Top Stories: Embattled Agouron CEO Reassures Employees, Investors
By Jesse Eisinger Senior Writer 7/9/98 6:01 PM ET
Facing poor reports out of an important conference, a round of cuts in analysts' earnings estimates and increasing skepticism concerning the overall efficacy and safety of its drugs, biotech upstart Agouron (AGPH:Nasdaq) continues to be on the defensive.
With the share price plummeting, Agouron CEO Peter Johnson is trying to resuscitate faith in the company with three new licensing deals for anti-AIDS drugs. In a memo circulated Tuesday meant to pep up employees and select analysts and investors, Johnson said that later this month the company will reveal "an innovative plan to aggressively pursue development" of the newly licensed drugs.
It's not clear what Agouron's "innovative plan" will be. What is clear is that Johnson is under pressure to boost the biotech's sagging share price, which has plunged about 23% in the last week and a half and is down over 50% since early October.
Agouron will do some sort of off-balance-sheet financing to fund one or more of the three compounds, according to Donna Nichols, an Agouron spokeswoman. She would not comment on the potential equity or debt financings. In the last several weeks, Agouron licensed a protease inhibitor from the Japan Energy Corp., a Japanese conglomerate, and a promising new AIDS treatment from Shionogi, a Japanese drug company. That new compound is from a new group of AIDS drugs called NNRTIs, or nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors.
Johnson's rush to license even led him to do a deal for Immune Response's (IMNR:Nasdaq) Remune, which was once was supposed to be a vaccine for AIDS and now is meant to act as an immune system enhancer. But analysts consider this a controversial move, since after years of testing it continues to be unclear what place, if any, Remune will have in AIDS treatment. Immune Response stock rose about 55% in the days before the conference but fell more than 20% during and after the meeting.
Johnson has sought to play up Agouron's new drug efforts as the outlook has continued to dim for the entire class of protease inhibitor drugs, of which AGPH's Viracept is the best-selling member. In numerous news reports and Wall Street notes coming from the early July AIDS meeting in Geneva, doctors and analysts openly worried that protease inhibitors have demonstrated severe limitations. As a class, they are not as effective as they initially appeared, according to data from the conference. Not only that, but many patients find the protease-inhibitor regimens difficult to adhere to, while others have shown increasing resistance to the drugs and new resistant strains of HIV. The long-term side effects, like excessive fat accumulation, may begin to pose problems. Many of these problems were evident after last year's ICAAC meeting in October.
Many investors on Wall Street now believe that the traditional AIDS combination treatment -- a triple combination of a protease inhibitor like Viracept or Merck's (MRK:NYSE) Crixivan and two reverse transcriptase inhibitors such as Glaxo Wellcome's (GLX:NYSE ADR) AZT and 3TC -- will be supplanted by a new regimen. What replaces it is likely to be a combination both nucleoside RTIs and non-nucleoside RTIs, such as DuPont's (DD:NYSE) Sustiva, which could cut protease inhibitors out of the mix entirely as the first choice for AIDS patients.
Also worrisome for Agouron and Merck is that once patients fail on their first protease inhibitor, their doctors don't simply switch their prescription to the other company's PI; they instead switch to a combination of two other PIs: Abbott's (ABT:NYSE) Norvir and Hoffmann-La Roche's Fortovase. Both of these now look stronger, according to Craig Parker, an analyst for Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette. "I think PIs will be displaced as first-line therapy," said DLJ's Parker, who attended the conference. And it also looks like "Crixivan and Viracept will be displaced as salvage [therapy]."
Parker said the main question is not when, but how fast Viracept sales will erode, which is difficult to gauge. He guessed that the erosion rate could be 20% over the next year.
But Agouron's Johnson is mounting an aggressive defense against this view. Terming the reports out of the Geneva conference "sensationalistic," Johnson's memo defends Agouron's research against the increasing evidence that it is being surpassed in efficacy by the NNRTIs. His memo states, "Some have conjectured that the advent of potent NNRTIs such as efavirenz [DuPont's Sustiva] entails the demise of protease inhibitors, because protease inhibitors are not perfect. We vehemently disagree."
If so, he's got an uphill battle. Even before the Geneva meeting, investors were worried that Viracept sales were flattening and that Agouron's balance sheet was weak, with inventories rising faster than sales. Wall Street analysts, already struggling with earnings estimates in light of the recent licensing deals, spent much of last week cutting their Agouron earnings and sales estimates.
Agouron spokeswoman Nichols insists that Agouron will meet its target of $350 million to $360 million in Viracept sales in fiscal 1998. And, in the memo, Johnson says that the company expects to sell more Viracept this fiscal year than last. Nichols said that the current consensus of earnings of 1 cent per share in the fiscal fourth quarter and 68 cents per share for the year are likely to be adjusted. Agouron will announce its earnings results for the fiscal fourth quarter on July 21.
Short-sellers focus on Agouron's balance sheet as a point of worry for the company. Inventories have risen 57% from $57.9 million in its first fiscal quarter to $91 million in the third quarter, or nearly three months' worth of sales. While Agouron has always had a high ratio of inventories-to-sales as it rolled out Viracept, why, if the company is as successful as it claims, do they remain so high, one California short-seller asks. Agouron's most recent short position was 9.1 million shares, around 29% of the shares outstanding.
When queried, Chief Financial Officer Steven Cowell said that the balance sheet was strong and that the company's earnings were of high quality: "There is no smoke, no mirrors. There is no suspicion as to the quality of earnings." He said that receivables and inventory were rising due to increased demand, primarily from its European partner Roche.
As Cowell pointed out, as sales go up, receivables do, too. And he said that the inventory level, at about $100 million, was "not unreasonable." In the fiscal fourth quarter, he foresees inventory "ticking up" by less than 10%, based on the company's ongoing need to satisfy Roche's demand. He said receivables would be down a bit in the fourth quarter.
Agouron wasn't the only AIDS stock to run into trouble during and after the sober, even depressing, Geneva conference. Vertex (VRTX:Nasdaq), which licensed its protease inhibitor to Glaxo, has fallen about 25% since late June.
If Agouron is in difficult straits, then Vertex is probably worse off. The company has a market cap of $530 million, but has yet to launch its long-delayed PI. Its protease inhibitor is still not launched and was shown to not have a potency or resistance advantage at the Geneva meeting, according to several investors who attended. Rumors abound that Glaxo will give back rights to the drug to the biotech company -- always a bad sign. "I think to justify the current valuation, Vertex has to sell more Amprenavir than Viracept," said DLJ's Parker. Is that unlikely?
"Yes."
Also, Gilead (GILD:Nasdaq) plummeted 27% on worries about the kidney and liver toxicity of its AIDS drug Preveon. Several firms, including DLJ, Merrill Lynch and Furman Selz, downgraded the stock last week.
As originally published, this story contained an error. Please see Corrections and Clarifications.
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