Key Points
- Pfizer rose after announcing two key news items.
- FDA approval for Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine also lifted BioNTech.
- Pfizer also said it was purchasing Trillium Therapeutics.
Pfizer’s stock was among the best performers in the Dow on a percentage basis thanks to a couple of news items that lifted its share price. Nevertheless, Pfizer’s gains were minimal compared to the boosts in the other companies involved with the drugmaker. Below, we’ll look at what good news for Pfizer meant for BioNTech (NASDAQ:BNTX) and Trillium Therapeutics (NASDAQ:TRIL).
Full approval for the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine
Pfizer’s big news was that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration fully approved the COVID-19 vaccine it developed with BioNTech. Shares of BioNTech surged higher by more than 10% on Monday morning in the wake of the news.
The Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine had already been extremely popular both in the U.S. and worldwide as one of the most effective COVID-19 vaccines on the market. However, the companies had been delivering inoculations under an Emergency Use Authorization from the FDA, which created some limitations on its use and the manner in which the companies marketed and priced the vaccine.
The FDA almost seemed more excited about the development than Pfizer and BioNTech. The regulatory agency’s press release heralded the approval as a key milestone against COVID-19, arguing that the public should be even more confident about “high standards for safety, effectiveness, and manufacturing quality” because of the approval.
BioNTech has played second fiddle to rival Moderna (NASDAQ:MRNA) among vaccine stocks. However, being first to full FDA approval is a distinction that could help bolster BioNTech’s long-term prospects.
Trillium gets an offer no one could refuse
Meanwhile, shares of Trillium Therapeutics skyrocketed 188%. The cancer specialist got a buyout bid from Pfizer at a premium that few acquisitions command, even in the highly lucrative biotech and pharma field.
Pfizer agreed to pay a total of $2.26 billion for Trillium. Trillium’s shareholders will receive $18.50 per share in cash. Given that the stock closed at just over $6 per share on Friday afternoon, it’s clear that Pfizer was willing to pay up, calculating its offer at a 118% premium to the weighted average share price over the past 60 days.
Pfizer is optimistic that Trillium will help bolster its oncology and hematology portfolio of pipeline treatments, with an emphasis on patients suffering from blood-related cancer. Trillium’s clinical-stage candidates are unique in the way they fight cancer, with the potential to change the way medical professionals treat patients with the disease.
Buying early stage biotechs is always risky, but given Trillium’s potential, Pfizer investors seem happy about the acquisition. Only time will tell, though, whether the move ends up working to Pfizer’s advantage in the long run.