Marcial: Best Biotechs for 2009
Some familiar big-cap stocks, such as Genentech, as well as a host of promising small caps section the list of biotech prospects
By Gene Marcial
Biotechnology stocks haven’t been darlings of Wall Street for quite some time—by the exception of giants Genentech (DNA) and Amgen (AMGN). In 2008 those companies pulled something of a surprise: They did relatively well for the time of the mart meltdown, beating the Dow Jones pertaining medium and Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index.
That has given a badly needed boost to the biotech bulls, who continue to believe the dispose has great potential for gigantic returns. There weren’confidentially many big winners in 2008, however: The Nasdaq Biotech Index (NBI), avidly tracked by means of biotech followers, was down 12% and the American Stock Exchange Biotech Index (BTK) slumped 17%. Still, that beat the Dow, which tumbled 33.84%, and the S&P, which sank 38.5%.
That’s no guarantee, of course, that biotechs will outperform the market in the new year. But the chances are looking better that they efficiency do that, level yet some biotech analysts expect 2009 will be another difficult year.
"Biotech stock performance in 2009 volition likely remain challenging," says Mark Monane, biotech analyst at investment firm Needham. He expects the housekeeping crisis and a tough regulatory environment for the industry to spill over into the new year.
Biotech’sitting Bright StarsThe biggest biotech winner in 2008 was Idenix Pharmaceuticals (IDIX), whose stock jumped 114.4% in 2008, to 5.79. It has after continued to rise, to 6 on Jan. 9. Idenix develops drugs for the manipulation of human viral and other pestiferous diseases, in the main directed at the hepatitis B and C viruses.
The No. 2 biotech gainer was Micromet (MITI), which was up 111.7%, to 4.36. It has since eased to 4.03 on Jan. 9. The company develops new antibody-based drugs for the treatment of cancer, inflammation, and autoimmune diseases.
The No. 3 gainer, Sequenom (SQNM), advanced 107.7%, to 19.84. The stock has continued to move up since the end of 2008, to 23.40 on Jan. 9, 2009. Sequenom provides genetic analysis tools used in biomedical, molecular therapeutic, agricultural, and noninvasive prenatal diagnostics research.
Sticking With Small CapsSo what is the next lot of biotechs that analysts believe pleasure lead the parade in 2009?
Since the broader stock market continues to reel from the drubbing it got in 2008, there is a determination among analysts to favor big-cap biotech stocks that boast veritable cash flow. Still, greatest in number analysts continue to be in favor of the small agitation, particularly those that see "pivotal events" sometime this year that could pull them up to boisterous levels.
"Some of the smaller-cap stocks we like accept the potential of attracting licensing pacts through Big Pharma, or may end up as takeover targets by larger companies," says Monane. He sees consolidation picking up this year in the biotech sector.
Monane points out that four areas account for more than 80% of the almost $300 billion exhausted on biopharmaceuticals in the U.S.: cancer, cardiovascular, central nervous system, and infectious/inflammatory diseases.
Among the biotech stocks Monane recommends are Allos Therapeutics (ALTH) in the field of oncology/hematology diseases; Cytokinetics (CYTK) in cardiovascular; Arena Pharmaceuticals (ARNA) in central nervous arrangement/metabolics; and Gilead (GILD) in infectious diseases, mainly HIV.
Original text: http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/jan2009/pi2009019_759106.htm?campaign_id=rss_null
