Wall St. is hot for cold storage
Investors take note of specialty packers and shippers
As the pandemic raged in March, some C OVID -19 patients in Milan were going into septic shock, and their blood pressure was perilously low.
A California drug company wanted to ship emergency medication to those patients, but commercial flights to Italy had been drastically scaled back. So it called PCI Pharma Services, a Philadelphia company that specializes in packaging and shipping drugs around the world. It took nearly a week, but PCI secured permits and arranged for courier jets, drivers and trains to deliver the drugs to Milan.
“That day when the drug arrived, six people were saved,” said Salim Haffar, PCI’s chief executive.
As countries prepare to distribute hundreds of millions of COVID-19 vaccines — some of which require storage as cold as the South Pole in winter and meticulous handling — the highly specialized operations of companies like PCI Pharma are in heavy demand.
And Wall Street, which likes nothing better than a hot trade with the potential for big profits, is rushing to grab a piece of the action.
Investors were already snapping up shares of vaccine-makers like Moderna and Pfizer, whose vaccine, developed with BioNTech, was introduced in the United States on Monday and requires an exceptionally low storage temperature of minus-94 degrees Fahrenheit.
FedEx and UPS, whose shares have already risen this year as the pandemic forced millions to rely on online shopping, could benefit further from their roles in vaccine delivery.
But in recent months, private equity firms and wealthy individual investors have also been seizing on smaller companies like PCI Pharma, whose cold-storage operations will play a crucial role in delivering COVID vaccines to the public. Until recently, the temperature-controlled storage and shipping of pharmaceutical products, known as the “cold chain,” was a relatively sleepy corner of the health care industry. The companies getting attention from Wall Street are notable for howniche their operations are.
Many use an elaborate network of freezers and specialized trucks and aircraft to move temperature-sensitive materials — such as blood, stem cells and tissue — around the world without compromising their efficacy. It’s a delicate process, because a product can go from vital to useless within minutes of being removed from cold storage.
Potential investors are calling Stirling Ultracold, whose freezer equipment is powering UPS ’“freezer farms” in Louisville, Kentucky, and the Netherlands, where vaccines will be stored.