Business Standard

Investors cheerWockh­ardt on revival hopes

Stock has gained 41% in 2017, the third best performer among pharma firms

- ANEESH PHADNIS More on business-standard.com

Wockhardt’s regulatory hassles are far from over but its stock has been the third best performer among pure-play pharmaceut­ical companies in the past 12 months, on signs of business recovery.

Cost-saving measures have helped the drugmaker minimise losses and the company is now evaluating an overseas bond issue to pre-pay a portion of its ~35-billion debt and fund research and developmen­t programmes. The Wockhardt stock gained 41 per cent in calendar year 2017 when the BSE health care index remained flat.

While almost all the major pharmaceut­ical companies have been impacted due to quality issues, Wockhardt has been hit the hardest as three of its plants are under an US Food and Drug Administra­tion import alert. The drugmaker lost over ~20 billion of sales from the US market over the past four years. Events such as Brexit (the company earns around 35 per cent of its revenue from the UK), demonetisa­tion and roll out of the goods and services tax (GST) added to its woes.

But now there are nascent signs of a recovery. The company’s sales grew 15 per cent quarter-on-quarter to ~10.22 billion in Q2FY18. Loss before tax and exceptiona­l items reduced to ~280 million in Q2FY18 from ~1,210 million in the previous quarter.

“So what you are seeing in the P&L (profit & loss) statement is probably the rock bottom and from here every dollar that we add in incrementa­l sales will contribute straight to Ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on),” said Manas Datta, group chief financial officer, Wockhardt.

Wockhardt’s novel antibiotic­s developmen­t programme which promises to be a multi-billlion dollar opportunit­y remains on track and its molecules are undergoing abridged Phase III clinical trials.

While the company expects to launch at least one novel drug (WCK5222) in FY21, new product launches and site transfers of products is aiding revenue growth in the current fiscal year. With three of its plants facing an import ban from the US drug regulator, Wockhardt decided to transfer the production of over 15 existing products to a third-party site. Two of them have received approval. Also, five new products filed from other sites have received approval for sales in the US.

Cost optimisati­on is yielding results too. “We have undertaken various cost optimisati­on initiative­s that have started giving results, be it in power and fuel or in administra­tive costs. Going forward this would continue to add to the bottom line,” Datta said.

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