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J&J to Buy Back $5 Billion in Shares After Brutal Two-Day Slide

The health-care company’s shares are down 14 percent since Thursday’s close, wiping out more than $50 billion in market value.

J&J to Buy Back $5 Billion in Shares After Brutal Two-Day Slide
Bottles of Johnson & Johnson baby bath products are displayed for sale (Photographer: Lam Yik Fei/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Following its worst two-day slide in more than 16 years, Johnson & Johnson said it will buy back as much as $5 billion of its own stock.

The health-care company’s shares are down 14 percent since Thursday’s close, wiping out more than $50 billion in market value. The company is facing thousands of lawsuits over claims that its baby powder caused cancer, as well as suits over what plaintiffs claim are defective, harmful metal hip replacements sold by the company.

J&J to Buy Back $5 Billion in Shares After Brutal Two-Day Slide

In a company video posted Monday, Chief Executive Officer Alex Gorsky said that J&J remains confident in the safety of its talcum baby powder. The message was an unusual public effort by the company to defend one of its most well-known consumer products after a Reuters report last week said that J&J had been aware for decades that the powder sometimes contained asbestos.

Since that report’s publication, which echoed details written about by Bloomberg last year, investors have fled the stock.

The stock buyback doesn’t have a time limit on it, J&J said in a statement announcing the plan. The company also reaffirmed its 2018 sales and adjusted earnings forecasts. The shares rose almost 1 percent to $130.20 after the market closed, doing little to erase the two-day slide from Thursday’s $147.84 close.

At least one company insider stepped in to buy shares on the way down, with board member Charles Prince III reporting a purchase of about $270,000 in shares on Friday. The former Citigroup Inc. chairman now holds about $3.9 million in J&J stock.

Prince didn’t respond to an emailed request for comment.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bailey Lipschultz in New York at blipschultz@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Catherine Larkin at clarkin4@bloomberg.net, Timothy Annett, Drew Armstrong

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