The Columbus Dispatch

Billions at stake with virus boosters

Wall Street monitors Moderna, Pfizer futures

- Tom Murphy

Billions more in profits are at stake for some vaccine makers as the U.S. moves toward dispensing COVID-19 booster shots to shore up Americans’ protection against the virus.

How much the manufactur­ers stand to gain depends on how big the rollout proves to be.

U.S. health officials late on Thursday endorsed booster shots of the Pfizer vaccine for all Americans 65 and older – along with tens of millions of younger people who are at higher risk from the coronaviru­s because of health conditions or their jobs.

Officials described the move as a first step. Boosters will likely be offered even more broadly in the coming weeks or months, including boosters of vaccines made by Moderna and Johnson & Johnson. That, plus continued growth in initial vaccinatio­ns, could mean a huge gain in sales and profits for Pfizer and Moderna in particular.

“The opportunit­y quite frankly is reflective of the billions of people around the world who would need a vaccinatio­n and a boost,” Jefferies analyst Michael Yee said.

Wall Street is taking notice. The average forecast among analysts for Moderna’s 2022 revenue has jumped 35% since President Joe Biden laid out his booster plan in mid-august.

Most of the vaccinatio­ns in the U.S. have come from Pfizer, which developed its shot with Germany’s Biontech, and Moderna. They have inoculated about 99 million and 68 million people, respective­ly. Johnson & Johnson is third with about 14 million people.

No one knows yet how many people will get the extra shots. But Morningsta­r analyst Karen Andersen said she expects boosters alone to bring in about $26 billion in global sales next year for Pfizer and Biontech and about $14 billion for Moderna if they are endorsed for nearly all Americans.

Those companies also might gain business from people who got other vaccines initially. In Britain, which plans to offer boosters to everyone over 50 and other vulnerable people, an expert panel has recommende­d that Pfizer’s shot be the primary choice, with Moderna as the alternativ­e.

Andersen said she expects Moderna, which has no other products on the market, to generate a roughly $13 billion profit next year from all COVID-19 vaccine sales if boosters are broadly authorized.

Potential vaccine profits are harder to estimate for Pfizer, but company executives have said they expect their pretax adjusted profit margin from the vaccine to be in the “high 20s” as a percentage of revenue. That would translate to a profit of about $7 billion next year just from boosters, based on Andersen’s sales prediction.

J&J and Europe’s Astrazenec­a have said they don’t intend to profit from their COVID-19 vaccines during the pandemic.

For Pfizer and Moderna, the boosters could be more profitable than the original doses because they won’t come with the research and developmen­t costs the companies incurred to get the vaccines on the market in the first place.

WBB Securities CEO Steve Brozak said the booster shots will represent “almost pure profit” compared with the initial doses.

Drugmakers aren’t the only businesses that could see a windfall from delivering boosters. Drugstore chains CVS Health and Walgreens could bring in more than $800 million each in revenue, according to Jeff Jonas, a portfolio manager with Gabelli Funds.

Jonas noted that the drugstores might not face competitio­n from mass vaccinatio­n clinics this time around, and the chains are diligent about collecting customer contact informatio­n. That makes it easy to invite people back for boosters.

Drugmakers are also developing COVID-19 shots that target certain variants of the virus, and suggested people might need annual shots like the ones they receive for the flu. All of that could make the vaccines a major recurring source of revenue.

The COVID-19 vaccines have done much better than their predecesso­rs.

Pfizer said in July it expects revenue from its COVID-19 vaccine to reach $33.5 billion this year, an estimate that could change depending on the impact of boosters or the possible expansion of shots to elementary school children.

That would be more than five times the $5.8 billion racked up last year by the world’s most lucrative vaccine – Pfizer’s Prevnar13, which protects against pneumococc­al disease.

It also would dwarf the $19.8 billion brought in last year by Abbvie’s rheumatoid arthritis treatment Humira, widely regarded as the world’s top-selling drug.

This bodes well for future vaccine developmen­t, noted Erik Gordon, a business professor at the University of Michigan.

Vaccines usually are nowhere near as profitable as treatments, Gordon said. But the success of the COVID-19 shots could draw more drugmakers and venture capitalist­s into the field.

“The vaccine business is more attractive, which, for those of us who are going to need vaccines, is good,” Gordon said.

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsibl­e for all content.

“The opportunit­y quite frankly is reflective of the billions of people around the world who would need a vaccinatio­n and a boost.”

Michael Yee, Jefferies analyst

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP ?? Billions more in profits are at stake for vaccine makers Moderna and Pfizer as the U.S. moves toward dispensing COVID-19 booster shots.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP Billions more in profits are at stake for vaccine makers Moderna and Pfizer as the U.S. moves toward dispensing COVID-19 booster shots.

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