Summary
GILD has begun talking a bit more about its pipeline and product plans for its leading antiviral programs.
This has allowed analysts to have greater clarity about its future.
Based on recent comments from its EVP and CSO and from GILD's recent product launches, it's possible to now assess its HIV/AIDS strategy for the 2020s.
This article attempts to analyze that strategy, finds it potentially a winning one, and then guesstimates future cash flows from it.
The article concludes by looking at GILD as a value and growth stock that suggests it is relatively attractive for patient investors oriented to assuming a degree of risk.
This has allowed analysts to have greater clarity about its future.
Based on recent comments from its EVP and CSO and from GILD's recent product launches, it's possible to now assess its HIV/AIDS strategy for the 2020s.
This article attempts to analyze that strategy, finds it potentially a winning one, and then guesstimates future cash flows from it.
The article concludes by looking at GILD as a value and growth stock that suggests it is relatively attractive for patient investors oriented to assuming a degree of risk.
Background
As I mentioned in my recent article on Gilead (NASDAQ:GILD),
on the global potential for its HCV drugs to, over time, beat the
evolving bearish consensus, I've had the time and interest to update my
understanding of its pipeline. This has been helped by various comments,
press releases, etc. by the company in recent weeks.
This
article begins to follow through in exploring GILD's pipeline. Because
in the DoctoRx view of investing in common stocks, the point of it all
is to share in profits that are either retained in the company or
distributed to shareholders, rather than endless promising future
profits without generating any, or any significant, current profits; the
most important and impressive part of GILD is its HCV and HIV/AIDS
product lines. It has developed and extended them in almost
unprecedented fashion; doing so while maximizing profits and keeping the
company's growth manageable have of necessity kept the rest of its
pipeline small relative to its now-large size. This in turn has
appropriately kept the P/E at a discount to that of the market; the
question for me is whether the degree of that discount is too large. The
S&P 500 (NYSEARCA:SPY) is trading above 24X TTM EPS; GILD is trading a little above 7X.
My
experience with high-quality names such as this is that on some
meaningful time frame, often a long one though, the holder of the 7X P/E
name will do well. So, I'm biased before looking more deeply to think
that GILD is a strong buy-and-hold investment in a pricey market for
both stocks and fixed income.
No comments:
Post a Comment