Strong Small Cap Performance Drives Second Quarter Gains

A strong showing by biotech stocks in the second quarter of the year points to a sector back in favor. And in the US at least, the smaller end of the market has benefited from substantial investor attention.
EP Vantage's quarterly analysis of share price movements reveals a very strong performance from small-cap US drug developers, which contrasts with a more mixed performance further up the scale. Huge advances from the likes of Vertex (VRTX), Jazz (JAZZ) and Puma (PBYI) put some of their larger peers to shame.
Vertex's $32bn valuation is now close to its 2015 peak, while Jazz is also heading back to historic highs. Incyte (INCY), whose 26% surge does not make the top five risers, breached its biotech boom peak earlier in the year, although has come back since.
Many of the risers detailed below have long been considered potential M&A targets. But as stock prices climb higher once again it is becoming increasingly hard to see how exuberant public market valuations can be met by more cautious industry buyers.
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A look at the mid cap space paints a more mixed picture for US biotech, with eight biotech climbers to five fallers. This reflects the picture among the big biotech stocks, where substantial double-digit gains by Regeneron (REGN), Amgen (AMGN) and Celgene (CELG) were negated somewhat by backward slides at Alexion (ALXN), Gilead (GILD) and Biogen (BIIB).
Vertex's surge, on the back of strong cystic fibrosis data, has been matched in percentage terms by France's Ipsen (OTCPK:IPSEY), which is still riding high on a deal with Merrimack. Italy's Recordati (OTCPK:RCDTF) still appears to be benefiting from speculation it was up for sale last year, while India's Zydus Cadila has been on a tear since getting a clean bill of health for a crucial manufacturing plant.
Among the fallers Opko (OPK) continues to be punished for a phase III failure at the close of 2016, while Lupin (OTC:LUPNY) and Dr. Reddy's (RDY) show that not all Indian drug makers are having a good year.
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Among the small caps the strong performance of US stocks really stands out - although they are also well represented among the fallers.
Improving fortunes for Esperion's (ESPR) cardiovascular treatment, Puma's breast cancer candidate and Portola's (PTLA) blood thinner have all been reflected in substantial share price gains. And outside of these top five risers another six US companies have seen their market caps more than double this year.
Of course there are always clinical failures and set backs in biotech - Ardelyx (ARDX) and Trevena (TRDN) can attest to the pain of problems with a lead asset. But overall the public markets paint a picture of health for drug developers - with investors receptive to IPOs and follow-on fundraisings, and willing to reward clinical advances.
After a dismal 2016 many will welcome this buoyant mood. Those hoping to see a resurgence in takeovers, however, might question whether some of these valuations have departed too far from reality.
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