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FinanceValeant

Here’s Why Shares of Valeant are Soaring

Lucinda Shen
By
Lucinda Shen
Lucinda Shen
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Lucinda Shen
By
Lucinda Shen
Lucinda Shen
Down Arrow Button Icon
August 17, 2016, 11:44 AM ET
Photograph by Bloomberg via Getty Images

Shares of beleaguered pharmaceutical Valeant jumped 10% Wednesday after a team of Morgan Stanley analysts upgraded the stock.

“Management appears to be implementing sound initiatives, improving business practices, enhancing financial performance, and reducing debt burdens,” lead analyst David Risinger wrote. “Although Valeant stock has been highly controversial, the company sells compelling products which are in demand, including key franchises such as Bausch and Lomb and dermatology.”

Morgan upgraded the stock from the equivalent of “hold” to “buy,” and pushed up its 12-month price target to $42 a share—a 43% upside from the stock’s current price.

The investment banking giant’s upgrade injects some more confidence into Valeant’s reorganization plans, which the company announced Aug. 9, sending shares up 25%, despite second-quarter earnings that missed Wall Street expectations.

CEO Joe Papa said he intended to wash Valeant’s hands clean of the accounting and drug pricing scandals that have plagued it. The plan included axing Valeant’s top lawyer and head of public relations.

Papa’s assurances lost some weight however when reports emerged two days later that the company was still under criminal investigation for potential insurance fraud related to its ties to specialty pharmaceutical Philidor—which erased all of the stock’s recent gains.

Morgan Stanley pointed to Valeant’s U.S. Business performance, Xifanxan growth trends, the success of Walgreen’s dermatology partnership, and the FDA’s recommendation of brodalumab for treatment of plaque psoriasis, as reasons for investors to be bullish.

Morgan first downgraded the stock to “hold” in October, after Valeant’s price gouging practices fell under public and government scrutiny. Short seller Andrew Left of Citron Research later brought attention to Valeant’s questionable accounting practices in relation to Philidor.

About the Author
Lucinda Shen
By Lucinda Shen
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