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Pfizer IncPFEDON'T BUYApr 11, 2013Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 11, 2026. Market Open.
Pharma companies today are divided into the haves and have-nots. Eli Lilly and Vertex are in the 'haves' group. He owns Eli Lilly which could be the biggest of the Pharmas. Also Vertex looks good and has a new Cystic Fibrosis drug. Pfizer has little growth and the stock is under pressure. It pays a high dividend but offers no real dividend growth, He prefers lower paying dividend companies with significant dividend growth ahead rather than companies that pay high dividends now. With this theme in mind The ETF, RDVY, holds companies with the ability to grow dividends. His view is that it is a reflating world and that rates could go up more in the next cycle.
Bought it last year for the 5.9% yield, but with Covid over (and vaccine sales gone), they have nothing. Shares have fallen in the past year. There was disappointment last year, but their obesity pill trial disappointed. Shares are washed out here. There are no expectations, though their drug pipeline is okay.
Down 43% in 2023 and one of the S&P's dogs, falling sharply after Covid. Pfizer keeps facing patent cliffs for its drugs and hitting profit shortfalls. A comeback is possible, but election years made drugmakers targets. Pays a 5.6% dividend and their Seagen deal which could add an excellent cancer franchise.
A contrarian call. They failed to get into the weight-loss drag boom, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. Them buying Seagen will diversify their business by getting the more into oncology which offers strong growth, more sustainable than weight-loss drugs. Offers good long-term growth for 3-5 years.
(Analysts’ price target is $39.58)
What would you think about moving profits from this company into Microsoft (MSFT-Q)? Microsoft had a few downgrades as some of the PC numbers that came out were very dour. We should be very careful with PC companies and anything associated with them. However, he hasn’t been a fan of pharmaceuticals for some time. He sees a leaky boat that is leaking a little less than it was. A year ago, $36 billion of patented product went generic and about $18 billion this year. Lost 71% off their Lipitor product. Doing a good job with bringing on new drugs but earnings are coming from cost cutting.