Generic Drugmakers To Dump As Teva's Woes Continue In 2018

 | Feb 13, 2018 06:02AM ET

Teva Pharmaceutical (NYSE:TEVA) reported another disappointing quarter last week. Its fourth-quarter earnings declined 32% year over year, while sales were down 16%.

The Israel-based company’s product sales in 2017 were hurt by increased pricing erosion, volume declines in the U.S. Generics unit and rapid erosion in sales of Copaxone -- Teva’s blockbuster multiple sclerosis injection -- in the Specialty segment. Mylan’s (NASDAQ:MYL) earlier-than-expected launch of the first generic version of the 40-mg strength of Copaxone was a major setback for Teva. The company is also bogged down by new competition for branded products and huge debt burden of over $32 billion.

On the fourth-quarter call, Teva provided a weak guidance for 2018 wherein it expects sales and profits to decline further this year.

Teva expects revenues in the range of $18.3 - $18.8 billion while earnings are expected in the band of $2.25–$2.50 per share in 2018. The numbers fell below investors’ expectations.

However, Teva has undertaken strategic restructuring efforts including the divestiture of some non-core assets,closure of plants, trimming of its generics portfolio, termination of low-value R&D projects, and plans to reduce its workforce by more than a quarter over the next two years.

Although the company expects to save almost $3 billion by the end of 2019 from these restructuring initiatives, a clear path to growth is not visible as it faces erosion of its largest product, Copaxone. Other than that, loss of sales due to divestures and pricing pressure in the U.S. generic business will continue to hurt the top line in 2018.

In fact, price erosion and several other challenges cast a shadow over the whole generic drug industry.

Generic Drug Industry in Doldrums

Generic Drugs has a Zacks Industry Rank #176 (bottom 34% of the 250 plus Zacks industries). The industry has declined 32.6% in the past year, underperforming an increase of 2.4% for the broader drugs industry and 14.6% for the S&P 500.