The Mercury News

Teva bid for rival gets brushoff

$ 40B deal would be likely to draw antritrust scrutiny

- By Linda A. Johnson

TRENTON, N. J. — Generic drug giant Teva formally offered to buy fellow drugmaker Mylan for about $ 40.1 billion in cash and stock Tuesday, despite Mylan’s cold shoulder and the certainty the proposed acquisitio­n will bring intense scrutiny by antitrust regulators.

If Israel- based Teva Pharmaceut­ical Industries succeeded, the combinatio­n would dominate the global generic drug market, be a major contender in some other specialty drug categories — and have the leverage to try to raise generic drugs prices.

After years of stability, generic medicine prices recently have risen several percent a year on average. Some have skyrockete­d by up to 1,000 percent, generally when competitio­n vanishes due to consolidat­ion or shortages caused by manufactur­ing quality problems.

A tie- up wouldn’t just increase Teva’s scale, allowing it to boost profitabil­ity by cutting jobs and other costs. It would increase its leverage in negotiatin­g drug prices with insurers and other payers, noted Les Funtleyder, health care portfolio manager Dutch drugmaker Mylan told Israel- based Teva that antitrust regulators probably wouldn’t approve a deal and said it prefers to remain a stand- alone company. at E Squared Asset Management.

“That’s going to feed into regulators’ interest,” he said.

That’s particular­ly true in the U. S., where seven of eight prescripti­ons filled are for generics and employers, insurers and government health programs encourage their use to hold down costs.

“It doesn’t mean the deal can’t be done,” because the companies could divest some assets, Funtleyder said, but he noted Mylan’s reluctance.

A Mylan spokeswoma­n did not immediatel­y return a call seeking comment Tuesday.

On Friday, the Dutch company said antitrust regulators probably wouldn’t approve a deal and said it prefers to remain a standalone company and instead buy generic drug and ingredient­s maker Perrigo. However Perrigo rejected Mylan’s offer Tuesday afternoon. The Irish company said the bid, which values Perrigo at $ 205 a share, or almost $ 29 billion, is too low.

Teva’s bid for Mylan, part of the latest cycle of drugmaker consolidat­ion, would be one of the biggest in the past couple of years, below Actavis’s recent $ 66 billion purchase of Allergan, based on figures from market research firm EvaluatePh­arma.

Mylan’s shares surged $ 6.03, or 8.9 percent, to $ 74.07 and reached an alltime high of $ 74.90. Teva shares gained 87 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $ 64.16.

Teva offered $ 82 a share, a 21 percent premium over Mylan’s Monday closing price, and said it could complete the deal by year’s end. Teva’s board has unanimousl­y approved the offer.

Teva gets half its revenue from generic drugs and another fifth from its top brandname medicine, multiple sclerosis drug Copaxone. Last Thursday, U. S. regulators approved a generic version of Copaxone, which could hit pharmacies around September, endangerin­g $ 4.2 billion of Teva’s $ 20 billion in annual revenue.

Mylan last year earned $ 929.4 million on $ 7.72 billion in revenue, nearly 85 percent of that from the more than 1,400 generic drugs it sells. Its specialty segment sells the EpiPen allergic reactions treatment, which brought in $ 1.19 billion in 2014.

 ?? DAN BALILTY/ ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
DAN BALILTY/ ASSOCIATED PRESS

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