Founded: 2013
Headquarter: Parsippany, US
Employees: 14,000
2023 Revenues: $8.54 BN
Stock Exchange: ZTS
It pays to be independent. In February 2013, US pharmaceutical group Pfizer spun off its animal health business unit Zoetis in an IPO on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) for $26 per share. Barely over a decade later, the stock is trading just under $180, resulting in a significant increase of almost 4.75% over the period. And it’s not over: most analysts recommend buying the stock. As they should. Zoetis is the world leader in pet health, offering a fairly comprehensive suite of veterinary solutions (vaccines, anti-infective treatments, pain medicine, diagnostic products). Moreover, its portfolio boasts no fewer than 15 blockbuster drugs, each generating at least $100 million in revenue per year.
As generics are uncommon in animal health, Zoetis benefits from a comfortable margin (38% in 2023), enough to make its human health counterparts drool with envy. To compare figures, Pfizer posted operational revenue growth of 7% in 2023. Zoetis forecasts annual revenue for 2024 of between $9.2 billion and $9.3 billion, up from $8.54 billion in 2023, for year-on-year growth of 7.7% to 8.9%. However, that is significantly less than in 2021. Due to lockdowns during the pandemic, pet adoption surged to unprecedented numbers. As a result, Zoetis recorded growth of almost 16% in 2021, driving the company’s share price to new heights – almost $250 per share at its peak at end-December 2021. As things returned to normal post-pandemic, the share price fell sharply – dropping 10% in 2024 (between 1 January and 30 November) – which analysts consider a good momentum for investment.