What's Behind Johnson & Johnson's Double-Digit Growth?

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Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) is a healthcare giant that racks up tens of billions of dollars in revenue every quarter. Usually, it's tough to deliver double-digit growth when you get to be as big of a company as J&J. However, in the second quarter, its sales were 10.6% higher than one year ago.

What's behind this healthcare Goliath's surprising growth: acquisitions, currency fluctuations, and demand for some of its best-selling drugs. Here's what you should know about the company's recent performance, and what to watch in the future.

The numbers

Johnson & Johnson's sales were $20.8 billion last quarter, and rising demand for its drugs (more on that in a minute) was responsible for most of the increase. But its acquisition of Actelion last year, and tailwinds from converting sales outside of the U.S. back into U.S. dollars, also contributed meaningfully to the results.

A magnifying glass showing stacks of coins with small plants growing on top of them
A magnifying glass showing stacks of coins with small plants growing on top of them

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Specifically, 1.9% of its 10.6% sales increase was due to fluctuating currency. If you back out the benefit associated with currency exchange and the contribution to sales from acquisitions, the company's organic growth was a healthy, but less exciting, 6.3%.

There's not a lot you can do about quarterly currency headwinds and tailwinds. J&J operates worldwide, and currency is always in flux, so conversion will either hurt or help the company's results in any given quarter. Similarly, acquisitions are unpredictable, and while they can boost sales (and hopefully, profit) in the short term, their benefit is typically temporary. After one year, the comparisons become apples-to-apples again.

Because of this, investors should focus their attention on product sales, because that's what provides the best insight into whether a company's executing well.

At J&J, the company's pharmaceuticals segment is giving investors plenty to cheer about.

Although Johnson & Johnson generates billions of dollars in sales from consumer brands such as Band-Aid, and from medical devices, it's the pharmaceutical business that really moves the needle at J&J; its second-quarter performance was no exception. Consumer-goods sales were flat and medical device revenue only grew 1.9% ex-currency, but after backing out currency and acquisitions, J&J's pharmaceutical sales jumped 11% from last year.

That's particularly impressive because the growth came even as sales of its best-selling drug, Remicade, continue to decline because of biosimilar competition. Biologics like Remicade are complex and created in living organisms, so they can't be copied exactly, but companies can create inexact biosimilars that are as effective. And following the launch of Inflectra, a cheaper biosimilar, J&J's Remicade revenue is sliding.