logo
Celltrion logs strongest Q1 sales

Celltrion logs strongest Q1 sales

Korea Herald09-05-2025
South Korean biopharmaceutical firm Celltrion reported record first-quarter revenue and a sharp jump in profit, as robust global demand for its next-generation biosimilars improved margins.
Operating profit soared a whopping 870 percent from a year earlier to 149.4 billion won ($107 million) in the January-March period, while consolidated revenue rose 14.2 percent to 841.9 billion won, the South Korean biopharmaceutical firm said Friday.
The earnings boost was attributed to the end of amortization costs tied to past mergers, enhanced inventory management and strong performance from high-margin products.
Sales of key biosimilars, including Remsima SC, Yuflyma and Vegzelma, climbed more than 62 percent from a year earlier.
Yuflyma, a treatment for autoimmune diseases, posted more than 100 billion won in quarterly sales for the first time, rising 1.6 times year-on-year. Vegzelma, a cancer treatment, secured a 28 percent prescription share in Europe's oncology biosimilar market, despite its relatively late market entry.
Celltrion plans to launch four new high-margin biosimilars in the second half of the year and begin full-scale production of titer-enhanced products. The company expects revenue from new and follow-up therapies to make up over 60 percent of total sales by year-end.
In drug development, Celltrion's multispecific antibody CT-P72 demonstrated strong tumor suppression and low toxicity in preclinical studies presented at the 2025 American Association for Cancer Research meeting.
'We've laid the groundwork for both quantitative and qualitative growth this year through strong performance from our next-generation biosimilars and cost-efficiency gains,' a company official said. 'With upcoming product launches and a solid new drug pipeline, we will continue to focus efforts on sustained growth.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US senators visit Seoul ahead of Lee-Trump summit
US senators visit Seoul ahead of Lee-Trump summit

Korea Herald

time8 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

US senators visit Seoul ahead of Lee-Trump summit

South Korea's Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back met Monday with US Sen. Tammy Duckworth, Democrat of Illinois, at the ministry headquarters in Yongsan-gu, central Seoul. She travels with Sen. Andy Kim of New Jersey, who held a separate meeting with National Assembly Speaker Woo Won-shik in Yeouido, Seoul, earlier the same day. Their visit takes place ahead of President Lee Jae Myung's first summit with US President Donald Trump in Washington later this month, where the future of the alliance, US troop levels in Korea, defense cost-sharing and new areas of industrial cooperation are expected to be on the agenda. According to the Defense Ministry, Ahn and Duckworth reviewed the security situation on the Korean Peninsula and broader alliance development. Ahn stressed that US congressional backing was "essential for the advancement of the South Korea-US alliance" and called for "continued interest from Congress to reinforce combined defense readiness and strengthen the credibility of extended deterrence." Duckworth reaffirmed the US commitment to its forces stationed in Korea. "US Forces Korea remain a cornerstone of deterrence against North Korea and of peace and stability on the peninsula," she said, pledging active congressional support to sustain their role. She and Ahn also agreed to expand cooperation in shipbuilding, maintenance, repair and overhaul, and the defense industry. The US senators' trip comes as Washington looks to tap the shipbuilding capacity of South Korea and Japan, the world's second- and third-largest shipbuilders, to compensate for America's industrial decline. According to the US Center for Strategic and International Studies, US commercial shipbuilding accounted for just 0.1 percent of global output in 2024, compared with 53 percent for China. Duckworth, who also serves as a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, previously warned in a recent interview with the Associated Press that US naval support capabilities have fallen below the levels of the 2003 Iraq War, saying "we have to rebuild the capacity" while current facilities are aging and increasingly costly to maintain. "If we have to bring ships all the way back to the United States to wait two years to be fixed, that doesn't help the situation," she said. South Korean shipbuilders are already engaging with the US Navy. Hanwha Ocean in March completed maintenance on the 41,000-ton USNS Wally Schirra, its first project under a 2024 repair agreement. Hanwha also owns Philly Shipyard in Philadelphia, while HD Hyundai Heavy Industries signed a maintenance support agreement with the US Navy in May and discussed possible investments in US yards. In recent trade talks, Seoul proposed investing $150 billion in the US shipbuilding industry as part of what it called the "Make American Shipbuilding Great Again" initiative, tying cooperation in shipyards to broader alliance discussions with Washington.

Seoul shares close lower on uncertainty over new US chip tariffs
Seoul shares close lower on uncertainty over new US chip tariffs

Korea Herald

time11 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

Seoul shares close lower on uncertainty over new US chip tariffs

South Korean stocks closed lower Monday, snapping a two-day winning streak, as major chipmakers declined, weighed down by investor concerns over possible new US tariffs on semiconductor imports. The won strengthened against the US dollar. The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index lost 48.38 points, or 1.5 percent, to close at 3,177.28. Trade volume was light at 319.72 million shares worth 8.77 trillion won ($6.33 billion), with decliners sharply beating gainers 697 to 198. Foreigners sold a net 540.2 billion won worth of local shares, while individual and institutional investors purchased a net 357.5 billion won and 79 billion won, respectively. Investor sentiment was dampened after US President Donald Trump said Friday (local time) he would announce new tariffs on imports of steel and semiconductor chips in the coming weeks. Wall Street closed lower Friday, dragged down by losses in the tech sector. The S&P 500 fell 0.3 percent, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite dipped 0.4 percent. The South Korean market was closed on Friday for a public holiday. Lee Kyung-min, an analyst at Daishin Securities, said Trump's latest announcement is unlikely to be a substantial negative factor, as the proposed tariffs appear aimed at encouraging the construction of domestic factories in the US. "Semiconductor stocks have seen sharp gains recently, and rising market anxiety has led to profit-taking," he added. In Seoul, major chip and tech shares closed sharply lower. Among heavyweights, chip giant Samsung Electronics fell 2.23 percent to 70,000 won, and its rival SK hynix retreated 3.25 percent to 267,500 won. Leading battery maker LG Energy Solution decreased 2.79 percent to close at 383,000 won. Bio shares also continued their downward trend. Major pharmaceutical firms Samsung Biologics and Celltrion declined 0.48 percent and 1.2 percent to 1,028,000 won and 172,900 won, respectively. Among gainers, defense giant Hanwha Aerospace went up 0.57 percent to close at 888,000 won after opening lower. The local currency was quoted at 1,385 won against the greenback at 3:30 p.m., down 3 won from the previous session. (Yonhap)

Govt. to prevent return of colonial-era assets to pro-Japan collaborators' families
Govt. to prevent return of colonial-era assets to pro-Japan collaborators' families

Korea Herald

time12 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

Govt. to prevent return of colonial-era assets to pro-Japan collaborators' families

Committee set up to monitor sales of confiscated assets to prevent collaborators' descendants from buying ancestors' colonial-era properties The South Korean government has established a new deliberation body to oversee the sale of assets confiscated from individuals who collaborated with Japan during its 1910–1945 colonial rule over Korea. The move is aimed at preventing descendants of pro-Japanese and anti-national figures from repurchasing their ancestors' former properties, officials said Monday. According to the Ministry of Patriots and Veterans Affairs, a subcommittee was formed in May under the existing government committee responsible for managing funds related to patriotic martyrs and independence fighters, as defined by the relevant law. The subcommittee will closely examine each asset sale, with a focus on whether the assets are being sold to relatives of the original owners. A comprehensive review will be conducted on the 842 pieces of confiscated land, with special monitoring slated for 118 properties that have been deemed likely to be sold to the collaborators' relatives. A factor to be considered by the committee is whether the land in question houses the grave of the collaborator, which would suggest a stronger incentive for family members to reclaim the property. Legacy of colonial collaboration lingers In 2011, South Korea enacted the Special Act on Asset Confiscation for Pro-Japanese and Anti-National Collaborators to the State, targeting those who collaborated with the Japanese imperialist government and aided its oppressive rule of the Korean Peninsula. Those who participated in the independence movement, or have acquired the assets by paying a fair sum, are excluded. While many independence fighters and their descendants lived in poverty, having sacrificed their possessions and personal life to the national cause, pro-Japanese collaborators were granted titles of nobility and economic privileges in exchange for their loyalty to the Japanese Empire, allowing them to accumulate significant wealth during the colonial period. A government-led investigation was conducted in 1948-1949 after Korea was liberated, but most of the powerful collaborators escaped punishment due to the complicated political and international circumstances of the time. Last year's parliamentary audit showed that out of the 341 assets of pro-Japanese collaborators that were confiscated and sold by the state from 2009, 12 were bought by the collaborator's descendants. This includes land confiscated by the family of the notorious collaborator Go Yeong-hui, who cooperated with Japan's annexation of Korea. "(The ministry) will thoroughly manage sales of the confiscated assets of the pro-Japanese collaborators, and make sure that the support and proper treatment of the patriots and their descendants will not be overlooked," said Minister of Patriots and Veterans Affairs Kwon Oh-eul.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store