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Does This $25 Million Bet on a Stock Down 61% Signal Turnaround Potential at $6?
Sio Capital Management disclosed a new position in Organon (OGN 3.83%) on February 17, 2026, acquiring 3,421,765 shares worth $24.53 million at quarter’s end.
What happened
According to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission dated February 17, 2026, Sio Capital Management established a new position in Organon (OGN 3.83%), purchasing 3,421,765 shares. The reported position value at quarter-end increased by $24.53 million as a result of the purchase.
What else to know
Company overview
Company snapshot
Organon operates as a global healthcare company with a strategic emphasis on women’s health and biosimilar pharmaceuticals. The company leverages a broad portfolio of established brands and specialty products to address diverse medical needs. With a strong presence in both domestic and international markets, Organon distributes its products primarily to drug wholesalers and retailers, hospitals, government agencies, and managed healthcare providers.
What this transaction means for investors
It’s been a brutal stretch for Organon, with shares down considerably over the past year and 16% since last quarter alone.
The company is not really a growth story right now. Revenue slipped 3% to about $6.2 billion last year, and profitability came under pressure, with net income falling 78% to $187 million and margins compressing as pricing and product mix weighed on results. The company is guiding for essentially flat performance in 2026, which tells you management is focused on stabilizing rather than accelerating.
Still, stability is sometimes enough when expectations are this low. The business still throws off roughly $1.9 billion in adjusted EBITDA, supported by a diversified portfolio spanning women’s health, biosimilars, and established brands. That’s cash flow that matters, especially as the company works through a heavy debt load of more than $8.5 billion.
Within a portfolio already concentrated in healthcare and defensives, this fits as a classic value tilt rather than a speculative swing, and with management being clear about its focus on maintaining operational performance and disciplined expense management this year, shares could be set for a turnaround if the company delivers.