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Sunday, August 17, 2025

Here’s How This Forgotten Healthcare Stock Could Generate Life-Changing Returns


  • CRISPR Therapeutics’ first approved therapy, Casgevy, was a breakthrough.

  • One of Casgevy’s biggest achievements may be demonstrating the viability of CRISPR Therapeutics’ strategy.

  • The biotech company could soar if it can follow up that win with more clinical and regulatory milestones.

  • 10 stocks we like better than CRISPR Therapeutics ›

Over the past few years, the market hasn’t been kind to somewhat speculative, unprofitable stocks. CRISPR Therapeutics (NASDAQ: CRSP), a mid-cap biotech, fits that description. The company’s shares are down by 24% since mid-2022. The S&P 500 is up 50% over the same period.

Despite this terrible performance, there are reasons to believe that CRISPR Therapeutics could still generate life-changing returns for investors willing to be patient. Here’s how the biotech could pull it off.

CRISPR Therapeutics‘ first approval was for Casgevy, a treatment for sickle cell disease (SCD) and transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia (TDT), which it developed in collaboration with Vertex Pharmaceuticals. Before Casgevy, no CRISPR-based gene-editing medicine had been approved.

While it became the first, it still faces some challenges. Ex vivo gene-editing therapies require a complex manufacturing and administration process that can only be performed in authorized treatment centers (ATCs). Moreover, they’re expensive. Casgevy costs $2.2 million in the U.S. Getting third-party payers on board for that is no easy feat.

A scientist wearing a respirator and holding forceps stands behind a large model of a DNA double helix.
Image source: Getty Images.

Still, CRISPR Therapeutics and Vertex Pharmaceuticals are making steady progress. As of the second quarter, CRISPR Therapeutics had achieved its goal of activating 75 ATCs. It had also secured reimbursement for eligible patients in 10 countries. The two companies estimate there are roughly 60,000 eligible SCD and TDT patients in the regions they have targeted.

Let’s say they continue to strike reimbursement deals and can count on third-party coverage for 70% of this target population (42,000 people), then go on to treat another 30% of that group in the next decade (12,600 patients). Assuming they could extend that $2.2 million price tag to those countries, Casgevy could generate more than $27.7 billion over this period. Based on its agreement with Vertex, 40% would go to CRISPR Therapeutics, or roughly $11.1 billion over a decade. That’s not bad, but it’s not that impressive either.

So, while Casgevy could contribute meaningfully to CRISPR Therapeutics’ results — and may even reach blockbuster status at some point — the medicine may primarily serve as a proof of concept to demonstrate that the biotech’s approach can be effective.

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