Why High Drug Prices Are Here to Stay and What This Means for Investors

Generado por agente de IAMarcus Lee
domingo, 3 de agosto de 2025, 10:12 am ET3 min de lectura

The U.S. healthcare system's structural flaws have created a perfect storm for pharmaceutical companies, PBMs, and biologics producers. Despite periodic calls for reform, the systemic factors driving high drug prices—ranging from opaque rebate systems to limited competition—ensure that these profits will persist for years to come. For investors, this is not a crisis to avoid but an opportunity to understand and capitalize on.

The Structural Engine of High Prices

The U.S. spends more on prescription drugs than any other developed nation, with prices averaging 2.78 times higher than in other OECD countries. This disparity is not accidental but a product of a system designed to reward complexity over transparency.

  1. Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) as Middlemen Profits:
    PBMs like those embedded in

    (CVS), Walgreens (WBA), and Optum (OPTUM) act as intermediaries between insurers, pharmacies, and manufacturers. Their business model thrives on spread pricing—charging insurers more than what they pay pharmacies—and opaque rebate structures. These practices inflate list prices while allowing PBMs to retain a significant cut. For example, a 2024 analysis revealed that PBMs' spread pricing alone added $50 billion to U.S. drug costs in 2024.

  2. GLP-1 Agonists: The Obesity Gold Rush:

    (NVO) and (LLY) dominate the GLP-1 class of weight-loss drugs, which have become the most lucrative segment in pharma. Wegovy and Mounjaro, priced at $1,000/month, are now central to insurers' cost trends. Despite insurers' attempts to limit usage via prior authorization, demand remains insatiable due to the drugs' efficacy and aggressive marketing. Novo Nordisk's U.S. Wegovy sales alone surged 21-fold from 2021–2023, dwarfing European sales by 15x.

  1. Biologics and Specialty Drugs: Pricing Power Unleashed:
    Biologics—used for conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and cancer—are inherently expensive to develop and manufacture. Companies like

    (ABBV) and (BMY) leverage this complexity to maintain high prices. Even with the advent of biosimilars, adoption remains slow. For instance, Humira's biosimilars achieved only 28% market share in 2024, while newer biologics like Stelara (Janssen, a Johnson & Johnson [JNJ] subsidiary) face even slower uptake.

  2. Cell and Gene Therapies (CGTs): One-Time Payments, Lifelong Profits:
    Companies like Bluebird Bio (BLUE) and

    (NVS) are pioneering CGTs priced in the $2–3 million range for one-time treatments. These therapies, targeting rare diseases like sickle cell anemia, are often excluded from reinsurance coverage, forcing health plans to absorb costs. With no viable alternatives, payers have little choice but to foot the bill.

The System's Resilience to Reform

Efforts to curb prices—such as Medicare's drug price negotiations under the Inflation Reduction Act—have had limited impact. For example, the first 10 drugs selected for negotiation are projected to save $6 billion in 2026, but these savings are confined to Medicare. Commercial insurers and Medicaid remain largely untouched by such reforms. Meanwhile, states are only beginning to address PBM spread pricing, with 16 states enacting restrictions in 2024. This fragmented approach ensures that the status quo endures.

Investment Opportunities in the Status Quo

For investors, the key is to identify players that benefit from the system's structural flaws:

  1. GLP-1 Manufacturers:
    Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly are prime examples of companies leveraging demand, pricing power, and regulatory tailwinds. Their dominance in obesity and diabetes care positions them for sustained revenue growth. Investors should monitor NVO and LLY's R&D pipelines for next-gen GLP-1 variants, which could extend their market leadership.

  2. Biologics Producers with Strong IP Portfolios:

    (AMGN) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY) own blockbuster biologics with lengthy patent protections. Even as biosimilars emerge, their market share will erode slowly. These companies' ability to negotiate favorable formulary placement with PBMs further insulates them from competition.

  3. PBMs and Pharmacy Chains:
    CVS Health and Walgreens benefit from the opaque rebate system and their control over retail pharmacy networks. As PBMs, they profit from spread pricing and rebate management, while their retail arms capture prescription volume. Investors should watch CVS's profitability metrics and its ability to expand into specialty pharmacy services.

  4. Cell and Gene Therapy Pioneers:
    Novartis and Bluebird Bio are betting on the future of one-time cures. While CGTs face high upfront costs, their potential to reduce long-term healthcare spending (e.g., by eliminating the need for lifelong treatments) makes them attractive to payers willing to trade short-term pain for long-term savings.

Risks and Mitigants

While these sectors are robust, investors should be wary of policy shifts. The Trump administration's push for international reference pricing and the FTC's antitrust actions could disrupt pricing models. However, the U.S. market's resistance to systemic change—rooted in lobbying power and political gridlock—suggests that these risks are more theoretical than imminent.

Conclusion: Bet on the System, Not Against It

High drug prices are not a temporary anomaly but a feature of a system designed to reward complexity, innovation, and opacity. For investors, this means prioritizing companies that dominate the current ecosystem: GLP-1 producers, biologics firms, PBMs, and CGT pioneers. These players are not just surviving the system—they are building their fortunes on it.

As the market grapples with rising costs and fragmented reforms, the winners will be those who understand the structural forces at play. For now, the best strategy is to invest in the architects of the status quo—and profit from the system they've helped create.

author avatar
Marcus Lee

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