Johnson & Johnson
JNJ
#20
Rank
A$786.22 B
Marketcap
A$326.33
Share price
-0.02%
Change (1 day)
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Change (1 year)

Johnson & Johnson is a global American pharmaceutical and consumer goods company with headquarters in New Brunswick, New Jersey. The company is listed in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

Johnson & Johnson - 10-Q quarterly report FY


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UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-Q

X QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the quarterly period ended March 29, 1998

OR

TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934


For the transition period from to

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Commission file number 1-3215


JOHNSON & JOHNSON
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)


NEW JERSEY 22-1024240
(State or other jurisdiction of (I.R.S. Employer
incorporation or organization)
Identification No.)


New Brunswick, New Jersey 08933
(Address of principal executive offices, including zip code)

732-524-0400
Registrant's telephone number, including area code


Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed
all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months
(or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to
file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing
requirements for the past 90 days.

Yes X No

Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the
issuer's classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable
date.

On April 24, 1998, 1,344,664,760 shares of Common Stock,
$1.00 par value, were outstanding.


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JOHNSON & JOHNSON AND SUBSIDIARIES


TABLE OF CONTENTS



Part I - Financial Information
Page No.


Consolidated Balance Sheet -
March 29, 1998 and December 28, 1997 3


Consolidated Statement of Earnings for the
Three Months Ended March 29, 1998 and
March 30, 1997 5


Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows for the
Three Months Ended March 29, 1998 and
March 30, 1997 6


Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 7


Management's Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of
Operations 10


Signatures 15




Part II - Other Information


Item 1 through 5 are not applicable

Item 6 - Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K 14











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Part I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 1 - FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


JOHNSON & JOHNSON AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET

(Unaudited; Dollars in Millions)

ASSETS


March 29,
December 28,
1998
1997
Current Assets:

Cash and cash equivalents $ 2,893 2,753

Marketable securities, at cost 128 146

Accounts receivable, trade, less
allowances $353 (1997 - $358) 3,500 3,329

Inventories (Note 4) 2,710 2,516

Deferred taxes on income 828 831

Prepaid expenses and other
receivables 1,075 988


Total current assets 11,134 10,563

Marketable securities, non-current 385 385

Property, plant and equipment, at cost 9,460 9,444

Less accumulated depreciation and
amortization 3,792 3,634

5,668 5,810

Intangible assets, net (Note 5) 3,303 3,261

Deferred taxes on income 366 332

Other assets 1,059 1,102


Total assets $ 21,915 21,453

See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

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JOHNSON & JOHNSON AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
(Unaudited; Dollars in Millions)

LIABILITIES AND SHAREOWNERS' EQUITY

March 29,
December 28,
1998
1997
Current Liabilities:

Loans and notes payable $ 570 714

Accounts payable 1,483 1,753

Accrued liabilities 2,342 2,258

Accrued salaries, wages and commissions413 332

Taxes on income 407 226

Total current liabilities 5,215 5,283

Long-term debt 1,124 1,126

Deferred tax liability 178 175

Certificates of extra compensation 128 126

Other liabilities 2,465 2,384

Shareowners' equity:
Preferred stock - without par value
(authorized and unissued 2,000,000
shares) - -

Common stock - par value $1.00 per share
(authorized 2,160,000,000 shares;
issued 1,534,824,000 shares) 1,535 1,535

Note receivable from employee stock
ownership plan (45) (51)

Accumulated other comprehensive
Income (Note 2) (427) (378)

Retained earnings 13,175 12,661

14,238
13,767
Less common stock held in treasury,
at cost (189,895,000 & 189,687,000
shares) 1,433 1,408

Total shareowners' equity 12,805 12,359

Total liabilities and shareowners'
equity $21,915 21,453

See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

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JOHNSON & JOHNSON AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF EARNINGS

(Unaudited; dollars & shares in millions

except per share figures)



Fiscal Quarter Ended
March 29, Percent March 30,
Percent
1998 to Sales 1997 to
Sales



Sales to customers (Note 6) $5,783 100.0 5,715 100.0

Cost of products sold 1,777 30.7 1,772 31.0

Selling, marketing and
administrative expenses 2,100 36.3 2,138 37.4

Research expense 494 8.5 478 8.4

Interest income (61) (1.0) (36) (.6)

Interest expense, net of
portion capitalized 28 .5 33 .5

Other expense, net 11 .2 28 .5

4,349 75.2 4,413 77.2

Earnings before provision
for taxes on income 1,434 24.8 1,302 22.8

Provision for taxes on
income (Note 3) 424 7.3 393 6.9


NET EARNINGS $1,010 17.5 909 15.9


NET EARNINGS PER SHARE (Notes 1 and 8)
Basic $ .75 .68
Diluted $ .73 .66

CASH DIVIDENDS PER SHARE $ .22 .19

AVG. SHARES OUTSTANDING
Basic 1,345.3 1,333.1
Diluted 1,374.7 1,368.5


See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

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JOHNSON & JOHNSON AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
(Unaudited; Dollars in Millions)

Fiscal Quarter
Ended
March 29, March
30,
1998
1997
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net earnings $1,010 909
Adjustments to reconcile net earnings to
cash flows:
Depreciation and amortization of
property and intangibles 294 280
Increase in accounts receivable, trade,
less allowances (195) (367)
Increase in inventories (221) (137)
Changes in other assets and liabilities 311 407

NET CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES 1,199 1,092

CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Additions to property, plant and equipment(215) (200)
Proceeds from the disposal of assets 8 6
Acquisition of businesses, net of cash
acquired (78) (158)
Other, principally intangible assets (85) (53)

NET CASH USED BY INVESTING ACTIVITIES (370) (405)

CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Dividends to shareowners (296) (254)
Repurchase of common stock (347) (273)
Proceeds from short-term debt 76 101
Retirement of short-term debt (120) (133)
Proceeds from long-term debt - -
Retirement of long-term debt (104) -
Proceeds from the exercise of stock
options 111 92

NET CASH USED BY FINANCING
ACTIVITIES (680) (467)

EFFECT OF EXCHANGE RATE CHANGES ON CASH
AND CASH EQUIVALENTS (9) (41)

INCREASE IN CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS 140 179

CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, BEGINNING OF PERIOD2,753 2,011

CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, END OF PERIOD $ 2,893 2,190


See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

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NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
NOTE 1 - The accompanying interim financial statements and related
notes should be read in conjunction with the Consolidated Financial
Statements of Johnson & Johnson and Subsidiaries (the "Company")
and related notes as contained in the Annual Report on Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 28, 1997. The interim financial
statements include all adjustments (consisting only of normal
recurring adjustments) and accruals necessary in the judgment of
management for a fair presentation of such statements.
At year-end 1997, the Company adopted Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 128 that requires the reporting of both
basic and diluted earnings per share. Basic earnings per share is
computed by dividing net income available to common shareowners by
the weighted average number of common shares outstanding for the
period. Diluted earnings per share reflects the potential dilution
that could occur if securities or other contracts to issue common
stock were exercised or converted into common stock. Prior periods
have been restated to reflect the new standard.

NOTE 2 - ADOPTION OF SFAS NO. 130
At March 29, 1998, the Company adopted Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 130 "Reporting Comprehensive Income"
("SFAS 130"). SFAS 130 establishes standards for reporting and
display of an alternative income measurement and its components
(revenue, expenses, gains and losses) in a full set of general
purpose financial statements. The total comprehensive income for
the three months ended March 29, 1998 is $961 million, compared
with $761 million for the same period a year ago. Total
comprehensive income includes net earnings, net unrealized currency
gains and losses on translation and net unrealized gains and losses
on securities.

NOTE 3 - INCOME TAXES
The effective income tax rates for the first three months of 1998
and 1997 are 29.6% and 30.2%, respectively, as compared to the U.S.
federal statutory rate of 35%. The difference from the statutory
rate is the result of domestic subsidiaries operating in Puerto
Rico under a grant for tax relief expiring on December 31, 2007 and
the result of subsidiaries manufacturing in Ireland under an
incentive tax rate expiring on December 21, 2010. The decrease in
the 1998 worldwide effective tax rate was primarily due to a
greater proportion of taxable income derived from lower tax rate
countries. The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 included
a change in the tax code which will reduce the benefit the Company
receives from its operations in Puerto Rico by 60% gradually over a
five year period.

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NOTE 4 - INVENTORIES

(Dollars in Millions) March 29, 1998 Dec. 28, 1997

Raw materials and supplies $ 740 655
Goods in process 401 417
Finished goods 1,569 1,444
$ 2,710 2,516

NOTE 5 - INTANGIBLE ASSETS

(Dollars in Millions) March 29, 1998 Dec. 28,
1997

Intangible assets $ 3,982 3,885
Less accumulated amortization 679 624
$ 3,303 3,261


The excess of the cost over the fair value of net assets of

purchased businesses is recorded as goodwill and is amortized on a

straight-line basis over periods of 40 years or less.

The cost of other acquired intangibles is amortized on a

straight-line basis over their estimated useful lives.


NOTE 6 - SALES TO CUSTOMERS BY SEGMENT OF BUSINESS AND GEOGRAPHIC
AREAS

(Dollars in Millions)

SALES BY SEGMENT OF BUSINESS

First Quarter
Percent
Increase
1998 1997 (Decrease)

Consumer
Domestic $ 840 832 1.0
International 799 852 (6.2)
1,639 1,684 (2.7)%

Pharmaceutical
Domestic $ 1,169 960 21.8
International 923 983 (6.1)
2,092 1,943 7.7%

Professional
Domestic $ 1,086 1,155 (6.0)
International 966 933 3.5
2,052 2,088 (1.7)%

Domestic $ 3,095 2,947 5.0
International 2,688 2,768 (2.9)
Worldwide $ 5,783 5,715 1.2%


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NOTE 6 - SALES TO CUSTOMERS BY SEGMENT OF BUSINESS AND GEOGRAPHIC
AREAS

(Dollars in Millions)

SALES BY GEOGRAPHIC AREA

First Quarter
Percent
Increase
1998 1997 (Decrease)

U.S. $ 3,095 2,947 5.0
Europe 1,539 1,557 (1.2)
Western Hemisphere
Excluding U.S. 507 495 2.4
Asia-Pacific, Africa 642 716 (10.3)

Total $ 5,783 5,715 1.2%


NOTE 7 - ACQUISITIONS

During the quarter the Company completed an acquisition with

IsoStent, Inc. Cordis acquired intellectual property and specific

assets, including the BX Stent, a new flexible interventional

medical device in development for treatment of coronary artery

disease. Pro forma results of the acquisition, assuming that the

transaction was consummated at the beginning of each year

presented, would not be materially different from the results

reported.


NOTE 8 - EARNINGS PER SHARE

The following is a reconciliation of basic net earnings per share

to diluted net earnings per share for the three months ended March

29, 1998 and March 30, 1997:


(Shares in Millions) March 29, March 30,
1998 1997

Basic net earnings per share $ .75 .68
Average shares outstanding - basic 1,345.3 1,333.1
Potential shares exercisable under
stock option plans 73.2 73.6

Less: shares which could be repurchased
under treasury stock method (43.8) (38.2)
Adjusted average shares outstanding - diluted1,374.7 1,368.5
Diluted earnings per share $ .73 .66

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NOTE 9 - PENDING LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

The Company, along with numerous other pharmaceutical

manufacturers and distributors, is a defendant in a large number of

individual and class actions brought by retail pharmacies in state

and federal courts under the antitrust laws. These cases assert

price discrimination and price-fixing violations resulting from an

alleged industry-wide agreement to deny retail pharmacists price

discounts on sales of brand name prescription drugs. The Company

believes the claims against the Company in these actions are

without merit and is defending them vigorously.

Further, the Company together with another contact lens

manufacturer, a trade association and various individual

defendants, is a defendant in several consumer class actions and an

action brought by multiple State Attorneys General on behalf of

consumers alleging violations of federal and state antitrust laws.

These cases assert that enforcement of the Company's long-standing

policy of selling contact lenses only to licensed eye care

professionals is a result of an unlawful conspiracy to eliminate

alternative distribution channels from the disposable contact lens

market. The Company believes that these actions are without merit

and is defending them vigorously.

The Company believes that the above proceedings in the aggregate

would not have a material adverse effect on its results of

operations, cash flows or financial position.


Item 2 - MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF
FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

SALES AND EARNINGS

Consolidated sales for the first quarter of 1998 were $5,783

million, an increase of 1.2% over 1997 first quarter sales of

$5,715 million. The effect of the stronger dollar relative to

foreign currencies decreased first quarter's sales by 4.4%. The

sales increase of 5.6% due to operations included a positive price

change effect of .4%.


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Consolidated net earnings for the first quarter of 1998 were
$1,010 million, compared with $909 million for the same period a
year ago, an increase of 11.1%. Worldwide basic net earnings per
share for the period were $.75, compared with $.68 for the same
period in 1997, an increase of 10.3%. Worldwide diluted net
earnings per share for the period were $.73, compared with $.66 for
the same period in 1997, an increase of 10.6%.
Domestic sales for the first three months of 1998 were $3,095
million, an increase of 5.0% over 1997 domestic sales of $2,947
million for the same period. Sales by international subsidiaries
were $2,688 million for the first quarter of 1998 compared with
$2,768 million for the same period a year ago, a decrease of 2.9%.
Excluding the impact of the higher value of the dollar,
international sales increased by 6.1% for the quarter.
Worldwide Consumer segment sales for the first quarter of 1998
were $1.6 billion, a decrease of 2.7% versus the same period a year
ago. In local currency, worldwide sales increased 2.4% before
adjusting for a 5.1% negative currency impact. Consumer sales were
led by continued strength in the skin care franchise, which
includes the NEUTROGENA, RoC and CLEAN & CLEAR product lines, as
well as strong performances from the adult and children's MOTRIN
line of analgesic products.
Worldwide pharmaceutical sales of $2.1 billion for the quarter
increased 7.7% over the same period in 1997. In local currency,
worldwide sales increased 12.1% before a negative currency impact
of 4.4%, due to the stronger U.S. dollar. This growth reflects the
strong performance of PROCRIT, for the treatment of anemia;
PROPULSID, a gastrointestinal product; DURAGESIC, a transdermal
patch for chronic pain; LEVAQUIN, an anti-infective; and ULTRAM, an
analgesic. REGRANEX, the first biologic treatment proven to
increase the incidence of healing in diabetic foot ulcers, was
launched in the U.S. in the first quarter.

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During the quarter, the company received European approval for a

peri-surgery indication for EPREX. Additionally, the company

announced a worldwide collaboration with Ergo Science Corporation

for the development and commercialization of bromocriptine mesylate

and other potential products for the treatment of Type 2 diabetes

and obesity. A New Drug Application (NDA) for the use of

bromocriptine mesylate to treat Type 2 diabetes was accepted by the

FDA for filing in October, 1997.

At the end of March, an NDA for ACIPHEX (rabeprazole), a proton

pump inhibitor for gastroesophagel reflux disease (GERD), GERD

maintenance and duodenal and gastric ulcers, was submitted to the

FDA by our partner Eisai, Inc. Eisai and Janssen Pharmaceutica, a

wholly-owned subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson, have entered into a

strategic alliance to market rabeprazole worldwide with the

exception of Japan and certain other territories.

Worldwide sales of $2.1 billion in the Professional segment

represented a decrease of 1.7% over the first quarter of 1997. In

local currency, worldwide sales increased 1.9% before adjusting for

a 3.6% negative currency impact. Strong sales growth of Ethicon

Endo-Surgery's laparoscopy and wound closure products and

LifeScan's blood glucose monitoring systems were offset by a

decline in sales of Cordis' coronary stents.

During the quarter, the company launched the THERMACHOICE Uterine

Balloon Therapy System in the U.S. for the treatment of excessive

menstrual bleeding in women. The product has been well received by

the obstetrical/gynecological community and over 1,900

practitioners have already been trained. Also in the quarter, an

FDA advisory committee unanimously recommended the approval of

DERMABOND, a topical skin adhesive for wound closure. Ethicon,

Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson, has exclusive

worldwide marketing and distribution rights for DERMABOND.

Average shares of common stock outstanding in the first three

months of 1998 were 1,345.3 million, compared with 1,333.1 million

for the same period a year ago.

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LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

Cash and current marketable securities increased $122 million

during the first three months of 1998 to $3,021 million at March

29, 1998. Total borrowings decreased $146 million during the first

three months of 1998 to $1,694 million. Net cash (cash and current

securities net of borrowings) was $1,327 million at March 29, 1998

compared with $1,059 million at the end of 1997. Total debt

represented 11.7% of total capital (shareowners' equity and total

borrowings) at quarter end compared with 13.0% at the end of 1997.

Additions to property, plant and equipment were $215 million for

the first three months of 1998, compared with $200 million for the

same period in 1997.

On April 23, 1998, the Board of Directors approved a 13.6%

increase in the quarterly dividend rate from 22 cents per share to

25 cents per share. The dividend is payable on June 9, 1998 to

shareowners of record as of May 19, 1998.























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Part II - Other Information

Item 6. Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K

(a) Exhibit Numbers

(1) Exhibit 27 - Financial Data Schedule


(b) Reports on Form 8-K

The Company did not file any reports on Form 8-K during
the three month period ended March 29, 1998.










































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SIGNATURES



Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on
its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.





JOHNSON & JOHNSON
(Registrant)






Date: May 8, 1998 By /s/ R. J. DARRETTA
R. J. DARRETTA
(Vice President, Finance)






Date: May 8, 1998 By /s/ C. E. LOCKETT
C. E. LOCKETT
(Corporate Controller)






















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