1 Beaten-Down Stock That Could Soar by 50% in 2025, According to Wall Street

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Biotech giant Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: REGN) started 2024 on a strong note and performed well through the first half of the year. However, the drugmaker has since seen its shares decline substantially due to several factors, most notably headwinds related to one of its key growth drivers (more on that later).

Still, many analysts on Wall Street think the correction is way overdone. Regeneron’s stock could soar by 50% in the next year from its current levels if we go by its average price target of $1,053 (according to Yahoo! Finance). Should investors rush to buy Regeneron’s shares?

Regeneron has largely relied on two main products to drive top-line growth in recent years. One is Dupixent, an eczema treatment whose rights it shares with Sanofi, based in France. The other is Eylea, a medicine for wet age-related macular degeneration (an eye disease) that it comarkets with Bayer.

However, Eylea has been facing serious issues in the past two years. It first dealt with stiff competition from Roche‘s Vabysmo. Regeneron did find a solution, at least somewhat, for Vabysmo’s challenge. It developed a high-dose formulation of Eylea that helped decrease the number of annual injections, one of Vabysmo’s key selling points.

But Regeneron is now dealing with biosimilar competition for the original Eylea. Amgen recently won a ruling allowing it to launch its biosimilar version of Eylea, Pavblu, while the two entities continue their patent battle in courts. Regeneron still generated strong financial results in the third quarter. Its revenue increased by 11% year over year to $3.72 billion. Combined U.S. sales of Eylea and Eylea HD came in at $1.54 billion, 3% higher than the year-ago period. But Eylea HD accounted for just $392 million of that total.

Having to deal with fewer injections per year is great, but a much lower price — which is what Pavblu will offer as a biosimilar — is also an excellent selling point. So, Regeneron’s Eylea-related sales and total revenue could start moving in the wrong direction because of this problem.

Thankfully, Regeneron’s other growth driver, Dupixent, is doing fine. In the third quarter, the medicine’s total worldwide revenue, recorded by Sanofi, increased by 23% year over year to $3.82 billion. In September, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gave the green light to Dupixent in treating COPD, an indication that could add several billion dollars in annual sales to the therapy. So, Dupixent should continue its upward path next year. It might even grow its sales faster since the COPD indication in the U.S. is still so fresh.

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