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Amgen Rises Almost 22% YTD: Should You Buy, Hold or Sell the Stock?

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Amgen’s AMGN stock has risen 21.7% so far this year compared with an increase of 7% for the industry.

AMGN Stock Performance

Zacks Investment Research
Zacks Investment Research

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Amgen’s stock has been rising consistently, with corrections in between due to pipeline setbacks. Amgen’s key medicines, like Evenity and Repatha, newer medicines like Tavneos and Tezspire and rare disease drugs, mostly products added from the Horizon acquisition, are driving sales. Its total revenues rose 19% in 2024 to $33.4 billion. Amgen expects key drugs like Repatha, Evenity, Tezspire and oncology and rare disease drugs, as well as biosimilars to drive top-line growth in 2025.

Amgen also has some key pipeline assets in obesity and inflammation, which have a large market opportunity.

However, increased pricing headwinds and competitive pressure are hurting sales of many products. Weakness in some key brands, like Otezla and Lumakras, creates potential revenue headwinds. Sales of best-selling drugs, Prolia and Xgeva, are expected to decline in 2025 due to biosimilar competition.

Let’s understand these factors in detail to better analyze how to play the stock.

Key Drugs Driving AMGN’s Top Line

Amgen is seeing declining revenues from oncology biosimilars and some legacy established products like Enbrel. Pricing headwinds and competitive pressure are hurting sales of many products. Sales of some key brands, like Otezla and Lumakras, have been lukewarm. However, revenues from key older medicines like Prolia, Repatha and Blincyto and new drugs like Tavneos and Tezspire are driving the top line. Rare disease drugs like Tepezza, Krystexxa and Uplizna, added from last year’s acquisition of Horizon Therapeutics, are also boosting top-line growth.

Amgen is also evaluating Kyprolis, Otezla, Nplate, Repatha, Lumakras, Tezspire, Uplizna and Blincyto for additional indications. Approval for expanded use of these drugs can potentially drive further top-line growth. Amgen plans to file regulatory applications for Uplizna in myasthenia gravis in the first half of 2025, while an application for IgG4-related disease is under priority review, with the FDA decision expected on April 3, 2025.

AMGN’s Interesting Pipeline

Amgen has invested several billion dollars in M&A deals over the last decade, which has bolstered its product portfolio and diversified its pipeline.

Amgen is developing MariTide, a GIPR/GLP-1 receptor, as a single dose in a convenient autoinjector device with a monthly and maybe less frequent dosing. This key feature differentiates it from Eli Lilly’s LLY and Novo Nordisk’s NVO popular GLP-1-based obesity drugs, Zepbound and Wegovy, which are weekly injections.