Potent pharmaceuticals
Low prices could mean ripe opportunity for stocks that are expected to grow as baby boomers age and ail
July 12, 1999
BY BOAZ HERZOG FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER
People are popping more potent and pricey pills than ever before. That's why Ken Stire is plopping down more money to invest in companies that make prescription drugs.
In the last couple of months, Stire, a financial planner at Clinton Township-based KMS Financial Services, has scooped up shares of Eli Lilly & Co. -- "one of the best buys" -- and Johnson & Johnson, "which has a proven track record," he said. Those shares comprise 15 percent of his portfolio. Now, he's eyeing other drug stocks to buy.
"Considering what's going on in the industry, the stocks can only do one thing, and that's go up," he said.
Stire's optimism is shared by many analysts who say a combination of factors -- including a recent drop in stock prices, an aging population, President Bill Clinton's Medicare plan and an interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve -- make investing in U.S. drug stocks a good idea.
"I'd be a buyer," said PaineWebber pharmaceutical analyst Jeffrey Chaffkin. "For people who want to buy quality, high-growth companies, these are ideal stocks to own."
Many major drug companies are trading at prices lower than they were a year ago. In the last year investors have been fretting about everything from patents on highly profitable drugs to the imposition of price controls as part of Medicare legislation.
Through Friday, the American Stock Exchange Pharmaceutical Index, a group of 15 widely held, highly capitalized drug-making companies, was off more than 4 percent so far this year. But some companies in the index are off by 16 percent or more. In comparison, the broader Standard & Poor's 500 is up more than 14 percent for the year and the Dow Jones Industrial Average up almost 22 percent.
Many analysts believe this is a ripe opportunity to buy drug company stocks at a bargain price.
Good time to buy
Taking a somewhat longer-term view, drug stocks have performed consistently well. Many are projected to maintain double-digit growth rates into the millennium -- and for good reasons.
Prescription drugs have increasingly become a perceived panacea. The explosion in direct-to-consumer advertising in recent years has made Claritin, Viagra and Prozac household names and fueled demand for newer and more expensive drugs. In addition, more drugs are entering the market every year. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration last year approved 39, almost double the number a decade earlier.
U.S. drug spending is expected to grow about 10 percent a year through 2007, according to the Health Care Financing Administration, the government agency that runs Medicare.
The average American already has almost 10 prescriptions a year filled. An aging baby boomer population will ensure that even more drugs get taken. The number of people past retirement age is projected to double, reaching 70 million by 2030.
Drugmakers had jitters about legislators' plans to include price controls in proposals to alter Medicare, the huge federal health insurance program for the elderly and disabled.
But last month Clinton proposed extending prescription drug coverage to the 39 million Medicare enrollees. The industry liked that a lot, and pharmaceutical makers "breathed a sigh of relief," said ABN Amro analyst James Keeney. The proposal didn't contain any drug restrictions or price controls that would threaten the earnings of major drugmakers, he said. Wall Street responded by bidding up the prices of many of the stocks.
Keeney and other analysts don't expect Congress, so close to an election year, to pass the ambitious plan, which would cost $110 billion over 10 years. Still, it's "inevitable some program will be passed in the next Congress, but that's not until 2001," he said.
The Federal Reserve's decision to raise interest rates a quarter of a percentage point late last month also benefits drug stocks by helping slow down a speeding economy, analysts say. The change, they say, should prompt a switch in capital spending from cyclical growth stocks to companies highly insulated from economic downturns, such as drugmakers.
Analysts' favorites
Aside from the external factors affecting drug stocks, analysts like what the companies are doing. Several analysts are particularly bullish on Eli Lilly. The company's stock is up about 11 percent from the same time last year. But it closed Friday on the NYSE at $74.38, down from a one-year high of $97.75 on March 5.
Best known for its antidepressant Prozac, Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly "has lots of little things working in its favor," said Le Anne Zhao, a Ryan, Beck/Southeast Research Partners analyst. She said she doesn't expect Prozac's patent to expire until 2004, although the company is being sued by generic drugmakers that want to get their versions on the market by 2001.
Eli Lilly also has benefited from Zyprexa, an antipsychotic drug and the company's primary source of recent revenue and earnings growth, capturing almost 30 percent of the market share since its launch in October 1996.
The company also launched a promising osteoporosis pill called Evista last year, and there's a drug in the works that will compete with Viagra, the anti-impotence pill made by Pfizer.
Another underperformer, Pfizer's stock is almost flat, year over year. It closed at $37 Friday, $1.67 below its price a year ago. It has fallen as low as $28.67 Oct. 10.
"They've been hammered recently," said ABN Amro's Keeney, who recommends the stock. "It's misleading to think of Pfizer as the Viagra company, because they have too many sizable new products."
Those include Norvasc, the world's biggest-selling drug for hypertension, and Celebrex, an anti-arthritis medication launched in January that is expected to take in more than $1 billion annually. New York-based Pfizer also co-markets with Warner-Lambert Co. the best-selling drug for reducing cholesterol, Lipitor.
Based in Morris Plains, N.J., Warner-Lambert has a successful diabetes drug, Rezulin and is co-promoting a popular antidepressant, Celexa, with Forest Labs. Though Warner-Lambert has seen its shares drop by almost 9 percent in the last year, PaineWebber's Chaffkin said he likes the company's potential growth rate and has rated it a "buy." The stock closed at $66.63 Friday; it stood at $73.19 a year ago.
Other favorites among analysts include Bristol-Myers Squibb, which has rebounded from a one-year low of $44.16 Oct. 8. The stock closed at $72.88 Friday, up more than 23 percent from a year ago.
The company has several new drugs in its pipeline, including Omapatrilat, a blood pressure reducer. Len Yaffe, pharmaceutical analyst for Banc of America Securities, called the drug a potential blockbuster that could achieve sales in excess of $1 billion annually. Bristol-Myers Squibb, one of Yaffe's favorites along with Eli Lilly, already has proven successes that include the cholesterol reducer Pravachol and the anti-cancer drug Taxol.
Merck & Co.'s stock also has performed above industry averages, up more than 14 percent during the last year. The Whitehouse Station, N.J.-based company is liked by PaineWebber's Chaffkin, who said its potential blockbuster Vioxx, an anti-arthritis medicine, gives it some leverage against expiring patents. Five of the major drugs sold by Merck, either directly or through joint ventures, lose their patents in 2000 and 2001.
When patents expire
Expiring patents also will hurt other brand-name drug manufacturers in coming years but might benefit generic drugmakers, such as Allegan-based Perrigo Co. and Detroit-based Caraco Pharmaceutical Laboratories.
The two companies have struggled. Perrigo announced in April it would cut up to 150 jobs to trim costs and restore profits. Caraco has never reported a profit in its 15-year existence and has gone through extensive management overhauls.
The big brand-name drugmakers also might lose some ground as employers and insurers pursue plans to lower drug spending. Many health plans have instituted structures that favor lower-cost generic substitution. Others are educating doctors about the wide price variations among brand-name and generic drugs.
Despite the pressures that drugmakers face, Stire, the financial planner, sees nothing but positive results in the future.
"If someone wants something stable in their portfolio, pharmaceuticals are a very, very good bet," he said.
BOAZ HERZOG can be reached at 313-222-6731 or herzog@freepress.com.
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