Teva Settles With Oklahoma, Shares Fall Following Downgrade

 | May 28, 2019 09:42PM ET

Shares of Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Limited (NYSE:TEVA) fell almost 12.4% on May 28 following media reports of a rating downgrade of the company by an analyst at UBS Group AG (NYSE:UBS) . The analyst downgraded the company following the announcement of a settlement with the state of Oklahoma related to abuse of opioids. The analyst believes that Teva’s litigation costs related to opioid abuse and price fixing of generic drugs can run into several billions of dollars.

On May 26, Teva agreed to pay $85 million to resolve Oklahoma’s claim that the company was among the entities responsible for opioid epidemic in the state. The settlement comes just before the start of the trial against the company as well as J&J’s (NYSE:JNJ) subsidiary, Janssen in the opioid abuse case.

While J&J fell 1.3% on Monday, Mylan (NASDAQ:MYL) , another company accused in the drug fixing litigations, declined 5.7%. The decline in Mylan’s shares was likely due to anticipated rise in litigation cost as well.

In the press release, Teva stated that the settlement with the state does not establish the allegation against the company but was rather part of the company’s strategy to focus on long-term stability by removing the court trial overhang.

Moreover, the company defended itself by stating that the company’s approval for a generic version of naloxone spray last month will help it fight opioid epidemic. The drug is widely recognized as an essential lifesaving medication to combat opioid abuse.

Teva’s shares have declined 29.5% so far this year compared with the industry ’s decline of 7.6%.