Is AbbVie a Value Trap?

With uncertainty surrounding the patent of blockbuster drug Humira, AbbVie is looking to deliver another success story from its pipeline. Is it headed for a patent cliff? Let’s take a look. By Alexander J. Poulos and Kris Rosemann A successful operator in the pharmaceutical industry (XLV) is often characterized by having high margins, allowing for copious amounts of free cash flow generation, which can be returned to shareholders via dividends. In today’s yield-starved market environment, major pharma, and the above-average yields of some players within, remains in demand, but investors must be cognizant of the unique risks that face the industry. One key risk remains the loss of patent protection on drugs and treatments that leads to the aforementioned attractive … Read more

Brexit: Secession Bells Are Ringing!

First Baptist Church in Columbia, S.C., where the first secession convention in the United States opened on Dec. 17, 1860. Source: Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Photo. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Web. 24 Jun. 2016. Global markets are plunging, and the implosion may still be in the early innings. Market valuations remain stretched among stagnant global economic growth, and “Brexit” may be the catalyst for a correction. In the paraphrased words of the well-known The Day of the Jackal author, Frederick Forsyth: the peasants have spoken. On June 23, the UK (EWU) held a referendum, in which anyone of voting age could take part, to decide whether the country should leave the European Union. The turnout was incredible at nearly 72%, and … Read more

Big Pharma 1Q Earnings Roundup, Part I

Image Source: Rodrigo Companies mentioned: AZN, ABT, BIIB, LLY, GSK, VRTX, ZTS AstraZeneca (AZN) Treading Water in 2016 AstraZeneca reported total revenue growth of 1% in the first quarter of 2016 on a year-over-year basis, but this growth rate climbs to 5% when not including the impact of foreign exchange headwinds. Core operating results, which excludes the impact of amortization, impairments, restructuring and other non-operating costs, did not hold up well compared to the first quarter of 2015. Core operating profit and core earnings per share fell 8% and 7%, respectively, on a constant currency basis from the year-ago period. Core R&D spending grew 15% in the quarter as a result of acquisitions and continued focus on the firm’s pipeline, which … Read more

Key Treatment Momentum Drives Big Pharma

The momentum of key drugs and treatments is often a solid indicator for the coming performance of a pharmaceutical firm. Growing competition and other market pressures out of a company’s control can often cause material ebbs and flows in financial performance, making a strong and stable pipeline necessary to sustained success. As we walk through the results from some of the biggest names in the pharmaceuticals industry, let’s get a feel for the trajectory of each firm’s drug portfolio and pipeline moving into the rest of 2016. AbbVie (ABBV) AbbVie reported a quarter of strong growth January 29, as adjusted net revenues jumped more than 24% on an operational basis, and GAAP net revenue increase more than 17% from the … Read more

Big Pharma Earnings Continued…

Amgen (AMGN) Amgen’s second-quarter results, released July 30, were a sight to see. Total revenue advanced 4% versus the second quarter of last year thanks to strength in Enbrel (etanercept), Prolia (denosumab), Sensipar (cinacalcet), Kyprolis (carfilzomib) and XGEVA (denosumab). Adjusted operating income and adjusted earnings per share leapt 10% and 8% in the quarter thanks in part to the strong top-line performance but also solid adjusted operating margin improvement (~+2 percentage points). Free cash flow generation was also fantastic, with the firm hauling in $2.7 billion in the measure compared to $2.1 billion in the second quarter of 2014. Keys to the Quarter: Investors should keep an eye on its blockbuster Neulasta/NEUPOGEN performance, which faced sales pressure in the quarter, … Read more

Guide to Second Quarter Earnings; Big Pharma Experiencing Earnings Momentum

Abbott (ABT) Abbott is one of our favorites in Big Pharma. We know many of you hold the stock in your own portfolios, and frankly, the company is one of the best operators in its industry. Abbott’s second-quarter performance revealed continued strength in its global diagnostics and branded generics businesses. Foreign currency exchange headwinds have posed problems for almost every multi-national in our coverage, but on an operational basis, second-quarter worldwide sales leapt nearly 10%. Abbott kept its full-year 2015 adjusted EPS guidance range from continuing operations unchanged at $2.10-$2.20, a rarity across a pharma universe that’s experiencing fantastic earnings momentum as of late. Keys to the Quarter: We were very pleased with the traction witnessed in Abbott’s pediatric nutrition … Read more

Some Wiggle Room, Please

Let’s go around the horn. Staples (SPLS) and Office Depot (ODP) will, in fact, join forces. The duo announced February 4th that Staples will pay $6.3 billion for its rival, valuing Office Depot at $11 per share, a nice premium to its previous day close and relative to our fair value estimate. Management expects to generate at least $1 billion in annualized cost savings. Removing redundant overhead, streamlining distribution and carving out other efficiencies will be par for the course. We also think pricing will ease up a bit, though competition from Walmart (WMT) and Amazon (AMZN) will always be present. We wouldn’t expect Office Depot’s equity to converge to the take-out price until the regulatory review is completed, likely … Read more

4 Opportunistic Stocks To Consider Buying in 2015

The Valuentum Buying Index (VBI) is a philosophy that considers the valuation of a company and the likelihood that a company’s stock will converge to a cash-flow derived fair value estimate. The VBI accepts the view that value is based on the sum of a company’s future expected discounted free cash flows and the excess cash on its balance sheet, while acknowledging that market participants must eventually agree with a firm’s underpricing (and buy the stock) in order to drive the stock’s price to fair value. An underpriced stock with no buying support is not poised to generate good returns, nor is an overpriced stock with good momentum as it will eventually succumb to panic selling once euphoria fades. Stocks … Read more

Price Is Almost Always Different Than Value

It was January 10, 2000. America Online had just announced that it would acquire Time Warner to create the largest media company. The purchase price amounted to more than $160 billion, and the combined entity was estimated to have a market capitalization of ~$350 billion. The deal was the biggest corporate merger to that date and was expected to launch the next Internet revolution, according to then-CEO of AOL Steve Case. The transaction valued Time Warner at about $108 per share, a huge premium over its price of $64.75 per share the trading session before. AOL’s shares closed at $72 the day of the announcement. Just a couple years later, things were quite different. When it reported full-year 2002 results, … Read more

Big Pharma Round Up

Though much has been made about the patent cliff—shorthand for the expiration of the patents of a large number of drugs over a short period of time—we continue to believe that pipelines across much of the pharmaceutical space are flush with new drugs and therapies. Readers may have an individual favorite or two (or three) within the space (and there’s nothing wrong with that), but we think one of the best ways for investors to play the strong pipelines across the healthcare sector—and ongoing consolidation—is through the Health Care Select SPDR ETF (XLV), a holding in the Best Ideas portfolio. The ETF boasts Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Pfizer (PFE), Merck (MRK), Gilead Sciences (GILD), and AbbVie (ABBV) as its top … Read more