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Saturday, May 3, 2025

'Gilead and Vertex Pharma: Biotech’s Tariff-Proof Fortresses in a Volatile Landscape'

 The biotechnology sector is navigating a storm of trade tensions, tariff threats, and supply chain disruptions. Amid this chaos, two companies—Gilead Sciences (GILD) and Vertex Pharmaceuticals (VRTX)—have emerged as “tariff safe havens,” their U.S.-centric operations and tax strategies shielding them from the sector’s growing pains. Here’s why investors should take note.

Why Tariffs Matter in Biotech

Global pharmaceutical tariffs are rising as governments pressure companies to repatriate manufacturing and combat profit-shifting to low-tax jurisdictions. For biotechs, this means higher costs for imported raw materials, retaliatory tariffs on exports, and disrupted supply chains. Yet Gilead and Vertex are bucking the trend.

Gilead: Anchored in the U.S.

Gilead’s 20% effective tax rate (GAAP) in 2025 reflects its heavy reliance on U.S. operations. Unlike peers using Ireland or the Netherlands for tax optimization, Gilead’s intellectual property and manufacturing are predominantly domestic. This reduces exposure to tariffs on offshore production.

  • Stock Performance: Shares rose 12% in 2025, outperforming the NYSE Arca Pharmaceutical Index, which gained just 1%.
  • Pipeline Strength: Lenacapavir, a twice-yearly HIV preventive drug, received a June 2025 FDA review date, promising to extend its HIV dominance.

GILD Trend
GILD
Gilead Sciences
103.680
NASDAQ
Stock
Closed
+0.430
+0.42%
All
Daily
Weekly
Monthly

Vertex: The Tax Rate Champion

Vertex’s 20.5–21.5% effective tax rate—the highest among peers—stems from its 100% U.S.-based manufacturing, centered in Boston. This vertical integration insulates it from tariffs on imported components.

  • Stock Surge: Vertex’s shares jumped 23% in 2025, driven by Trikafta’s dominance in cystic fibrosis (CF) treatment.
  • Regulatory Tailwinds: Trikafta’s orphan-drug status exempts it from Medicare price negotiations, boosting margins.

VERX Trend
VERX
Vertex
39.210
NASDAQ
Stock
Closed
-0.600
-1.51%
All
Daily
Weekly
Monthly

Why Peers Lag

Companies like Regeneron (REGN) and Amgen (AMGN), with 9–11% and 15–16% tax rates, face higher tariff risks. Their reliance on Ireland (12.5% tax rate) and offshore manufacturing leaves them vulnerable. Citi estimates tariffs could shave 9.7% off 2026 sector profits, hitting firms like Merck ($200M tariff impact) hardest.

REGN, BIIB, VRTX, GILD, AMGN
Name
RegeneronREGN
BiogenBIIB
Vertex PharmaceuticalsVRTX
Gilead SciencesGILD
AmgenAMGN

Broader Industry Shifts

  • Manufacturing Reshoring: Eli Lilly ($27B U.S. investment) and Pfizer are following Gilead’s lead, but Vertex and Gilead are already ahead.
  • Supply Chain Weakness: A BIO survey found 90% of U.S. biotechs rely on imported components, exposing them to EU tariffs. Vertex and Gilead’s vertical integration avoids this.

Risks and Considerations

While these companies are tariff-proof, they aren’t immune to all risks:
Pipeline Delays: Lenacapavir’s FDA approval (June 2025) is critical for Gilead.
Market Saturation: Vertex’s CF drugs treat 90% of cases, leaving limited upside.
Controversy: Critics argue their tariff exemptions—despite enabling affordable CF drugs—distort competition.

Conclusion: Safe Havens for a Volatile Era

Gilead and Vertex are the biotech sector’s most tariff-resistant stocks, leveraging U.S.-centric operations and high tax rates to sidestep disruptions. With stock gains of 12%–23% in 2025 versus peers’ struggles, their strategies align with geopolitical priorities and regulatory trends.

Investors should prioritize these names for three reasons:
1. Tariff Mitigation: Their domestic focus shields them from 25% tariffs on imported APIs (active pharmaceutical ingredients).
2. Pipeline Momentum: Lenacapavir and Trikafta’s expansion into new indications ensure growth.
3. Cash Reserves: Gilead holds $7.9B in cash, while Vertex’s strong CF franchise fuels reinvestment.

In a sector facing a potential 9.7% profit hit, these companies are proving that onshore manufacturing and tax transparency aren’t just compliance strategies—they’re competitive weapons. For investors seeking stability, GILD and VRTX are the sector’s safest bets.

Data sources: Company reports, Citi analysis, Congressional Research Service, BIO survey.

https://www.ainvest.com/news/gilead-vertex-pharma-biotech-tariff-proof-fortresses-volatile-landscape-2505/

Maine high school teacher says Trump ‘needs to die,’ urges Secret Service to take him, followers out

 A Maine high school teacher called for the US Secret Service to “take out” those who support President Trump — and said that “Trump and his cronies need to die,” in a string of unhinged social media posts this week. 

“The Secret Service has the perfect opportunity, if they choose to step up and take it. You are the ones with the power. Coordinate. Take out every single person who supports Trump’s illegal, immoral, unconstitutional acts,” Waterville Senior High School English teacher JoAnna St. Germain raged on Facebook Tuesday. 

Waterville Senior High School English teacher JoAnna St. Germain called for the US Secret Service to “take out” President Trump’s followers on Facebook Tuesday.JoAnna St. Germain/Facebook

“If I had the skill set required, I would take them out myself,” the educator wrote.

In the same post, she added that she was “not talking about assassinating a president” because a president is “a person duly elected by the American people” – whereas Trump is leading “a fascist dictatorship.”

“When I say that Trump and all the sycophants he’s surrounded himself with need to die, I mean that s–t . . . I’ll die on that hill, happily,” she wrote in the comments section of the same post, which has since been pinned to the top of her Facebook page

In a Facebook post less than 24 hours later, St. Germain doubled down. 

“I have zero shame about what I’ve said. I’m not backtracking a single thing. I believe Trump and every sycophant he has surrounded himself with . . . needs to die,” she wrote, adding that she posted “knowing I’d likely lose my job and benefits.”

“When I say that Trump and all the sycophants he’s surrounded himself with need to die, I mean that s–t,” St. Germain seethed.AP

“People are quite angry with me for stating openly that Trump and his cronies need to die,” St. Germain wrote in a separate Facebook post Wednesday. 

“If you’re mad at this post, knowing that I just threw away a decade of experience teaching the truth, fully knowing that my superintendent will have to fire me? If you’re mad that I’m speaking truth to power? F–k you,” she ranted.

Two hours later, the instructor brazenly reposted an emailed statement from the Waterville Public Schools Superintendent Peter Hallen, which was posted by news outlet The Maine Wire.

The pixie-faced instructor wrote the unhinged Facebook posts “knowing I’d likely lose my job and benefits,” she said.JoAnna St. Germain/Facebook

“Please know that I have taken steps to ensure everyone’s safety and am, along with the appropriate authorities, actively investigating the incident,” Hallen wrote.

“While I cannot comment on personal matters, I assure you that due process and the safety of our students and staff are my highest priority,” he wrote.

St. Germain seemingly responded to Hallen’s words in another Facebook post less than an hour later. 

Waterville Public Schools Superintendent, Peter Hallen said that he and authorities are investigating St. Germain’s concerning online behavior in an emailed statement to families Wednesday.JMG

“To be clear, publicly: I knew what I was doing when I did it. I’m not the least f–king sorry,” she seethed. 

St. Germain, Hallen and Waterville Senior High School’s principal, Brian Laramee, did not immediately respond to inquiries. 

As of Friday, St. Germain was still listed on the staff directory on the school’s website.

https://nypost.com/2025/05/03/us-news/maine-high-school-teacher-joanna-st-germain-says-president-trump-and-followers-need-to-die-in-sick-facebook-posts/