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Sanofi to sell Regeneron stake worth Us$13bil

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LONDON: Sanofi is selling a stake in Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals Inc valued at about Us$13bil, giving the French drugmaker more firepower to invest in booming fields such as cancer.

Regeneron has agreed to repurchase Us$5bil of its stock from Paris-based Sanofi, the companies said on Monday. Regeneron said that the French company also plans to sell approximat­ely 12.8 million shares, a holding worth more than Us$7bil based on Friday’s closing price. That will mark the largest public equity offering in the healthcare industry on record.

The announceme­nt is part of chief executive officer Paul Hudson’s revamped strategy. The drugmaker said in December that it would end its hunt for new diabetes and heart disease medicines, helping save more than Us$2bil, and focus on lucrative areas such as oncology. The transactio­n will boost Sanofi’s war chest for acquisitio­ns to Us$50bil, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce’s Sam Fazeli.

“We believe the proceeds from this transactio­n will help further our ability to execute on our strategy to drive innovation and growth,” Hudson said in a statement.

Sanofi’s decision to sell comes after Regeneron’s stock surged 57% in the past six months. The French drugmaker holds about 23.2 million Regeneron shares, or 20.6% of the US pharmaceut­ical company.

When Sanofi first purchased shares of the Tarrytown, New York-based company in 2003, the stock was trading below US$20, compared with a closing price of US$569.91 last Friday.

€89.57 Sanofi rose as much as 2.2% to euros in early Paris trading yesterday. Besides cancer, targets for deals may include immunology and gene-therapy technology, according to analysts at Bank of America Corp.

Bank of America and Goldman Sachs Group Inc are the underwrite­rs of the stake sale. Regeneron said it will fund the share repurchase with Us$3.5bil of cash and Us$1.5bil of financing from Goldman Sachs Bank USA.

Sanofi and Regeneron said there will be no change to their ongoing partnershi­ps. Through their longstandi­ng collaborat­ion since 2003, the companies have brought five medicines to market, and have additional drug candidates currently in clinical developmen­t. Sanofi will continue to own about 400,000 Regeneron shares.

In December, Sanofi and Regeneron announced their intent to restructur­e collaborat­ions for two drugs, the cholestero­l-buster Praluent and the arthritis medicine Kevzara.

Hudson also said at the time that Sanofi could raise funds by selling its stake in Regeneron after a lock-up period expires at the end of 2020.

“As the lockup expires, your flexibilit­y increases,” he said. “We will look at the equity and decide where it can yield the best return for us as an organisati­on.”

Regeneron announced later that month that it planned to cut staff as it restructur­ed its partnershi­p with the French drugmaker.

The deal will also likely reignite speculatio­n that Sanofi may buy back L’oreal SA’S 9.4% stake in the drug company. That, in turn, raises the possibilit­y that L’oreal would buy back a 23% stake that Nestle SA holds in the French cosmetics maker.

Both Sanofi and Regeneron have positioned themselves as front-runners in the race to develop therapies and vaccines to battle the coronaviru­s pandemic. Sanofi has received funding from the US government to expedite research and developmen­t and scale up production capabiliti­es for its high-profile vaccine candidates.

Sanofi is also working with Regeneron to evaluate how Kevzara could help very sick Covid-19 patients in respirator­y distress. Initial trial results have suggested that the drug may help only the most critically ill patients – the severest of the severe – while those with slightly less dire cases of the disease likely won’t see a benefit.

The companies are moving forward with a big trial focused on the most serious Covid-19 cases, with results expected in June.

“We believe the proceeds from this transactio­n will further our ability to execute on our strategy to drive innovation and growth.” Paul Hudson

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