Succession doubts cloud Apotex future after billionaire
owner's death
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[December 22, 2017]
By Matt Scuffham
TORONTO (Reuters) - Canadian
pharmaceuticals billionaire Barry Sherman failed to implement a
succession plan at his Apotex business before his death last week, two
business associates told Reuters, potentially leaving it vulnerable to
takeover approaches.
The bodies of Sherman, 75, and his wife Honey, 70, were found in their
Toronto mansion last week and their deaths are under investigation by
Toronto's homicide squad. A memorial service was held on Thursday.
Sherman had always resisted approaches from trade buyers and never
wanted to take the generic drugmaker public, the associates said,
preferring to keep control and not involve outside shareholders.
Despite stepping down as chief executive in 2012, the self-confessed
workaholic continued to work seven-day weeks and twelve-hour days. None
of Sherman's four children were interested in running the business and
only one had worked at the company, the associates said.
Sherman's son Jonathan, who has a degree in industrial engineering from
Columbia University, took at job at the firm after graduating but quit
after less than a year.
Sherman founded Apotex in 1974 and grew it through a strategy of
launching hundreds of lawsuits against competitors to overturn patent
protection for their drugs. Apotex would then manufacture cheaper
identical products that did not carry a brand name.
The company now employs more than 10,000 worldwide with annual sales
exceeding C$2 billion ($1.6 billion).
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A woman cries during a memorial service for Apotex pharmaceutical
billionaire Barry Sherman and his wife Honey, days after what police
call their suspicious deaths in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, December
21, 2017. REUTERS/Mark Blinch
The associates said no formal sales process is underway. Any approach would come
as the world's biggest generic drug companies are grappling with declining drug
prices and intensifying competition.
Any potential buyer would also require an appetite for litigation, the
associates said, since Apotex is regularly involved in legal actions over
patents.
And Teva Pharmaceuticals Industries <TEVA.TA> <TEVA.N>, the world's biggest
maker of generic drugs, is currently in a legal dispute with Apotex over
allegations a former Teva executive shared trade secrets with Apotex CEO Jeremy
Desai.
Teva is also weighed by $35 billion in debt it took on to acquire Allergan's <AGN.N>
Actavis generic drug business for $40.5 billion last year. Last week it said it
would axe 14,000 jobs.
A Teva spokeswoman in Israel had no immediate comment when asked about any
takeover plans or the status of its legal case against Apotex.
(Additional reporting by Ari Rabinovitch in Jerusalem; Editing by Meredith
Mazzili)
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