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Baxter Raises Guidance As Hospital Market Rebounds; Stock Hits High

Shares of medical-product maker Baxter International ( BAX ) hit an all-time high Tuesday after the company beat Q1 estimates and raised its guidance. Baxter’s earnings, excluding one-time items, rose 6% over the year-earlier quarter to 36 cents a share, beating analysts’ consensus by seven cents, according to Thomson Reuters. Sales declined 1% to $2.38 billion, beating Wall Street’s number by about $22 million. Excluding the foreign-exchange impact, sales rose 4%. Baxter added 13 cents to its full-year EPS guidance, now $1.59 to $1.67, up from $1.36 last year. The company said that its constant-currency sales growth should be 3%; it had previously guided 2% to 3%. For the second quarter, Baxter forecast earnings of 38 to 40 cents a share, topping analysts’ average estimate of 35 cents. It said that sales should grow 2% — even including the FX impact — where the Street had expected a slight decline. Baxter stock hit a new high of 44.75 in early trading on the stock market today . In afternoon trading, shares were up less than 1%, near 44. Baxter’s products, which include IV systems, dialysis machines and surgical equipment, are sold mainly to the hospital market, which has been looking strong this earnings season, according to Leerink analyst Danielle Antalffy. “This — now the third consecutive growth quarter in the U.S. after two consecutive quarters of low-single-digit declines — could serve as another encouraging data point, in addition to Johnson & Johnson ( JNJ ), St. Jude Medical ( STJ ) and Abbott Laboratories ( ABT ) (Q1 reports) last week, that supports a potential trend for improving U.S. procedure volumes overall,” Antalffy wrote in a research note. The fortunes of hospital stocks supports her view: The Medical-Hospitals group has been among the fastest-rising of IBD’s 197 industry groups, leaping from No. 191 to six weeks ago to No. 39 at present.

Medivation Stock Hit After Congress Targets Cancer Drug Price

Shares of biotech Medivation ( MDVN ) tumbled Tuesday, a day after Congress attacked the pricing of its lead drug and the company hired a new CFO. Late Monday, the press picked up a letter from six U.S. representatives and six senators, including Democratic presidential candidate Bernard Sanders, to the head of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) urging the agency to exercise its “march-in” right to lower the price of Medivation’s prostate-cancer drug Xtandi. “The 1980 Bayh-Dole Act gives federal agencies, including the NIH, the authority to license a patent when ‘action is necessary to alleviate health or safety needs which are not reasonably satisfied’ or if the invention is not ‘available to the public on reasonable terms,’ ” the letter noted. “Price can be a clear barrier to access for consumers, and despite the law being in place for over 35 years, the NIH has never used this broad and powerful authority to protect consumers from excessive prescription drug prices.” The letter went on to say that Xtandi, which is sold by Medivation’s partner Astellas, costs $129,000 in the U.S. but less than a third of that in Japan, Sweden and Canada. The letter urged the NIH to hold a public hearing on Xtandi and its pricing. A similar hearing in 2004 led Abbott Laboratories ( ABT ) to lower the price of its AIDS drug Norvir for Medicaid and the AIDS Drug Assistance Programs, it said. The NIH did not actually use its march-in authority for that, however, and in 2013 sent a letter to advocates explaining why it thought such a move would be inappropriate. UBS analyst Matthew Roden pointed out that only a minority of Xtandi prescriptions are covered by Medicaid, “though worst case, dual eligibles (i.e. for both Medicare and Medicaid) could be impacted.” Roden estimates that about 75% of Xtandi sales are paid for by Medicare, and perhaps 20% of those are dual eligibles. Is $129,000 A High Price For A New Cancer Drug? The letter represented the latest salvo in politicians’ recent war on high drug prices, and something of a change in focus. While the recent attacks on Valeant Pharmaceuticals ( VRX ) and Turing Pharmaceuticals focused on steep price increases in old, neglected generic drugs, Xtandi is an innovative product that just launched in 2012. Its price is not exceptionally high for a new cancer drug: For instance, Bristol-Myers Squibb ‘s ( BMY ) Opdivo and Merck ‘s ( MRK ) similar drug Keytruda, both launched late in 2014, are going for about $150,000 a year. Meanwhile, Medivation also said late Monday that it had hired Citigroup ( C ) manager Jennifer Jarrett as its new CFO, replacing Rick Bierly who will retire in July. Analyst Roden wrote that Jarrett brings buyout expertise to the company, which may in turn dampen speculation that Medivation itself will be bought. In morning trading on the stock market today , Medivation stock was down 10% near 37. The growth of Xtandi has given the company a healthy IBD EPS Rank of 78, while the stock had been recovering after hitting a two-year low on Feb. 9. It has a weak Relative Strength Rating of just 22, so the stock has performed among the lowest 22% of all stocks over the past 12 months.

Mylan Will Buy Meda For $9.9 Billion, Q4 Earnings Miss; Stock Dives

Generic-drug giant Mylan ( MYL ) announced a $9.9 billion buyout of Swedish counterpart Meda late Wednesday, as it also reported Q4 earnings that missed estimates. The stock tumbled in after-hours trading. Mylan said that the acquisition will be immediately accretive to earnings, adding 35 to 40 cents to EPS next year. That will allow the company to hit its previously stated target of $6.00 a share to earnings a year earlier than the expected 2018. The deal will hike Mylan’s annual revenue by about 25%, and bring $350 million in annual cost savings, Mylan said. Mylan is offering a mixture of cash and stock that adds up to 165 Swedish kronor per Meda share, which including Meda’s net debt adds up to $9.9 billion. “This transaction builds on everything we have put in place around the world, including our recent acquisition of the Abbott ( ABT ) non-U.S. developed markets specialty and branded generics business,” Mylan CEO Heather Bresch said in a statement. “Meda brings us greater scale, breadth and diversity across products, geographies and sales channels, and together we will have an even stronger global commercial infrastructure.” Mylan also said that its Q4 earnings totaled $1.22 a share, up 16% from the year-earlier quarter but 6 cents below analysts’ consensus, according to Thomson Reuters. Revenue climbed 20% to $2.49 billion, more than $200 million short of consensus. For the full 2015, EPS rose 21% to $4.30 while revenue gained 28% to $9.45 billion. Mylan also offered 2016 guidance that assumes that the Meda deal will close at the end of Q3, with $10.5 billion to $11.5 billion in sales and $4.85 to $5.15 in EPS. Analysts did not include Meda in their consensus of $5.00 in EPS and $10.6 billion in sales, but Bresch said the firm is “committed to our 2016 guidance ranges with or without Meda.” Mylan stock, which holds a strong Composite Rating of 89, fell 0.4% in regular trading on the stock market today to close at 50.54. Mylan lost 9% to 45.85 after hours.