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Topline
In a glimmer of hope for one of this year’s worst-performing stocks, Morgan Stanley analyst Matthew Harrison projected incoming results for one of Moderna’s flu vaccine candidates would likely be a promising development for the firm’s struggling stock, joining a growing crop of experts looking to Moderna’s potential suite of offerings—and not necessarily its Covid-19 vaccine—as a catalyst for growth.
Key Facts
In a Tuesday evening note to clients, Harrison said phase 2 trial data for Moderna’s flu vaccine in the coming weeks would “likely demonstrate non-inferiority and even a trend toward superiority” relative to competing products on the market—an improvement from December results Harrison called “undifferentiated” from biotech firm Sanofi’s flu vaccine.
The bullish reading follows a steep drop for Moderna shares, which fell 4% Wednesday to $138 and have plummeted nearly 42% this year, becoming the S&P 500’s third-worst-performing stock—behind only Etsy (down 43%) and PayPal (down 44%).
Harrison stopped short of recommending investors to buy the stock, instead reiterating a neutral rating, but the firm’s new price target of $213 implies shares could skyrocket about 49% over the next year.
Other analysts are more bullish: In a Friday note, Piper Sandler’s Edward Tenthoff reiterated his $348 price target, a staggering 150% above current prices, after Moderna announced three new vaccine candidates under development—for herpes, the virus that causes Shines and one targeting antigens for cancer.
Tenthoff told investors the success of Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccine has lessened the financial risk associated with developing new vaccines using the same technology and touted the firm’s “broad” development strategy—which other analysts have also pointed to as a source of opportunity.
On Tuesday, Moderna initiated phase three trials for a vaccine targeting the respiratory syncytial virus, which causes a respiratory illness akin to the flu and Covid; the firm also has an HIV vaccine in the works.
Surprising Fact
Moderna has plunged 71.5% from an all-time closing high of $484 on August 9, wiping out more than $140 billion from the firm’s market capitalization, which now stands at less than $56 billion.
Key Background
Founded in 2010, Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Moderna spent nearly a decade developing the technology for its messenger RNA vaccines, which tell the body to produce part of a pathogen to trigger an immune response (unlike traditional vaccines that instead use a piece of the pathogen). Once the pandemic hit, the company doubled down on the effort and in November 2020 filed for an emergency use authorization for its Covid-19 vaccine. The shots have proven to be a massive boon for businesses heading up their development, but Moderna shares have struggled in recent months as critics increasingly question whether or not sales of Covid-19 vaccines alone will prove a viable revenue stream in years to come.
What To Watch For
Moderna is slated to release its fourth-quarter earnings Thursday morning. Analysts expect the Massachusetts-based firm will likely report its first quarterly profit ever and revenue of $6.8 billion, up 1,090% from one year prior.
Big Number
$5 billion. That’s nearly how much third-quarter revenue Moderna reported in November, falling notably short of average analyst projections calling for $6.2 billion.
Further Reading
Moderna Stock Crash: Losses Top $140 Billion As Insiders Sell Millions Of Dollars In Shares (Forbes)
Moderna Stock Crash Intensifies: Losses Top $130 Billion (Forbes)
Pfizer Triggers $28 Billion Stock Plunge After Warning Covid Vaccine Sales May Disappoint This Year (Forbes)
Financial Services