Business World

Trump says pharma ‘getting away with murder,’ stocks slide

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NEW YORK — US president-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday said pharmaceut­ical companies are “getting away with murder” in what they charge the government for medicines, and promised that would change, sending drugs stocks sharply lower.

The benchmark S& P 500 index slipped into negative territory after his remarks at a news conference spooked investors. The iShares Nasdaq Biotech dropped 4% at its session low and ended down 3%, its largest daily percentage drop in three months.

“When the president-elect says we’re going to negotiate drug pricing, you have to take that seriously, but at the same this is a complicate­d issue because there’s not going to be clarity on drug pricing reform anytime soon,” said Brad Loncar, manager of the Loncar Cancer Immunother­apy. “When somebody that high profile says something that negative, people do not want to invest in it.”

Trump has blasted other industries for charging the government too much, particular­ly defense companies, but has made only a few public statements about drug pricing since being elected. He briefly mentioned Lockheed Martin Corp., Ford Motor Co., and United Technologi­es Corp. during the news conference and promised a border tax for companies producing products for US consumers outside the United States.

Back in May, then-candidate Trump said Amazon was also “getting away with murder,” referring to taxes in that case. The stock fell as much as 4% in the next few days but is up almost 12% since Trump’s remark.

PHARMA ON EDGE

After his promise to bring down drug spending, the ARCA pharmaceut­ical index gave up as much as 2.6% and ended the day down 1.7%.

The drug industry has been on edge for two years about the potential for more government pressure on pricing after sharp increases in the costs of some life-saving drugs drew scrutiny in the press and among lawmakers. The government is investigat­ing Medicaid and Medicare overspendi­ng on Mylan NV’s allergy treatment EpiPen, for instance.

David Katz, chief investment officer at Matrix Asset Advisors in New York, said negative comments on drug pricing trigger selling both from algorithms and investors who suffered from share drops when Democrat Hillary Clinton campaigned against health care cost increases.

Trump’s campaign platform included allowing the Medicare health care program to negotiate with pharmaceut­ical companies, which the law currently prohibits. He has also discussed making it easier to import drugs at cheaper prices.

“We are going to start bidding. We are going to save billions of dollars over time,” Trump said.

Medicare, which covers more than 55 million elderly or disabled Americans, spent $325 billion on medicines in 2015.

Industry trade group Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America, or PhRMA President Stephen Ubl said “Medicines are purchased in a competitiv­e marketplac­e where large, sophistica­ted purchasers aggressive­ly negotiate lower prices.”

He said the industry is “committed to working with president-elect Trump and Congress to improve American competitiv­eness and protect American jobs.”

Roche Pharmaceut­icals CEO Daniel O’Day said in an interview at a JPMorgan conference in San Francisco that Roche Holding AG focuses on innovation and investing in research.

Price increases over the past several years have been “responsibl­e” and in the range of low to mid single digits, he said.

At the same conference, Mylan CEO Heather Bresch said it was premature to respond to Trump’s comments, when she was asked during an investor presentati­on. She said the industry should look again at how health care is set up as the government repeals the Affordable Care Act.

Trump said he plans to repeal the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, and replace it at about the same time. The news helped shares of hospitals, which are nervous about losing government payments for medical services. It hurt some health insurers, like Anthem, Inc, which sell plans on the government- run health insurance exchanges.

Health care ETFs including the Health Care Select Sector SPDR Fund ( XLV) and the IBB drew their highest trading volume since Nov. 10, in the wake of Trump’s election.

Trading volume in XLV options jumped to 58,248 contracts, more than twice the average daily volume according to Reuters data.

Health care sector stocks were the largest drag on the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100. —

 ??  ?? US PRESIDENT-ELECT Donald Trump argues with CNN’s Jim Acosta during a news conference in the lobby of Trump Tower in Manhattan, New York City, US, Jan. 11.
US PRESIDENT-ELECT Donald Trump argues with CNN’s Jim Acosta during a news conference in the lobby of Trump Tower in Manhattan, New York City, US, Jan. 11.

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