Here are the biggest calls on Wall Street on Wednesday: Redburn Atlantic Equities reiterates Amazon as buy Redburn said Amazon Web Services’ pricing power will drive share acceleration for Amazon. “The combination of fading optimisation headwinds, increased deployment of new workloads and the February price hike bodes well for a meaningful growth reacceleration of AWS above market expectations. Bank of America reiterates Alphabet as buy Bank of America said AI is a “top stock driver” for Alphabet “Overall, we do not see a major traffic impact for Google and continue to expect progress with AI to be top stock driver.” Leerink downgrades Amgen to market perform from outperform Leerink downgraded the biotech company due to rising obesity competition and the firm says more info is needed for Amgen’s experimental weight-loss drug. “We await data with longer-term administration to better understand drug efficacy and tolerability.” KeyBanc initiates Crocs and Deckers as overweight Key said it’s bullish on footwear companies like Crocs and Deckers. “Another Year of Macro Uncertainty Is Upon Us, but Footwear Should Remain Strong and Steady.” Gordon Haskett upgrades Target to buy from neutral Gordon Haskett said in its upgrade of the stock that “comp prospects will begin to brighten.” “Finally, in order to capitalize on our expectation for an uptick in discretionary sales we are upgrading Target to Buy.” Redburn Atlantic Equities upgrades Toast to buy from neutral Redburn said the restaurant technology company is underappreciated. ” Toast’s ability to maintain a stable gross payment take rate while onboarding larger merchants is clear evidence of pricing power on SMB [small midsize business] merchants.” Jefferies initiates Sprout Social as buy Jefferies said the social media software provider is a market leader. “We initiate on social media management software company SPT with a Buy.” Citi downgrades Steven Madden to neutral from buy Citi said in its downgrade of Steven Madden that it sees margin headwinds for the shoe company. “Margin Headwinds Limit EPS Upside in F24E; D/G to Neutral.” JPMorgan downgrades New York Community Bancorp to neutral from overweight JPMorgan said in its downgrade of the regional bank that executive departures and a disappointing earnings report earlier this week have the stock “outside of our comfort zone.” “It has been a very challenging week for NYCB shares since NYCB reported 4Q23 earnings which included (1) the company reporting a wide EPS miss on 4Q23 results (on significant provision build) and (2) a disappointing 2024 outlook tied to the bank ramping up liquidity, reserves, and capital as part of becoming a Category 4 bank ($100B+ in assets).” Jefferies upgrades Quest Diagnostics to buy from hold Jefferies said in its upgrade of Quest that the medical diagnostic’s stock is “compelling.” “U/G to Buy: Guidance Is Attainable, M & A To Drive Upside, Valuation’s Compelling.” Morgan Stanley names Huntington Bancshares a top pick Morgan Stanley said it likes the regional bank’s low exposure to commercial real estate. “Making HBAN , with its low CRE exposure and high reserve ratio our Top Pick.” Morgan Stanley reiterates Nvidia as overweight Morgan Stanley raised its price target on Nvidia to $750 per share from $603. “We continue to see a very strong near term picture, and think that various second derivative anxieties are missing the bigger picture; we raise #s yet again.” Morgan Stanley downgrades Aptiv to underweight from equal weight Morgan Stanley said it sees slowing growth for the automotic tech company. “A slowdown in demand for EVs and legacy OEMs’ willingness to make them challenges APTV’s growth-over-market (GOM) assumption which underpins earnings and valuation.” Jefferies upgrades Semrush to buy from hold Jefferies said the search engine optimization company has “pricing power.” “We assume coverage of Semrush — an SEO, competitor intelligence, and digital marketing platform— upgrading the stock to Buy from Hold.” JPMorgan upgrades Crown Holdings to overweight from neutral JPMorgan said shares of the packaging company have an attractive risk/reward. “We think that Crown Holdings has reached an equity value that leads to a favorable risk/reward balance.” Piper Sandler initiates Civitas Resources as buy Piper said shares of the energy producer are underappreciated. “We initiate coverage of Civitas Resources (CIVI) with an Overweight rating and $92 PT.” DA Davidson upgrade Symbotic to buy from neutral DA said shares of the robotic automation company are attractive. “We find SYM’s long term fundamentals attractive and its technology unrivaled and highly differentiated.” Goldman Sachs downgrades VF Corp to neutral from buy Goldman downgraded the owner of brands of like Vans and North Face and says it doesn’t see any near term positive catalysts for VF Corp. “Longer-dated path to turnaround as profit pressures persist; downgrade to Neutral.” Bank of America downgrades New York Community Bancorp to neutral from buy Bank of America said New York Community Bancorp’s outlook is too “muddled” after the recent selloff. “We believe the persistent sell-off in the stock over the last two days on perceived risks tied to the commercial real estate (CRE) book and the heightened degree of regulatory scrutiny is likely to weigh on the EPS outlook and on investor sentiment to add exposure to the stock.” DA Davidson reiterates Apple as neutral DA raised its price target on the stock to $200 per share from $166 and says it’s bullish on Apple’s Vision Pro. The firm said it was maintaining its neutral rating overall. “We are more positive on AAPL after experiencing a Vision Pro demo first hand.” Oppenheimer upgrades Enphase to outperform from perform Oppenheimer upgraded the energy company after its earnings report on Tuesday and says estimates have bottomed. “With ENPH guiding well below consensus and shares trading substantially higher, we believe the debate on shares will now focus on lingering channel inventory overhang, underlying demand levels, and the competitive landscape.” Jefferies initiates ZoomInfo as buy Jefferies initiates the software data company with a buy and says it sees new customer growth. “We initiate on sales and marketing intelligence company ZI with a Buy.’
Meta reported second-quarter earnings on Wednesday and said that its Reality Labs unit, which develops virtual reality and augmented reality technologies needed to power the metaverse, logged a $3.7 billion operating loss.
The unit recorded $276 million in second-quarter sales, down from the $339 million in revenue it brought during the first quarter. Analysts polled by StreetAccount were projecting Reality Labs to record $421 million in sales and $3.5 billion in operating losses.
Shares of Meta were up about 5% after it reported an 11% pop in revenue as advertising rebounded and the company issued an uplifting sales forecast for the third quarter. It shows that Meta is still very much an ad company with a big cost center.
Last year, Meta’s Reality Labs unit lost a total of $13.7 billion while bringing in $2.16 billion in revenue, which is driven in part by the company’s sales of Quest-branded VR headsets. Reality Labs lost $3.99 billion during the first quarter. That puts its total losses at about $21.3 billion since the beginning of last year.
Meta said in its earnings report that it expects operating losses in its Reality Labs unit “to increase meaningfully year-over-year due to our ongoing product development efforts in augmented reality/virtual reality and investments to further scale our ecosystem.”
In June, Meta announced a VR subscription service dubbed Meta Quest+, which costs $7.99 a month and is compatible with the company’s Quest 2, Quest Pro and upcoming Quest 3 headsets. The subscription service lets people access two new VR games each month, and they will be able to play those games as long as they have active subscriptions.
Also in June, Zuckerberg revealed details about the Quest 3 headset just days before Apple announced its Vision Pro VR and AR headset that will cost a whopping $3,499 when it is released in 2024. The Quest 3 will be sold at a price starting at $499 and is 40% thinner than the Quest 2 and will contain a next-generation Qualcomm chipset, the company said.
Seniors with early Alzheimer’s disease will face major hurdles to get treated even if promising new drugs roll out more broadly in the coming years, putting them at risk of developing more severe disease as they wait months or perhaps years for a diagnosis.
The U.S. health-care system is not currently prepared to meet the needs of an aging population in which a growing number of people will need to undergo evaluation forAlzheimer’s, according to neurologists, health policy experts and the companies developing the drugs.
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There are not enough dementia specialists or the needed testing capacity in the U.S. to diagnose everyone who may benefit from a new treatment like Eisai and Biogen‘s Leqembi. After patients are diagnosed, the capacity may not exist — at least initially — to provide the twice monthly intravenous infusions for everyone who is eligible.
Researchers estimate that the wait time from the initial evaluation to the confirmatory diagnostic tests to the infusions could range anywhere from a year and a half to four years or longer. Those months are critical for people with Alzheimer’s.
“The whole process from that time of the family physician conversation to the point of infusion, I worry how long it will take and the complexities of the patient navigating through all of that to successfully get to the end,” Anne White, president of neuroscience at Eli Lilly, which is developing its own Alzheimer’s treatment, told CNBC.
There are promising innovations in development, such as blood tests and injections that patients would take at home, which could make it significantly easier to get diagnosed and treated in the future.
White also said Lilly is confident that more doctors will get into the field and help to alleviate capacity issues, as awareness grows that medicines are entering the market to treat Alzheimer’s.
But time spent waiting robs early patients of their memory and ability to live independently. Alzheimer’s gets worse with time, and as patients deteriorate into more advanced stages of the disease, they no longer benefit from treatments like Leqembi that are designed to slow cognitive decline early.
More than 2,000 seniors transition from mild to moderate dementia from the disease a day, according to estimates from the Alzheimer’s Association. At that stage, they become ineligible for Leqembi.
The central challenge is that a large and rapidly growing group of people have early memory loss and other thinking problems known as mild cognitive impairment. This condition is often, though not always, a sign of early Alzheimer’s disease.
An estimated 13 million people in the U.S. had mild cognitive impairment last year, according to a study published in the Alzheimer’s and Dementia Journal. As the U.S. population ages, the number of people with this condition is expected to reach 21 million by 2060, the study projected.
The U.S. health-care system will deal with major logistical challenges in diagnosing the growing population of people with early Alzheimer’s — even before patients face potential issues with accessing treatment.
“There’s a very large population of undiagnosed cognitive impairments that need to be evaluated in order to determine if people are eligible for treatment,” said Jodi Liu, an expert on health policy at the Rand Corporation.
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Access to drugs like Leqembi is severely restricted because Medicare for nowwill only cover the $26,500-per-year treatment for people participating in clinical trials. Medicare has promised to provide broader coverage if Leqembi receives full approval from the Food and Drug Administration, which Eisai expects to happen in July.
Eisai has estimated that 100,000 people in the U.S. will be diagnosed and eligible for Leqembi by the third year of the treatment’s rollout. The sum is a fraction of the total population that could benefit.
Those patients could have other options if new treatments emerge from trials with positive marks.
Eli Lilly will publish clinical trial data on its antibody infusion donanemab in the second quarter of this year. If the data is positive, the company will ask the FDA to approve the drug.
Eisai’s U.S. CEO Ivan Cheung and Lilly’s White said during the companies’ respective earnings calls in February that they are focused on working with the U.S. health system to address the challenges of rolling out of Alzheimer’s treatments.
“The primary goal right now during this launch phase […] is really get the market ready in terms of the diagnostic pathway, the infusion capacity, the education on how to monitor for this therapy, get all the hospitals and clinics ready,” Cheung said.
Long lines are expected at the offices of geriatricians, neurologists and radiologists as millions of people with mild cognitive impairment undergo evaluation to diagnose whether they have Alzheimer’s disease.
Demand for geriatricians — doctors who are experts in diseases that affect the elderly — is expected to outstrip the number of specialists available in the field through at least 2035, according to projections from the federal Health Resources and Services Administration.
The American Academy of Neurology told Medicare in a February letter that increased demand for Alzheimer’s treatments will put substantial pressure on neurologists, who will need additional resources. The federal data predicts a substantial shortage of these specialists in rural areas through at least 2035.
“You just look at the neurologists, look at geriatricians — there are fewer and fewer geriatricians per person in the U.S.,” Rand’s Liu said. “It’s just a few number of specialists to do this kind of work.”
White said Lilly has heard stories of patients waiting six to 12 months to see a neurologist or other doctors who treat dementia due to current capacity issues.
The number of radiologists — who also play a role in diagnosing the disease — is expected to decline in the U.S. through 2035 even as demand increases, the data shows.
In a study published in 2017, Liu and other Rand researchers estimated an initial wait of 18 months for patients to get evaluated by a dementia specialist, tested to confirm a diagnosis, and then treated in the first year that an Alzheimer’s antibody treatment becomes available. The wait would decrease to 1.3 months by 2030 as the patient backlog is cleared, they estimated at the time.
But more recent research found that the wait would actually increase as demand created by an aging U.S. population outstrips the supply of specialists.
Patients seeking a first specialist visit could face an initial wait of 20 months, according to a study by researchers at the University of Southern California published in the journal Alzheimer’s and Dementia in 2021. The delay could increase to about four years as early as 2028 and grow longer through 2050, the study found.
The journal is published by the Alzheimer’s Association.
Both studies are based on assumptions made before Leqembi received expedited approval from the FDA in January. Actual wait times could differ from the studies’ projections.
Two types of tests can diagnosis Alzheimer’s disease: PET scans and spinal taps. PET scans are accurate and safe diagnostic tools, but they are also cumbersome and expensive, said Dr. David Russell, a neurologist.
Patients are injected with a tracer that makes brain abnormalities visible to the machine that does the imaging. Tracers have to be made for each patient and used on the same day.
“We don’t have the infrastructure to roll out PET scanning on a major scale,” said Russell, director of clinical research at the Institute for Neurodegenerative Disorders in New Haven, Connecticut. He is the principal investigator on the clinical trials of Leqembi and donanemab at the institute.
Medicare coverage of PET scans for Alzheimer’s patients is also limited right now. The insurance program for seniors will only cover one scan per lifetime, and only when the patient is participating in a clinical trail approved by the federal Centers for for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
“That’s concerning because people may actually test negative at one point but then obviously as they age, they may need to get tested again,” White said.
Early Alzheimer’s disease can also be diagnosed with a spinal tap, in which fluid around the spinal cord is extracted with a catheter and tested. While there’s plenty of capacity to do spinal taps, this option isn’t attractive to many patients due to unfounded fears that it’s painful and dangerous, Russell said.
Though “there’s a lot of resistance” to the procedure, it is well tolerated and safe, he noted.
“There are certainly areas that don’t have a PET scanner, rural areas, so people would need to travel to a health center that has a PET scanner,” Liu said.
In a large, sparsely populated rural state like New Mexico, many patients would have to drive three to five hours to get a PET scan in a city such as Albuquerque, said Dr. Gary Rosenberg, a neurologist and director of the New Mexico Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center.
“It’s not California or the East Coast where everything’s very compressed and people can travel and get to a center pretty easily and go through these kinds of treatments,” Rosenberg said.
The state has an estimated population of 43,000 people with dementia, and there are very few neurologists outside of the Albuquerque area, Rosenberg said. The New Mexico Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center in Albuquerque is one of only three such facilities funded by the federal National Institute of Aging in a vast region stretching west from Texas to Arizona.
To do a PET scan, a tracer has to be made for each patient off-site in Phoenix, flown on a private plane to Albuquerque and used within hours because the tracers have a short shelf life, according to Rosenberg. The whole process costs more than $12,000 per patient, he added.
“It’s logistically going to be very challenging,” Rosenberg said.
After spending months or possibly years waiting to get diagnosed with early Alzheimer’s, patients would then be eligible for intravenous infusions of Leqembi. But the U.S. doesn’t currently have the capacity to give infusions twice monthly for everyone who likely has the disease, Russell said.
“Having an IV infusion every two weeks would sort of ration people to availability and that’s a problem,” Russell said.
The University of New Mexico Hospital is already maxed out with demand for infusion therapies for cancer, rheumatoid arthritis and autoimmune diseases, and could have a “problem” adding new capacity, said Rosenberg.
Intravenous infusions of monoclonal antibodies like Leqembi aren’t difficult to administer, Russell said.
The infrastructure to offer infusions should expand rapidly once industry sees there’s demand for treatments like Leqembi. But the process of building out capacity could still take a couple years, Russell said. He believes big players like CVS will provide infusions for Alzheimer’s disease on a major scale if they see there’s a large and stable market.
“In one sense, capitalism works, and if it looks like that’s going to be the future, I think infusion centers will explode onto the scene,” the neurologist said.
Eisai and Biogen hope to move early Alzheimer’s patients to a single monthly dose of Leqembi after they’ve completed their initial course of twice monthly infusions, which could help alleviate some of the capacity issues with infusions over time. They plan to ask the FDA to approve this plan in early 2024.
Eli Lilly’s Alzheimer’s candidate antibody treatment donanemab is a single monthly dose, potentially making the logistics of administration easier if the drug gets approved. Dr. Dan Skovronsky, Lilly’s chief medical officer, told analysts during the company’s first-quarter earnings call that he expects many patients will be able to stop taking donanemab at 12 months.
Though the projected wait times to get diagnosed and treated are sobering, innovations on the horizon promise to significantly improve access to Alzheimer’s drugs over time.
Blood tests for Alzheimer’s are in development and some are already on the market. Primary-care doctors could administer the tests, which would ease the burden on patients, especially those in rural communities where the closest PET scan machine is hours away.
These tests detect proteins in the blood associated with Alzheimer’s. They promise to help diagnose the disease before people display cognitive symptoms, potentially giving patients the chance to get treated before they suffer irreparable brain damage, according to the National Institutes of Health.
At least three blood tests made by C2N Diagnostics, Quest Diagnostics and Qaunterix are currently on the market. But they are used to evaluate people who are already presenting symptoms and aren’t available on the mass scale needed for the expected increase in Alzheimer’s patients.
C2N’s PrecivityAD test costs $1,250 and is not covered by insurance — though the company has a financial assistance program. Quest Diagnostics’ AD-Detect test costs $650. Quest’s test is covered by some insurance plans but not Medicare at the moment. The company also has a financial assistance program. Quanterix wouldn’t disclose the price of its test, which insurance does not cover.
Right now, these are not stand-alone tests that can definitively diagnose Alzheimer’s. But the tests could help identify the patients who likely have the disease, which would narrow the population that needs further evaluation and reduce wait times for dementia specialists or confirmatory PET scans.
A study in the journal Alzheimer’s and Dementia estimated that a cognitive test combined with a blood test could slash wait times for dementia specialists from 50 months down to 12 months.
Eisai believes that inexpensive blood tests could completely replace PET scans and spinal taps by the fourth year of Leqembi’s rollout. The quicker diagnosiscould increase the number of people eligible for treatment.
Rosenberg said widespread availability of blood tests will allow mobile clinics to go into rural communities and identify who has markers associated with Alzheimer’s. This would allow patients in remote towns avoid the hours-long drive to cities with PET scan machines, Rosenberg said.
“It’s a game changer,” the neurologist said.
Lilly is developing at least two blood tests. The company is already using one test in clinical trials and hopes to commercialize it sometime this year. It is developing a second test through a collaboration with Roche. White said it is reasonable to expect that in a few years blood tests could replace more burdensome PET scans.
Biogen and Eisai are also developing an injectable form of Leqembi which patients could administer themselves with an autoinjector similar to insulin pens, saving the trip to a site that provides intravenous infusions. They plan to ask the FDA to approve these so-called subcutaneous injections in early 2024.
Eli Lilly is also conducting clinical trials on an antibody treatment called remternetug as a self-administered injection. But the promise of injections that can be administered at home could make companies reluctant to invest in building out intravenous infusion capacity, Russell said.
In the future, Alzheimer’s diagnosis and treatment could be folded into routine checkups with a family doctor, Russell said. When people turn 50 and head in to get a colonoscopy or a cholesterol check, the doctor could also run a blood test for Alzheimer’s.
If the test comes back positive, the doctor could then schedule patients for an MRI and get them started on an autoinjector treatment, Russell said.
“That’s going to be the way that we’re looking at it in the not too distant future,” he said.
The World Health Organization said nearly 20 million new COVID cases were recorded in the 28 days through Jan. 29, down 78% from the previous 28 days.
The WHO counted more than 114,000 deaths in the period, up 65% from the previous one.
The agency is switching to a 28-day interval to smooth out weekly fluctuations in cases and deaths, but it continues to caution that a reduction in testing and delays in reporting in many countries are distorting the numbers.
“Current trends in reported COVID-19 cases are underestimates of the true number of global infections and reinfections as shown by prevalence surveys,” the WHO said in its weekly epidemiological update.
The other three are BF.7, BQ.1 and BA.2.75, along with their sublineages. These are currently the ones showing a growth-rate advantage in some countries compared with other circulating variants.
U.S. cases are still declining. The seven-day average of new cases stood at 41,771 on Wednesday, according to a New York Times tracker. That’s down 23% from two weeks ago.
The daily average for hospitalizations was down 22% at 31,593. The average for deaths was 453, down 6% from two weeks ago, but still an undesirably high number heading into the third year of the pandemic and ahead of President Joe Biden’s plan to end the twin COVID emergencies on May 11.
• Quest Diagnostics Inc. DGX, -1.55%
is the latest healthcare company to report a steep drop in revenue from COVID-related products, in this instance a 74.6% slide in tests in its fourth quarter. Revenue from COVID tests fell to $184 million in the quarter from $722 million a year ago, when the omicron wave was about to crest. But the company still posted better-than-expected earnings, raised its quarterly dividend and added $1 billion to its share-buyback authorization, which has $311 million already available.
• Hong Kong will give away air tickets and vouchers to woo tourists back to the international financial hub as it races to catch up with other popular travel destinations in a fierce regional competition, the Associated Press reported. During the pandemic, the city largely aligned itself with mainland China’s zero-COVID strategy and has relaxed its entry rules months later than rival destinations such as Singapore, Japan and Taiwan. Even after it reopened its border with mainland China in January, tourism recovery was sluggish. On Thursday, Chief Executive John Lee launched a tourism campaign, “Hello Hong Kong,” saying the city will offer 500,000 free air tickets to welcome tourists from around the world in what he called “probably the world’s biggest welcome ever.”
• Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee has tested positive for COVID-19 for the second time, the AP reported separately. Inslee’s office said in a statement Wednesday that he had tested positive and was experiencing very mild symptoms, including a cough. He is consulting with his doctor about whether to receive Paxlovid antiviral treatments, according to the statement. He plans to continue working. Trudi Inslee, his spouse, has tested negative.
The U.S. leads the world with 102.5 million cases and 1,109,687 fatalities.
The CDC’s tracker shows that 229.6 million people living in the U.S., equal to 69.2% of the total population, are fully vaccinated, meaning they have had their primary shots.
So far, just 51.4 million Americans, equal to 15.5% of the overall population, have had the updated COVID booster that targets both the original virus and the omicron variants.