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Where Will Bristol Myers Squibb Be in 5 Years?

Motley Fool - Sun Aug 18, 8:24AM CDT

Bristol Myers Squibb(NYSE: BMY) has had a rough past five years. Its shares are barely in the green, its financial results have been unimpressive, and it has faced important patent cliffs. Most notably, its cancer drug Revlimid, its top-selling product at one point, is now out of patent exclusivity.

Despite that poor showing in recent years, things might be very different for BMS in the next half-decade, but only if it can better handle the headwinds it has experienced. Let's find out how things might develop for the company through 2029.

^SPX Chart

^SPX data by YCharts.

More patent cliffs on the horizon

In the second quarter, revenue increased by almost 9% year over year to $12.2 billion -- the best top-line growth rate BMS has recorded in about three years:

BMY Revenue (Quarterly YoY Growth) Chart

BMY Revenue (Quarterly YoY Growth) data by YCharts.

The drugmaker's best-selling products in the period were anticoagulant Eliquis and cancer medicine Opdivo; BMS shares the rights to the former medicine with Pfizer. Eliquis' revenue increased by 7% year over year to $3.4 billion. Opdivo's sales of $2.4 billion were up 11% compared to the year-ago period. These two medicines made up 47.6% of the company's total revenue.

Unfortunately, both medicines will lose patent protection by the end of 2029. Once these patent cliffs arrive, revenue will decline. But BMS is already preparing for that eventuality.

Bristol Myers Squibb's plan to bounce back

BMS has earned several brand-new approvals since 2019. Let's consider three of them. Reblozyl treats anemia in patients with beta-thalassemia; it was approved in 2019. Opdualag, a therapy for melanoma, was launched in 2022. Camzyos, also approved in 2022, treats a heart disease. Though none of these provides a significant share of revenue, they're growing their sales rapidly:

Drug

Q2 Revenue

Q2 Growth (YoY)

Reblozyl

$425 million

82%

Opdualag

$235 million

53%

Camzyos

$139 million

202%

YoY= Year over year. Data source: Company financial statements.

These products and other relatively new additions to the company's lineup should continue growing their sales for the next five years. BMS expects more than $25 billion in revenue from its new product portfolio by 2030. It won't stop earning brand-new approvals or label expansions either: BMS boasts 55 compounds across dozens of clinical trials in its pipeline.

One of the drugmaker's promising new products isn't exactly new: It's a subcutaneous version of its crown jewel, Opdivo. BMS expects that this version could target between 65% and 75% of Opdivo's indications in the U.S. It won't reach the same peak, but it should help smooth out the losses the company will incur from Opdivo's patent cliff.

Beyond that, BMS has many other products, some of which will join the company's growing portfolio of new products in the next five years. The healthcare giant has also made several acquisitions to boost its pipeline in recent years.

More reasons to buy the stock

The company's performance should improve compared to the past five years, at least until it hits important patent cliffs toward the end of the decade. And it has the tools to bounce back and perform well after that.

Furthermore, the stock is also a great pick for dividend investors: BMS has increased its payouts every year for 15 years straight. The company is committed to continuing those increases, so expect it to maintain this streak through 2029. The forward dividend yield currently stands at an impressive 5.1%.

The cash payout ratio looks conservative at just under 37%. Bristol Myers Squibb looks like a solid, blue chip dividend stock to buy and hold for the next half-decade, and likely well beyond that.

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Prosper Junior Bakiny has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Bristol Myers Squibb and Pfizer. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.