Teva's New CEO Brings No Relief: Generic Drugmakers To Dump

 | Sep 12, 2017 03:33AM ET

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Limited (NYSE:TEVA) on Monday announced that it has hired H. Lundbeck’s (OTC:HLUYY) chief Kåre Schultz as its new CEO. The appointment ended Teva’s more than six-month long search for a permanent CEO after Erez Vigodman stepped down in February this year.

Israel-based Teva has been facing tough times. A challenging environment in the U.S. generics business and the continued deterioration in Venezuela have been hurting its sales. Meanwhile, delay in the launch of some new generic drugs and fierce competition for some others is also hurting Generic segment sales. Teva is also facing several other challenges in the form of generic competition for branded multiple sclerosis drug, Copaxone, its key revenue generator, new competition for branded products, a high cost base and debt load.

It remains to be seen if Schultz can use his 30 years of extensive global pharmaceutical experience to help the world’s largest generic drugmaker regain lost ground. Schultz will be tasked with increasing sales and reducing debt for the generic drugmaker. It is worth mentioning here that Schultz joined Lundbeck in 2015 when the company was struggling due to loss of patents for key drugs and helped the company to turn around, backed by significant restructuring initiatives.

Meanwhile, the huge development at Teva has once again shifted focus to the Generic Drug industry, which is presently facing several challenges

Generic Drug Industry in Doldrums

The Generic Drugs industry has a Zacks Industry Rank #246 (bottom 7% of the 250 plus Zacks industries). The industry has declined 15% year to date (YTD), significantly less than a return of 11.2% for the S&P 500.