Value in Biotech: Do Low P/E Ratios Make For Cheap Stocks? (AMGN, BIB, CEPH, CBST, GENZ, PDLI)

August 22, 2009 · Filed Under Cancer, fda, multiple sclerosis, politics · Comments Off 

Biotechnology has historically been a very tough segment for investors to find “value” in.  Usually, the multiples of earnings and revenues are high and many of the emerging companies have no revenues or earnings and will not for years to come.  Yet we recently found a study of biotech analysts, investors, and portfolio managers from BIO and Thomson Reuters which showed how many influential investors in the new tougher world of lower valuations are looking at traditional low-price/earnings ratios and other traditional investment valuation metrics in evaluating biotech stocks.  So this week we ran a screen of some of the top 50 biotech stocks and wanted to review the following companies:

Amgen Inc. (NASDAQ: AMGN)
Biogen Idec Inc. (NASDAQ: BIIB)
Cephalon Inc. (NASDAQ: CEPH)
Cubist Pharmaceuticals Inc. (NASDAQ: CBST)
Genzyme Corporation (NASDAQ: GENZ)
PDL BioPharma, Inc. (NASDAQ: PDLI)

In each of these we reviewed the share prices and why these are trading where they are.  We also gave detailed data from Thomson Reuters for 2009 and 2010 consensus earnings and revenue estimates, as well as what their forward P/E and Times-Revenues figures are.  Also included are average analyst target prices and any recent calls.  We also gave the caveats, issues, or suppositions behind each company and a layout of what lies ahead.  We also had a market cap criteria, and while all of these companies are over $1 billion in market cap we were willing to look down as low as $400 million.  These six companies also greatly exceeded our average daily volume minimum of 250,000 shares.

Lastly, these were reviewed alphabetically rather than by any order of preference because each company and each case is rather unique.
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