Health Check: A ‘manageable headwind' as Trump slugs Europe with 15pc pharma tariff
Mach 7's new CEO wants to walk in customers' shoes
Highlights from the quarterly reporting fiesta
The European drug sector is exhaling a sigh of relief after the Trump administration's decision to include drugs in a sweeping 15% tariff on European goods.
The Orange One had threatened drug imposts of up to 200%.
In a statement, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen confirmed pharma products would be included.
The White House Fact Sheet – no, not alternative facts – describes a 15% tariff 'including on autos and auto parts, pharmaceuticals and semiconductors'.
The process is subject to a so-called Section 232 investigation, which examines any national security implications. This is due to conclude on August 1.
Endpoints News reports that the European Union exported US$212 billion of pharma products in 2024. These drugs include Botox, Keytruda and Ozempic.
Ireland accounted for nearly a quarter of these shipments.
Analysts at US investment bank TD Cowen dub the 15% tariff a 'manageable headwind'.
Makers of branded drugs will fare better than generic providers, because of higher prices.
Meanwhile Australian pharma companies are waiting to see how munificent the Prez is – or otherwise.
Federal Health Minister Mark Butler notes the US position on drug tariffs has "changed a lot over the last couple of weeks".
Our capitulation on US beef imports might help, but who can read the mind of Donald John Trump?
Mach 7 says major US job is on track
Radiology imager Mach7 Technologies' (ASX:M7T) new CEO Teri Thomas has reassured investors about the progress of a large, delayed contract with the US Veterans Health Administration.
The job is to support the sprawling organisation's National Teleradiology Program.
Mach 7 is part of a five-member consortium, providing its picture archiving and communications systems.
Announcing the contract in July 2023, the company said the phase one rollout potentially was worth $11.7 million over three years, This rises to $47.9 million for the second five-year phase.
The system was meant to have cranked up by December last year and Thomas hopes this will happen later this year.
'It's progressing,' Thomas says. 'It's big, it's complicated and we are one of a number of vendors who need to come together for this solution to go live.'
Quarterly progress
Meanwhile, Mach 7 has chalked up its third successive quarter of positive cash flow, achieving $600,000 for the period and $700,000 for the year.
The US-focused Mach 7 reported June quarter receipts of $8.4 million, 20% lower owing to 'timing differences' (March quarter receipts were 28% higher).
As of June 30, contracted annual recurring revenue stood at $30.2 million, up 1.6% with 'growth from expansions and renewals offset by customer attrition'.
Mach 7 has $23.1 million cash and no debt.
Unusually for a biotech, Mach 7 has been undertaking a share buyback, having acquired $2.2 million of its own shares in the June half.
This reflects management's belief that that Mach 7's modest $100 million market cap undervalues the company.
Mach 7 shares have lost one-third of their value over the last year, including 8% this morning.
In her maiden investor outing, Thomas this morning spoke of 'getting in the mind of customers and chucking on their shoes'.
If Thomas the Tank Engine builds a head of steam, things could turn around quickly.
Aroa affirms current-year guidance
After a barren couple of weeks, we're being deluged with quarterlies – and far too many to scrutinise properly.
As with Mach 7, Kiwi wound repair house Aroa Biosurgery (ASX:ARX) reported its third successive quarter of positive cash flow, of NZ$1.7 million.
The company also managed receipts of NZ$22.5 million, driven by sales of its Myriad range for large complex wounds.
Aroa has guided to revenue of NZ$92-100 million for the year to March 2026, with normalised underlying earnings of NZ$5-8 million.
Cancer imaging house Imagion Biosystems (ASX:IBX) says it's on track to file an Investigation New Drug (IND) application with the FDA in the current quarter.
If the agency grants the IND, Imagion can kick off a clinical trial of its Magsense tech, for breast imaging.
Magsense will be the first imaging tech to use targeted magnetic nanoparticles to tag and detect cancers.
Imagion had June quarter cash outflows of $818,000, taking cash on hand to $883,000.
The company expects outflows to reduce in the current quarter, as it reduces corporate costs.
Clever Culture Systems (ASX:CC5) chief Brent Barnes says 2024-25 has been a 'turning point for the company, resulting in a major milestone towards becoming a sustainable operating business'.
The company now has signed up five big pharma companies for its automated agar plate system APAS Independence. These are for environmental monitoring of sterile drug making facilities.
The company cites a 'sales opportunity' of $40 million, based on existing customers purchasing 60 to 80 units.
Clever Culture recorded receipts of $880,000 and net operating cash outflows of $248,000. Full year flows were positive to the tune of $1.16 million.
Prescient wants some more
On the fundraising front, cancer drug developer Prescient Therapeutics (ASX:PTX) has raised $6.8 million in a share purchase plan (SPP) and will now carry out a follow-on placement.
Usually, companies do the placement before the SPP, but there are no hard and fast rules.
The shares are on trading hold pending the unquantified placement, which will be done at 4 cents per share (an 11% discount).
Prescient's mercifully slimmed-down program focuses on PTX-100, which is in phase II development.
The world's only GGT-1 inhibitor in clinical development, PTX-100 has looked promising in early programs for blood and solid cancers.
Yesterday, PainChek (ASX:PCK) said it had raised $7.5 million in a placement, partly to support a US rollout into the $580 million US nursing market.
The company expects FDA clearance of its digital pain measurement app by early October.
New and existing institutional, high net worth and sophisticated investors supported the raising.
The company said net contracted licences increased to 110,000. Contracted annual recurring revenue came in at $5.4 million (up 10%).
The placement funds also will support the company's rollout of an infant app locally.
FDA U-turns on key drug decision
In more news from our buzzing Washington desk, the FDA has allowed Sarepta Therapeutics to resume selling its Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene therapy to non-wheelchair bound patients.
In response, shares in the Nasdaq-listed Sarepta bounded almost 50% overnight.
The agency decided the death of a Brazilian boy was unrelated to the drug, Elevidys. But two older patients died earlier.
Sarepta still can't supply the drug to non-ambulatory patients.
Despite the share bounce, Sarepta shares still have lost 90% of their value over the last year.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
US applications for jobless benefits up modestly
The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits slightly increased last week, a sign that employers are still retaining workers despite economic uncertainty related to US trade policy. Jobless claims for the week ending August 2 rose by 7000 to 226,000, the Labour Department reported on Thursday, slightly more than the 219,000 new applications that economists had forecast. The report is the first government labour market data release since Friday's grim July jobs report sent financial markets spiralling downward, spurring President Donald Trump to fire the head of the agency that tallies the monthly jobs numbers. Weekly applications for jobless benefits are seen as a proxy for US layoffs and have mostly settled in a historically healthy range between 200,000 and 250,000 since COVID-19 throttled the economy in the spring of 2020. It was just the second time in eight weeks that jobless benefit applications rose. While layoffs remain low by historical standards, there has been a noticeable deterioration in the labour market this year. Last week, the government reported that US employers added just 73,000 jobs in July, well short of the 115,000 expected. Worse, revisions to the May and June jobs figures shaved a stunning 258,000 jobs off previous estimates and the unemployment rate ticked up to 4.2 per cent from 4.1 per cent. Many economists contend that Trump's erratic tariff rollout in April created uncertainty for employers, who have grown reluctant to expand their payrolls. The grim jobs data raised the ire of Trump, who alleged that the data was manipulated for political reasons and ordered the firing of Erika McEntarfer, the head of the Bureau of Labour Statistics, which produces the monthly jobs figures. The firing was roundly criticised by economists, who, along with Wall Street investors, have long considered the job figures reliable. Stock and bond markets often react sharply when they are released. US markets recoiled at last week's jobs report, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbling more than 600 points on Friday. The Bureau of Labour Statistics does not contribute to the weekly unemployment benefits report except to calculate the annual seasonal adjustments that account for changes in weather, holidays, and school schedules. The Department of Labour's Employment and Training Administration collects the weekly unemployment insurance claims reported by each state. There was another indicator that the labour market is softening in a government report last week that revealed employers posted 7.4 million job vacancies in June, down from 7.7 million in May. The number of people quitting their jobs — a sign of confidence in finding a better job — fell in June to the lowest level since December. Hiring also fell from May. Major companies have announced job cuts this year, including Procter & Gamble, Dow, CNN, Starbucks, Southwest Airlines, Microsoft, Google, and Facebook's parent company, Meta. Most recently, Intel and The Walt Disney Co announced staff reductions. The deadline on most of Trump's stiff proposed taxes on imports kicked in on Thursday, though some deals have been made and other deadlines to negotiate have been extended. Unless Trump reaches deals with countries to lower the tariffs, economists fear they could act as a drag on the economy and spark another rise in inflation. Thursday's report also showed that the four-week average of claims, which smooths out some of the week-to-week volatility, fell by 500 to 220,750. The total number of Americans collecting unemployment benefits for the previous week of July 26 jumped by 38,000 to 1.97 million, the highest level since November 2021.


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Tech stocks power Wall Street gains, tariff relief hope
Wall Street's main indexes have advanced, lifted by hopes that technology giants might dodge President Donald Trump's newest tariffs on chip imports. Apple's shares climbed 2.4 per cent, having risen 5.1 per cent and led gains on Wall Street in the prior session, after Trump said the iPhone maker will invest an additional $US100 billion ($A153 billion) in the US. This brings its total commitment to $US600 billion ($A920 billion) over the next four years. Trump also announced a tariff of about 100 per cent on imports of semiconductors, but said it would not apply to companies that are manufacturing in the US or have committed to do so. Shares of chipmakers Nvidia and Broadcom rose 1.3 per cent each, while peer Advanced Micro Devices advanced 3.0 per cent. The tech sector emerged as the top performer, gaining 1.1 per cent, while the healthcare sector fell to the bottom. Eli Lilly dropped 11.2 per cent after reporting data on its late-stage oral weight-loss drug. The drugmaker also raised its full-year profit forecast. In early trading on Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 263.08 points, or 0.60 per cent, to 44,456.20, the S&P 500 gained 37.82 points, or 0.60 per cent, to 6,382.88 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 177.85 points, or 0.84 per cent, to 21,347.27. Trump's higher tariffs of 10 per cent to 50 per cent on dozens of trading partners took effect on Thursday. Fresh signs of a faltering labour market, especially after a disappointing July payrolls report, have fuelled speculation that the Federal Reserve could soon kick off a rate-cutting cycle. Underscoring the jitters, new data showed jobless claims came in at 226,000 for the week of August 2, surpassing economists' expectations of 221,000. "It's certainly validating the increase in jobless claims we've been seeing, which also jives with the weakness we saw in the employment report," said Ben Laidler, head of equity strategy at Bradesco BBI. "The narrative is clear, the economy is slowing. It may not be headed towards recession, but it's definitely slowing." Traders are now betting almost fully on a September rate cut, with at least two moves expected this year, CME Group's FedWatch tool showed. Investors are also watching for Trump's interim replacement for Fed Governor Adriana Kugler in the coming days, amid expectations that the nominee would be a policy dove who will likely favour bringing interest rates lower. Kugler's resignation leaves an opening at the seven-member Fed Board led by Chair Jerome Powell, who Trump has repeatedly criticised for not cutting borrowing costs. Powell's tenure is due to end in May. Meanwhile, chipmaker Intel lost 0.7 per cent after Trump called for its chief executive's resignation, saying, "the Intel CEO is highly conflicted and should resign immediately". Second-quarter earnings barrage continued at full throttle. DoorDash topped revenue estimates and forecast a stronger-than-expected gross merchandise value for the current quarter. Its shares jumped 4.9 per cent. Datadog gained 6.2 per cent after beating estimates for second-quarter results. Airbnb slumped 8.4 per cent after the company forecast slower growth for the second half of the year. Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 4.32-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and by a 2.32-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq. The S&P 500 posted 17 new 52-week highs and no new lows, while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 41 new highs and 28 new lows.

9 News
2 hours ago
- 9 News
Former Superman actor says he's joining ICE, backs Trump's immigration crackdown
Your web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here The comic book hero that Cain portrayed in the 1990s television show Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman might have been an immigrant himself, but it seems the actor has a more hardline view on foreign arrivals to the United States . In an interview with Fox News on Wednesday, Cain revealed that he decided to join the agency after sharing one of ICE's recruitment videos on social media the day before. Dean Cain revealed in an interview with Fox News that he decided to join ICE after sharing one of their recruitment videos on social media. (Fox News) "I'm actually … a sworn deputy sheriff and a reserve police officer – I wasn't part of ICE, but once I put that (the recruitment video) out there and you put a little blurb on your show, it went crazy," Cain told Fox News host Jesse Watters. "So now I've spoken with some officials over at ICE and I will be sworn in as an ICE agent ASAP." Asked what motivated the move, Cain, who is a well known conservative in Hollywood, said: "This country was built on patriots stepping up, whether it was popular or not, and doing the right thing. I truly believe this is the right thing." Cain described the US's immigration system as "broken," saying, "Congress needs to fix it, but in the interim, President Trump ran on this. He is delivering on this. This is what people voted for. It's what I voted for and he's going to see it through, and I'll do my part and help make sure it happens." Cain's public pledge to join ICE comes amid a significant acceleration in immigration enforcement, as the Trump administration is apprehending hundreds of immigrants every day across the country. Dean Cain portrayed in the 1990s television show "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman." (Warner Bros Tv/Kobal/Shutterstock) Cain has revealed that he's joining the ranks of the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency. (Dominic Gwinn/Middle East Images/AFP/Getty Images) But a CNN analysis of agency data revealed a stark split in where ICE makes those arrests in blue states and red states. In states that voted for Trump, ICE agents are most likely to arrest immigrants directly from prisons and jails. By contract, in Democratic-leaning states ICE is frequently arresting immigrants from worksites, streets and mass roundups that have sparked protests and intense backlash in cities such as Los Angeles. Most of those arrested don't have a criminal record. Overall, ICE is making more arrests in red states than blue states – both in the community and, especially, in prisons and jails – the ICE data shows. World USA Donald Trump celebrity Politics immigration CONTACT US