India pharma investors
think small as U.S. compliance woes hit heavyweights
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[December 22, 2015]
By Karen Rebelo and Zeba Siddiqui
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Investors in India's $15
billion pharmaceutical industry are favoring smaller firms with little
or no exposure to the United States, where increasingly tight regulatory
controls have burnt two of the country's biggest drugmakers over the
past month.
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Heavyweight generics makers, led by Sun Pharma and Dr Reddy's
Laboratories, have long been seen as a conservative bet for domestic
and foreign funds eyeing India, as these firms rely on the United
States - the world's biggest pharmaceuticals market - for the bulk
of their revenue.
But investors now say the prospects for these drugmakers are
uncertain after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in November
and December issued warnings over the manufacturing standards at Sun
Pharma and Dr Reddy's, raising doubts about a costly two-year-old
campaign to revamp processes.
Both firms are India's biggest drugmakers by revenue.
"The regulators have really turned up the heat on the sector," said
Jane Andrews, a partner at London-based investment management firm
Smith & Williamson, which recently exited its holding in Sun Pharma.
Even though the FDA has issues several warnings to Indian pharma
firms over the past two years, the latest reprimands sent the BSE
Healthcare index down almost 10 percent in November, its biggest
monthly percentage fall since Oct. 2008. Dr Reddy's and Sun Pharma
lost a combined 45 percent of their value that month.
The warnings also prompted investors to hedge their bets and buy
into smaller pharma firms such as fifth-largest drugmaker Cipla,
Indoco Remedies and Biocon Ltd, which are more focused on India and
other emerging markets and less on the United States, where growth
has been lukewarm because of regulatory issues and slow drug
approvals.
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G Chokkalingam, the founder of Equinomics, a Mumbai-based research
and fund advisory firm, said he now favored stocks in smaller firms
such as Biocon and JB Chemicals, which together make up 5 percent of
his portfolio. Sun Pharma and Dr. Reddy's account for about 0.5
percent.
"If this (regulatory) process is going to take some time, maybe
people would go underweight on these stocks and wait for some more
time, but I don't think anyone will walk away," Chokkalingam said.
"The market is so huge, they can't afford to lose it."
Investors also rushed to subscribe last week to the initial public
offering of Alkem Laboratories Ltd, which gets about three-quarters
of its sales from India. It raised over $200 million after pricing
the offer at the top end of the indicated range.
(Editing by Clara Ferreira Marques and Miral Fahmy)
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