Is Eli Lilly in Good Hands?

Updated

Investing isn't just buying shares in a hot ticker; it is putting your hard-earned money in the future of a business -- and, often overlooked, trusting management to execute on that vision of success. When it comes to Eli Lilly, are investors in good hands or is their faith misplaced?

In order to help you answer this question, our senior biotech analyst has composed a brand-new premium research report that explains Eli Lilly's market opportunity, risks, and reasons to both buy and sell today. The following excerpt from the report takes an in-depth look at Eli Lilly's man in charge.

Management
Eli Lilly's chairman, president, and CEO, John Lechleiter, is a rarity in the pharmaceutical industry.


Those three titles (or at least chairman and CEO) seem to be disappointingly standard these days. Any checks and balances at the highest corporate level have been lost.

Instead, Lechleiter is uncommon because he's a scientist. He started at Eli Lilly back in 1979 as an organic chemist in process research and development. As he worked his way up the ladder, Lechleiter supervised both product development and regulatory affairs. He inherited the top job in 2008 after Sidney Taurel retired.

Merck's CEO was a lawyer. Ian Read came to Pfizer as an accountant. Johnson & Johnson's new CEO, Alex Gorsky, started with the company in sales, as did his predecessor Bill Weldon. Novartis' Joseph Jimenez came to the company via H.J. Heinz -- yep, the ketchup company.

But having a scientist at the helm isn't necessarily all it's cracked up to be. Sure, having a Ph.D. can help Lechleiter understand the basic science behind why a drug works the way it does. But how many direct scientific decisions is he really making? I doubt he's down in the lab helping the scientists figure out how to synthesize a compound with an extra methyl group on it.

Lechleiter should be making higher-order decisions that will have a direct effect on margins and cash flow and have the final say on whether to approve licensing deals and acquisitions.

My worry is that scientists tend to be dreamers...

The article Is Eli Lilly in Good Hands? originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Brian Orelli has no positions in the stocks mentioned above. The Motley Fool owns shares of Johnson & Johnson. Motley Fool newsletter services recommend Johnson & Johnson. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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