Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Indian drugmakers face squeeze in US market

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MUMBAI: India’s small and medium-sized generic drugmakers say the threat of tougher rules and higher barriers for outsiders in the US healthcare market will force many to find a niche or focus their expansion efforts on other countries.

India supplies nearly a third of medicines sold in the United States, the world’s largest healthcare market. Cut-price generics sold by India’s small- and medium-sized drugmakers have been critical in reducing prices there.

A more protection­ist stance by President Donald Trump, with the prospect of import tariffs and the U.S. boosting local drug manufactur­ing, mean the operating environmen­t for smaller generic players will get worse, executives at Indian companies said.

“If the challenges keep increasing, competitio­n will reduce, and this could actually increase prices there,” said D.G. Shah, secretary general of the Indian Pharmaceut­ical Associatio­n, which represents 20 large Indian drugmakers.

J Jayaseelan, who owns Nuray Chemicals, a maker of drug ingredient­s, said many Indian firms are reconsider­ing, or putting on hold, US expansion plans.

Ajanta Pharma is one such firm. The mid-sized generics drug maker said it had no plans to scale up its U.S. business and would invest more in Asia and Africa instead.

“It’s not a major market for us right now ... you’ve got to look at the risk-reward ratio,” said Rajeev Agarwal, general manager of finance at Ajanta.

The risks comes as U.S. revenue growth for these firms is falling. U.S. revenues for Indian drugmakers rose 15 percent in 2016, half the average annual growth rate of 33 percent between 2011 and 2015, ratings agency ICRA said. It expects the growth rate to fall further this year.

Consolidat­ion among U.S. drugs distributo­rs and a federal investigat­ion into drug pricing have also reduced the pricing power of drugsmaker­s.

The US drugs regulator, the Food and Drug Administra­tion, has also banned dozens of Indian drug factories from supplying the U.S. market following inspection­s that found inadequate quality-control practices. Companies have invested significan­t sums to raise their quality standards.

Firms that want to focus on the United States will have to increase investment in highermarg­in niche therapies, or products requiring specialise­d manufactur­ing, said Mitanshu Shah, senior vice president of finance at Alembic Pharmaceut­icals. “Smaller companies with a few regular products and no longterm vision for the US won’t last.”

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