Pfizer Officials File to Sell Near Record Highs: Insider Focus [part of the reason for stock's recent weakness?] Bloomberg News April 30, 1998, 2:48 p.m. PT
Pfizer Officials File to Sell Near Record Highs: Insider Focus
New York, April 30 (Bloomberg) -- Pfizer Inc. officials filed to sell as many as 469,562 shares this month as sales of Pfizer's new impotence pill Viagra boosted the stock to a record.
Pfizer Chairman and Chief Executive William Steere is in line to lead the selling, filing to sell 80,000 shares, according to Washington Service, which tracks stock transactions by insiders such as executives and directors. Another 16 Pfizer executives and one director also filed to sell shares. At recent prices, the sales could fetch as much as $54 million.
Pfizer's stock is up 53 percent this year on prospects that Viagra, the first oral impotence medication, could become one of the biggest sellers in pharmaceutical history. The shares touched a record high of 121 3/4 on April 21, pushing Pfizer's market value past long-time U.S. drug industry leader Merck & Co.
''We don't have a problem with management taking some money off the table as the stock runs up,'' said Scott Abernethy, an equity analyst for Glenmede Trust, which holds about 1.7 million Pfizer shares. ''You're talking about relatively small blocks.''
Pfizer executives also have much of their pay tied to stock options, said Charles Engelberg, an analyst with AmeriCal Securities, who has a ''buy'' rating on Pfizer. For that reason, it is not unusual to see insider sales from time to time, he said.
January Sales
In January, for example, Pfizer's Steere sold 100,000 shares in an options-related sale, netting about $6.16 million. After the sale, he held 440,091 Pfizer shares, according to Washington Service. All told, Pfizer executives sold about 276,708 at prices of $77.95 to $82.25 each in January, fetching at least $21.6 million.
Eleven of the 12 Pfizer insider sales reported in January were related to options. No sales were reported in February or March, Washington Service said.
Pfizer declined to comment on the latest plans to sell by insiders, which were disclosed in Securities and Exchange Commission reports.
Analysts estimate that Viagra sales could reach $1 billion in its first full year on the market. Eventually, sales of the drug could rise to $10 billion a year, said Engelberg, who has a ''buy'' rating on Pfizer.
For the Price of a Movie
At about $10 a pill, ''it's basically the same price as a movie,'' Engelberg said. ''For many people, it will be more a form of entertainment than anything else. Aging baby boomers can afford it.''
Doctors wrote as many as 46,000 prescriptions a day for Viagra in the week ended last Friday, according to NDC Health Information Services, which tracks prescription data.
Still, it's far from certain whether sales of the new drug will continue at that pace, said Glenmede Trust's Abernethy. Abernethy said Pfizer stock may ''take a breather'' after its recent sharp rise.
''It may not perform as well as the rest of the industry for a month of two,'' he said.
Pfizer has started to lag the Standard & Poor's Drugs Index after rising more than twice as much as the broader index in the year before Viagra sales started.
Pfizer has dropped 3.8 percent since closing at a record high of 118 1/4 last Friday, while the S&P Drug Index is up 0.3 percent.
Too much attention has been paid to Viagra, Abernethy said. ''It's only one drug in an incredibly strong portfolio,'' he said.
For example, Pfizer plans to introduce another potential top- selling drug this year, the schizophrenia medication Zeldox. This drug is believed to have fewer side effects than products already on the market, including Eli Lilly & Co.'s Zyprexa and Johnson & Johnson's Risperdal.
Lilly's Zyprexa had sales of $730 million in 1997, its first full year on the market, while Johnson & Johnson's drug is estimated to have more than $800 million in annual sales.
Other Pfizer officials who filed with the SEC to sell shares in April include Executive Vice President Henry McKinnell and Jean-Paul Valles, a director, and 15 vice presidents.
--Kerry Dooley in the Princeton newsroom (609) 279-4016/jmg |