Latest news with #AmicusTherapeutics
Yahoo
30-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Amicus Therapeutics to Present at Upcoming Investor Conferences in June 2025
PRINCETON, N.J., May 30, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Amicus Therapeutics (Nasdaq: FOLD) today announced that management will participate in upcoming presentations at the following investor conferences in June. Jefferies Global Healthcare Conference 2025 in New York, NY, on Wednesday, June 4, 2025, at 11:40 a.m. ET Goldman Sachs 46th Annual Global Healthcare Conference 2025 in Miami, FL, on Tuesday, June 10, 2025, at 2:00 p.m. ET A live audio webcast of each presentation can also be accessed via the investors section of the Amicus Therapeutics corporate website at About Amicus Therapeutics Amicus Therapeutics (Nasdaq: FOLD) is a global, patient-dedicated biotechnology company focused on discovering, developing and delivering novel high-quality medicines for people living with rare diseases. With extraordinary patient focus, Amicus Therapeutics is committed to advancing and expanding a pipeline of cutting-edge, first- or best-in-class medicines for rare diseases. For more information please visit the company's website at and follow on X and LinkedIn. CONTACT: Investors:Amicus TherapeuticsAndrew FaughnanVice President, Investor Relationsafaughnan@ (609) 662-3809 Media:Amicus TherapeuticsDiana MooreHead of Global Corporate Affairs and Communications dmoore@ (609) 662-5079 FOLD–GError in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
13-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Is Amicus Therapeutics (FOLD) the Best Low Priced Biotech Stock to Buy Now?
We recently published a list of . In this article, we are going to take a look at where Amicus Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:FOLD) stands against other best low priced biotech stocks to buy now. On May 8, Michael Yee, Senior Biotech Analyst at Jefferies, appeared on CNBC to discuss how tariffs and policy risks are pressuring the biotech industry, while simultaneously iterating that low valuations in the sector may present buying opportunities once the uncertainty clears. Talking about the broader impact of tariffs on the biotech sector, he said that the estimated tariff rate would be around 50%, while the negative EPS impact would be around -4-5%. According to Yee, the sector is facing several challenges that have caused significant pressure and anxiety among biotech investors. One of them is definitely sector-specific tariffs. The 50% estimation is a manageable impact for many of the biotech companies, but there are also other challenges being floated. Another factor is the most favored nations that could drop drug prices by as much as 40% to 50%, making it a related impact. Assuming all these impacts are going into place, there are definitely uncertain downside risks to the model. However, the takeaway is that many of these stocks are down more than 20-30% and, in fact, are trading at a decade-low P/E multiple. Therefore, while these uncertainties may be out there over the next few weeks or months, the stocks are expected to move higher after that. If we look back at some other stocks with tariffs, many are obviously higher off the bottoms. They have thus fallen to an attractive valuation, which is why there might be an opportunity to buy them. READ ALSO: Recession Resistant Investing: 10 Best Grocery Stocks To Buy Now and 11 Most Promising Future Stocks According to Hedge Funds. Shedding light on the most favored nation policy, Yee said it is not new. It is also not a new concept that the US, on average, pays around 40% to 50% more for drugs as compared to the basket of other, say, five to ten major developed nations. The country also gets its drugs faster, and is the home of innovation. Many of the pharmaceutical company executives over the past few weeks pointed out that most of those countries are also facing downside issues because of R&D investments, getting the drugs years later, and obviously, the countries aren't benefiting from access to any of these drugs. However, the United States government does negotiate 15-20 drugs per year and will be doing that for the next decade. We sifted through stock screeners, financial media reports, and ETFs to compile a list of 50 low-priced biotech stocks and then chose the top 10 with the highest number of hedge fund holders as of Q4 2024. We sourced the hedge fund sentiment data from Insider Monkey's database. The list is ordered in ascending order of hedge fund sentiment. Note: The data was recorded on May 9. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter's strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 363.5% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 208 percentage points (). Doctors in a lab coat attending to a patient receiving enzyme replacement therapies. Stock Price: $5.98 Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 40 Amicus Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:FOLD) is the fourth-best low-priced biotech stock to buy now. The company discovers, develops, and delivers medicines to treat metabolic diseases. Its product portfolio includes the first and only approved oral precision medicine to treat Fabry disease, a clinical-stage treatment paradigm for Pompe disease, and a rare disease gene therapy portfolio. On May 2, Leerink Partners analyst Joseph Schwartz reiterated their bullish stance on Amicus Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:FOLD), giving a Buy rating due to its growth potential and strategic positioning. The company recently announced a licensing agreement for DMX-200 to treat focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), which has no FDA-approved therapies. The analyst is bullish on the stock because of this strategic effort to capitalize on the regulatory advancements in the FSGS space. Since there are around 15,000 to 30,000 patients suffering from the condition in the United States, this move presents a significant market opportunity for Amicus Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:FOLD). The agreement's financial terms include a $30 million upfront payment and up to $560 million in milestone payments, highlighting a well-structured yield with the potential to produce considerable returns, supporting the buy rating. Analysts are thus bullish on the stock, and its median price target of $5.98 implies an upside of 167.56% from current levels. Overall, FOLD ranks 4th on our list of the best low priced biotech stocks to buy now. While we acknowledge the potential for FOLD as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter time frame. There is an AI stock that went up since the beginning of 2025, while popular AI stocks lost around 25%. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than FOLD but trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about this cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey. Sign in to access your portfolio

News.com.au
12-05-2025
- Business
- News.com.au
Dr Boreham's Crucible: The wheels keep turning for Dimerix and its kidney drug candidate
As a former bus driver, Dimerix (ASX:DXB) CEO Dr Nina Webster knows that the drug development journey is just as important as the destination when it comes to delivering value to shareholders. The therapeutic trip can be painfully long, especially when investors are in the back street screaming: 'are we there yet'? The developer of a drug for a rare kidney disease, Dimerix is out of the depot and down the road. But with the results of its phase III trial not due for some years, the company needs to navigate a few more twists and turns. At least it's keeping the kids in the back – er, shareholders – entertained with some scenic road stops and ice cream along the way. Last week, Dimerix shares rocketed after the company announced its fourth – and largest – geographic partnership, with the Nasdaq-listed rare diseases house Amicus Therapeutics. The deal delivers US$30 million ($48 million) upfront to Dimerix, with the potential for up to US$520 million of success-based payments. That's a lot of Choc Wedges. Dimerix CEO Dr Nina Webster dubs the deal as 'likely to be one of the biggest in the history of Australian biotech'. Who are we to argue? 'We are absolutely thrilled to be partnering with Amicus,' she adds. The four deals have delivered $66.5 million in upfront cash, with $1.4 billion of potential milestones – payable mainly when the company reaches its destination of US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval (see 'finances and performance'). But what's the point of the journey? Dimerix is developing its lead compound, DMX-200, for the rare and regressive kidney disease focal segmental glomerulo-sclerosis (FSGS). FSGS attacks the kidney's filtering units – glomeruli – causing irreversible scarring and permanent kidney damage. Kidney failure typically happens within five years of diagnosis, with 60 % of patients receiving a transplant experiencing recurring FSGS. With no other disease-specific treatment available, the FDA has accorded the condition orphan drug designation. This confers benefits such as marketing exclusivity, higher prices and other regulatory leg-ups. Currently, FSGS is treated with blood pressure medications known as angiotensin receptor blockers. A bit of history Dimerix was founded in 2004 by Dr James Williams and former Macquarie Group adviser Liddy McCall, based on technology developed at the University of Western Australia. Dimerix Bioscience was acquired in July 2015 by the ASX-listed Sun Biomedical, which was developing saliva-based drug tests. The company changed its name to Dimerix Limited in November 2015. Patent lawyer and scientist Kathy Harrison was appointed inaugural CEO in August 2017, having been the company's sole employee when she joined in 2014. A year later she was replaced by Webster. Also, a patent lawyer – as well as a former bus driver – Webster held senior positions at drug companies including Wyeth Pharmaceuticals (now Pfizer), Acrux and Immuron. Amic-able deal Webster says the US$2.2 billion Amicus is an ideal partner because it already has two rare disease medicines and considerable commercial and regulatory experience. 'Collectively this puts us in a far stronger position to bring our exciting drug candidate to patients with limited treatment options.' Here's the nitty-gritty: Amicus pays an upfront US$30 million ($A48 million) to Dimerix, with the potential for up to US$520 million of success-based payments. These milestones consist of US$410 million of sales milestones, US$75 million on regulatory approval and US$35 million on first sales. Dimerix is also entitled to tiered royalties on sales, in the 'low tens to low twenties' percentage range. 'The royalties we have achieved are very good for a deal of this structure and fit very much with the industry standard,' Webster says. Amicus becomes responsible for the FDA approval process and selling the drug, while Dimerix bears the ongoing phase III trial costs. Webster says the Amicus deal had been negotiated in earnest since last November, in a competitive tender process. Past – and future – deals Unveiled in October 2023, Dimerix signed the European, Canadian, Australia and New Zealand rights to the London-based Advanz Pharma. This deal delivered $10.8 million upfront and potential milestones of $219 million. In May last year, the company struck a deal for Iraq and the Gulf Countries with the World Health Organisation. In January this year, Dimerix then signed on the dotted line with Japanese company Fuso, which delivered another $7.2 million upfront and $100 million of potential milestones. Investor attention now turns to likely follow-on deals in the major territories still up for grabs. These include China, Latin America and South Korea. Webster cites 'significant interest' from potential partners, but 'deals get done when they get done'. Action stations Dimerix's centrepiece is its ongoing phase III trial, dubbed Action 3, which combines DMX-200 with the standard-of care blood pressure drugs. The trial aims for 286 patients across multiple sites, with 185 already randomized and dosed. The study is blinded and placebo-controlled, with the patients medicated for two years, at 70 sites in 11 countries. The primary endpoint is the reduction in the amount of protein seeping from blood in the urine – proteinuria – a telltale sign of kidney disease. This is a similar endpoint to the company's phase II trial. In 2020, the company reported the phase II showed a circa 17% proteinuria reduction relative to placebo, on top of a 15 to 20% benefit from the standard-of-care drug (as measured by published data). In a March 2024 interim phase III analysis of the first 72 patients, the company reported DMX-200 performing better than placebo in reducing proteinuria. Because the trial was blinded, this finding stemmed from statistical modelling. 'This suggests DMX-200 may achieve a statistically significant and clinically meaningful result at the end of the study,' Webster says. 'The results are very encouraging, especially for FSGS patients who currently have very limited treatment options.' The company adds that 42 patients have completed the two-year treatment and rolled on to the open-label extension trial. What's next? Dimerix expects Action 3 enrolment to complete by the end of 2025. Then there's a two-year wait for all of them to finish the treatment and then a few months of analysis before a final read-out. Equating progress to a Melbourne-to-Sydney slog up the Hume Highway, we're at Gundagai. But there are diversions along the Action 3 highway far more interesting than the dog on the tucker box. Sometime before the end of calendar 2025, Dimerix should produce a second interim analysis, which could pave the way for an FDA accelerated approval application. This means that while the company would have to complete the trial, it would be able to sell the drug before then. Last week, the FDA told the company it would accept proteinuria as a so-called 'surrogate endpoint' for the trial. The alternative is to wait for the incidence of kidney end failure, which could take years. The company can use the proportion of patients either achieving a defined proteinuria reduction relative to placebo, or the percentage change in proteinuria from baseline. In any event, the company has been keeping data on both proteinuria trends and estimated glomerular filtration rate (EGFR), which measures the loss of kidney function more directly. 'Proteinuria is far easier to measure because it has far fewer variabilities, so you will get better statistical powering with it,' Webster says. Meanwhile, Dimerix is liaising with a third-party working group called Parasol, which will advise on an 'appropriate endpoint for accelerated approval in FSGS'. This work should take three to six months. Because the next analysis is also blinded, the company needs to discuss the parameters for unblinding with the FDA. Finances and performance At the end of March, Dimerix had cash of $17.5 million and this week banked the $48 million Amicus upfront payment. The company expects the $4.1 million from the Fuso agreement to lob this quarter. So, let's say Dimerix has a smidge under $70 million of cash. There are more riches on the way, with options worth up to $6.2 million due to expire in June 2025. These options are exercisable at 15.3 cents, so there's a handy 360% gain on the table. Any investor who forgets to convert will be kicking themselves. Webster says Dimerix has spent around $60 million on the Action 3 trial to date. But having broken the back of the recruitment stage – the most expensive stanza – outgoings should moderate. Webster says the company is well-funded to pursue its development pipeline and other potential opportunities (see below). On potential drug pricing, there's no directly comparable FSGS therapy. Webster says rare disease drugs in the US typically sell for US$120,000 to US$500,000 per patient per year. Over the last 12 months Dimerix shares have traded between 31 cents in late December last year and 76 cents last Friday. The shares could be picked up for a mere six cents in late 2023. Interestingly, in September 2020 the stock traded at around 74 cents – not far off-peak levels – well before the four company-transforming partnerships. Other diseases? While the US deal involves all DMX-200 indications, the company is free to ponder other therapies. Dimerix has another pre-clinical drug candidate called DMX-700, which targets major lung ailments including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). DMX700 works by blocking the interleukin-8 (IL-8) receptor, which is expressed at elevated levels in sick patients. This in turn causes lung tissue damage. Cystic fibrosis also has been mentioned in dispatches. The company has mulled diabetic kidney disease (DKD) in the past. The DKD market has heavy competition and would require much bigger trials, while the advent of anti-obesity GLP-1 drugs may ameliorate the incidence of the disease. Dr Boreham's diagnosis The spectre of eye drug developer Opthea's recent two-phase III trial results cast a dark shadow over the sector. In road trip terms, Opthea followed Siri (the FDA's guidance) to the word but still ended up a dead-end. So why should Dimerix holders be reassured? Apart from the company's positive interim data readout, Webster says the four global partners all underwent extensive due diligence. 'Dimerix has good validation of the asset, both technically and commercially,' she says. 'We have already demonstrated a strong safety profile and have collected encouraging efficacy data, across both the phase II trial and the first unblinded clinical analysis of the phase III trial.' FSGS is a worthwhile journey for the company to make, with the potential market estimated at US$6 billion a year by 2032, across eight key geographies (including US$2 billion in the US). That said, Dimerix is wise in organising some 'side trips' by way of its secondary programs as the risks with DMX-200 – which combines two compounds – always will remain. As Opthea has attested, driving miles and miles only to find a flea-ridden BnB is no one's idea of fun. At a glance ASX code: DXB Share price: 61 cents Shares on issue: 563,520,000 Market cap: $343.75 million Chief executive officer: Dr Nina Webster Financials (March 2025 quarter): customer receipts $3.5 million, cash outflows $4.3 million, cash of circa $70 million (after $52.1 million payments from Amicus and Fuso) Identifiable major holders: Peter Meurs 13.6%, Precision Opportunities Fund 1.8%, Bavaria Bay Pty Ltd (Perth high net worth individuals) 1.3% Dr Boreham is not a qualified medical practitioner and does not possess a doctorate of any sort. Being old fashioned, his guiding star is Melways, not Siri and Gen Y-ers will need to Google this reference.
Yahoo
07-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Amicus Therapeutics to Present at the Bank of America 2025 Health Care Conference
Amicus Therapeutics, Inc. PRINCETON, N.J., May 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Amicus Therapeutics (Nasdaq: FOLD) today announced that management will participate in a fireside chat at the Bank of America 2025 Health Care Conference in Las Vegas, NV on Wednesday, May 14, 2025, at 8:00 a.m. P.T. A live audio webcast of the presentation can also be accessed via the investors section of the Amicus Therapeutics corporate website at About Amicus Therapeutics Amicus Therapeutics (Nasdaq: FOLD) is a global, patient-dedicated biotechnology company focused on discovering, developing and delivering novel high-quality medicines for people living with rare diseases. With extraordinary patient focus, Amicus Therapeutics is committed to advancing and expanding a pipeline of cutting-edge, first- or best-in-class medicines for rare diseases. For more information please visit the company's website at and follow on X and LinkedIn. CONTACT: Investors: Amicus Therapeutics Andrew Faughnan Vice President, Investor Relations afaughnan@ (609) 662-3809 Media: Amicus Therapeutics Diana Moore Head of Global Corporate Affairs and Communications dmoore@ (609) 662-5079 FOLD–G
Yahoo
01-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Dimerix and Amicus to commercialise DMX-200 in US
Australian biopharmaceutical company Dimerix and Amicus Therapeutics have signed an agreement for the US commercialisation of the former's Phase III drug candidate DMX-200. The drug will be marketed for all indications, including the rare kidney disease focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). Dimerix retains the drug's commercialisation rights in all territories, excluding the already licensed areas. Amicus will gain exclusive development rights to the drug for other potential future indications in the country. The companies will establish a joint steering committee to coordinate development and commercialisation strategies for DMX-200 in FSGS treatment in the US market. In return for these rights, Dimerix will obtain an upfront payment of $30m from Amicus, with the potential for additional milestone payments based on the success of the Phase III trial for treating FSGS. The upfront payment will be made by Amicus with cash on hand. Dimerix could receive up to $75m in development and regulatory milestone payments until US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval is gained, $35m upon first sales and commercial sales milestone payments up to $410m, along with tiered royalties on net sales in the country. The company may also receive up to $40m for potential future indications. Evercore Partners International is serving as Dimerix's exclusive financial advisor. Cooleys is the legal advisor. Amicus' legal advice is provided by Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati. Amicus Therapeutics CEO and president Bradley Campbell stated: 'Amicus is thrilled to enter into this collaboration with Dimerix to bring DMX-200 to patients in the US, and we are incredibly impressed by their achievements to date. 'We look forward to leveraging our regulatory, commercial, medical and advocacy capabilities to bring this potentially transformative treatment to people living with FSGS in the US.' A chemokine receptor 2 inhibitor, DMX-200 has shown promising interim outcomes in the ongoing pivotal Phase III ACTION3 trial. Dimerix will fund and manage the trial, while Amicus will handle the regulatory dossier submission and maintenance in the US, along with all commercialisation expenses. The drug is protected by patents until 2032, and these may extend to 2042 with further applications, including an orphan drug designation by the US regulator. "Dimerix and Amicus to commercialise DMX-200 in US" was originally created and published by Pharmaceutical Technology, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Sign in to access your portfolio