Is Galapagos NV a Buy Now?

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Galapagos NV (NASDAQ: GLPG) fell out of favor with a lot of investors after AbbVie (NYSE: ABBV) walked away from an important collaboration three years ago. Now that it looks like the discarded candidate could climb to the top of its class, though; the stock is more popular than ever.

Does a clinical-trial success with an experimental drug make Galapagos a buy now? Let's look at the case for and against the stock to find out.

Person looking at a lot of question marks.
Person looking at a lot of question marks.

Image source: Getty Images.

Filgotinib is on fire

Three years ago, AbbVie dumped Galapagos NV's filgotinib for another JAK inhibitor that looked a lot prettier at the time. AbbVie's upadacitinib appeared as effective if not better in mid-stage testing, and it was much farther along on the clinical development timeline. To top it off, AbbVie won't have to share revenue with Galapagos if upadacitinib's upcoming application for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) earns FDA approval.

Unburdened by a robust pipeline of its own, Gilead Sciences (NASDAQ: GILD) was eager to give Galapagos $300 million in cash and a $425 million equity investment for rights to filgotinib after AbbVie walked away. If the treatment earns approvals, Galapagos is also eligible to receive tiered royalties of 20% and higher from Gilead.

AbbVie's leading RA injection, Humira, is on pace to achieve $20 billion in sales this year, even though it just isn't an option for many RA patients. As an easy-to-swallow alternative to Humira, filgotinib has a shot at becoming a megablockbuster too, especially if a best-in-class safety profile helps it stand out among its peers.

A safety profile completely free of deadly blood clots through the first of three phase 3 RA studies suggests AbbVie let go of the wrong tablet. The FDA couldn't get over a handful of similar issues that appeared during RA studies with another drug in the same class, Eli Lilly's Olumiant, and severely limited its approval. If it is approved, healthcare providers aren't going to forget that AbbVie's upadacitinib has been associated with cases of pulmonary embolism either.

If filgotinib can make it through a commercial launch with a safety profile unsullied by deadly blood clots and expand to groups beyond RA, Gilead and Galapagos could turn the drug into a $6 billion-per-year cash cow at its peak. That encouraging peak sales estimate includes potential expansions to indications beyond RA. Filgotinib recently aced a mid-stage trial with ankylosing spondylitis patients, and it's in late-stage development for Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis.