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Is Johnson & Johnson a Buy After Its Latest Earnings Report?

On Wednesday morning, Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) published its second-quarter earnings report, but this wasn’t greeted warmly. Investors generally sold the stock, and by the end of that trading session, it was down by almost 3%.

This occurred on a broadly positive day for the stock market, with the bellwether S&P 500 index closing in positive territory. What did those selling investors find so unappealing about the pharmaceutical giant’s figures, and was that reaction justified? Let’s explore.

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Johnson & Johnson.
Image source: The Motley Fool.

Slightly better than expected

Perhaps the first source of discontent for Mr. Market is that, while Johnson & Johnson notched a double beat on analyst estimates, neither beat was crushing.

In the quarter, the company’s total sales were a shade over $25.3 billion, which bettered the same period of 2025 by almost 7%. Yet they weren’t vastly higher than the consensus pundit projection of $25 billion.

As for profitability, the dynamic was similar. Net income not under generally accepted accounting principles (non-GAAP, or adjusted) rose at a nearly 6% clip to $7.08 billion, or $2.90 per share. That was a few cents higher than the average analyst estimate of $2.86.

Johnson & Johnson is essentially two healthcare businesses in one: a massive pharmaceutical company and an important, influential medical device unit.

Of the pair, the former (officially known as “innovative medicine”) is the larger; it brought in nearly $16.4 billion during the quarter, for a year-over-year improvement of almost 8%. Devices, or “MedTech,” as the company calls this unit, saw a more modest lift of under 5% to slightly more than $8.9 billion.

Breaking down those results further, in the drug sphere, Johnson & Johnson did particularly well, with immunology drug Tremfya’s sales growing a very robust 73% to $2 billion. This success is critical for the company as that medicine supplants an older immunology treatment, Stelara. The latter’s sales are sliding rapidly, with a 56% decline (to $740 million) in the quarter.

Meanwhile, the company’s oncology portfolio — one of the strongest in the industry — was looking robust. Its star drug in that lineup, blood cancer treatment Darzalex, posted a nearly 19% lift in sales to over $4.2 billion. Overall, the portfolio’s sales rose by 17% to $7.4 billion.

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