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Promised US tax cut could boost Novartis investment

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DONALD Trump’s plans to cut US corporate tax rates could trigger increased investment in the US by Novartis, its chief executive said, despite the president-elect’s recent harsh words on drug prices.

“When we build a new manufactur­ing site we think about the tax rate, we think about the economy of the country, we think about jobs, so a booming US economy would make the US more attractive for investment,” Joe Jimenez said yesterday.

Trump unnerved drug company executives last week by saying the industry was “getting away with murder” on pricing and promising to introduce more competitio­n to drive down costs.

Jimenez said on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, that he expected continued pressure on prices in the US market, but his company was already adapting by shifting to outcomes-based pricing.

The Swiss drugmaker recently struck deals with two US insurers for its heart failure drug Entresto, under which payments are calculated based on any proven reduction in patient admissions to hospital, not on the number of pills consumed.

Entresto has got off to a slow start, but Jimenez said there had been a “nice pick up in prescripti­ons” more recently. It will update investors on prospects for the potential blockbuste­r when it reports full-year results next week, he added. Novartis is holding an R&D day to coincide with its results next Wednesday, to highlight pipeline prospects.

These include a novel cell therapy for childhood leukaemia called CTL-019, which Jimenez confirmed was on track for submission to regulators for approval early this year.

Another closely watched new drug is BAF-312 for secondary progressiv­e multiple sclerosis. Novartis is discussing with US and European regulators whether it could file BAF-312 for approval based on a single Phase III clinical trial, Jimenez said.

Novartis is looking to these and other new products for heart and eye conditions to help offset generic competitio­n to its old blood cancer drug Glivec. “We have a number of catalysts that are coming,” Jimenez said. “From the end of 2017 we will be completely out from under that genericisa­tion and the company should enter its next growth phase beginning in 2018.”

Novartis is currently weighing plans to sell its substantia­l stake in Basel-based rival Roche, but Jimenez said he was in no rush, adding that recent weakness in European drug stocks relative to US ones meant the timing wasn’t right just now. It built up its onethird stake in Roche voting stock between 2001 and 2003. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Novartis should enter its next growth phase beginning in 2018, says its chief executive Joe Jimenez in Davos.
PHOTO: REUTERS Novartis should enter its next growth phase beginning in 2018, says its chief executive Joe Jimenez in Davos.

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