Why You Might Think Of Investing In This FTSE Underdog: AstraZeneca plc

AstraZeneca plc (LON: AZN) could be a contrarian investment opportunity.

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

Contrarian investors look for stocks that are out of favour with the market. When sentiment is negative then the true value of a stock can be overlooked. I’m trawling the underdogs of the FTSE to identify which of them may not deserve their sub-market PE ratings.

Unloved

AstraZeneca (LSE: AZN) (NYSE: AZN.US) is certainly unloved. At 9.1, its historic P/E is half that of rival GlaxoSmithKline (LSE: GSK) (NYSE: GSK.US). Digital Look shows just 5 out of 35 brokers give it a ‘buy’ rating. And a yield rising year-on-year is a clear sign of a stock supported by its dividend.

Astra’s problem is its well-know patent cliff. Sales dropped by 20% in 2012 as drugs came off-patent, and analysts’ expectations are for continued declines over the next few years. CEO Pascal Soriot has committed Astra to remaining a pure pharma company, and sees its salvation in development of new drugs.  But even he set a modest target of restoring sales in 2018 to their 2011 level.

Safer

I much prefer GSK’s safer, more diversified, strategy. As well as prescription drugs it makes over-the-counter medicines and vaccines. They don’t involve such massive and risky R&D investment.

Indications are that GSK has also overcome its patent cliff, with analysts forecasting an upturn in its drugs revenues. That suggests Astra’s pipeline issues shouldn’t be insurmountable.

Biotech

I have a small holding in Astra. Essentially I see it as a biotech play, but one that pays a fat dividend while it’s developing new drugs.

Astra has targeted three therapeutic areas. This month alone has seen announcements about two biotech company acquisitions and two drugs going to Stage III trials, one for cancer and one for asthma. Global demographics — more, older, wealthier people — underpin demand for whatever the boffins can invent.

Meanwhile Astra’s strong balance sheet, with net gearing of 11% against GSK’s 243%, means the dividend should be safe. Management have relaxed the policy to target two times cover ‘over the investment cycle’ to give them wriggle-room.

Buying opportunity?

Ace investor Neil Woodford is a big fan, with 9% of his Invesco Perpetual funds in each of Astra and GSK. However, either the change of management when he leaves, or investors withdrawing funds from Invesco Perpetual, could see a flow of investment away from Astra.

That’s something I’ll watch. If the shares do weaken in the near term I might add to my holding.  The buy case for Astra needs patience.

 > Tony owns shares in AstraZeneca and GSK but no other shares mentioned in this article. The Motley Fool has recommended shares in GlaxoSmithKline.

More on Investing Articles

Middle-aged white man wearing glasses, staring into space over the top of his laptop in a coffee shop
Investing Articles

A new risk has emerged for Rolls-Royce and it could send the share price back to 1,010p

All of a sudden, the Rolls-Royce share price is falling. Edward Sheldon believes that it could go lower before it…

Read more »

Night Takeoff Of The American Space Shuttle
Investing Articles

Here’s how Britons can invest in SpaceX on the FTSE 100

Mark Hartley takes a look at the various options available to UK investors keen on SpaceX exposure, and details one…

Read more »

Investing Articles

The BT share price is on fire in 2026. Is there still time to buy?

The BT share price has had a cracking couple of years, as the company heads towards escalating free cash flow…

Read more »

Illustration of flames over a black background
Investing Articles

These 2 Stocks and Shares ISA buys are on fire in 2026

The new Stocks and Shares ISA season is seeing a few interesting changes to the companies making up investors' latest…

Read more »

Two white male workmen working on site at an oil rig
Dividend Shares

More oil wobbles as the BP share price dives 7% in a day!

The BP share price has been wildly volatile in 2026, bouncing around with each new move in the US-Iran war.…

Read more »

British bank notes and coins
Investing Articles

Meet the 9.6%-yielding income share that could keep growing its payout!

This income share yields close to 10% -- and has grown its dividend per share year after year for well…

Read more »

Fireworks display in the shape of willow at Newcastle, Co. Down , Northern Ireland at Halloween.
Investing Articles

When will Barclays shares hit £10?

Barclays shares were close to £1 not so long ago, but could they do the unthinkable and make it to…

Read more »

Picture of an easyJet plane taking off.
Investing Articles

easyJet shares have bounced back before. On a P/E ratio of 6, could they do it again?

Our writer thinks easyJet shares could turn out to be a terrific bargain from a long-term perspective. So is he…

Read more »