AbbVie Inc.’s stock fell 0.5% early Monday, after the biotech lowered its first-quarter guidance to reflect the dilutive impact of its closure of the acquisition of ImmunoGen.
AbbVie ABBV, -0.41% said it now expects first-quarter per-share earnings to range from $ 2.26 to $ 2.30, down from prior guidance of $ 2.30 to $ 2.34, including a 4 cent per share dilutive impact from the Immunogen deal.
AbbVie announced the $ 10.1 billion all-cash deal for Immunogen in November, that includes ImmunoGen’s antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) Elahere, which has been approved as a treatment for ovarian cancer.
Elahere is the first and only ADC to get regulatory approval for ovarian cancer. About 19,680 women in the U.S. will receive a new diagnosis of ovarian cancer this year, according to estimates from the American Cancer Society.
“ImmunoGen’s follow-on pipeline of ADCs further builds on AbbVie’s existing solid tumor pipeline of novel targeted therapies and next-generation immuno-oncology assets, which have the potential to create new treatment possibilities across multiple solid tumors and hematologic malignancies,” AbbVie said in a statement.
The company reaffirmed that it expects full-year adjusted EPS of $ 11.05 to $ 11.25, which includes a 42 cent per share dilutive impact from the ImmunoGen deal and the pending close of Cerevel Therapeutics Holdings Inc. CERE, +1.66%.
AbbVie announced its plan to buy Cerevel in December for $ 8.7 billion, saying that Cerevel’s “robust” neuroscience pipeline adds medications that may transform standards of care in psychiatric and neurological illnesses.
AbbVie’s stock has gained 14.5% in the last 12 months, while the S&P 500 SPX, +0.57% has gained 23%.