- Previous Close
361.40 - Open
362.54 - Bid 373.51 x 100
- Ask 374.10 x 100
- Day's Range
360.15 - 375.06 - 52 Week Range
208.62 - 377.03 - Volume
563,245 - Avg. Volume
400,743 - Market Cap (intraday)
16.696B - Beta (5Y Monthly) --
- PE Ratio (TTM)
16.42 - EPS (TTM)
22.77 - Earnings Date Oct 30, 2024
- Forward Dividend & Yield --
- Ex-Dividend Date --
- 1y Target Est
380.76
United Therapeutics Corporation, a biotechnology company, engages in the development and commercialization of products to address the unmet medical needs of patients with chronic and life-threatening diseases in the United States and internationally. The company offers Tyvaso DPI, an inhaled dry powder via pre-filled and single-use cartridges; Tyvaso, an inhaled solution via ultrasonic nebulizer; Remodulin (treprostinil) injection to treat patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) to diminish symptoms associated with exercise; Orenitram, a tablet dosage form of treprostinil, to delay disease progression and improve exercise capacity in PAH patients; and Adcirca, an oral PDE-5 inhibitor to enhance the exercise ability in PAH patients. It also markets and sells Unituxin (dinutuximab) injection, a monoclonal antibody for treating high-risk neuroblastoma; and Remunity Pump, which contains a pump and separate controller for Remodulin. In addition, the company engages in developing RemoPro and Ralinepag for the treatment of PAH; Aurora-GT, a gene therapy product to rebuild the blood vessels in the lungs; and Nebulized Tyvaso, for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, as well as xenografts, which are development-stage organ products. It has licensing and collaboration agreements with DEKA Research & Development Corp. to develop a semi-disposable system for the subcutaneous delivery of treprostinil; MannKind Corporation to develop and license treprostinil inhalation powder and the Dreamboat device; and Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc. to develop Ralinepag. The company was incorporated in 1996 and is headquartered in Silver Spring, Maryland.
www.unither.comRecent News: UTHR
View MorePerformance Overview: UTHR
Trailing total returns as of 10/31/2024, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is
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Statistics: UTHR
View MoreValuation Measures
Market Cap
16.69B
Enterprise Value
13.77B
Trailing P/E
16.43
Forward P/E
13.26
PEG Ratio (5yr expected)
1.53
Price/Sales (ttm)
6.63
Price/Book (mrq)
2.74
Enterprise Value/Revenue
5.00
Enterprise Value/EBITDA
8.86
Financial Highlights
Profitability and Income Statement
Profit Margin
40.31%
Return on Assets (ttm)
11.31%
Return on Equity (ttm)
18.81%
Revenue (ttm)
2.76B
Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)
1.11B
Diluted EPS (ttm)
22.77
Balance Sheet and Cash Flow
Total Cash (mrq)
3.33B
Total Debt/Equity (mrq)
6.56%
Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)
574.9M
Research Analysis: UTHR
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Research Reports: UTHR
View MoreUnited Therapeutics Earnings: Strong Demand for Tyvaso DPI, but Branded Competition Poses Challenges
United Therapeutics specializes in drug development for pulmonary arterial hypertension, a rare and progressive disease marked by abnormally high blood pressure in the arteries of the lungs. The company's therapies for PAH largely focus on the prostacyclin pathway, and many of its treatments are based on the same molecule, treprostinil. Most of the company's sales are generated within the United States. United Therapeutics also markets a pediatric oncology drug, but its focus largely remains in pulmonary arterial hypertension.
RatingPrice TargetRaising target price to $400
United Therapeutics is a biotechnology company focused on the development and commercialization of therapeutic products for patients with cardiovascular conditions, cancer, and infectious diseases. It has five approved products on the market and a strong new product pipeline. The company has roughly 1,168 employees and is a component of the S&P 400.
RatingPrice TargetOctober Resets Economic, Interest Rate Expectations Investors came into
October Resets Economic, Interest Rate Expectations Investors came into October with mixed expectations. Signs of a cooling jobs market in late summer stirred comments that the Fed had remained in restrictive mode too long, putting fragile economic growth at risk. On the upside, investors consoled themselves, the Fed's own dallying likely positioned the central bank to cut rates aggressively into year-end. A strong September nonfarm payrolls report early in October jolted investors out of that mindset. Subsequent data suggested that, far from drifting toward recession, the economy was strengthening slightly coming out of summer and into fall. Investors also had to reassess their expectations for the Fed's rate-cutting schedule through year-end 2024. While the market still appears to anticipate a cumulative 100-basis-points (bps) in rate cuts in 2024, that outcome is no longer a slam-dunk. Jobs Bounce Back Spikes Rates September nonfarm payrolls, reported on 10/4/24, shocked the market and upended expectations that the employment economy was cooling rapidly. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that the U.S. economy generated 254,000 new jobs in September, well above the Argus forecast of 135,000 and the consensus estimate of 140,000. Given September's blow-out number and upward revisions to August and July, the three-month jobs growth average jumped to 186,000 -- after being closer to 120,000 following August payrolls. The unemployment rate dipped to 4.1%, after coming within a whisker of triggering the Sahm Rule (a usually reliable recession indicator) one month before. Jobs were not only plentiful in September; they continued to generate wage growth above the inflation rate. Average hourly earnings increased 4.0% year over year. Economic Data Churns Along The NFIB's Small Business Optimism Index came in at 91.5, marking 33 consecutive months below the 50-year average of 98. This index has been battered by inflation, and before that by difficulty in finding qualified workers. The Uncertainty Index rose 11 points to 103, the highest reading recorded in this series. Uncertainty, according to the NFIB, makes businesses hesitant to invest in inventory, spend on expansion, and hire new workers. Small businesses are feeling the pain of high financing costs and lingering inflation. The trade deficit, which is reported with an uncommon lag, improved markedly in August to $70.4 billion -- 10% narrower than in July. Exports rose $5.3 billion, and imports declined $3.2 billion from July. All the decrease was in the goods deficit, while the services surplus ticked slightly higher. This represented the lowest monthly trade deficit since March. For 1Q24 and 2Q24, the net exports-imports balance has been overweighted to imports, which is subtractive to GDP. Relative strength in exports could contribute to third-quarter GDP growth. The inflation data released at mid-month was a bit warmer than expected. All-items CPI rose 0.2% month over month and 2.4% year over year. While both missed consensus by one tick, the annual change was the lowest since March 2021, before the onslaught of inflation. The core index rose 3.3% annually, also a tick higher than expected. A day later, the Producer Price Index (PPI) cheered the market with no change on a month-over-month basis. The year-over-year change of 1.8% was a tick higher than expected, but 20 basis points below the Fed's 2% target. Core PPI (less food and energy) was right at the Fed's 2% target. Retail sales provided some good news for the market, rising 0.4% in September from a 0.1% gain in August. Sales were ahead of consensus expectations. Excluding vehicles, September retail sales were up 0.5%; and excluding vehicles and gas, sales were up 0.7%. Vehicle sales are being hurt by sticker shock and high financing costs, while the decline in gas sales mainly reflects a consumer-friendly decline in gasoline costs. Struggles at Boeing have pressured exports, given the importance of aerospace to goods exports. The machinists' strike is just the latest headache for the company, which has faced headwinds in both its commercial and defense & space units. Industrial production decreased 0.3% in September, which was worse than the 0.1% consensus call. The decline was mainly due to the strike at Boeing along with the two major hurricanes that hit the Southeast. Reflecting Boeing, capacity utilization for aerospace & miscellaneous transportation decreased 8.3%. Utilization was 77.5% in September, about 2.2 points below the long-run average. In the months preceding the Fed's first rate cut of the cycle in September, something like optimism returned to the long-depressed housing industry. But rates as noted have spiked higher after first coming down around the September rate cut. The effect of lower rates on housing will be positive. Given the huge number of sub-4% mortgages or homes with no mortgage, however, Argus is not looking for a housing surge like that seen in the pandemic period. September existing home sales fell to a 14-year low, coming in at a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of 3.84 million units. Supply has improved, but the currently most-desirable homes -- entry-level for those starting families -- remain in short supply nationwide. Home prices in aggregate are simply too high for many would-be buyers. Sales in September mainly were for deals concluded in the months preceding the Fed's rate cut. But few expect the existing homes market to recover rapidly. New home sales, by contrast, ticked higher to a 738,000 SAAR for September from 709,000 for August. New home sales, which account for about one-sixth of all home sales, were at their highest level in nearly a year and a half. Builders may finally be realizing that the scarcity of affordable starter homes creates an opportunity to stimulate homebuilding. Consumer sentiment hit a six-month high in October, coming at 70.5 from 70.1 in September in response to prospects for interest-rate relief. The University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index has been volatile and could easily move down again. But the combination of higher retail sales, new home sales, and sentiment sent a positive message to a market worried about Boeing and the industrial economy. GDP Outlook Higher In mid-October, Argus' Chief Economist Chris Graja, CFA, raised the Argus third-quarter 2024 GDP forecast to 3.0%, from a prior 1.6% estimate. In his multi-input model, the biggest increases were to the services component within Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE), reflecting recent strength in ISM's Services Purchasing Manager's Index; and higher contributions from equipment and intellectual property within nonresidential fixed investment, a proxy for corporate capital spending. Other growth drivers include the strong September nonfarm payrolls report, which is putting more money in employees' hands. The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow forecast for 3Q24 currently stands at 3.3%. At the end of August, the GDPNow forecast was around 2.0%. It has steadily ticked higher on the strong jobs, retail spending, and new-home sales data. Chris also raised the Argus 4Q24 GDP forecast to 2.3%, from a prior 1.7%. First-quarter GDP grew at 1.6%, while second-quarter GDP rebounded to 3.0% growth. Given net first-half strength and the higher second-half outlook, Argus now looks for GDP growth of 2.5% for all of 2024, raised from a prior 1.9%. Chris retained Argus' forecast for 2.0% GDP growth in 2025. Conclusion Bond yields hit multi-month lows following the Fed's September rate cuts but started ticking higher soon after. The nonfarm payrolls report sent yields spiking higher across the maturity spectrum. Also following the report, the CME's FedWatch tool went from a 30% probability of a 50 bps cut at the November FOMC meeting, to a 10% probability of such an aggressive cut. And the probability of an additional 75-bps cut through year-end was cut in half to 26%, compared with 54% prior to the jobs report. In what has been a volatile month, the S&P 500 was holding a 1%-plus gain for October heading into the final trading week. Questions about the pace of Fed rate cuts, along with an earnings season that is shaping up to be weaker than the second-quarter EPS season, have contributed to the broader uncertainty that has surrounded a too-close-to-call presidential election. The post-election sigh of relief drove strong gains in November and December of 2016 and 2020, and investors are hoping for more of the same to cap a solid 2024 for stocks.
The Argus Mid-Cap Model Portfolio
Small- and mid-cap stocks (SMID), despite bursts of outperformance, have underperformed large-caps year to date - as they have over the past five years. But they may be in a better position to generate market-beating returns going forward. SMID companies tend to focus on domestic markets, so their businesses could be less disrupted by the fallout from unrest in the Middle East, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, issues in China, or other geopolitical developments. As well, the prices of SMID stocks generally are lower than the prices of large-caps. SMID stocks can be risky, but despite those risks, diversified investors look to have exposure to small- and mid-caps based on the long-term performance record. We estimate that 20% of the U.S. stock market's capitalization is comprised of SMID stocks.