Based on the Novartis Q4 2025 Media Release, here is the high-level summary of the financial and operational performance:

Full Year 2025 Financial Results

Novartis delivered strong performance in 2025, driven by double-digit growth in core products:

Key Growth Drivers (Full Year Sales)

The following products contributed significantly to the revenue growth:

Pipeline and Strategic Progress

Novartis has completed its transformation into a “pure-play” medicines company, focusing on four core therapeutic areas: Cardiovascular-Renal-Metabolic, Immunology, Neuroscience, and Oncology.


Below is the Income Statement and analysis based on the Novartis Q4 2025 financial report.

Income Statement FY 2025

Item2025(USD million)2024(USD million)YoY(%)% of Total Rev
Net Sales54532503178.4%100.0%
Core Operating Income218891949412.3%40.1%
Core Net Income174111575510.5%31.9%
Operating Income(IFRS)176441454421.3%32.4%
Net Income(IFRS)139671193917.0%25.6%

Segment Revenue Analysis

Segment2025(USD million)2024(USD million)YoY(%)% of Total Rev
Oncology168121435717.1%30.8%
Immunology10274917312.0%18.8%
Cardiovascular, Renal & Metabolic894685744.3%16.4%
Neuroscience5658445527.0%10.4%
Established Medicines31873354-5.0%5.8%
Other Products & Contract Revenues965510404-7.2%17.7%

Key Product Performance

ProductTherapeutic Area2025(USD million)YoY(%)% of Total Rev
EntrestoCardiovascular727120.0%13.3%
CosentyxImmunology580717.0%10.6%
KesimptaNeuroscience342539.0%6.3%
KisqaliOncology307341.0%5.6%
PluvictoOncology131343.0%2.4%

Executive Summary and Financial Analysis

1.Revenue Growth: Net sales grew by 8.4% (10% in constant currencies), primarily fueled by strong volume growth from “Key Growth Drivers.” The transition to a focused medicines company has successfully shifted the portfolio toward high-margin, innovative treatments.

2.Margin Expansion: The Core Operating Income margin improved to 40.1%, up from 38.7% in 2024. This was driven by a favorable product mix and continued productivity gains, even as R&D investment remained robust to support the late-stage pipeline.

3.Therapeutic Strengths: Neuroscience was the fastest-growing segment (+27%), led by the rapid adoption of Kesimpta. Oncology also showed exceptional momentum (+17.1%) due to the success of Kisqali in breast cancer and Pluvicto in radioligand therapy.

4.Shareholder Returns: Reflecting strong cash generation and confidence in the future, the Board proposed a 2.8% increase in the dividend to 3.70 CHF per share. The company maintains a strong balance sheet while continuing its share buyback program.


According to the latest Novartis earnings reports and investor presentations from early 2026, the company is entering a “catalyst-rich” period with over 15 submission-enabling Phase 3 readouts expected between 2026 and 2027.

Below is the organized Phase 3 pipeline with the most current estimated readout dates.

Phase 3 Clinical Trial Timeline (2026-2027)

Therapeutic AreaAssetIndicationEstimated Readout
Cardiovascular (CRM)PelacarsenLp(a) lowering (CV Outcomes)H1 2026 (Originally 2025)
AbelacimabStroke prevention in AFib2026 (Event-driven)
LeqvioSecondary & Primary Prevention2027
NeuroscienceRemibrutinibRelapsing Multiple Sclerosis (RMS)H2 2026
VotoplamHuntington’s Disease2027+ (Ph3 started early ’26)
ImmunologyIanalumabSjögren’s Disease / SLE2026 – 2027
ZigakibartIgA Nephropathy (IgAN)2026 – 2027
RemibrutinibChronic Inducible Urticaria (CIndU)2026
OncologyPluvictomHSPC (Pre-taxane)2026 (Regulatory update)
Scemblix1L Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML)2026 (Market expansion data)
PelabresibMyelofibrosis2026 (Follow-up/Filing)

Key Catalyst Deep Dive

1. Pelacarsen (The Big One)

2. Remibrutinib (BTK Inhibitor)

3. Ianalumab (Pipeline-in-a-drug)

4. Vanrafia (Atrasentan) Update

Strategic Note: “The Patent Cliff”

Novartis is accelerating these readouts specifically to offset the generic entry of Entresto (its top seller), which is expected to face significant revenue erosion starting in 2025-2026. The success of Pelacarsen and Remibrutinib is critical for maintaining their 5% CAGR guidance through 2030.


In October 2025, Novartis announced its acquisition of Avidity Biosciences for approximately $12 billion ($72 per share in cash). This is one of Novartis’ largest deals in recent years, specifically designed to accelerate its “xRNA” strategy and bolster its neuroscience pipeline as key patents (like Entresto) approach expiration.

The transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2026.

The Core Technology: AOC Platform

Avidity’s value lies in its proprietary Antibody Oligonucleotide Conjugate (AOC) platform.

Key Clinical Assets Acquired

Novartis gains three potential first-in-class, late-stage programs:

Drug CandidateTarget DiseaseClinical Stage
del-desiran (AOC 1001)Myotonic Dystrophy Type 1 (DM1)Phase 3 (HARBOR trial)
del-brax (AOC 1020)Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy (FSHD)Phase 2 (FORTITUDE trial)
del-zota (AOC 1044)Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD Exon 44)Phase 1/2 (EXPLORE44)

The “SpinCo” Structure

To focus the acquisition on neuromuscular assets, the deal includes a specific corporate restructuring:

Financial & Strategic Impact

If you would like to track the progress of these specific clinical trials (like the HARBOR trial for DM1), I can provide more detailed milestone dates for 2026.


Novartis’ “Pipeline Pruning” is a strategic initiative to transform into a “Pure-play Innovative Medicines” company. According to the Q4 2025 and early 2026 updates, the company is aggressively optimizing its R&D portfolio to focus resources on high-value, first-in-class, or best-in-class projects.

1. Specific Pruning Actions (2025-2026)

In the latest updates, Novartis removed 6 early-stage (Phase 1) candidates from its pipeline. The majority of these removals were concentrated in the Oncology sector:

CandidateTherapeutic AreaPlatformReason for Removal
AAA802OncologyRadioligand (Ac-225)Replaced by next-generation candidates
MGY825OncologySmall MoleculePortfolio prioritization (NSCLC focus)
KFA115OncologyBiotherapeuticStrategic deprioritization
HRO761OncologySmall MoleculeRealignment in solid tumor strategy

While 6 projects were removed, Novartis simultaneously added 2 new Phase 1 assets (such as AMO959 for DNA repair), illustrating that this is not a budget cut but a quality upgrade.

2. Strategic Rationale (The “Why”)

CEO Vas Narasimhan has emphasized that Novartis previously suffered from “project bloat,” where too many projects led to under-investment in individual key assets. The pruning serves several goals:

3. Resource Realignment

The capital and focus saved from pruning are redirected toward:

Executive Summary: Efficiency over Volume

Novartis’ pruning is not an act of financial distress; it is Portfolio Optimization. By eliminating early-stage projects with marginal differentiation, Novartis aims to build a more resilient model capable of maintaining 5-6% sales growth through 2030.


Based on the financial reports from 2021 to 2025, here is a detailed financial ratio analysis. This period captures the company’s significant transformation from a diversified giant into a focused “Pure-play Medicines” innovator following the spin-off of Sandoz.

Profitability Ratios

Novartis has shown a consistent upward trend in margins, reflecting the higher value of its innovative portfolio and improved operational efficiency.

Ratio20252024202320222021
Gross Margin76.3%75.2%74.2%73.4%74.1%
Core Operating Margin40.1%38.7%36.0%33.0%32.1%
Net Profit Margin25.6%23.7%18.9%16.5%46.5%*
Return on Equity (ROE)34.1%26.3%16.2%9.5%36.9%*

Note: 2021 Net Margin and ROE were exceptionally high due to a one-time gain of over $14 billion from the divestment of the Roche stake.

Solvency & Liquidity Ratios

While the company maintains a strong balance sheet, the debt-to-equity ratio has climbed recently to fund strategic acquisitions like Avidity Biosciences.

Ratio20252024202320222021
Debt to Equity (D/E)72.0%63.6%57.0%47.0%46.0%
Net Debt to EBITDA1.1x1.0x0.8x0.7x0.2x
Current Ratio0.881.041.161.291.51

Efficiency & Market Valuation

The company’s ability to generate cash remains its primary strength, supporting its 28-year streak of dividend increases.

Ratio20252024202320222021
Free Cash Flow (USD B)17.616.313.212.113.3
P/E Ratio (TTM)21.4x16.6x28.6x9.2x20.1x
Dividend Yield3.1%3.3%3.5%3.8%3.6%

Key Financial Insights


As of February 2026, Novartis (NVS) is trading at a valuation that reflects its successful transition into a high-margin, innovative medicines company. While its Trailing P/E (TTM) has risen due to recent stock price strength following the Phase III ALIGN study results, its Forward P/E suggests it remains reasonably priced relative to industry giants.

P/E Ratio Comparison (As of Feb 2026)

CompanyTickerTrailing P/E (TTM)Forward P/E (FY1)Valuation Context
NovartisNVS22.1x15.6xPremium valuation due to 40% core margin milestone.
Eli LillyLLY45.5x30.6xHyper-growth premium from GLP-1 (weight loss) dominance.
AstraZenecaAZN31.8x21.0xHigh premium for industry-leading oncology growth.
Johnson & JohnsonJNJ23.0x20.0xStabilized as a “Pure-play” MedTech & Pharma giant.
RocheRHHBY21.9x17.4xTrading in line with Novartis; similar portfolio transition.
Merck & Co.MRK16.1x12.8xValue-play; heavily reliant on Keytruda patent cycle.
PfizerPFE15.8x12.4xSignificant discount as it seeks post-COVID growth drivers.
Bristol Myers SquibbBMY20.9x9.6xDeep discount; market skeptical of its growth past 2026.

Valuation Analysis & Peer Benchmarking

  1. Novartis vs. The Industry Average:The current S&P 500 Healthcare sector forward P/E is approximately 18.7x, while the general Pharmaceutical industry average sits at 19.5x. At a 15.6x Forward P/E, Novartis is trading at a slight discount to the broader healthcare sector, despite its superior 40% core operating margin. This suggests investors still see “room to run” as pipeline catalysts materialize.
  2. The “Premium” vs. “Value” Gap:
    • Growth Premium: Companies like Eli Lilly and AstraZeneca command much higher multiples (30x–38x) because of explosive near-term revenue growth.
    • Reasonable Value: Novartis and Roche represent the “Reasonable Growth at a Reasonable Price” (GARP) segment. Their 21x–22x trailing multiples are justified by their strong ROE (Novartis at ~32.6%) and steady dividend growth.
  3. Forward-Looking Upside:With a Forward P/E of 15.6x, Novartis is priced for mid-to-high single-digit earnings growth. If the 2026 pipeline readouts (specifically Pelacarsen) are successful, analysts anticipate a potential “re-rating,” where the stock’s multiple could expand closer to AstraZeneca’s ~20x forward levels.

Strategic Conclusion

Novartis is no longer the “undervalued” laggard it was in 2022 (when it traded at ~8x P/E). It is now viewed as a top-tier efficiency performer. Its current 22x TTM P/E is the highest in a decade, signaling that the market has finally priced in its operational turnaround.

Novartis


Source: https://www.novartis.com/sites/novartis_com/files/q4-2025-media-release-en.pdf

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