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Biotechnology

The budding recovery in the S&P biotech index is likely to gather steam. Big pharma is desperate to replenish its drug pipeline, putting biotech equities back into play following a drawn out de-rating phase. This phenomenon is not limited to U.S. pharmaceutical companies, as European and Japanese firms are also racing to scoop up promising biotech assets. As a result, deal premia for coveted U.S. biotech companies have skyrocketed, hitting all-time highs (middle panel). Both the relative forward P/E and P/E/G ratios are sufficiently depressed to expect a wholesale re-rating as a low cost of capital and receptive markets embolden pharmaceutical companies to buy future growth (third panel). Bottom Line: We reiterate our recent boost to an overweight stance in the S&P biotech index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BIOTX - VRTX, CELG, GILD, AMGN, REGN, BIIB, ALXN, ABBV, BXLT. bca.uses_in_2016_08_24_001_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_08_24_001_c1
With the broad market breaking out to new highs courtesy of flush liquidity conditions and rising risk appetite, the momentum-driven biotech group stands an excellent change of reclaiming previous relative performance highs. We upgraded the S&P biotech index to overweight a month ago because value had been fully restored and underlying fundamentals remained solid. For instance, demand-driven pharmaceutical pricing power gains remain intact, which is driving productivity improvement. Increased profit potential should attract renewed capital inflows and translate into higher share prices, especially now that the supply of biotech stocks is ebbing fast: biotech IPOs have cratered. Importantly, drug industry M&A activity remains robust, suggesting that the S&P biotech index has the potential for a re-rating. We reiterate our recent upgrade to overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BIOT- AMGN, GILD, ABBV, CELG, BIIB, REGN, ALXN, VRTX. Biotech Is Coming Back Biotech Is Coming Back
The combination of biotech stabilization and a health care facilities plateau argues for profit taking in our long/short trade between the two groups. We had exploited the valuation mismatch because hospital profit prospects were far superior to those of the biotech group, especially within the context of a soaring U.S. dollar. Now that the primary upward thrust in the currency has played out, the revenue playing field will shift to a more neutral setting, on the margin. Indeed, while hospital spending is still growing much faster than pharmaceutical exports, a proxy for relative top-line trends, pricing power has not followed suit. Against a backdrop of soaring hospital wage bills, especially relative to pharmaceutical wages, we are closing this pair trade for a profit of 10%. The ticker symbols for the stocks in both indexes are: BLBG: S15HCFA - HCA, UHS, WOOF, AMSG, LPNT, THC, CYH, SCAI, SEM, KND, ENSG, USPH, QHC and BLBG: S5BIOT - AMGN, GILD, ABBV, CELG, BIIB, REGN, ALXN, VRTX. bca.uses_in_2016_06_28_003_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_06_28_003_c1
A gap has opened between the Nasdaq and S&P biotech indices, suggesting broad-based selling has reached a stage where discrimination is occurring. The former is infused with concept stage companies with no revenue or earnings, while the latter comprises more mature, pharmaceutical-type firms. We are becoming more favorable toward the S&P biotech index. Using the tech bubble as a guide, on a relative price/sales basis, the S&P biotech group has deviated from fair value by more than the tech sector did after the turn of the century. With value fully restored and robust pharmaceutical industry fundamentals, buying interest should ensue. At least one potential threat to pricing power has been deferred, as the U.S. governments' drug pricing control measures have reportedly been delayed. Consequently, the risk premium associated with doubts about pricing power sustainability should lift. We recommended shifting from underweight to overweight in yesterday's Weekly. Please refer to that report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BIOT - AMGN, GILD, ABBV, CELG, BIIB, REGN, ALXN, VRTX. Biotech Is Due For A Rebound Biotech Is Due For A Rebound

The health care sector is poised to resume its bull market, but the character of the rally will change. Sell hospitals and buy biotech.

The oversold bounce is not supported by policy or profits, and should be treated as countertrend. Lift machinery to neutral and differentiate between pharmaceuticals and the unwinding of the biotech mania.

The previous Insight showed that S&P pharmaceutical index outperformance is well supported by both endogenous and exogenous forces. The same is not true for the riskier biotech space. As discussed in previous research, biotech stocks have exhibited all of the characteristics of a mania. Now the forces that propelled the group higher are working in reverse. Speculation is rapidly being reined in, warning that the flows into biotech stocks are drying up. Margin debt has crested, reinforcing that the high-octane fuel to support momentum stocks is starting to evaporate. Biotech IPOs are going from feast to famine: if share prices continue to fall, expected returns will follow suit, warning against expecting further capital inflows. Consequently, we expect biotech stocks to remain on the mania track, which has not entered the bubble-bursting phase (top panel). (Part II) Pharmaceuticals And Biotech Are Parting Ways (Part II) Pharmaceuticals And Biotech Are Parting Ways
Pharmaceutical stocks have broken from their correlation with biotech stocks, and we expected this divergence to be sustained. Pharmaceutical profits remain one of the few bright spots within the corporate sector. Drug demand continues to boom, as measured by consumer spending data. Inventories have moved higher at both the wholesale and manufacturing level, but this appears to reflect demand-driven stocking of product, given ongoing strong pricing power gains. In a deflationary world, the ability to significantly lift selling prices warrants a premium valuation. Yet the S&P pharmaceuticals index still trades at a large discount to its historic average relative valuation. If domestic economic disappointment mounts, as we expect, it will provide another catalyst for a relative performance re-rating. Stay overweight the S&P pharmaceuticals index. Importantly, it will be important to differentiate pharma from biotech, please see the next Insight. (Part I) Pharmaceuticals And Biotech Are Parting Ways (Part I) Pharmaceuticals And Biotech Are Parting Ways