New GSK, the pharma business to be separated from its consumer
product operations next year, will cut dividend payouts and shift
some debt to the consumer unit, leaving scope for investments to
revive its sluggish stock market performance.
GSK's share price has fallen 14% over the past 12 months versus a 5%
rise in the STOXX Europe 600 Health Care index, hit by a lack of
fast-growing products and as patients deferred treatments due to the
coronavirus pandemic.
The company is the world's largest vaccine maker by sales, but has
fallen behind rivals such as AstraZeneca in the race to develop a
shot against the coronavirus.
Luke Miels, chief commercial officer at GSK, told Reuters that the
market was underestimating the company's value "both in terms of our
growth prospects with the products that we have in the market now,
and also our (drug development) pipeline".
The company said in April it was looking at partnerships and deals
with drug and vaccine developers, particularly in immunology and
genetics.
Miels said key trial read-outs are due over the next two years,
though it will take longer to see results from a more fundamental
upgrade of research and development (R&D), gunning for therapy
breakthroughs rather than incremental improvement.
"I think what we need to do is to give (investors) more confidence
on commercial execution and give them more confidence on the quality
of the assets in the pipeline," said Miels.
GSK's track record this year has been sobering. In oncology,
compounds bintrafusp alfa and feladilimab, previously touted as
potential billion-sellers, fell through in trials.
The loss of patent exclusivity on HIV drug dolutegravir looms at the
end of 2027, with about 3 billion pounds in annual sales expected to
vanish.
"Given the recent failures in the mid-stage pipeline...
supplementing the internal R&D pipeline via additional
collaborations or acquisitions makes strategic sense," Berenberg
analysts wrote in a note.
ONE BECOMES TWO
Expectation around the investor day has grown since a report in
April that activist investor Elliott Management has taken a large
stake in GSK. There has also been speculation about the future of
Emma Walmsley, chief executive since 2017 and former head of the
consumer products division.
[to top of second column] |
GSK, whose consumer products
include brands such as Sensodyne toothpaste,
Advil pain killers and Nicorette gum, has a
market valuation of more than 70 billion pounds
($97 billion), and a separately listed pharma
business would be expected to be one of
Britain's bigger companies in its own right.
Analysts say the separation of the consumer
products division, a joint venture with U.S.
pharmaceuticals group Pfizer, could take the
form of an initial public offering, with
proceeds going to the innovative pharma
business. GSK has said the
consumer products business will take on net debt worth 3.5 to 4
times its annual adjusted earnings before interest, taxes,
depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA). That is up from 2 times for
all of GSK currently.
The pharma business in turn will have lower debt.
"Post-separation, the balance sheet will be in a stronger position
to execute on larger transactions should the opportunity or need
arise," said Louise Pearson, an analyst at brokerage Redburn.
To give itself even more financial wiggle room, GSK has flagged
dividends will be cut from next year, with analysts projecting a
reduction to about 40% of earnings, down from more than 80% this
year.
"Continued investment in the pipeline ahead of (the 2022 split) is
anticipated as management must convince the market that the
Pharmaceuticals business can live without Consumer Healthcare,"
Berenberg said.
Much will ride on trial results expected this year and next,
including for a combination therapy with cancer drug Blenrep, for
experimental anaemia treatment daprodustat to ease chronic kidney
disease, and for novel antibiotic gepotidacin against urinary tract
infections.
"Hopefully over the next couple of years the changes in R&D will be
more visible and reflected in the share price," said Miels.
($1 = 0.7231 pounds)
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger; Editing by Keith Weir and Jan Harvey)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content
|