2 Biotech Stocks You Can Buy Hand Over Fist This Month

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Among the qualities a biotech company needs to be successful, being innovative is one of the most important. It’s easy to understand why.

Although drugs and vaccines benefit from patent protection for some time, this will eventually run out, at which point the invention enters the public domain, inviting the challenge of cheaper generics and biosimilars. So, long-term performance requires drugmakers to develop newer products continuously. When looking for biotech stocks to invest in, it’s useful to start by looking at those that seem to have a good track record in this department.

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Let’s consider two examples: Vertex Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: VRTX) and Moderna (NASDAQ: MRNA). Here’s why these biotechs are worth investing in this month.

Vertex Pharmaceuticals is at an inflection point of sorts. The company has been a terrific performer over the past decade due to its work in the market for drugs that treat the underlying causes of cystic fibrosis (CF), a rare disease that affects patients’ organs. Plenty of drugmakers have tried but failed (so far) to develop competing medicines, which speaks volumes about Vertex’s innovative abilities.

However, the biotech is expanding its lineup well beyond its core area of expertise. It’s not because its CF franchise is running out of steam. In the third quarter, the company’s revenue of $2.77 billion increased by 12% year over year, a strong performance for a biotech giant. The company’s best CF treatment yet, Trikafta, accounted for almost all its sales.

So, things are going well in that department for Vertex, and they are about to improve. The company is awaiting approval for a next-gen CF therapy that can be taken once daily (Trikafta is taken twice daily). About 20,000 CF patients out of 92,000 where Vertex operates are eligible for its current medicines, but have yet to start treatment. So, this franchise will remain a key growth driver.

Elsewhere, Vertex will earn new approvals. In fact, it has already done so. Last year, it got the nod for Casgevy, a gene-editing treatment for two rare blood disorders: transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease. Gene-editing therapies are complex to administer. That’s why Casgevy isn’t yet contributing to Vertex’s results, but it will eventually.

The company is also awaiting approval for suzetrigine in treating acute pain. Many current pain treatments come with severe potential side effects. That’s the problem Vertex Pharmaceuticals is trying to solve. Further, its phase 3 pipeline features an investigational medicine for APOL-1 mediated kidney disease called inaxaplin, and another for IgA nephropathy called povetacicept.

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