Tag Archives: amgn

Medivation Reportedly Yielding To Buyer Interest; Stock Surges

Shares of rising biopharma player Medivation ( MDVN ) jumped to an 11-month high Monday on reports the company now is willing to sell itself. Citing an anonymous source, Reuters reported that Medivation had signed non-disclosure agreements with Pfizer ( PFE ) and Amgen ( AMGN ), both of which were previously rumored to be interested in buying the company, while Sanofi ( SNY ) went public with its uninvited $9.3 billion bid last month. It still isn’t certain that those companies will actually bid, Reuters said. Medivation stock was up modestly in morning trading on the stock market today , but shares surged after the report came out in the early afternoon, eventually closing up 4.3% at 62.59. Medivation had initially resisted being bought by anyone, and in late March it reportedly hired advisers to help it fend off such attempts. The reason was implied by CEO David Hung in his refusal of Sanofi’s offer , when he accused the French pharma major of taking advantage of “market dislocation” that he believed led the market to undervalue Medivation’s stock. Medivation’s value has continued to go up since then, taking the stock to within 5% of its 52-week high last May. With an IBD Composite Rating of 97, putting it among the top 3% of all stocks in key metrics such as sales and earnings growth, it sits at No. 49 on the IBD 50 list of top-performing stocks.

Medivation Misses Q1 Estimates As Sanofi Turns Up The Buyout Heat

Drugmaker Medivation ( MDVN ) missed Wall Street’s Q1 estimates and affirmed guidance late Thursday, as it fended off the increasingly hostile attentions of big pharma Sanofi ( SNY ). Medivation’s revenue rose 41% over the year-earlier quarter to $182.5 million, missing analysts’ consensus by $14 million, according to Thomson Reuters. Net income climbed 35% to 11 cents a share, badly missing consensus of 23 cents. Medivation nonetheless affirmed its full-year guidance, calling for $900 million to $970 million in revenue and $1.30 to $1.40 in EPS. Last year, it made $1.01 a share on $943 million in revenue. The company’s revenue comes from royalties on its prostate-cancer drug Xtandi from Japan’s Astellas, which markets the treatment. Medivation said that Xtandi brought in a total of $547 million in the quarter and should sell $1.425 billion to $1.525 billion in the full year. “Consistent with the first quarter of 2015, our first-quarter 2016 non-GAAP net income was impacted by several seasonal items, including the lower royalty rate on ex-U.S. Xtandi sales, the higher gross-to-net (i.e. rebating) accrual by Astellas on U.S. net sales, inventory drawdowns and the previously mentioned SG&A (sales, general & administrative) expenses related to our Astellas collaboration,” Medivation said in its earnings release. Medivation stock was down a fraction in after-hours trading, following its earnings release. Shares had risen a fraction in Thursday’s regular session to 59.22. Earlier Thursday, Medivation rejected a renewed $9.3 billion buyout offer from Sanofi, which Sanofi first made last week, and which Medivation rejected as undervalued. Sanofi CEO Olivier Brandicourt said in a letter to Medivation’s directors that “there is overwhelming support by your shareholders for a transaction.” He said he preferred to engage with Medivation’s management rather than go hostile, but “if you are not prepared to engage with us, we have no choice but to go directly to your shareholders. As you know, your shareholders have the ability to act at any time by written consent to remove and replace the board.” Medivation responded with a press release saying that there was nothing new in the letter and that the offer was still inadequate. Meanwhile, rumors continued to fly about other interested parties. AstraZeneca ( AZN ), Novartis ( NVS ) and Pfizer ( PFE ) had already been named by anonymous sources in previous weeks, but on Thursday Bloomberg reported that big biotech Amgen ( AMGN ) was also pondering a bid as it seeks a major acquisition to fill out its aging drug portfolio. Weeks of buyout speculation have driven the stock up more than 120% since its 30-month low, hit on Feb. 9, helping it to a strong IBD Composite Rating of 97 and the No. 50 spot on the IBD 50 list of top-performing stocks over the past 12 months.

IBD 50: Ligand Pharma Beats Q1 Estimates, Buys Device Royalties

Ligand Pharmaceuticals ( LGND ), an  IBD 50 stock, rose early Wednesday after the small biopharma beat Q1 estimates and announced an acquisition that helped lift its guidance. Ligand reported earnings  excluding one-time items of 97 cents a share, more than triple the year-earlier number, beating analysts’ consensus by 30 cents, according to Thomson Reuters. Revenue rose 103% to $29.6 million, topping consensus by about $3 million. As described in a recent IBD  New America  story, Ligand’s business model is based on developing or acquiring technologies used in drug development and partnering with larger biotechs and pharmas that can make them into commercial products. Much of the growth in Q1 revenue came from the timing of milestone payments, along with the January acquisition of Open Monoclonal Technology, which licenses its biotech platform to drug developers. Ligand’s royalty payments grew thanks to the continued ramp of Amgen ’s ( AMGN ) blood-cancer drug Kyprolis and Novartis ’ ( NVS ) low-platelet treatment Promacta. Ligand also said it had agreed to pay $17.5 million for royalties on multiple programs from CorMatrix Cardiovascular, a privately held company that sells devices that help regrow human tissue. Ligand is guaranteed a minimum payment of $2.75 million annually, but says this is expected to double over time as CorMatrix rolls out new products. “CorMatrix’s existing and pipeline medical devices address market opportunities estimated to exceed $1 billion annually,” Ligand said in its press release . Ligand added $2 million to its 2016 revenue guidance, of which $1 million was expected to come from CorMatrix, bringing the range to $115 million to $119 million. That was still on the low side of Wall Street’s average estimate of $118.5 million, but EPS guidance beat Wall Street, at $3.41 to $3.46. Last year, the company made $3.37 a share on $71.9 million in revenue. It also guided 2017 slightly below consensus, with $160 million and EPS of $5.03. Ligand stock was up 2% in early trading on the stock market today , near 122. The stock is No. 18 on the current IBD 50 list of top-performing names over the past 12 months, with a strong Composite Rating of 93 despite somewhat light trading volume.