Why This Beaten-Down Growth Stock Is a No-Brainer Buy on the Dip

In This Article:

Every investor has heard the phrase "buy low, sell high." It's a simple enough piece of advice that's less simple to apply. What exactly qualifies as "low"? One possible answer is when a company's shares fall significantly in one day following a setback that barely affects its long-term prospects.

That's what recently happened to Vertex Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: VRTX), a biotech company. Here is why now is as good a time as any to "buy low" when it comes to this stock.

Vertex's pain medicine underwhelms

Vertex Pharmaceuticals' suzetrigine is an investigational pain treatment. Its first approved indication could come as early as next month in treating acute pain. It will seek label expansions thereafter, including in targeting painful lumbosacral radiculopathy (LSR, a condition that results from a pinched or inflamed nerve in the lower back). Vertex Pharmaceuticals recently released data from a phase 2 study for suzetrigine in LSR. Unfortunately, the market was not impressed.

The medicine hit its primary endpoint of a decrease in the average daily leg pain intensity as measured by the Numeric Pain Rating Scale after 12 weeks of treatment. Suzetrigine led to a statistically significant reduction in pain, but so did a placebo, and the difference between the two was not particularly large.

This data created some uncertainty concerning suzetrigine's efficacy in people with LSR, a condition that affects millions of patients every year, and could, therefore, be a large and lucrative market for Vertex Pharmaceuticals. That's why the company's shares dipped by more than 10% in one day after it released this data.

Focus on the long game

Vertex will likely still run a phase 3 study for suzetrigine in LSR that could break its way. But what if it doesn't? The biotech has many more tricks up its sleeves. It recently earned approval for its next-gen cystic fibrosis (CF) therapy, Alyftrek. Vertex has a monopoly in the CF drug market. Alyftrek is yet another improvement from its latest gem, Trikafta. Among other things, Alyftrek is just as effective despite its once-daily dosage (Trikafta is taken twice a day).

The company's CF franchise continues to drive strong top-line growth. Third-quarter revenue increased by 12% year over year to $2.77 billion. There is still a good chance suzetrigine will earn approval in acute pain next month. Vertex has also been ramping up its gene-editing treatment, Casgevy, which targets two rare blood diseases. Although it has been approved for over a year in some markets, including the U.K., Casgevy will take time to impact Vertex's financial results significantly.