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Hikma Pharmaceuticals PLC (HIK.L)

LSE - LSE 延遲價格。貨幣為 GBp (0.01 GBP)。
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1,913.00+59.00 (+3.18%)
收市:04:39PM BST
全螢幕
前收市價1,854.00
開市1,861.00
買盤1,913.00 x 0
賣出價1,915.00 x 0
今日波幅1,861.00 - 1,920.00
52 週波幅1,711.00 - 2,222.00
成交量369,709
平均成交量627,527
市值4.245B
Beta 值 (5 年,每月)0.44
市盈率 (最近 12 個月)28.13
每股盈利 (最近 12 個月)0.68
業績公佈日2024年2月22日
遠期股息及收益率0.57 (2.98%)
除息日2024年3月21日
1 年預測目標價25.93
  • Reuters

    Merck's Bridion faces generic threat from drugmaker Hikma

    Merck has received a letter that Hikma Pharmaceuticals US unit has sought a pre-patent expiry approval from the US FDA to sell a generic version of its Bridion injection, the drugmaker said in filing on Monday. Merck said, on Feb. 5, it received the letter under the Hatch-Waxman Act, through which a company can seek FDA approval to market a copycat before the expiration of patents related to the brand-name drug. Merck said in the filing that it is currently considering its options.

  • Reuters

    High-dose opioid reversal spray no better than lower dose in field, US study finds

    A high-dose version of the opioid reversal spray naloxone, made by Hikma Pharmaceuticals, did not result in an increased survival rate compared with lower-dose versions of the drug when administered in emergency situations by New York law enforcement, according to a U.S. study. The analysis also suggests that those given the higher 8 milligram strength spray were more than twice as likely to experience opioid withdrawal symptoms compared to other sprays such as Narcan that use a 4 mg dose. The Hikma version, sold under the brand name Kloxxado, was approved in 2021 after U.S. Food and Drug Administration advisers and National Institutes of Health reports suggested that a high-dose version was needed to respond to overdoses by more potent opioids such as fentanyl.

  • Reuters

    UPDATE 1-Ad firm Publicis, drugmaker Hikma settle US opioid cases for $500 million

    A division of French advertising company Publicis Groupe SA and drug company Hikma Pharmaceuticals have reached separate settlements worth a collective $500 million to resolve claims that they helped fuel the deadly U.S. opioid epidemic. The settlements announced by U.S. state attorneys general on Thursday add to the more than $50 billion that drug manufacturers, distributors, pharmacy operators and consultants have agreed to pay to resolve lawsuits and investigations over their roles in the drug addiction crisis. Publicis Health, a subsidiary of Publicis Groupe, agreed to pay $350 million to resolve claims by all U.S. states and territories that it helped OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma devise marketing strategies to boost sales of its prescription opioid painkiller.