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How to Avoid Risky Biotech Stocks: Picks and Shovels Companies - YouTube
Channel: The Motley Fool
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Shannon Jones: Let's talk about our third
and final way to play it safe when it comes
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to biotechs, Brian, and that's
with picks and shovels providers.
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Brian, what in the world
is a pick and shovel?
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Brian Feroldi: That's a that's a fun investor
way of saying, if you want to play a trend,
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one of the safer ways to do it is
to buy the suppliers to that industry.
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Let me give you an example. There's a
company called West Pharmaceutical Services.
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What they do is, they're a leading provider
of components and systems that make drugs injectable.
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They provide vials, syringes, pens, stoppers,
safety devices on the actual drugs themselves.
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If you have a thesis that the number of drugs
that are available are going to grow and the
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number of people using them is going to grow,
that naturally leads to more demand for the
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injectable products, the actual things that get the drug
into your body -- the vials themselves, the packaging.
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All of those things are actually
handled by West Pharmaceutical.
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These guys are one of the
top-tier suppliers to the industry.
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In fact, about the top 75 biotech injectable
products on the market actually come from West.
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This is a company that has no risk
of any particular drug not going well.
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They're a steady-eddy business, and they've
produced fantastic returns for shareholders
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over the last 10 years.
They're actually up about 520%.
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That's a return that just smashes the index.
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Jones: That's incredible returns
for a company you don't hear a lot about.
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I did some research, this company has actually been
around since the 1920s, which is very surprising to me.
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When you're in the position of being a biopharma
company, you want that long-term expertise,
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that experience on the regulatory front, and even more
so when it comes to the delivery components.
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Sometimes, getting that right -- both from
a manufacturing and a compliance and regulatory
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perspective -- is just as important as getting
the drug itself through to approval.
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So, this company in particular,
don't see it going away anytime soon.
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They supply pharmaceutical companies,
they supply the biotech companies, even generic
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medical device companies,
as well. They're massive.
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They've got over 50 locations,
28 facilities across the globe.
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This is one I鈥檓 certainly
going to be watching, Brian.
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Let's talk about the second picks and
shovels play on your list, a company that I
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pretty much consider a good
Fool favorite around here.
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Feroldi: Veeva Systems should be a name that
sounds familiar to a lot of longtime listeners.
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This a company that provides cloud-based software
that's specifically made for the life sciences industry.
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Veeva Systems provides software that helps
companies to manage their clinical trial data,
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manage customer relationships before and after
the sale, can help with regulatory compliance.
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This a company that has taken an extreme niche
focus on the life science industry.
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Because of that, because of their tailored
needs, they've really made a name for themselves.
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In fact, today, they currently boast more
than 600 customers, which includes some of
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the biggest names in the industry, like GlaxoSmithKline,
AstraZeneca, Biogen, Lilly, Novartis, etc.
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All of them rely on Veeva Systems' tools to
help them with the clinical trial process.
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Because of their niche focus, and because
they've been able to grow so rapidly in the industry,
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this a company that's
put up great returns for investors.
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They just IPO-ed in 2014, so we don't have
an incredible amount of data to look at,
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but investors who got in at the IPO are already
up 177% because this company is growing so rapidly.
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Jones: Another thing I love
about the Veeva story is the CEO.
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He was actually a former
executive from Salesforce.
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He recognized that for the pharmaceutical
industry, they didn't have a cloud-based offering
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that could fit the needs
of the industry itself.
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So, there you have it, here comes Veeva.
Veeva has a number of different products.
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In particular, they started off with a CRM,
customer relationship management, tool built
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for big pharma specifically.
But really, the big money maker has been Veeva Vault.
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That's helping companies manage all of the
data that's needed to track and analyze clinical trials.
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What I love about the Veeva platform is that with
all these multiple products, they're all connected.
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As you're a biopharma company,
you've got really high switching costs to come off of
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that one platform to go to another.
I love the fact that they've got such a wide moat here.
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I think Veeva in and of itself is in a league
of its own, and it's even expanding beyond biopharma.
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It's working now with companies in the consumer goods
industry, manufacturing, even the chemical industry.
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Huge, huge growth ahead for Veeva.
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Brian, let's turn our attention to the last picks
and shovels play, one that I had not followed as much.
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But after doing some digging,
this one certainly piqued my interest.
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Feroldi: The final company today
is called Repligen. Its ticker is RGEN.
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These guys make proteins
and filtration technology
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that enable the drugs themselves
to actually be manufactured.
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When you're making a drug,
you need active ingredients.
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Repligen helps drug companies to actually
make the equipment and provides the proteins
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that go into the drugs themselves.
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These guys have literally a 95% market share
in making proteins that are used to make vaccines
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and are used in gene therapy.
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They've grown right alongside with the
general demand in the biotech market.
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In fact, this one of the
best-performing stocks over the last decade.
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Their stock is up 1,320%
over the last 10 years.
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Again, because they don't care specifically
about any particular drug making it through,
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and because they're very well-diversified
amongst a lot of customers, they can ride
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the general wave of growth in biotech.
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Jones: Absolutely.
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When you consider that the equipment that
they make is needed to purify biologics, and
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just how crucial that is -- if you think
about it, biologics themselves are products
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that are made from living cells.
They're very large, very complex.
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After they're produced, though,
you have to purify the product.
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This is really where Repligen stands out
in terms of lowering the cost.
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Purification in and of itself is a very cost-intensive
step, and one of the riskiest, too, when it
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comes to biologics manufacturing.
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Speaking of biologics, there are currently
over 1,000 biologics been studied for development.
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The growth runway on this stock
is tremendous. That's across the globe.
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Also, interestingly enough, oncology is actually
the leading therapeutic area with the maximum
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number of biologics
under development right now.
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A lot to watch here on this particular company,
especially as biologics are expected to hit
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over $300 billion by next year.
It's a massive market.
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All in all, Repligen is a great way for investors to ride the
wave safely when it comes to biologics development,
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both on the development front
and post-commercialization.
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