Business World

Biotech M&A takes off as Sanofi and Celgene spend $20 billion

-

BIOTECH deal activity exploded on Monday with French drug maker Sanofi and US-based Celgene spending a combined total of more than $20 billion to add new products for hemophilia and cancer to their medicine cabinets. The acquisitio­ns will fuel expectatio­ns for a busy year of mergers and acquisitio­ns as large drug makers snap up promising assets from smaller rivals to help revive growth.

NEW YORK — Biotech deal activity exploded on Monday with French drug maker Sanofi and US-based Celgene spending a combined total of more than $20 billion to add new products for hemophilia and cancer to their medicine cabinets.

The acquisitio­ns will fuel expectatio­ns for a busy year of mergers and acquisitio­ns (M&A) as large drug makers snap up promising assets from smaller rivals to help revive growth.

Sanofi agreed to buy US hemophilia expert Bioverativ for $11.6 billion, its biggest deal for seven years, while Celgene is paying about $9 billion for the 90% of cancer specialist Juno Therapeuti­cs it does not already own.

The two cash deals were agreed at a prices of $105 and $87 per share respective­ly. Shares in Bioverativ leaped 63% in early US trading and Juno jumped 27%, reflecting the offers, while Sanofi fell 4%. Celgene was little changed.

Other biotech stocks were driven higher by the takeover news, with rivals to Juno including Bluebird Bio, Sangamo Therapeuti­cs and Cellectis each gaining around 10%.

“The signs are good for biotech deal activity in 2018,” said Chris Stirling, head of KPMG’s global life sciences practice.

Big companies are under pressure from declining sales of older treatments and many are struggling to find sufficient high-value replacemen­ts from within their own laboratori­es, making buying in products and know-how an attractive option.

“It takes a long time to introduce technology that makes a significan­t difference, and in the interim CEOs are looking at any way to get their hands on product where they believe they can make a decent return,” Mr. Stirling said. “They’ve got to be seen to be doing things, otherwise they really struggle to convince investors.”

Both Sanofi and Celgene had been seen as likely multibilli­ondollar acquirers.

BUSY START

The French group, which faces mounting competitio­n in its key diabetes unit, lost out on buying US cancer firm Medivation to Pfizer in 2016, and also missed acquiring Swiss-based Actelion, which was bought by Johnson & Johnson last year.

Celgene, meanwhile, needs to dilute its reliance on cancer drug Revlimid. It had been widely tipped as a buyer for Juno, whose technology is at the cutting edge of cancer treatment.

Juno is one of several pioneers of a system to modify immune cells to fight tumors and its product is likely to reach the market in 2019, behind rival approval treatments from Novartis and Gilead.

Gilead only recently jumped into the space after acquiring Kite Pharma last year for $12 billion in one of the few standout deals during a relatively subdued year for biotech M&A.

Despite the late start, Celgene believes could have peak annual sales of $3 billion and it sees the acquisitio­n being “incrementa­lly additive” to net product sales in 2020. Following setbacks at Juno, Celgene is paying less than the $93 a share it stumped up for just under 10% of the company in 2015.

Sanofi expects Bioverativ, which was spun off from Biogen last year, can deliver commercial success despite rapid changes in the $ 10- billion hemophilia market posed by a novel drug from Roche and the potential of gene therapy to provide a onetime cure.

Those changes have spooked some investors but Sanofi is betting that the factor replacemen­t therapies made by Bioverativ will remain the standard of care for many years and it expects the deal to boost earnings immediatel­y.

Monday’s two big acquisitio­ns build on an already busy start for 2018 biotech M&A, with Celgene earlier agreeing to acquire privately held Impact Biomedicin­es for as much as $7 billion, including $1.1-billion upfront, and Novo Nordisk bidding $3.1 billion for Belgium’s Ablynx.

Separate reports this month by consultanc­y EY and law firm Baker McKenzie both predicted a significan­t rise in life sciences M&A in 2018, helped by US tax changes that may lift big companies’ appetite for deals. Lazard advised Sanofi on its deal, while Guggenheim Securities and J.P. Morgan worked for Bioverativ. J.P. Morgan also worked for Celgene and Morgan Stanley for Juno. —

 ??  ?? LOGO OF SANOFI
LOGO OF SANOFI

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines