Biotech Stock Gains May Signal Post-'Brexit' Investor Return to Riskier Assets
July 12 2016 - 12:06PM
Dow Jones News
By Akane Otani
A rally in biotech stocks could be a sign that investors are
becoming more willing to dip into riskier parts of the market
again, some analysts say.
The sector has been losing ground for most of the year. It took
another hit in the days leading up to the U.K. vote to leave the
European Union, as investors dumped risky assets such as stocks
while driving up the prices of havens such as gold, government
bonds and the Swiss franc.
Yet as global markets rebounded from the surprise outcome of the
referendum, with the S&P 500 hitting a record high on Monday,
biotech's gains outpaced those of the broader market.
Between June 23 and Monday's close, the Nasdaq Biotechnology
Index rose 3.2%, surpassing gains made by all but the S&P 500's
utilities shares, which moved up 4.2% over the same time frame. The
S&P 500 rose 1.1%.
"I'm not an aggressive growth investor," said David Klaskin,
chief investment officer at Oak Ridge Investments in Chicago, which
manages $4.3 billion in assets. "But I see these large-cap biotech
stocks as having pretty decent upside at the moment."
To be sure, biotech remains a small and volatile part of the
stock market. Biotech companies have sometimes wiped out half their
value overnight on news of failed clinical trials or rejected
products. And the Nasdaq Biotechnology Index, which tumbled last
fall when politicians scrutinized drug pricing, is still down 20%
for the year.
Biotech's rally suggests investors who had pulled out of riskier
sectors before the U.K. referendum are beginning to feel more at
ease with them again, analysts said. While dividend-heavy utilities
were the best performing S&P 500 sector in the days after the
U.K. vote, consumer discretionary and technology stocks, which tend
to do well when investors believe the economy will grow, have also
been among the biggest gainers in recent sessions.
The shift in leadership among sectors could bode well for
biotech stocks, said Mike King, managing director and senior
biotechnology analyst at JMP Securities. "This group usually does
better with a risk-on mentality, " Mr. King said.
Others say biotech shares have rallied because, unlike certain
swaths of the market, they don't take as much revenue from outside
the U.S. as others. That means they have been somewhat shielded
from the battering more internationally-focused bank, energy and
travel stocks have taken after the U.K. referendum.
Some also question whether biotech's recent resurgence is as
solid as it seems on the surface. The sector is usually driven
higher by mergers and acquisitions, as well as major clinical
breakthroughs, Mr. King said. Neither seems to have occurred in the
past two weeks, he added.
"It smells such as money sloshing around, rather than new
developments in the industry," said Mr. King, who remains bullish
on the sector in the long term.
But for now, biotech investors are enjoying the ride. Biotech
stocks are cheaper than their historical average, a sign to some
analysts that they are ripe for bargains. Biogen was recently
trading at 15 times its past 12 months of earnings, nearly half its
five-year average of 29 times. Gilead was trading at 7.4 times its
past 12 months of earnings, compared with a five-year average of
21.
"Long term, I think the sector is probably looking as good as
any other in the market," Mr. Klaskin said.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 12, 2016 11:51 ET (15:51 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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