Founded: 1896
Headquarter: BASEL (CH)
Employees: 100,000
2023 Revenues: CHF 58.72 BN
Stock Exchange: ROG
The Swiss pharmaceutical giant is still trying to recover from the coronavirus. In 2023, Roche’s revenue shed 7% to 58.72 billion Swiss francs (up 1% at constant exchange rates). The main cause: sales evaporated from the diagnostic kits that had helped to control the pandemic, and the COVID-19 division lost 4.3 billion Swiss francs compared with the previous year.
To make up for it, the company is focusing on oncology. Of Roche’s 10 best-selling medicines in 2023, five are anti-cancer drugs (Perjeta, Tecentriq, Kadcyla, MabThera/Rituxan and Herceptin), and the company has around 60 clinical trials under way in the field, four of which could lead to a market launch in 2024.
In the first half of 2024, oncology sales accounted for almost 40% of Roche’s revenue, at 5.7 billion out of a total of 14.4 billion Swiss francs. The only downside was the decline in sales of three of its flagship cancer drugs (MabThera/ Rituxan, Herceptin and Avastin), due to their patent expiry and the introduction of biosimilars. But Roche also has its diagnostics division to offset this performance, which includes many small companies such as Grail, which develops blood tests for multi-cancer early detection (MCED). That’s an advantage over the competition. "Roche, which is the world leader in diagnostics, remains extremely powerful," says Vincent Meunier of Bryan, Garnier & Co. "This company’s ability to innovate, through both in-house expertise and targeted acquisitions, is how it maintains its competitive edge in diagnostics." Most analysts who follow the stock recommend holding Roche shares.