2 Biotech Stocks to Buy Hand Over Fist in December

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The biotech industry has lagged the broader market so far in 2024. The SPDR S&P Biotech ETF, an industry benchmark, is up 9% this year compared to 28% for the S&P 500. Will that trend continue in 2025? It’s hard to say, but many individual biotech stocks still look like solid long-term picks.

That includes CRISPR Therapeutics (NASDAQ: CRSP) and Exelixis (NASDAQ: EXEL). The former is well in the red for the year, while the latter has crushed the broader market this year. Despite moving in opposite directions in 2024, CRISPR Therapeutics and Exelixis have strong prospects. Read on to learn more.

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CRISPR Therapeutics is a gene-editing specialist with a major claim to fame: It created Casgevy, the first approved medicine that uses the Nobel prize-winning CRISPR technique. The company developed this therapy with the help of Vertex Pharmaceuticals.

Casgevy’s first approval came down in November 2023, but CRISPR Therapeutics’ shares have underperformed the market since. What gives? First, Casgevy has yet to contribute a single dollar in sales to the biotech due to the complexity of administering gene editing therapies. Second, CRISPR Therapeutics remains unprofitable.

That’s not unusual for a biotech company of this size, but investors have been less forgiving of unprofitable companies in recent years. Despite these issues, CRISPR Therapeutics looks like an attractive stock.

Consider Casgevy’s potential. The medicine treats two rare blood-related disorders: transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia (TDT) and sickle cell disease (SCD). There are few treatment options for either. CRISPR Therapeutics has little competition to speak of in the U.S. and virtually none in other regions such as Europe, Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain. Their target market is about 58,000 patients.

Assuming they can treat 20,000 patients at an average price of $1.5 million, it could be a $30 billion opportunity. Casgevy will cost $2.2 million in the U.S., but we don’t know its price tag in other countries. At any rate, the medicine has massive potential even before we consider potential label expansions. And it could just be the beginning for CRISPR Therapeutics.

Despite Casgevy’s slow uptake, the biotech isn’t lacking in funds, thanks to its partnership with Vertex Pharmaceuticals. CRISPR Therapeutics ended the third quarter with $1.9 billion in cash and equivalents and several exciting phase 1 and phase 2 gene editing candidates.

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