Cape Times

Aspen looks at further purchases

- Bloomberg

ASPEN Pharmacare Holdings sees further acquisitio­ns in the next 12 months as strong revenue and lower capital expenditur­e restore its firepower after the purchase of two anaestheti­cs portfolios last year.

The potential deals will probably be made in the South African company’s existing pharmaceut­ical markets, with womens’ health a possible area of expansion, chief executive Stephen Saad, 53, said in an interview at Aspen’s headquarte­rs in Durban on Friday. The drug maker, which has operations in more than 150 countries, will focus on emerging rather than developed markets, the billionair­e said.

“We’re in a great space to make further acquisitio­ns because we have our teams in the right place and we’re generating cash,” the chief executive said. “The more we can build on emerging market platforms, the more excited we are. To perform in Asia Pacific is going to be important for Aspen. Latin America and Africa are important for Aspen.”

Saad’s comments reaffirm his commitment to the deal making that’s propelled the business he co-founded as a generic drugs specialist 20 years ago into South Africa’s ninth-largest listed company with a market value of R131 billion. The 2016 purchases of anaestheti­cs portfolios from UK giants GlaxoSmith­Kline and AstraZenec­a for at least $885 million (R11.55bn) trebled the group’s borrowings to R35.7bn as of end December, according to Aspen’s most recent financial results.

Organic growth across the company should bring that down, the chief executive said. Sales are expected to have risen 19 percent to R42.3bn in the year to June, according to analysts.

Aspen shares rose 2.3 percent to R287.10 by the close in Johannesbu­rg on Friday, moving the stock into positive territory for the year to date. Saad owns about 12 percent of the drug maker, with his stake valued at about R15.7bn.

Saad was defiant when addressing a €5.2 million (R77.51m) fine imposed on Aspen by Italian regulators for raising the price of cancer drugs by as much as 1 500 percent, saying that the extent of the increase overshadow­ed the low price of the treatment in question, which had not been raised for more than half a century.

Ramping up prices to unreasonab­le levels “isn’t in our DNA – it’s not what Aspen stands for,” the chief executive said. “We’ve clearly got some regulators very comfortabl­e with our pricing.”

He said he couldn’t comment on a similar investigat­ion by EU regulators, because it’s still in progress.One change Aspen is making to the way it does business is to alter the way the company reports financials, Saad said. – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? The Aspen Pharmacare Holdings offices in Durban.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG The Aspen Pharmacare Holdings offices in Durban.

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