ADVERTISEMENT

Teva Surges as Buffett's Investment Stokes Hopes of Recovery

Berkshire disclosed in a filing it had bought about $350 million worth of Teva shares.

Teva Surges as Buffett's Investment Stokes Hopes of Recovery
Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway Inc. chairman and chief executive officer, is seen at the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting news conference in Omaha, Nebraska. (Photographer: Chris Machian/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- Warren Buffett stoked hopes of a transformation at the world’s biggest generic drugmaker as his Berkshire Hathaway Inc. became a top shareholder weeks after pledging to cut soaring U.S. health-care costs.

Shares of the drugmaker, Israel’s troubled Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., surged the most in two months after Berkshire disclosed it had bought about $350 million worth of stock.

Teva is working on a turnaround after getting bruised by the recent slump in U.S. generics prices. It supplies one in six copycat medicines used by Americans, and its ability to develop cheaper copies of complex treatments could play a role in an ambitious effort to lower health-care costs announced last month by Berkshire, Amazon.com Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co.

“Drug costs continue to escalate, Trump is all over prices, and Teva, along with the rest of the generics industry, is part of the solution,” Elliot Wilbur, an analyst at Raymond James & Associates, wrote in a note to clients that sought to describe “the 30,000 ft. view approach that may have led Buffett to Teva.”

Teva Surges as Buffett's Investment Stokes Hopes of Recovery

Teva shares surged as much as 11 percent in Tel Aviv trading. With about 1.9 percent of Teva’s U.S.-traded shares, Berkshire became the tenth-biggest shareholder in the world’s largest manufacturer of generic medicines.

Teva’s bonds jumped on the news. Its 1.3 billion euros ($1.6 billion) of notes due 2023 rose 2.1 cents on the euro to 90.5 cents as of 10:13 a.m. in New York, the biggest ever intraday jump, according to Trace bond price data.

Buffett is buying into Teva at the early stages of its own repair. The Israeli drugmaker took on a mountain of loans in 2016 to bulk up its copycat medicines business as profit margins declined in the U.S., the world’s most lucrative market for pharmaceutical companies. Worse, rival drugmakers began selling cheaper copies of Copaxone, a blockbuster multiple sclerosis injection, dragging profits of Teva’s highest grossing product.

The stock lost nearly half its value in 2016 and the following year again.

Teva’s new Chief Executive Officer Kare Schultz laid out a vast cost-cutting plan in December, halting dividend payments and eliminating 25 percent of the global workforce. He has repeatedly stated that his biggest priority is to curb the company’s $31.4 billion debt pile.

Berkshire hasn’t revealed the reasons why it bought Teva shares. But the fact that it staked money supports the view of those who say that Teva “is taking the right steps to execute on a successful turnaround,” Citigroup Inc. analyst Liav Abraham wrote in an emailed note to clients.

--With assistance from Bradley Olson Catherine Larkin and Molly Smith

To contact the reporter on this story: Yaacov Benmeleh in Tel Aviv at ybenmeleh@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Stefania Bianchi at sbianchi10@bloomberg.net, Eric Pfanner at epfanner1@bloomberg.net, Marthe Fourcade

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.