PharmaMar — Update 5 May 2016

PharmaMar — Update 5 May 2016

PharmaMar

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PharmaMar

Aplidin Phase III success

Positive ADMYRE Phase III

Pharma & biotech

5 May 2016

Price

€2.79

Market cap

€620m

$/€ 1.1

Net debt (€m) at end December 2015

46.9

Shares in issue

222.2m

Free float

73%

Code

PHM

Primary exchange

BME

Secondary exchange

N/A

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

11.6

33.5

(32.4)

Rel (local)

10.9

30.6

(10.8)

52-week high/low

€4.32

€1.73

Business description

PharmaMar is a Spanish biopharmaceutical company with a core focus on the development of marine-based drugs for cancer. Yondelis is approved in the US, EU and Japan, and is partnered with Janssen (J&J) in the US and Taiho in Japan. The group also has subsidiaries commercialising and developing consumer chemicals, molecular diagnostics and RNAi.

Next events

Initiate PM1183 lung cancer Phase III

June/July

PM1183 ovarian cancer Phase III interim futility analysis

H216

Fully enrol PM1183 ovarian Phase III

H216

Analysts

Dennis Hulme

+61 (0)2 9258 1161

Lala Gregorek

+44 (0)20 3681 2527

PharmaMar is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

Positive results from PharmaMar’s ADMYRE Phase III trial of Aplidin in multiple myeloma clear the path for a potential approval in Europe in H217. Separately, PharmaMar continues to accelerate clinical development of PM1183, a follow-on to its marketed anticancer drug Yondelis: a Phase III trial of PM1183 in small cell lung cancer planned for mid-year will add to the ongoing CORAIL Phase III in ovarian cancer (an interim futility analysis after 210 ovarian patients is expected to report in H216). Our valuation increases to €1.09bn (was €1.07bn previously) or €4.91 per share (€4.82), but a successful self-commercialisation of PM1183 in the US (if approved) could lift valuation by 14% compared to our base case.

Year end

Revenue
(€m)

PBT*
(€m)

EPS*
(c)

DPS
(c)

P/E
(x)

Yield
(%)

12/14

149.7

16.3

6.77

0.0

41.2

N/A

12/15

162.0

6.5

3.24

0.0

86.1

N/A

12/16e

177.1

(5.9)

(3.38)

0.0

N/A

N/A

12/17e

195.6

23.6

9.85

0.0

28.3

N/A

Note: *PBT and EPS are normalised, excluding amortisation of acquired intangibles, exceptional items and share-based payments.

Aplidin: Positive results in ADMYRE pivotal trial

The 255-patient ADMYRE Phase III trial of Aplidin in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma met its primary endpoint last month, showing a statistically significant 35% reduction in the risk of disease progression or death. PharmaMar plans to file for approval in Europe in Q416, which could potentially lead to an approval in H217 and market launch in early 2018. With US approval likely to depend on the forthcoming pivotal trial in T-cell lymphoma, we delay our forecast US launch date for Aplidin by three years to 2021.

PM1183 development programme on track

PharmaMar is executing its plan to accelerate the development of PM1183. A Phase III trial in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer is expected to report interim futility data in the current quarter, and to complete recruitment around the end of the year. A Phase III in small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is expected to commence in June or July following an impressive 67% response rate in a Phase Ib/II study. Initial data from a Phase II trial in breast cancer are also expected this year.

Valuation: Increased to €4.91 per share

Our valuation increased to €1.09bn (up from €1.07bn or €4.82/share). Increased likelihood of Aplidin launch in Europe offsets a three-year delay in forecast US launch to 2021. Longer-term prospects remain solid; we see significant potential upside from the recent Yondelis US and Japan market launches (we update our WACC to 10% in these regions), a potential European Aplidin approval next year and from the accelerated development plan for PM1183. Our valuation is based on a sum-of-the-parts DCF to 2028 (rNPV for the biopharma business; DCF for the chemicals division). We highlight that our base case valuation assumes US rights to PM1183 will be licensed to a partner. Self-commercialisation of PM1183 in the US (if approved) could see our valuation increase by 14% to €1,245m (€5.60 per share).

Positive Aplidin Phase III clears the way for EU approval

PharmaMar announced positive top-line results from the 255-patient ADMYRE Phase III trial of Aplidin (plitidepsin) in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma last month. The trial met its primary endpoint, showing a statistically significant 35% reduction in the risk of disease progression or death. With these positive trial results in hand, PharmaMar plans to file for approval in Europe in Q416. The full ADMYRE results will be presented at a future medical conference, possibly ASH in December. Aplidin has orphan drug designation in Europe and the US.

Separately, in the US the company plans to seek initial approval for Aplidin for the ultra-orphan indication angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma, which accounts for 2% of non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas. A pivotal Phase II trial in this indication is expected to commence recruitment in the current quarter.

Multiple myeloma accounts for 10% of all haematological malignancies. It is caused by malignant plasma cells that multiply very rapidly. In 2015, 26,850 new cases were diagnosed in the US, and about 11,200 people died of this disease. In Europe, the incidence is 4.5-6.0 out of every 100,000 people each year.

On the back of the successful Phase III trial, we increase our likelihood of approval in Europe to 90% (previously 65%). We expect PharmaMar to file for regulatory approval in Europe in Q416, which could potentially lead to approval in late 2017 and market launch in 2018. However, we have pushed our forecast US launch back by Three years to 2020, given that development timelines are yet to be determined. We expect Aplidin to reach global peak sales of US$300m.

PharmaMar has an Aplidin co-promotion agreement with Chugai Pharma Europe covering certain European countries (France, Germany, the UK, Benelux, Ireland and Austria). It has also licensed marketing rights to Specialised Therapeutics Australia covering Australia, New Zealand and certain Asian countries, and to TTY Biopharm in Taiwan. PharmaMar retains commercialisation rights in several key European territories, including Spain, Italy and Northern Europe, where we assume it will market Aplidin using its existing salesforce. PharmaMar also retains production rights and will supply Aplidin to its partners for sale in the licensed regions. There is potential for further licensing newsflow with Aplidin as the regulatory dossier for European approval will also be valid for more than 40 additional ex-EU countries.

PM1183 – ovarian cancer Phase III recruiting well, lung next

PharmaMar plans to initiate a pivotal Phase III study in SCLC on the back of impressive efficacy in an expansion cohort in a Phase Ib study. The proposed Phase III is expected to be a head-to-head study comparing the combination of PM1183 and doxorubicin against either topotecan or a combination of cyclophosphamide, adriamycin and vincristine in 600 relapsed (second-line) SCLC patients following platinum-containing therapy. Preliminary results from the Phase Ib study showed that 67% of SCLC patients responded to PM1183 plus doxorubicin, compared to response rates of 20-25% typically seen with standard-of-care drug topotecan. In patients who initially responded to first-line chemotherapy before relapse, the response rate was 100% (Exhibits 1 and 2).

PM1183 is a synthetic alkaloid that is structurally related to PharmaMar’s marketed drug Yondelis, with activity in similar (ovarian cancer) and new indications (SCLC, NSCLC, breast cancer). The compound has been optimised to improve the pharmacokinetic profile, such that PM1183 can be given at 4x the tolerated dose level of Yondelis and offers administration advantages. PM1183 can be administered in a one-hour infusion using a peripheral intravenous catheter, compared to a 24-hour infusion with Yondelis via a central catheter.

Exhibit 1: SCLC – maximum tumour size variation according to response to first-line chemotherapy

Exhibit 2: SCLC – best confirmed response according to response to first-line chemotherapy

Source: PharmaMar corporate presentation. Note: Sensitive = chemotherapy-free interval (CTFI) > 90 days after first line therapy; Resistant = CTFI90days; PD = progressive disease; PR = partial response.

Source: PharmaMar. Note: CR = complete response; CTFI = chemotherapy-free interval; PD = progressive disease; PR = partial response; SD = stable disease.

Exhibit 1: SCLC – maximum tumour size variation according to response to first-line chemotherapy

Source: PharmaMar corporate presentation. Note: Sensitive = chemotherapy-free interval (CTFI) > 90 days after first line therapy; Resistant = CTFI90days; PD = progressive disease; PR = partial response.

Exhibit 2: SCLC – best confirmed response according to response to first-line chemotherapy

Source: PharmaMar. Note: CR = complete response; CTFI = chemotherapy-free interval; PD = progressive disease; PR = partial response; SD = stable disease.

In June 2015 PharmaMar initiated a Phase III trial of PM1183 as a monotherapy in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer (CORAIL), compared to a control arm with topotecan or liposomal doxorubicin. The randomised open-label trial will enrol 420 women with unresectable platinum-resistant ovarian cancer and will assess whether PM1183 can improve progression-free survival (PFS) as the primary endpoint. The drug cleared an interim safety analysis on the first 80 patients in February, and an interim futility analysis after 210 patients is expected to report in June or July. Recruitment is expected to complete around the end of 2016 with results likely in 2017. This pivotal study follows encouraging PFS and OS rates in a Phase IIb trial (Exhibit 3).

Data also are expected before the end of the year from a Phase II trial of PM1183 in metastatic breast cancer, which commenced in 2012. The primary endpoint of the 117-patient trial is overall response rate.

Exhibit 3: PM1183 (lurbinectedin) development status

Programme

Indication

Stage

Notes

PM1183 (lurbinectedin)

Platinum-resistant/ refractory ovarian cancer (PRROC)

Phase III

420-pt monotherapy CORAIL trial in platinum-resistant ovarian cancer commenced recruitment in June 2015. The trial will compare PM1183 vs investigators’ choice of topotecan or pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD). Recruitment is expected to take 18 months. In a Phase IIb trial PFS 5.7 months for PM1183 vs 1.7 months for topotecan (p=0.0005). Orphan drug status.

Small cell lung cancer (SCLC)

Phase III planned Q216

600-pt ATLANTIS trial as second-line therapy in combination with doxorubicin in platinum-resistant SCLC. Recruitment planned to commence June 2016, with final results in 2019. The trial will compare PM1183 plus doxorubicin against either topotecan or a combination of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin and vincristine. In a Phase I trial in 21 SCLC pts confirmed ORR was 67%, including 10% CR.

BRCA1/2-associated breast cancer (BC)

Phase II

117-pt two-part Phase IIb trial in BRCA1/2-associated or unselected metastatic BC ongoing. Stage one: 20 pts with mut-BRCA1/2 mutation (targeting ≥4 pts with ORR) and 30 pts with unknown status (targeting ≥3pts with ORR), leading into second stage with 33 pts in each arm if positive. Second stage ongoing, with recruitment expected to complete Q116. Primary endpoint of ORR.

Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)

Phase II

120-pt three-arm Phase II of PM1183 ± gemcitabine vs docetaxel in second-line unresectable NSCLC (recruitment ongoing). Primary endpoint: PFS at four months. Secondary endpoints: ORR, PFS/OS, histology. Phase I study + gemcitabine resulted in 1 CR, 4 PR and 7 SD in 19 evaluable NSCLC pts.

“Basket” trial in advanced solid tumours

Phase II

225-pt Phase II of PM1183 in patients with advanced solid tumours, including SCLC, head and neck cancer, neuroendocrine tumours, biliary tract tumours, endometrial cancer, breast cancer, germ cell tumours and Ewing’s family of tumours. Primary endpoint: ORR.

Source: Edison Investment Research, clinicaltrials.gov. Note: PFS = progression-free survival; IDMC = independent data monitoring committee; PTCL = peripheral T-cell lymphoma; ORR = overall response rate; CR = complete response; PR = partial response; SD = stable disease.

Valuation

We have increased the likelihood of Aplidin approval in Europe from 65% to 90% following the positive Phase III results, but have delayed our forecast market launch date for Aplidin in the US by three years to 2021. These changes broadly net out; however, as Yondelis sales in US and Japan are becoming established, we have also updated our WACC to 10% (our standard for commercial-stage programmes) from 12.5%. The result is an increase to our valuation which now stands at €1.09bn or €4.91/share (vs €1.07bn or €4.82/share previously). Our valuation is based on a sum-of-the-parts DCF model (project-based rNPV for the biopharma business; FCF for the chemicals division to 2025), as shown in Exhibit 4.

Exhibit 4: PharmaMar sum-of-the-parts DCF

Product

rNPV (€m)

rNPV/

share (€)

Assumptions

Chemicals business FCF

51.4

0.23

7.5% WACC, 2% growth rate, accounts for 25% of group capex and depreciation and amortisation.

Yondelis (Europe)

712.2

3.21

Second-line STS peak sales of €80m with 35% penetration; third-line ovarian cancer peak sales of €100m with 22% penetration into addressable platinum sensitive market. First potential generics in 2022. 10% WACC.

Yondelis (US)

126.7

0.57

STS (second-line) peak sales of $130m with 2016 launch; peak sales in platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer of $150m, 65% risk adjustment, 2020 launch; both assume 15% royalty from J&J and 47% gross margin on sales of raw materials. 10% WACC.

Yondelis (Japan)

66.4

0.30

STS only: peak sales of €130m; 90% success probability; launch 2016; 15% royalty from Taiho. 10% WACC.

Aplidin (multiple myeloma)

156.4

0.70

Global peak sales of $300m assuming 40% of MM patients ultimately receive fourth-line therapy and 25% penetration; pricing of $25k in EU with 25% US premium; 90% success probability in Europe, 65% in the US; launch 2018 in Europe, 2019 in the US; sold by Chugai in eight European territories (assume effective royalty of 25%) and direct in other EU regions, assume 25% royalty in US; includes Chugai milestones of €5m on deal signing in 2014 and €20m of near-term regulatory milestones out of €30m total. No milestones included for other territories at this stage.

PM01183 (ovarian cancer)

310.1

1.40

Third-line, platinum-resistant ovarian cancer: peak sales of €492m with 65% success probability, 2019 launch; sold direct in Europe with 25% royalty in US (post Phase III).

PM01183 (SCLC)

55.4

0.25

Peak sales of $200m; 50% success probability; launch 2019; 25% royalty (post Phase III).

PM01183 (breast/NSCLC)

34.8

0.16

Combined peak sales of $500m; 15% success probability; launch 2020; 25% royalty (post Phase III).

Sylentis

3.7

0.02

Cumulative peak sales of $200m, with 20% probability of success, potential launch 2021, 10% royalty.

Genomica

29.9

0.13

Conservative 2% growth rate.

R&D

(194.0)

(0.87)

12.5% WACC.

SG&A

(196.8)

(0.89)

10% WACC.

Capex

(18.8)

(0.08)

75% of group capex for biopharma business.

Net cash/(debt)

(46.9)

(0.21)

At end-FY15.

Total

1,090.3

4.91

Source: Edison Investment Research. Note: WACC of 12.5% used except where indicated otherwise.

With regard to PM1183 and Aplidin, we note that we have maintained our previous assumptions that these products will be out-licensed at some stage. However, we acknowledge that with the new corporate structure, PM1183 (and possibly also Aplidin) could be retained by PharmaMar for self-commercialisation or co-promotion. This would typically provide greater economic returns on these products (even after the extra investment required), so confirmation of a co-promotion strategy in the US (and across Europe) would add upside.

For example, if PharmaMar negotiated a 35% profit share arrangement for PM1183 in the US post approval, our valuation would increase to €1,170m (€5.27 per share). Alternatively, if it self-commercialised PM1183 in the US at an operating margin of 45% (subject to obtaining funding to set up a salesforce) our valuation would increase to €1,245m (€5.60 per share).

Robust financial position to fund pipeline

Q116 group net sales increased 16% q-o-q to €40m, of which Yondelis commercial sales in territories where PharmaMar leads commercialisation rose 15% to €22.8m. Royalties on sales of Yondelis by licencees Janssen and Taiho rose to €1.8m vs €0.6m in Q115, boosted by approvals in the US and Japan in H215. EBITDA fell from €9.0m in Q115 to a loss of €4.7m in Q116 due to a significant increase in oncology R&D expense (+51% to €16.9m) and the previously disclosed completion of the milestone payment schedule under the Coordination Agreement signed with Janssen in 2011. While we expect the growth in R&D spend not to slow in subsequent quarters, we have increased forecast gross R&D spend for FY16 by 4% to 71.8m, a 13% increase over FY15. The issue of €17m of non-convertible bonds in July 2015 has allowed PharmaMar to reduce short-term debt from €44.5m at end 2014 to €35.6m at end Q116. The company ended Q116 with €19.2m of undrawn credit lines plus €44.6m of cash and financial assets which, when combined with anticipated revenue growth flowing from recent Yondelis approvals, puts it in a robust financial position to fund its clinical trial programme.

Sensitivities

PharmaMar is subject to various sensitivities common to speciality pharmaceutical companies, including potential clinical or regulatory failure or delay, manufacturing and commercialisation risks (launch, uptake, pricing, reimbursement and competition), and reliance on partners for ex-Europe markets. The chemical business is predominantly exposed to economic factors, although raw material costs, environmental/regulatory requirements and external weather conditions may also affect sales or margins. As mentioned above, successful self-commercialisation of PM1183 in the US could see a 14% valuation uplift compared to our base case out-licensing assumption.

Key stock-specific sensitivities for the core oncology business include, but are not limited to:

Yondelis: European sales growth 8% in 2015, although likely to get flow-on benefit from recent FDA approval. If EU sales growth does not improve, this may have negative implications for sales forecasts in US and Japan; on the other hand, Janssen's salesforce may deliver outperformance. Outcome of ongoing US ovarian cancer clinical trial is another key risk.

Aplidin: pending filing for regulatory approval in Europe; development progress in T-cell lymphoma; timing and economics of any additional licensing deal(s).

PM1183: development progress in various indications; deal timing and economics.


Exhibit 5: Financial summary

€'000s

2014

2015

2016e

2017e

Year end 31 December

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

PROFIT & LOSS

Revenue

 

 

149,652

161,992

177,100

195,587

Cost of Sales

(40,765)

(45,705)

(44,849)

(46,593)

Gross Profit

108,887

116,287

132,250

148,994

R&D Expenses (gross)

(52,456)

(63,549)

(71,789)

(71,639)

Capitalised in-house R&D

5,979

3,258

4,480

4,480

Sales, General and Administrative Expenses

(61,177)

(68,528)

(70,769)

(73,775)

Other (milestones and royalties)

28,408

31,825

12,293

27,714

EBITDA

 

 

25,704

19,329

5,853

35,156

Operating Profit (before GW and except.)

22,096

11,852

(1,497)

28,720

Depreciation

(3,608)

(7,477)

(7,350)

(6,436)

Intangible Amortisation

(1,859)

(523)

(2,146)

(2,333)

Exceptionals

0

0

0

0

Operating Profit

20,237

11,329

(3,644)

26,387

Net Interest

(5,762)

(5,327)

(4,416)

(5,072)

Other

0

0

0

0

Profit Before Tax (norm)

 

 

16,334

6,525

(5,913)

23,648

Profit Before Tax (FRS 3)

 

 

14,475

6,002

(8,059)

21,315

Tax

(1,304)

654

(1,594)

(1,760)

Deferred tax

0

0

0

0

Profit After Tax (norm)

15,030

7,179

(7,507)

21,887

Profit After Tax (FRS 3)

13,171

6,656

(9,653)

19,554

Minority interests

20

25

0

0

Discontinued operations

(76)

0

0

(48)

Net income (normalised)

 

 

15,050

7,204

(7,507)

21,887

Net income (FRS3)

 

 

13,115

6,681

(9,653)

19,506

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

222.2

222.2

222.2

222.2

EPS - normalised (c)

 

 

6.8

3.2

(3.4)

9.9

EPS - FRS 3 (c)

 

 

5.9

3.0

(4.3)

8.8

Dividend per share (c)

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

Gross Margin (%)

72.8%

71.8%

74.7%

76.2%

EBITDA Margin (%)

17.2%

11.9%

3.3%

18.0%

Operating Margin (before GW and except.) (%)

14.8%

7.3%

-0.8%

14.7%

BALANCE SHEET

Fixed Assets

 

 

99,473

99,804

98,330

97,953

Intangible Assets

28,836

29,377

31,711

33,858

Tangible Assets

29,218

30,624

26,816

24,292

Other

41,419

39,803

39,803

39,803

Current Assets

 

 

101,916

112,135

115,973

137,415

Stocks

24,404

22,990

24,575

25,530

Debtors

36,989

40,200

43,668

48,227

Cash and current financial assets

35,511

45,625

44,410

60,337

Other

5,012

3,320

3,320

3,320

Current Liabilities

 

 

(82,626)

(70,623)

(69,388)

(70,588)

Creditors

(38,160)

(41,994)

(40,759)

(41,959)

Short term borrowings

(44,466)

(28,629)

(28,629)

(28,629)

Long Term Liabilities

 

 

(58,694)

(68,280)

(81,533)

(81,842)

Long term borrowings

(47,003)

(64,973)

(77,973)

(77,973)

Other long term liabilities

(11,691)

(3,307)

(3,560)

(3,869)

Net Assets

 

 

60,069

73,036

63,383

82,937

CASH FLOW

Operating Cash Flow

 

 

23,475

10,195

(183)

31,151

Net Interest

(1,000)

252

(4,416)

(5,072)

Tax

(366)

654

(1,594)

(1,760)

Capex

(10,179)

(9,221)

(8,022)

(8,392)

Acquisitions/disposals

4

0

0

0

Financing

(2,905)

6,169

0

0

Other

0

0

0

0

Net Cash Flow

9,029

8,049

(14,215)

15,927

Opening net debt/(cash)

 

 

64,585

54,886

46,910

61,125

Exchange rate movements

1

0

0

0

Other

669

(73)

0

0

Closing net debt/(cash)

 

 

54,886

46,910

61,125

45,198

Source: Edison Investment Research, PharmaMar accounts

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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

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60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 9258 1161

Level 25, Aurora Place

88 Phillip St, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Wellington +64 (0)48 948 555

Level 15, 171 Featherston St

Wellington 6011

New Zealand

Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 9258 1161

Level 25, Aurora Place

88 Phillip St, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Wellington +64 (0)48 948 555

Level 15, 171 Featherston St

Wellington 6011

New Zealand

Viralytics — Update 5 May 2016

Viralytics

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