapse

PTEN Phosphatase and tensin homologue

Q3W, Q4W, etc Every three weeks, every four weeks, etc

R&D Research and development

R&I Respiratory & Immunology

RSV Respiratory syncytial virus

sBLA Supplemental biologics license application (US)

SCLC Small cell lung cancer

s.c. Subcutaneous injection

SEA Severe eosinophilic asthma

SEC Securities Exchange Commission (US)

SG&A Sales, general and administration

SGLT2 Sodium-glucose cotransporter 2

SLL Small lymphocytic lymphoma

SMI Sustainable Markets Initiative

SPA Share Purchase Agreement

T2D Type-2 diabetes

TACE Transarterial chemoembolization

TNBC Triple negative breast cancer

TNF Tumour necrosis factor

TOP1 Topoisomerase I

TROP2 Trophoblast cell surface antigen 2

USPTO US Patent and Trademark Office

V&I Vaccines & Immune Therapies

VBP Volume-based procurement

VLP Virus like particle

 

 

- End of document -


[1] Constant exchange rates. The differences between Actual Change and CER Change are due to foreign exchange movements between periods in 2023 vs. 2022. CER financial measures are not accounted for according to generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) because they remove the effects of currency movements from Reported results.

[2] Effective 1 January 2023, the Group has updated the presentation of Total Revenue. For further details of the presentation of Alliance Revenue and Collaboration Revenue, see the Basis of preparation and accounting policies section of the Notes to the Condensed consolidated financial statements section.

[3] Core financial measures are adjusted to exclude certain items. The differences between Reported and Core measures are primarily due to costs relating to the acquisition of Alexion, amortisation of intangibles, impairments, legal settlements and restructuring charges. A full reconciliation between Reported EPS and Core EPS is provided in Table 13 and Table 14 in the Financial performance section of this document.

[4] The COVID-19 medicines are Vaxzevria, Evusheld, and sipavibart (AZD3152) - the COVID-19 antibody currently in development.

[5] The calculation of Reported and Core Product Sales Gross Margin (formerly termed as Gross Margin) excludes the impact of Alliance Revenue and Collaboration Revenue.

[6] In Table 2, the plus and minus symbols denote the directional impact of the item being discussed, e.g. a '+' symbol next to an R&D expense comment indicates that the item increased the R&D expense relative to the prior year.

[7] Income from disposals of assets and businesses, where the Group does not retain a significant ongoing economic interest, continue to be recorded in Other operating income and expense in the Company's financial statements.

[8] Partnered with BridgeBio Pharma Inc (BridgeBio) - AstraZeneca has rights to commercialise acamoridis in Japan

[9] Product Sales shown in the Imfinzi line include Product Sales from Imjudo

[10] 'New-to-brand' share represents a medicine's share in the dynamic market.

[11] Other adjustments include fair value adjustments and discount unwind, relating to contingent consideration on business combinations, Other payables arising from intangibles asset acquisitions, other acquisition-related liabilities (see Note 4) and provision movements related to certain legal matters. These legal matters include a $510m charge to provisions relating to a legal settlement with BMS and Ono and a $425m charge to provisions relating to a multidistrict litigation proceeding legal settlement in FY 2023 (see Note 6).

[12] Based on best prevailing assumptions around currency profiles.

[13] Based on average daily spot rates 1 Jan 2023 to 31 Dec 2023.

[14] Based on average daily spot rates 1 Jan 2024 to 31 Jan 2024.

[15] Other currencies include AUD, BRL, CAD, KRW and RUB.

[16] Effective 1 January 2023, the Group updated the presentation of Total Revenue. See Note 1 for further details of the presentation of Alliance Revenue.

[17] The table provides an analysis of year-on-year Product Sales, with Actual and CER growth rates reflecting year-on-year growth. Due to rounding, the sum of a number of dollar values and percentages may not agree to totals.

[18] The table provides an analysis of year-on-year Product Sales, with Actual and CER growth rates reflecting year-on-year growth. Due to rounding, the sum of a number of dollar values and percentages may not agree to totals.

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