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US skeleton racer appeals for Olympic spot after 'corrupted' qualifier
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Massive winter storm sweeps across US bringing ice, frigid temps
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WHO chief says reasons US gave for withdrawing 'untrue'
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Dupont inspires Toulouse to Pau thumping despite sin binning
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Nwaneri scores on Marseille debut as Lens lose top spot
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Mbappe double fires Real Madrid to win at Villarreal
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Pittsburgh Steelers appoint Mike McCarthy as head coach
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Republicans eye 'Trump-palooza' convention ahead of US midterms
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Liverpool running on empty in Bournemouth defeat, says Slot
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Man City success 'despite' refereeing calls, claims Guardiola
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Pakistani court jails rights activist and husband for 10 years
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US immigration agents shoot dead another person in Minneapolis
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This is spinal... brat? Charli xcx stars in mockumentary 'The Moment'
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Bournemouth snap Liverpool's unbeaten run to up pressure on Slot
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Frank's future in fresh doubt after Spurs stumble, Liverpool lose
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Grizzlies' Morant sidelined by elbow sprain
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Lacklustre Bayern 'punished' in shock defeat, says Kane
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Bucks' Antetokounmpo expects to miss to miss at least a month
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Federal agents shoot dead another person in Minneapolis
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Frank under increased pressure after Spurs stumble at Burnley as City win
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Frank laments unforgivable Tottenham defending in Burnley draw
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Bordeaux-Begles give up on top two hopes after shock Stade Francais loss
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Trump praises UK troops as row over his NATO comments grows
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Spurs slip at Burnley increases pressure on Frank as City win
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Turkey pro-Kurd party urges end to Kobane siege
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Augsburg hand Bayern Munich first Bundesliga defeat since March
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Minnesota governor slams 'another horrific shooting' by federal agents
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Steady Root helps England level ODI series in Sri Lanka
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Snow, ice hit western, central US as massive storm sweeps nation
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Outrage across Europe after Trump says NATO avoided Afghan front line
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Stade Francais hold nerve to grab victory at Bordeaux-Begles
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Ukraine, Russia, US agree to more talks next week in UAE
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Reed pulls four shots ahead with McIlroy 11 adrift at Dubai Desert Classic
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Trump threatens Canada with 100% tariff if it completes China trade deal
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West Ham thump Sunderland to boost survival bid
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Iranians struggle as internet shutdown hits livelihoods
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Hector wins as Shiffrin third in Czech giant slalom before Olympics
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Heat triggers Melbourne chaos as Djokovic hits landmark, Osaka out
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Snow, heavy rain kill 61 in three days in Afghanistan
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England spinners choke Sri Lanka to 219 in second ODI
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Franzoni gains Olympic boost edging Odermatt in Kitzbuehel downhill
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Djokovic wins record 400th Slam match to power on in Australia
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Ukraine says deadly Russian strikes threaten US-backed peace talks
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Shiffrin fourth in first run of Czech giant slalom race
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Heat triggers Melbourne chaos as Osaka out, Sinner survives
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Swiatek survives roller coaster to reach Australian Open last 16
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Wawrinka, 40, out in third round on fond Australian Open farewell
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'Heartbroken' Osaka pulls out of Australian Open injured
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China says top military official under investigation
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Threatened Ugandan opposition leader needs UN help: lawyer
Tepid 2026 outlook dents Pfizer shares
Pfizer signaled Tuesday it expects a challenging 2026 as it invests in new products to offset declines in Covid-19 revenues while limiting shareholder payouts.
Shares of the big drugmaker fell sharply after it projected a dip in full-year adjusted profits per share on roughly flat revenues.
Pfizer expects 2026 revenues of between $59.5 billion and $62.5 billion, compared with $62 billion in 2025.
The pharma giant last month completed an acquisition of biotech firm Metsera, deepening its portfolio of products in the fast-growing market for weight loss drugs.
Pfizer has also identified oncology as a major growth area, while Chief Executive Albert Bourla insisted the company would continue to invest in vaccines in the face of recent controversial policies under the vaccine-skeptic Trump administration.
The drugmaker expects a drop of $1.5 billion in 2026 revenues tied to lower Covid-19 sales and the decline of another $1.5 billion from products experiencing a loss of exclusivity.
Pfizer has maintained a dividend but not undertaken share repurchases in 2025. Executives said they would continue to steer cash into development programs rather than stock repurchases.
"Obviously I would love to do share repurchases," Chief Financial Officer David Denton said on a conference call. "The reality is at this point in time, I think the best and highest use of capital is continued investment in business development."
Briefing.com said the results underscored Pfizer's "painful transition" out of the Covid-19 era.
The tepid outlook "indicates that earnings will likely remain stagnant or decline slightly as the company digests the Metsera deal and ramps up R&D," Briefing.com said in its note.
On vaccines, Bourla characterized recent policy shifts under US Health Secretary Robert Kennedy as misguided.
"Vaccines are an essential part of any health care system," Bourla said. "We will continue investing in vaccines because ... this is an anomaly that will correct itself. I hope pretty soon."
Under Kennedy, an appointee of Donald Trump, the Centers for Disease Control recently revised its website with language that undermines its previous, scientifically grounded position that immunizations do not cause autism.
Bourla has also touted a deal announced in September with the Trump administration in which the company promised to lower some drug prices in exchange for a three-year reprieve on planned tariffs.
Shares of Pfizer fell 3.8 percent in afternoon trading.
R.Braegger--VB