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Tuesday, 5 June 2007

R&D: Worth It Only When You Don’t Pay for It

Posted on 07:00 by Unknown
The late Michael Sorrel, one of biotech’s most perspicacious analysts, had a few basic rules for investing, one of which was the call option. Did the biotech have not merely a lead program, which could anchor the company’s valuation, but something else the stock buyer could get for free.

Same holds true with pharma. Analysts are now so skeptical of early-stage Big Pharma R&D that they want it for free. Or at least that’s the implication of some intriguing calculations from Craig Maxwell, European equity research analyst at JP Morgan.

Maxwell summed the estimated value of the six major European pharmas based solely on their current products plus their Phase III pipelines – the “embedded value” -- and then compared it to their current share prices (see chart). The closer these values came to the share value, the less the market—theorizes Maxwell—is valuing research. And that means the less the investor is paying for R&D.

Conversely, the bigger the gap between product value and share value, the greater the value the market is putting on research. No free R&D option—and a poor deal for investors.

Best value on the European market: Novo Nordisk (products equal 104% of share price). Worst deal: GSK (products equal just 74%).

Now, you can disagree with Maxwell’s estimates of product value. Maybe he’s discounting the value of GSK’s products and inflating Novo’s. But the fact that he won’t pay for R&D—that he wants it for free, and apparently can get it—seems about as damning an indictment of the value of R&D as we’ve heard in a long time.
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