Novartis sells U.S. generics assets to India's
bargain-hunting Aurobindo
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[September 06, 2018]
By John Miller and Nivedita Balu
ZURICH/BENGALURU (Reuters) - New Novartis
Chief Executive Vas Narasimhan has further reshaped the Swiss drugmaker,
announcing on Thursday he is selling U.S. dermatology and generic pill
assets to India's Aurobindo Pharma Ltd for up to $1 billion.
The deal, which comes after price pressure hurt the U.S. pills business,
includes some 300 products. An initial $900 million cash payment could
be followed by $100 million in performance-based payments to the
Basel-based drugmaker.
This transaction has been in the works for months but some analysts said
Aurobindo was paying less than they had pencilled in for the deal.
Shares in Aurobindo rose more than 9 percent on the news, while Novartis
stock was up 0.2 percent at 1000 GMT.
"The acquisition announced today is in line with our strategy to grow
and diversify our business in the U.S.," said N Govindarajan, managing
director of Aurobindo, adding the deal will make it the second-largest
U.S. generics maker by prescriptions. http://bit.ly/2MRmXqA
Aurobindo will get plants in Wilson, North Carolina, as well as in
Hicksville and Melville, New York, Novartis said.
Around 750 employees as well as field representatives from the
PharmaDerm branded dermatology business are expected to transfer to
Aurobindo.
Narasimhan, who became CEO on Feb. 1, has pushed ahead with efforts to
slim down Novartis that began under his predecessor, Joe Jimenez, to
focus on higher-margin drugs.
He sold a consumer health joint venture to GlaxoSmithKline this year for
$13 billion and plans to spin off his Alcon eyecare unit in 2019.
The U.S. Sandoz pills business has long been a problem child for
Novartis, with price pressure hurting results and becoming a main reason
the division has pared back its growth targets, most recently in July.
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Logo of Swiss drugmaker Novartis is seen at its branch in
Schweizerhalle near Basel, Switzerland, March 29, 2018. REUTERS/Arnd
Wiegmann
"Through this transaction, we are refocusing our business," said Richard
Francis, the Sandoz division head, adding the disposal would allow him to focus
on products such as biosimilars, or near-copies of rival's biological drug
blockbusters whose patents have expired.
Analyst Stefan Schneider at Swiss bank Vontobel said the lackluster $900 million
up-front price showed just how deep the U.S. pills business and dermatology
assets had fallen.
"We had assumed a price of 1 times sales for such a transaction," Schneider
said. "We realize that pricing pressure in the U.S. generics market is greater
that we had anticipated, as last year's revenues were $1.5 billion for this
business and first-half 2018 revenues only $0.6 billion."
He has a "hold" rating on the shares.
Narasimhan, a U.S. citizen and Harvard-trained doctor, has so far said that
Sandoz businesses elsewhere including in Europe remain core parts of Novartis.
Overall, Sandoz had nearly $5 billion in sales in the first half.
Following this transaction, the Sandoz U.S. portfolio will include biosimilars
as well as complex generics such as its Glatopa copy of Teva's Copaxone medicine
for relapsing multiple sclerosis.
(Editing by Gopakumar Warrier and Keith Weir)
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