Health and Healthcare

What to Expect When Gilead Reports

Wikimedia Commons

Gilead Sciences Inc. (NASDAQ: GILD) is scheduled to release its second-quarter financial results after the markets close on Wednesday. The Thomson Reuters consensus estimates of $1.56 in earnings per share and $5.21 billion in revenue compare with the $2.56 in per share and $7.14 billion posted in the same period of last year.

Gilead was supposed to be coming back as a company on the heels of its first major acquisition in years. Unfortunately for the company and its shareholders, the reaction from the last earnings report was no help at all.

Following its last earnings report, a couple of analysts gave their thoughts on the biotech giant.

Merrill Lynch maintained its Neutral rating but lowered its price objective to $78 from $87. The firm noted that HCV sales were hurt by competition from AbbVie, while HIV drug sales were negatively affected by an inventory drawdown. Yescarta was said to be the silver lining, with first-quarter sales of $40 million more than doubling expectations, but this is a tiny drop in the bucket for a company that will have $20 billion or so in revenues.

Credit Suisse maintained its Neutral rating and $80 price target. The firm noted that Gilead missed revenue expectations, as HIV inventory had an impact on results, at the same time it reaffirmed its product sales guidance. Credit Suisse believes investors are skeptical of that guidance, and it lowered its HIV and HBV revenue estimates by about a billion to $14 billion in 2018. Still, the firm feels that Gilead’s strong cash position allows the company significant flexibility to grow its revenues in the near term.

However, since Gilead’s first-quarter fumble, the stock has seen a solid gain. Its shares are up about 8% year to date, and they are up about 9% in the past month alone. Over the past 52 weeks, the stock is up only 4%.

Shares of Gilead were last seen trading at $78.19, with a consensus analyst price target of $86.17 and a 52-week range of $64.27 to $89.54.

Travel Cards Are Getting Too Good To Ignore

Credit card companies are pulling out all the stops, with the issuers are offering insane travel rewards and perks.

We’re talking huge sign-up bonuses, points on every purchase, and benefits like lounge access, travel credits, and free hotel nights. For travelers, these rewards can add up to thousands of dollars in flights, upgrades, and luxury experiences every year.

It’s like getting paid to travel — and it’s available to qualified borrowers who know where to look.

We’ve rounded up some of the best travel credit cards on the market. Click here to see the list. Don’t miss these offers — they won’t be this good forever.

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.

AI Portfolio

Discover Our Top AI Stocks

Our expert who first called NVIDIA in 2009 is predicting 2025 will see a historic AI breakthrough.

You can follow him investing $500,000 of his own money on our top AI stocks for free.