WPI

WPI

Watson Pharma: Income Statement Analysis for December 2009 Quarter

Neil Carvin submits: Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NYSE: WPI) earned $0.51 per share in the fourth quarter of 2009, which ended 31 December, up from $0.50 in the same quarter of 2008. The latest quarter was unusual in that it included about one month of Arrow Group results. Watson's acquisition of Arrow, which closed on 2 December 2009, added about 20 generic drugs to Watson's growing product line.Complete Story »

The Future of Biotech: Party Like It's 1999

Joseph Krueger submits: At the 28th annual JP Morgan Healthcare conference, which ran from January 11- January 14th 2010, there were more than 300 companies represented, making their presentations to more than 6000 public and private equity and venture capital investors.Leading up to the conference and early last week there was bullish movement in many companies presenting at the conference. Many of the many of the larger companies like Amgen (AMGN), Genzyme (GENZ), Biogen (BIIB), Celgene (CELG), Gilead Sciences (GILD), TEVA Pharmaceuticals TEVA), Watson Pharmaceuticals (WPI) and OSI Pharmaceuticals (OSIP) previewed 2009 earnings during the conference.Complete Story »

Many Reasons to Launch a Global Generic Drug ETF

Mike Havrilla submits:Since I first wrote about my idea for a new generic drug exchange-traded fund (ETF) nearly two years ago, the global index of 80 stocks has been a strong performer as it catches up with the strong underlying fundamentals for the generic drug industry which are outlined below. 1.) approximately 70% of all prescriptions in the U.S. are filled with generic drugs; 2.) IMS Health estimates $135 billion in branded drug sales (including $90 billion in U.S.) will face generic competition / patent expiration over next five years (including blockbusters such as Lipitor and Plavix); 3.) IMS Health estimates $42 billion in global generic drug sales in 2011, representing growth from an expected $28 billion in global sales in 2009 and $17 billion in 2008; 4.) IMS Health estimates that the generic drug industry is growing at 7.8%, which is a faster pace than the worldwide market for pharmaceuticals; and 5.) the National Association of Chain Drug Stores estimates that in 2007 the average retail price of generic prescription drugs was $34.34 as compared to a much higher (over 3X) average price for brand name drugs at $119.51. The HavRx Global Generic Drug Index is passively managed and tracks the performance of companies which meet any of the following three requirements: 1.) Derive either $500 million (USD) OR more than 50% of trailing 12-month revenue from the manufacture and sale of any type of generic (off-patent) prescription or over-the-counter (OTC) drug product intended for use by humans, including contract manufacturing services, active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) suppliers, and intermediate product suppliers for drug products and biological agents; 2.) Have one or more compound(s) in active clinical development OR have a pending ANDA with the FDA for a generic drug candidate; and 3.) Receive FDA approval for an ANDA within the past 12 months. The index excludes all companies that derive over 50% of trailing 12-month revenue from the sale of patent-protected or legacy brand prescription or OTC drug products. Approximately 75% of the companies in the index are based outside of the U.S. (including many small / mid-cap stocks based in China and India), which strengthens the case for a Global Generic Drug ETF since it would provide average retail investors with a cost-efficient means to trade the entire industry in a single investment vehicle. The accompanying tables include statistics for a semi-active generic drug ETF that would be rebalanced on a quarterly basis and equally weighted among active components with a market cap of at least $200 million and three-month average daily trading volume of at least 30,000 shares, in addition to the 15 largest index components by market cap.click to enlargeAs of late November, 55 of the generic drug index component stocks met these requirements with an average stock price gain of approximately 95% over the past year and over 15% gain for the entire index in the past three months. Generic drug stocks have outpaced the overall healthcare sector and related ETFs, such as the PowerShares Dynamic Pharma (PJP), iShares DJ US Pharma (IHE), Pharma HOLDRs (PPH), S&P Pharma SPDR (XPH), Healthcare Sector SPDR (XLV), iShares Nasdaq Biotech (IBB), and SPDR S&P Biotech (XBI).A Global Generic Drug ETF would also provide instant, diversified access to the small / mid-cap generic drug makers and suppliers that are tracked in this index and the subject of possible acquisitions by leaders in the industry such as Teva Pharma (TEVA), Mylan (MYL), Watson Pharma (WPI), and even big pharma companies such as Novartis (NVS) and Pfizer (PFE) that have significant generic drug divisions.Disclosure: No positionsComplete Story »

Watson Pharmaceuticals: Income Statement Analysis for the September 2009 Quarter

Neil Carvin submits: Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (WPI) earned $0.54 per share in the third quarter of 2009, down from $0.60 in the same quarter of last year. [Note: our per-share numbers are slightly different than the official results because we don't adjust for interest expenses on convertible contingent senior debentures (CODES).]This post examines the Income Statement for the quarter in the earnings announcement and the more detailed 10-Q and compares the entries on each line to our "look-ahead" estimates. Our target for Watson's Net Income in the latest quarter was $0.56 per share.Complete Story »

S&P 500 Stocks Up Since 10/9/07

Hickey and Walters (Bespoke) submit:
As noted earlier, Friday marks the two-year anniversary of the S&P 500's closing peak. As of Thursday's close (10/8), only 57 of the 500 stocks currently in the index are up since then. Needless to say, it has been a lousy two years. Below we highlight the 25 best performing stocks in the index over the last two years. As shown, sectors which are the most heavily represented include Technology (7), Energy (6), Consumer Discretionary (5), and Health Care (5). Check back Friday morning for a list of the top performing Mid and Small Cap stocks since 10/9/07.click to enlargeComplete Story »

BioMed News Bytes: Arena, Momenta, Vivus

Mike Havrilla submits:On 9/18/09, Arena Pharma (ARNA) ($5.32, +9%) (heavy, above-average volume) announced lorcaserin met all primary endpoints and FDA benchmark with 63% of patients who complied with the protocol losing at least 5% of their weight. ARNA plans to file a NDA with the FDA in December. However, patients who took lorcaserin 10 mg twice daily achieved an average weight loss of 5.9% of their body weight, compared to 2.8% for placebo, causing shares of ARNA to initially decline on the news (with a recent turnaround and uptick) based on concerns for the commercial prospects of lorcaserin compared to Qnexa from Vivus (VVUS) ($11.51, +9%) (heavy, above-average volume), which is trading up on the lorcaserin results despite announcing a secondary offering of 9 million shares at a price of $10.50. Complete Story »

Teva Pharmaceutical: Predictable Growth, Good Value

Chuck Carnevale submits:HistoryConventional wisdom would indicate that finding a sure thing in the stock market is an impractical dream. However, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, Ltd. (TEVA) may be as close as you will ever get. As one of the top 20 pharmaceutical companies in the world this leader in generic and biogenerics is well positioned to prosper in today’s healthcare environment.Teva, however, is much more than just the largest generic manufacturer and distributor; they also are one of the most innovative participants in the important fields of neurology for treatments of devastating diseases, other autoimmune diseases, and oncology.Complete Story »

Healthcare: Branded Pharma Out, Diagnostics/Generics In

Ryan Barnes submits:When you lose, Don’t lose the lesson - The Dalai Lama For the better part of 5 months I’ve been kicking myself over not dumping Pfizer (PFE) from the Secular Trends Portfolio the day they announced the Wyeth merger. The second I heard about the deal I honestly thought the TV announcer had made a mistake; “No no, it couldn’t be Wyeth. That would just be stupid”Complete Story »

Watson Pharmaceuticals Says to Look Ahead to June 2009 Earnings

Neil Carvin submits: The GCFR Overall Gauge of Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (WPI) decreased from 56 to 41 of the 100 possible points in the first quarter of 2009. Our analysis report explained this result in some detail. Watson's Revenue in the March 2009 quarter was 6.5 percent more than in last year's comparable period. Generic drugs were responsible for 60 percent of Revenue, up from 58.5 percent. Despite the head start provided by rising revenue, an $18 million charge to settle patent litigation with Elan (ELN) led to a small drop in Operating Income. A $1.5 million gain on the sale of assets in India might have made up some of the lost ground, but a higher state income tax rate also came into play. The bottom line was Net Income 3 percent less than in 2008.Complete Story »

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