nascobal (r) (b 12) demand is strong

par is cheap


If You Can't Beat 'Em, Join 'Em: Pharma Goes Generic
By Brian Orelli
May 21, 2009 | Comments (0)

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In the battle against generic rivals, it seems pharmaceutical companies would rather switch than fight. A pair of deals yesterday heralded Big Pharma's latest moves into the generic-drug world.

And who can blame them? The generic-drug industry has done O.K. for itself in the past, and its future looks pretty bright:

Company
Last 5 Years' Annual EPS Growth
Next 5 Years' Estimated Annual EPS Growth

Teva Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: TEVA)
19%
15%

Mylan
3.4%
19%

Watson Pharmaceuticals
4.3%
9.7%

Perrigo
20%
14%


Source: Yahoo! Finance.


Going all in
The biggest pharmaceutical player in the generic world is Novartis (NYSE: NVS). The company has built out its generic division, Sandoz, into a major player; sales of generic drugs made up 18% of revenue last year. That puts it just behind Teva as the world's second-largest generic-drug maker.

Yesterday, Novartis added to its generic arsenal with the acquisition of EBEWE Pharma's specialty generic injectables business, for about $1.2 billion. The acquisition adds a nice array of injectable cancer drugs -- a growing opportunity, since some $9 billion in annual sales are expected to lose patent protection by 2015.

EBEWE Pharma had operating income of about $77 million last year, so the acquisition of the injectables business doesn't look particularly cheap. But Novartis should be able to use its size to expand margins, and the new drugs -- along with new developments -- should help grow earnings from here.

sanofi-aventis (NYSE: SNY) seems to be following Novartis into the generic waters with a series of global bolt-on acquisitions. Earlier this year, it closed on its nearly $2 billion purchase of Czech generics company Zentiva. sanofi-aventis already owned 25% of the company and got in a bidding war with another minority owner. Last month, the French pharmaceutical company moved across the Atlantic with two smaller deals, purchasing Mexican generic-drug maker Laboratorios Kendrick and Brazil's Medley.

Dabbling
Some pharmaceutical companies have just started to get their toes wet with generic drugs.

Pfizer (NYSE: PFE) is looking to expand the role of its subsidiary, Greenstone, which has sold generic versions of Pfizer's drugs once they go off-patent. Earlier this year it licensed 70 generic products and 12 antibiotics from India's Aurobindo Pharma to sell in the U.S. and Europe, and yesterday it expanded its agreement with Aurobindo to market 60 drugs in 70 different countries. Yesterday, Pfizer also added 15 generic injectable products from Claris Lifesciences in a separate agreement.

The company now has 128 non-Pfizer drugs to market, but it'll have to add a heck of a lot more to make any meaningful contribution to the $47 billion in annual revenue.

GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE: GSK) is taking a different slant, letting other companies do the dirty work, but still profiting from it. Last summer, it signed a deal with South Africa's Aspen to sell its products as generics in developing countries. Then, earlier this month, Glaxo traded a few drugs and a manufacturing plant in exchange for a 16% stake in Aspen.

Go big or go home
Pharmaceutical investors interested in grabbing some of the generic-drug growth should avoid looking for an all-in-one package. In my opinion, it's better to buy the best of each world, rather than buying a pharmaceutical company just because it's moving into generic drugs.

Like Costco (Nasdaq: COST) and Wal-Mart Stores (NYSE: WMT), generic-drug companies need to be large to deal with the industry's low margins. Teva and Mylan have the size to make it work, unlike pharmaceutical companies dabbling in generic drugs because the grass looks greener on the other side.

The exception to avoiding an all-in-one drugmaker is Global Gains selection Novartis. It's large and growing generic-drug division is big enough to compete with Teva and Mylan.

Generic drugs are here to stay and pharmaceutical companies aren't going away anytime soon. Take one of each. They're cheap.
 










































Hey, if you want to pay $3.76 for a stock that you can buy for $3.00, be my guest. Hell, why don't you run it up to $14? Or $15? Where were you when he really needed that run up to $20 before St. Patty's day?

Only 3 more trading days left in May. Anyone really think it'll jump another 25% by Friday? Anyone other than P, that is.
 






Put aside your jealous streak and let's get him $14 for all he does for us. Cancel the sells and get aggressive on the bid. Your math is wrong since a 25% gain would put us at $16.25 which we will visit later in 2009. An 8% gain gets us to $14 but he already won the bet since par more then doubled from 8 to 13.76. You are easy pickings.
 






Pee hasn't won any bet, because he's never had the cajones to TAKE a bet. He only called $13.76 AFTER it hit that price.

I don't think anyone is jealous of Pee, sitting in his mom's basement in his stained tighty-whiteys dreaming of the little boys at Disney...
 






Put aside your jealous streak and let's get him $14 for all he does for us. Cancel the sells and get aggressive on the bid. Your math is wrong since a 25% gain would put us at $16.25 which we will visit later in 2009. An 8% gain gets us to $14 but he already won the bet since par more then doubled from 8 to 13.76. You are easy pickings.

I see the jealous rage continues. Pharmaguy is a f'en loser over and over again.
 


















Forbes has an interesting article on green lasers which will hit the consumer market in cells , projection devices, etc in a few months from GLW ie corning glassworks a cutting edge breakthru technology.Just a tip to you for all you do.
 






many months away, as process takes over one year

lets get that 14 handle soon


FDA Is Reviewing Ranbaxy’s Corrective Plan on Drugs to the U.S.
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By Catherine Larkin and Saikat Chatterjee

May 28 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. drug regulator is reviewing a “corrective action” plan from India’s Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd. after some medicines from its plants in the South Asian nation were barred from being exported to the U.S.

“The FDA is working very closely with the firm to ensure that all the Ranbaxy products currently in the U.S. market are safe and effective,” FDA spokesman Christopher Kelly said in an e-mail yesterday. “The next steps will be dependent on the actions identified” in the plan, he said.

U.S. sales of Ranbaxy, India’s biggest drugmaker, fell for two straight quarters after the U.S. Food & Drug Administration on Sept. 16 blocked the import of 30 medicines produced at two of its factories. The FDA decision to block the products in the U.S., the world’s largest drug market, led Ranbaxy’s stock to plunge 45 percent until Chief Executive Officer Atul Sobti said earlier this week that the company had submitted the plan.

The regulator in February barred Ranbaxy from introducing new generic medicines from one of the two plants. The FDA said Ranbaxy falsified data from the factory in Paonta Sahib, northern India. Drugs from that plant were approved for sale in the U.K. and Australia after a joint audit by regulators, Ranbaxy said March 23.

Ranbaxy, controlled by Tokyo-based Daiichi Sankyo Co., rose 0.4 percent to 262.85 rupees as of 10:31 a.m. in Mumbai trading, while India’s benchmark Sensitive Index gained 1 percent.

Sobti, who replaced Malvinder Singh as CEO under a plan by its parent to turn around the unprofitable company, said Ranbaxy expects the full approval process by the FDA to take months.

The FDA said it received Ranbaxy’s corrective action plan on May 18.
 






many months away, as process takes over one year

lets get that 14 handle soon


FDA Is Reviewing Ranbaxy’s Corrective Plan on Drugs to the U.S.

Pee logs in anon, and pushes his f'ed up theory that Ranbaxy will buy Par. Please keep this crap outta this thread. You already have a useless thread for that!
 


















toprol sales continue strong , very strong

par on pace for a nice quarter and never give up on the inevitable BUYOUT

when it gets sleepy, BEWARE


((((((((((((((((((($$$16 IN NEXT 3 MONTHS)))))))))))))))))