Wall Street’s New Tariff Safe Haven: High-Tax Biotech Stocks

Wall Street’s New Tariff Safe Haven: High-Tax Biotech Stocks

Chief Executives don’t usually brag about paying high tax rates.

But with pharma tariffs looming, being a tax sucker is suddenly a badge of safety in the industry. That isn’t because Wall Street is suddenly in love with taxes. Rather, with so much uncertainty, investors are prizing biotech companies that base their intellectual property and manufacturing in the U.S., which up until now often meant higher taxes.

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On a Thursday earnings call, Gilead Sciences Chief Executive Daniel O’Day proudly pointed out that the biotech’s corporate tax rate of approximately 20% “reflects the fact that the substantial majority of our intellectual property is already registered in the United States.”

Before the Trump era, many pharma and biotech firms established intellectual property and manufacturing operations in low-tax hubs such as Ireland. This allowed them to reduce their tax bills through transfer pricing . Essentially, the Irish unit of the company sells the drug to a U.S. unit at a high internal “transfer price,” enabling the parent company to book most of the profit in the lower-tax jurisdiction. (Ireland currently offers a headline 15% corporate tax rate to big companies, compared with 21% in the U.S.) On paper, the U.S. unit appears to earn little—even though the end-sales are largely happening in America.

While the 2017 tax overhaul under Trump was meant to curb offshore profit shifting, in practice it left key loopholes intact . Now the second Trump administration appears to be preparing to use tariffs to target the practice, with the goal of inducing companies to increase manufacturing in the U.S. Earlier this month, the Trump administration—which has repeatedly lambasted Ireland for luring American pharma companies—announced probes into pharmaceutical imports, citing national-security concerns. “If you look across the board,” says Citigroup healthcare strategist Traver Davis, “companies with more complex supply chains are going to face the greatest exposure.”

Wall Street’s New Tariff Safe Haven: High-Tax Biotech Stocks

Of course, investors aren’t going to buy companies simply based on their tariff exposure. But in the case of Gilead, it aligns with a growth story as the company prepares to launch its twice-yearly HIV-prevention drug lenacapavir .

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