|
Stock Watch
Posted AtExpress
Pharm
The year 2005 saw a host
of Indian pharma companies in deal with foreign firms.
Mergers, acquisitions and strategic alliances were
the order of the day. With contract research and manufacturing
services (CRAMS) opening doors to Indian pharma, domestic
pharmaceutical exports are expected to grow by 30
percent, touching a new high of Rs 21,685 crore this
financial year.
The year 2006 will continue to see large number of
global pharmaceutical majors outsourcing the manufacturing
activity to Indian pharma companies, which enjoy much
lower costs than their western counterparts.On the
policy front, the government has proposed reduction
of excise duty on all pharma products from 16 percent
to eight percent. This will be favourable for pharma
companies that have a major chunk of their turnover
coming from the domestic market.
The draft National Pharmaceutical Policy has proposed
a complete exemption of cancer drugs from all types
of central levies excise duty, import duty and has
also said that states would also be asked to exempt
these medicines from all types of state and local
levies.
The government has set ceilings on trade margins,
migrated to a uniform regime of MRP and has done away
with branded generics. The new MRP based excise duty
regime threatens the existence of many small scale
pharma units, especially in the states of Andhra Pradesh
and Maharashtra that were involved in contract manufacturing
for the larger established players.
Taking the case of specific stocks, companies like
Sun Pharmaceuticals, Cipla, Wockhardt and Lupin have
been in the news during the past year. Let's take
a closer look at them.
Cipla posted a net profit of Rs 95.9 crore for the
second quarter ended September 2004, up 38 percent
over the same period a year ago, while net sales rose
29 percent to Rs 581.4 crore. Exports contributed
to 40 percent of total sales against 38.7 percent
last year.
Revenues from international trade were up 31.6 percent
to Rs 241.7 crore. The maximum growth in the exports
was in the formulations segment, which saw an increase
of over 76 percent to Rs 157.9 crore.
Cipla recently signed up a global supply deal with
the $10 billion German drug maker Boehringer Ingelheim.
The product development and manufacturing pact involves
development and supply of Boehringerâs hypertension
drug, Telmisartan.
The company is also planning to start supplies of
Tamiflu to some Asian and European countries from
January.
Cipla is currently trading at Rs 441.15 on the BSE,
has gone up by 38.35 percent approximately in the
last one year.
Sun Pharmaceuticals, the speciality pharma company
is ranked sixth among all Indian pharma companies
with a 3.31 percent market share. In the Indian market,
the company is a leader in niche therapy areas of
psychiatry, neurology, cardiology, diabetology, gastroenterology,
orthopedics, with a rank among the top three companies.
The company makes speciality bulk actives and formulations
across 11 cities in India.
The company's wholly owned subsidiary, Sun Pharmaceutical,
Michigan recently acquired Able Labs in the US for
$23.15 million. This is Sun Pharma's fourth acquisition
in the US, the other three being the acquisition of
Caraco in 1997, the acquisition of two brands from
Women's First Healthcare in 2004, and the purchase
of a dosage form plant at Bryan, Ohio earlier in September
this year.
In the regulated US market, Sun and its subsidiary
Caraco continued to make rapid strides. As of end
September, Sun and Caraco had a total of 37 ANDAs
pending approval with the USFDA. Approvals and launches
should take place over the next two to three years,
providing visible US operations.
Sun Pharmaceuticals is currently trading at Rs 681.05
on the BSE, has gone up by 23 percent approximately
in the last one year.
Lupin reported a 158 percent rise in net profits for
the quarter ended September 30, 2005 at Rs 452 million,
up from Rs 175 million in the corresponding period
last year. Gross revenues for the quarter increased
by 32 percent to Rs 4,191 million. Driven by buoyant
off-take in the US market with the launch of Ceftriaxone
vials for injection, the company's exports revenues
grew 42 percent to Rs 1855 million. Domestic revenues
also kept up the growth momentum with an increase
of 24 percent to reach Rs 2,337 million. EBITDA increased
by 127 percent to Rs 763 million as against Rs 336
million in the previous year.
During the quarter the company spent Rs 231 million
on R&D expenses taking the total R&D spend during
H1 2005-06 to Rs 418 million representing six percent
of net revenues.
The company filed three ANDAs, two COS and one DMF.
It received two ANDA approvals viz. for Lisinopril
Tablets and Cephalexin suspension respectively during
the quarter under review.
Lupin is currently trading at Rs 769 on the BSE, has
gone up by 12 percent approximately in the last one
year.
January 24, 2006 |