It's hard to say that there's anything particularly wrong with Sanofi (NYSE: SNY )
today. Like most of its big pharma peers, revenue growth remains a
challenge (sales were down 7% as reported in the third quarter and up
less than 1% in constant currency), and investors are worried that
generics, biosimilars in this case, will chew into Sanofi's lucrative
diabetes franchise. Even so, the shares are near an all-time high, and
investors who've owned these shares for a few years aren't exactly
hurting.
Even so, one of the pillars of the bear thesis is that Sanofi hasn't
done enough to position itself in some of the more attractive markets
within branded pharmaceuticals. Sanofi's deal with Regeneron for
its anti-PCSK9 antibody was a pretty good deal for Regeneron, and
Genzyme's rare disease drugs contribute less than 10% of the total
revenue base.
Most specifically, though, Sanofi is weak in arguably the hottest
area in pharma: oncology. Given recent pipeline failures and weak
positioning in immunotherapies, it's worth asking if Sanofi may turn to
M&A to appease investors worried that Sanofi's fortresses in
diabetes and vaccines and emerging opportunities in cholesterol and
multiple sclerosis aren't enough.
Read the full article at The Motley Fool:
Does Sanofi Need to Turn to M&A to Bulk Up Its Oncology Assets?
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