Pfizer Inc. 3Q2006 Form 10-Q

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 October 1, 2006

OR

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

For the transition period from________to_______

COMMISSION FILE NUMBER 1-3619

----

PFIZER INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

   

DELAWARE
(State of Incorporation)

13-5315170
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)

    

235 East 42nd Street, New York, New York   10017
     (Address of principal executive offices)   (zip code)
(212) 573-2323
(Registrant's telephone number)

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 by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated filer. See definition of "accelerated filer and large accelerated filer" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act (Check one):

Large accelerated filer  X                     Accelerated Filer                     Non-accelerated filer

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).

YES                    NO     X   

At October 31, 2006, 7,210,444,662 shares of the issuer's voting common stock were outstanding.

FORM 10-Q

For the Quarter Ended
October 1, 2006

Table of Contents

PART I.  FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Page

   

Item 1.

Financial Statements:

   

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Income for the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005

3

   

Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets as of October 1, 2006 and December 31, 2005

4

   

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005

5

   

Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements

6

   

Review Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

25

   

Item 2.

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

26

   

Item 3.

Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk

57

   

Item 4.

Controls and Procedures

57

   

PART II.  OTHER INFORMATION

 

   

Item 1.

Legal Proceedings

58

   

Item 1A.

Risk Factors

59

   

Item 2.

Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds

59

   

Item 3.

Defaults Upon Senior Securities

59

   

Item 4.

Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders

59

   

Item 5.

Other Information

59

   

Item 6.

Exhibits

60

   

Signature

61

PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 1. Financial Statements.

PFIZER INC AND SUBSIDIARY COMPANIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
(UNAUDITED)

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions, except per common share data)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct.  2, 
2005 

   

Revenues

$

12,280 

$

11,263 

$

35,768 

$

34,858 

  

Costs and expenses:

Cost of sales(a)

1,962 

1,611 

5,423 

5,250 

Selling, informational and administrative expenses(a)

3,751 

3,526 

11,027 

10,958 

Research and development expenses(a)

1,902 

1,739 

5,187 

5,287 

Amortization of intangible assets

798 

833 

2,446 

2,569 

Merger-related in-process research and development charges

         -

1,390 

513 

1,652 

Restructuring charges and merger-related costs

249 

303 

816 

782 

Other (income)/deductions - net

(343)

(151)

(958)

703 

  

Income from continuing operations before provision for taxes on income and minority interests

3,961 

2,012 

11,314 

7,657 

  

Provision for taxes on income

717 

530 

1,769 

2,642 

  

Minority interests

10 

  

Income from continuing operations

3,239 

1,479 

9,535 

5,009 

  

Discontinued operations:

Income from discontinued operations - net of tax

120 

107 

330 

299 

Gains on sales of discontinued operations - net of tax

23 

44 

  

Discontinued operations - net of tax

123 

110 

353 

343 

   

Net income

$

3,362 

$

1,589 

$

9,888 

$

5,352 

  

Earnings per common share - basic:

Income from continuing operations

$

0.45 

$

0.20 

$

1.31 

$

0.68 

Discontinued operations - net of tax

0.02 

0.02 

0.05 

0.05 

Net income

$

0.47 

$

0.22 

$

1.36 

$

0.73 

  

Earnings per common share - diluted:

Income from continuing operations

$

0.44 

$

0.20 

$

1.30 

$

0.67 

Discontinued operations - net of tax

0.02 

0.02 

0.05 

0.05 

Net income

$

0.46 

$

0.22 

$

1.35 

$

0.72 

  

Weighted-average shares used to calculate earnings per common share:

Basic

7,228 

7,333 

7,275 

7,372 

  

Diluted

7,251 

7,382 

7,306 

7,424 

  

Cash dividends paid per common share

$

0.24 

$

0.19 

$

0.72 

$

0.57 

   

(a)

Exclusive of amortization of intangible assets, except as disclosed in Note 12B, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets: Other Intangible Assets.

See accompanying Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.

PFIZER INC AND SUBSIDIARY COMPANIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(UNAUDITED)

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1, 
2006*

Dec. 31, 
2005**

ASSETS

Current Assets

Cash and cash equivalents

$

1,177 

$

2,247 

Short-term investments

11,654 

19,979 

Accounts receivable, less allowance for doubtful accounts

9,177 

9,103 

Short-term loans

460 

510 

Inventories

6,167 

5,478 

Prepaid expenses and taxes

3,281 

2,859 

Assets of discontinued operations and other assets held for sale

6,805 

6,659 

Total current assets

38,721 

46,835 

Long-term investments and loans

2,845 

2,497 

Property, plant and equipment, less accumulated depreciation

16,417 

16,233 

Goodwill

21,051 

20,985 

Identifiable intangible assets, less accumulated amortization

25,323 

26,244 

Other assets, deferred taxes and deferred charges

4,228 

4,176 

Total assets

$

108,585 

$

116,970 

   

LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY

Current Liabilities

Short-term borrowings, including current portion of long-term debt

$

2,508 

$

11,589 

Accounts payable

1,742 

2,073 

Dividends payable

1,772 

Income taxes payable

5,209 

3,618 

Accrued compensation and related items

1,533 

1,602 

Other current liabilities

5,271 

6,521 

Liabilities of discontinued operations and other liabilities held for sale

1,423 

1,237 

Total current liabilities

17,688 

28,412 

    

Long-term debt

5,561 

6,347 

Pension benefit obligations

2,636 

2,681 

Postretirement benefit obligations

1,368 

1,424 

Deferred taxes

8,838 

9,707 

Other noncurrent liabilities

2,782 

2,635 

Total liabilities

38,873 

51,206 

   

Shareholders' Equity

Preferred stock

146 

169 

Common stock

441 

439 

Additional paid-in capital

68,865 

67,759 

Employee benefit trust, at fair value

(845)

(923)

Treasury stock

(44,256)

(39,767)

Retained earnings

43,991 

37,608 

Accumulated other comprehensive income

1,370 

479 

   

Total shareholders' equity

69,712 

65,764 

Total liabilities and shareholders' equity

$

108,585 

$

116,970 

*    Unaudited.

**  Condensed from audited financial statements.

See accompanying Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.

PFIZER INC AND SUBSIDIARY COMPANIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(UNAUDITED)

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct.  1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

   

Operating Activities:

Net income

$

9,888 

$

5,352 

Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:

Depreciation and amortization

4,026 

4,143 

Share-based compensation expense

506 

121 

Merger-related in-process research and development charges

513 

1,652 

Intangible asset impairments and other associated non-cash charges

-- 

 1,216 

Gains on disposal of investments, products and product lines

(201)

(58)

Gains on sales of discontinued operations

(37)

(72)

Deferred taxes from continuing operations

(1,333)

(1,088)

Other deferred taxes

67 

(33)

Other non-cash adjustments

180 

290 

Changes in assets and liabilities (net of businesses acquired and divested)

(491)

(1,527)

   

Net cash provided by operating activities

13,118 

9,996 

   

Investing Activities:

Purchases of property, plant and equipment

(1,438)

(1,493)

Purchases of short-term investments

(8,472)

(16,840)

Proceeds from redemptions of short-term investments

17,346 

23,179 

Purchases of long-term investments

(835)

(650)

Proceeds from redemptions of long-term investments

229 

655 

Purchases of other assets

(118)

(392)

Proceeds from sales of other assets

Proceeds from the sales of businesses, products and product lines

22 

108 

Acquisitions, net of cash acquired

(1,989)

(2,104)

Other investing activities

(82)

238 

   

Net cash provided by investing activities

4,666 

2,707 

   

Financing Activities:

Increase in short-term borrowings, net

993 

Principal payments on short-term borrowings

(11,721)

(5,274)

Proceeds from issuances of long-term debt

1,051 

Principal payments on long-term debt

(55)

(1,042)

Purchases of common stock

(4,496)

(3,415)

Cash dividends paid

(5,211)

(4,177)

Stock option transactions and other

593 

346 

   

Net cash used in financing activities

(18,846)

(13,548)

Effect of exchange-rate changes on cash and cash equivalents

(8)

(4)

Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents

(1,070)

(849)

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period

2,247 

1,808 

   

Cash and cash equivalents at end of period

$

1,177 

$

959 

   

Supplemental Cash Flow Information:

Cash paid during the period for:

Income taxes

$

2,031 

$

3,738 

Interest

579 

485 

 

See accompanying Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.

PFIZER INC AND SUBSIDIARY COMPANIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)

Note 1.  Basis of Presentation

We prepared the condensed consolidated financial statements following the requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for interim reporting. As permitted under those rules, certain footnotes or other financial information that are normally required by accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (GAAP) can be condensed or omitted. Balance sheet amounts and operating results for subsidiaries operating outside the U.S. are as of and for the three-month and nine-month periods ended August 27, 2006 and August 28, 2005.

We made certain reclassifications to the 2005 condensed consolidated financial statements to conform to the 2006 presentation. These reclassifications are primarily related to discontinued operations (see Note 3, Discontinued Operations), as well as to better reflect jurisdictional netting of deferred taxes.

Revenues, expenses, assets and liabilities can vary during each quarter of the year. Therefore, the results and trends in these interim financial statements may not be representative of those for the full year.

We are responsible for the unaudited financial statements included in this document. The financial statements include all normal and recurring adjustments that are considered necessary for the fair presentation of our financial position and operating results.

The information included in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes included in Pfizer's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2005.

Note 2.  Acquisitions

On May 16, 2006, we completed the acquisition of all of the outstanding shares of Rinat Neuroscience Corp., a biologics company with several new central-nervous-system product candidates. In connection with the acquisition, as part of our preliminary purchase price allocation, we recorded $478 million, pre-tax, in Merger-related in-process research and development charges.

On February 28, 2006, we completed the acquisition of the sanofi-aventis worldwide rights, including patent rights and production technology, to manufacture and sell Exubera, an inhaled form of insulin for use in adults with type 1 and type 2 diabetes, and the insulin-production business and facilities located in Frankfurt, Germany, previously jointly owned by Pfizer and sanofi-aventis, for approximately $1.4 billion (including transaction costs). In connection with the acquisition, as part of our final purchase price allocation, we recorded an intangible asset for developed technology rights of approximately $1.0 billion, inventory valued at $218 million and goodwill of approximately $166 million, all of which have been allocated to our Pharmaceutical segment. The amortization of the developed technology rights is primarily included in Cost of Sales. Prior to the acquisition, in connection with our collaboration agreement with sanofi-aventis, we recorded a research and development milestone due to us from sanofi-aventis of approximately $118 million ($71 million, after tax) in the first quarter of 2006 in Research and development expenses upon the approval of Exubera in January 2006 by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

On September 14, 2005, we completed the acquisition of all of the outstanding shares of Vicuron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Vicuron), a biopharmaceutical company focused on the development of novel anti-infectives, for approximately $1.9 billion in cash (including transaction costs). The allocation of the purchase price includes in-process research and development of approximately $1.4 billion, which was expensed and included in Merger-related in-process research and development charges, and goodwill of $243 million, which has been allocated to our Pharmaceutical segment. Neither of these items was deductible for tax purposes.

On April 12, 2005, we completed the acquisition of Idun Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Idun), a biopharmaceutical company focused on the discovery and development of therapies to control apoptosis, and on August 15, 2005, we completed the acquisition of all outstanding shares of Bioren Inc. (Bioren), which focuses on technology for optimizing antibodies. The aggregate cost of these and other smaller acquisitions was approximately $340 million for the nine months ended October 2, 2005.

Note 3.  Discontinued Operations

We evaluate our businesses and product lines periodically for strategic fit within our operations. As a result of our evaluation, we decided to sell a number of businesses and product lines, certain of which qualified for Discontinued operations treatment:

In June 2006, we entered into an agreement to sell our Consumer Healthcare business for approximately $16.6 billion in cash. This business comprises substantially all of our former Consumer Healthcare segment and other associated amounts, such as purchase-accounting impacts and merger-related costs, and restructuring and implementation costs related to our Adapting to Scale (AtS) productivity initiative, previously reported in the Corporate/Other segment. In addition, certain manufacturing facility assets and liabilities, which were previously part of our Pharmaceutical or Corporate/Other segment, are included in the planned sale of the Consumer Healthcare business. In connection with the decision to sell this business, for all periods presented, the operating results associated with this business that will be discontinued have been reclassified into Discontinued operations - net of tax in the condensed consolidated statements of income, and the assets and liabilities associated with this business that will be sold have been reclassified into Assets/Liabilities of discontinued operations and other assets/liabilities held for sale, as appropriate, on the condensed consolidated balance sheets. The divestiture of the Consumer Healthcare business is expected to close in late 2006 and is subject to customary closing conditions, including receipt of regulatory approvals.

   

In the third quarter of 2005, we sold the last of three European generic pharmaceutical businesses, which we had included in our Pharmaceutical segment, for 4.7 million euros (approximately $5.6 million) and recorded a loss of $3 million ($2 million, net of tax) in Gains on sales of discontinued operations - net of tax in the condensed consolidated statement of income for the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005.

   

In the first quarter of 2005, we sold the second of three European generic pharmaceutical businesses, which had been included in our Pharmaceutical segment, for 70 million euros (approximately $93 million) and recorded a gain of $57 million ($36 million, net of tax) in Gains on sales of discontinued operations - net of tax in the condensed consolidated statement of income. In addition, we recorded an impairment charge of $9 million ($6 million, net of tax) related to the last of the three European generic pharmaceutical businesses in Income from discontinued operations - net of tax in the condensed consolidated statement of income for the nine months ended October 2, 2005.

 

The following amounts, primarily related to our Consumer Healthcare business, have been segregated from continuing operations and included in Discontinued operations - net of tax in the condensed consolidated statements of income:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(in millions)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

  

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

   

Revenues

$

974 

$

932 

$

2,920 

$

2,883 

   

Pre-tax income of discontinued businesses

$

178 

$

174 

$

493 

$

465 

Provision for taxes on income

(58)

(67)

(163)

(166)

Income from discontinued operations - net of tax

120 

107 

330 

299 

Pre-tax gains on sales of discontinued businesses

37 

72 

Provision for taxes on gains

(3)

(4)

(14)

(28)

Gains on sales of discontinued operations - net of tax

23 

44 

Discontinued operations-net of tax

$

123 

$

110 

$

353 

$

343 

 

The following assets and liabilities, primarily related to our Consumer Healthcare business, have been segregated and included in Assets of discontinued operations and other assets held for sale and Liabilities of discontinued operations and other liabilities held for sale, as appropriate, in the condensed consolidated balance sheets:

(in millions)

Oct. 1,
2006

Dec. 31,
2005

   

Accounts receivable, less allowance for doubtful accounts

$

778

$

661

Inventories

518

561

Prepaid expenses and taxes

64

71

Property, plant and equipment, less accumulated depreciation

1,023

1,002

Goodwill

2,751

2,789

Identifiable intangible assets, less accumulated amortization

1,651

1,557

Other assets, deferred taxes and deferred charges

20

18

Assets of discontinued operations and other assets held for sale

$

6,805

$

6,659

   

Current liabilities

$

681

$

538

Other

742

699

Liabilities of discontinued operations and other liabilities held for sale

$

1,423

$

1,237

 

Net cash flows of our discontinued operations estimated from each of the categories of operating, investing and financing activities were not significant for the nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005.

Note 4. Adoption of New Accounting Standards

On January 1, 2006, we adopted the provisions of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 123R, Share-Based Payment, as supplemented by the interpretation provided by SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 107, issued in March 2005. (SFAS 123R replaced SFAS 123, Stock-Based Compensation, issued in 1995.) We have elected the modified prospective application transition method of adoption and, as such, prior-period financial statements have not been restated. Under this method, the fair value of all stock options granted or modified after adoption must be recognized in the consolidated statement of income and total compensation cost related to nonvested awards not yet recognized, determined under the original provisions of SFAS 123, must also be recognized in the consolidated statement of income.

Prior to January 1, 2006, we accounted for stock options under Accounting Principle Board Opinion (APB) No. 25, Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees, an elective accounting policy permitted by SFAS 123. Under this standard, since the exercise price of our stock options granted is set equal to the market price on the date of the grant, we did not record any expense to the condensed consolidated statement of income related to stock options, unless certain original grant date terms were subsequently modified. However, as required, we disclosed, in the Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements, the pro forma expense impact of the stock option grants as if we had applied the fair-value-based recognition provisions of SFAS 123.

The adoption of SFAS 123R primarily impacted our accounting for stock options (see Note 14, Share-Based Payments).

Note 5.  Asset Impairment Charge and Other Costs Associated with the Suspension of Bextra Sales

In the first nine months of 2005, we recorded charges totaling $1.2 billion ($762 million, net of tax) in connection with the decision to suspend sales of Bextra. The pre-tax charge included $1.1 billion related to the impairment of developed technology rights and $7 million related to the write-off of machinery and equipment, both of which were included in Other (income)/deductions - net. In addition, in connection with the suspension, we recorded $56 million in write-offs of inventory and exit costs, included in Cost of sales; $8 million related to the cost of administering the suspension of sales, included in Selling, informational and administrative expenses; and $212 million for an estimate of customer returns, primarily included against Revenues. Substantially all of these charges were recorded in the first quarter of 2005.

Note 6.  Adapting to Scale Productivity Initiative

We incurred the following costs in connection with our Adapting to Scale (AtS) productivity initiative, which was launched in early 2005:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

  

  

  

  

Implementation costs(a)

$

182

$

100

$

547

$

133

Restructuring charges(b)

245

151

801

172

Total AtS costs

$

427

$

251

$

1,348

$

305

   

(a)

Included in Cost of sales ($50 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($63 million), Research and development expenses ($70 million) and in Other (income)/deductions - net ($1 million income) for the three months ended October 1, 2006 and included in Cost of sales ($278 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($160 million), Research and development expenses ($132 million) and in Other (income)/deductions - net ($23 million income) for the nine months ended October 1, 2006. Included in Cost of sales ($36 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($56 million) and Research and development expenses ($8 million) for the three months ended October 2, 2005 and included in Cost of sales ($37 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($76 million), Research and development expenses ($20 million) for the nine months ended October 2, 2005.

(b)

Included in Restructuring charges and merger-related costs.

 

Included in Discontinued operations - net of tax are additional pre-tax AtS costs of $2 million and $17 million for the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 and $7 million for the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005.

Through October 1, 2006, the restructuring charges primarily relate to our plant network optimization efforts and the restructuring of our U.S. marketing and worldwide research and development operations, while the implementation costs primarily relate to system and process standardization, as well as the expansion of shared services.

The components of restructuring charges associated with AtS follow:

(millions of dollars)

Costs
Incurred
Through
Oct. 1,
2006

Utilization
Through
Oct. 1,
2006

 

Accrual
as of
Oct. 1,
2006

(a)

  

  

Employee termination costs

$

751

$

626

$

125

Asset impairments

386

386

--

Other

102

50

52

Total

$

1,239

$

1,062

$

177

  

(a)

Included in Other current liabilities.

 

During the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006, we expensed $118 million and $449 million for Employee termination costs, $86 million and $263 million for Asset impairments, and $41 million and $89 million in Other. Through October 1, 2006, Employee termination costs represent the approved reduction of the workforce by 5,728 employees, mainly in manufacturing, sales and research. We notified affected individuals and 5,325 employees were terminated as of October 1, 2006. Employee termination costs are recorded as incurred and include accrued severance benefits, pension and postretirement benefits. Asset impairments primarily include charges to write off inventory and write down property, plant and equipment. Other primarily includes costs to exit certain activities.

Note 7.  Merger-Related Costs

We incurred the following merger-related costs:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

  

  

Integration costs

$

3

$

91

$

8

$

384

Restructuring charges

1

61

7

226

Total merger-related costs(a)

$

4

$

152

$

15

$

610

   

(a)

Included in Restructuring charges and merger-related costs. Amounts in 2005 primarily relate to our acquisition of Pharmacia Corporation (Pharmacia), which was completed on April 16, 2003.

 

Included in Discontinued operations - net of tax is a downward adjustment of additional pre-tax merger-related costs of  $(2) million for the three months ended October 1, 2006 and additional pre-tax merger-related costs of $3 million for the nine months ended October 1, 2006. Included in Discontinued operations - net of tax were additional pre-tax merger-related costs of $9 million and $25 million for the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005.

Restructuring charges included severance, costs of vacating duplicative facilities, contract termination and other exit costs.

Note 8.  Taxes on Income

A.  Taxes on Income

In the third quarter of 2006, we recorded a decrease to the 2005 estimated U.S. tax provision related to the repatriation of foreign earnings, due primarily to the receipt of information that raised our assessment of the likelihood of prevailing on the technical merits of a certain position and we recognized a tax benefit of $124 million.

On January 23, 2006, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued final regulations on Statutory Mergers and Consolidations, which impacted certain prior-period transactions. In the first quarter of 2006, we recorded a tax benefit of $217 million, reflecting the total impact of these regulations.

In the first nine months of 2005, we recorded an income tax charge of $1.7 billion, included in Provision  for taxes on income, in connection with our decision to repatriate about $37 billion of foreign earnings in accordance with the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (the Jobs Act). In the first quarter of 2005, we recorded an initial estimate of $2.2 billion based on the decision to repatriate $28.3 billion of foreign earnings; in the second quarter of 2005, we reduced our original estimate of the tax charge by $490 million, due primarily to guidance issued by the U.S. Treasury in the second quarter of 2005, partially offset by our decision to increase the amount of the repatriation.

As of October 1, 2006, we intend to permanently reinvest the earnings of our international subsidiaries and, therefore, we have not recorded a U.S. tax provision on unremitted earnings.

B.  Tax Contingencies

On January 25, 2006, the Company was notified by the IRS Appeals Division that a resolution had been reached on the matter that we were in the process of appealing related to the tax deductibility of a breakup fee paid by Warner-Lambert Company in 2000. As a result, in the first quarter of 2006 we recorded a tax benefit of approximately $441 million related to the resolution of this issue.

In the second quarter of 2005, we recorded a tax benefit of $586 million primarily related to the resolution of certain tax positions.

The IRS is currently conducting audits of the Pfizer Inc. tax returns for the years 2002, 2003 and 2004. The 2005 and 2006 tax years are also currently under audit under the IRS Compliance Assurance Process, a recently introduced real-time audit process.

With respect to Pharmacia Corporation, the IRS has completed audits of the tax returns for the years 2000 through 2002 and is currently conducting an audit for the 2003 tax year through the date of the merger with Pfizer (April 16, 2003).

We periodically reassess the likelihood of assessments resulting from audits of federal, state and foreign income tax filings. We believe that our accruals for tax liabilities are adequate for all open years.

Note 9.  Comprehensive Income

The components of comprehensive income/(expense) follow:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

   

  

Net income

$

3,362 

$

1,589 

$

9,888 

$

5,352 

Other comprehensive income/(expense):

Currency translation adjustment and other(a)

(125)

(174)

873 

(1,159)

Net unrealized gains/(losses) on derivative financial instruments(b)

(19)

(13)

74 

(40)

Net unrealized gains/(losses) on available-for-sale securities(b)

(2)

(35)

(114)

Minimum pension liability(b)

 8  

(21) 

20 

Total other comprehensive income/(expense)

(138)

(176)

891 

(1,293)

Total comprehensive income

$

3,224 

$

1,413 

$

10,779 

$

4,059 

    

(a)

Includes changes in currency translation adjustments of nil and $21 million for the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006, and ($12) million and ($37) million for the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005, related to discontinued operations.

(b)

Amounts associated with discontinued operations are not significant.

 

Note 10.  Financial Instruments

A.  Long-Term Debt

In May 2006, we decided to exercise Pfizer's option to call, at par-value plus accrued interest, $1 billion of senior unsecured floating-rate notes, which were included in Long-term debt as of December 31, 2005. Notice to call was given to the Trustees and the notes were redeemed in the third quarter of 2006.

On February 22, 2006, we issued the following Japanese yen fixed-rate bonds, to be used for general corporate purposes:

$508 million equivalent, senior unsecured notes, due February 2011, which pay interest semi-annually, beginning on August 22, 2006, at a rate of 1.2%; and

    

$466 million equivalent, senior unsecured notes, due February 2016, which pay interest semi-annually, beginning on August 22, 2006, at a rate of 1.8%.

 

The notes were issued under a $5 billion debt shelf registration filed with the SEC in November 2002. As of October 1, 2006, we had the ability to borrow approximately $1 billion by issuing debt securities under that debt shelf registration statement.

B.  Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging Activities

There was no material ineffectiveness in any hedging relationship reported in earnings in the first nine months of 2006.

Foreign Exchange Risk

During the first nine months of 2006, we entered into the following new or incremental hedging or offset activities:

Instrument(a)

Primary
Balance Sheet
Caption

(b)

  

Hedge
Type

(c)

  

Hedged or Offset Item

Notional Amount as of
October 1, 2006
(millions of dollars)

Maturity Date

Forward

OCL

--

Short-term foreign currency assets and liabilities(d)

$ 1,521             

2006

Swaps

OCL

NI

Euro net investments

1,318             

2007

Forward

OCL

CF

Yen available-for-sale investments

822             

2006

LT yen debt

LTD

NI

Yen net investments

508             

2011

Forward

Prepaid

CF

Euro intercompany loan

  

493             

2006

LT yen debt

LTD

NI

Yen net investments

466             

2016

   

(a)

Forward = Forward-exchange contracts; LT yen debt = Long-term yen debt

(b)

The primary balance sheet caption indicates the financial statement classification of the fair value amount associated with the financial instrument used to hedge foreign exchange risk. OCL = Other current liabilities; Prepaid = Prepaid expenses and taxes; LTD = Long-term debt

(c)

NI = Net investment hedge; CF = Cash flow hedge

(d)

Forward-exchange contracts used to offset short-term foreign currency assets and liabilities were primarily for intercompany transactions in euros, Japanese yen, U.K. pounds, Canadian dollars and Australian dollars.

 

These foreign-exchange instruments serve to protect us against the impact of the translation into U.S. dollars of certain foreign exchange denominated transactions.

Note 11.  Inventories

The components of inventories follow:

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1,
2006

Dec. 31,
2005

   

Finished goods

$

2,160

$

1,756

Work-in-process

2,993

2,373

Raw materials and supplies

1,014

1,349

Total inventories(a)

$

6,167

$

5,478

   

    

 

(a)

Increase primarily due to the acquisition of sanofi-aventis' Exubera inventory, the build-up of inventory in advance of product launches and the impact of foreign exchange, partially offset by the impact of our inventory-reduction initiative.

 

 

Note 12.  Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets

A.  Goodwill

The changes in the carrying amount of goodwill by segment for the nine months ended October 1, 2006 follow:

(millions of dollars)

Pharmaceutical 

Animal 
Health 

Other 

Total 

   

Balance, December 31, 2005

$

20,919 

$

56 

$

10 

$

20,985 

Additions(a)

166 

-- 

-- 

166 

Other(b)

(112)

(100)

Balance, October 1, 2006

$

20,973 

$

61 

$

17 

$

21,051 

  

(a)

Primarily related to Exubera.

(b)

Includes a reduction to goodwill related to the resolution of certain tax positions and the impact of foreign exchange.

 

B.  Other Intangible Assets

The components of identifiable intangible assets, primarily included in our Pharmaceutical segment, follow:

Oct. 1, 2006

Dec. 31, 2005

(millions of dollars)

Gross 
Carrying 
Amount 

Accumulated 
Amortization 

Gross 
Carrying 
Amount 

Accumulated 
Amortization 

Finite-lived intangible assets:

Developed technology rights

$

32,440 

$

(11,459)

$

30,729 

$

(8,810)

Brands

887 

(85)

885 

(51)

License agreements

191 

(38)

152 

(27)

Trademarks

111 

(71)

106 

(65)

Other(a)

517 

(255)

446 

(203)

Total amortized finite-lived intangible assets

34,146 

(11,908)

32,318 

(9,156)

Indefinite-lived intangible assets:

Brands

2,989 

-- 

2,990 

-- 

Trademarks

79 

-- 

79 

-- 

Other(b)

17 

-- 

13 

-- 

Total indefinite-lived intangible assets

3,085 

-- 

3,082 

-- 

Total identifiable intangible assets

$

37,231 

$

(11,908)

$

35,400 

$

(9,156)

  

Total identifiable intangible assets, less accumulated amortization

$

25,323

  

$

26,244

  

(a)

Includes patents, non-compete agreements, customer contracts and other intangible assets.

(b)

Includes pension-related intangible assets.

 

In the first nine months of 2006, we acquired the sanofi-aventis worldwide rights, including patent rights and production technology, to manufacture and sell Exubera. In connection with the acquisition, we recorded an intangible asset for developed technology rights of approximately $1.0 billion. The amortization of these developed technology rights are primarily included in Cost of sales.

In the first nine months of 2005, we recorded an impairment charge of $1.1 billion in Other (income)/deductions - net related to the developed technology rights for Bextra, a selective COX-2 inhibitor (included in our Pharmaceutical segment) in connection with the decision to suspend sales of Bextra (see Note 5, Asset Impairment Charge and Other Costs Associated with the Suspension of Bextra Sales).

Amortization expense related to acquired intangible assets that contribute to our ability to sell, manufacture, research, market and distribute our products are included in Amortization of intangible assets as they benefit multiple business functions. Amortization expense related to acquired intangible assets that are associated with a single function are included in Cost of sales, Selling, informational and administrative expenses or Research and development expenses, as appropriate. Total amortization expense for finite-lived intangible assets was $851 million and $856 million for the three months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005, and $2.6 billion for the nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005.

Included in Discontinued operations - net of tax is additional pre-tax amortization expense for finite-lived intangible assets of nil and $3 million for the three months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005 and $7 million for the nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005.

The annual amortization expense expected for the fiscal years 2006 through 2011 is $3.4 billion in 2006; $3.3 billion in 2007; $2.8 billion in 2008; and $2.5 billion in 2009, 2010 and 2011.

Note 13.  Benefit Plans

The components of net periodic benefit cost of the U.S. and international pension plans and the postretirement plans, which provide medical and life insurance benefits to retirees and their eligible dependents, for the three months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005 follow:

Pension Plans

U.S. Qualified

U.S. Supplemental
(Non-Qualified)

International

Postretirement Plans

(millions of dollars)

2006 

2005 

2006

2005

2006 

2005  

2006 

2005 

   

Service cost

$

91 

$

80 

$

10 

$

$

78 

$

71 

$

11 

$

10 

Interest cost

110 

104 

15 

15 

79 

76 

32 

28 

Expected return on plan assets

(157)

(148)

-- 

-- 

(82)

(77)

(7)

(6)

Amortization of:

Prior service costs/(credits)

(1)

-- 

(1)

(1)

-- 

Net transition obligation

-- 

-- 

-- 

-- 

-- 

-- 

Actuarial losses

31 

26

13 

10 

28 

23 

11 

Curtailments and settlements - net

12 

-- 

-- 

-- 

-- 

Special termination benefits

-- 

-- 

Less: amounts included in discontinued operations

(4)

(3)

(1)

(1)

(1)

(1)

Net periodic benefit costs

$

86 

$

67 

$

36 

$

33 

$

116 

$

100 

$

50 

$

37 

 

The components of net periodic benefit cost of the U.S. and international pension plans and the postretirement plans, which provide medical and life insurance benefits to retirees and their eligible dependents, for the nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005 follow:

Pension Plans

U.S. Qualified

U.S. Supplemental
(Non-Qualified)

International

Postretirement Plans

(millions of dollars)

2006 

2005 

2006 

2005 

2006 

2005 

2006 

2005 

   

Service cost

$

277 

$

239 

$

32 

$

28 

$

227 

$

224 

$

35 

$

29 

Interest cost

334 

310 

45 

44 

229 

234 

95 

84 

Expected return on plan assets

(472)

(445)

-- 

-- 

(238)

(238)

(21)

(17)

Amortization of:

Prior service costs/(credits)

6  

11 

(2)

(1) 

(2)

Net transition obligation

--  

-- 

-- 

-- 

2  

 2 

-- 

-- 

Actuarial losses

90  

77 

34 

29 

79 

71 

28 

14 

Curtailments and settlements - net

37  

-- 

-- 

11 

17 

-- 

Special termination benefits

11  

-- 

-- 

18 

11 

Less: amounts included in discontinued operations

(12)

(11)

(2)

(2)

(2)

(2)

(3)

(3)

Net periodic benefit costs

$

271 

$

185 

$

107 

$

100 

$

323 

$

311 

$

159 

$

109 

 

For the first nine months of 2006, we contributed from the Company's general assets $450 million to our U.S. qualified pension plans, $70 million to our U.S. supplemental (non-qualified) pension plans, $401 million to our international pension plans and $218 million to our postretirement plans.

During 2006, we expect to contribute, from the Company's general assets, a total of $454 million to our U.S. qualified pension plans, $77 million to our U.S. supplemental (non-qualified) pension plans, $483 million to our international pension plans and $260 million to our postretirement plans. Contributions expected to be made for 2006 are inclusive of amounts contributed during the first nine months of 2006. The contributions from the Company's general assets include direct employer benefit payments. Amounts associated with discontinued operations are not significant.

Note 14.  Share-Based Payments

Our compensation programs can include share-based payments. In 2006 and 2005, the primary share-based awards and their general terms and conditions are as follows:

Stock options, which entitle the holder to purchase, at the end of a vesting term, a specified number of shares of Pfizer common stock at a price per share set equal to the market price of Pfizer common stock on the date of grant.

   

Restricted stock units (RSUs), which entitle the holder to receive, at the end of a vesting term, a specified number of shares of Pfizer common stock, including shares resulting from dividend equivalents paid on such RSUs.

   

Performance share awards (PSAs) and performance-contingent share awards (PCSAs), which entitle the holder to receive, at the end of a vesting term, a number of shares of Pfizer common stock, within a range of shares from zero to a specified maximum, calculated using a non-discretionary formula that measures Pfizer's performance relative to an industry peer group.

   

Restricted stock grants, which entitle the holder to receive, at the end of a vesting term, a specified number of shares of Pfizer common stock, and which also entitle the holder to receive dividends paid on such grants.

 

The Company's shareholders approved the Pfizer Inc. 2004 Stock Plan (the 2004 Plan) at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders held on April 22, 2004 and, effective upon that approval, new stock option and other share-based awards may be granted only under the 2004 Plan. The 2004 Plan allows a maximum of 3 million shares to be awarded to any employee per year and 475 million shares in total. RSUs, PSAs, PCSAs and restricted stock grants count as three shares while stock options count as one share under the 2004 Plan toward the maximums.

In the past, we had various employee stock and incentive plans under which stock options and other share-based awards were granted. Stock options and other share-based awards that were granted under prior plans and were outstanding on April 22, 2004 continue in accordance with the terms of the respective plans.

As of October 1, 2006, 313 million shares were available for award, which include 31 million shares available for award under the legacy Pharmacia Long-Term Incentive Plan, that reflect award cancellations returned to the pool of available shares for legacy Pharmacia commitments.

Although not required to do so, historically we have used authorized and unissued shares and, to a lesser extent, shares held in our Employee Benefit Trust to satisfy our obligations under these programs.

A.  Impact on Net Income

The components of share-based compensation expense and the associated tax benefit follow:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

  

  

  

  

Stock option expense

$

93 

$

-- 

$

314 

$

-- 

Restricted stock unit expense

53 

34 

142 

85 

Performance share awards and performance-contingent share awards expense

34 

50 

36 

Share-based payment expense(a)

180 

42 

506 

121 

Tax benefit for share-based compensation expense

(57)

(14)

(150)

(41)

Share-based payment expense, net of tax

$

123 

$

28 

$

356 

$

80 

     

(a)

Included in Cost of sales, Selling, informational and administrative expense and Research and development expense, as appropriate, generally according to the expense classification of the employees' payroll costs.

 

Included in Discontinued operations - net of tax is share-based compensation expense as shown in the following table:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

  

Oct. 2, 
2005 

  

Oct. 1, 
2006 

  

Oct. 2, 
2005 

  

Share-based compensation expense

$

$

$

23 

$

Tax benefit for share-based compensation expense

(3)

(1)

(7)

(2)

Share-based compensation expense, net of tax

$

$

$

16 

$

 

Amounts capitalized as part of inventory cost were not significant. In the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006, the impact of modifications under the AtS productivity initiative to share-based awards was not significant and, in the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005, the impact of modifications under the Pharmacia restructuring program was not significant. Generally, these modifications resulted in an acceleration of vesting either in accordance with plan terms or at management's discretion.

B.  Stock Options

Stock options, which entitle the holder to purchase, at the end of a vesting term, a specified number of shares of Pfizer common stock at a price per share set equal to the market price of Pfizer common stock on the date of grant, are accounted for at fair value at the date of grant in the income statement beginning in 2006. These fair values are generally amortized on an even basis over the vesting term into Cost of sales, Selling, informational and administrative expenses and Research and development expenses, as appropriate.

In 2005 and earlier years, stock options were accounted for under APB No. 25 using the intrinsic value method in the income statement and fair value information was disclosed. In these disclosures of fair value, we allocated stock option compensation expense based on the nominal vesting period, rather than the expected time to achieve retirement eligibility. In 2006, we changed our method of allocating stock option compensation expense to a method based on the substantive vesting period for all new awards, while continuing to allocate outstanding nonvested awards not yet recognized as of December 31, 2005 under the nominal vesting period method. Specifically, under this prospective change in accounting policy, compensation expense related to stock options granted prior to 2006 that are subject to accelerated vesting upon retirement eligibility is being recognized over the vesting term of the grant, even though the service period after retirement eligibility is not considered to be a substantive vesting requirement. The impact of this change was not significant.

All employees may receive stock option grants. In virtually all instances, stock options vest after three years of continuous service from the grant date and have a contractual term of ten years; for certain members of management, vesting typically occurs in equal annual installments after three, four and five years from the grant date. In all cases, even for stock options that are subject to accelerated vesting upon voluntary retirement, stock options must be held for at least one year from grant date before any vesting may occur. In the event of a divestiture, options held by employees of the divested business are immediately vested and are exercisable from three months to their remaining term, depending on various conditions.

The fair value of each stock option grant is estimated on the grant date using, for virtually all grants, the Black-Scholes-Merton option-pricing model. These fair values incorporate a number of valuation assumptions noted in the following table, shown at their weighted-average values:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

   

 

Expected dividend yield (a)

3.65%

  

2.76%

   

3.66%

   

2.90%

Risk-free interest rate (b)

4.87%

 

3.81%

4.59%

3.96%

Expected stock price volatility (c)

22.85%

 

20.00%

24.50%

21.93%

Expected term (d) (years)

10   

 

5.59   

6   

5.75   

   

(a)

Determined using a constant dividend yield during the expected term of the option.

(b)

Determined using the extrapolated yield on U.S. Treasury zero-coupon issues.

(c)

Determined using implied volatility, after consideration of historical volatility.

(d)

Determined using historical exercise and post-vesting termination patterns. In the third quarter of 2006, the use of historical patterns was deemed inappropriate as virtually all of the option-grant activity related to a single individual; instead, the contractual term of the options was used.

 

In the first quarter of 2006, we changed our method of estimating expected stock price volatility to reflect market-based inputs under emerging stock option valuation considerations. We use the implied volatility in a long-term traded option, after consideration of historical volatility. In 2005, we used an average term structure of volatility quoted to us by financial institutions, after consideration of historical volatility.

The following table summarizes all stock option activity during the nine months ended October 1, 2006:

Shares (thousands)

Weighted-
Average
Exercise
Price
Per Share

Weighted-
Average
Remaining
Contractual
Term
(years)

Aggregate
Intrinsic
Value(a)
(millions)

    

Outstanding, January 1, 2006

627,404 

$33.51

Granted

69,202 

26.20

Exercised

(33,451)

15.56

Forfeited

(7,600)

30.95

Cancelled

(53,720)

32.38

Outstanding, October 1, 2006

601,835 

33.81

5.4

$589

Vested and expected to vest(b), October 1, 2006

593,273 

33.85

5.3

578

Exercisable, October 1, 2006

405,054 

35.32

4.0

339

   

(a)

Market price of underlying stock less exercise price.

(b)

The number of options expected to vest takes into account an estimate of expected forfeitures.

The following table provides data related to all stock option activity:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars, except per stock option amounts and years)

Oct. 1,
2006

  

Oct. 2,
2005

  

Oct. 1,
2006

  

Oct. 2,
2005

  

Weighted-average grant date fair value per stock option

$

5.70

$

5.00

$

5.42

$

5.15

Aggregate intrinsic value on exercise

$

165

$

101

$

336

$

397

Cash received upon exercise

$

230

$

64

$

497

$

326

Tax benefits realized related to exercise

$

45

$

21

$

98

$

124

Total compensation cost related to nonvested stock options not yet recognized, pre-tax (a)

$

457

N/A

$

457

N/A

Weighted-average period in years over which stock option compensation cost is expected to be recognized (b)

1.3

N/A

1.3

N/A

 

     

 

(a)

The total compensation cost related to our Consumer Healthcare business is $22 million.

 

(b)

The planned divestiture of our Consumer Healthcare business does not have a significant impact on this weighted-average period.

 

 

C.  Restricted Stock Units

RSUs, which entitle the holder to receive, at the end of a vesting term, a specified number of shares of Pfizer common stock, including shares resulting from dividend equivalents paid on such RSUs, are accounted for at fair value at the date of grant. Most RSUs vest in substantially equal portions each year over five years of continuous service; the fair value related to each year's portion is then amortized evenly into Cost of sales, Selling, informational and administrative expenses and Research and development expenses, as appropriate. For certain members of senior and key management, vesting may occur after three years of continuous service.

The fair value of each RSU grant is estimated on the grant date using the average price of Pfizer common stock on the date of grant.

The following table summarizes all RSU activity during the nine months ended October 1, 2006:

(thousands of shares)

Shares 

   

Weighted-Average
Grant Date Fair
Value Per Share

    

Nonvested, January 1, 2006

12,803 

$26.89

Granted

12,682 

26.15

Vested

(3,338)

27.32

Reinvested dividend equivalents

502 

25.30

Forfeited

(1,215)

26.19

Nonvested, October 1, 2006

21,434 

26.58

 

The following table provides data related to all RSU activity:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars, except per RSU amounts and years)

Oct. 1,
2006

  

Oct. 2,
2005

  

Oct. 1,
2006

  

Oct. 2,
2005

  

Weighted-average grant date fair value per RSU

$

26.16

$

26.66

$

26.35

$

26.25

Total fair value of shares vested

$

1

$

1

$

91

$

2

Total compensation cost related to nonvested RSU awards not yet recognized, pre-tax(a)

$

335

N/A

$

335

N/A

Weighted-average period in years over which RSU cost is expected to be recognized(b)

4.0

N/A

4.0

N/A

 

       

 

(a)

The total compensation cost related to our Consumer Healthcare business is $17 million.

 

(b)

The planned divestiture of our Consumer Healthcare business does not have a significant impact on this weighted-average period.

 

 

D.  Performance Share Awards (PSAs) and Performance-Contingent Share Awards (PCSAs)

PSAs in 2006 and PCSAs prior to 2006 entitle the holder to receive, at the end of a vesting term, a number of shares of Pfizer common stock, within a specified range of shares, calculated using a non-discretionary formula that measures Pfizer's performance relative to an industry peer group. PSAs are accounted for at fair value at the date of grant in the income statement beginning with grants in 2006. Further, PSAs are generally amortized on an even basis over the vesting term into Cost of sales, Selling, informational and administrative expenses and Research and development expenses, as appropriate. For grants in 2005 and earlier years, PCSA grants are accounted for using the intrinsic value method in the income statement.

Senior and other key members of management may receive PSA and PCSA grants. In most instances, PSA grants vest after three years and PCSA grants vest after five years of continuous service from the grant date. In certain instances, PCSA grants vest over two to four years of continuous service from the grant date. The vesting terms are equal to the contractual terms.

The 2004 Plan limitations on the maximum amount of share-based awards apply to all awards including PSA and PCSA grants. In 2001, our shareholders approved the 2001 Performance-Contingent Share Award Plan (the 2001 Plan), allowing a maximum of 12.5 million shares to be awarded to all participants. This maximum was applied to awards for performance periods beginning after January 1, 2002 through 2004. The 2004 Plan is the only plan under which share-based awards may be granted in the future.

PSA grants made in 2006 will vest and be paid based on a non-discretionary formula that measures our performance using relative total shareholder return over a performance period relative to an industry peer group. If our minimum performance in the measure is below the threshold level relative to the peer group, then no shares will be paid. PCSA grants made prior to 2006 will vest and be paid based on a non-discretionary formula, which measures our performance using relative total shareholder return and relative change in diluted earnings per common share (EPS) over a performance period relative to an industry peer group. If our minimum performance in the measures is below the threshold level relative to the peer group, then no shares will be paid.

As of January 1, 2006, we measure PSA grants at fair value using the average price of Pfizer common stock on the date of grant times the target number of shares. The target number of shares is determined by reference to the fair value of share-based awards to similar employees in the industry peer group. We measure PCSA grants at intrinsic value whereby the probable award was allocated over the term of the award, then the resultant shares are adjusted to the fair value of our common stock at each accounting period until the date of payment.

The following table summarizes all PSA and PCSA activity during the nine months ended October 1, 2006, with the shares granted representing the maximum award that could be achieved:

(thousands of shares)

Shares 

  

Weighted-Average
Grant Date
Value Per Share

   

Nonvested, January 1, 2006

13,366 

$23.32

Granted

1,563 

26.18

Vested

(1,583)

26.20

Reinvested dividend equivalents

29 

25.17

Forfeited(a)

(1,646)

26.12

Nonvested, October 1, 2006

11,729 

28.07

 

    

(a)

Forfeited includes 345 thousand shares that were forfeited by retirees. At the discretion of the Compensation Committee of the Company's Board of Directors, $9 million in cash was paid to such retirees, which amount was equivalent to the fair value of the forfeited shares prorated for the portion of the performance period that was completed prior to retirement.

 

The following table provides data related to all PSA and PCSA activity:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars, except per PCSA amounts and years)

Oct. 1,
2006

  

Oct. 2,
2005

  

Oct. 1,
2006

  

Oct. 2,
2005

  

Weighted-average grant date intrinsic value per PCSA

$

28.36

$

24.97

$

28.36

$

24.97

Total intrinsic value of vested PCSA shares

$

--

$

--

$

50

$

56

Total compensation cost related to nonvested PSA grants not yet recognized, pre-tax(a)

$

15

N/A

$

15

N/A

Weighted-average period in years over which PSA cost is expected to be recognized(b)

2.3

N/A

2. 3

N/A

   

(a)

The total compensation cost related to our Consumer Healthcare business is nominal.

 

(b)

The planned divestiture of our Consumer Healthcare business does not have a significant impact on this weighted-average period.

 

 

We entered into forward-purchase contracts that partially offset the potential impact on net income of our obligation under the pre-2006 PCSAs. At settlement date we will, at the option of the counterparty to each of the contracts, either receive our own stock or settle the contracts for cash. Other contract terms are as follows:

Per Share

Maximum
Maturity (years)

(thousands of shares)

Purchase
Price

  

Oct. 1,
2006

  

Dec. 31,
2005

   

3,051

$33.85

0.6

--

3,051

33.84

--

0.4

 

The financial statements include the following items related to these contracts:

Prepaid expenses and taxes includes:

fair value of these contracts

 

Other (income)/deductions - net includes:

changes in the fair value of these contracts

 

E.  Restricted Stock

Restricted stock grants, which entitle the holder to receive, at the end of a vesting term, a specified number of shares of Pfizer common stock, and which also entitle the holder to receive dividends paid on such grants, are accounted for at fair value at the date of grant.

Senior and key members of management received restricted stock awards prior to 2005. In most instances, restricted stock grants vest after three years of continuous service from the grant date. The vesting terms are equal to the contractual terms.

These awards have not been significant.

F.  Transition Information

The following table shows the effect on results for the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005 as if we had applied the fair-value-based recognition provisions of SFAS 123R to measure stock-based compensation expense for the option grants:

(millions of dollars, except per common share data)

 

Three Months 
Ended 
Oct. 2, 2005 

 

Nine Months 
Ended 
Oct. 2, 2005 

   

Net income available to common shareholders used in the calculation of basic earnings per common share:

As reported under GAAP(a)

$

1,588 

$

5,348 

Compensation expense - net of tax(b)

(104)

(356)

Pro forma

$

1,484 

$

4,992 

Basic earnings per common share:

As reported under GAAP(a)

$

0.22 

$

0.73 

Compensation expense - net of tax(b)

(0.02)

(0.05)

Pro forma

$

0.20 

$

0.68 

Net income available to common shareholders used in the calculation of diluted earnings per common share:

As reported under GAAP(a)

$

1,588 

$

5,349 

Compensation expense - net of tax(b)

(104)

(356)

Pro forma

$

1,484 

$

4,993 

Diluted earnings per common share:

As reported under GAAP(a)

$

0.22 

$

0.72 

Compensation expense - net of tax(b)

(0.02)

(0.05)

Pro forma

$

0.20 

$

0.67 

   

(a) 

Includes stock-based compensation expense, net of related tax effects, of $28 million and $81 million for the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005.

(b) 

Pro forma compensation expense related to stock options that are subject to accelerated vesting upon retirement is recognized over the period of employment up to the vesting date of the grant.

 

Note 15.  Earnings Per Common Share

Basic and diluted EPS were computed using the following common share data:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

Oct. 1,
2006 

Oct. 2,
2005

  

EPS Numerator - Basic:

Income from continuing operations

$

3,239

$

1,479

$

9,535

$

5,009

Less:  Preferred stock dividends - net of tax

1

1

4

4

Income available to common shareholders from continuing operations

3,238

1,478

9,531

5,005

Discontinued operations - net of tax

123

110

353

343

Net income available to common shareholders

$

3,361

$

1,588

$

9,884

$

5,348

  

EPS Denominator - Basic:

Weighted-average number of common shares outstanding

7,228

7,333

7,275

7,372

  

EPS Numerator - Diluted:

Income from continuing operations

$

3,239

$

1,479

$

9,535

$

5,009

Less:  ESOP contribution - net of tax

1

1

3

3

Income available to common shareholders from continuing operations

3,238

1,478

9,532

5,006

Discontinued operations - net of tax

123

110

353

343

Net income available to common shareholders

$

3,361

$

1,588

$

9,885

$

5,349

  

EPS Denominator - Diluted:

Weighted-average number of common shares outstanding

7,228 

7,333 

7,275 

7,372 

Common share equivalents: stock options, restricted stock units, stock issuable under employee compensation plans and convertible preferred stock

23

49

31

52

Weighted-average number of common shares outstanding and common share equivalents

7,251

7,382

7,306

7,424

 

Outstanding stock options, representing about 563 million shares and 564 million shares of common stock during the three-month and nine-month periods ended October 1, 2006 and about 563 million shares and 513 million shares of common stock during the three-month and nine-month periods ended October 2, 2005, had exercise prices greater than the average market price of our common stock. Such options are excluded from the computation of diluted EPS for these periods because their inclusion would have had an anti-dilutive effect.

Also, in the diluted computation, income from continuing operations and net income are reduced by the incremental contribution to the ESOPs, which were acquired as part of our Pharmacia acquisition. This contribution is the after-tax difference between the income that the ESOPs would have received in preferred stock dividends and the dividend on the common shares assumed to have been outstanding.

Note 16.  Segment Information

We operate in the following business segments:

Pharmaceutical

  

The Pharmaceutical segment, which represents our pharmaceutical business, includes products that prevent and treat cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, central nervous system disorders, arthritis and pain, infectious and respiratory diseases, urogenital conditions, cancer, eye disease, endocrine disorders and allergies.

   

Animal Health

   

The Animal Health segment includes products that prevent and treat diseases in livestock and companion animals.

 

Segment profit/(loss) is measured based on income from continuing operations before provision for taxes on income and minority interests. Certain costs, such as significant impacts of purchase accounting for acquisitions, merger-related costs and costs related to our AtS productivity initiative, are included in Corporate/Other only. This methodology is utilized by management to evaluate our businesses.

Revenues and profit/(loss) by segment for the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005, follow:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

  

Oct. 1, 
2006 

  

Oct. 2, 
2005 

  

Revenues:

Pharmaceutical

$

11,485 

$

10,547 

$

33,417

$

32,617 

Animal Health

562 

503 

1,656 

1,576 

Corporate/Other(a)

233 

213 

695 

665 

Total revenues

$

12,280 

$

11,263 

$

35,768 

$

34,858 

   

Segment profit/(loss)(b)

Pharmaceutical

$

5,492 

$

4,869 

$

16,253 

$

14,799 

Animal Health

100 

85 

315 

288 

Corporate/Other(a)

(1,631)

(c)

(2,942)

(d)

(5,254)

(c)

(7,430)

(d)

Total profit/(loss)

$

3,961 

$

2,012 

$

11,314 

$

7,657 

  

(a)

Corporate/Other includes our gelatin capsules business, our contract manufacturing business and a bulk pharmaceutical chemicals business. Corporate/Other also includes interest income/(expense), corporate expenses (e.g., corporate administration costs), other income/(expense) (e.g., realized gains and losses attributable to our investments in debt and equity securities), certain performance-based compensation expenses not allocated to the business segments, share-based payments, significant impacts of purchase accounting for acquisitions, certain milestone payments, merger-related costs, intangible asset impairments and costs related to our AtS productivity initiative.

  

(b)

Segment profit/(loss) equals income from continuing operations before provision for taxes on income and minority interests. Certain costs, such as significant impacts of purchase accounting for acquisitions, merger-related costs and costs related to our AtS productivity initiative, are included in Corporate/Other only. This methodology is utilized by management to evaluate our businesses.

  

(c)

For the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006, Corporate/Other includes (i) significant impacts of purchase accounting for acquisitions of $803 million and $2.9 billion, including acquired in-process research and development charges and incremental intangible asset amortization and other charges, (ii) merger-related costs of $4 million and $15 million, (iii) restructuring charges and implementation costs associated with our AtS productivity initiative of $427 million and $1.3 billion, (iv) gain on disposals of investments and other of $86 million and $160 million, and (v) a research and development milestone due to us from sanofi-aventis of approximately $118 million in the first quarter of 2006.

  

(d)

For the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005, Corporate/Other includes (i) significant impacts of purchase accounting for acquisitions of $2.2 billion and $4.1 billion, including acquired in-process research and development charges, incremental intangible asset amortization and other charges, (ii) merger-related costs of $152 million and $610 million, (iii) restructuring charges and implementation costs associated with our AtS productivity initiative of $251 million and $305 million, and (iv) costs associated with the suspension of Bextra's sales of $3 million and $1.2 billion.

 

Revenues for each group of similar products follow:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

  


Change 

  

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

  


Change 

   

PHARMACEUTICAL

Cardiovascular and metabolic diseases

$

5,111

$

4,467

14%

$

14,628

$

13,664

7%

Central nervous system disorders

1,500

1,590

(6)  

4,787

4,718

1   

Arthritis and pain

706

548

29   

1,974

1,736

14   

Infectious and respiratory diseases

836

1,074

(22)  

2,608

3,659

(29)  

Urology

732

629

16   

2,055

1,958

5   

Oncology

540

507

7   

1,550

1,499

3   

Ophthalmology

376

338

11   

1,065

1,011

5   

Endocrine disorders

246

262

(6)  

724

783

(7)  

All other

1,102

865

26   

3,042

2,832

7   

Alliance revenue

336

267

26   

984

757

30   

Total Pharmaceutical

11,485

10,547

9   

33,417

32,617

2   

ANIMAL HEALTH

562

503

12   

1,656

1,576

5   

OTHER

233

213

9   

695

665

5   

Total revenues

$

12,280

$

11,263

9   

$

35,768

$

34,858

3   

 

REVIEW REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Shareholders and Board of Directors of Pfizer Inc:

We have reviewed the condensed consolidated balance sheet of Pfizer Inc and Subsidiary Companies as of October 1, 2006, the related condensed consolidated statements of income for the three-month and nine-month periods ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005, and the related condensed consolidated statements of cash flows for the nine-month periods ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005. These condensed consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management.

We conducted our reviews in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). A review of interim financial information consists principally of applying analytical procedures and making inquiries of persons responsible for financial and accounting matters. It is substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the objective of which is the expression of an opinion regarding the financial statements taken as a whole. Accordingly, we do not express such an opinion.

Based on our reviews, we are not aware of any material modifications that should be made to the condensed consolidated financial statements referred to above for them to be in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

We have previously audited, in accordance with standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the consolidated balance sheet of Pfizer Inc and Subsidiary Companies as of December 31, 2005, and the related consolidated statements of income, shareholders' equity, and cash flows for the year then ended (not presented herein); and in our report dated February 24, 2006, we expressed an unqualified opinion on those consolidated financial statements. In our opinion, the information set forth in the accompanying condensed consolidated balance sheet as of December 31, 2005, is fairly stated, in all material respects, in relation to the consolidated balance sheet from which it has been derived.

KPMG LLP

New York, New York
November 3, 2006

Item 2.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (MD&A)

Introduction

Our MD&A is provided in addition to the accompanying condensed consolidated financial statements and footnotes to assist readers in understanding Pfizer's results of operations, financial condition and cash flows. The MD&A is organized as follows:

Overview of Our  Consolidated Operating Results. This section, beginning on page 28, provides a general description of Pfizer's business; provides information about our operating environment and our response to key challenges; discusses significant licensing and new business development transactions, as well as the planned disposition of our Consumer Healthcare business; and summarizes our productivity initiatives.

  

Revenues. This section, beginning on page 32, provides an analysis of our products and revenues for the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005, as well as an overview of important product developments.

   

Costs and Expenses. This section, beginning on page 43, provides a discussion about our costs and expenses.

   

Provision for Taxes on Income. This section, beginning on page 45, provides a discussion of items impacting our tax provision for the periods presented.

   

Adjusted Income. This section, beginning on page 45, provides a discussion of an alternative view of performance used by management.

   

Financial Condition, Liquidity and Capital Resources. This section, beginning on page 50, provides an analysis of our balance sheets as of October 1, 2006 and December 31, 2005, and cash flows for the nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005, as well as a discussion of our outstanding debt and commitments that existed as of October 1, 2006 and December 31, 2005. Included in the discussion of outstanding debt is a discussion of the amount of financial capacity available to help fund Pfizer's future commitments.

   

Outlook. This section, beginning on page 54, provides a discussion of forecasted financial performance.

   

Forward-Looking Information and Factors That May Affect Future Results. This section, beginning on page 55 provides a description of the risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed in forward-looking statements set forth in this report relating to the financial results, operations and business prospects of the Company. Such forward-looking statements are based on management's current expectations about future events, which are inherently susceptible to uncertainty and changes in circumstances. Also included in this section is a discussion of Legal Proceedings and Contingencies.

 

Components of the Condensed Consolidated Statement of Income follow:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars, except per common share data)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

% Change

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

% Change

   

Revenues

$

12,280 

$

11,263 

9%

$

35,768 

$

34,858

3%

  

Cost of sales

1,962 

1,611 

22   

5,423 

5,250

3   

% of revenues

16.0 

%

14.3 

%

15.2 

%

15.1

%

  

Selling, informational and administrative expenses

3,751 

3,526 

6   

11,027 

10,958

--   

% of revenues

30.5 

%

31.3 

%

30.8 

%

31.4

%

  

Research and development expenses

1,902 

1,739 

9   

5,187 

5,287

(2)  

% of revenues

15.5 

%

15.4 

%

14.5 

%

15.2

%

  

Amortization of intangible assets

798 

833 

(4)  

2,446 

2,569

(5)  

% of revenues

6.5 

%

7.4 

%

6.8 

%

7.4

%

  

Merger-related in-process research and development charges

1,390 

(100)  

513 

1,652

(69)  

% of revenues

12.3 

%

1.4 

%

4.7

%

  

Restructuring charges and merger-related costs

249 

303 

(18)  

816

782

4   

% of revenues

2.0 

%

2.7 

%

2.3

%

2.2

%

  

Other (income)/deductions - net

(343)

(151)

127   

(958)

703

*   

   

Income from continuing operations before provision for taxes on income, and minority interests

3,961

2,012 

97   

11,314 

7,657

48   

% of revenues

32.3 

%

17.9 

%

31.6 

%

22.0

%

  

Provision for taxes on income

717 

530 

35   

1,769

2,642

(33) 

  

Effective tax rate

18.1 

%

26.4 

%

15.6 

%

34.5

%

  

Minority interests

69   

10 

6

68   

  

Income from continuing operations

3,239

1,479 

119   

9,535 

5,009

90   

% of revenues

26.4 

%

13.1 

%

26.7 

%

14.4

%

  

Discontinued operations - net of tax

123 

110 

11   

353 

343

3   

  

Net income

$

3,362

$

1,589 

112   

$

9,888 

$

5,352

85   

% of revenues

27.4 

%

14.1 

%

27.6 

%

15.4

%

  

Earnings per common share - basic:

Income from continuing operations

$

0.45 

$

0.20 

125   

$

1.31 

$

0.68

93   

Discontinued operations - net of tax

0.02 

0.02 

--   

0.05 

0.05

--   

Net income

$

0.47 

$

0.22 

114   

$

1.36 

$

0.73

86   

  

Earnings per common share - diluted:

Income from continuing operations

$

0.44 

$

0.20 

120   

$

1.30 

$

0.67

94   

Discontinued operations - net of tax

0.02 

0.02 

--   

0.05 

0.05

--   

Net income

$

0.46 

$

0.22 

109   

$

1.35 

$

0.72

88   

  

Cash dividends paid per common share

$

0.24 

$

0.19 

$

0.72 

$

0.57

  

   

*  Calculation not meaningful

 

OVERVIEW OF OUR CONSOLIDATED OPERATING RESULTS

Our Business

We are a global, research-based company that is dedicated to better health and greater access to healthcare for people and their valued animals. Our purpose is to help people live longer, healthier, happier and more productive lives. Our efforts in support of that purpose include the discovery, development, manufacture and marketing of breakthrough medicines; the exploration of ideas that advance the frontiers of science and medicine; and the support of programs dedicated to illness prevention, health and wellness and increased access to quality healthcare. Our value proposition is to demonstrate that our medicines can effectively treat disease, including the associated symptoms and suffering, and can form the basis for an overall improvement in healthcare systems by increasing effective prevention and treatment and by reducing the need for hospitalization. Our revenues are derived from the sale of our products as well as through alliance agreements, under which we co-promote products discovered by other companies.

Our Operating Environment and Response to Key Challenges

Our company and our industry continue to face a number of significant challenges, including a rapidly changing healthcare environment. Our performance has been and will continue to be adversely impacted by the loss of U.S. exclusivity for several of our major products, and many of our other products continue to face strong competition, including from generics, in key markets. Nine products, comprising 31% of our Pharmaceutical revenues and 29% of our total revenues for the year ended December 31, 2005, have been, or in the near term will be, affected by loss of U.S. exclusivity: Neurontin, Diflucan and Accupril/Accuretic in 2004; Zithromax in November 2005; Zoloft at the end of June 2006; Norvasc and Zyrtec in 2007; and Camptosar and Inspra in 2008. Further, in accordance with requests from applicable regulatory authorities, we suspended sales of Bextra in the U.S., E.U., Canada and many other countries in early 2005.

Industry-wide, regulatory and pricing environments have created added challenges. We are confronted by increasing regulatory scrutiny of drug safety and efficacy; the adoption of new direct-to-consumer advertising guidelines; and lower prescription growth rates. In addition, we have recently seen a strengthening of the U.S. dollar (as of October 19, 2006), as well as restrictive actions on access and pricing taken by influential decision makers in several large European markets.

As a result, at current exchange rates, we now expect revenues in 2007 and 2008 to be comparable to 2006.

Notwithstanding the challenges, we also see great opportunities for future growth. There is enormous promise in the science and technology of pharmaceutical research. Further, with an aging population expecting to live longer, healthier lives, we expect that there will be growing demand for our products and services.

We recognize that the world around us is changing dramatically and that we need to accelerate the scope and speed of change to transform Pfizer. Investments in research and development (R&D), enhancements in R&D productivity, focused business development efforts and aggressive cost reductions will continue to help us to manage these challenges, to capitalize on the best opportunities presented to us and to return our company to top-line growth over time.

Our in-line product portfolio and the potential of our new-product pipeline demonstrate our ability to generate new revenues. Our total revenues increased 9% in the three months ended October 1, 2006 and increased 3% in the nine months ended October 1, 2006 as compared to the same periods in 2005, in spite of the fact that the loss of U.S. exclusivity for Accupril/Accuretic, Diflucan, Neurontin, Zithromax and Zoloft and the voluntary withdrawal of Bextra accounted for about a 6% and 5% reduction in those period revenues - - demonstrating the solid aggregate performance in the balance of our broad portfolio of patent-protected medicines, a portfolio that includes three of the world's 25 best selling medicines, with seven medicines that lead their therapeutic areas. Importantly, we have also recognized an aggregate year-over-year increase in revenues from new products launched in 2004, 2005 and within the first nine months of 2006 of approximately $450 million for the third quarter of 2006 and $1.1 billion for the first nine months of 2006 and are advancing a number of internally developed, in-licensed and co-promoted product candidates. We have launched four new medicines in the U.S. in 2006 --Sutent, Eraxis, Chantix and Exubera. In June 2006, we received an approvable letter from the FDA for Zeven (dalbavancin) and expect approval and launch in 2007. In June 2006, after certain decisions by the FDA, we notified Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. (Neurocrine) that we are returning the development and marketing rights for indiplon to Neurocrine. (See further discussion in the section "Revenues - Pharmaceutical Revenues.")

We believe we have important competitive advantages that will serve us well and distinguish us from others in our industry. Our product portfolio and pipeline demonstrate the benefits of Pfizer's scale and our skill at leveraging the opportunities it provides us. Scale also enhances our status as 'partner of choice' with other companies who have promising product candidates and technologies, as well as giving us influence as a global purchaser of goods and services. We continue to build on and enhance our research and development capabilities through acquisitions and collaborations. Through targeted acquisitions, licensing opportunities and internal development, we are augmenting our commercial portfolio. Given the time requirements attendant to and uncertainties inherent in the research and development process, as well as the commercial risk, the timing and magnitude of revenues from these investments are highly uncertain. (See further discussions in the sections "Revenues - Product Developments" and "Overview of Our Consolidated Operating Results - Licensing and New Business Development - Strategy and Recent Transactions.")

We have also made progress with our Adapting to Scale productivity initiative, which is a broad-based, company-wide effort to leverage our scale and strength more robustly and increase our productivity. (See further discussion in the section "Overview of Our Consolidated Operating Results - Productivity Initiatives and Merger-Related Synergies.") We now plan to broaden this initiative in 2007 and 2008 in a bold way to transform our cost structure, resulting in, at current exchange rates, the reduction of 2007 operating expenses to a level below that in 2006, as well as a further reduction in 2008 operating expenses. Our goal is to create a more flexible cost structure, so that it will be easier and less disruptive to adjust expenditures in light of changing market conditions and needs. These savings will be over and above the $4 billion currently projected annual cost savings by 2008 for our Adapting to Scale productivity initiative.

Licensing and New Business Development - Strategy and Recent Transactions

We are committed to capitalizing on new growth opportunities by advancing our own new-product pipeline, as well as through licensing, co-promotion agreements and acquisitions. Our business development strategy targets a number of growth opportunities, including biologics, oncology, Alzheimer's disease, vaccines and other products and services that seek to provide innovative healthcare solutions.

On August 14, 2006, we entered into a license agreement with Bayer Pharmaceuticals Corporation to acquire exclusive worldwide rights to DGAT-1 inhibitors, an innovative class of compounds that modify lipid metabolism. The lead compound in the class, BAY 74-4113, is a potential treatment for obesity, type 2 diabetes and other related disorders. In June 2006, we acquired the worldwide rights to fesoterodine, a new drug candidate for treating overactive bladder, from Schwarz Pharma AG. In March 2006, we entered into research collaborations with NicOX SA in ophthalmic disorders and NOXXON Pharma AG in obesity. In addition, in November 2005, we entered into a research collaboration with Incyte for CCR2 antagonists for use in a broad range of diseases.

On May 16, 2006, we completed the acquisition of all of the outstanding shares of Rinat Neuroscience Corp. (Rinat), a biologics company with several new central-nervous-system product candidates. In connection with the acquisition, as part of our preliminary purchase price allocation, we recorded $478 million, pre-tax, in Merger-related in-process research and development charges.

On February 28, 2006, we completed the acquisition of the sanofi-aventis worldwide rights, including patent rights and production technology, to manufacture and sell Exubera, an inhaled form of insulin for use in adults with type 1 and type 2 diabetes, and the insulin-production business and facilities located in Frankfurt, Germany, previously jointly owned by Pfizer and sanofi-aventis, for approximately $1.4 billion (including transaction costs). In connection with the acquisition, as part of our final purchase price allocation, we recorded an intangible asset for developed technology rights of approximately $1.0 billion, inventory valued at $218 million and goodwill of approximately $166 million, all of which have been allocated to our Pharmaceutical segment. The amortization of the developed technology rights is primarily included in Cost of Sales. Prior to the acquisition, in connection with our collaboration agreement with sanofi-aventis, we recorded a research and development milestone due to us from sanofi-aventis of approximately $118 million ($71 million, after tax) in the first quarter of 2006 in Research and development expenses upon the approval of Exubera in January 2006 by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

On September 14, 2005, we completed the acquisition of all of the outstanding shares of Vicuron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Vicuron), a biopharmaceutical company focused on the development of novel anti-infectives, for approximately $1.9 billion in cash (including transaction costs). The allocation of the purchase price includes in-process research and development of approximately $1.4 billion, which was expensed and included in Merger-related in-process research and development charges, and goodwill of $243 million, which has been allocated to our Pharmaceutical segment. Neither of these items was deductible for tax purposes.

On April 12, 2005, we completed the acquisition of Idun Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Idun), a biopharmaceutical company focused on the discovery and development of therapies to control apoptosis, and on August 15, 2005, we completed the acquisition of all outstanding shares of Bioren Inc. (Bioren), which focuses on technology for optimizing antibodies. The aggregate cost of these and other smaller acquisitions was approximately $340 million for the nine months ended October 2, 2005.

Although not yet reflected in these financial statements, as the transactions have not yet been finalized, on September 18, 2006, we entered into a license agreement with TransTech Pharma Inc. to develop and commercialize small- and large- molecule compounds for treatment of Alzheimer's disease and diabetes, and on September 26, 2006, we entered into a license agreement with Quark Biotech Inc. for exclusive worldwide rights to its novel human gene and to molecules for the treatment of age-related macular degeneration (AMD). In addition, on October 6, 2006, we entered into an agreement to acquire PowderMed Ltd., a U.K. company specializing in the emerging science of DNA-based vaccines for the treatment of influenza and chronic viral diseases.

 

Discontinued Operations

We evaluate our businesses and product lines periodically for strategic fit within our operations. We sold or are in the process of selling the following businesses that do not fit our strategic goals:

In June 2006, we entered into an agreement to sell our Consumer Healthcare business to Johnson & Johnson for approximately $16.6 billion in cash. This business comprises substantially all of our former Consumer Healthcare segment and other associated amounts, such as purchase-accounting impacts and merger-related costs, and restructuring and implementation costs related to our Adapting to Scale (AtS) productivity initiative, previously reported in the Corporate/Other segment. In addition, certain manufacturing facility assets and liabilities, which were previously part of our Pharmaceutical or Corporate/Other segment, are included in the planned sale of the Consumer Healthcare business. In connection with the decision to sell this business, for all periods presented, the operating results associated with this business that will be discontinued have been reclassified into Discontinued operations - net of tax in the condensed consolidated statements of income, and the assets and liabilities associated with this business that will be sold have been reclassified into Assets/Liabilities of discontinued operations and other assets/liabilities held for sale, as appropriate, on the condensed consolidated balance sheets. The divestiture of the Consumer Healthcare business is expected to close in late 2006 and is subject to customary closing conditions, including receipt of regulatory approvals.

   

In the third quarter of 2005, we sold the last of three European generic pharmaceutical businesses, which we had included in our Pharmaceutical segment, for 4.7 million euros (approximately $5.6 million) and recorded a loss of $3 million ($2 million, net of tax) in Gains on sales of discontinued operations - net of tax in the condensed consolidated statement of income for the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005.

   

In the first quarter of 2005, we sold the second of three European generic pharmaceutical businesses which had been included in our Pharmaceutical segment for 70 million euros (approximately $93 million) and recorded a gain of $57 million ($36 million, net of tax) in Gains on sales of discontinued operations - net of tax in the condensed consolidated statement of income. In addition, we recorded an impairment charge of $9 million ($6 million, net of tax) related to the last of the three European generic pharmaceutical businesses in Income from discontinued operations - net of tax in the condensed consolidated statement of income for the nine months ended October 2, 2005.

 

Productivity Initiatives and Merger-Related Synergies

During 2005 and the first nine months of 2006, we made progress with our multi-year productivity initiative, called Adapting to Scale (AtS), designed to increase efficiency and streamline decision making across the Company. This initiative, launched in early 2005, follows the integration of Warner-Lambert and Pharmacia Corporation (Pharmacia), which resulted in a combined annual expense reduction of approximately $6 billion.

We now expect that cost savings from our AtS productivity initiative will be about $2.5 billion in 2006, substantially ahead of our original guidance of about $2 billion and, without giving effect to any additional initiatives to transform our cost structure, growing to about $4 billion annually upon completion in 2008, notwithstanding the planned divestiture of our Consumer Healthcare business and the expense reductions associated with that business. These savings are expected to be realized in procurement, operating expenses and facilities, among other sources. Savings realized during the third quarter and first nine months of 2006 total approximately $600 million and $1.8 billion. Without giving effect to any additional initiatives to transform our cost structure, the Company continues to expect that the aggregate cost of implementing the AtS productivity initiative through 2008 will be approximately $4 billion to $5 billion on a pre-tax basis.

Projects in various stages of implementation include:

Reorganizing Pfizer Global Research & Development (PGRD) to increase efficiency and effectiveness in bringing new therapies to patients in need while reducing the cost of research and development. PGRD has been reorganized into eleven therapeutic areas: cardiovascular, metabolic, and endocrine; central nervous system; inflammation; allergy and respiratory; infectious diseases; pain; gastrointestinal and hepatitis; oncology; urology and sexual health; ophthalmology; and dermatology. Development will move toward single sites for most therapeutic areas.

   

Enhanced Clinical Trial Design is a key Pfizer initiative aimed at reducing the frequency and cost of clinical trial failures, which is a common issue across the industry. The standardization and broad application of advanced improvements in quantitative techniques, such as pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic modeling and computer-based clinical trial simulation, along with use of leading edge statistical techniques including adaptive learning and confirming approaches, have transformed the way we design clinical trials today. Benefits achieved include improvements in positive predictive capacity, efficiency, risk management and knowledge management. Once fully implemented, the Enhanced Clinical Trial Design initiative is expected to yield significant savings and enhance research productivity.

   

Standardization of practices across Research and Development is driving costs down and increasing efficiencies in our research facilities, resulting in significant savings. Centers of emphasis have been built to take advantage of special skill sets, reduce waste and enhance asset utilization. We substantially reduced the number of pilot plants which manufacture the active ingredients for our clinical supplies, making more efficient use of the capacity retained. Clinical supply depots across the globe are being realigned with future needs. For example, across Europe and Canada 26 out of 37 depots have been identified for rationalization, with 15 closures completed through October 1, 2006. A wide range of continuous improvement practices is being applied to enable further productivity improvements in all areas of R&D.

  

Continuing our optimization of Pfizer's network of plants, which began with the acquisition of Pharmacia, to ensure that the Company's manufacturing facilities are aligned with current and future product needs. We have focused on innovation and delivering value through a simplified supply network. During 2005 and through the first nine months of 2006, 18 sites were identified for rationalization (Angers and Val de Reuil, France; Arecibo and Cruce Davila, Puerto Rico; Augusta, Georgia; Bangkok, Thailand; Corby and Morpeth, U.K.; Groton, Connecticut; Holland, Michigan; Jakarta, Indonesia; Seoul, Korea; Orangeville, Canada; Parsippany, New Jersey; Tlalpan, Mexico; Tsukuba, Japan; and Stockholm and Uppsala-Fyrislund, Sweden). In addition, there have been extensive consolidations and realignments of operations resulting in streamlined operations and staff reductions. In particular, sites in Sandwich, U.K.; Lincoln and Omaha, Nebraska; Puerto Rico; Lititz, Pennsylvania; and Brooklyn, N.Y. have undergone notable staff reductions.

   

Realigning our European marketing teams and implementing initiatives designed to improve the effectiveness of our field force in Japan. During 2005, we completed a major reorganization of the U.S. field force, reshaping the management structure to be more responsive to commercial trends as the Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003 (the Medicare Act) takes effect and driving greater sales-force accountability in preparation for the launch of new medicines.

  

Continuing to pursue savings in information technology resulting from significant reductions in application software (already significantly reduced from over 8,000 applications at the time of the Pharmacia acquisition in 2003) and data centers (to be reduced from 17 to 4), as well as rationalization of service providers, while enhancing our ability to invest in innovative technology opportunities to further propel our growth. Two of the 17 corporate data centers have now been reduced to local computing facilities, managed remotely from a global operations center. Vendor analysis and selection are currently underway to select a list of global infrastructure service providers. Vendor selection will be completed in the fourth quarter of 2006, with transition to the new service providers occurring in 2007 and 2008.

  

Reducing costs in purchased goods and services. Purchasing initiatives are focusing on rationalizing suppliers, leveraging the approximately $16 billion of goods and services that Pfizer purchases annually and improving demand management to optimize levels of outside services needed and strategic sourcing from lower-cost sources. For example, savings from demand management are being derived in part from reductions in travel, entertainment, consulting and other external service expenses. Facilities savings are being found in site rationalization, energy conservation and renegotiated service contracts.

 

Given the challenging operating environment, we plan to expand our AtS initiative by undertaking a further transformation of how we invest in our business and manage our costs. As a result of additional initiatives to transform our cost structure, at current exchange rates, we will reduce 2007 operating expenses to a level below that in 2006, and further reduce 2008 operating expenses. Our goal is to create a more flexible cost structure, so that it will be easier and less disruptive to adjust expenditures in consideration of changing market conditions and needs. Specific goals and actions are under development.

REVENUES

Worldwide revenues by segment and geographic area for the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005 follow:

Three Months Ended

Worldwide

U.S.

International

% Change in Revenues

Oct. 1,

Oct. 2,

Oct. 1,

Oct. 2,

Oct. 1,

Oct. 2,

Worldwide

U.S.

International

(millions of dollars)

2006

2005

2006

2005

2006

2005

06/05

06/05

06/05

   

Pharmaceutical

$

11,485

$

10,547

$

6,380

$

5,615

$

5,105

$

4,932

9

14

3

Animal Health

562

503

260

228

302

275

12

14

10

Other

233

213

68

64

165

149

9

6

11

Total Revenues

$

12,280

$

11,263

$

6,708

$

5,907

$

5,572

(a)

$

5,356

(a)

9

14

4

  

(a)

Includes revenue from Japan of $801 million (7% of total revenues) and $826 million (7% of total revenues) for the three months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005.

   

Nine Months Ended

Worldwide

U.S.

International

% Change in Revenues

Oct. 1,

Oct. 2,

Oct. 1,

Oct. 2,

Oct. 1,

Oct. 2,

Worldwide

U.S.

International

(millions of dollars)

2006

2005

2006

2005

2006

2005

06/05

06/05

06/05

   

Pharmaceutical

$

33,417

$

32,617

$

18,448

$

17,219

$

14,969

$

15,398

7

(3)

Animal Health

1,656

1,576

751

710

905

866

6

Other

695

665

219

206

476

459

6

Total Revenues

$

35,768

$

34,858

$

19,418

$

18,135

$

16,350

(b)

$

16,723

(b)

7

(2)

  

(b)

Includes revenue from Japan of $2.4 billion (7% of total revenues) and $2.6 billion (7% of total revenues) for the nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005.

 

Pharmaceutical Revenues

 

Pfizer's pharmaceutical business continued to show solid performance, with our in-line products in the aggregate performing well in a tough operating environment and many of our new products making important contributions as well, partially offset by revenue declines from the loss of exclusivity on major products and other factors.

Worldwide pharmaceutical revenues for the third quarter and first nine months of 2006 were $11.5 billion, an increase of 9%, and $33.4 billion, an increase of 2%, compared to the same periods in 2005, due primarily to:

the solid aggregate performance of our broad portfolio of patent-protected medicines;

  

an aggregate year-over-year increase in revenues from new products launched in 2004, 2005 and within the first nine months of 2006 of approximately $450 million for the third quarter of 2006 and $1.1 billion for the first nine months of 2006;

   

the one-time reversal of a sales deduction accrual related to a favorable development in a pricing dispute in the U.S. of about $170 million;

   

higher U.S. wholesaler inventories in the third quarter of 2006 by about two days compared to the end of the second quarter of 2006, with levels at the end of the third quarter of 2006 at normal levels and comparable to those at the end of the third quarter of 2005; and

   

the favorable impact of changes in the mix of sales rebates in the U.S.,

  

partially offset by:

  

a decrease in revenue for Zoloft, primarily due to the launch of generic competition in mid-July 2006 after Zoloft lost exclusivity in the U.S. in June 2006 and also due to the earlier loss of exclusivity in many European markets, by $348 million for the third quarter of 2006 and $504 million for the first nine months of 2006;

   

a decrease in revenue from the loss of exclusivity of Zithromax in November 2005 of $302 million for the third quarter of 2006 and $1.1 billion for the first nine months of 2006; and

   

the continued decline in revenue by $39 million for the third quarter of 2006 and $218 million for the first nine months of 2006 of Neurontin, Diflucan and Accupril/Accuretic, which lost U.S. exclusivity in 2004.

 

Pharmaceutical revenues for the three months ended October 1, 2006, were also impacted by the weakening of the U.S. dollar relative to many foreign currencies, especially the euro, which increased revenue by $118 million, while Pharmaceutical revenues for the nine months ended October 1, 2006, were impacted by the strengthening of the U.S. dollar relative to many foreign currencies, especially the euro and the Japanese yen, which decreased revenue by $443 million. Finally, the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 were also impacted by increased competition and the overall market decline, as branded prescriptions in the U.S. declined 4% and 3% compared to the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005.

Geographically:

in the U.S., Pharmaceutical revenues increased 14% and 7% in the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 compared to the same periods in 2005, primarily due to revenues from new products, as well as growth in Lipitor and Celebrex sales, the one-time reversal of a sales deduction accrual related to a favorable development in a pricing dispute and higher U.S. wholesaler inventories in the third quarter of 2006 by about two days compared to the end of the second quarter of 2006, partially offset by the loss of exclusivity of Zithromax in November 2005 and Zoloft in June 2006; and

   

in our international markets, Pharmaceutical revenues increased 3% in the three months ended October 1, 2006 compared to the same period in 2005, primarily due to revenues from our new products, as well as growth in Lipitor and Celebrex sales, and the favorable impact of foreign exchange on revenue of $107 million (1%), partially offset by lower revenues from Zoloft due to the loss of exclusivity in many key international markets. Our international Pharmaceutical revenues decreased 3% in the nine months ended October 1, 2006, compared to the same period in 2005, primarily due to the unfavorable impact of foreign exchange on revenue of $422 million (1%) and lower revenues from Zoloft due to the loss of exclusivity in many key international markets.

 

As is typical in the pharmaceutical industry, our gross product sales are subject to a variety of deductions, primarily representing rebates and discounts to government agencies, wholesalers and managed care organizations with respect to our pharmaceutical products. These deductions represent estimates of the related obligations and, as such, judgment is required when estimating the impact of these sales deductions on gross sales for a reporting period. In the third quarter of 2006, we recorded a reversal of a sales deduction accrual related to a favorable development in a pricing dispute in the U.S. of about $170 million. Historically, our adjustments to actual have not been material; on a quarterly basis, not including the adjustment mentioned above, they generally have been less than 1% of Pharmaceutical net sales and can result in either a net increase or a net decrease to income.

Rebates under Medicaid and related state programs reduced revenues by $40 million and $414 million in the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 and $257 million and $956 million in the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005. Rebates under Medicare reduced revenues by $253 million and $436 million for the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 and $23 million and $37 million in the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005. The decrease in Medicaid and related state program rebates and the increase in Medicare rebates are due primarily to the impact of the Medicare Act, effective January 1, 2006. Performance-based contract rebates reduced revenues by $393 million and $1.3 billion in the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 and $482 million and $1.6 billion in the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005. The decrease in performance-based contract rebates is due primarily to the expiration of our contract with Express Scripts Inc. on December 31, 2005 and reduced managed care rebates related to Zithromax, which lost exclusivity in the U.S in November 2005. These contracts are with managed care customers, including health maintenance organizations and pharmacy benefit managers, who receive rebates based on the achievement of contracted performance terms for products. Rebates are product-specific and, therefore, for any given year are impacted by the mix of products sold. Chargebacks (primarily reimbursements to wholesalers for honoring contracted prices to third parties) reduced revenues by $382 million and $1.1 billion in the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 and $324 million and $916 million in the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005.

Our accruals for Medicaid rebates, Medicare rebates, contract rebates and chargebacks totaled $1.5 billion as of October 1, 2006, a decrease from $1.8 billion as of December 31, 2005, due primarily to the impact of the Medicare Act.

Pharmaceutical--Selected Product Revenues

 

Revenue information for several of our major Pharmaceutical products follow:

 

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)
Product

Primary Indications

Oct. 1, 
2006 

  

% Change
from 2005

  

Oct. 1, 
2006 

  

% Change
from 2005

Cardiovascular and
metabolic diseases:

Lipitor

Reduction of LDL cholesterol

$3,321 

15%

$9,551 

8%

Norvasc

Hypertension

1,208 

 7   

3,549 

3   

Cardura

Hypertension/Benign prostatic hyperplasia

133 

1   

398 

(10)  

Caduet

Reduction of LDL cholesterol and hypertension

98 

104   

255 

111   

Accupril/Accuretic

Hypertension/Congestive heart failure

61 

(21)  

198 

(21)  

Chantix/Champix

Smoking cessation

33 

*  

33 

*  

Central nervous
system disorders:

Zoloft

Depression and certain anxiety disorders

459 

(43)  

1,944 

(21)  

Lyrica

Epilepsy, post-herpetic neuralgia and diabetic peripheral neuropathy

340 

324   

803 

480   

Geodon/Zeldox

Schizophrenia and acute manic or mixed episodes associated with bipolar disorder

201 

36   

548 

28   

Neurontin

Epilepsy and post-herpetic neuralgia

126 

(18)  

376 

(24)  

Aricept(a)

Alzheimer's disease

90 

6   

260 

2   

Xanax/Xanax XR

Anxiety/Panic disorders

74 

(26)  

235 

(23)  

Relpax

Migraine headaches

72 

8   

205 

21   

Arthritis and pain:

Celebrex

Arthritis pain and inflammation, acute pain

537 

20   

1,499 

19   

Infectious and
respiratory diseases:

Zyvox

Bacterial infections

206 

31   

559 

23   

Zithromax/Zmax

Bacterial infections

104 

(74)  

529 

(67)  

Vfend

Fungal infections

132 

25   

367 

29   

Diflucan

Fungal infections

109 

5   

326 

(12)  

Urology:

Viagra

Erectile dysfunction

423 

10   

1,207 

(1)  

Detrol/Detrol LA

Overactive bladder

295 

28   

810 

15   

Oncology:

Camptosar

Metastatic colorectal cancer

218 

(5)   

668 

(1)  

Ellence

Breast cancer

77 

(11)  

236 

(13)  

Aromasin

Breast cancer

84 

32   

229 

30   

Sutent

Metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) and malignant gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST)

63 

*   

115 

*   

Ophthalmology:

Xalatan/Xalacom

Glaucoma and ocular hypertension

374 

11  

1,062 

5   

Endocrine disorders:

Genotropin

Replacement of human growth hormone

198 

(1)  

586 

(3)  

All other:

Zyrtec/Zyrtec-D

Allergies

397 

17   

1,195 

15   

Alliance revenue:

Aricept, Macugen, Mirapex, Olmetec, Rebif and Spiriva

Alzheimer's disease (Aricept), neovascular (wet) age-related macular degeneration (Macugen), Parkinson's disease (Mirapex), hypertension (Olmetec), multiple sclerosis (Rebif), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (Spiriva)

336 

26   

984 

30   

     

(a)

 Represents direct sales under license agreement with Eisai Co., Ltd.

*

 Calculation not meaningful.

Certain amounts and percentages may reflect rounding adjustments.

 

Pharmaceutical --Selected Product Descriptions:

Lipitor, for the treatment of elevated LDL-cholesterol levels in the blood, is the most widely used treatment for lowering cholesterol and the best-selling pharmaceutical product of any kind in the world, reaching about $9.6 billion in worldwide sales in the first nine months of 2006, an increase of 8% compared to the same period in 2005. In the U.S., sales of $5.9 billion represent growth of 11% over the previous year's first nine months. Internationally, Lipitor sales in the first nine months of 2006 increased 4% compared to the same period in 2005.

   

The growth in Lipitor revenue was driven by a combination of factors, including the impact of the Medicare Act, dosage-form escalation, pricing (including a favorable development in a pricing dispute in the U.S.) and a return to normal wholesaler inventory levels. We continue to see aggressive competition from branded and generic agents, which will further intensify in the fourth quarter of 2006, particularly when additional generic agents become available in the U.S. near the end of the year. Lipitor began to face competition in the U.S. from generic pravastatin (Pravachol) in April 2006 and generic simvastatin (Zocor) in June 2006, as well as other competitive pressures. In April 2006, we launched a new advertising campaign for Lipitor that highlights its strong benefit profile and advantageous formulary positioning. Scientific data continue to reinforce the trend toward the use of higher dosages of statins for greater cholesterol reduction.

   

Norvasc is the world's most-prescribed branded medicine for treating hypertension. Norvasc maintains exclusivity in many major markets globally, including the U.S., Japan, Canada and Australia, but has experienced patent expirations in many E.U. countries. Norvasc sales in the first nine months of 2006 increased 3% over the same period in 2005. See Part II, Other Information; Item 1, Legal Proceedings, of this Form 10-Q for a discussion of certain recent patent litigation relating to Norvasc.

   

Exubera, the first inhaled human insulin therapy for glycemic control received approvals from both the FDA and the European Commission for the treatment of adults with type 1 and type 2 diabetes in January 2006. Millions of people with diabetes are not achieving or maintaining acceptable blood sugar levels, despite the availability of current therapies. Exubera represents a medical advance that offers patients a novel method of introducing insulin into their systems through the lungs. Since May 2006, Exubera has been launched in Germany, Ireland, the U.K. and most recently, the U.S., where the Joslin Diabetes Clinic in Boston, widely recognized as one of the pre-eminent diabetes and research organizations in the world, has recognized Exubera in its diabetes treatment guidelines. Within the U.S., a comprehensive education and training program for physicians is underway. To further support patients and healthcare professionals, Pfizer also provides a 24-hour-a-day, 7-day-a-week call center staffed by healthcare professionals. Similar programs are also in place in European markets where the product has been launched. An expanded roll-out of Exubera to primary-care physicians in the U.S. previously targeted for November 2006, will begin in January 2007. The manufacturing process for Exubera is complex, involving novel technology. We are working at capacity to meet expected demand, while also expanding drug product capacity. Initial supplies of Exubera were available across the U.S. beginning in September 2006.

   

Zoloft, which lost exclusivity in the U.S. in June 2006 and earlier in many European markets, experienced a 21% revenue decline in the first nine months of 2006 compared to the same period in 2005. It is indicated for the treatment of major depressive disorder, panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) in adults and children, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) and social anxiety disorder (SAD). Zoloft is approved for acute and long-term use in all of these indications, with the exception of PMDD. It is the only approved agent for the long-term treatment of PTSD and SAD, an important differentiating feature as these disorders tend to be chronic. Zoloft was approved in Japan in April 2006 for the indications of depression/depressed state and panic disorder.

   

Geodon/Zeldox, a psychotropic agent, is a dopamine and serotonin receptor antagonist indicated for the treatment of schizophrenia and acute manic or mixed episodes associated with bipolar disorder. It is available in both an oral capsule and rapid-acting intramuscular formulation. In the U.S., Geodon hit an all-time new prescription share weekly high of 7.4% during September 2006. In the past six months, Geodon has become the fastest growing anti-psychotic medication in the U.S. In the first nine months of 2006, total Geodon worldwide sales grew 28% compared to the same period in 2005.

   

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office granted a five-year extension to the Geodon U.S. patent, extending its exclusivity to 2012.

   

Lyrica achieved $803 million in worldwide revenue in the first nine months of 2006. In September 2006, Lyrica was approved by the European Commission to treat central nerve pain, which is associated with conditions such as spinal injury, stroke and multiple sclerosis. In addition, in March 2006, it was approved by the European Commission to treat generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) in adults, thereby providing a new treatment option for the approximately 12 million Europeans living with GAD.

   

Lyrica was approved by the FDA in June 2005 for adjunctive therapy for adults with partial onset epileptic seizures. This indication built on the earlier FDA approval of Lyrica for two of the most common forms of neuropathic pain; painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy, a chronic neurologic condition affecting about three million Americans, and post-herpetic neuralgia. Lyrica was launched in the U.S., Canada and Italy in September 2005 and is now approved in more than 60 countries and available in more than 35 markets. More than one million patients have been prescribed Lyrica since its introduction. Lyrica gained a 9.7% new prescription share of the total U.S. anti-epileptic market in September 2006, continuing its performance as one of Pfizer's most successful pharmaceutical launches.

   

Celebrex and Bextra

Celebrex achieved a 19% increase in worldwide sales in the first nine months of 2006 compared to the same period in 2005. In the first nine months of 2006, Celebrex delivered three consecutive quarters of double-digit sales growth and had a monthly new prescription share of 10.5% in September 2006. Pfizer is continuing its efforts to address physicians and patients' questions by clearly communicating the risks and benefits of Celebrex. In addition, the Prospective Randomized Evaluation of Celecoxib Integrated Safety vs. Ibuprofen or Naproxen (PRECISION) study, which began enrolling patients in October 2006, will provide further understanding of the comparative cardiovascular safety of Celebrex and some common non-specific non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in arthritis patients at risk for, or already suffering from, heart disease.

   

Pfizer began to reintroduce branded advertising in the U.S. in April 2006 in alignment with our new direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising principles, highlighting Celebrex's strong clinical profile and benefits. In July 2005, the FDA approved a sixth indication for Celebrex--ankylosing spondylitis--a form of spinal arthritis that affects more than one million people in the U.S. In August 2006, Celebrex was granted pediatric exclusivity in the U.S., extending its patent protection until May 2014. Strong clinical data continue to support Celebrex as an important medicine for patients with arthritis. The Successive Celecoxib Efficacy and Safety Study (SUCCESS-1), recently published in the American Journal of Medicine, showed that people with osteoarthritis who take Celebrex experience significantly fewer gastrointestinal problems than patients who take NSAIDs.

   

In 2005, in accordance with decisions by applicable regulatory authorities, we implemented label changes for Celebrex in the U.S. and the E.U., and we suspended sales of Bextra in the U.S., E.U., Canada and many other countries. The revised U.S. label for Celebrex contains a boxed warning of potential serious cardiovascular and gastrointestinal risks that is consistent with warnings for all other prescription NSAIDS. The revised E.U. labels for Celebrex and all other COX-2 medicines include a restriction on use by patients with established heart disease or stroke and additional warnings to physicians regarding use by patients with cardiovascular risk factors.

   

Zithromax experienced a 68% decline in worldwide sales in the first nine months of 2006 compared to the same period of 2005, reflecting the expiration of its composition-of-matter patent in the U.S. in November 2005 and the end of Pfizer's active sales promotion in July 2005. During the fourth quarter of 2005, four generic versions of oral solid azithromycin were launched, including an authorized generic by Pfizer's Greenstone subsidiary. Additional generic formulations of azithromycin were launched during 2006, including three oral suspensions and two intravenous versions.

   

Eraxis, an antifungal approved to treat candidemia and other forms of Candida infections (intra-abdominal abscesses and peritonitis), as well as esophageal candidiasis, was launched mid-June 2006 in the U.S. Candidemia is the most deadly of the common hospital-acquired bloodstream infections with a mortality rate of approximately 40%.

   

Viagra remains the leading treatment for erectile dysfunction and one of the world's most recognized pharmaceutical brands, with more than 58% of U.S. total prescriptions in the erectile dysfunction market through September 2006. Viagra sales declined 1% worldwide in the first nine months of 2006 compared to the same period in 2005. We expect to see continued pressure on sales in the U.S. More than 45 states have either eliminated erectile-dysfunction coverage or have enacted "preferred drug lists" that have the potential to limit Pfizer sales to state Medicaid programs. Effective January 1, 2006, federal funds may not be used for reimbursement of erectile-dysfunction medications by the Medicaid program. Medicare coverage of Viagra will end in 2007.

   

Pfizer has introduced new branded and unbranded advertising to encourage men with erectile dysfunction to talk to their physicians about their condition and specifically about Viagra.

   

Sutent is an oral multi-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor that combines anti-angiogenic and anti-tumor activity to inhibit the blood supply to tumors and has direct anti-tumor effects. Sutent was approved by the FDA in January 2006 for advanced renal cell carcinoma, including metastatic renal cell carcinoma (collectively, mRCC), and gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) after disease progression on or intolerance to imatinib mesylate. Since approval, Sutent has been prescribed to more than 7,500 patients in the U.S. On July 27, 2006, Sutent received conditional marketing authorization from the European Commission for mRCC, after failure of interferon alfa or interleukin-2 therapy, and unresectable and/or metastatic malignant GIST, after failure of imatinib due to resistance or intolerance. This was the first time the European Commission granted a new oncology drug conditional marketing authorization in the European Union. Final approval is contingent on the provision of comprehensive data on Sutent's effect in terms of relevant clinical endpoints, such as progression-free survival in patients with mRCC. In October 2006, following evaluation of clinical data submitted by Pfizer, the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) recommended a switch from the conditional marketing authorization to a full marketing authorization. It also recommended to extend the indication to first-line treatment of mRCC. Sutent has received approvals or registration in several countries in Asia and Latin America and is expected to launch in many more markets worldwide over the coming months. Sutent has recorded $115 million in sales worldwide in the first nine months of 2006.

   

Camptosar is indicated as first-line therapy for metastatic colorectal cancer in combination with 5-fluorouracil and leucovorin. It is also indicated as second-line therapy for patients in whom metastatic colorectal cancer has recurred or progressed despite following initial fluorouracil-based therapy. Camptosar is for intravenous use only. Revenue in the first nine months of 2006 decreased 1% to $668 million compared to the same period in 2005. Among current oncology medications, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, an alliance of 19 of the world's leading cancer centers, has issued guidelines recommending Camptosar as an option across all lines of treatment for advanced colorectal cancer.

   

Xalatan/Xalacom, a prostaglandin analogue used to lower the intraocular pressure associated with glaucoma and ocular hypertension, is the most-prescribed branded glaucoma medicine in the world. Clinical data showing its advantages in treating intraocular pressure compared with beta blockers should support the continued growth of this important medicine. Xalacom, the only fixed combination prostaglandin (Xalatan) and beta blocker, is available primarily in European markets. Xalatan/Xalacom sales grew 5% in the first nine months of 2006 compared to the same period in 2005.

   

Zyrtec provides strong, rapid and long-lasting relief for seasonal and year-round allergies and hives with once-daily dosing. Zyrtec continues to be the most-prescribed antihistamine in the U.S. in a challenging market. Sales increased 15% in the first nine months of 2006 compared to the same period in 2005. In February 2006, we began a new DTC advertising campaign featuring new insight that allergy symptoms can worsen over time due to exposure to new allergens.

   

Caduet, a multi-target single pill combining Norvasc and Lipitor, recorded worldwide revenues of $255 million with a growth rate of 111% for the first nine months of 2006 compared to the same period in 2005. Caduet was launched in the U.S. in May 2004 and continues to grow at significantly higher rates than the overall U.S. cardiovascular market. Caduet is available in more than 10 other countries. Caduet has now received approvals in 51 markets with drug applications pending in 14 additional markets and applications planned in 10 other countries. During 2006, Caduet is expected to be launched in France, Spain, Australia, Taiwan and Turkey.

   

Chantix/Champix, the first new prescription treatment for smoking cessation in nearly a decade, became available to patients in the U.S. in August 2006. In September 2006, the European Commission approved Champix in Europe for smoking cessation. Chantix/Champix is available with a patient support plan which smokers can customize to address their individual behavioral triggers as they try to quit smoking.

 

Animal Health

Revenues of our Animal Health business in the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006, compared to the three months and nine months ended October 2, 2005, follow:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

% Change

  

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

% Change

  

Livestock products

$

340

$

301

13%

$

1,011

$

958

6 %

Companion animal products

222

202

10   

645

618

4    

Total Animal Health

$

562

$

503

12   

$

1,656

$

1,576

5    

 

The increase in Animal Health revenues in the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006, as compared to the same periods in 2005, was primarily attributable to:

for livestock products, the continued performance of Draxxin (for treatment of respiratory disease in cattle and swine) in Europe and the U.S.; and

  

for companion animal products, the performance of Rimadyl (for treatment of pain and inflammation associated with canine osteoarthritis and soft-tissue orthopedic surgery) for the three months ended October 1, 2006, the continued performance of Revolution (a parasiticide for dogs and cats) for both the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 and the favorable impact of the weakening of the U.S. dollar relative to many foreign currencies in the third quarter of 2006;

  

partially offset by:

  

a decline in U.S. Rimadyl revenues in the first half of 2006 due to lower-than-anticipated NSAID market growth and intense branded competition, as well as increased generic competition in the European companion animal market; and

   

the unfavorable impact of the strengthening of the U.S. dollar relative to many foreign currencies for the first nine months of 2006.

 

Product Developments

We continue to invest in R&D to provide future sources of revenue through the development of new products, as well as through additional uses for existing in-line and alliance products. We have a broad and deep pipeline of medicines in development. However, there are no assurances as to when, or if, we will receive regulatory approval for additional indications for existing products or any of our other products in development.

Certain significant regulatory actions by, and filings pending with, the FDA and other regulatory authorities follow:

Recent FDA Approvals:

Product

Indication

   

Date Approved

  

Aricept

Treatment of severe Alzheimer's disease

October 2006

   

Chantix

Nicotine-receptor partial agonist for smoking cessation

May 2006

   

Genotropin

Treatment of short stature and growth problems resulting from Turner's syndrome

April 2006

   

Geodon

Liquid oral suspension

March 2006

   

Eraxis

Treatment of candidemia and invasive candidiasis

February 2006

  

Treatment of esophageal candidiasis

February 2006

  

Exubera

Inhaled form of insulin for use in adults with type 1 and type 2 diabetes

January 2006

  

Sutent

Treatment of mRCC and GIST

January 2006

 

Pending U.S. New Drug Applications (NDAs) and Supplemental Filings:

Product

Indication

 

Date Submitted

   

Celebrex

Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis

June 2006

   

   

Lipitor

Secondary prevention of cardiovascular (CV) events in patients with established coronary artery disease (CAD)

May 2006

   

   

Fesoterodine

Treatment of overactive bladder

March 2006

   

Vfend

Pediatric filing

June 2005

  

Zeven (dalbavancin)

Treatment of Gram-positive bacterial infections

December 2004

 

We received "not-approvable" letters from the FDA for Oporia for the prevention of post-menopausal osteoporosis in September 2005 and for the treatment of vaginal atrophy in January 2006. We are currently in discussions with the FDA regarding these letters, and we continue to develop Oporia. In March 2006, we received a "not-approvable" letter for Fragmin for use in oncology patients, and we are currently in discussions with the FDA regarding this letter as well. In September 2006, an FDA advisory committee recommended that the FDA approve Fragmin for the prevention of blood clots in oncology patients. In September 2005, we received a "not-approvable" letter for Dynastat (parecoxib), an injectable prodrug for valdecoxib for the treatment of acute pain. We have had discussions with the FDA regarding this letter, and we are developing plans to address the FDA's concerns.

In June 2006, after certain decisions by the FDA, we notified Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. (Neurocrine) that we are returning the development and marketing rights for indiplon, a product candidate to treat insomnia, to Neurocrine. This includes both the collaboration to develop and co-market indiplon in the U.S., as well as Pfizer's exclusive license to develop and market indiplon outside of the U.S.

In June 2006, the FDA designated as approvable the NDA for Zeven (dalbavancin). We now anticipate a successful resolution of outstanding issues to allow final FDA approval and launch in 2007.

Other Regulatory Approvals and Filings:

    

Product

Description of Event

Date Approved

  

Date Submitted

  

 

 

Lyrica

Approval in the E.U. for the treatment of central neuropathic pain

September 2006

--

Approval in the E.U. for treatment of GAD in adults

March 2006

--

   

Chantix/Champix

Approval in the E.U. for smoking cessation

September 2006

--

   

Spiriva

Application submitted in the E.U. - Respimat device for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

--

September 2006

   

Eraxis

Application submitted in the E.U. for treatment of candidemia and candidiasis

--

September 2006

   

Sutent

Application submitted in the E.U. for mRCC as a first-line treatment(a)

--

August 2006

Approval in Canada for GIST

May 2006

--

Application submitted in Canada for mRCC

--

December 2005

Application submitted in the E.U. for mRCC, as a second-line treatment, and for GIST(a)

--

August 2005

   

Aricept

Application submitted in Canada for treatment of severe Alzheimer's disease

--

July 2006

   

Fragmin

Approval in Canada for treatment of medical thromboprophylaxis

July 2006

--

   

Neurontin

Approval in Japan for treatment of epilepsy

July 2006

--

   

Genotropin

Approval in Japan for treatment of short stature and growth problems

July 2006

--

   

Lipitor

Approval in the E.U. for primary prevention of CV events in high coronary heart disease risk patients without established CAD

May 2006

--

  

Aromasin

Approval in Canada for early breast cancer

May 2006

--

  

Vfend

Approval in Canada for the powder form oral suspension

May 2006

--

  

Revatio

Approval in Canada for treating pulmonary arterial hypertension

May 2006

--

  

Zyvox

Approval in Japan for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus

April 2006

--

   

Zoloft

Approval in Japan for treatment of depression and panic disorder

April 2006

--

  

Detrol/Detrol LA/Detrusitol

Approval in Japan for treatment of overactive bladder

April 2006

--

   

Celebrex

Application submitted in the E.U. for the treatment of ankylosing spondylitis

--

April 2006

   

Fesoterodine

Application submitted in the E.U. for treatment of overactive bladder

--

March 2006

   

Chantix/Champix

Application submitted in Canada for smoking cessation

--

February 2006

   

Exubera

Application submitted in Canada as an inhaled form of insulin for use in adults with type 1 and 2 diabetes

--

April 2006

 

Approval in the E.U. as an inhaled form of insulin for use in adults with type 1 and 2 diabetes

January 2006

--

  

Macugen

Approval in E.U. for AMD

January 2006

--

    

Somavert

Application submitted in Japan for acromegaly

--

May 2005

   

(a)

On July 27, 2006, Sutent received conditional marketing authorization from the European Commission for mRCC, after failure of interferon alfa or interleukin-2 therapy, and unresectable and/or metastatic malignant GIST, after failure of imatinib due to resistance or intolerance. This was the first time the European Commission granted a new oncology drug conditional marketing authorization in the European Union. Final approval is contingent on the provision of comprehensive data on Sutent's effect in terms of relevant clinical endpoints, such as progression-free survival in patients with mRCC. In October 2006, following evaluation of clinical data submitted by Pfizer, the CHMP recommended a switch from the conditional marketing authorization to a full marketing authorization. It also recommended to extend the indication to first-line treatment of mRCC.

 

Ongoing or planned clinical trials for additional uses and dosage forms for our products include:

Product

Indication

  

Geodon/Zeldox

Bipolar relapse prevention, bipolar pediatric

   

Lyrica

Fibromyalgia, generalized anxiety disorder

   

Sutent

Breast cancer

   

Revatio

Pediatric pulmonary arterial hypertension

   

Macugen

Diabetic macular edema

  

Zyvox

Catheter-related infections

  

Bone and joint infections

 

Drug candidates in late-stage development include maraviroc (UK-427,857), a CCR-5 receptor antagonist for HIV; torcetrapib/atorvastatin, a combination CETP inhibitor/statin for heart disease; asenapine, for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, under co-development with Akzo Nobel's Organon healthcare unit; Zithromax/chloroquine for treatment of malaria; PF-3512676, a toll-like receptor 9 agonist for non-small cell lung cancer developed in partnership with Coley Pharmaceutical Group, Inc.; and CP-675,206, an anti-CTLA4 monoclonal antibody for melanoma. The FDA has granted fast-track designation for maraviroc's clinical development program. Based on the mixed study results to date for asenapine for the treatment of schizophrenia, Pfizer does not believe that an NDA filing with the FDA will be made in 2007. Following receipt of the data from the final Phase 3 study for schizophrenia, Pfizer will discuss the complete Phase 3 data set with Organon, and an announcement will be made concerning the next steps for asenapine.

Torcetrapib/atorvastatin, which combines the new chemical entity torcetrapib (a CETP inhibitor discovered by Pfizer that raises HDL cholesterol) with atorvastatin (Lipitor), is continuing in global Phase 3 clinical trials. This comprehensive 12,000-subject development program includes three comparative atherosclerotic imaging trials (a coronary intravascular ultrasound study and two carotid ultrasound studies), as well as a full range of blood-lipid efficacy studies comparing torcetrapib/ atorvastatin to Lipitor, other statins and fibrates. We are in the midst of the blood-lipid efficacy program, and we anticipate completion of the three ongoing imaging trials by the end of this year. Assuming that we see sufficient improvements over the comparative agents in these various studies, we plan to file the torcetrapib/atorvastatin NDA in 2007.

In addition to these Phase 3 studies, the development program includes a definitive mortality and morbidity trial, which has completed enrollment.

The American Heart Association has accepted for presentation at its annual meeting on November 15, 2006, the torcetrapib/atorvastatin program's study results in patients with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (HeFH). In this relatively uncommon condition, which is found in one of every 500 people in the general population and is characterized by high LDL-cholesterol levels, the study primarily investigated the drug's lipid efficacy and safety in comparison to matching doses of Lipitor in 437 patients who were treated for 24 weeks. In this HeFH study, torcetrapib/atorvastatin raised HDL ("good") cholesterol by about 56% and additionally lowered LDL ("bad") cholesterol by about 27% compared to Lipitor alone. Patients in the torcetrapib/atorvastatin group experienced an average increase in systolic blood pressure that was about 2 millimeters greater than the increase experienced by patients in the Lipitor-only group. Generally, in all of the blood-lipid efficacy studies completed to date, torcetrapib/atorvastatin increased HDL cholesterol by 55-60% and additionally lowered LDL cholesterol by 10-15% compared to Lipitor alone. In those studies, patients in the torcetrapib/atorvastatin group experienced an average increase in systolic blood pressure versus the comparator agents of approximately one millimeter above the two-to-three millimeter range that was observed in the Phase 2 studies. It is important to note that the Phase 3 results to date are far from complete, covering less than 25% of all patients in the entire torcetrapib/atorvastatin clinical trial program. No final conclusions regarding the efficacy and safety of torcetrapib/atorvastatin can be drawn until we complete the blood lipid-efficacy and imaging studies and do the accompanying statistical analysis. The torcetrapib/atorvastatin studies completed to date vary in duration and size, and preliminary results at this stage may not represent the final results when Phase 3 is completed. We expect to present the results of the three comparative atherosclerotic imaging studies at the American College of Cardiology meeting in March 2007.

Despite effective treatments, cardiovascular disease remains the number one killer worldwide with a residual relative risk of 60% to 70% after treatment with statins. Therefore, the primary objective of the torcetrapib/atorvastatin development program is to provide clear evidence that substantially raising HDL cholesterol and further lowering LDL cholesterol can reduce cardiovascular risk beyond what can be achieved with current treatments. Torcetrapib is being developed with atorvastatin in order to rigorously test this hypothesis and the new CETP inhibition mechanism of action. This development program represents a major commitment by Pfizer to significantly advance the understanding of lipids and atherosclerosis in order to provide an important new tool for patients and prescribers in preventing and treating the global burden of cardiovascular disease. In addition to the torcetrapib/atorvastatin development program, we plan to develop torcetrapib as concurrent therapy to be used with other statins or lipid-lowering medications.

Additional product-related programs are in various stages of discovery and development.

COSTS AND EXPENSES

Cost of Sales

Cost of sales increased 22% and 3% in the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006 as compared to the same periods in 2005. Cost of sales as a percentage of revenues increased in the three months ended October 1, 2006, primarily due to the unfavorable impact on expenses of foreign exchange, a concerted focus on inventory-reduction initiatives (exclusive of inventory build-up in advance of new product launches) and higher costs related to our AtS productivity initiative, partially offset by savings related to our AtS productivity initiative. Costs of sales as a percentage of revenues also increased for the nine months ended October 1, 2006, primarily due to higher costs related to our AtS productivity initiative and a concerted focus on inventory-reduction initiatives (exclusive of inventory build-up in advance of new product launches), partially offset by savings related to our AtS productivity initiative, the impact of the second-quarter 2005 inventory write-off of $56 million related to the suspension of Bextra sales.

Selling, Informational and Administrative Expenses

Selling, informational and administrative (SI&A) expenses increased 6% and remained flat in the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006, as compared to the same periods in 2005. The increase in the three months ended October 1, 2006, reflect higher costs related to our AtS productivity initiative, expenses related to share-based payments and the higher promotional investments in new product launches and in-line product promotional programs during the second half of 2006. For the nine months ended October 1, 2006, such factors were offset by the favorable impact on expenses of foreign exchange. SI&A expense growth comparisons during the first half of 2006 were more favorable than in the second half of the year, since savings from our AtS productivity initiative began to be realized in the third quarter of 2005.

Research and Development Expenses

Research and development (R&D) expenses increased 9% and decreased 2% in the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006, as compared to the same periods in 2005. The increase reflects increased operational activity, higher costs related to our AtS productivity initiative, expenses related to share-based payments and higher payments related to intellectual property rights, partially offset by savings related to our AtS productivity initiative. The decrease reflects savings related to our AtS productivity initiative and a R&D milestone due to us from sanofi-aventis (approximately $118 million, pre-tax, in the first quarter of 2006). R&D expense growth comparisons during the first half of 2006 were more favorable than in the second half of the year, since savings from our AtS productivity initiative began to be realized in the third quarter of 2005.

Merger-Related In-Process Research and Development Charges

The estimated fair value of Merger-related in-process research and development charges (IPR&D) is expensed at acquisition date. IPR&D of $513 million, pre-tax, was recorded in the first nine months of 2006, primarily related to our acquisition of Rinat on May 16, 2006, as compared to $1.4 billion and $1.7 billion, pre-tax, recorded in the third quarter and first nine months of 2005, primarily related to our acquisition of Vicuron on September 14, 2005 ($1.4 billion) and our acquisition of Idun on April 12, 2005 ($250 million).

Adapting to Scale Initiative

In connection with the AtS productivity initiative, which was launched in early 2005, Pfizer management has performed a comprehensive review of our processes, organizations, systems and decision-making procedures in a company-wide effort to improve performance and efficiency. Without giving effect to any additional initiatives to transform our cost structure, we continue to expect the costs associated with this multi-year effort to continue through 2008 and to total approximately $4 billion to $5 billion, on a pre-tax basis. We now expect that cost savings from our AtS productivity initiative will be about $2.5 billion in 2006, substantially ahead of our original guidance of about $2 billion and, without giving effect to any additional initiatives to transform our cost structure, growing to about $4 billion annually upon completion in 2008, notwithstanding the planned divestiture of our Consumer Healthcare business and the expense reductions associated with that business. Savings realized during the third quarter and first nine months of 2006 total approximately $600 million and $1.8 billion. The actions associated with the AtS productivity initiative will include restructuring charges, such as asset impairments, exit costs and severance costs (including any related impacts to our benefit plans, including settlements and curtailments) and associated implementation costs, such as accelerated depreciation charges, primarily associated with plant network optimization efforts, and expenses associated with system and process standardization and the expansion of shared services (see Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements - Note 6, Adapting to Scale Productivity Initiative).

We incurred the following costs in connection with our AtS productivity initiative:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2,
2005

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2,
2005

  

Implementation costs(a)

$

182

$

100

$

547

$

133

Restructuring charges(b)

245

151

801

172

Total AtS costs

$

427

$

251

$

1,348

$

305

  

(a)

Included in Cost of sales ($50 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($63 million), Research and development expenses ($70 million) and in Other (income)/deductions - net ($1 million income) for the three months ended October 1, 2006 and included in Cost of sales ($278 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($160 million), Research and development expenses ($132 million) and in Other (income)/deductions - net ($23 million income) for the nine months ended October 1, 2006. Included in Cost of sales ($36 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($56 million), and Research and development expenses ($8 million) for the three months ended October 2, 2005 and included in Cost of sales ($37 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($76 million), and Research and development expenses ($20 million) for the nine months ended October 2, 2005.

(b)

Included in Restructuring charges and merger-related costs.

 

Merger-Related Costs

In connection with acquisitions, we typically restructure and integrate the operations of the acquired companies to eliminate duplicative facilities and reduce costs. In certain instances, legacy Pfizer operations may be impacted by restructuring actions.

We incurred the following merger-related costs:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

Oct. 1,
2006

Oct. 2,
2005

  

Integration costs

$

3

$

91

$

8

$

384

Restructuring charges

1

61

7

226

Total merger-related costs(a)

$

4

$

152

$

15

$

610

   

(a)

Included in Restructuring charges and merger-related costs. Amounts in 2005 primarily relate to our acquisition of Pharmacia Corporation (Pharmacia), which was completed on April 16, 2003.

 

Restructuring charges included severance, costs of vacating duplicative facilities, contract termination and other exit costs.

Other (Income)/Deductions - Net

In the first nine months of 2005, we recorded impairment charges of $1.1 billion related to the developed technology rights for Bextra and $7 million related to the write-off of machinery and equipment, both of which are included in Other (income)/deductions - net. Substantially all of these charges were recorded in the first quarter of 2005.

PROVISION FOR TAXES ON INCOME

In the third quarter of 2006, we recorded a decrease to the 2005 estimated U.S. tax provision related to the repatriation of foreign earnings, due primarily to the receipt of information that raised our assessment of the likelihood of prevailing on the technical merits of a certain position and we recognized a tax benefit of $124 million.

On January 25, 2006, the Company was notified by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Appeals Division that a resolution had been reached on the matter that we were in the process of appealing related to the tax deductibility of a breakup fee paid by the Warner-Lambert Company in 2000. As a result, in the first quarter of 2006 we recorded a tax benefit of approximately $441 million related to the resolution of this issue.

On January 23, 2006, the IRS issued final regulations on Statutory Mergers and Consolidations, which impacted certain prior-period transactions. In the first quarter of 2006, we recorded a tax benefit of $217 million, reflecting the total impact of these regulations.

In the second quarter of 2005, we recorded a tax benefit of $586 million primarily related to the resolution of certain tax positions.

Our effective tax rate for continuing operations was 15.6% for the first nine months of 2006 compared to 34.5% in the same period in 2005. The lower tax rate for the first nine months of 2006 is primarily due to tax benefits related to the resolution of a tax matter, the change in tax regulations and a decrease in the 2005 estimated U.S. tax provision related to the repatriation of foreign earnings, as discussed above. The higher tax rate for the first nine months of 2005 is primarily due to the recording of a $1.7 billion charge related to our decision to repatriate certain foreign earnings under the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (the Jobs Act) and a $1.7 billion non-deductible charge for IPR&D, primarily relating to our acquisition of Vicuron and Idun, partially offset by the tax benefit of $586 million primarily related to the resolution of certain tax positions. (See Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements--Note 8, Taxes on Income.)

DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS - NET OF TAX

In June 2006, we entered into an agreement to sell our Consumer Healthcare business and this business has been presented as a discontinued operation. Income from discontinued operations, net of tax, increased 12% and 10% for the three months and nine months ended October 1, 2006, as compared to the same periods in  2005. The increase in both periods reflects higher net sales from our Consumer Healthcare business, offset by higher costs and expenses related to that business, and also reflects losses in 2005 from our other discontinued businesses.

ADJUSTED INCOME

General Description of Adjusted Income Measure

Adjusted income is an alternative view of performance used by management and we believe that investors' understanding of our performance is enhanced by disclosing this performance measure. The Company reports Adjusted income in order to portray the results of our major operations--the discovery, development, manufacture, marketing and sale of prescription medicines for humans and animals--prior to considering certain income statement elements. We have defined Adjusted income as Net income before significant impact of purchase accounting for acquisitions, merger-related costs, discontinued operations and certain significant items. The Adjusted income measure is not, and should not be viewed as, a substitute for U.S. GAAP Net income.

The Adjusted income measure is an important internal measurement for Pfizer. We measure the performance of the overall Company on this basis. The following are examples of how the Adjusted income measure is utilized.

Senior management receives a monthly analysis of the operating results of our Company that is prepared on an Adjusted income basis;

  

The annual budgets of our Company are prepared on an Adjusted income basis; and

  

Annual and long-term compensation, including annual cash bonuses, merit-based salary adjustments and stock options, for various levels of management, is based on financial measures that include Adjusted income. The Adjusted income measure currently represents a significant portion of target objectives that are utilized to determine the annual compensation for various levels of management, although the actual weighting of the objective may vary by level of management and job responsibility and may be considered in the determination of certain long-term compensation plans. The portion of senior management's bonus, merit-based salary increase and stock option awards based on the Adjusted income measure ranges from 10% to 30%.

 

Despite the importance of this measure to management in goal setting and performance measurement, we stress that Adjusted income is a non-GAAP financial measure that has no standardized meaning prescribed by U.S. GAAP and, therefore, has limits in its usefulness to investors. Because of its non-standardized definition, Adjusted income (unlike U.S. GAAP Net income) may not be comparable with the calculation of similar measures for other companies. Adjusted income is presented solely to permit investors to more fully understand how management assesses the performance of our Company.

We also recognize that, as an internal measure of performance, the Adjusted income measure has limitations and we do not restrict our performance-management process solely to this metric. A limitation of the Adjusted income measure is that it provides a view of our Company's operations without including all events during a period such as the effects of an acquisition, merger-related costs or amortization of purchased intangibles and does not provide a comparable view of our performance to other companies in the pharmaceutical industry. We also use other specifically tailored tools designed to ensure the highest levels of performance in our Company. For example, our R&D organization has productivity targets, upon which its effectiveness is measured. In addition, for senior levels of management, a portion of their long-term compensation is based on U.S. GAAP Net income.

Purchase Accounting Adjustments

Adjusted income is calculated prior to considering certain significant purchase-accounting impacts, such as those related to our acquisitions of Pharmacia, Rinat, Vicuron, Idun, and sanofi-aventis' rights to Exubera, as well as net asset acquisitions. These impacts can include charges for purchased in-process R&D, the incremental charge to cost of sales from the sale of acquired inventory that was written up to fair value and the incremental charges related to the amortization of finite-lived intangible assets for the increase to fair value. Therefore, the Adjusted income measure includes the revenues earned upon the sale of the acquired products without considering the aforementioned significant charges.

Certain of the purchase-accounting adjustments associated with a business combination, such as the amortization of intangibles acquired in connection with our acquisition of Pharmacia, can occur for up to 40 years (these assets have a weighted-average useful life of approximately nine years), but this presentation provides an alternative view of our performance that is used by management to internally assess business performance. We believe the elimination of amortization attributable to acquired intangible assets provides management and investors an alternative view of our business results by trying to provide a degree of parity to internally developed intangible assets for which research and development costs have been previously expensed.

However, a completely accurate comparison of internally developed intangible assets and acquired intangible assets cannot be achieved through Adjusted income. This component of Adjusted income is derived solely with the impacts of the items listed in the first paragraph of this section. We have not factored in the impacts of any other differences in experience that might have occurred if Pfizer had discovered and developed those intangible assets on its own and this approach does not intend to be representative of the results that would have occurred in those circumstances. For example, our research and development costs in total, and in the periods presented, may have been different; our speed to commercialization and resulting sales, if any, may have been different; or our costs to manufacture may have been different. In addition, our marketing efforts may have been received differently by our customers. As such, in total, there can be no assurance that our Adjusted income amounts would have been the same as presented had Pfizer discovered and developed the acquired intangible assets.

Merger-Related Costs

Adjusted income is calculated prior to considering integration and restructuring costs associated with business combinations because these costs are unique to each transaction and represent costs that were incurred to restructure and integrate businesses as a result of the acquisition decision. For additional clarity, only restructuring and integration activities that are associated with a purchase business combination or a net-asset acquisition are included in merger-related costs. We have not factored in the impacts of synergies that would have resulted had these costs not been incurred.

We believe that viewing income prior to considering these charges provides investors with a useful additional perspective because the significant costs incurred in a business combination result primarily from the need to eliminate duplicate assets, activities or employees--a natural result of acquiring a fully integrated set of activities. For this reason, we believe that the costs incurred to convert disparate systems, to close duplicative facilities or to eliminate duplicate positions (for example, in the context of a business combination) can be viewed differently from those costs incurred in other, more normal business contexts.

The integration and restructuring costs associated with a business combination may occur over several years with the more significant impacts ending within three years of the transaction. Because of the need for certain external approvals for some actions, the span of time needed to achieve certain restructuring and integration activities can be lengthy. For example, due to the highly regulated nature of the pharmaceutical business, the closure of excess facilities can take several years as all manufacturing changes are subject to extensive validation and testing and must be approved by the FDA. In other situations, we may be required by local laws to obtain approvals prior to terminating certain employees. This approval process can delay the termination action.

Discontinued Operations

Adjusted income is calculated prior to considering the results of operations included in discontinued operations, such as our Consumer Healthcare business which we have agreed to sell, as well as any related gains or losses on the sale of such operations. We believe that this presentation is meaningful to investors because, while we review our businesses and product lines periodically for strategic fit with our operations, we do not build or run our businesses with an intent to sell them.

Certain Significant Items

Adjusted income is calculated prior to considering certain significant items. Certain significant items represent substantive, unusual items that are evaluated on an individual basis. Such evaluation considers both the quantitative and the qualitative aspect of their unusual nature. Unusual, in this context, may represent items that are not part of our ongoing business; items that, either as a result of their nature or size, we would not expect to occur as part of our normal business on a regular basis; items that would be non-recurring; or items that relate to products we no longer sell. While not all-inclusive, examples of items that could be included as certain significant items would be a major non-acquisition-related restructuring charge and associated implementation costs for a program which is specific in nature with a defined term, such as those related to our AtS productivity initiative; costs associated with a significant recall of one of our products; charges related to sales or disposals of products or facilities that do not qualify as discontinued operations as defined by U.S. GAAP; certain intangible asset impairments; adjustments related to the resolution of certain tax positions; the impact of adopting certain significant, event-driven tax legislation, such as charges attributable to the repatriation of foreign earnings in accordance with the Jobs Act; or possible charges related to legal matters, such as certain of those discussed in Legal Proceedings in our Form 10-K and in Part II: Other Information; Item 1, Legal Proceedings included in our Form 10-Q filings. Normal, ongoing defense costs of the Company or settlements and accruals on legal matters made in the normal course of our business would not be considered a certain significant item.

Reconciliation

A reconciliation between Net income, as reported under U.S. GAAP, and Adjusted income follows:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

% Incr./
(Decr.)

  

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

% Incr./
(Decr.)

  

Reported net income

$

3,362 

$

1,589 

112 %

$

9,888 

$

5,352 

85 %

Purchase accounting adjustments - net of tax

566 

1,962 

(71)   

2,232 

3,398 

(34)   

Merger-related costs - net of tax

65 

(95)   

385 

(98)   

Discontinued operations - net of tax

(123) 

(110)

11    

(353) 

(343)

3    

Certain significant items - net of tax

113 

172 

(35)   

159 

2,085 

(92)   

Adjusted income

$

3,922 

$

3,678 

7    

$

11,935 

$

10,877 

10    

  

Certain amounts and percentages may reflect rounding adjustments.

 

Adjusted income as shown above excludes the following items:

Three Months Ended

Nine Months Ended

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

  

Oct. 1, 
2006 

Oct. 2, 
2005 

   

Purchase accounting adjustments, pre-tax:

In-process research and development charges(a)

$

-- 

$

1,390 

$

513 

$

1,652 

Intangible amortization and other(b)

803 

808 

2,414 

2,487 

Total purchase accounting adjustments, pre-tax

803 

2,198 

2,927 

4,139 

Income taxes

(237)

(236)

(695)

(741)

Total purchase accounting adjustments - net of tax

566 

1,962 

2,232 

3,398 

Merger-related costs, pre-tax:

Integration costs(c)

91 

384 

Restructuring charges(c)

61 

226 

Total merger-related costs, pre-tax

152 

15 

610 

Income taxes

-- 

(87)

(6)

(225)

Total merger-related costs - net of tax

65 

385 

Discontinued operations, pre-tax:

Income from discontinued operations (d)

(178)

(174)

(493)

(465)

Gains on sales of discontinued operations(d)

(6)

(7)

(37)

(72)

Total discontinued operations, pre-tax

(184)

(181)

(530)

(537)

Income taxes

61 

71 

177 

194 

Total discontinued operations - net of tax

(123)

(110)

(353)

(343)

Certain significant items, pre-tax

Asset impairment charges (e)

--  

-- 

1,216 

Sanofi-aventis research and development milestone(f)

--  

-- 

(118)

-- 

Restructuring charges - Adapting to Scale(c)

245 

151 

801 

172 

Implementation costs - Adapting to Scale(g)

182 

100 

547 

133 

Gain on disposals of investments and other(h)

(86)

-- 

(160)

-- 

Total certain significant items, pre-tax

341 

254 

1,070 

1,521 

Income taxes

(104)

(82)

(346)

(549)

Resolution of certain tax positions(i)

-- 

-- 

(441)

(586)

Tax impact of the repatriation of foreign earnings(i)

(124)

-- 

(124)

1,699 

Total certain significant items - net of tax

113 

172 

159 

2,085 

Total purchase accounting adjustments, merger-related costs, discontinued operations and certain significant items - net of tax


$

560 

$

2,089 

$

2,047 

$

5,525 

  

(a)

Included in Merger-related in-process research and development charges.

(b)

Included primarily in Amortization of intangible assets.

(c)

Included in Restructuring charges and merger-related costs.

(d)

Discontinued operations - net of tax includes $124 million and $123 million related to the Consumer Healthcare business for the three months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005 and $335 million and $336 million for the nine months ended October 1, 2006 and October 2, 2005. These amounts do not include a prospective gain on the planned divestiture.

(e)

Included in Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($3 million) for the three months ended October 2, 2005, and included in Cost of sales ($56 million), Selling informational and administrative expenses ($8 million) and Other (income)/deductions - net ($1.2 billion) for the nine months ended October 2, 2005.

(f)

Included in Research and development expenses.

(g)

Included in Cost of sales ($50 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($63 million), Research and development expenses ($70 million) and in Other (income)/deductions - net ($1 million income) for the three months ended October 1, 2006 and included in Cost of sales ($278 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($160 million), Research and development expenses ($132 million) and in Other (income)/deductions - net ($23 million income) for the nine months ended October 1, 2006. Included in Cost of sales ($36 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($56 million), and Research and development expenses ($8 million) for the three months ended October 2, 2005 and included in Cost of sales ($37 million), Selling, informational and administrative expenses ($76 million) and Research and development expenses ($20 million) for the nine months ended October 2, 2005.

(h)

Included in Other (income)/deductions - net.

(i)

Included in Provision for taxes on income.

 

FINANCIAL CONDITION, LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

Net Financial Assets

Our net financial asset position follows:

(millions of dollars)

Oct. 1,
2006

Dec. 31,
2005

   

Financial assets:

Cash and cash equivalents

$

1,177

$

2,247

Short-term investments

11,654

19,979

Short-term loans

460

510

Long-term investments and loans

2,845

2,497

Total financial assets

16,136

25,233

Debt:

Short-term borrowings

2,508

11,589

Long-term debt

5,561

6,347

Total debt

8,069

17,936

Net financial assets

$

8,067

$

7,297

 

We rely largely on operating cash flow, short-term commercial paper borrowings and long-term debt to provide for the working capital needs of our operations, including our R&D activities. We believe that we have the ability to obtain both short-term and long-term debt to meet our financing needs for the foreseeable future.

Investments

Our short-term and long-term investments consist primarily of high-quality, liquid investment-grade available-for-sale debt securities. Wherever possible, cash management is centralized and intercompany financing is used to provide working capital to our operations. Where local restrictions prevent intercompany financing, working capital needs are met through operating cash flows and/or external borrowings. Our portfolio of short-term investments was reduced in the first nine months of 2006 and the proceeds were primarily used to pay down short-term borrowings.

Long-Term Debt

In May 2006, we decided to exercise Pfizer's option to call, at par-value plus accrued interest, $1 billion of senior unsecured floating-rate notes, which were included in Long-term debt as of December 31, 2005. Notice to call was given to the Trustees and the notes were redeemed in the third quarter of 2006.

On February 22, 2006, we issued the following Japanese yen fixed-rate bonds, to be used for general corporate purposes:

$508 million equivalent, senior unsecured notes, due February 2011, which pay interest semi-annually, beginning on August 22, 2006, at a rate of 1.2%; and

   

$466 million equivalent, senior unsecured notes, due February 2016, which pay interest semi-annually, beginning on August 22, 2006, at a rate of 1.8%.

 

The notes were issued under a $5 billion debt shelf registration filed with the SEC in November 2002. Such yen debt is designated as a hedge of our yen net investments.

Credit Ratings

Two major corporate debt-rating organizations, Moody's Investors Services (Moody's) and Standard & Poor's (S&P), assign ratings to our short-term and long-term debt. The following chart reflects the current ratings assigned to the Company's senior unsecured non-credit enhanced long-term debt and commercial paper issued directly by the Company or by affiliates with a guarantee from the Company by each of these agencies:

Long-Term-Debt

Name of Rating Agency

Commercial Paper

  

Rating

Outlook

   

Moody's

P-1

Aaa

Negative

S&P

A1+

AAA

Stable

 

In early April 2005, following the market withdrawal of Bextra and the FDA's decision requiring new labeling for Celebrex, Moody's placed our Aaa rating under review for possible downgrade. The review was completed in June 2005 when Moody's removed Pfizer from review status and reaffirmed our Aaa rating. However, Moody's maintained our rating outlook as negative. Following our announcement in June 2006 of the agreement to sell our Consumer Healthcare business and our target to purchase up to $17 billion of Pfizer stock in 2006 and 2007, Moody's again reaffirmed our Aaa rating with a negative outlook. The negative outlook reflects Moody's concern that disappointing product sales, potential setbacks in the development of key pipeline products, or a shift towards a more aggressive financial profile, including higher levels of acquisition activity, could result in Pfizer's financial metrics falling below those appropriate for a Aaa-rated company.

S&P views our rating outlook as stable, while they note a slowdown in sales and earnings growth as a result of major patent expirations and increased competition. S&P relies on Pfizer's excellent position in the worldwide pharmaceutical market, highlighted by our diverse drug portfolio and deep product pipeline, together with our superior financial profile and cash-generating ability.

Our superior credit ratings are primarily based on our diversified product portfolio, strong operating cash flow, substantial financial assets, strong late-stage product pipeline and desire to maintain a prudent financial profile. Our access to financing at favorable rates would be affected by a substantial downgrade in our credit ratings.

Debt Capacity

We have available lines of credit and revolving-credit agreements with a group of banks and other financial intermediaries. We maintain cash balances and short-term investments in excess of our commercial paper and other short-term borrowings. At October 1, 2006, we had access to $3.6 billion of lines of credit, of which $1.2 billion expire within one year. Of these lines of credit, $3.3 billion are unused, of which our lenders have committed to loan us $2.1 billion at our request. $2.0 billion of the unused lines of credit, which expire in 2011, may be used to support our commercial paper borrowings.

As of October 1, 2006, we had the ability to borrow approximately $1 billion by issuing debt securities under our existing debt shelf registration statement filed with the SEC in November 2002.

Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets

At October 1, 2006, goodwill totaled $21.1 billion (19% of our total assets) and other intangible assets, net of accumulated amortization, totaled $25.3 billion (23% of our total assets). The largest components of goodwill and other intangible assets were acquired in connection with our acquisition of Pharmacia. In the first quarter of 2006, we acquired the sanofi-aventis worldwide rights, including patent rights and production technology, to manufacture and sell Exubera. In connection with the acquisition, we recorded an intangible asset for developed technology rights of approximately $1.0 billion and goodwill of approximately $166 million. Finite-lived intangible assets, net, include $21.0 billion related to developed technology rights and $802 million related to brands. Indefinite-lived intangible assets include $3.0 billion related to brands.

The developed technology rights primarily represent the amortized acquisition-date fair value of the commercialized products that we acquired from Pharmacia. We acquired a well-diversified portfolio of developed technology rights across the therapeutic categories displayed in the table of major Pharmaceutical products in the "Revenues" section of MD&A. While the Arthritis and Pain therapeutic category represents about 27% of the total value of developed technology rights at October 1, 2006, the balance of the value is evenly distributed across the following Pharmaceutical therapeutic product categories: Ophthalmology; Oncology; Urology; Infectious and Respiratory Diseases; Endocrine Disorders categories; and, as a group, the Cardiovascular and Metabolic Diseases; Central Nervous System Disorders and All Other categories.

SELECTED MEASURES OF LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

The following table sets forth certain relevant measures of our liquidity and capital resources:

(millions of dollars, except ratios and per common share data)

Oct. 1,
2006

Dec. 31,
2005

  

Cash and cash equivalents and short-term investments and loans

$

13,291

$

22,736

  

Working capital(a)

$

21,033

$

18,423

  

Ratio of current assets to current liabilities

2.19:1

1.65:1

  

Shareholders' equity per common share(b)

$

9.70

$

8.98

    

(a)

Working capital includes assets of discontinued operations and other assets held for sale of $6.8 billion and $6.7 billion and liabilities of discontinued operations and other liabilities held for sale of $1.4 billion and $1.2 billion, as of October 1, 2006 and December 31, 2005.

(b)

Represents total shareholders' equity divided by the actual number of common shares outstanding (which excludes treasury shares and those held by our employee benefit trust).

 

The increase in working capital as of October 1, 2006 as compared to December 31, 2005 was primarily due to:

the timing of dividend accruals of $1.8 billion;

   

an increase in inventories of $689 million, which is primarily due to the acquisition of sanofi-aventis' Exubera inventory, the build-up of inventory in advance of product launches and the impact of foreign exchange, partially offset by the impact of our inventory-reduction initiative;

   

the impact of a change in the mix of the U.S. sales rebate accrual of about $370 million; and

  

a general reduction in payables and accruals of about $1.3 billion, primarily reflecting timing of payments and accruals;

   

partially offset by:

   

the expected timing of tax obligations of about $1.3 billion; and

   

a decrease in net current financial assets of $364 million primarily due to the redemption of short-term investments, partially offset by the pay down of short-term borrowings.

 

Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities

During the first nine months of 2006, net cash provided by operating activities was $13.1 billion, as compared to $10.0 billion in the same period of 2005. The increase in net cash provided by operating activities was primarily attributable to:

higher tax payments in 2005 of $1.7 billion,  primarily related to the repatriation of foreign earnings in 2005, and

   

higher current period net income, adjusted for non-cash items, reflecting, among other things, the timing of receipts and payments in the ordinary course of business.

 

The estimated net cash flows provided by operating activities associated with discontinued operations were not significant.

Net Cash Provided by Investing Activities

During the first nine months of 2006, net cash provided by investing activities was $4.7 billion, as compared to $2.7 billion in the same period in 2005. The increase in net cash provided by investing activities was primarily attributable to:

higher net redemptions of investments in 2006 (a positive change in cash and cash equivalents of $1.9 billion); in 2006, the proceeds of which were utilized to repay debt and in 2005, the proceeds of which were used to fund the repatriation of foreign earnings as a result of the Jobs Act, and

  

the acquisition of Rinat and sanofi-aventis' rights to Exubera in 2006 compared to the acquisition of Vicuron and Idun in 2005 (a decreased use of cash of $115 million).

 

The estimated net cash flows used in investing activities associated with discontinued operations were not significant.

Net Cash Used in Financing Activities

During the first nine months of 2006, net cash used in financing activities was $18.8 billion, as compared to $13.5 billion in the same period in 2005. The increase in net cash used in financing activities was primarily attributable to:

net repayments of $9.7 billion on total borrowings in 2006, compared to $6.3 billion in 2005,

  

an increase in cash dividends paid of $1.0 billion in 2006 as compared to 2005, primarily due to an increase in the dividend rate, and

   

higher purchases of common stock in 2006 of $4.5 billion as compared to $3.4 billion in 2005,

  

partially offset by:

   

higher proceeds from the exercise of stock options.

 

The estimated net cash flows used in financing activities associated with discontinued operations were not significant.

In June 2005, we announced a $5 billion share-purchase program which is being funded by operating cash flows. During the first nine months of 2006, we purchased approximately 172 million shares under that program for approximately $4.5 billion. In June 2006, the Board of Directors increased our share-purchase authorization from $5 billion to $18 billion.

In October 2004, we announced a $5 billion share-purchase program, which we completed in the second quarter of 2005 and was funded from operating cash flows. In total, under the October 2004 program, we purchased approximately 185 million shares.

OFF-BALANCE SHEET ARRANGEMENTS

In the ordinary course of business and in connection with the sale of assets and businesses, we often indemnify our counterparties against certain liabilities that may arise in connection with a transaction or related to activities prior to a transaction. These indemnifications typically pertain to environmental, tax, employee and/or product-related matters, and patent infringement claims. If the indemnified party were to make a successful claim pursuant to the terms of the indemnification, we would be required to reimburse the loss. These indemnifications are generally subject to threshold amounts, specified claim periods and other restrictions and limitations. Historically, we have not paid significant amounts under these provisions and as of October 1, 2006, recorded amounts for the estimated fair value of these indemnifications are not significant.

Certain of our co-promotion or license agreements give our licensors or partners the rights to negotiate for, or in some cases to obtain, under certain financial conditions, co-promotion or other rights in specified countries with respect to certain of our products.

RECENTLY ADOPTED ACCOUNTING STANDARDS

On January 1, 2006, we adopted the provisions of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 123R, Share-Based Payment, as supplemented by the guidance provided by SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin No.107, issued in March 2005. (SFAS 123R replaces SFAS 123, Stock-Based Compensation, issued in 1995.) (See Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements - Note 4, Adoption of New Accounting Standards, and Note 14, Share-Based Payments.)

RECENTLY ISSUED ACCOUNTING STANDARDS

In September 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 158, Employers' Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and Other Postretirement Plans (an amendment of FASB Statements No. 87, 88, 106, and 132R). SFAS 158 requires an employer to recognize the funded status of its defined benefit pension and postretirement plans on its statement of financial position and to recognize as a component of other comprehensive income, net of taxes, the gains or losses and prior service credits that arise during the period but are not recognized as components of net periodic benefit costs. Upon initial adoption, SFAS 158 requires the recognition of previously unrecognized actuarial gains and losses, prior service costs or credits and net transition amounts within Accumulated other comprehensive income, net of tax. The provisions of SFAS 158 are effective as of the end of fiscal year 2006. Based on current information, we estimate that the adoption of SFAS 158 will have the effect of decreasing our Total Assets by approximately $2.0 billion, increasing our Total liabilities by approximately $2.5 billion and reducing our Total shareholders' equity by approximately $4.5 billion, all on a pre-tax basis. We expect the net deferred tax impact of these adjustments to approximate 37%.

In June 2006, the FASB issued Interpretation No. 48 (FIN 48), Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes, an interpretation of  SFAS 109, Accounting for Income Taxes. FIN 48 provides guidance relative to the recognition, derecognition and measurement of tax positions for financial statement purposes. Historically, our policy has been to account for uncertainty in income taxes based on whether we determined that our tax position is "probable" of being sustained. FIN 48 requires the accounting be determined based on if it is "more likely than not" that a tax position will be sustained -- a lower level of certainty. Upon adoption of FIN 48, any gains or losses would be recorded as an adjustment to the opening balance of retained earnings. We are currently in the process of evaluating the impact on the financial statements of adopting FIN 48. We expect to adopt the standard when required in 2007.

In September 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 157 Fair Value Measurements. SFAS 157 provides guidance for, among other things, the definition of fair value and the methods used to measure fair value. The provisions of SFAS 157 are effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. We are currently in the process of evaluating the impact of adopting SFAS 157 on our financial statements.

OUTLOOK

Results in 2006 have been, and results over the next few years will continue to be, impacted by the loss of U.S. exclusivity of certain key products since the beginning of 2004. Results also have been, and may continue to be, impacted by increased competition in key markets. In addition, we have recently seen a variability of the U.S. dollar relative to other currencies and restrictive actions on access and pricing taken by influential decision makers in several large European markets. As a result of these near-term challenges, at current exchange rates, we are now expecting revenues in 2007 and 2008 to be comparable to 2006, as compared to our previous forecast of modest revenue growth over the period.

The growth of four products--Lipitor, Celebrex, Lyrica and Geodon--is contributing significantly to our 2006 revenues. At current exchange rates, we are committed to achieving our full-year 2006 revenue targets for these four products and continue to expect 2006 aggregate revenues to be comparable to overall revenues in 2005. At current exchange rates we target Lipitor sales of about $13 billion; Celebrex revenues of about $2 billion; Geodon revenues of about $800 million; and Lyrica revenues of more than $1 billion in 2006.

We continue to forecast 2006 adjusted diluted EPS of about $2.00. Reported diluted EPS for 2006 is now forecast at about $1.63, reflecting the impact of an equity sale in the third quarter as well as a decrease of the estimated 2005 U.S. tax provision related to the repatriation of foreign earnings as discussed in the "Provision for Taxes on Income" section. We expect the cost of sales pre-tax component of adjusted income as a percentage of revenues to remain under pressure in the fourth quarter of 2006 and we now expect the cost of sales pre-tax component of adjusted income as a percentage of revenues this year to be comparable to 2005. We continue to expect the SI&A pre-tax component of adjusted income to be about $15.4 billion in 2006. We now expect the R&D pre-tax component of adjusted income to be about $7.4 billion. We continue to expect our cash flow from operations to exceed $16 billion in 2006.

We now expect AtS-related cost savings in excess of $2.5 billion in 2006, an increase of at least $1.7 billion over 2005 savings.

Given these and other factors, a reconciliation, at current exchange rates and reflecting management's current assessment for 2006, of forecasted 2006 Adjusted income and Adjusted diluted EPS to forecasted 2006 reported Net income and reported diluted EPS follows:

($ billions, except per-share amounts)

Net Income(a)

Diluted EPS(a)

   

Forecasted Adjusted income/diluted EPS

~$14.7     

~$2.00     

Purchase accounting impacts, net of tax

(2.9)    

(0.39)    

Adapting to scale costs, net of tax

(1.1)    

(0.15)    

Income from discontinued operations, net of tax(b)

0.5     

0.07     

Equity sales/other

0.2     

0.02     

Tax impact of the repatriation of foreign earnings

0.2     

0.02     

Resolution of certain tax positions

0.4     

0.06     

Forecasted reported Net income/diluted EPS

~$12.0     

~$1.63     

   

(a)

Includes the Consumer Healthcare business as discontinued operations and excludes the effects of other business-development transactions not completed as of the end of the third quarter of 2006 and the potential impact from a substantial prospective gain on the divestiture of our Consumer Healthcare business.

(b)

Primarily reflects the reclassification of our Consumer Healthcare business to discontinued operations.

 

Our forecasted financial performance is subject to a number of factors and uncertainties--as described in the "Forward Looking Information and Factors That May Affect Future Results" section below. Some of these factors and uncertainties may persist over our planning horizon.

FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION AND FACTORS THAT MAY AFFECT FUTURE RESULTS

Our disclosure and analysis in this report, including but not limited to the information discussed in the Outlook section above, contain forward-looking information about our Company's financial results and estimates, business prospects, in-line products and product candidates that involve substantial risks and uncertainties, including, without limitation, information about the Company's agreement to sell its Consumer Healthcare business to Johnson & Johnson, as well as about the Company's stock-purchase plans. From time to time, we also may provide oral or written forward-looking statements in other materials we release to the public. Forward-looking statements give our current expectations or forecasts of future events. You can identify these statements by the fact that they do not relate strictly to historic or current facts. They use words such as "will," "anticipate," "estimate," "expect," "project," "intend," "plan," "believe," "target," "forecast" and other words and terms of similar meaning in connection with any discussion of future operating or financial performance or business prospects. In particular, these include statements relating to future actions, prospective products or product approvals, future performance or results of current and anticipated products, sales efforts, expenses, interest rates, foreign exchange rates, the outcome of contingencies, such as legal proceedings, and financial results. Among the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially are the following:

the success of research and development activities;

  

decisions by regulatory authorities regarding whether and when to approve our drug applications as well as their decisions regarding labeling and other matters that could affect the availability or commercial potential of our products;

  

the speed with which regulatory authorizations, pricing approvals, and product launches may be achieved;

  

competitive developments affecting our current growth products;

  

the ability to successfully market both new and existing products domestically and internationally;

  

difficulties or delays in manufacturing;

  

trade buying patterns;

  

the ability to meet generic and branded competition after the loss of patent protection for our products and competitor products;

  

the impact of existing and future regulatory provisions on product exclusivity;

  

trends toward managed care and healthcare cost containment;

  

possible U.S. legislation or regulatory action affecting, among other things, pharmaceutical pricing and reimbursement, including under Medicaid and Medicare, the importation of prescription drugs that are marketed outside the U.S. and sold at prices that are regulated by governments of various foreign countries, and the involuntary approval of prescription medicines for over-the-counter use;

  

the potential impact of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003;

  

legislation or regulations in markets outside the U.S. affecting product pricing, reimbursement or access;

  

contingencies related to actual or alleged environmental contamination;

  

claims and concerns that may arise regarding the safety or efficacy of in-line products and product candidates;

  

legal defense costs, insurance expenses, settlement costs and the risk of an adverse decision or settlement related to product liability, patent protection, governmental investigations, ongoing efforts to explore various means for resolving asbestos litigation and other legal proceedings;

   

the Company's ability to protect its patents and other intellectual property both domestically and internationally;

  

interest rate and foreign-currency exchange-rate fluctuations;

  

governmental laws and regulations affecting domestic and foreign operations, including tax obligations;

  

changes in U.S. generally accepted accounting principles;

   

any changes in business, political and economic conditions due to the threat of future terrorist activity in the U.S. and other parts of the world, and related U.S. military action overseas;

     

growth in costs and expenses;

  

changes in our product, segment and geographic mix; and

  

the impact of acquisitions, divestitures, restructurings, product withdrawals and other unusual items, including our ability to realize the projected benefits of our Adapting to Scale multi-year productivity initiative, including the benefits of the planned broadening of this initiative in 2007 and 2008, and the ability of the Company and Johnson & Johnson to satisfy the conditions to closing the sale of the Company's Consumer Healthcare business, including receiving the required regulatory approvals.

 

We cannot guarantee that any forward-looking statement will be realized, although we believe we have been prudent in our plans and assumptions. Achievement of future results is subject to risks, uncertainties and inaccurate assumptions. Should known or unknown risks or uncertainties materialize, or should underlying assumptions prove inaccurate, actual results could differ materially from past results and those anticipated, estimated or projected. Investors should bear this in mind as they consider forward-looking statements.

We undertake no obligation to publicly update forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. You are advised, however, to consult any further disclosures we make on related subjects in our Forms 10-Q, 8-K and 10-K reports to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Our Form 10-K filing for the 2005 fiscal year listed various important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from expected and historic results. We note these factors for investors as permitted by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Readers can find them in Part I, Item 1A, of that filing under the heading "Risk Factors and Cautionary Factors That May Affect Future Results." We incorporate that section of that Form 10-K in this filing and investors should refer to it. You should understand that it is not possible to predict or identify all such factors. Consequently, you should not consider any such list to be a complete set of all potential risks or uncertainties.

This report includes discussion of certain clinical studies relating to various in-line products and/or product candidates. These studies typically are part of a larger body of clinical data relating to such products or product candidates, and the discussion herein should be considered in the context of the larger body of data.

Legal Proceedings and Contingencies

We and certain of our subsidiaries are involved in various patent, product liability, consumer, commercial, securities, environmental and tax litigations and claims; government investigations; and other legal proceedings that arise from time to time in the ordinary course of our business. We do not believe any of them will have a material adverse effect on our financial position.

We record accruals for such contingencies to the extent that we conclude their occurrence is probable and the related damages are estimable. If a range of liability is probable and estimable and some amount within the range appears to be a better estimate than any other amount within the range, we accrue that amount. If a range of liability is probable and estimable and no amount within the range appears to be a better estimate than any other amount within the range, we accrue the minimum of such probable range. Many claims involve highly complex issues relating to causation, label warnings, scientific evidence, actual damages and other matters. Often these issues are subject to substantial uncertainties and, therefore, the probability of loss and an estimation of damages are difficult to ascertain. Consequently, we cannot reasonably estimate the maximum potential exposure or the range of possible loss in excess of amounts accrued for these contingencies. These assessments can involve a series of complex judgments about future events and can rely heavily on estimates and assumptions. Our assessments are based on estimates and assumptions that have been deemed reasonable by management. Litigation is inherently unpredictable, and excessive verdicts do occur. Although we believe we have substantial defenses in these matters, we could in the future incur judgments or enter into settlements of claims that could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations in any particular period.

Patent claims include challenges to the coverage and/or validity of our patents on various products or processes. Although we believe we have substantial defenses to these challenges with respect to all our material patents, there can be no assurance as to the outcome of these matters, and a loss in any of these cases could result in a loss of patent protection for the drug at issue, which could lead to a significant loss of sales of that drug and could materially affect future results of operations.

Item 3.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk.

Information required by this item is incorporated by reference from the discussion under the heading Financial Risk Management in our 2005 Financial Report, which is filed as exhibit 13 to our 2005 Form 10-K. We currently invest and borrow primarily on a short-term or effectively variable-rate basis.

Item 4.  Controls and Procedures.

As of the end of the period covered by this report, we carried out an evaluation, under the supervision and with the participation of our principal executive officer and principal financial officer, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of our disclosure controls and procedures (as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act)). Based on this evaluation, our principal executive officer and principal financial officer concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures are effective in alerting them in a timely manner to material information required to be disclosed in our periodic reports filed with the SEC.

During our most recent fiscal quarter, there has not been any change in our internal control over financial reporting (as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting. However, we do wish to highlight some changes which, taken together, are expected to have a favorable impact on our controls over a multi-year period. We continue to pursue a multi-year initiative to outsource some transaction-processing activities within certain accounting processes and are migrating to a consistent enterprise resource planning system across the organization. These are enhancements of ongoing activities to support the growth of our financial shared service capabilities and standardize our financial systems. None of these initiatives is in response to any identified deficiency or weakness in our internal control over financial reporting.

PART II - OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1.  Legal Proceedings

Certain legal proceedings in which we are involved are discussed in Note 18 to the consolidated financial statements included in our 2005 Financial Report; Part I, Item 3, of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2005; and Part II, Item 1, of our Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q for the quarters ended April 2 and July 2, 2006. The following discussion is limited to certain recent developments concerning our legal proceedings and should be read in conjunction with those earlier Reports. Unless otherwise indicated, all proceedings discussed in those earlier Reports remain outstanding. Reference also is made to the Legal Proceedings and Contingencies section in Part I, Item 2, of this Form 10-Q.

Patent Matters

Norvasc (amlodipine)

As previously reported, between 2002 and 2005, we brought patent infringement suits in various federal courts against several manufacturers that have filed abbreviated new drug applications with the FDA seeking to market a generic version of amlodipine besylate, which is the salt form contained in Norvasc. Our patent for amlodipine besylate is being challenged in all of the suits, and our basic patent for amlodipine also is being challenged in one of the suits.

In the first of these actions to go to trial, which involved only our amlodipine besylate patent, in January 2006 the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois held that our amlodipine besylate patent is valid and infringed by the generic manufacturer Torpharm/Apotex Inc.'s product. The court issued an injunction prohibiting Torpharm/Apotex from marketing its generic amlodipine besylate product before the expiration of our amlodipine besylate patent (including the additional six-month pediatric exclusivity period) in September 2007. In February 2006, Torpharm/Apotex appealed the decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

Similarly, in the second of these actions to go to trial, which also involved only our amlodipine besylate patent, in August 2006 the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina held that our amlodipine besylate patent is valid and infringed by generic manufacturer Synthon Pharmaceuticals, Inc.'s product. The court issued an injunction prohibiting Synthon from marketing its generic amlodipine besylate product before September 2007. In September 2006, Synthon appealed the decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

Separately, as previously reported, in November 2005 Synthon IP filed an action against us in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia alleging that our sales of Norvasc and Caduet infringe Synthon's patent relating to the manufacture of amlodipine. In August 2006, the jury held that Synthon's patent is invalid and is not infringed by our sales of Norvasc and Caduet. The decision is subject to possible appeal.

Government Investigations

As previously reported, in 2005 we received a request from the staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission") for information and documents concerning our COX-2 franchise. In August 2006, we received a letter from the staff notifying us that this investigation has been terminated and that no enforcement action has been recommended by the staff to the Commission.

Tax Matters

On January 25, 2006, the Company was notified by the IRS Appeals Division that a resolution had been reached on the matter that we were in the process of appealing related to the tax deductibility of a breakup fee paid by Warner-Lambert Company in 2000. As a result, in the first nine months of 2006 we recorded a tax benefit of approximately $441 million related to the resolution of this issue.

In the second quarter of 2005, we recorded a tax benefit of $586 million primarily related to the resolution of certain tax positions.

The IRS is currently conducting audits of the Pfizer Inc. tax returns for the years 2002, 2003 and 2004. The 2005 and 2006 tax years are also currently under audit under the IRS Compliance Assurance Process, a recently introduced real-time audit process.

With respect to Pharmacia Corporation, the IRS has completed audits of the tax returns for the years 2000 through 2002 and is currently conducting an audit for the year 2003 through the date of the merger with Pfizer (April 16, 2003).

We periodically reassess the likelihood of assessments resulting from audits of federal, state and foreign income tax filings. We believe that our accruals for tax liabilities are adequate for all open years.

Item 1A.  Risk Factors.

There have been no material changes from the risk factors disclosed in Part 1, Item 1A, of our 2005 Form 10-K.

Item 2.  Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds.

This table provides certain information with respect to our purchases of shares of Pfizer's common stock during the three months ended October 1, 2006:

Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities(a)

  

Period

Total Number of    
Shares Purchased
(b)

Average Price    
Paid per Share
(b)

Total Number of  
Shares Purchased as  
Part of Publicly  
Announced Plan
(a)

Approximate Dollar  
Value of Shares that  
May Yet Be Purchased  
Under the Plan
(a)

July 3, 2006 through
July 31, 2006

6,595,881    

$24.91    

6,539,300  

$15,344,343,763  

August 1, 2006 through
August 31, 2006

47,571,739    

$26.38    

47,336,500  

$14,095,266,386  

September 1, 2006 through
October 1, 2006

38,766,119    

$28.00    

38,745,083  

$13,010,454,666  

Total

92,933,739    

$26.95    

92,620,883  

  

(a)

On June 23, 2005, Pfizer announced that the Board of Directors authorized a $5 billion share-purchase plan (the "2005 Stock Purchase Plan"). On June 26, 2006, Pfizer announced that the Board of Directors increased the authorized amount of shares to be purchased under the 2005 Stock Purchase Plan from $5 billion to $18 billion.

 

    

(b)

In addition to purchases under the 2005 Stock Purchase Plan, this column reflects the following transactions during the three months ended October 1, 2006: (i) the deemed surrender to Pfizer of 214,471 shares of common stock to pay the exercise price and to satisfy tax withholding obligations in connection with the exercise of employee stock options, (ii) the open-market purchase by the trustee of 83,891 shares of common stock in connection with the reinvestment of dividends paid on common stock held in trust for employees who were granted performance-contingent share awards and who deferred receipt of such awards and (iii) the surrender to Pfizer of 14,494 shares of common stock to satisfy tax withholding obligations in connection with the vesting of restricted stock issued to employees.

Item 3.  Defaults Upon Senior Securities.

None

Item 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders

None

Item 5.  Other Information.

None

Item 6.

Exhibits.

  

1)  Exhibit 12

-

Computation of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges

  

2)  Exhibit 15

-

Accountants' Acknowledgment

  

3)  Exhibit 31.1

-

Certification by the Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

  

4)  Exhibit 31.2

-

Certification by the Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

  

5)  Exhibit 32.1

-

Certification by the Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

  

6)  Exhibit 32.2

-

Certification by the Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

 

SIGNATURE

Under the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report was signed on behalf of the Registrant by the authorized person named below.

  

Pfizer Inc.

(Registrant)

  

  

Dated:  November 3, 2006

/s/ Loretta V. Cangialosi

  

Loretta V. Cangialosi, Vice President, Controller
(Principal Accounting Officer and
Duly Authorized Officer)

Exhibit 12

PFIZER INC. AND SUBSIDIARY COMPANIES
COMPUTATION OF RATIO OF EARNINGS TO FIXED CHARGES

Nine
Months
Ended
Oct. 1,

Year Ended December 31,

(in millions, except ratios)

2006

  

2005

2004

2003

2002

2001

  

Determination of earnings:

Income from continuing operations before provision for taxes on income, minority interests and cumulative effect of a change in accounting principles

$

11,314

$

10,800

$

13,456

$

2,816

$

11,247

$

9,469

Less:

Minority interests

10

12

7

1

3

12

Income adjusted for minority interest

11,304

10,788

13,449

2,815

11,244

9,457

Add:

Fixed charges

519

630

505

438

318

301

Total earnings as defined

$

11,823

$

11,418

$

13,954

$

3,253

$

11,562

$

9,758

  

Fixed charges:

Interest expense (a)

$

399

$

471

$

347

$

270

$

251

$

266

Preferred stock dividends (b)

11

14

12

10

--

--

Rents (c)

109

145

146

158

67

35

Fixed charges

519

630

505

438

318

301

  

Capitalized interest

22

17

12

20

28

56

  

Total fixed charges

$

541

$

647

$

517

$

458

$

346

$

357

  

Ratio of earnings to fixed charges

21.9

17.6

27.0

7.1

33.4

27.3

 

All financial information reflects the following as discontinued operations for all periods presented: the Consumer Healthcare business; for 2006, 2005, 2004 and 2003: certain European generics businesses; and for 2004 and 2003: our in-vitro allergy and autoimmune diagnostics testing, and surgical ophthalmics.

All financial information reflects the following as discontinued operations for 2003, 2002, and 2001: our confectionery, shaving and fish-care products businesses, as well as the Estrostep, Loestrin and femhrt women's health product lines for all the years presented.

(a)

Interest expense includes amortization of debt premium, discount and expenses.

  

(b)

Preferred stock dividends are from our Series A convertible perpetual preferred stock held by an Employee Stock Ownership Plan assumed in connection with our acquisition of Pharmacia.

  

(c)

Rents included in the computation consist of one-third of rental expense which we believe to be a conservative estimate of an interest factor in our leases, which are not material.

Exhibit 15

ACCOUNTANTS' ACKNOWLEDGMENT

To the Shareholders and Board of Directors of Pfizer Inc:

We hereby acknowledge our awareness of the incorporation by reference of our report dated November 3, 2006, included within the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of Pfizer Inc. for the quarter ended October 1, 2006, in the following Registration Statements:

- Form S-8 dated October 27, 1983 (File No. 2-87473),

- Form S-8 dated March 22, 1990 (File No. 33-34139),

- Form S-8 dated January 24, 1991 (File No. 33-38708),

- Form S-8 dated November 18, 1991 (File No. 33-44053),

- Form S-8 dated May 27, 1993 (File No. 33-49631),

- Form S-8 dated May 19, 1994 (File No. 33-53713),

- Form S-8 dated October 5, 1994 (File No. 33-55771),

- Form S-8 dated December 20, 1994 (File No. 33-56979),

- Form S-8 dated March 29, 1996 (File No. 333-02061),

- Form S-8 dated September 25, 1997 (File No. 333-36371),

- Form S-8 dated April 24, 1998 (File No. 333-50899),

- Form S-8 dated April 22, 1999 (File No. 333-76839),

- Form S-8 dated June 19, 2000 (File No. 333-90975),

- Form S-8 dated June 19, 2000 (File No. 333-39606),

- Form S-8 dated June 19, 2000 (File No. 333-39610),

- Form S-3 dated October 20, 2000 (File No. 333-48382),

- Form S-8 dated April 27, 2001 (File No. 333-59660),

- Form S-8 dated April 27, 2001 (File No. 333-59654),

- Form S-3 dated October 30, 2002 (File No. 333-100853),

- Form S-3 dated December 16, 2002 (File No. 33-56435),

- Form S-8 dated April 16, 2003 (File No. 333-104581),

- Form S-8 dated April 16, 2003 (File No. 333-104582),

- Form S-8 dated November 18, 2003 (File No. 333-110571),

- Form S-8 dated December 18, 2003 (File No. 333-111333),

- Form S-8 dated April 26, 2004 (File No.333-114852), and

- Form S-3 dated March 1, 2005 (File No. 333-123058).

Pursuant to Rule 436(c) under the Securities Act of 1933, such report is not considered a part of a registration statement prepared or certified by an accountant or a report prepared or certified by an accountant within the meaning of Sections 7 and 11 of that Act.

KPMG LLP

New York, New York
November 3, 2006

Exhibit 31.1

CERTIFICATION BY THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER PURSUANT TO
SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

I, Jeffrey B. Kindler, certify that:

1.

I have reviewed this report on Form 10-Q of Pfizer Inc.;

  

2.

Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

  

3.

Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

  

4.

The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:

  

a)

Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

  

b)

Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

  

c)

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and

  

d)

Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's most recent fiscal quarter that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and

  

5.

The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

  

a)

All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

  

b)

Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Date:  November 3, 2006

  

/s/ Jeffrey B. Kindler

Jeffrey B. Kindler
Chief Executive Officer

Exhibit 31.2

CERTIFICATION BY THE CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER PURSUANT TO
SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

I, Alan G. Levin, certify that:

1.

I have reviewed this report on Form 10-Q of Pfizer Inc.;

  

2.

Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

  

3.

Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

  

4.

The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have:

  

a)

Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

  

b)

Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

  

c)

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and

  

d)

Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant's most recent fiscal quarter that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and

  

5.

The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

  

a)

All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

  

b)

Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Date:  November 3, 2006

  

/s/ Alan G. Levin

Alan G. Levin
Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Exhibit 32.1

Certification by the Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to 18 U. S. C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

Pursuant to 18 U. S. C. Section 1350, I, Jeffrey B. Kindler, hereby certify that, to the best of my knowledge, the Quarterly Report of Pfizer Inc. on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended October 1, 2006 (the "Report") fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or Section 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and that the information contained in that Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of Pfizer Inc.

  

/s/ Jeffrey B. Kindler             
Jeffrey B. Kindler
Chief Executive Officer
November 3, 2006

This certification accompanies this Report on Form 10-Q pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and shall not, except to the extent required by such Act, be deemed filed by the Company for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act"). Such certification will not be deemed to be incorporated by reference into any filing under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Exchange Act, except to the extent that the Company specifically incorporates it by reference.

Exhibit 32.2

Certification by the Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to 18 U. S. C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

Pursuant to 18 U. S. C. Section 1350, I, Alan G. Levin, hereby certify that, to the best of my knowledge, the Quarterly Report of Pfizer Inc. on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended October 1, 2006 (the "Report") fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or Section 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and that the information contained in that Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of Pfizer Inc.

/s/ Alan G. Levin            
Alan G. Levin
Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
November 3, 2006

This certification accompanies this Report on Form 10-Q pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and shall not, except to the extent required by such Act, be deemed filed by the Company for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act"). Such certification will not be deemed to be incorporated by reference into any filing under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Exchange Act, except to the extent that the Company specifically incorporates it by reference.