Is Beaten-Down Summit Therapeutics Stock a Bad-News Buy?

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Summit Therapeutics stock fell hard recently in response to disappointing clinical trial results.

  • Ivonescimab failed to produced a statistically significant overall survival benefit in the phase 3 Harmoni trial.

  • Ivonescimab has been approved by Chinese regulators, but Summit Therapeutics has a license to sell it outside of China.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Summit Therapeutics ›

Shares of Summit Therapeutics (NASDAQ: SMMT) tanked more than 30% on Friday, May 30. Such dramatic price swings aren't unusual in the biotechnology industry; in this case, disappointing data from an important clinical trial drove the stock down.

Stock markets have a tendency to sell first and ask questions later. After watching this stock plummet, some bargain-shoppers are wondering if it fell too far. Recent trial results missed the mark the company was hoping for, but the results weren't entirely discouraging.

Let's weigh the bad news against the good to see if this stock could be a beaten-down bargain.

A person sits with face in hands while a colleague gestures with their hands.
Image source: Getty Images.

Harmoni hits the wrong note

Summit Therapeutics and its investors have been eagerly anticipating results from the phase 3 Harmoni trial of ivonescimab. It's a bispecific antibody that works like a compination of Keytruda (a PD-1 inhibitor) plus Avastin (a VEGF inhibitor).

Summit's stock price rocketed higher in 2024 thanks to Harmoni-2 trial results that showed it outperformed Keytruda at limiting tumor growth in lung cancer patients. Although ivonescimab is already approved in China, it's not for sale in the U.S. and EU, where Summit Therapeutics has a license to sell it.

The Harmoni trial enrolled second-line lung cancer patients and treated them with ivonescimab or a placebo plus standard chemo. The treatment reduced the risk of disease progression in terms of tumor growth by 48%, but failed to show a convincing overall survival benefit.

Adding ivonescimab to standard chemo reduced patients' risk of death by 21%, but the results fell just outside a 95% confidence interval with a p-value of 0.057.

It's highly unlikely the Food and Drug Administration will approve ivonescimab for sale in the U.S. based on the Harmoni trial results. According to Summit, the FDA has been clear about the need for a statistically significant overall survival benefit to support an application.

The good news

The China-based company that owns ivonescimab, Akeso, recently earned a second approval to market the therapy to lung cancer patients in China.

Keytruda sales rose to $29.5 billion last year, and a treatment that can outperform the leader could do even better. Ivonescimab is unlikely to earn approval in the U.S. for patients similar to those enrolled in the Harmoni trial. Given its ability to shrink tumors, though, it's probably just a matter of time before it produces statistically significant overall survival results for an underserved patient population.