A recent report published by Transparency
Market Research has cast a pall on the future profitability of the PDE5
inhibitor sex drug class, forecasting that annual sales of sexual dysfunction
drugs will fall from $4.3 billion in 2012 to $3.4 billion in 2019. The study
authors opine that the loss of Pfizer’s
(PFE) Viagra patent exclusivity in Canada, Asia and Europe will weaken all drug
manufacturers’ lock – including Eli
Lilly’s (LLY) Cialis and Bayer’s (BAYRY)
Levitra – on pricing power in coming years.
Though a U.S. federal judge reaffirmed
Pfizer’s “method-of-use” patent, blocking Teva
Pharmaceuticals (TEVA) and others from launching their own generic versions
until October 2019, the competitive landscape elsewhere is more hostile.
Through September 2013, Pfizer reported that U.S. sales of Viagra held steady
at $819 million; international revenue declined 13% to $586 million, however,
as the Israeli-based drug maker, U.S.-based generic manufacturers Actavis (ACT) and Mylan (MYL), and other generic houses started to roll-out cheaper
copies of sildenafil back in July.
Continue reading at YCharts: Why
Pfizer’s Expiring Viagra Patent Hurts Lilly Most
Editor David J Phillips does not hold a
financial interest in any stocks mentioned in this article. The 10Q Detective
has a Full Disclosure Policy.
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