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Novavax beats first-quarter revenue estimates on strength in vaccine deals

By Thomson Reuters May 6, 2026 | 6:56 AM

By Michael Erman and Siddhi Mahatole

May 6 (Reuters) – Novavax on Wednesday beat Wall Street estimates for first-quarter revenue, as milestone payments from vaccine supply and licensing deals helped ​offset pressure from sagging demand, sending its shares up ‌nearly 7% in premarket trading.

The company relies on licensing deals and partnerships tied to its vaccine technology to drive revenue growth as narrower U.S. vaccine recommendations weigh on demand for its COVID-19 shot.

First-quarter revenue came in at $139.5 ‌million, ​surpassing analysts’ estimate of $78.3 million, according to ⁠LSEG-compiled data.

It gained $30 million ⁠upfront when it licensed its Matrix-M adjuvant, which boosts the body’s immune response to vaccines, to Pfizer earlier this year.

It is also eligible to receive up to $500 million in milestone ​payments as well as royalties on future sales.

In the first four months of 2026, the “momentum has increased exponentially regarding interest ⁠in our tech,” Novavax CEO John ⁠Jacobs told Reuters in an interview.

Novavax’s strategy of licensing ​out assets and partnering early in development has left it “partially insulated” ​from policy uncertainty as it avoids taking products through ‌late‑stage trials and commercialization on its own, Jacobs said.

The company said it has expanded partnerships tied to its Matrix-M adjuvant this year, with large drugmakers and biotech companies to explore its use ⁠across infectious disease and oncology targets such as colorectal cancer and pancreatic cancer.

Novavax maintained its 2026 adjusted revenue forecast of between $230 million and $270 ⁠million. The number ‌excludes supply sales, royalties and milestones related to ⁠its Sanofi deal.

The company also said it is ​continuing ‌efforts to reduce costs, targeting combined research and ​administrative expenses ⁠of about $325 million in 2026 and $225 million in 2027.

Activist investor Shah Capital, Novavax’s second-largest shareholder, has been pushing the biotech’s board to pursue strategic changes, including a potential sale.

(Reporting by Siddhi Mahatole and Mariam Sunny in Bengaluru and Michael Erman in New Jersey; Editing ​by Devika Syamnath)