Sanofi said it would acquire all outstanding shares of Translate Bio
for $38.00 per share in cash, representing a total equity value of
about $3.2 billion.
The boards of both companies have approved the deal, and the chief
executive of Translate Bio and the U.S. company's largest
shareholder have backed it, Sanofi and Translate Bio said in a joint
statement.
Shares in the French pharmaceuticals company edged up 0.3% in early
morning trade.
"Translate Bio adds an mRNA technology platform and strong
capabilities to our research, further advancing our ability to
explore the promise of this technology to develop both best-in-class
vaccines and therapeutics," Sanofi CEO Paul Hudson said.
Sanofi's offer of $38 represented a 30.4% premium on the New
York-listed company's Aug. 2 closing share price.
Translate Bio's stock soared more than 70% to above $50 in extended
trading on Monday following the Reuters report.
INFLUENZA
Sanofi's bid for Translate Bio marks the latest interest by a large
pharmaceutical company in mRNA technology, following its proven
success in COVID-19 vaccines developed by Pfizer/BioNTech and
Moderna.
Analysts said the price made strategic sense, a long-term wager on
mRNA vaccine technology beyond COVID-19 by one of the world's top
flu vaccine makers.
"Since COVID, mRNA vaccines have made a big impact on the future of
vaccine R&D and the most obvious target for next generation mRNA
vaccines is influenza," Liberum wrote in a briefing note.
The messenger RNA (ribonucleic acid) approach, an area of Translate
Bio expertise, instructs human cells to make specific proteins that
produce an immune response to a given disease. Sanofi and Translate
Bio joined forces last year to develop an mRNA-based COVID-19
vaccine. They expect interim results of their Phase I/II clinical
trial in the third quarter.
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The two companies are also
looking at mRNA vaccines for several infectious
diseases and in June started a Phase I trial
evaluating a possible mRNA-based vaccine against
seasonal flu.
Rival Moderna launched a Phase I/II trial into a
possible mRNA flu shot in July.
TOUGH YEAR
Sanofi expects to complete the acquisition in
the third quarter of 2021.
Translate Bio's chief executive and its largest shareholder, Baupost
Group, signed binding commitments to support the deal. Their shares
combined with those already held by Sanofi represent about 30% of
Translate Bio's total shares outstanding. Sanofi's interest comes
after a tough year for the French drugmaker after falling behind
rivals in the COVID-19 vaccine race, a major blow to CEO Hudson who
joined the company almost two years ago. Sanofi warned last year its
traditional, protein-based COVID-19 jab developed with
GlaxoSmithKline showed an insufficient immune response in older
people, delaying its launch until toward the end of 2021. Hudson has
also been under increasing pressure to reduce the company's
dependence on its star eczema treatment Dupixent to boost earnings.
Earlier this year, Sanofi agreed to fill and pack millions of doses
of shots made by Pfizer/BioNTech, Johnson & Johnson and Moderna.
Translate Bio, set up in 2016, has not launched any drugs on the
market but its clinical-stage pulmonary product using its mRNA
platform is being tested as an inhaled treatment for cystic fibrosis
in a Phase I/II clinical trial.
(Reporting by Matthias Blamont in Paris; Additional reporting by
Caroline Humer and Lewis Krauskopf in New York, Ankur Banerjee in
Bengaluru, and Sudip Kar-Gupta and Richard Lough in Paris; editing
by Sonali Paul, Louise Heavens and Jason Neely)
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