3 Top Biotech Stocks to Buy Right Now

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Investing in biotech stocks can be risky because clinical trial failures can lead to eye-popping drops in share prices. Nevertheless, the potential to benefit from revolutionary new medicines can make owning biotech stocks in a diversified portfolio smart. If you're hunting for new biotech stocks to buy, these three Motley Fool investors think you should consider Ligand Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: LGND), Viking Therapeutics (NASDAQ: VKTX), and Amarin Corporation (NASDAQ: AMRN). Each of these companies has catalysts that could make now a good time to pick up shares.

A better business model

Brian Feroldi (Ligand Pharmaceuticals): One way that biotech investors can lower their risk profile is by only investing in companies that have already reached profitability. While these companies are few and far between, there are a handful of biotechs out there that have already achieved this important milestone.

A professionally dressed man pointing at a thumbs-up symbol displayed in the foreground.
A professionally dressed man pointing at a thumbs-up symbol displayed in the foreground.

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Ligand Pharmaceuticals is one such business. The company has generated consistent profits since 2013 and looks poised to continue to do so for the foreseeable future.

Ligand has successfully crossed into the black because it has adopted a business model that is differentiated from most biotechnology companies. Ligand focuses its research dollars on developing technologies and products that help other drug companies discover and develop new compounds. The company then licenses its technology out to its partners and receives milestone payments along the way. Better yet, Ligand earns royalty payments when any of its partnered programs cross the finish line.

This unique approach to drug development is highly appealing for a few reasons. First, Ligand is easily able to spread its risk out over dozens of programs at the same time (the company's technology is currently being used in more than 165 programs). Second, the company doesn't have to deal with the hassle of running the clinical trials, seeking regulatory approval, or commercializing any successful compounds. Instead, Ligand gets to act as a cash-checking machine whenever its partners' programs progress or hit pay dirt.

Ligand's low-risk approach to drug development has worked out beautifully for investors over the long term:

SPY Chart
SPY Chart

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Moving forward, market watchers expect Ligand's profits to grow in excess of 31% annually over the next five years. While the stock isn't particularly cheap right now -- shares are trading hands for about 39 times next year's earnings estimates -- I still think that right now is a fine time for biotech investors to give this innovative business a hard look.