revprez wrote:That doesn't answer my question. I want a number.
It’s a fact, not a number. Antibiotics
have been used excessively to the point of becoming rarities in being effective countermeasures to even common bacteria. That is why drugs companies are trying to get all the talent they can to help form a new line of defence to counter the likes of MRSA or god forbid VRSA. This isn’t a matter of “We see money here” it’s a matter of “If we don’t bloody do something we won’t have any patients left to buy drugs”.
And what's the point? I could understand if you were arguing that they avidly try to get as many drugs as possible onto the shelves rather than behind the counter, but so what if they make non-prescription drugs? The cost increases in this country are in prescription drugs.
It was merely an indication of the type of strategies modern drug companies go for now that, at least in the UK, new gov’t legislation allows higher dosages to be administered over the counter. OTC medicines make as much of a difference as the hard-line stuff and if Joe Public can get them without going to the GP then profits may inevitably rise, for that product at least.
You suggested that people are better off sucking lemons. Claiming they're substituting a higher cost alternative at the behest of some company seems to me that some said company is improperly advertising its product.
It’s not that fact, actually. The point is, to anyone who has studied virology (that’d be me) I
know that sucking a lemon and taking paracetamol is just as effective. You can, of course, always buy Lemsip Max Strength (the “max strength” implying it’s going to the limit of new gov’t dosage laws) but the fact is I can use a homemade alternative. The company is simply filling a niche which the majority of desperate flu sufferers will squabble over for their products. Call it a rip-off if you will, but it’s not dishonest, good PR I’d say.
I hate apples, but I love apple pie. Go figure.
Eh, personal preference is an odd thing.
Well, only one in five drugs recoup their losses.
Depends on the market. I’m thinking once we see the main players of the drug industry get their act together like Glaxo Wellcome and Smithkline Beecham did then we may see a turnaround in marketing strategies. It can be a demanding task trying to get new drugs to take off and meet their projected goals. Some do poorly, others are blockbusting.
So what's the problem?
It’s a con.
I'm not familiar with the data on Zovirax so I'll pass on that. However, the point is that if GSK breaks big on a new discovery shareholders get paid big for their investment, because the likelihood is you're not likely to stumble upon some anti-viral miracle and in the meantime you've got to deal with "me too's," generics and generally lousy earnings compared to your star moments.
I’m sure they all go through that phase, it’s hardly fair to say one company makes the pioneering stuff and the rest act as copy-cats. It’s hit and miss, as with any industry. Ford cars made a lot of advances before many other companies, but you’d hardly call investing in anything other than Ford as bad business. The rise of the megacorporations like these pharmaceuticals is a new thing and with the new technology we have you’ll see many more mergers in order for any real kind of competition to stay in the game, much like the car industry had to do and aerospace since costs were spiralling out of hand.
Costs mean nothing if you don’t have the expertise. I’m no lover of number crunching, but I do know that throwing money at a problem, as is common in many American companies in the past, isn’t always the answer. These companies have the skill still as do the likes of Pfizer even if they spend less than the US company. Having the funds is one thing but money doesn’t make drugs on its own, people with skill do.
That’s why I’m seeing many biotech companies have to merge to meet the demanding costs, though they have the skill to get where they want, teams work better.
Market drops like that are typical for pharm companies who have not attracted interest in the principal risks their about to assume. This is a full two months tracking after the announcement was made.
The stock market is a volatile entity I have no delusions about understanding. I think the general economic atmosphere today is a big blow for major industry as it is.
It's high enough risk/returns trade off enough to justify the high profit margins and $2/shr dividend payouts.
I would say so, depends on the investor. Play it safe and get lesser benefits or go in for the big league stuff and take what comes at you. I’m in no state to attempt any of this, but I’d like to invest in the future in one of these companies if I work for one or any general biotech institute.
Yes, but if you expect higher risks you expect higher pay offs.
Rev Prez
Again, I’d have to say case-by-case. No one could’ve predicted Viagra’s success, at least I never heard anything. That’s just life and even safe bets can end up a disaster and even the big companies can fall such as Enron or Parmalat.
I'm tired, but I hope that made some sort of sense. My field is in what these drug companies make and sell, not how much the fat cats and investors line their pockets with.