Should You Buy Pfizer Stock Right Now?

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Pfizer's dividend yield is around 7.3%, which is super generous.

  • The company has many irons in the fire via drugs in development.

  • It's facing some challenges now, but it's also sporting a low valuation.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Pfizer ›

If you have an opening in your portfolio for a great stock with solid growth potential and perhaps even a respectable dividend yield, you would do well to give Pfizer (NYSE: PFE) some serious consideration.

As with any stock, there are very good reasons to consider buying into Pfizer and also some reasons to take a more cautious stance. Here's a look at some reasons why you might buy -- or not buy -- shares of Pfizer.

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Image source: Getty Images.

Pfizer: An introduction

With a recent market value near $133 billion, Pfizer is a pharmaceutical powerhouse -- tracing its roots way back to 1849 -- before the Civil War! Like many big drug companies, it not only has multiple treatments on the market for various health conditions and diseases, but it also has a big pipeline of products in development.

At the time of this writing, Pfizer had 108 candidates in its pipeline. Forty-seven were in the early phase 1 stage, 28 in phase 2, and 30 in late-stage development, phase 3. Among the phase 3 candidates, more than half were focused on oncology, addressing various kinds of cancers, such as breast, multiple myeloma, prostate, bladder, lung, and colon, among others. Several were for vaccines: Lyme disease, Clostridioides difficile ("C. Diff"), and COVID-19.

Pfizer's current major medications include its COVID-19 vaccine, its COVID-19 treatment Paxlovid, its Prevnar pneumococcal vaccine, its Ibrance breast cancer therapy, and its Xtandi treatment for advanced prostate cancer.

Why you might invest in Pfizer

Here are some pluses for Pfizer:

  • Its dividend: The stock recently yielded a whopping 7.3%. That's hard to beat and will generate around $730 for every $10,000 you have invested in Pfizer. CFO David Denton called the company’s commitment to its dividend "steadfast." As he has said in the past, Pfizer intends to maintain and grow the dividend over time.

  • Its growth prospects, particularly in oncology: As many big pharma companies do, Pfizer bought a smaller drug developer in 2023, Seagen (costing it $43 billion), acquiring its various drugs in development.

  • Its low valuation: The stock's recent forward-looking price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 8, for example, is well below the five-year average of 10. Its price-to-sales ratio, meanwhile, was recently 2.1, lower than its five-year average of 3.1.