Yup it looks to be an opportunity, the proverbial "mis-pricing"The media and the shorts have blown the problem out of proportion and this lead to a large mispricing in the stock price. VRX can handle pretty much any fine that is thrown at it using its liquidity, cash flow generation and $1.5B credit revolver
Care to share the specifics of that trade? Seems like a sensible enough thing to do.I'm buying delta, mostly through selling puts because the vol is bananas and I don't expect the stock to rip up anytime soon.
Here are the slides which to me has pretty much destroyed the short argument (unless you are talking about a day trade)
To me the key phrase no one is talking about is the 'Valeant is notably absent from this list'. Essentially you have all these shaddy pharma companies doing bad stuff over and over again but no one talks about it. But when Valeant did, the entire world has blown the issue out of proportion. Yet, the fact shows that Valeant is actually one of the least corrupt companies. You have all these companies having issues with safey disclosures, we are talking about stuff that might kill people. That's not what Valeant did. If anything, they are actually trustworthy compared to the rest. The media and the shorts have blown the problem out of proportion and this lead to a large mispricing in the stock price. VRX can handle pretty much any fine that is thrown at it using its liquidity, cash flow generation and $1.5B credit revolver
I plan to buy the stock monday unless the shorts come out with something REALLY strong
I (think I) understand your thesis, however:
(1) "Past performance is not a guarantee of future performance".
What if regulators decided to take a harsher stance with VRX than other drug companies? For example, as I've posted previously, what if VRX was fined $1 million per instance of wire/mail fraud, and had a fine measured in several billion dollars?
(2) More importantly, this isn't just about the insurance fraud concerns, it's about the change to VRX's future earnings.
2a: With a lower stock price, its ability to grow earnings via acquisition seems diminished or even
eliminated.
2b: Lower earnings due to severing ties with Philidor.
In any case, due to the high volatility the stock has experienced, and could continue to experience this week, it's entirely possible the stock could provide profitable buying opportunities, just based on an oversold bounce, and nothing else. The stock was as high as $127.08 on Thursday, 35% higher than Friday's closing price. If it got back to $127.08 this week it would be difficult to determine if this was based on an oversold bounce, or based on fundamental factors.
Disclosure: no position in VRX
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Heck yeah! Disappointment we did not get one last breach of the prior low & panic move, that would have been one insane opportunity. Half-insane will have to do it seemsCitron Over, Drama Over, Buy Time loaded up