Tag Archives: technology

2 Hotly Debated Drugs Due For FDA Decisions Next Week

In the week before Memorial Day, the FDA is due to decide whether to approve two of the most divisive drugs in the biotech industry, both of them crucial for the companies that make them, Sarepta Therapeutics and Intercept Pharmaceuticals. Thursday is the deadline for eteplirsen, Sarepta Therapeutics ‘ ( SRPT ) treatment for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Just getting to the filing took years of negotiation between Sarepta and the FDA, and May 26 is three months later than the decision was originally supposed to be made. And after all that, Wall Street is placing low odds on the drug’s approval. That’s based mainly on last month’s advisory committee meeting on eteplirsen, which voted 7 to 3 (with 3 abstentions) that the drug’s effectiveness wasn’t adequately proven by Sarepta’s tiny clinical trial. Sarepta stock hit a four-year low of 8, on April 26, as multiple analysts downgraded it on the assumption the drug will be rejected. Nonetheless, DMD is a devastating disease without a current treatment, and the families of the children affected have turned into a formidable lobby to get something on the market — especially after BioMarin Pharmaceutical ‘s ( BMRN ) rival drug Kyndrisa was rejected in January. Some observers say the families’ desperation might be enough to move the agency. Oppenheimer analyst Christopher Marai on May 2 upgraded Sarepta on the grounds that, in the past, the FDA has been more flexible in such cases of unmet need. He also pointed out that the stock was now cheap. Sarepta stock has remained volatile but has steadied somewhat the past couple of weeks. On Friday, shares jumped 8.8%, to 19.15. Intercept’s Liver-Disease Treatment Expected To Get OK A day after the Sarepta decision, Intercept Pharmaceuticals ‘ ( ICPT ) liver-disease treatment Ocaliva is due for a verdict. Ocaliva’s advisory committee vote last month went the opposite way of eteplirsen’s, with the panel unanimously supporting approval for the drug, which treats the rare disease primary biliary cholangitis (PBC). As a result, Wall Street generally expects approval. Bears, however, are still growling about Ocaliva’s safety, which they say could limit the drug’s label. The day after the panel vote, Morgan Stanley analyst Andrew Berens drove down Intercept’s stock with the theory that the FDA would discourage use in patients with advanced cirrhosis. This might affect not only the relatively small PBC market, but also the much, much bigger possibilities for Ocaliva in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). Intercept is testing the drug in NASH, and approval wouldn’t be for a couple of years, but it’s a major part of the stock’s bull thesis, as analysts see annual sales in the multi-billions. Intercept stock has been on a downtrend this month, but it rose 2.4% this past week. On Friday, shares closed up 2.2%, at 134.28.

Amazon Looks Primed To Disrupt Wal-Mart, Target, CVS, Walgreens

A major expansion by Amazon.com ( AMZN ) into private-label goods, which could come this month, elevates its ability to further challenge legacy retailers across the board. Cowen analyst John Blackledge estimates Amazon will be the No. 2 player in the $425 billion consumable market, excluding food and beverage, surpassing  Walgreens Boots Alliance ( WBA ), CVS Health ( CVS ) and Target ( TGT ) but still lagging well behind market leader Wal-Mart ( WMT ). He defines consumables as four segments: personal care products, household products, baby products and pet products. Blackledge also estimates Amazon will be a top-10 player in the $785 billion food and beverage grocery market by 2019. “We are encouraged by Amazon’s growing footprint in this category, which we see as ripe for potential disruption, given younger demos increasingly purchasing grocery items via digital channels,” Blackledge wrote. The leader in the food and beverage category is Wal-Mart, followed by Kroger ( KR ), Albertsons/Safeway and Costco Wholesale ( COST ). Last week, the Wall Street Journal  cited people familiar with the matter as saying Amazon is set in the coming weeks to roll out new lines of private-label brands that will include its first broad push into perishable foods. According to the Private Label Manufacturers Association, sales of private-label store brands in the U.S. topped $118 billion in 2015, with supermarkets and drug chains accounting for over $70 billion of the total. In the grocery and consumables market, Blackledge says, Amazon’s growth has come at the expense of Wal-Mart, Target. Walgreens and CVS. Amazon’s key competitive advantage is its multiplatform approach with Amazon Prime, which includes same-day delivery for many goods, “all of which should lead to rising number of consumers skipping the trip to the local supercenter, drug store or grocery market,” he wrote. Amazon has sold private-label products since 2009, primarily under the AmazonBasics brand, though that effort has concentrated largely on consumer electronics. Amazon stock rose 0.6% to 702.80 in the stock market today . Amazon stock hit an all-time high of 722.45 on May 12. It carries a strong IBD Composite Rating of 94, putting it among the top 6% of all stocks on key metrics such as revenue growth. Walgreens climbed 1.3% but CVS fell 1.5%. Target climbed 2.4%. Wal-Mart advanced 1%, hitting a nine-month high intraday, after spiking nearly 10% Thursday on strong earnings and same-store sales.

8×8 Guidance Tops Views; Stock Up On ‘Next Phase Of Growth’

8×8 ( EGHT ) stock jumped Friday after the provider of business communications services on Thursday reported higher-than-expected fiscal Q4 revenue and forecast current-year sales above consensus estimates. 8×8 stock leapt 7.3% to 12.60 in the stock market today , touching a nearly four-month high. With Friday’s gain, the San Jose, Calif.-based company’s stock is in the black for 2016 to date. Shares broke out of a cup-with-handle at a 12.05 buy point on Wednesday. The provider of VoIP services (voice over Internet protocol) has an IBD Composite Rating of 93 out of a possible 99, putting it among the top 7% of all companies on key metrics such as stock performance. 8×8 reported adjusted earnings of 3 cents per share in fiscal Q4 ended March 31, down from 5 cents per share in the year-earlier period but in-line with Wall Street views. Revenue rose 32% to $57.3 million, where analysts had modeled revenue of $54.4 million. In the current fiscal year, 8×8 said it expects revenue of $251 million at the midpoint of its guidance range, vs. consensus estimates of $245 million. For fiscal 2016, the company said sales rose 29% to $209.3 million. “8×8 has now entered the next phase of growth, graduating from being a pure over-the-top small-business VoIP provider in the United States to a global enterprise communications service provider with a broad end-to-end suite of cloud service offerings,” Dmitry Netis, an analyst at William Blair, said in a research report.