Pfizer will buy Metsera for at least $47.50 per share.
Pfizer could end up paying closer to $70 per share.
Pfizer wants to sell GLP-1 weight loss drugs, and Metsera has four such candidates.
Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), the one-time COVID vaccine hero turned Ozempic craze zero, is marching higher Monday after announcing it will try to recover from its danuglipron setback by buying another drug company with weight loss dreams.
As of 12:25 p.m. ET, Pfizer stock is up 2.1 %.
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Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer intends to purchase smaller Metsera (NASDAQ: MTSR), which has "four highly differentiated clinical-stage incretin and amylin programs." These include:
Pfizer intends to pay $47.50 per share up front to acquire all of Metsera's stock, plus potentially $22.50 per share more in milestone payments as Metsera's drug candidates progress through trials to the marketplace. When all's said and done, Pfizer could end up paying as much as $7.2 billion to get back in the GLP-1 weight loss game.
This is not a cheap price, and Pfizer's not in the best position to pay it. Valued at more than $136 billion in market capitalization, Pfizer sports a reasonable price-to-free-cash-flow (FCF) ratio, but its $50 billion in net debt (largely taken on through prior ill-considered acquisitions) inflates its enterprise value-to-FCF ratio to 15.
Ordinarily, that would be a fine valuation, except most analysts expect Pfizer's profits to shrink, not expand, in future years. The company's making a risky and expensive bet here in hopes it can win entry into the GLP-1 space and start growing again... eventually.
Success isn't certain, however. If Metsera's drugs don't pan out, Pfizer could end up paying twice what Metsera stock was worth Friday, and get little or nothing out of it.
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Rich Smith has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Pfizer. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.