Today: 13 May 2026
Pfizer Earnings Beat Wall Street, But The Patent Cliff Is Still The Story

Pfizer Earnings Beat Wall Street, But The Patent Cliff Is Still The Story

New York, May 5, 2026, 07:11 EDT

Pfizer turned in a first-quarter profit that beat forecasts on Tuesday, thanks in large part to solid demand for established drugs like the blood thinner Eliquis and cancer therapy Padcev, cushioning the impact of another steep fall in sales of its COVID offerings. Adjusted earnings landed at 75 cents per share, with revenue reaching $14.45 billion—both topping Wall Street’s consensus for 72 cents per share and $13.79 billion in revenue, according to Reuters.

This beat is key for Pfizer, which is still working to prove it can deliver growth now that the pandemic surge has passed. Stripping out Comirnaty and Paxlovid, revenue was up 7% operationally—excluding currency effects—according to the company. Revenue from launched and acquired products jumped 22%.

The company reiterated its 2026 outlook, sticking to revenue between $59.5 billion and $62.5 billion, with adjusted earnings projected at $2.80 to $3.00 per share. This guidance is at the heart of the Pfizer stock narrative right now: investors are after cash returns, but they’re also looking for signs that the drugmaker has a plan to tackle looming patent expirations on key products.

Pfizer reported Padcev sales jumping 39% on the back of stronger bladder-cancer demand, while Eliquis notched an 8% gain. Oncology biosimilars, the cheaper alternatives to branded biologics, surged 52%. Nurtec ODT/Vydura, the company’s migraine drug, advanced 41%.

COVID pressure lingered. Comirnaty revenue tumbled 59% on an operational basis, with the slide blamed on reduced international shipments and softer U.S. uptake following stricter vaccine guidance. Paxlovid revenue slumped 63% as both infections and government buying waned, according to the company.

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla described the quarter as a “strong start,” citing gains in both oncology and obesity. CFO David Denton added that the numbers showed “solid commercial performance globally” and highlighted operational efficiency, calling out contributions from both launched and acquired products. Business Wire

Pfizer’s R&D bill climbed 12% in the first quarter, fueled mostly by oncology and obesity drugs in the works. The company says its late-stage pipeline is still lined up to launch around 20 major pivotal studies in 2026.

There’s a catch: some of the same drugs boosting this quarter are also turning into liabilities. Pfizer is staring down patent cliffs for big sellers like Eliquis and the cancer drug Ibrance. Its 2026 forecast already bakes in roughly $1.5 billion in lost revenue from generic and biosimilar challengers, based on figures from Reuters and company filings.

Eliquis didn’t just lift Pfizer. Bristol Myers Squibb, which co-markets the blood thinner with Pfizer, also topped profit forecasts last week. The company reported Eliquis sales up 16% to $4.14 billion—a reminder that both drugmakers still lean hard on established blockbusters, even as they try to ramp up newer drugs.

Pfizer stock hovered around $26.30 in early premarket moves, hardly budging. Benzinga, previewing earnings, pegged the annual dividend yield at 6.53%. Citigroup’s Geoff Meacham, according to the note, stuck with his Neutral call but nudged the price target up—now $27, previously $26.

Pfizer’s quarter offers a bit of breathing space, but it’s far from a full reset. Sales topped expectations and guidance remains intact. Some of the newer oncology assets are seeing traction. Still, the challenge is clear: pipeline investment has to deliver products hefty enough to offset shrinking COVID revenues and the losses looming from lower-priced generics.

Stock Market Today

  • NetApp (NTAP) Valuation: Undervalued Despite Recent Share Price Gains
    May 13, 2026, 2:35 PM EDT. NetApp's (NTAP) stock has gained 21.2% over the past month and 19.0% over the last year, driven by demand in data storage, cloud infrastructure, and AI. Yet, a Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis by Simply Wall St shows the stock is undervalued by approximately 35%, with an intrinsic value estimated at $179.04 versus the current price near $116. Recent Free Cash Flow projections indicate growth to $2.56 billion by 2035. The 5/6 valuation score signals more insights are needed, highlighting that despite recent gains, NetApp may still present value opportunities for investors focused on cash flow fundamentals.

Latest articles

Palantir Stock Slides as Zelenskiy Meeting Puts War-AI Bet in Focus

Palantir Stock Slides as Zelenskiy Meeting Puts War-AI Bet in Focus

13 May 2026
Palantir shares fell 4.4% to $129.97 Wednesday as CEO Alex Karp met President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Kyiv to discuss expanding AI use in Ukraine’s war effort. Kyiv’s Brave1 Dataroom project, launched with Palantir, is training AI models to intercept Russian drones. Russia fired at least 800 drones at Ukraine on Wednesday, killing six. Palantir’s U.S. government and commercial revenue surged in the first quarter.
Why Grab Holdings Stock Is Back Under Pressure After a Big Q1 Beat

Why Grab Holdings Stock Is Back Under Pressure After a Big Q1 Beat

13 May 2026
Grab shares fell 1.1% to $3.60 in New York after first-quarter revenue beat estimates, rising 24% to $955 million. Profit jumped to $120 million from $10 million a year earlier. Investors weighed strong results against Indonesia’s new 8% ride-hailing commission cap. Grab kept its 2026 revenue and adjusted EBITDA outlook unchanged.
SoFi Bought a Key IPO Access Tool. The Stock Is Still Telling a More Cautious Story

SoFi Bought a Key IPO Access Tool. The Stock Is Still Telling a More Cautious Story

13 May 2026
SoFi acquired PrimaryBid’s technology to expand IPO access for retail investors, confirmed by both companies. SoFi shares fell 2.9% to $15.44 after Truist cut its price target, citing concerns over loan and technology platforms. The acquisition follows a drop in technology-platform accounts and comes as SoFi reported strong first-quarter revenue and member growth. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Popular

Ouster Stock Jumps as NVIDIA Tie-Up Tests the Line Between Real Demand and Rich Valuation

Ouster Stock Jumps as NVIDIA Tie-Up Tests the Line Between Real Demand and Rich Valuation

13 May 2026
Ouster shares rose 6.1% to $28.75 in early premarket trading after its Rev8 lidar sensors qualified for NVIDIA’s DRIVE Hyperion autonomous-vehicle platform. The company reported first-quarter revenue of $49 million and a net loss of $17.5 million. Investors cited the NVIDIA qualification as a potential new channel, though no purchase order was announced.
US Stock Market Today: Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Futures Rise as Oil Pullback Gives Wall Street a Narrow Opening
Previous Story

US Stock Market Today: Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Futures Rise as Oil Pullback Gives Wall Street a Narrow Opening

CRWV Stock Jumps Before Earnings: Why Meta’s $21 Billion AI Deal Has Wall Street Watching
Next Story

CRWV Stock Jumps Before Earnings: Why Meta’s $21 Billion AI Deal Has Wall Street Watching

Go toTop