Teva Pharm expects to start paying U.S. opioid settlement in 2023
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[September 19, 2022]
By Steven Scheer
TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Teva Pharmaceutical
Industries expects to finalise an opioid settlement in the United States
by year-end and start paying in 2023, its chief executive said on
Sunday, while confirming he was unlikely to renew his contract next
year.
After years of negotiations, Israel-based Teva in July proposed a $4.35
billion nationwide settlement - mostly cash and partly medicines that
will amount to $300 million to $400 million over 13 years - to resolve
its opioid lawsuits.
U.S. states, cities and counties filed more than 3,000 lawsuits against
opioid manufacturers, distributors and pharmacies, accusing them of
playing down the risks of addiction and failing to stop pills from being
diverted for illegal use.
CEO Kare Schultz said Teva was working on legal wording that should be
wrapped up by the end of September. It then needs approval from states
and subdivisions within states.
"When they opt in, once that is all done ... then it goes into force and
that means the first payments happen next year and go on for 13 years,"
Schultz told a news conference. "So, by the end of the year, you should
have this clarification that it all comes together and we will start
paying next year."
Teva has denied wrongdoing, saying it sold legal medication that was
approved for treatment of pain.
The U.S. opioid crisis has caused more than 500,000 overdose deaths over
the past two decades, including more than 80,000 in 2021 alone,
according to government data.
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The CEO of Teva Pharmaceutical
Industries Kare Schultz speaks during a news conference to discuss
the company's 2019 outlooks in Tel Aviv, Israel February 19, 2019.
REUTERS/Amir Cohen/File Photo
Schultz, who took over as CEO in
December 2017, confirmed he was unlikely to extend it his contract
which expires on Nov. 1 2023, saying he will be 62. But he said he
would like to stay on the company's board.
He said Teva would cut costs further by closing some of its sites.
Since 2017 it has reduced the number of manufacturing plants to 53
from 80 and it plans to close another 10 in the next few years.
Teva's New York listed shares are up 10% so far in 2022 at $8.81 but
well off a peak of $72 in 2015.
Questioning the low share price, Schultz noted that Teva has a
price-earnings ratio of about 3.5, whereas a normal rate should be
10. "Teva has one of the lowest P/E ratios of any share I know, and
the business is actually very stable, that will grow long term and
generate cash - so it's very good for long term investors," Schultz
said.
"Right now we are worth a third of what you will see the normal
value if we didn't have these risk factors."
He suggested that the low share price largely stemmed from high
debt, which has come down to $20 billion from $34 billion, and the
opioid litigation.
(Reporting by Steven Scheer; Editing by Alison Williams, Frances
Kerry and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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