pharma

Ascending to New Heights

by Shawn Narancich, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

Ascending to New Heights

Subsiding geopolitical tensions in Eastern Europe, tentative steps by Chinese policymakers to support slowing growth, and more deal-making domestically combined to send U.S. stock prices to new record highs this week. Investors expecting negative revisions to previously reported first quarter GDP numbers were undeterred by the latest numbers that proved surprisingly poor, buying shares of economically sensitive companies poised to benefit from a rebounding economy. The fact that benchmark U.S. equities are now up four percent for the year is less surprising to us than the observation that bonds have nearly kept pace. Until just recently, key fixed income indices were outperforming stocks, prompting no small amount of ink to be spilled by investment analysts attempting to explain why bonds have done so well at a time when economic growth domestically is accelerating.

Skating to Where the Puck Will Be

While somewhat shocking at first glance, the one percent first quarter GDP contraction reported by the U.S. Commerce Department earlier this week paints an unrealistically dour view of the US economy. By now, almost anyone who didn’t hibernate through the unusually cold and snowy winter knows what the inclement weather did to economic activity. We are encouraged by recent strength in reported payrolls, rising U.S. energy production and the health of key manufacturing indices that point to rising domestic investment. With retail activity picking up, we do not foresee inventory investment continuing to detract from GDP in the second quarter, and surprisingly low interest rates may very well end up providing a nice boost to the recently lackluster housing market. All told, we expect a strong rebound domestically, one that could produce upwards of four percent GDP growth in the second quarter.

Food Fight

We anticipated that a faster rate of economic growth, relatively low interest rates and high levels of cash on corporate balance sheets would stimulate merger and acquisition activity this year, and that is certainly what has transpired. Deal-making in the cable, telecom and drug industries that has dominated M&A headlines so far this year gave way to activity in the food aisle this week, as meat processors Tyson and Pilgrim’s Pride now find themselves in a bidding war for Jimmy Dean sausage and cold cut company Hillshire Brands. What started as an attempt by Hillshire to expand its grocery store presence by acquiring Pinnacle Foods (purveyor of Birds Eye frozen vegetables and Log Cabin syrup) has turned the hunter into prey. Pinnacle Foods, which soared 13 percent earlier this month on the Hillshire bid, has now given back almost all of its recent gains on the heels of Pilgrim’s Pride’s $45/share bid for Hillshire Farms. The presumption is that the poultry producer wouldn’t want Pinnacle in the fold, opting instead to vertically integrate with Brazil’s JBS, the 75 percent owner of Pilgrim’s Pride. Complicating matters, chicken and pork processing competitor Tyson entered the fray by offering a superior bid of $50/share for Hillshire.

How this game of chicken concludes is hard to tell, but what the frenzied deal making in the food business demonstrates is the industry’s slow growth and ultra-competitive dynamics. Key players are being incented to combine and eliminate duplicative cost structures, produce more favorable margins by vertically integrating from the meatpacking floor to the cold-cut aisle and dampen the cyclicality inherent in livestock production.

Our Takeaways from the Week

  • Contraction in the US economy early this year should give way to stronger growth in the months to come
  • M&A activity continues at a heightened pace as key players jockey for better industry positioning

Disclosures

From Healthcare to Hoops

Jason Norris of Ferguson Wellman by Jason Norris, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

I Want a New Drug

We have seen a major resurgence in the healthcare space with regard to R&D and stock performance. In 2013, with the broad market up over 30 percent, the healthcare sector returned close to 45 percent and was the second best-performing sector. This year, in a flat, sideways-trending market, healthcare has been the best performing sector. We believe the sector gives investors a great mix of growth as well as stability and income. The worst of the drug patent cliff and generic substitution is behind us. We saw this transition peak in 2011 and 2012 with the likes of Lipitor, Plavix, Viagra and Singular coming “off patent.” This total was roughly $90 billion of revenue for big pharma companies. With this event sunseting, big pharma has cut costs, spun off divisions and made acquisitions to “right size” their lines of business. We anticipate the emerging pipelines from big pharma to more-than-offset the loss of revenue that will occur in 2016 and 2017. This reemergence is driven by diabetes, oncology and anti-clotting drugs.

Another space displaying strong R&D performance is biotech. In 2013, Biogen Idec launched its revolutionary multiple sclerosis drug and this year we have seen Gilead’s hepatitis C treatment (Sovaldi) come to market. The growth opportunities for this type of drug are great. For example, six months ago, Gilead was estimated to sale $2 billion of Sovaldi in 2014. Now expectations have risen around $7 to $10 billion. The R&D efforts in drug development around the world continue to break new ground.

Cover Me

The end of March will mark the conclusion of the first open-enrollment season of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). While the rollout was far from perfect, there is still quite a bit of uncertainty of its effects on the healthcare sector. We believe, relative to investing, most of the uncertainty has been diminished. The taxes that were implemented on the drug makers and medical device manufacturers have already taken effect. It is anticipated that the remaining uncertainties will affect hospital and insurance markets. As we have seen some adverse selection in the enrollment, the overall costs to the plans may see steep increases. While there is a clause in the ACA to reimburse insurance providers for their losses, we have heard “rumblings” from Congress to repeal this provision. While that is highly unlikely, it still creates uncertainty.

Finish What You Started

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve continued to reduce their monthly bond purchases and gave all indications that they want this program to wrap up by year end. The Fed did state, however, that they will continue to remain “accommodative” while the economy muddles along. The major change was the removal to the 6.5 percent unemployment-rate threshold. We anticipated this because of the issues around labor participation can distort the rate. We do believe that the Fed funds rate will be anchored at 0.25 percent well into 2015.

Come Monday

On Monday, April 7, the NCAA will crown a men’s college basketball champion. For those lucky enough to still have a viable bracket, you are moving closer to winning $1 billion from Warren Buffet, providing you continue to have the perfect picks. The odds of this are 1-in-9 quintillion (yes that’s 19 zeros).  Let’s hope that in the last couple days, worker productivity did not fall too much as fans tried to follow all the games.

Our Takeaways for the Week

  • We remain bullish on the healthcare sector and believe it will outperform the broad market
  • Even though interest rates have fallen year-to-date, as the Fed unwinds its bond buyer and the economy picks up, the 10-year Treasury will end the year above 3 percent