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This Is Why Biotech Stocks May Explode Again

Biotech stocks fell into one of the deepest craters in their history, starting last summer, but rumblings of a recovery are sounding. After a three-year bull run that more than quadrupled its value by its peak last July, IBD’s Medical-Biomed/Biotech Industry Group plunged 50% by early February, hurt by backlashes against high drug prices and mergers that seek to lower corporate taxes. But the group has gained 12% since its Feb. 11 low, and some leading stocks have done better than that. BioMarin Pharmaceutical ( BMRN ) is up 30% from its Feb. 9 low.  Incyte ( INCY ) has gained 29% from its low point that same week, while  Ligand Pharmaceuticals ( LGND ) has climbed 45%, and  Medivation ( MDVN ), boosted by buyout talk, is up 127%. The group was up by even more before taking some hits over the past two weeks on negative earnings news from several industry players. But fund managers tell IBD the rebound is here. Why? For one, they say, the spate of bad news has already been factored into stock prices. But more than that, they see a climate favoring rejuvenated M&A, hot drugs in the new-product pipeline and pricing power for innovate products. Bottom line: The positive factors that drove the runup never went away, they say. They just got drowned out by the noise. “A very key point is that this group is a very high-beta group — particularly the small- to midcap stocks. Since they don’t have sales, they don’t have earnings,” said Tom Vandeventer, portfolio manager at Tocqueville Asset Management. “The history of this group is that elevated macro uncertainty definitely hits (it),” Vandeventer said. “My own opinion is this group trades more on sentiment than on fundamentals during those time periods.” Political Fire For Drugmakers Vandeventer points to troubles in China as emblematic of the macroeconomic concerns that hit biotech stocks. Another sentiment-driving factor is politics. Many of the candidates in the U.S. presidential race have bashed drugmakers for high prices and have proposed ways to clamp down. Wall Street has dismissed some of these ideas as impossible or ineffective. What seems to be generating the most concern are Democrats’ proposals to let Medicare and Medicaid negotiate drug prices, which they are not allowed to do now. Already the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services has shown its teeth. It announced a pilot program changing the reimbursement for Medicare Part B, which covers drugs administered in hospitals and clinics. The Part B reimbursement scheme was long criticized for encouraging use of expensive drugs because it reimburses health care providers for the entire cost of a drug, plus 6% on top. The proposed scheme would reduce that premium and add a flat fee unrelated to the price of the drug. That, in theory, could encourage doctors to choose cheaper options. On the M&A front, the Treasury Department last month issued new guidelines on tax-inversion deals that derailed what would have been the drug industry’s biggest-ever merger, between Pfizer ( PFE ) and Allergan ( AGN ). Tax inversions have become a popular way for drugmakers to boost their bottom lines and get access to cash. Allergan, after earlier mergers, is based in Ireland, which has low taxes. “We think that with the tax regulation — I call this the ‘inversion bottom’ — and the bad press associated with the health care industry, that created a bottom in our minds,” said Robert Bombace, senior portfolio manager at Frost Investment Advisors. “A lot of the bad news has already been baked into these companies.” In fact, a number of industry insiders say the breakup of the Pfizer-Allergan merger could turn out to be good for biotech stocks because it makes them acquisition targets for the two companies. Allergan has a long history of acquisitiveness, and Pfizer is thinking of splitting its innovative drug business from its other products. Evercore ISI analyst Mark Schoenebaum says Pfizer will want to bulk up its innovative business to make it valuable as a standalone, since its pipeline is modest compared to its big-pharma competitors. Schoenebaum has also said, though, that biotech boards are balking at buyout offers. They can’t accept how much their valuations have dropped, so they’ve been unwilling to sell at market prices. He suspects this will lead to hostile takeover deals if the big players are willing to do them. This partly came to fruition in late April, when Sanofi ( SNY ) made an unsolicited $9.3 billion bid for Medivation, as rumors swirled that AstraZeneca ( AZN ) and Pfizer were also interested. Medivation’s response reflected the attitude that Schoenebaum spoke of — that the market was underpricing the stock. “Sanofi’s opportunistically timed proposal, which comes during a period of significant market dislocation, and before several important near-term events for the company, is designed to seize for Sanofi value that rightly belongs to our stockholders,” Medivation founder and CEO David Hung said in a statement rejecting the offer. Bombace, however, says the biotechs’ reluctance might be for show. “I think that’s just a bargaining chip,” he said. “The reality is that most of these companies will have to partner up anyway. … The larger pharma and biotech names … will reach a point where their pipelines are so dry, it will force their hands.” Bombace sees lots of exciting biotechnology science going on to fill out those pipelines. As he put it, we’re “going from the Model T stage to the space-shuttle stage.” Though he declined to name specific companies, he pointed to work in biomarkers — which include PD-1 inhibitors such as Bristol-Myers Squibb ‘s ( BMY ) Opdivo and Merck ‘s ( MRK ) Keytruda. He also cited work in genetic mutations, the focus of many rare-disease firms such as BioMarin and Bluebird Bio ( BLUE ). Specialty Drugs Get 37% Of Dollars Spent On Drugs These discoveries are keeping money flowing into and out of biotechnology, says Leonard Yaffe, who manages a health care hedge fund at Kessef Capital Management. He told IBD that specialty drugs — the largely biologic drugs prescribed by specialists, as opposed to primary-care doctors — contributed only 1% of prescriptions last year but 37% of dollars spent on drugs, up from 25% two years earlier. “One thing I think will drive the biotech stocks is that, if you look at drugs introduced in the last two years, 65% of the revenue derived from those drugs are from biologicals,” Yaffe said. “So it’s the most attractive sector in the pharmaceutical area.” Also, while most publicly traded biotech stocks don’t have earnings, those that have successfully launched drugs remain highly profitable. Of the top five biotechs in market cap — Gilead Sciences ( GILD ), Amgen ( AMGN ), Celgene ( CELG ),  Biogen ( BIIB ), and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals ( REGN ) — four have IBD EPS Ranks ranging from 89 to 96, putting them in the top 11% of all stocks in EPS growth. Regeneron has a 68 EPS Rank. Those numbers, however, reflect the pricing power of biologic drugs, which is precisely what’s under political attack these days. Vandeventer says price uncertainty is the biggest risk to his bull thesis on the group right now. But he also points out that Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton attempted a previous overhaul of the health care system back in the mid-1990s, which depressed drug stocks in the short term but was followed by the late-1990s boom. Innovation And Blockbuster Drugs Are The Key That boom was driven by the first wave of biotech innovation, when companies like Amgen and  Roche ‘s ( RHHBY ) Genentech proved that biotechnology could produce blockbusters. Vandeventer says that innovation will remain the key in maintaining pricing power, even under political pressure. He points to Gilead’s portfolio of hepatitis C drugs, which started in late 2013 with the launch of Sovaldi. Despite much political criticism of Sovaldi’s high price, no one could stop it because the drug was so superior to anything else on the market. “Companies that have done the research — they’ll continue to get price increases,” he said. “Companies that are particularly in the rare-disease, orphan-disease arena, (or) the oncology space — companies that have drugs in an era of targeted medicine that have higher efficacy rather than a shotgun trying to hit a disease — are going to have pricing power.” The promise of such drugs can still make small stocks explode. Celator Pharmaceuticals ( CPXX ) has surged to over 13 from under 3 since March on favorable late-stage trial results for its acute myeloid leukemia treatment. The company also saw a hedge fund take a position in the stock and attracted favorable initial coverage from an analyst. There are signs that even generalist investors think biotech stocks have gotten cheap, says Yaffe. During the first quarter, a common lament was that every biotech stock got punished for bad news, but good news got no reward. But when Biogen issued a mixed earnings report that drew mostly negative reactions from Wall Street on April 21, its stock rose more than 5%. Biogen had fallen even harder than other big-cap biotechs, dropping 50% from its March 2015 high to its Feb. 12 low, so it was ready for a bounce, says Yaffe. “The overview comment is the sector had corrected 30%, and at some point it gets to the level where the stocks are very attractive,” he said.

ETF Strategy: Bullish On UDN, GDX, GLD After Weak Jobs Numbers; Bearish On SPY, IBB

The much anticipated labor market data was released at the time of writing this article. The report indicates that the U.S. economy is not out of the woods yet. The economy added just 160,000 jobs in the month of April, well below the consensus forecast of 202,000 job additions. While markets have slipped on the disappointing job numbers, it is possibly due to the fact that it creates uncertainty over the pace of rate hikes. Conflicting Signals From the Fed The Federal Reserve hiked benchmark interest rates for the first time in almost a decade in December last year. At the time the Fed had anticipated four more rate hikes in 2016. But extreme volatility in global markets seen at the start of this year has forced the Fed to change its stance. The Fed now expects two further rate hikes. Markets anticipate just one. With today’s disappointing job numbers, even a solitary rate hike now looks unlikely. I Am Bullish on UDN, GDX and GLD The Fed has reiterated time and again that it will be cautious with future rate hikes. Today’s weak job numbers give the central bank a strong reason to remain on the sidelines. This is good news for gold bulls. This week, gold prices crossed $1,300 an ounce. After being written off at the end of last year, the precious metal has made a strong comeback since the start of this year. The rally at the start of the year was sparked due to volatility in risk assets, which boosted gold’s safe haven appeal. But with the Fed factor back, expect further strengthening in gold prices. I am bullish on the SPDR Gold Trust (ETF) (NYSEARCA: GLD ), which is now up more than 21% for the year. The chart below shows GLD has broken through some key resistance levels. Click to enlarge Stockcharts.com. Importantly, GLD is seeing significant inflows. On Monday, GLD had net inflows $860 million, highlighting the bullish sentiment on gold. The table below from ETF.com shows GLD is at the top when it comes to fund inflows into ETF. This trend is likely to continue following today’s weak jobs report. Recently I covered Market Vectors Gold Miners (ETF) (NYSEARCA: GDX ), which is now up more than 84% for the year. I had noted in the article that the excellent run in GDX will continue based on the outlook for gold. That thesis has been strengthened further following the weak April jobs report. As I had highlighted in my GDX article, the ETF substantially underperforms gold when gold prices drop and vice versa. GDX’s gains have been four times those of GLD this year. Therefore, if prices continue to strengthen expect significant further upside in GDX. I am also bullish on Powershares DB US Dollar Index Bearish Fund (NYSEARCA: UDN ). The greenback strengthened significantly from mid-2014 onwards as it became clear that the Fed would start to tighten its monetary policy. The story has been different this year. Click to enlarge Google Finance. UDN has gained almost 5% this year but with a rate hike unlikely this year, I expect further gains. Bearish on SPY and IBB Finally, what does today’s weak jobs report mean for the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ). The S&P 500 has edged lower today but a weak jobs report, which leads to a delay in rate hike, is a positive for risk assets such as equities. But the weak earnings season suggests that the S&P 500 will remain under pressure, which is why I am bearish on the index. SPY, as the table below from ETF.com shows, has seen the highest redemption among ETFs. This trend could continue following the weak earnings. According to data from FactSet, the blended earnings decline for the S&P 500 in the ongoing earnings season (as on April 29, 2016) was 7.6%. While the Energy sector is to a great extent responsible for this steep drop, even after excluding the sector, the FactSet data shows 2.4% decline. I must add though that a weaker dollar will help Corporate America. However, the impact will not be felt in the near-term. The iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index (ETF) (NASDAQ: IBB ) has had another rough week. The fund dropped more than 5% for the week. IBB is in fact heading into bear market territory. Since April 25, it has fallen 13%. I discussed some of the factors in my article late last month that will keep pressure on IBB. One of the factors that I had mentioned was difficulty obtaining funding. In April, multiple biotech IPOs were withdrawn. This week we saw one more instance which highlights the fact that biotech companies are struggling to gain access to capital markets. Relypsa (NASDAQ: RLYP ), which has an approved product, obtained $150 million in debt financing. RLYP will be paying 11.50% in interest. Debt funding at such a high interest rate for a biotech company in early stages of commercialization is not good news. I expect difficult times ahead for the sector. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

How A Savvy Stock Portfolio Manager Got The Oil Trend Right

Oil explorer stocks have done what at least one savvy money manager expected this year. Back in January, Fidelity Investments energy portfolio manager John Dowd weighed in with commentary that rejected the gloom and doom crowd. Dowd took more of a  gloom and room to run position. Valuations had fallen to levels where oil stocks historically had “rebounded and delivered positive performance,” he noted. “All of the gloom is generally reflected in the historically low valuations for energy stocks as if this environment is permanent, but I don’t believe it is,” Dowd wrote. Fidelity published his comments Jan. 20, which happened to be the same day that IBD’s industry group Oil & Gas-U.S. Exploration & Production notched a low. How low was it? The market hadn’t seen a lower level since early 2009. Stock moves based on valuations aren’t IBD’s forte. IBD’s method involves buying the best stocks in the best markets. Oil explorers aren’t the best stocks in fundamentals, and this market certainly isn’t the best. One choice available to the individual investor is the swing trade. These sometimes involve stocks that are more of a relative strength story than a great fundamentals story. In swing trades, the investor is not looking for what could become another of history’s greatest stocks. The swing trader is looking for favorable conditions for a smaller profit over a shorter period of time. The oil explorer group was No. 27 Thursday, up from No. 174 at the end of 2015. Within the oil explorer group, three stocks have done especially well this year. Range Resources ( RRC ) is up 72% year to date. The company focuses on unconventional plays, such as shale, coal bed methane and tight gas sand reservoirs. The stock’s three-month Relative Price Strength Rating is 97, putting it in the top three percentile. Continental Resources ( CLR ) is up 71% this year. The company is a major producer in the Bakken of North Dakota and Montana. The big cap also has positions in Oklahoma. The three-month RS rating is 98. Rice Energy ( RICE ) is up 69% this year. The small cap company is a natural gas and oil player in the Appalachian Basin. The three-month RS rating is 98. Apart from the bounce off valuations, a wildfire in Alberta is destroying supply and thereby boosting oil prices and oil stocks. Canada is a big player in the oil patch, sending about 100 million barrels of crude oil monthly to the U.S. and 240 billion cubic feet of natural gas monthly. Oil markets have generally had a modulated reaction, probably because U.S. inventories are high. More than 80,000 people have fled Fort McMurray, Alberta, including oil workers. The impact on prices hinges on whether or not oil facilities are damaged.