3 Pharma Stocks to Sell in August Before They Crash and Burn

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With pharmaceutical companies, it’s all about the pipeline of new medications. Drugmakers, and their pharma stocks, are judged based on sales of current medications and potential sales of future prescriptions. Analysts and investors alike are always on the lookout for the next blockbuster drug. This helps to explain why the stocks of pharmaceutical companies with weight-loss medications in their pipeline have gone through the roof this year. Wall Street sees weight loss drugs as the next frontier in medicine with billions of dollars of profits on tap.

In general, the pharmaceutical industry continues to thrive as we spend more, not less, on medications. Global sales of prescription drugs are expected to reach $1.5 trillion this year, according to industry magazine World Pharma Today. Sales are widely expected to continue accelerating for the foreseeable future as consumers shell out money for not only lifesaving medications but also lifestyle drugs. Weight-loss medications are just the latest example of how society is turning to pharmaceutical manufacturers for solutions. However, not all drugmakers are doing well. Many pharma companies are underperforming, big time. Here are three pharma stocks to sell in August before they crash and burn.

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AbbVie (ABBV)

Closeup of AbbVie (ABBV) building corporate office, an American biopharmaceutical company with its headquarters in Lake Bluff, Illinois, USA
Closeup of AbbVie (ABBV) building corporate office, an American biopharmaceutical company with its headquarters in Lake Bluff, Illinois, USA

Source: Valeriya Zankovych / Shutterstock.com

AbbVie (NYSE:ABBV) has been sold by a lot of investors since earlier this year when the company lost its exclusive patent protection on bestselling drug Humira that is used to treat inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis and psoriasis. Humira sales are tanking at AbbVie, with the company forecasting a 37% year-over-year decline in 2023. That has led to ABBV stock falling 7% so far this year and more declines can be expected. The company has been trying to entice stockholders to stick around for its quarterly dividend payment of $1.48 a share, which yields 3.91%. However, many are taking a pass judging by the share price deflation.

AbbVie is not without a drug pipeline, and the company has been focusing more on driving sales of its other mediations, namely Skyrizi for psoriasis treatments and Rinvoq for various autoimmune diseases. Even here, sales have struggled. Rinvoq sales of $686 million in this year’s first quarter missed analyst consensus estimates of $713.7 million, while Skyrizi’s sales of $1.36 billion fell short of Wall Street forecasts of $1.46 billion, according to Refinitiv data. AbbVie lowered its full-year 2023 profit guidance as it struggles to find a replacement for Humira, which was once the world’s top selling medication and a cash cow for the company. ABBV stock is one of our pharma stocks to avoid in August.