01/21 09:50 Monsanto Reports 1998 Fourth-Quarter and Full-Year Results Monsanto Reports 1998 Fourth-Quarter and Full-Year Results ST. LOUIS, Jan. 21 /PRNewswire/ -- Monsanto Company (NYSE: MTC) reported an aftertax loss from continuing operations for the fourth quarter of 1998 of $603 million, or a loss of $1.00 per share on both a basic and diluted basis.
Sales during the period were $2.1 billion. For the year, the company recorded an aftertax loss from continuing operations of $250 million, or a loss of 41 cents per share on both a basic and diluted basis. Sales reached $8.6 billion.
Both the fourth quarter and the year were affected by charges for restructuring, acquired in-process research and development (R&D) and other unusual items. If these items were excluded for the fourth quarter, aftertax income from continuing operations would have been $27 million, or 5 cents per share on a diluted basis. For the full year, if unusual items were excluded, aftertax income from continuing operations would have been $580 million, or 93 cents per share on a diluted basis. Based on an EBIT measure (earnings before interest expense and taxes), the company recorded a fourth-quarter loss of $748 million, which included restructuring, in-process R&D and other charges of $858 million. If the unusual items were excluded, fourth-quarter EBIT would have been $110 million.
For the full year, EBIT was $69 million, which included restructuring, in-process R&D and other charges of $1.1 billion. EBITDA (earnings before interest expense, taxes, depreciation and amortization, and excluding unusual items) was $320 million for the last quarter of 1998 and $1.8 billion for the full year. EBITDA is a cash-based measure of operating profitability.
"We completed several of the critical steps in our life sciences strategy in 1998 and put in place the platforms that will accelerate the commercialization and growth of our new products," said Robert B. Shapiro, Monsanto chairman and chief executive officer. "Our efforts in 1999 will be centered on continuing to grow strong base businesses like Roundup herbicide, integrating our newly acquired seed companies, commercializing new products like Celebrex arthritis treatment, and accelerating the development of our product pipeline."
In comparison, aftertax income from continuing operations in 1997 was $5 million, or 1 cent per share on a diluted basis, on sales of $1.8 billion for the quarter, and $294 million, or 48 cents per share on a diluted basis, on sales of $7.5 billion for the year. If unusual items in 1997 were excluded, aftertax income from continuing operations would have been $55 million, or 9 cents per share on a diluted basis, for the fourth quarter, and $749 million, or $1.23 per share on a diluted basis, for the full year. In 1997, EBIT was $56 million for the fourth quarter, which included $75 million of in-process R&D charges, and $536 million for the 12-month period, which included charges of $684 million for in-process R&D. (EBITDA for 1997 was $269 million for the fourth quarter and $1.7 billion for the year.)
In the fourth quarter of 1998, Monsanto reported pretax restructuring and special charges of $625 million. These charges primarily will cover the costs necessary to eliminate roughly 1,700 jobs in 1999, to write down assets being sold, and to dispose of nonstrategic assets and product lines. These initiatives are expected to generate annual pretax savings of approximately $160 million. The expenses associated with these charges are expected to be fully offset by cost savings within 20 months. Additional cost-saving actions are being considered that may require future charges. Fourth-quarter 1998 results also included net pretax charges of $233 million, primarily for in- process R&D write-offs associated with the purchase of DEKALB Genetics Corporation, Plant Breeding International Cambridge Limited, and the international seed operations of Cargill Inc. In 1998, the company invested $2.1 billion pretax for growth spending, which included costs associated with research and technology, major product developments, new product launches and other growth initiatives. This is a 52 percent increase from growth spending in 1997. These growth investments reduced year-to-year EBIT by approximately $720 million.
Unlike the EBIT measure for the company, the EBIT measure for Monsanto's specific business segments excludes unusual items, thereby more closely approximating the cash-generating ability of each business. Based on EBIT, the agricultural segment had a loss of $79 million for the quarter and earnings of $737 million for the year, roughly flat with the returns in the comparable periods in 1997. Technology, selling, administration and amortization costs negatively affected year-to-year EBIT, primarily because of the inclusion of recently acquired seed companies in the segment's results. (EBITDA for the agricultural segment was $35 million for the quarter and $1.1 billion for 1998. This compares with a loss of $11 million and earnings of $939 million, respectively, in 1997.) For the year, worldwide volumes for Roundup herbicide increased more than 25 percent compared with volumes last year. The overall number of acres planted with crops enhanced by Monsanto's biotechnology traits tripled, and new products were launched for corn and potatoes in the United States and cotton in China. Searle, Monsanto's pharmaceutical segment, had EBIT of $179 million for the fourth quarter and $309 million for the year, increases of 14 percent and 8 percent, respectively, from results for the quarter and year in 1997. (On a year-to-year comparison, Searle's EBITDA was $451 million in 1998 vs. $422 million in 1997. In the fourth quarter, EBITDA improved to $222 million in 1998, compared with $197 million in the previous year.) Sales reached a record for the year, fueled by sales of more than $300 million for both Daypro and Arthrotec arthritis treatments and of more than $400 million for Ambien short-term treatment for insomnia. Searle became the No. 1 provider of branded arthritis treatments in 1998 and will add Celebrex to its arthritis portfolio in 1999. Results for Searle for the fourth quarter included approximately $200 million from partnering and product-rights agreements. For the full year, Searle's EBIT and EBITDA also benefited from roughly $250 million higher partnering and product-rights payments when compared with 1997 payments.
Celebrex, the first drug of its kind approved for relief of the signs and symptoms of osteoarthritis and adult rheumatoid arthritis, was approved in the United States on Dec. 31, 1998, and in Brazil on Jan. 15, 1999. Shipments of Celebrex to chain and independent pharmacies in the United States also began this week.
Searle continues to focus its research efforts on compounds in three key therapeutic areas: arthritis/pain and inflammation, oncology and cardiovascular disease. Six of the company's pipeline candidates are currently in advanced stage (Phase III) clinical trials. These investigational drugs include: valdecoxib, a second-generation COX-2 inhibitor being evaluated for enhanced inflammation and pain efficacy; parecoxib, a COX-2 inhibitor for post-surgery pain management; and celecoxib, a COX-2 inhibitor designed to reduce polyps that may be precursors to certain malignant tumors. Other investigational drugs being evaluated in Phase III trials are: eplerenone, a cardiovascular candidate for the treatment of hypertension and congestive heart failure; leridistim, a blood cell growth factor designed to help prevent infections in cancer patients after chemotherapy; and hormone replacement therapy patches for the treatment of menopausal symptoms and estrogen deficiency.
EBIT for the nutrition and consumer segment was $51 million for the quarter, down 34 percent from EBIT in last year's fourth quarter, and $278 million for the year, down 14 percent in year-to-year comparisons, primarily because of the timing of sales of NutraSweet brand sweetener to major customers, and higher spending on neotame and science-based nutrition projects. (EBITDA for the nutrition and consumer segment was $88 million in the fourth-quarter of 1998, and $109 million in the same period during 1997.
For the full year, the segment's EBITDA was $405 million in 1998 vs. $440 million in 1997.) Market share for both tabletop sweeteners and biogums improved in 1998 as compared with 1997 results. At the end of 1998, a general use petition for neotame, a new high-intensity sweetener, was filed with the FDA.
In-process R&D is an accounting treatment that values and immediately writes off research that is under way at the time of an acquisition but that has not yet resulted in commercial products. EBIT for the company includes unusual items, such as restructuring, in-process R&D and other charges; EBIT for business segments excludes unusual items. Certain statements made in the news release, including those relating to
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