Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Sunday, Nov 12, 2006
ePaper


Investment World
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Investment World - Stocks
Markets - Recommendation
Glenmark Pharma: Buy

Nath Balakrishnan

Exposures can be considered in the stock of Glenmark Pharma, which trades at about Rs 460. Though the stock has appreciated 40 per cent over the past three weeks on the back of the out-licensing deal struck with Merck of Germany for its anti-diabetic molecule, we believe that there still is some more steam left in the story. We have remained consistently positive on Glenmark's prospects and continue to position it as a best play on the pharma R&D theme in the country.

The key driver of Glenmark's stock in the recent past has been its ability to monetise molecules in its development pipeline through an out-licensing arrangement. The latest deal with Merck is once again a vindication of Glenmark's forte in this space. The deal envisages an upfront payment of $32 million (about Rs 145 crore), which will be reflected in the latter half of the current financial. Another such deal could be concluded this fiscal (possibly on the anti-asthma molecule for the European geography). With four other molecules set to enter trials, we believe that news flow on out-licensing arrangements will remain strong and act as catalysts for the stock.

On the base business front, too, there are positive signs. The India business continues to grow at a rate that's higher than the overall market, on the back of product launches and sharper focus on physicians. In the key US market, with a front end in place, Glenmark is ramping up filings with the US Food and Drug administration through alliances with partners. We expect the traction seen in these markets, as well as in other geographies, to sustain, going forward.

Clearly, the street appears to be attributing significant value to the R&D business, as the sharp run-up in price suggests. Any adverse developments on the discovery front - more so in the case of the two molecules that have been out-licensed - would be a major reversal for the stock, and, as such, would constitute the principal risk to our recommendation.

More Stories on : Stocks | Recommendation | Pharmaceuticals

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Stories in this Section
Investment Quiz


Devaki Hospitals - Open offer: Reject
To invest, first catch a good broker
Revisiting the mid-cap space
Portfolio with potential
A vital balancing act
Tata Select Equity: Invest
Sundaram BNP Paribas Growth: Hold
Market View
Biral Midcap: Cement, pharma pruned
Fund Talk
Update
Glenmark Pharma: Buy
Ranbaxy Laboratories: Hold
Adlabs Films: Buy
Syndicate Bank: Hold
Godfrey Phillips: Hold
Travel first-class A/C for exemption
ONGC in consolidation mode
ACC
Infosys
Trader's Corner
Index Outlook
Tata Steel
Positive outlook on Nifty futures
SBI
Reliance Ind
Query corner
Tech Tools
KEI Industries
Yuppies on a shopping spree
A classier E-Class
Renault-M&M tie-up: Win-win for both
CBZ X-Treme — in the classic Hero Honda mould
Banking on trust
Ask not how the market is doing
Baskets of X
Bull's Eye
For small investor, opportunity online
Investment Nuggets
Money-Talk
Markets as frictionless and non-linear systems
Children's Day special from ICICI Bank
One account, multiple benefits
Golden offer from HDFC Bank
SriLankan slashes rates
Airtel's Trend


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2006, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line