Pfizer’s Covid Pill Is Shaking Up the Asia Recovery Trade
(Bloomberg) — Shares tied to reopening trades from casinos to airlines surged in Asia on Monday after Pfizer Inc. said that its Covid-19 pill could reduce hospitalizations and deaths in high-risk patients by 89%.
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A Bloomberg gauge of Macau casino shares jumped 5.9%, the biggest move in over two months, while an index of Asia-Pacific airline stocks rallied 4.5%, the most since March. Luggage manufacturer Samsonite International SA climbed 14% in Hong Kong.
The buying frenzy in Asia — which tracks gains among similar stocks in the U.S. — comes as Pfizer looked to become the second pharmaceutical company to offer an oral pill to combat the virus. While Pfizer’s drug has yet to receive emergency authorization from U.S. regulators, investors say that it shows promise to help ease the pandemic globally and accelerate a return to travel.
The pill is “bringing some hope that reopening will be able to take place more smoothly, especially if the pill is able to reduce the strain on hospital capacity,” said Jun Rong Yeap, market strategist with IG Asia Pte. in Singapore. “The fact that it is an oral treatment may also suggest that it may be more well-received, along with its high efficacy.”
Meanwhile, makers of Covid-19 vaccines and treatments in the region slumped, with CanSino Biologics Inc. sinking 17% in Hong Kong. Wuxi Biologics Cayman Inc., which makes ingredients for AstraZeneca Plc’s vaccine, also fell by 8.6%.
If successful, Pfizer’s pill “may create uncertainties for earnings outlook and valuations of Chinese vaccine makers,” said Daniel So, a strategist at CMB International Securities. “The impacts are expected to be of mid-to-long-term.”
In Japan, Shionogi & Co., which has been developing a rival drug to Pfizer’s, fell the most since March 2020. The firm is expecting late-stage trial data on that treatment by December. Takara Bio Inc., which has a contract to produce mRNA vaccines in Japan starting next year, fell the most since May of last year.
Last month, Merck & Co. submitted its experimental treatment to regulators, after a study showed it slashed the risk of getting seriously ill or dying by half in certain patients. Vaccine related shares also plunged after that news.
(Updates with closing prices.)
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