QUOTE AND NEWS
Bloomberg  8 hrs ago  Comment 
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd this week will make a third attempt to introduce a carbon trading bill, confronted by a new opposition leader who views the climate-change debate as his ticket to power.
Sydney Morning Herald  10 hrs ago  Comment 
Virginity is not a ‘gift’. To suggest it is, as Tony Abbott has, is absurdly childish. It’s also ridiculously romantic. None of which would matter if the discussion stopped there. But it doesn’t.
Sydney Morning Herald  Jan 31  Comment 
Last Thursday's issue of the newspaper The Land was a public relations bonanza for Tony Abbott. Under a front-page headline saying ''At your side'' is a photograph of Abbott deep in conversation with a farmer he visited outside Tamworth last week.
Sydney Morning Herald  Jan 30  Comment 
Tony Abbott has confirmed the federal opposition will release its new climate change policy on Tuesday.
Sydney Morning Herald  Jan 29  Comment 
TONY ABBOTT will brand Kevin Rudd as a travel-obsessed, all-talk, no-action prime minister today, one who plans to seek re-election on the basis of promises rather than performance.
Sydney Morning Herald  Jan 29  Comment 
Tony Abbott's personal views have been thoroughly pawed this week. He has been getting it from all angles after uttering a few cheesy lines of dad speak on the topic of virginity. Well, I would like to come forward, in chivalrous fashion, to...
Sydney Morning Herald  Jan 28  Comment 
Opposition Leader Tony Abbott appears to have ruled out an increase in tobacco taxes to fund the coalition's new climate change policy.
Sydney Morning Herald  Jan 28  Comment 
Opposition Leader Tony Abbott should stick to the business of providing political direction rather than personal advice, PM Kevin Rudd says.
FiercePharma  Jan 28  Comment 
It looks as if 2010 will be another big year for emerging-markets M&A. As the Wall Street Journal Health Blog reports, Abbott Laboratories is looking to grow its "geographic footprint," and it's on the lookout for deals that would augment its...
Motley Fool  Jan 27  Comment 
Investors don't seem to see it that way though.



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ABT AT A GLANCE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Abbott Laboratories (NYSE: ABT) is the largest company in the nutritional products market and the second largest company in the worldwide market for diagnostic products. The company manufactures a number of nutritional and pharmaceutical products, laboratory diagnostics, pharmaceutical therapies and medical devices, including the arthritis medication Humira and the coronary stent Xience. Abbott had total sales of $29.5 billion in 2008. Abbott Labs' recent acquisitions of Kos Pharmaceuticals and Guidant Corporation have contributed to Abbott's competitiveness in the highly profitable vascular stent market.

In recent years, Abbott has shifted its focus to the pharmaceutical industry. Abbott can expand by either obtaining FDA approval on new products or adding new indications for already existing products, such as Humira. Medicare reform also has a significant role in the success of drugs--new coverage of Humira may cause a spike in demand for the drug; Abbott will profit even more if new medication receives similar coverage in the future.

Abbott and the rest of the pharmaceutical industry are continually under pressure from expiring patents. Patent expiration allows generic drug companies to lower prices for a certain medication by producing their own versions, increasing competition for that product's market.

Corporate Overview

Products

Abbott Labs' products fall into three categories or production divisions: medical, pharmaceutical, and nutritional. Over the past five years, the revenue distribution from each of these these divisions has held fairly steady, with Pharmaceuticals consistent as the highest earner. Medical products are on an upwards growth curve, however, and may equal or surpass pharmaceuticals in importance--especially if demand for vascular stents remains high.

  • Pharmaceutical Products ($16.7 billion, 60.9% of 2008 revenue)[1]

Abbott's main revenue-generating pharmaceuticals are Humira and Depakote, which together make up 43% of the pharmaceutical division's revenues. Humira, Abbott's #1 selling medication, is used to treat rheumatoid arthritis; Depakote is used to treat epilepsy and bipolar disorder (see Antiepileptic Drug Market). Abbott also develops Niaspan, which is the only drug on the market capable of decreasing cardiovascular risk by increasing HDL, or "good" cholesterol.

  • Nutritional Products ($4.9 billion, 17.9% of 2008 revenue)[2]

The nutritional products division has been a steady source of revenue for Abbott and a source of growth in 2009 (nutritional revenue rose 4% to $1.28B in Q2 2009). The company further announced in July, 2009 plans to expand the division's operations in India by purchasing local nutrition companies Wockhardt and Carol Info Services for $130M. [3] Abbott's most well-known brands include Ensure, a meal replacement shake, and ZonePerfect snack bars.

  • Diagnostics ($3.6 billion, 13% of 2008 revenue) [4]

Abbott's diagnostics division makes tests used in blood banks, hospitals, laboratories, and plasma protein therapeutic companies. The tests include immunoassay and chemistry systems used to screen for markers for infectious diseases, fertility, drug targets, and cancer, as well as genetic tests and hematology systems.

  • Vascular ($2.2 billion, 8.2% of 2008 revenue) [5]

The vascular division is largely dominated by stents, which open up clogged arteries in patients. Abbott's new drug-eluting stent Xience V has shown strong growth, doubling in sales in a year and becoming the best-selling stent of its kind in the U.S. market.[6] Clinical trials have shown Xience V to be safer and more reliable for treating clogged heart arteries than its competition. In particular, one clinical trial demonstrated Xience V to be clinically superior to its competitor Boston Scientific's Taxus stent. Abbott's acquisitions of Kos Pharmaceuticals and Guidant Corp will add depth to Abbott's medical product pipeline.

Business Growth

In 2009 Q2, earnings decreased to $1.29B from $1.32B the year before. Sales increased by 2.5% to $7.5B compared to the previous year, despite an 8% decrease in revenues due to unfavorable exchange rates. Total international sales fell 21%, while US sales increased 21%. Humira remains the main growth and profitability driver for the company, with Q2 sales of $1.3B, due to its continued expansion into the rheumatology, dermatology, and gastroenterology markets. [7]

In Q3 2009 (ending 9-30-09), Abbott reported sales of $7.76 billion, an increase of 3.5% over the same quarter of the previous year. Total international sales rose 8.5%, while U.S. sales shrank 1.7%. Abbott's sales growth was driven largely by its nutritional and vascular divisions, which grew 9.8% and 4.7%, respectively, while pharmaceutical sales decreased 1.6% and diagnostics sales remained flat. Abbott's fastest growing major products where the blockbuster arthritis medication, Humira, which grew 26.2% and its pediatrics nutritional products, which grew 21.9%.[8] Abbott reported a net income of $1.48 billion for the quarter, an increase of 37% from the previous year. For fiscal 2009, Abbott raised its outlook from $3.65-$3.70 to $3.70-$3.72 earnings per share.[9]

Abbott's coronary and drug-eluting stents showed particularly strong growth, with total stent sales rising 83.5% to $397million from a year ago. Abbott's new Xience stent has become the best-selling stent of its kind in the U.S. market, with market share in the mid to upper 20's.[7]

In December 2008, Abbot announced plans to acquire Ibis Biosciences from Isis Pharmaceuticals (ISIS) for $215 million. The company expects the acquisition to help advance its position in detecting infectious agents, specifically in hospitals. [10] As of June 2009, the company continues to be open to growth through mergers and acquisitions, specifically seeking to expand its non-pharma business. It does not appear, however, to be looking for the same scale deals as those of Pfizer (PFE)/Wyeth (WYE) and Merck (MRK)/Schering-Plough (SGP). [11]

On September 24, 2009, Abbott made a bid to acquire the drugs unit of Solvay Pharmaceuticals, rivalling an earlier bid made by privately owned Nycomed. Solvay is a Belgian chemical and pharmaceutical company whose drugs include cardio-metabolic, neuroscience, gastroenerolgy, and hormone therapies. Analysts estimate that the deal will eventually cost more than 5 billion euros.[12] Abbott has announced plans to pay $6.6 billion in cash in a deal that would also include up to $441.3 million in milestone payments.[13]

Trends and Forces

Government regulation challenge

Abbott Labs and its competitors are all heavily affected by government regulation. This includes both long-term challenges like required FDA approval and patent expiration, and acute sudden changes like Medicare reform. These regulations are primarily affected by political factors.

Expiring patents threat

Expiring patents are inevitable and a threat to all companies in the pharmaceutical market. More than half of Abbott's revenues are generated by the pharmaceutical division. With expiring patents and an extremely competitive generic drug market, Abbott's pharmaceutical revenues could experience a drop in sales.

Strong pipeline; diverse businesses

Expiring patents will have the greatest effect on Abbott's pharmaceutical division, so if Abbott can successfully maintain a diverse business spread beyond pharmaceuticals to nutritional, and medical as well, it can insulate itself from the drop in profit caused by patent expirations or drug approval troubles. Currently, Abbott's nutritionals division generates 20% of its revenue, but still might not be enough to offset a heavy loss of pharmaceutical revenue due to expired patents and generic competitors. The performance of Abbott's Xience V drug-eluting stent will be important for boosting profits in Abbott's medical division.

Generic pharmaceuticals: direct competition

Although Abbott has a diverse product line spread throughout the pharmaceutical, nutritional and medical products industries, Abbott's main focus has shifted onto the pharmaceutical industry in recent years. The threat of FDA approval of generic drugs has put a lot of pressure on the pharmaceutical industry. Of Abbott's 70 drug patents, the most threatened (expired or due to expire in the near future) are:

  • Biaxin (expired 2005): this antibiotic has already experienced a 33% sales decrease since losing its patent.
  • Depakote (expires January 2008): this prescription drug treats migraines, bipolar disorder, and epilepsy, and is Abbott's second best selling pharmaceutical product. Abbott's sales will be especially hurt by a sharp decrease in Depakote sales due to generic competitors.

Further, major pharmaceuticals are constantly vulnerable to patent infringement from generic competitors. The litigation involved in preventing such patent violations can be drawn out and costly, though successful defenses of patents can sometimes offset these losses. In July 2009, for example, Abbott sued Medtronic (MDT) to defend its coronary stent technology and successfully settled for $400M. [14]

Medicare coverage patterns

Health coverage is an important determining factor when patients and doctors choose among various treatment options, and Medicare coverage is particularly significant in that it directly affects the drug choices of about 20% of the US population.

Recent Medicare reform resulted in expanded coverage for two treatments for rheumatoid arthritis: Abbott's Humira and Amgen's Enbrel (previously Medicare only covered Johnson & Johnson’s Remicade). Now that Humira can be reimbursed under Medicare, its market share (and that of rival Enbrel) are expected to increase. However, as Medicare coverage extends over time to cover other rheumatoid arthritis medications, competition may force Abbott to lower prices.

Effect of US politics

Under the Medicare Modernization Act (MMA), drug prices are negotiated between private drug manufacturers and private drug plans which prohibit government interference from participating in negotiations and setting up a price structure. The White House and Democrat-heavy Senate are exploring new ways to lower drug prices, which could decrease revenue throughout the pharmaceutical industry. If Abbott is forced to lower their drug prices, they will be hard hit--more than half of their total sales come from pharmaceuticals.

The results of the President Obama's 2009 healthcare reform will affect Abbott's pharmaceuticals industry by playing a major role in Medicare reform.

Abbott versus the Competition

For a company in the high-speed and constantly changing health care industry, capturing market share must be the primary focus. Market share can be spiked up either by introducing new drugs or by obtaining new indications for existing drugs, increasing demand for the medications.

Humira is currently awaiting FDA approval for several new indications including Crohn's Disease and psoriasis after excellent results in clinical trials. Humira faces competition for the treatment of Crohn's Disease and psoriasis from Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) and Amgen (AMGN). If Humira is approved for those new indications, Abbott could shift market share away from these competitors.

Abbott's Xience V is also being pushed to seize market share, this time in the lucrative drug-eluting stent market--currently populated by only two main players, Boston Scientific's Taxus and Johnson and Johnson's Cypher. Combined, these two companies hold more than 90% of drug-eluting stent market. Johnson and Johnson's recent acquisition of Conor Medsystems may benefit Abbott if the Xience V is approved in time to pick up some of the lost market share from Conor. Abbott competes with St. Jude Medical (STJ) in the vascular closure device market.

Abbott's toughest competition may still be generic drug manufacturers, however. A slew of expiring patents makes Abbott's sales very vulnerable to competition from generic drugs, whose low prices make it difficult for Abbott to compete.

Abbott will have to continue investing more in R&D in order to stay ahead of the tough competition, both from generics and from companies like Johnson and Johnson. In 2006, Abbott's R&D spending was significantly less than its competition.

Competition in the pharmaceutical industry lies mostly in specific drug markets. For example, a new diabetes drug is not going to have any effect on an existing cholesterol drug, no matter how successful it is. As a result, financial data on the pharmaceutical companies do not tell the whole story. Instead, it may be more appropriate to analyze Pfizer's competitors by each drug market (See section on Major Drugs and Industry Trends).

Note that Eli Lilly's net income is negative largely due to its acquisition of ImClone for $6.5 billion in October of 2008.[15]


Pharmaceutical and Biotech Industry — Competitive Operating Metrics (2008)

 

Sanofi-Aventis SA (SNY)

Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)

Pfizer (PFE)

Novartis (NVS)

Abbott Laboratories (ABT)

Merck (MRK)

Bristol-Meyers Squibb (BMY)

Eli Lilly (LLY)

Amgen (AMGN)

Allergan (AGN)

AstraZeneca (AZN)

Roche (RHHBY)

Revenue (in billions of USD)

Total Revenue

$35.8

$63.75

$48.30

$42.58

$29.53

$23.85

$20.60

$20.38

$15.00

$4.40

$31.60

$45.62

Gross Profit

$26.3

$45.24

$40.18

$30.02

$16.92

$18.27

$14.20

$16.00

$12.71

$3.58

$25.41

$31.96

Revenue Growth from 2007

(-1.7%)

4.34%

0.00%

9.34%

13.94%

(-1.44%)

13.21%

9.41%

1.55%

11.81%

6.90%

(-0.01%)

Income

Net Income

$3.85

$12.95

$8.10

$8.20

$4.88

$7.81

$4.15

(-$2.07)

$4.20

$0.58

$6.10

$8.97

Net Profit Margin

10.7%

20.3%

16.8%

19.2%

16.5%

32.7%

20.2%

NA

28.0%

13.2%

19.3%

19.7%

Operating Income

$5.71

$16.93

$9.69

$8.80

$5.69

$9.81

$5.47

(-$1.31)

$5.21

$0.80

-$9.14

$13.76

Earnings Per Share (EPS)

$4.25

$4.63

$2.03

$3.58

$3.10

$4.02

$1.87

$3.70

$4.19

$2.06

$4.63

$10.23

Other

R&D Spending

$5.95

$7.58

$7.95

$7.22

$2.69

$4.81

$3.59

$3.84

$3.03

$0.80

$5.01

$8.85




References

  1. ABT 2008 10-K Pg. 63
  2. ABT 2008 10-K Pg. 63
  3. Reuters. "Abbott to buy India nutritionals for $130 mln." 28 July 2009
  4. ABT 2008 10-K Pg. 63
  5. ABT 2008 10-K Pg. 63
  6. 7.0 7.1 Abbott Laboratories Q2 2009 Earnings.
  7. Abbott Reports 16.5 Percent Earnings Growth in Third Quarter; Raises Earnings Guidance for 2009
  8. Abbott Q3 Profit Surges 37%, Tops Consensus; Boosts FY09 Earnings Outlook
  9. Reuters. "Abbott Labs to buy Isis unit in $215 mln deal." 17 Dec 2008
  10. Reuters. "Abbott seeks to grow non-pharma side of business." 19 Jun 2009.
  11. Solvay unit bid war looms after Abbott offer-source
  12. Abbott to buy Solvay unit for $6.6 billion
  13. Reuters. "Medtronic to pay Abbott $400 mln to end stent suit." 27 July, 2009
  14. Lilly to Acquire ImClone Systems in $6.5 Billion Transaction
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