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Pharma giant Novartis sees net profit jump 24%

A file picture taken on January 28, 2009 in Basel, shows the logo of Novartis pictured on a building of Novartis' headquarters

Swiss pharmaceuticals giant Novartis on Thursday posted a 24-percent jump in first-quarter net profit, driven largely by the sale of a blood transfusion diagnostics unit.

The company, which earlier this week announced an extreme make-over of its structure, said it had raked in a net profit of $2.96 billion (2.14 billion euros) during the first three months of the year.

Not counting acquisitions or other exceptional events such as the $900 million it booked during the quarter on the sale of its blood transfusion diagnostics unit to the Spanish firm Grifols, Novartis said its net profit remained flat year-on-year at $3.12 billion.

That was slightly higher than the £3.05 billion expected by analysts, according to a poll by Dow Jones Newswires.

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The company meanwhile saw its net sales edge up just 1.0 percent during the quarter to $14.02 billion, missing analyst expectations it would rake in $14.22 billion.

Largely thanks to the diagnostics unit sale, announced last November, Novartis meanwhile saw its operating profit for the quarter soar 22 percent to $3.5 billion.

Investors appeared disappointed, sending Novartis's share price down 0.85 percent to 75.60 Swiss francs a piece in morning trading as the Swiss stock exchange's main SMI index rose 0.1 percent.

Novartis chief executive Joe Jimenez was upbeat though.

"Novartis delivered a solid quarter, with all divisions contributing to growth," he said in the earnings statement, adding that going forward, things should only get better.

"The transformational deals announced on Tuesday position the company for future success based on our sharpened focus, innovation power and financial strength," he said.

He was referring to the unveiling of several multi-billion-dollar deals with British GlaxoSmithKline and US group Eli Lilly promising a major shake-up of the pharmaceutical sector.