Business World

M&A bonanza stokes healthcare dealmakers ahead of conference

- Reuters

NEW YORK — Healthcare dealmakers are making their way to San Francisco for a major industry conference, optimistic that more deals are in the offing after a wave of biotech company takeovers at the end of last year.

The four-day JPMorgan Healthcare Conference beginning on Monday is expected by organizers to attract over 8,000 people, including delegation­s from the world’s largest drugmakers, a signal of a return to business as usual after fewer participan­ts were invited last year over COVID-19 concerns.

Last month alone, drugmakers including AbbVie, Bristol Myers Squibb and AstraZenec­a announced roughly $25 billion worth of US-listed biotech deals, according to data provider LSEG Deals Intelligen­ce.

Overall, global mergers and acquisitio­ns (M&A) activity in the healthcare sector grew 8% on an annual basis to $365 billion in 2023, lagging the previous five-year average spending of $432 billion, LSEG calculated. “We’ve had an uptick of M&A recently, we’re seeing stocks rebound with the market recovery and interest rates lowering,” said JPMorgan global head of healthcare investment banking Mike Gaito, who will interview chief executive officer Jamie Dimon on the opening day. “People are open for business.”

Among the hottest topics will be the wildly popular weight-loss drugs revolution­izing the fight against obesity that have establishe­d Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk as two of the world’s most valuable companies.

Analysts forecast current drugs and other obesity treatments in developmen­t could garner $100 billion a year by the end of the decade.

Mr. Gaito said other companies are feeling the pressure to get into the space, and those that are want to be able to offer other treatment options.

Two deals epitomizin­g this in 2023 were Roche’s $2.7-billion acquisitio­n of Carmot Therapeuti­cs and Eli Lilly’s takeover of Versanis Bio for up to $1.93 billion, which strengthen­ed the Mounjaro maker’s pipeline of obesity drugs.

Other themes will range from regulation and antitrust to the financing environmen­t and possible effects of the 2024 US presidenti­al election on the industry, participan­ts said.

WALL STREET RALLY

The conference comes after a blistering Wall Street rally in recent weeks, propelled by expectatio­ns the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates this year.

Biotech companies were among the beneficiar­ies. The SPDR S&P Biotech ETF, a gauge of biotech industry performanc­e, was up more than 18% in December.

The benchmark US 10-year Treasury note dropped by nearly 50 points last month, easing financing costs for acquirers.

“We expect the macro environmen­t, including how people are thinking about sector growth, interest rates and the labor dynamic, to be top of mind (at the conference),” said Ali Satvat, a partner at private equity firm KKR.

The buying spree by drugmakers late last year was part of their strategy to help offset expected revenue declines as patents on blockbuste­r therapies expire. AbbVie, already facing biosimilar competitio­n for its cash cow Humira, and Bristol Myers collective­ly spent roughly $35 billion in deals to bolster their neurology and oncology franchises.

The annual conference at the Westin St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco will include smaller drugmakers and companies from all corners of the healthcare industry, such as health insurers and medical device firms.

Investors will meet companies in public and private settings.

“It’s an opportunit­y to actually sit in a small group, with investors but also with some corporate people, and meet with the management­s to ask questions directly and really gather a lot of competitiv­e intelligen­ce,” said investment firm Perceptive Advisors managing director Doug Giordano.

After a slow 2023, private equity firms will be looking for investment opportunit­ies for a record level of $2.59 trillion of unspent cash. They’ll also be searching for buyers.

“There is a very significan­t backlog of private equity-owned companies that will come out for sale in 2024,” said Devin O’Reilly, a partner at buyout firm Bain Capital.

Dealmakers from JPMorgan’s rival investment banks and law firms also will be in town to win new business from the over 400 healthcare companies expected to attend.

Competitor­s set up their own headquarte­rs in hotels near the conference and lure clients by offering better catering and amenities.

Latham & Watkins M&A partner Charles Ruck said you could have fun ranking “who has got better food at their mini conference­s around and compare it to the JPMorgan.” —

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