Industry experts have for years viewed the consumer business --
whose brands include nutritional supplements Seven Seas and Bion and
decongestant Nasivin - as lacking critical scale.
Sources have said that management has informally sounded out
prospective buyers on numerous occasions over the years, only to be
held back by the founding family, which still owns 70 percent of
Merck and favours a diversified strategy for the drugmaker.
"We expect increasing internal constraints to fund the business to
reach the required scale. Fully anticipating this, we are preparing
strategic options," Belen Garijo, chief executive of the healthcare
business, said in a statement.
"Any possible proceeds from a potential transaction would be used to
deliver on the company’s overall financial targets."
Merck has forecast roughly flat core earnings of 4.4 to 4.6 billion
euros for 2017 and a slight to moderate organic increase in sales.
Shares in Merck rose as much as 2.9 percent to 94.72 euros in early
trade, their highest level in nearly six weeks. By 0805 GMT they
were trading 2.4 percent higher at the top of the German blue-chip
DAX.
Merck said it would consider a full or partial sale of the consumer
health business as well as strategic partnerships, adding that the
review process was in an early stage with no final decision taken.
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Merck, which traces its roots to a 17th century pharmacy, is
focusing on its pharmaceuticals unit, where it is pinning growth
hopes on cancer immunotherapy treatment Bavencio and multiple
sclerosis pill Mavenclad after a string of setbacks.
It has also built a global biotech laboratory supplies business with
takeovers of Millipore and Sigma-Aldrich in 2010 and 2016.
Merck saw liquid crystals revenue surge at the turn of the century
with the advent of flat-screen LCD TVs, having failed for decades to
find a commercial use for the substance.
But Chinese rivals have been chipping away at its dominant market
position, leading it to spend billions on takeovers to
counterbalance its dependence on the high-tech screen chemicals that
still account for about 15 percent of group earnings.
(Reporting by Georgina Prodhan and Ludwig Burger; Editing by Maria
Sheahan)
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