Sandoz enters $265 million settlement agreement in U.S. price-fixing
case
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[February 29, 2024]
(Reuters) -Swiss generic and biosimilar manufacturer Sandoz on
Thursday said it had entered into a $265 million settlement agreement in
a price-fixing case in the United States.
The company said its U.S. subsidiaries had agreed to pay $265 million in
a lawsuit with a class of direct drug purchasers, an agreement that does
not contain any admission of wrongdoing by the Swiss company.
The agreement, which is subject to court approval, would also release
Sandoz of all the claims asserted against it by the settlement class
members.
The case dates back to the time when Sandoz was part of Swiss healthcare
giant Novartis Group, which spun off its generics business in October
2023 and floated it on the stock exchange.
Novartis had already reached settlements for two similar antitrust
lawsuits against the division in 2020 and 2021, paying a total of almost
$400 million.
Sandoz's settlement in the U.S. price-fixing case is separate from two
remaining plaintiff cases, which the company said concern indirect and
downstream purchases and damages claims under state law.
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Used blister packets that contained medicines, tablets and pills are
seen, in this picture illustration taken June 30, 2018.
REUTERS/Russell Boyce/Illustration
"Sandoz U.S. continues to defend
itself vigorously in those cases, and has raised a number of
defenses, including whether downstream purchasers were actually
damaged due to the alleged conduct," the company said in a
statement.
(Writing by Bartosz Dabrowski in Gdansk and Noele Illien in
ZurichEditing by Miranda Murray)
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