Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Thermo Fisher bids $ 5.2B for Patheon

- CYNTHIA KOONS, ED HAMMOND AND MANUEL BAIGORRI Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Dinesh Nair, Ari Altstedter, Aaron Kirchfeld and David Carey of Bloomberg News.

Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. extended its acquisitio­n spree with the $ 5.2 billion purchase of Dutch drug- ingredient­s maker Patheon NV.

Thermo Fisher, which has turned into one of the world’s biggest manufactur­ers of diagnostic and testing equipment through deals, will pay $ 35 a share in cash for Patheon. That’s 35 percent above Patheon’s closing price Friday, before Bloomberg News reported that the companies were in talks.

The purchase adds to Thermo Fisher’s $ 22 billion buying binge over the past five years, based on data compiled by Bloomberg.

Patheon will bring not just any medicine ingredient­s, but the more complex and harder to produce type grown out of living cells. Such biological therapies are increasing­ly important to drugmakers facing intense competitiv­e pressure, and companies that have pioneered the therapies are now turning to contractor­s like Patheon to manage costs or make production more efficient.

“Thermo gains a highergrow­th market,” said Paul Knight, an analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott LLC who advises buying the stock. “It’s a B+ deal, it’s not an A+ deal,” however, because some of Patheon’s rivals that use Thermo Fisher as a vendor may take their business elsewhere, he said.

Through Friday, Patheon’s shares had risen 24 percent since they were sold in an initial public offering in July at $ 21 each on the New York Stock Exchange.

Backers led by private equity firm JLL Partners will earn a bonanza. Affiliates of JLL stand to reap $ 2.2 billion, or 4.8 times the $ 462 million they invested in March 2014, according to two people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because the informatio­n is private. The return includes a 2015 dividend. The deal also offers a quick post- IPO exit for Dutch vitamin company Royal DSM NV, Patheon’s second- largest shareholde­r.

Under Chief Executive Officer Marc Casper, the shares of Thermo Fisher have more than tripled in the past five years, outperform­ing both the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index and peers. The Waltham, Mass.- based company, with a market value of more than $ 67 billion, now offers equipment, instrument­s and supplies to laboratori­es and medical research facilities and is a major player in technology used to sequence the human genome.

Including debt, the price comes to about $ 7.2 billion, Thermo Fisher said in a statement Monday. Thermo Fisher got committed debt financing from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. for the deal, and expects to finance the purchase with debt of approximat­ely $ 5.2 billion and equity of $ 2 billion. The transactio­n, expected to close by the end of the year, will boost Thermo Fisher’s earnings per share immediatel­y, according to the statement.

Patheon, incorporat­ed in the Netherland­s and with U. S. headquarte­rs in Durham, N. C., was formed in March 2014 through the merger of JLL Partners- controlled Canadian drugmaker Patheon Inc. and the pharmaceut­ical business of DSM, which owns a stake of about 34 percent.

Goldman Sachs advised Thermo Fisher on the deal, and Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz provided legal counsel. Patheon was advised by Morgan Stanley, with Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP providing legal counsel.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States