Business World

China’s Fosun Pharma to buy smaller stake in India’s Gland Pharma for $1.1B

-

BEIJING/MUMBAI — Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceut­ical Group is trimming the size of the stake it will buy in India’s Gland Pharma to 74% for $1.1 billion, in a bid to salvage the stalled deal that would be the biggest takeover by a Chinese firm in India.

Fosun Pharma had struck a deal in July last year to buy an 86% stake valued at about $1.26 billion in the Indian generic injectable drug maker, but the deal had raised concerns among some in the Indian government, a source had told Reuters previously.

India allows foreign investment of up to 100% in its pharmaceut­ical sector but above 74% requires government approval.

Two sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters that the Chinese drug maker had agreed to lower the stake it planned to acquire in Gland to 74%, mainly because it sought to get the deal completed more smoothly and faster. Gland is backed by private equity firm KKR & Co. LP.

Fosun said in a statement on Sunday the deal no longer required a nod from India’s Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. It said it had already received approval from Chinese regulators and applied for antitrust approval in the United States and India.

The Chinese drug maker added that Gland Pharma’s founding family wanted to retain a bigger holding in the Indian company because of its good performanc­e.

Gland Managing Director Ravi Penmetsa told Reuters some approvals the original deal had received were at risk of expiring.

“Now with this new agreement, we won’t have to reapply for those,” he said, adding that he expects the deal to be completed in two weeks.

Fosun Pharma’s parent, Fosun Internatio­nal, has been the poster child for China’s decadelong overseas push that saw Chinese bidders spend a record $ 105 billion on assets ranging from film studios to football clubs in 2016.

Best known outside China for its acquisitio­n of French resort chain Club Med, Fosun Internatio­nal was among acquisitiv­e firms that found itself in the cross- hairs of Chinese authoritie­s, sources have said.

But its executives said in late August that Fosun would continue to conduct overseas deals and scout for targets in areas including drug manufactur­ing.

Fosun Pharma said in midAugust it was bidding for a stake in US specialty drug maker Arbor Pharmaceut­icals LLC.

On Sunday Fosun Pharma said it would spend no more than $25 million to market the Indian company’s enoxaparin bloodthinn­ing drug in the United States, when it obtains approval there, cutting the previously proposed marketing spend by half.

In a statement on Sunday, Gland said the deal would allow it to make biosimilar­s — lucrative copies of biotech drugs — at Fosun’s site and sell them in India.

“It won’t happen overnight, but we have started working on it,” Mr. Penmetsa said.

Mr. Penmetsa and his father, P.V. N. Raju, will remain on the Gland board and the current management team will continue to run the company. —

 ??  ?? A COMPANY logo is pictured at the headquarte­rs of Shanghai Fosun Pharma Group in Shanghai, China, Sept. 13, 2016.
A COMPANY logo is pictured at the headquarte­rs of Shanghai Fosun Pharma Group in Shanghai, China, Sept. 13, 2016.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines