BioBeat Market Recap: October Summary as of 11/1/17

  • Earnings and top line growth disappoint and Celgene leads biotech sector down.
  • Technicals and momentum weakens. Rotation continues out of healthcare.
  • No help from current political healthcare agenda.
  • My last post was on October 16 when we became concerned about technicals, upcoming earnings and harsh political rhetoric returning to the healthcare sector. We felt that risks were rising and that this was not a time to add new positions or modify our portfolio. This view was confirmed as large cap earnings have not supported current valuations. However Abbvie (ABBV), our top large cap pick has delivered with top line and EPS growth.

    Here are some key market indices in an ongoing 2017 bull market for healthcare and biotech stocks.

    IBB  iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology Index

    Down 0.63% yesterday 1.24% for one month, Up 17.6% YTD, trending down.

    XBI SPDR S&P Biotech  

    Down 1.4% yesterday 4.74% for one month, up 39.3% YTD, trending flat.

    XLV Healthcare SPDR

    XLV up 0.25% yesterday 0.5% for one month, up 17.9% YTD, trending flat.

    Speculation in small caps ebbed slightly: as you can see from the XBI a flattish trend emerged in mid-October. The more speculative IWC  iShares Russell Microcap Index has been weak over the past two weeks hitting a high above $96 in early October and off a tad to the $93 level now. Another new microchip ETF Loncar Cancer Immunotherapy (CNCR) is down 7.2% for the past month.

    Large cap biotech earnings were mixed with a focus on guidance and top line growth which were disappointing. We will summarize earnings in a future post. Two stocks for example that took a hit are Gilead Sciences (GILD) and Merck (MRK). Celgene (CELG) was crushed in October off about 45 points now at $100 after a miss and revised guidance for 2020.

    Over the past two weeks large cap technology stocks as represented by the QQQ, up 28.4% YTD or the XLK up 30% YTD have outperformed large cap biotech ETFS like IBB and funds by more than 10%.