New Year, New Rules: Drugs Sounding Good to Investors About Now
The economy may slump and the market may plunge, but investors can always feel safe with the health care stocks.
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Waiting Out the PC Stocks |
| Drugs Sounding Good to Investors Right About Now |
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Stores of Value
That view has been reflected in stock performances this year. While the tech-heavy Nasdaq is sharply off its highs, the Nasdaq Biotech Index has mostly had a great year, with biotech stocks up nearly 50% from a year ago. The biotech index outperformed other major indices, like the Dow and the S&P 500, which are now trading mostly flat from a year ago.| Turnaround Drug stocks outperforming tech |
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Excuses, Excuses
If anything, analysts say a national health care program could be good for the industry, since it will expand the use of drugs among the 20 million or so people who aren't covered by any outpatient program. Even if price controls are imposed, higher volumes will more than cover the cost to the industry, they say. But the bulk of the industry expansion will likely come from new drugs, and there are many in development. As of June, the U.S. biotechnology industry alone had 283 products in mid-to-late stage clinical development, calculates Goldman Sachs, many in partnership with leading drug companies that collectively have dozens of their own in advanced development. The downside, of course, is that many of these high-risk drugs won't make it to market, and the results of a failure can be devastating for big and small companies alike. Among the highest profile failures this year was Vanlev, expected to be a multibillion-dollar selling hypertension drug that was sent back for more tests at Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY), and Maxim Pharmaceuticals' (MAXM) cancer drug Maxamine, which was rejected by the Food and Drug Administration last week. Both moves led to sharp stock price declines. And certainly patent expirations are keen on the minds of investors, particularly for companies like Merck (MRK), which is facing patent expirations on some $5 billion worth of sales in the next four years. With robust numbers from drugs like Vioxx for arthritis and Zocor for cholesterol and a bevy of new successor drugs, Merck says it can ride out the expiration loss and continue to generate strong earnings. "In 2001 to 2002, we expect new product visibility to noticeably improve, with the major therapeutic success stories emanating from the Cox-2 inhibitors [like Vioxx] and their next-generation brethren, the cholesterol-lowering drugs, drugs for hypertension and congestive heart failure and biologicals, including new drugs for sepsis and rheumatoid arthritis," wrote Morgan Stanley Dean Witter in a recent report.Value Talk
The risk, of course, is that drug stock valuations may get well beyond what investors will pay, but that concern may be offset by a relative lack of opportunity in other sectors for a safe earnings stream, writes Morgan Stanley: "Changing hands at a 40% to 50% premium to the broad market, U.S. drug stocks are trading at valuations well ahead of their historic ranges of 25% to 35%. However, if we move into an environment with steeply falling earnings in the broader market, combined with pockets of modest upside surprise in the drug sector, then we believe the group remains attractively priced." But if you think drug stocks are a buy at any price, try biotech stocks, where prices can hover around 70 times forward earnings (when there are any). And there's lots out there to be had, with lockups coming off many of the 50-plus initial public offerings
this year, with at least 20 lockups expiring in January alone, according to unlockdates.com, a Web site that tracks such matters. Still, the IPO and stock offering boom this year gave biotechs the means to make the new drugs that will drive the growth in the future, whether it be from risky genome plays to more solid therapeutic drug stock picks. For some analysts, this was a watershed year, where more and more biotechs are starting to turn a profit and demonstrate that biotech is nowhere near dot-com land, as Barron's recently suggested. "The biotech model is finally getting proven, with lots of drugs before the FDA and more companies getting profitable," says Stefan Loren, analyst with Legg Mason Wood Walker. "We are looking at a favorable outlook for next year.">To order reprints of this article, click here: Reprints
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